Gordianus the Finder

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gordianus the Finder is the fictional protagonist of Steven Saylor's Roma Sub Rosa series of mystery novels set in Republican Rome.

Gordianus interacts with non-fictional citizens including Sulla, Cicero, Marcus Crassus, Catullus, Pompey, Julius Caesar, Quintus Sertorius, and Marc Antony.

The first Gordianus novel, Roman Blood, is based on an actual murder trial in which Marcus Tullius Cicero defended Sextus Roscius against the charge of parricide. The crime has a unique punishment, which Saylor describes in gruesome detail.

For an ancient Roman, Gordianus has an unconventional family. His wife, Bethesda, was his former Egyptian concubine, whom he had purchased as a slave. His eldest adopted son Eco was a former mute who followed in his father's footsteps as an investigator; another adopted son Meto estranged himself from his father by becoming a soldier; while the youngest adopted son, Rupa was the brother of Cassandra, an adulterous love of Gordianus. The only child of his blood is his daughter Diana, an intellectual and headstrong young woman.

It is suspected that he may have died soon after his wife did, while in Egypt, by drowning in the Nile (The Judgement of Caesar). However, Saylor's website indicates that there may be more novels in the series coming, and that Gordianus may be around to witness the death of Caesar.

[edit] External links