![]() Yet with blood and iron, guile and gold, all invaders had been turned back. Rome’s boundaries had been tested countless times by Celt and German, Persian and Scythian. Our Roman Empire endured as it had endured for a thousand years, extending from the cold moors of Britannia to the blistering sands of Arabia, and from the headwaters of the Euphrates River to the Atlantic surf of North Africa. Three hundred and seventy-six years after the birth of Our Savior, the world was still one. Onegesh: A Roman-born lieutenant of Attila Theodosius II: Emperor of the Eastern Roman EmpireĪnianus: Bishop and (when it suits him) hermitĮdeco: Uncle of Skilla and warlord of AttilaĮudoxius: A Greek doctor who is an envoy of Attila Valentinian III: Emperor of the Western Roman Empire ![]() Jonas Alabanda: A young Roman envoy and scribe They gave me a children’s book recounting the Battle of Chalons and sparked a lifelong curiosity. ![]() To my mother, and in memory of my father. ![]()
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