EesomeBeastie
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Setting: Rome, AD 106 (in the reign of the emperor Trajan)
Name: Lucius Tadius Aelianus
Age: 27
Note: the above name is formed of Lucius as his given name, Tadius as a clan name and Aelianus as a family name. He’d be called simply Aelianus by friends, or slightly more formally Tadius Aelianus or Lucius Tadius (especially if there was a chance of mixing him up with others called Aelianus). Lucius on its own would be used by very close family in private. The full three names would be used in formal situations. This three-name system only applied to male citizens – a freeborn women usually only had two names, derived from her father, slaves went by a single given name and freedmen (freed ex-slaves) created a name based on their given name or nickname and usually their ex-owner’s name (as he was still considered their patron and them a member of his extended family).
Description: 5 foot 8 tall, and of medium build, with short light brown hair and blue eyes. He tends to have a serious, even brooding, expression.
http://static.tvguide.com/MediaBin/Galleries/Shows/M_R/Ri_Rp/Rome/season2/rome39.jpg
In this pic he is wearing an everyday tunic rather than toga (more practical for travelling in) with the stripes indicating he’s a member of the equestrian rank (ruling families who monopolised most public offices and the senate).
Bio: Aelianus is a senator’s son, but a third son who is probably not destined for high public office, though so far he’s managed to get elected to a minor magistracy in Rome. He’s resisted his parents’ entreaties to marry and has moved out of the family home to avoid their nagging. Luckily a friend of his has obtained a quaestorship (high financial office) in Spain and is letting Aelianus house-sit his comfortable town house in the city. This includes most of his slaves, though Aelianus has brought his personal manservant slave Marcus from his parents’ house and his friend has recently recalled his superb cook to serve in his new Spanish residence. It’s this latter that has brought Aelianus to the slave market in Ostia in search of a replacement.
* * * * *
It was her ginger hair that first caught his attention. She looked scared, ill and miserable standing there in line on a slave dealer’s platform in Ostia, Rome’s great port. He, Lucius Tadius Aelianus, had made the trip here to find a cook, and in that he’d succeeded, having selected a portly Gallic woman who came with good references from her previous owner. He didn’t need another slave, but there was something about this short, thin girl on the trader’s stand that made him stop on his way back to the stables where he’d left his hired horses; stop and have another look.
He wandered over to the roped-off area where the slaves were displayed. The slave dealer recognised the hint of interest in his gaze and rushed over to greet him smarmily.
“Good day, Sir. Can I interest you in any of my merchandise? I have everything you could want here. Strong Germans taken in battle to work the fields, boys to run errands, educated Greeks and Egyptians to keep your records, cooks, cleaners, Spanish dancing girls to show off at your dinner parties, or to entertain you privately…” He leered and winked at this last.
Aelianus looked over them all, trying not to show particular interest in any. When he reached the girl with the wavy red hair he casually asked “Where’s she from, then?”
The slave trader looked surprised that he’d asked about such a miserable specimen. “Ah, a discerning gentleman, I see, with an eye for beauty! She’s from Dacia, brought back by our gallant legions from the Emperor’s conquests there.”
“A bit seasick from the voyage, but she’ll soon get over that,” he added, lying through his teeth. In fact he’d had the girl a week and her chill was deepening into a fever. Let her become someone else’s problem before he had a corpse on his hands.
Aelianus wasn’t sure why his heart went out to the poor, ill girl. As a magistrate he’d seen plenty of suffering, and indeed one could hardly live in Rome without seeing unfortunates at every turn. So why should he be drawn to this wretch?
The slave trader pulled her down off the platform and out of his compound to him. Aelianus walked around her, studying her. She was slender, emaciated even - he assumed she'd lost a lot of weight on the way here. But she looked like she would fill out nicely with a few months of decent food. She had the breasts of a curvier woman - breasts which were barely covered by the revealing tunic the slaver had dressed her in to attract attention from the more lecherous clientele. Her legs were straight, with no sign of rickets, though her skin was pallid. What really caught his attention, though were her eyes. Close up now, he could see that one was blue and the other green. How unusual!
Between those curious eyes and her ginger hair he spotted tiny drops of sweat beading her forehead. He’d be mad to take her home in case she was infectious, but he felt compelled to do so anyway.
“800 denarii,” he offered. The trader didn’t need to feign astonishment as this was less than half the normal minimum price for a female slave. He countered with 3000 denarii, but Aelianus was having none of that.
“Come on, man,” he chided. “She’s ill and we both know it. I’ll give you 1000 denarii and not a sestertius more.”
They haggled over the girl right in front of her, as if she wasn’t there, though she could probably barely follow their conservation anyway as she presumably spoke very little Latin. They eventually settled on 1200 denarii and Aelianus went over to the trader’s trestle table to sign the papers.
He decided to take the girl with him immediately. He’d asked for the cook to be delivered to his house, so he could ride back to Rome with his manservant slave Marcus, on the two horses they’d hired, but he wanted this girl resting as soon as possible and seen by a physician if necessary. He left her with Marcus whilst he wandered the marketplaces looking for suitable transport. Eventually he found a carter who was taking a load of hay into Rome who would be willing to let the girl rest on the hay and carry her to the city gates for a few brass sestertii. He and Marcus could ride alongside. Carts not being allowed into the city until after dark, he’d get her a litter from there.
The arrangements made, he returned to the slave market and the three of them made their way to the stables, Marcus supporting the girl with an arm around her shoulders.
Setting: Rome, AD 106 (in the reign of the emperor Trajan)
Name: Lucius Tadius Aelianus
Age: 27
Note: the above name is formed of Lucius as his given name, Tadius as a clan name and Aelianus as a family name. He’d be called simply Aelianus by friends, or slightly more formally Tadius Aelianus or Lucius Tadius (especially if there was a chance of mixing him up with others called Aelianus). Lucius on its own would be used by very close family in private. The full three names would be used in formal situations. This three-name system only applied to male citizens – a freeborn women usually only had two names, derived from her father, slaves went by a single given name and freedmen (freed ex-slaves) created a name based on their given name or nickname and usually their ex-owner’s name (as he was still considered their patron and them a member of his extended family).
Description: 5 foot 8 tall, and of medium build, with short light brown hair and blue eyes. He tends to have a serious, even brooding, expression.
http://static.tvguide.com/MediaBin/Galleries/Shows/M_R/Ri_Rp/Rome/season2/rome39.jpg
In this pic he is wearing an everyday tunic rather than toga (more practical for travelling in) with the stripes indicating he’s a member of the equestrian rank (ruling families who monopolised most public offices and the senate).
Bio: Aelianus is a senator’s son, but a third son who is probably not destined for high public office, though so far he’s managed to get elected to a minor magistracy in Rome. He’s resisted his parents’ entreaties to marry and has moved out of the family home to avoid their nagging. Luckily a friend of his has obtained a quaestorship (high financial office) in Spain and is letting Aelianus house-sit his comfortable town house in the city. This includes most of his slaves, though Aelianus has brought his personal manservant slave Marcus from his parents’ house and his friend has recently recalled his superb cook to serve in his new Spanish residence. It’s this latter that has brought Aelianus to the slave market in Ostia in search of a replacement.
* * * * *
It was her ginger hair that first caught his attention. She looked scared, ill and miserable standing there in line on a slave dealer’s platform in Ostia, Rome’s great port. He, Lucius Tadius Aelianus, had made the trip here to find a cook, and in that he’d succeeded, having selected a portly Gallic woman who came with good references from her previous owner. He didn’t need another slave, but there was something about this short, thin girl on the trader’s stand that made him stop on his way back to the stables where he’d left his hired horses; stop and have another look.
He wandered over to the roped-off area where the slaves were displayed. The slave dealer recognised the hint of interest in his gaze and rushed over to greet him smarmily.
“Good day, Sir. Can I interest you in any of my merchandise? I have everything you could want here. Strong Germans taken in battle to work the fields, boys to run errands, educated Greeks and Egyptians to keep your records, cooks, cleaners, Spanish dancing girls to show off at your dinner parties, or to entertain you privately…” He leered and winked at this last.
Aelianus looked over them all, trying not to show particular interest in any. When he reached the girl with the wavy red hair he casually asked “Where’s she from, then?”
The slave trader looked surprised that he’d asked about such a miserable specimen. “Ah, a discerning gentleman, I see, with an eye for beauty! She’s from Dacia, brought back by our gallant legions from the Emperor’s conquests there.”
“A bit seasick from the voyage, but she’ll soon get over that,” he added, lying through his teeth. In fact he’d had the girl a week and her chill was deepening into a fever. Let her become someone else’s problem before he had a corpse on his hands.
Aelianus wasn’t sure why his heart went out to the poor, ill girl. As a magistrate he’d seen plenty of suffering, and indeed one could hardly live in Rome without seeing unfortunates at every turn. So why should he be drawn to this wretch?
The slave trader pulled her down off the platform and out of his compound to him. Aelianus walked around her, studying her. She was slender, emaciated even - he assumed she'd lost a lot of weight on the way here. But she looked like she would fill out nicely with a few months of decent food. She had the breasts of a curvier woman - breasts which were barely covered by the revealing tunic the slaver had dressed her in to attract attention from the more lecherous clientele. Her legs were straight, with no sign of rickets, though her skin was pallid. What really caught his attention, though were her eyes. Close up now, he could see that one was blue and the other green. How unusual!
Between those curious eyes and her ginger hair he spotted tiny drops of sweat beading her forehead. He’d be mad to take her home in case she was infectious, but he felt compelled to do so anyway.
“800 denarii,” he offered. The trader didn’t need to feign astonishment as this was less than half the normal minimum price for a female slave. He countered with 3000 denarii, but Aelianus was having none of that.
“Come on, man,” he chided. “She’s ill and we both know it. I’ll give you 1000 denarii and not a sestertius more.”
They haggled over the girl right in front of her, as if she wasn’t there, though she could probably barely follow their conservation anyway as she presumably spoke very little Latin. They eventually settled on 1200 denarii and Aelianus went over to the trader’s trestle table to sign the papers.
He decided to take the girl with him immediately. He’d asked for the cook to be delivered to his house, so he could ride back to Rome with his manservant slave Marcus, on the two horses they’d hired, but he wanted this girl resting as soon as possible and seen by a physician if necessary. He left her with Marcus whilst he wandered the marketplaces looking for suitable transport. Eventually he found a carter who was taking a load of hay into Rome who would be willing to let the girl rest on the hay and carry her to the city gates for a few brass sestertii. He and Marcus could ride alongside. Carts not being allowed into the city until after dark, he’d get her a litter from there.
The arrangements made, he returned to the slave market and the three of them made their way to the stables, Marcus supporting the girl with an arm around her shoulders.