If by some warp of time I could invite my three special ladies to tea, the party would dwarf that of Alice in Wonderland.
Tanaquil, the 700 bc Etruscan princess, wife of Roman King, Tarquin.
Julia, the fiery political savvy daughter of the Emperor Augustus, first century century ad.
Cartimandua, the Brigantes Queen in 40 ad when her Celtic tribe was being swallowed up by an ever encroaching Rome.
I see me sitting at the table with these three strong women, who operate in a man's world with drive, ingenuity and success equal to any male counterpart. In short order we put aside chit-chat about frivolous women's concerns. Without tiptoeing fanfare we get to the real issues which unite us. For despite time and space differences we four face the same problems. How do we assure a world for our offspring-- a world that is peaceful and hospitable?
But what does peaceful mean to each of us? It takes no brains to see that an ancient Roman soldier killed on the German-Roman border is just as dead as one killed in today's Iraqi conflict. The Roman lad in Tarquin's army and the Celtic warrior bleed with the same blood. For war is war is war. And in the last analysis how we women view it depends on our place in time and the scheme of things.
Julia, the most widely traveled and the most cosmopolitan, comes from a time labeled as 'Pax Romana' because it followed decades of civil war. In contrast to the Roman matron who followed faithfully and submissively the ambitions of her man, Julia represents a new kind of woman. She rebels against the constraints of 'a woman's place'. She has never known the inconveniences of war; she relishes in the luxuries of life that her position and wealth afford.
Cartimandua has known war. She has been a part of the unending tribal conflicts among Celtic tribes of Britain; she has witnessed the ever encroaching Romans. She has seen it close up. For the Brigantes, as do most Celtic tribes, do not relegate any of their women to the sidelines of life, rule or war. Cartimandua is the reigning queen of her tribe.
Tanaquil, against the advice and wishes of her aristocratic Etruscan family, married an alien, the son of a Greek trader. That he was a very rich alien mattered not. Shunned by her family and friends she convinced her husband to leave flourishing Tarquinia and move to the 'mud hut' city of Rome. Her husband with wealth, know how and charm captured the city and became king. She knows well the cost of developing a city.
And I-- I am privileged to learn from these remarkable women-- just what is the legacy of war.
To visit the biographies of these women, go to
IONICBOOKS
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