Flavia Gemina, 10, is an amateur detective. She lives in the Roman
port of Ostia with her father Marcus Flavius Geminus, her ex-slave-girl Nubia,
her tutor Aristo, two slaves and two dogs. (This interview was given in
November AD 79)
My dog Scuto wakes me at
sunrise. He presses his cold nose into my face and I open my eyes to see his
face looming in a big, panting grin. If I've been up late the night before, I
roll over and go back to sleep. Scuto knows it's no good trying to wake me if
I'm tired, so he goes downstairs to help our cook Alma prepare breakfast. She
goes out to buy bread at cockcrow and is usually back by dawn.
a lyre |
Presently I hear music - the
sound of flute and lyre. Nubia usually practises with my tutor Aristo first
thing in the morning. Nubia's about 11 - a little older than I am. She used to
be my slave-girl but she saved my life so many times that finally I set her
free. She still lives with us though. Now she's like my dark-skinned sister. If
Scuto doesn't get me up, the music does.
Nubia coifs Flavia |
Nubia likes clothes and
jewellery but I'm not too bothered about all that. I lace up my sandals and
slip on any old tunic, a short one in summer and a long one in winter. Then I
go downstairs. Our house has a secret garden inside: nobody on the street can
see it. In the center is a fountain. I splash some water on my face and have a
drink. Then I use the latrine. This month it's my job to empty the latrine
bucket every morning - but that's another story.
We all eat breakfast whenever
we come downstairs: usually a warm poppy-seed roll and a piece of cheese in
summer and a hot poculum made of spiced wine mixed with milk in winter.
a lararium or shrine |
By the time I appear, pater
is usually up and at work in his study, preparing for the day ahead. He calls
the whole household together into the atrium and we watch him make the daily
offering at the household shrine. It might be a honey-cake, or a piece of
fruit, or a hyacinth-scented candle. Just something to keep the household gods
happy. My father didn't used to be so pious... but that's another story.
After morning prayers, pater
goes out: to the barber first and then to call on his patron. Then he goes to
the harbour to work on his ship and do whatever a captain does when he's not on
a voyage. Of course he's home at the moment because the sailing season is over;
it won't begin again until late April.
Jonathan and his sister Miriam |
After pater leaves, about an
hour past dawn, Jonathan and Lupus come over for lessons. Jonathan is my
next-door-neighbour. He's Jewish. We became friends after he saved me from some
wild dogs... But that's another story. I like Jonathan because he makes me
laugh.
Lupus is a boy we discovered once in the necropolis outside the town walls. He has no tongue and can't speak. He's a bit wild but very clever. He learned to read in less than a month and now he can write, too. We think he's about eight or nine years old.
Lupus is a boy we discovered once in the necropolis outside the town walls. He has no tongue and can't speak. He's a bit wild but very clever. He learned to read in less than a month and now he can write, too. We think he's about eight or nine years old.
Lupus' name means "wolf" in Latin |
Lupus lives with Jonathan at
the moment and they have lessons with me and Nubia. Jonathan's father Mordecai
and my father came to some arrangement. I think Mordecai gives us free medical
care in return: he's an excellent doctor.
Jonathan's older sister Miriam used to attend lessons with us, but now
she's preparing to get married. She's fourteen and the most beautiful woman
I've ever seen.
Aristo the Greek tutor |
Aristo is a brilliant tutor.
He's young and Greek and very handsome. (When I was younger I wanted to marry
him, but now I'm too mature for such childish ideas.) He teaches us Latin
literature, Greek language, mythology, philosophy and maths. Ugh! I hate maths.
I hate it almost as much as I hate emptying the latrine bucket.
Lessons last until noon, when
the gongs announce the opening of the public baths. Then we have a light lunch
of bread and cheese and olives. Afterwards the adults take a siesta or go to
the baths. That's usually when we conduct our investigations. But during the
winter months - like now - Nubia likes to go to the baths, too. She says the
only time she feels warm is in the hot, dry laconicum or the steamy sudatorium.
dining Roman style |
Pater usually goes out to
dinner about four hours past noon. He dines with his patron or one of his
friends. In that case, Nubia and I have something light with Alma and Caudex.
(Caudex is our door-slave and sometimes my bodyguard.) Occasionally pater entertains
at home and sometimes we are invited. We never recline - well, only at the
Saturnalia. We sit at a table in the middle of the triclinium while pater and
his friends recline on the three couches around us.
reading by lamplight |
We go to bed at sunset, or
shortly after, which is nice in the summer but very frustrating in the winter.
Alma says it's bad for my eyes, but sometimes I smuggle a scroll up to my
bedroom and read by the light of my little clay oil-lamp. My favourite scroll
at the moment is one by Apollodorus. He tells lots of Greek myths. I finally
fall asleep and dream that I'm going on a quest with Jason or helping Hercules
complete his tasks. My dreams are always in colour and they are very exciting.
But they are never as exciting as my real life!
This interview is an excerpt from The Roman Mysteries Treasury, a glossy book based on the TV series based on my 17 book series The Roman Mysteries, which covers almost every imaginable aspect of life in Italy at the time of Mount Vesuvius's eruption. The Treasury is now out of print but you can still get the books and the TV series on DVD. Please mention The Roman Mysteries if quoting and acknowledge photos © LEG Ltd 2007. Thanks!
This interview is an excerpt from The Roman Mysteries Treasury, a glossy book based on the TV series based on my 17 book series The Roman Mysteries, which covers almost every imaginable aspect of life in Italy at the time of Mount Vesuvius's eruption. The Treasury is now out of print but you can still get the books and the TV series on DVD. Please mention The Roman Mysteries if quoting and acknowledge photos © LEG Ltd 2007. Thanks!
It's fascinating how little has really changed in the last 2000 years. Things like having fresh water within the house or even having latrines sounds normal to us nowadays and to think all that was available in Roman times too! Everything works automatically now but I think it is the inventions Romans made that really counts.
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