
AURELIAN; - OR, - Rome in the Third Century - IN LETTERS OF LUCIUS M. PISO, FROM ROME, TO FAUSTA, THE DAUGHTER OF GRACCHUS, AT PALMYRA. - BY - WILLIAM WARE, - AUTHOR OF "ZENOBIA," "JULIAN," ETC. - FIFTH EDITION. TWO VOLUMES COMPLETE IN ONE. - VOL. I.
NOTICE.
AURELIAN.
LETTER I. - FROM PISO TO FAUSTA.
LETTER II. - FROM PISO TO FAUSTA.
LETTER III. - FROM PISO TO FAUSTA.
LETTER IV. - FROM PISO TO FAUSTA.
LETTER V. - FROM PISO TO FAUSTA.
LETTER VI. - FROM PISO TO FAUSTA.
LETTER VII. - FROM PISO TO FAUSTA.
Through a series of carefully selected letters penned by the Roman senator Lucius Manlius Piso, this work opens a window onto the turbulent third‑century empire. The narrator, Nicomachus—once a devoted servant of the famed queen of Palmyra—arranges the correspondence to illuminate Piso’s character, his family ties, and the broader political currents that roiled Rome and its eastern provinces. Interwoven with his own reflections, the letters reveal the clash of cultures, the rise of new religious ideas, and the personal dilemmas faced by those caught between tradition and change.
The collection also offers a vivid portrait of an age marked by imperial ambition, military upheaval, and the early persecution of Christians under emperors such as Aurelian. Readers will hear the voices of senators, diplomats, and ordinary citizens as they grapple with loyalty, faith, and survival. By presenting these authentic missives alongside a modest narrative thread, the book invites listeners to experience the complexity of a world on the brink of transformation.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (804K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Julia Miller, Janet Blenkinship and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2007-06-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1797–1852
A Unitarian minister turned novelist, he brought the ancient world to life in stories that helped shape early American historical fiction. His best-known books, including Zenobia and Aurelian, mix classical settings with moral and religious reflection.
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