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{{Short description|Series of children's books by Caroline Lawrence}} |
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{{About|the book series|the TV series|Roman Mysteries (TV series)}} |
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⚫ | '''The Roman Mysteries''' is a series of [[historical novel]]s for children by [[Caroline Lawrence]]. The first book, ''[[The Thieves of Ostia]]'', was published in 2001, finishing with The Man from |
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{{more sources|date=July 2020}} |
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{{italic title}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2020}} |
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{{Infobox book series |
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| image = The Thieves of Ostia cover.jpg |
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| caption = Book 1 in the series |
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| books = [[The Thieves of Ostia]]<br />[[The Secrets of Vesuvius]]<br />[[The Pirates of Pompeii]]<br />[[The Assassins of Rome]]<br />[[The Dolphins of Laurentum]]<br />[[The Twelve Tasks of Flavia Gemina]]<br />[[The Enemies of Jupiter]]<br />[[The Gladiators from Capua]]<br />[[The Colossus of Rhodes (novel)|The Colossus of Rhodes]]<br />[[The Fugitive from Corinth]]<br />[[The Sirens of Surrentum]]<br />[[The Charioteer of Delphi]]<br />[[The Slave-girl from Jerusalem]]<br />[[The Beggar of Volubilis]]<br />[[The Scribes from Alexandria]]<br />[[The Prophet from Ephesus]]<br />[[The Man from Pomegranate Street]] |
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| author = [[Caroline Lawrence]] |
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| illustrator = Fred van Deelen, Peter Sutton, Richard Carr |
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| country = United Kingdom |
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| genre = [[Historical novels|Historical]] |
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| publisher = [[Orion Publishing Group|Orion]] |
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| pub_date = |
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| media_type = Print (hardback & paperback) |
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}} |
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⚫ | '''''The Roman Mysteries''''' is a series of [[historical novel]]s for children by [[Caroline Lawrence]]. The first book, ''[[The Thieves of Ostia]]'', was published in 2001, finishing with ''[[The Man from Pomegranate Street]]'', published in 2009, and totaling 17 novels, plus a number of "mini-mysteries", spinoffs, and companion titles. |
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The books take place |
The books take place during the ancient [[Roman Empire]] during the reign of the Emperor [[Titus]]. They detail the adventures of four children who solve mysteries and have adventures in [[Ostia Antica]], Rome, Greece, and beyond: Flavia, a rich Roman girl who lives in Ostia; Nubia, a freed slave girl from Africa; Jonathan, a rich [[Jewish]] boy; and Lupus, an orphaned [[muteness|mute]] beggar boy. |
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==Characters== |
==Characters== |
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===The four detectives=== |
===The four detectives=== |
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* ''' |
* '''Flavia Gemina''': A wealthy Roman girl, daughter of a sea captain, Marcus Flavius Geminus |
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* ''' |
* '''Jonathan ben Mordecai''': A kind but pessimistic Jewish/Christian boy |
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* '''Nubia''': An African girl, former slave of Flavia, good with animals |
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* '''Jonathan ben Mordecai''': A kind but pessimistic Jewish boy. |
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* '''Lupus''': A mute beggar boy |
* '''Lupus''': A mute beggar boy with a tragic past |
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===Other characters=== |
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* '''Marcus Flavius Geminus''': Flavia's father, a sea captain |
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* '''Mordecai''': Jonathan's father, a doctor |
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* '''Miriam bat Mordecai''': Jonathan's older sister |
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* '''Aristo''': Greek tutor of the children |
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===Characters based on historical persons=== |
===Characters based on historical persons=== |
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* [[Pliny the Younger]], nephew of the Elder |
* [[Pliny the Younger]], nephew of the Elder |
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* [[Titus]], Emperor of Rome |
* [[Titus]], Emperor of Rome |
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* [[Berenice (daughter of Herod Agrippa)|Berenice of Cilicia]], Titus' exiled Jewish mistress |
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* [[Domitian]], |
* [[Domitian]], Titus' younger brother |
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* [[Suetonius|Gaius Suetonius Tranquillus]], the famous historian, who appears as a young man initially betrothed to Flavia. |
* [[Suetonius|Gaius Suetonius Tranquillus]], the famous historian, who appears as a young man initially betrothed to Flavia. |
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* [[Gaius Valerius Flaccus]], the poet, who appears in several novels as a teenaged man, and a love interest of Flavia's. |
* [[Valerius Flaccus (poet)|Gaius Valerius Flaccus]], the poet, who appears in several novels as a teenaged man, and a love interest of Flavia's. |
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* [[Titus Flavius Josephus]], famous Jewish historian. |
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* [[Julia Flavia]], Titus' daughter. |
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==Novels== |
==Novels== |
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# '' |
# ''The Thieves of Ostia'' (2001) |
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# '' |
# ''The Secrets of Vesuvius'' (2001) |
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# '' |
# ''The Pirates of Pompeii'' (2002) |
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# '' |
# ''The Assassins of Rome'' (2002) |
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# '' |
# ''The Dolphins of Laurentum'' (2003) |
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# '' |
# ''The Twelve Tasks of Flavia Gemina'' (2003) |
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# '' |
# ''The Enemies of Jupiter'' (2003) |
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# '' |
# ''The Gladiators from Capua'' (2004) |
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# '' |
# ''The Colossus of Rhodes'' (2005) |
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# '' |
# ''The Fugitive from Corinth'' (2005) |
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# '' |
# ''The Sirens of Surrentum'' (2006) |
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# '' |
# ''The Charioteer of Delphi'' (2006) |
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# '' |
# ''The Slave-girl from Jerusalem'' (2007) |
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# '' |
# ''The Beggar of Volubilis'' (2008) |
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# '' |
# ''The Scribes from Alexandria'' (2008) |
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# '' |
# ''The Prophet from Ephesus'' (2009) |
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# '' |
# ''The Man from Pomegranate Street'' (2009) |
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== |
==Omnibus== |
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#The Roman Mysteries Omnibus I: The Thieves of Ostia, the Secrets of Vesuvius and the Pirates of Pompeii |
#''The Roman Mysteries'' Omnibus I: The Thieves of Ostia, the Secrets of Vesuvius and the Pirates of Pompeii. |
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#The Roman Mysteries Omnibus II: The Assassins of Rome, the Dolphins of Laurentum, the Twelve Tasks of Flavia Gemina. |
#''The Roman Mysteries'' Omnibus II: The Assassins of Rome, the Dolphins of Laurentum, the Twelve Tasks of Flavia Gemina. |
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#''The Roman Mysteries'' Omnibus III: The Enemies of Jupiter, the Gladiators from Capua, the Colossus of Rhodes. |
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==Mini-mysteries== |
==Mini-mysteries== |
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# ''Bread and Circuses'' (short story published in 2003 in ''The Mammoth Book of Roman Whodunits''); re-published as a novella, titled ''[[The Code of Romulus]]'' for [[World Book Day]] in April 2007) |
# ''Bread and Circuses'' (short story published in 2003 in ''The Mammoth Book of Roman Whodunits''); re-published in a shorter version as a novella, titled ''[[The Code of Romulus]]'' for [[World Book Day]] in April 2007) |
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# '' |
# ''Trimalchio's Feast and other mini-mysteries'' (2007) |
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# '' |
# ''The Legionary from Londinium and other mini-mysteries'' (2010) |
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==Companion books== |
==Companion books== |
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# ''From Ostia to Alexandria with Flavia Gemina: Travels with Flavia Gemina'' (2008) |
# ''From Ostia to Alexandria with Flavia Gemina: Travels with Flavia Gemina'' (2008) |
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==Sequel |
==Sequel trilogy== |
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In 2008 a sequel trilogy for young adults was proposed, with the main characters being Jonathan's 14-year-old orphaned twin nephews. The stories would have been partly set in Roman Britain. The first book was to be published in March 2010. The working title for the trilogy was the Flavian Trilogy, with individual stories "Brothers of Jackals", "Companion of Owls" and "Prey of Lions". On her blog and website, Caroline Lawrence has said the content was deemed "too edgy" for the Roman Mysteries brand and as a result has been put on hold indefinitely.{{fact|date=July 2020}} |
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In April 2010, author Caroline Lawrence announced that she is planning a spinoff for younger readers. The main character will be Threptus, an 8-year-old Ostian beggar boy who makes appearances in the final Roman Mystery, ''[[The Man from Pomegranate Street]]'' and the final short story in ''The Legionary from Londinium and other mini-mysteries''.{{fact|date=July 2020}} |
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A sequel trilogy will be published, and the main characters will be Jonathan's twin nephews. The stories will be set in Roman Britain. The first book will be published in March 2010. The Trilogy is going to be called the Flavian Trilogy. The stories will be called The Brothers of Jackels, the Companion of Owls and the Prey of Lions |
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==Special features== |
==Special features== |
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Each of the novels has at least one map of the area covered in the story, sometimes also plans or diagrams; these are by Richard Russell Lawrence. The chapters are called [[scrolls]], after the rolls of [[papyrus]] which were Roman 'books', and are numbered with Roman numerals. The [[glossary]] explaining Roman terms is called "Aristo's Scroll", after Flavia's tutor, and the author's note, which separates fact from fiction, is called "The Last Scroll". |
Each of the novels has at least one map of the area covered in the story, sometimes also plans or diagrams; these are by Richard Russell Lawrence. The chapters are called [[scrolls]], after the rolls of [[papyrus]] which were Roman 'books', and are numbered with [[Roman numerals]]. The [[glossary]] explaining Roman terms is called "Aristo's Scroll", after Flavia's tutor, and the author's note, which separates fact from fiction, is called "The Last Scroll". |
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==TV series== |
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{{ |
{{Main|Roman Mysteries (TV series)}} |
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The [[BBC]] |
The [[BBC]] produced a television series based on the books, entitled ''Roman Mysteries''. The first season was broadcast in 2007, the second season in 2008.<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/cbbc/romanmysteries/ Roman Mysteries BBC website]</ref> |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{ |
{{Reflist}} |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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*[http://www.romanmysteries.com Official Roman Mysteries website] |
*[http://www.romanmysteries.com Official ''Roman Mysteries'' website] |
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*[http://romanmysteries.wikispaces.com/ Roman Mysteries wiki site] |
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*[http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Literature/TheRomanMysteries TV Tropes ''The Roman Mysteries'' page] |
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{{The Roman Mysteries}} |
{{The Roman Mysteries}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Roman Mysteries, The}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Roman Mysteries, The}} |
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[[Category:The Roman Mysteries| ]] |
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<!--Categories--> |
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[[Category:Lagardère SCA franchises]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Novels set in ancient Rome]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Cultural depictions of Domitian]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Historical mystery novels]] |
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[[Category:Cultural depictions of Titus]] |
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[[ca:Misteris Romans]] |
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[[es:Misterios romanos]] |
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[[fr:Les Mystères romains]] |
Latest revision as of 20:29, 30 January 2024
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2020) |
The Thieves of Ostia The Secrets of Vesuvius The Pirates of Pompeii The Assassins of Rome The Dolphins of Laurentum The Twelve Tasks of Flavia Gemina The Enemies of Jupiter The Gladiators from Capua The Colossus of Rhodes The Fugitive from Corinth The Sirens of Surrentum The Charioteer of Delphi The Slave-girl from Jerusalem The Beggar of Volubilis The Scribes from Alexandria The Prophet from Ephesus The Man from Pomegranate Street | |
Author | Caroline Lawrence |
---|---|
Illustrator | Fred van Deelen, Peter Sutton, Richard Carr |
Country | United Kingdom |
Genre | Historical |
Publisher | Orion |
Media type | Print (hardback & paperback) |
The Roman Mysteries is a series of historical novels for children by Caroline Lawrence. The first book, The Thieves of Ostia, was published in 2001, finishing with The Man from Pomegranate Street, published in 2009, and totaling 17 novels, plus a number of "mini-mysteries", spinoffs, and companion titles.
The books take place during the ancient Roman Empire during the reign of the Emperor Titus. They detail the adventures of four children who solve mysteries and have adventures in Ostia Antica, Rome, Greece, and beyond: Flavia, a rich Roman girl who lives in Ostia; Nubia, a freed slave girl from Africa; Jonathan, a rich Jewish boy; and Lupus, an orphaned mute beggar boy.
Characters
[edit]The four detectives
[edit]- Flavia Gemina: A wealthy Roman girl, daughter of a sea captain, Marcus Flavius Geminus
- Jonathan ben Mordecai: A kind but pessimistic Jewish/Christian boy
- Nubia: An African girl, former slave of Flavia, good with animals
- Lupus: A mute beggar boy with a tragic past
Other characters
[edit]- Marcus Flavius Geminus: Flavia's father, a sea captain
- Mordecai: Jonathan's father, a doctor
- Miriam bat Mordecai: Jonathan's older sister
- Aristo: Greek tutor of the children
Characters based on historical persons
[edit]- Pliny the Elder, admiral of the Misenum fleet and an accomplished natural historian.
- Pliny the Younger, nephew of the Elder
- Titus, Emperor of Rome
- Berenice of Cilicia, Titus' exiled Jewish mistress
- Domitian, Titus' younger brother
- Gaius Suetonius Tranquillus, the famous historian, who appears as a young man initially betrothed to Flavia.
- Gaius Valerius Flaccus, the poet, who appears in several novels as a teenaged man, and a love interest of Flavia's.
- Titus Flavius Josephus, famous Jewish historian.
- Julia Flavia, Titus' daughter.
Novels
[edit]- The Thieves of Ostia (2001)
- The Secrets of Vesuvius (2001)
- The Pirates of Pompeii (2002)
- The Assassins of Rome (2002)
- The Dolphins of Laurentum (2003)
- The Twelve Tasks of Flavia Gemina (2003)
- The Enemies of Jupiter (2003)
- The Gladiators from Capua (2004)
- The Colossus of Rhodes (2005)
- The Fugitive from Corinth (2005)
- The Sirens of Surrentum (2006)
- The Charioteer of Delphi (2006)
- The Slave-girl from Jerusalem (2007)
- The Beggar of Volubilis (2008)
- The Scribes from Alexandria (2008)
- The Prophet from Ephesus (2009)
- The Man from Pomegranate Street (2009)
Omnibus
[edit]- The Roman Mysteries Omnibus I: The Thieves of Ostia, the Secrets of Vesuvius and the Pirates of Pompeii.
- The Roman Mysteries Omnibus II: The Assassins of Rome, the Dolphins of Laurentum, the Twelve Tasks of Flavia Gemina.
- The Roman Mysteries Omnibus III: The Enemies of Jupiter, the Gladiators from Capua, the Colossus of Rhodes.
Mini-mysteries
[edit]- Bread and Circuses (short story published in 2003 in The Mammoth Book of Roman Whodunits); re-published in a shorter version as a novella, titled The Code of Romulus for World Book Day in April 2007)
- Trimalchio's Feast and other mini-mysteries (2007)
- The Legionary from Londinium and other mini-mysteries (2010)
Companion books
[edit]- The First Roman Mysteries Quiz Book
- The Second Roman Mysteries Quiz Book
- The Roman Mysteries Treasury (2007)
- From Ostia to Alexandria with Flavia Gemina: Travels with Flavia Gemina (2008)
Sequel trilogy
[edit]In 2008 a sequel trilogy for young adults was proposed, with the main characters being Jonathan's 14-year-old orphaned twin nephews. The stories would have been partly set in Roman Britain. The first book was to be published in March 2010. The working title for the trilogy was the Flavian Trilogy, with individual stories "Brothers of Jackals", "Companion of Owls" and "Prey of Lions". On her blog and website, Caroline Lawrence has said the content was deemed "too edgy" for the Roman Mysteries brand and as a result has been put on hold indefinitely.[citation needed]
In April 2010, author Caroline Lawrence announced that she is planning a spinoff for younger readers. The main character will be Threptus, an 8-year-old Ostian beggar boy who makes appearances in the final Roman Mystery, The Man from Pomegranate Street and the final short story in The Legionary from Londinium and other mini-mysteries.[citation needed]
Special features
[edit]Each of the novels has at least one map of the area covered in the story, sometimes also plans or diagrams; these are by Richard Russell Lawrence. The chapters are called scrolls, after the rolls of papyrus which were Roman 'books', and are numbered with Roman numerals. The glossary explaining Roman terms is called "Aristo's Scroll", after Flavia's tutor, and the author's note, which separates fact from fiction, is called "The Last Scroll".
TV series
[edit]The BBC produced a television series based on the books, entitled Roman Mysteries. The first season was broadcast in 2007, the second season in 2008.[1]