Nicomedia, 111 AD:
He bounded through the winding alleys and crowded streets of the city, his pursuers close behind. As a runaway slave, Callidromus knew that capture would mean chains, torture - and likely worse. If he could only make it to the statue of the emperor Trajan...
2) Reaching the refuge of the imperial statue narrowly ahead of his hunters, Callidromus gripped the emperor's bronze foot and called out breathlessly to the crowds all around; to witness that here he had the right of asylum - the right to demand his remarkable story be heard...
3) A Roman soldier named Appuleius, garrisoned in Nicomedia, was soon drawn to the disturbance at the imperial statue. Appuleius heard the pleas of the runaway, and agreed to escort Callidromus to the city magistrates to have his case fully considered...
4) Callidromus told the magistrates his extraordinary tale: of being seized by the foe, of his slavery and redemption, of hairbreadth escapes, and journeys across vast deserts and mountains. Stunned by the story, the magistrates decided it must be heard by the imperial governor..
5) Callidromus was soon brought before the provincial governor of Bithynia and Pontus, Gaius Plinius Secundus - or as he is more commonly known, Pliny the Younger. Once more he recounted his astonishing narrative. The runaway claimed that years before he had been the slave of...
6) ..the Roman senator, consul and general, Manius Laberius Maximus. In 101, Callidromus had gone with his master to the frontlines of Trajan's Dacian War. At some point during the conflict, Callidromus was taken prisoner by the Sarmatian general Susagus and handed over to..
7) ..the Dacian king, Decebalus. As part of his efforts to forge alliances with other enemies of Rome, Decebalus gave his Roman slave Callidromus as a diplomatic gift to the Parthian king, Pacorus II (reigned 78-110 AD). Callidromus was therefore sent 1,800 miles from..
8) ..the court of Decebalus at Sarmizegetusa (in modern Romania), all the way to the palace of Pacorus at Hecatompylos (Qumis, Iran). There Callidromus served the Persian king for many years, observing the inner workings of Rome's great nemesis in the East, until one day...
9) ..he made good his escape. Concealing his identity, Callidromus set out on an epic return journey west through hostile territory. After traversing over 1,000 miles across the Persian empire and the entirety of Anatolia, Callidromus eventually came to the city of Nicomedia..
10) In Nicomedia, Callidromus fell into the service of two bakers, Maximus and Dionysius - though it is not clear whether he was their slave or whether he was employed by them having concealed his slave status. Similarly, we are not told why it was that Callidromus eventually...
11) ..fled from them and claimed the right of asylum at the statue of Trajan. It may be that the bakers were particularly cruel masters, prompting Callidromus to escape and finally tell his story - or perhaps the two bakers discovered that their employee was of slave status.
12) Incidentally, having twice escaped his masters, the irony of the name Callidromus might not have gone unnoticed: deriving from 'calli' meaning 'fine' or 'beautiful', and 'dromus' meaning 'runner' (like the 'dromedary' camel). Callidromus was indeed a 'fine runner'..
13) Pliny asked the runaway if he had any evidence that might prove his fantastical story. Callidromus claimed that he had owned a valuable ring bearing the portrait of Pacorus, given to those that served the Parthian king - but it had recently been stolen from him in Nicomedia..
14) Pliny sent men out into the city to try and track down the ring. In the meantime, Callidromus gave the governor a rare mineral that he carried, which could only have come from a Parthian mine. Contemplating the exotic stone in hand, Pliny made the decision to write to..
15) ..the emperor Trajan. In one of over sixty preserved letters to the ruler in Rome, Pliny recounted the story of Callidromus and communicated his intentions to send the runaway to the emperor in due course. For now he enclosed the Parthian stone in the letter and...
16) ..sealed it with his own signet which took the form of a four-horse chariot. There was good reason for the account of Callidromus to be treated with such urgency: with his Dacian Wars successfully concluded, Trajan now looked to resolve the 'eastern question' of Parthia...
17) If Callidromus had truly spent the better part of the last decade as a slave in the Parthian palace, then the intelligence he may be able to offer Trajan as he prepared an all-out offensive against the Parthian empire could be immensely valuable.
18) Tragically, no reply from Trajan on the matter has been preserved in the letters of Pliny so we are left to imagine what happened to Callidromus. I like to think that he was sent on to Rome, welcomed by Trajan, and perhaps granted freedom in return for his years of hardship..
19) One thing we do know is that within two years, Trajan had formally decided to go to war with Parthia. In an unstoppable lightning offensive, Trajan overran the Parthian capital Ctesiphon in 116 and soon after, reached the distant shores of the Persian Gulf. There he watched..
20) ..the trade ships setting sail on the calm, azure waters, bound for the rich realm known as India. It would be the furthest east that Rome would ever venture. Reluctantly accepting the limits of the world, Trajan and his entourage soon turned about and..
21) ..began the long return journey to Rome. Maybe, just maybe, Callidromus was among them.
(The story of the runaway slave Callidromus is taken from the Letters of Pliny the Younger to the Emperor Trajan, Letter 74)
1) Let's travel in time through this fascinating Roman denarius added to my collection, to the sacred grove of the goddess Diana on the mysterious shores of Lake Nemi – and into one of the most bloody and undeniably cinematic rites of the ancient world...
2) Situated in the Alban Hills south of Rome, Lago di Nemi is a circular crater lake nestled within the caldera of an extinct ancient volcano. The sheltered and tranquil body of water, which perfectly reflected the moon, came to be known by the Romans as 'Diana's Mirror'..
3) Within a sacred grove on the northern shore of the lake stood the temple sanctuary of Diana Nemorensis or 'Diana of the Wood' constructed around 300 BC, though the cult of Diana of Nemi is thought to have its origins as far back as the 6th century BC..
1) This bronze diploma was awarded to Marcus Surus Garasenus on 5th April 71 AD, recognising his completion of 26 years' service as an auxiliary marine in the Roman naval fleet based at Misenum. The prized diploma granted full Roman citizenship to Marcus, his wife and his heirs..
2) Marcus Surus originally came from the Roman province of Syria, leaving his home in what is today Jerash, Jordan to join the Roman navy during the reign of Claudius in 46 AD...
3) Marking completion of his stipulation 26 years of service, this diploma not only grants him honourable discharge and full Roman citizenship, but also records that 'Surus, son of Dama, from Jerash' will now be known by his Romanised name, Marcus Surus Garasenus.
1) An astounding survival from the Roman world. This silver bust of the emperor Galba is an incredibly rare example of an imperial imago, a reverential portrait of the reigning emperor mounted on a pole and carried into battle as a military standard...
2) The imago of the emperor was carried on campaign by a special standard-bearer known as the imaginifer. These precious metal busts ensured the symbolic presence of the emperor on the battlefield, and in the absence of the real ruler, could be used as...
3) ..objects of veneration in the camp, foci for oaths of fidelity to the emperor, as well as oaths of submission from a defeated enemy. This imago of Galba is of particular historical interest; after he had reigned for six months in the wake of Nero's suicide...
1) The fascinating Roman grave memorial of Sextus Vettius Geminus, veteran of the Third Augustan Legion based at Lambaesis, Algeria. The stele with its striking portrait is compelling in its own right – but is made even more so by an intriguing added function that it served...
2) Sextus Vettius Geminus lived sixty years and was a veteran of Legio III Augusta, in which he served a crucial role as signifer or standard-bearer. The old, bearded veteran is shown wearing his toga in a powerful frontal portrait that extends beyond the limits of its frame..
3) The memorial to Vettius Geminus was probably set up by his wife Licinia Muciana and a son also called Vettius, whose names are both damaged in the inscription. It is when we look at the top of the gravestone that we see something very surprising...
1) This incredible Roman bronze victory trophy is a unique survival from the ancient world, unearthed in the forum of Hippo Regius in Algeria where it once stood in celebration of a Roman military triumph...
2) The tropaeum, standing eight feet tall and weighing over a quarter of a ton, is sculpted in emulation of temporary trophies erected near the site of a victorious battle, taking the form of a tree trunk decorated with captured armour and weapons...
3) The cast bronze trophy shows a general's cuirass armour draped in a cloak, with precisely sculpted leather pteruges strips that provided some defence at the hips. Captured enemy weapons may have also been fixed to monument in ancient times...
1) The massive Trier Gold Hoard: 2,516 Roman aurei coins weighing 18.5 kg, unearthed in 1993 in the cellar of a Roman administrative building of ancient Augusta Treverorum. The hoard was deposited during the Antonine Plague or 'Plague of Galen' in the late 2nd century AD..
2) The gold hoard was unearthed by chance during the excavation of an underground parking garage in Trier. Sadly, hundreds of coins were stolen before the hoard could be secured by authorities, but an estimated 95% was preserved – the largest surviving Roman imperial gold hoard.
3) Study has shown the Trier hoard was first deposited in 167 AD at the height of the Antonine Plague: a catastrophic pandemic that may have killed upwards of 10 million people across the Roman Empire including, in all likelihood, the Roman emperor Lucius Verus..