Arminius : the limits of empire / Robert Fabbri.

By: Fabbri, Robert [author.]Material type: TextTextSeries: Fabbri, Robert. Vespasian series ; 8.Publisher: London : Corvus, 2017Copyright date: ©2017Description: 382 pages : map ; 24 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781782397038; 9781782397007Other title: Limits of empireSubject(s): Arminius, Prince of the Cherusci -- Fiction | Teutoburger Wald, Battle of, Germany, 9 A.D -- Fiction | Betrayal -- Fiction | Massacres -- Fiction | Roman provinces -- Germany -- FictionGenre/Form: Biographical fiction. | Historical fiction. DDC classification: 823.92 Summary: A.D. 9: In the depths of the Teutoburg Wald, in a landscape riven by ravines, darkened by ancient oak and bisected by fast-flowing streams, Arminius of the Cherusci led a confederation of six Germanic tribes in the annihilation of three Roman legions. Deep in the forest, almost twenty thousand men were massacred without mercy; fewer than two hundred of them ever made it back across the Rhine. To Rome's shame, three sacred Eagles were lost that day. But Arminius wasn't brought up in Germania Magna, he had been raised as a Roman. This is the story of how Arminius came to turn his back on the people who raised him and went on to commit a betrayal so great and so deep, it echoed through the ages.
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F FAB (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Checked out 01/05/2024 31111067252427

A.D. 9: In the depths of the Teutoburg Wald, in a landscape riven by ravines, darkened by ancient oak and bisected by fast-flowing streams, Arminius of the Cherusci led a confederation of six Germanic tribes in the annihilation of three Roman legions. Deep in the forest, almost twenty thousand men were massacred without mercy; fewer than two hundred of them ever made it back across the Rhine. To Rome's shame, three sacred Eagles were lost that day. But Arminius wasn't brought up in Germania Magna, he had been raised as a Roman. This is the story of how Arminius came to turn his back on the people who raised him and went on to commit a betrayal so great and so deep, it echoed through the ages.

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