175 n. Chr., Vindolanda, Die sarmatische Kavallerie wurde bei der Donauschlacht von den römischen Legionen zerschlagen. Nun muss sich Kai, ihr stolzester Krieger, das Überleben seines Volkes mit dem Versprechen erkaufen, Rom zu dienen. Obwohl die Sarmaten unter der Schmach der Niederlage leiden, sind sie bereit, für Kaiser Marc Aurel zu kämpfen und zu sterben. Aus ihrer Heimat verbannt, sollen sie sich auf dem Eisernen Weg bis zum Rand des Römischen Reiches begeben. Hier durchschneidet der Hadrianswall das Land und trennt die römischen Gebiete vom Rest der Insel. Für die nomadischen Sarmaten ist der Garnisonsdienst eine grausame Strafe. Doch als es auf beiden Seiten des Walls zu Unruhen kommt, entdeckt Kai, dass jedes Bollwerk seine Schwächen Das ist seine Chance, für sein Volk zu kämpfen.
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The Sarmatian warriors, taken from their beloved Steppes and unceremoniously dumped at the far north of the Roman Empire. They had been conscripted to fight as auxiliaries in their conquerors army. Guard the Wall, keep the painted savages pinned down in their inhospitable lands and, after 25 years service, return to Sarmatia. Unfortunately, that last promise was a downright lie. These warriors were meant to live and die in Britannia. A nomadic people penned into a straitjacket of Roman discipline and culture. These were a people who worshipped a glorious death, a people whose women fought alongside their male counterparts and, when they were too old to hold a spear or ride a horse, it fell to their sons to kill them. These were the warriors that Rome tried to tame, with mixed results. This was an exciting tale of heroism, death and treachery. Well worth a read.
I confess I had never heard of the Sarmatians before reading this book but it seems I can be forgiven because in his Historical Note the author reveals that very little is known for certain about them. A nomadic, warlike people, they left no written records and minimal archaeological evidence. However, the events in the first book – their defeat by the Romans and a peace settlement the terms of which saw thousands of their warriors sent to the north of Britain – are based on fact.
The book focuses on one band of Sarmatians, made up of five hundred warriors, under their Roman commander, Lucius, who as a result of previous events has become a sort of ‘honorary’ Sarmatian. He’s described at one point as having the soul of a Sarmatian locked in a Roman body. Bound by an oath to serve as part of the Roman army for twenty-five years, the Sarmatians find themselves guarding one of the forts along Hadrian’s Wall against the threat of attack from tribes to the north. It’s not where they want to be. They pine for the wide open spaces of their homeland, ‘the long grass dancing with the wind, the wildflowers shining under the sun, the world open before them beneath an endless sky’. Instead they find themselves confined to the settlement around the fort, in the shadow of Hadrian’s Wall. ‘They saw their prison, the chain of stone that bound them, the symbol of a shameful defeat.’
The author gives the reader a fascinating insight into the Sarmatian people. What we learn is that they are bound together not just by ties of kinship but by sacred oaths and the belief that to die in battle is glorious. Their philosophy? ‘Given the choice between two paths, between safety and danger, one must always go toward sword and spear, and choose the iron way.’ And that’s not just the men because the Sarmatian women are warriors too.
The story is told from the point of view of three main characters – Lucius, his Sarmatian comrade Kai and Arite, the wife of Kai’s former friend. None of them is where they want to be. Lucius recognises his posting to the Wall is a sign of his fall from grace. And he soon discovers he is pawn in the hands of powerful and ambitious men. Kai longs to return to his homeland and see his daughter once again. Arite finds herself unable to use her skills as a warrior, consigned instead to a life of household drudgery. The frustration felt by the Sarmatians creates an atmosphere of extreme tension. Unused to the discipline of a Roman army, there are drunken brawls and petty rivalries.
There are some terrific action scenes that put the reader in the heart of the battle and reveal some quite remarkable aspects of the Sarmatians as a fighting force. But the writing throughout flows beautifully giving a real insight into the thoughts and feelings of a people quite different from ourselves – or at least those of us who don’t gallop across the steppes on huge heavily armoured horses trained to kill.
Having endured one betrayal, the end of the book sees Lucius come to the realisation that what lies ahead for the Sarmatians is a conflict not of their own making but one driven by the personal ambition of others.
I thought The Iron Way was brilliant. Its blend of fascinating historical detail, absorbing storyline, interesting characters and full-on action made it a thoroughly engrossing read. Roll on book three.
The second in what is proving to be a brilliant trilogy, following the warrior Kai, and his Sarmatian tribe across the Roman empire.
As with the first, and every other book Tim has written, the prose is beautiful, the world brilliantly evoked, and the character development from book one to this one is spot on.
The Sarmatians have been enrolled into the Roman army, forced to serve as auxiliaries for twenty-five years, with the promise that they will be able to return home when their service is done. Kai leaves his daughter on the steppe, and the thought of seeing her again is his driving force.
To Hadrian's Wall they are sent, Britannia is painted as a desolate land, the Wall described as the last outpost of Rome. Officers despise being sent there, feeling too far away from Rome and the riches of empire. Lucius though, is content. He has his tribe, the tribe he has brought across the breadth of the empire, and they are safe.
War, though, is an ever constant in the far reaches of empire, and the Sarmatians will soon have to fight, with enemies from both across the Wall and within.
This book for me is more than an equal to the first (A Winter War), with battles, betrayals and an underlying story of love and betrayal, it had me gripped all the way through. I can't wait for the third.
Tim Leach ist einfach so ein guter Autor! Er schafft es, durchgängig die Spannung hochzuhalten, behandelt vielschichtig emotionale zwischenmenschliche Beziehungen und das alles vor einer historischen Hintergrundfolie. Dazu reproduziert er nicht ständig diskriminierende Stereotype, sondern zeigt, dass historische Romane auch anders können und setzt sich so von anderen Autoren ab, die das historische Setting für Trauma Porn nutzen. All das umrandet von einem wunderbaren Schreibstil mit sprachlichen Bildern, die Gänsehaut verursachen. Ich muss sofort in den dritten Teil der Trilogie springen!
I received an eARC from the publishers through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. It has not affected my opinions.
3.5 stars
THE IRON WAY is the second instalment in the Sarmatian trilogy, following Kai, Arite, and Lucius as the Sarmatians are posted to Roman Britain and Hadrian's wall.
Roman Britain and Hadrian's wall are big things in the British education. Despite being a southerner (and thus not actually seeing the wall yet!), it always excites me to get a book about the wall. It's just so ingrained into history classes from a young age.
I really liked the outsider approach this book took. The Sarmatians are doubly outsiders - outsiders to the Romans but having to work with them, and outsiders to Britain. No one is really an "insider" here - the women are being restricted to roles that aren't their, Lucius no longer really fits the Roman mould he has to fill, the native Britons have been made outsiders in their own lands by the conquering Romans. The prevalence of this "outsiderness" gives the book an uneasy, bleak feel. No one is comfortable, so there are tinderboxes ready to spark everywhere you turn. It really helps with the tension and atmosphere.
The POV balance is a bit more even in the book, firmly written from three perspective rather than two with some occasional scenes from Lucius' perspective (which is what A WINTER WAR was.) I really liked seeing more from Lucius. Not only did it allow for a deeper look at the games being played by senior Romans and the various powers that had to be balanced, but also to see him struggling with the knowledge that the Roman command had lied to the Sarmatians and how he was stuck between the orders from on high and his own (good-faith) oaths to the Sarmatians.
I didn't, though, quite understand why Lucius felt Kai had betrayed him when the truth came out - which action in that moment meant both men felt betrayed by the other. Kai so clearly was betrayed (while Lucius had made the initial promise believing it to be true, he'd then held back the information once he knew the truth) but I couldn't see how his actions were a betrayal. He was hurt and so I was firmly on his side. It did mean that the emotional dynamic at the end didn't make sense and I never felt like Lucius had any right to feel hurt. He should have been grateful that Kai was still standing beside him!
One book to go in this trilogy and I am sure the cost will be high. While I wouldn't say this series is a tragedy (that implies to me that the events and disasters are personal failings that come from not being able to recognise and correct a personal flaw), it is bleak. Which is accurate to the history. You know it's going to end badly, but not because of the characters' decisions but because of the situations they're put in.
175 CE Vindolanda, Britannia. Sarmatian warrior Kai has paid for his people’s defeat on the Danube by pledging his arms to Rome. At the edge of Empire, the Sarmatians fight to keep their world alive. At the milecastle near the centre of the Wall, boards are rotting, iron gates are rusting and mortar crumbling away. Above, the sentry nods; below, the raiders move silently. Kai shares a campfire with Lucius the Roman commander. He searches in the shadows for her, Arite. Perhaps she is one of those in the women’s camp. Also in the shadows is her husband Bahadur, also looking for Arite. The signal fires are lit, the horns blown; it is time to fight, to die for Rome. Kai picks 20 riders to lead the advance. Twenty-five more years, after fulfilling their oath, and they can go home; Kai will see his daughter Tomyris. From among the dead, Kai rescues a boy. One of the raiders has escaped, the man on the tall horse. Kai and Gaevani leave camp on a quest for justice, but they’ve got it wrong. When freedom is on the agenda, existing alliances, even oaths by the sword, may be threatened. ‘Something is stirring, north of the Wall,’ the Votadini chief tells Lucius, ‘something that your Empire cannot stop.’ This masterpiece is a tale of a conquered people and their tentative truce with invading imperialists, affording each other a portion of mutual respect, yet tinged with mutual distrust. A great story from a fascinating period, superbly written, this is Book 2 in the Sarmatian Trilogy. It is masterful to write with such beautiful language, and yet it still has a Roman province sense of place and an antique feel. It must have been quite a feat digging out such historical verisimilitude from a dark period of history. This review was originally written for Historical Novels Review.
The Romans had the perfect solution to protect their part of the British Island. Build a wall to keep the “northern hoards” and rabble out. Therefore, they built a very impressive border wall with guard towers every mile to dissuade foreign invaders from attacking and occupying the region.
Thousands of invaders approached the wall carefully but remarkably no defense was supported on the wall and the army just pushed through on their journey to London.
A Roman Centurion was the leader of the defense brigade. He considered this posting to be punishment for his inability to control the population. The prefect hated his job and could not wait to retire but his greatest concern was that he would not be invited to return to Rome or its environs.
This story exemplifies the schism that was the British Isles during the first one thousand years of the current epoch. The invaders heading toward England simply went to the hole in the wall and advanced on toward London.
The story is an interesting look at the calamity that befell various nomadic tribes which colonized those islands at the time. This book is well written and certainly has poetic license at its core because there is no written history of many of these tribes. Read and enjoy! 4.5 stars – CE Williams
Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing me with the opportunity to read and review this book.
The second in the excellent trilogy set in the second century and featuring the Sarmatians and Romans. The Sarmatians are now captives of the Romans and have sworn an oath to serve for twenty five years. They have been brought to Britain and guard one of the forts at Hadrians Wall against the wild tribes north of the wall. Tim Leach's writing is beautifully poetic and atmospheric ; it is a joy to read. The characters earn the reader's respect through their courage and camaraderie. Theirs is a hard life, and through the excellent writing, I felt totally immersed in the historical setting. I found this an exciting and also a very moving read and I can't wait for the final instalment. I received a free review copy of the book from the publisher in exchange for my honest and unedited review.
I am giving this book 4 stars because I enjoyed the first volume in the trilogy "A Winter's War" so much. Sadly, this is not as good a book. The story lags, there is too much character development and it just read as if it was setting up the final book in the trilogy.
Sure, there is some great action and interesting insights into Roman Britain, but it did not grab me as much as the first volume.
However, I am eagerly looking forward to reading the final volume in the trilogy.
Eine schöne Geschichte von Tapferkeit und Brüderlichkeit. Von Verlust, Verrat und Vergebung. Umspannen von einem grob umrissenen historischen Rahmen und getragen von starken Figuren. Ich freue mich bereits auf den abschließenden Teil und denke das ich danach wieder in Stimmung für eine Artus-Geschichte sein könnte.
I didn't read the first instalment and I think I will do it as I enjoyed this one. It's well plotted, fast paced, and entertaining. The historical background is well researched and vivid. Recommended. Many thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for this ARC, all opinions are mine
Even better than the first book. I'm a sucker for anything set in Roman Britain so, combined with the beautiful writing, fabulously complex characters and their profound emotional journeys, this book was just about perfect. Can't wait for the next one in the trilogy.
I didn't realise that this was a series and so I found some parts a bit confusing. Overall i enjoyed it but will definitely go back to it and reread after I have read the first book.