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Alberix the Celt Book 2 - Noyer, Albert
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Julius Caesar's political successes at Rome earn him governorship of two provinces and three legions. Although absent, he effectively runs the government with Pompey and Crassus. After Caesar's Helvetian victory he remains in Gaul to defeat Ariovistus, a German king encroaching on Celtic lands. Yet as Gallic tribes resent a continued presence of Roman legions, talk of rebellion flares and culminates in the massacre of Roman merchants. A rebel leader emerges in the person of Vercingetorix. With ten legions now in Gaul, Caesar establishes a chain of camps, pacifies some tribes, and defeats…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Julius Caesar's political successes at Rome earn him governorship of two provinces and three legions. Although absent, he effectively runs the government with Pompey and Crassus. After Caesar's Helvetian victory he remains in Gaul to defeat Ariovistus, a German king encroaching on Celtic lands. Yet as Gallic tribes resent a continued presence of Roman legions, talk of rebellion flares and culminates in the massacre of Roman merchants. A rebel leader emerges in the person of Vercingetorix. With ten legions now in Gaul, Caesar establishes a chain of camps, pacifies some tribes, and defeats others, but an attack on Vercingetorix's stronghold of Gergovia fails. Rather than follow up his victory, the king retreats to a fortress at Alesia. Caesar surrounds the stronghold with deadly ground obstacles and twin defensive walls. In a prolonged siege, Roman tactics defeat Vercingetorix. He surrenders and is sent to Rome for execution. Despite Caesar's victories, much of the Senate is hostile to his reforms and declares him a public enemy. Attacking Pompey, Caesar wins a devastating civil war, but is assassinated in 44 B.C.E. Gaul recovers and prospers under a Pax Romana. --- Book 2. In Alberix's search for Vercingetorix, he witnesses a druidic birth ritual by Ollam Fodla, which predicts failure for a rebellion. The Gallic king is present, so Alberix hears his plan to unify Gaul. Returning, he and Simonides scout Gergovia, where a council expels Vercingetorix. While leaving both are captured by his warriors. At Wermaros, Cluvios is murdered by Arvos, who burns his body. Infatuated with Apsa, she kills Arvos as he attempts to rape her. Druid Triccos tries the slave woman for murder, but Marius presents a torc of Cluvios found in Arvos's hut. When Moira pleads for asylum from Triccos, Marius takes her to his Roman watch-tower. Liscos attacks the tower, but dies in the attempt. After Alberix refuses to join the rebellion, Vercingetorix mutilates and expels him from his camp. Apsa divines Alberix's location in Gaul. The king repulses a Roman attack on Gergovia, yet retreats to Alesia. When Caesar defeats a Gallic relief army, Vercingetorix surrenders after a brutal month-long siege. Assigned to escort the king to Rome with Lucius, Alberix first rescues his mother and aunt from Wermaros, torched by an insane Triccos. At Rome, Briga and Apsa are abducted in a failed plot to free Vercingetorix. Later, when a Rhine settlement rises on the site of his father's destroyed village, Alberix is elected magistrate and realizes his dream as foretold on the Celtic Wheel of Life.
Autorenporträt
An artist and writer, Albert Noyer was born in Switzerland but raised in Detroit, Michigan. After Army service, he pursued degrees in art, art education, and teaching humanities, at Wayne State University. He subsequently worked as a commercial artist, taught art in a Detroit Public Schools technical/vocational program, and art history at a private college. Noyer retired to New Mexico with his wife, Jennifer, where he exhibits watercolor paintings and woodcut prints in galleries and regional exhibits. His artwork has been featured in New Mexico Magazine and the Mature Life in New Mexico supplement in Sunday's Albuquerque Journal. He is a member of the New Mexico Watercolor Society, SouthWest Writers, Sisters in Crime, Croak & Dagger, and New Mexico Veteran's Art. Published by Plain View Press, his contemporary Fr. Jake Mysteries, The Ghosts of Glorieta; One for the Money, Two for the Sluice; and Deadly Discrimination are set in Michigan and New Mexico. The two volume Alberix the Celt, also published by Plain View Press, is a retelling of Julius Caesar's conquest of Gaul from the viewpoint of a Celtic youth caught up in the Romanization of the country now called France. Noyer first published A.D. fifth century novels, the Getorius and Arcadia mysteries, set in an era seen as critical in creating the political, religious, and cultural institutions that survive into modern times.