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Procurator #1

Procurator

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In a world where the Roman Empire never fell, Procurator Germanicus must find a way to defeat the rebel zaims, who are using mysterious mental powers to challenge the Empires technology

234 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1984

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About the author

Kirk Mitchell

39 books69 followers
Kirk Mitchell is an author who is known for his time travel, alternate history, historical fiction, and adventure fiction novels. Mitchell has also created several novelizations of movies.He writes under the pseudonym of Joel Norst

Kirk Mitchell served as a deputy sheriff on the Paiute- Shoshone Indian reservations of the desert country that includes Death Valley, and was a SWAT sergeant in southern California, before beginning his career as a full-time writer.

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5 stars
17 (15%)
4 stars
29 (26%)
3 stars
39 (35%)
2 stars
19 (17%)
1 star
7 (6%)
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Andrew Fear.
114 reviews5 followers
December 17, 2011
Nice "Rome of the Future" book with the empire stuck in the Caucasus. Given the date of the book, I suspect that this theme may have been inspired by the Soviet Union's Afghan adventure, but with another empire currently bogged down there it has a surprisingly contemporary ring. There are a couple of very odd excursuses which I didn't think worked and inevitably the tiresome romantic subplot, as if men were never motivated by worthier things. Nevertheless the alternative world was credible and the plot raced along, I even began to suspect that pilum may indeed have changed gender over the centuries.
Profile Image for sabisteb aka callisto.
2,342 reviews1 follower
July 11, 2011
Anatolien MMDCCXLII A.U.C. Procurator Germanicus Julius Agricola, ein entfernter Neffe des herrschenden römischen Kaisers, ist Procurator der Provinz Anatolia und sieht sich mal wieder einer Rebellion der örtlichen Anführer gegenüber. Diese fühlen sich von den Römern in ihrem religiösen Belangen eingeschränkt und rufen zum Djihad gegen die Römer auf.

Procurator ist der erste Band der Germanicus Trilogie. Bei diesen Romanen handelt es sich um eine Was wäre wenn Geschichte, in diesem Fall „Was wäre, wenn das Römische Reich nicht untergegangen wäre?“. Zwei Entscheidungen haben dazu geführt, dass das römische Reich noch existiert. Zum einen hatte Pilatus Frau einen prophetischen Traum und warnte ihren Mann davor Jesus hinzurichten. Pilatus widersetzt sich somit der Forderung des Volkes Barabas freizulassen und gibt stattdessen Joshua bar-Joseph frei. Des Weiteren glaubte Varus in dieser Zeitlinie den Warnungen vor Arminius und siegte im Teutoburger Wald, so dass Germanien latinisiert wurde. Es kam nie zu einer Spaltung des Reiches und die Römer beherrschen einen Großteil der bekannten Welt. Dennoch ist die Zeit nicht stehen geblieben, es gibt Elektrizität, Schienengaleeren, Sandgaleeren und Gewähre haben die Pili abgelöst.

Germanicus sieht sich in diesem Band zwei Gefahren gegenüber, der klassischen Gefahr einer Verschwörung gegen den Kaiser (die im alten Rom fast der Normalzustand war), und einem Glaubenskrieg der Muslime gegen das Römische Reich. Obwohl das Reich eine Politik der Toleranz gegenüber fremden Kulten pflegt, hat es ein Beamter gewagt, eine Statue des Kaisers in einer Moschee zu errichten, und damit den Eklat heraufbeschworen.
Das Interessante an diesem Band ist die Rolle von Joshua bar-Joseph in dieser Zeitlinie. Josua wurde zu einem großen Lehrmeister, der durch die Lande zog und in vielen Ländern seine Spuren hinterließ ohne jedoch jemals eine so große Anhängerschaft zu gewinnen, wie es durch seinen Tod möglich gewesen wäre. Viele Völker kennen ihn als Propheten und Sensei und ehren seine Erinnerung, mehr aber nicht.

Insgesamt eine interessante Idee, die für mich jedoch daran scheitert, dass sie in Schlachten und Kämpfen untergeht. Germanicus zieht mit seinen Truppen im Winter durch Anatolien, schlägt Schlachten und Scharmützel, deckt eine Verschwörung auf und führt diplomatische Verhandlungen. Das war nicht wirklich packend oder spannend. Zu wenig Politik und vor allem zu wenig „was wäre wenn“. Historische Referenzen beziehen sich alle entweder auf das bekannte klassische antike Geschichte oder auf jüngste Ereignisse dieser Geschichte, in den 200 Jahren dazwischen scheint nicht wirklich spannendes passiert zu sein, das zitierens- oder erwähnenswert scheint, da macht es sich der Autor zu einfach. Dazwischen tauchen anachronistische preußische Maße (Oxhoft) auf. Der Autor streut lateinische Begriffe und alte Ortsbezeichnungen über den Text, bietet jedoch keinen erklärenden Anhang mit Übersetzungen.
Steampunk mal anders als der gewohnte victorianische. Diesmal ist das ewige römische Reich das Steampunk Universum.

Profile Image for Kelly Lemieux.
Author 16 books7 followers
June 7, 2021
Procurator is genre writing and not necessarily at its finest. But who can go wrong with an alternate history novel set in a Roman empire that never fell (kind of like Byzantium). There is a regular amount of anti-Arab hate speech on the part of the Romans, who refer to the novel's barbarians as wrap-heads. If only Mitchell had said as much. This book is definitely from 1984, a time period that was racist, as we have all come to figure out in 2020s. I remembered this tome and went searching for it and re-discovered it and discovered that there are two sequels, which I will read in time. Interesting.
87 reviews2 followers
January 15, 2019
4 stars, but…..you have to like really alternative history with a bit of magic thrown in. If you are OK with those criteria, then this is a pleasant piece of mental chewing gum. Rome didn’t fall, Jesus was released and faded into obscurity, along with his (capital H? in the alternative history) religion. So Imperial Rome doesn’t fall (OK, OK, kind of overlooking the various Goths) and this follows the life of a virtuous member of the Imperial Family. Not sure why I gravitate towards stories with aging men as leading characters, unless it is because I am an aging man?
Profile Image for Danny.
199 reviews
September 22, 2019
A bit scattershot but still engrossing. BC it's a three book series and they emphasized he was low in the line of succession I knew that the Procurator would become Emperor.

As a lot of altverse books, especially older ones, there was a glimpse into our world, through dream and later reinterpreted through a play which I thought was well done.
Profile Image for Todd.
191 reviews
July 20, 2022
The fact that I had completely forgotten about reading this book is rather telling. It clearly left zero impression on me. I remember it mostly as being not-even-a-little bit racist towards Arabs, but I understood both then and now that would not be a particularly unusual thing when seen from a Roman viewpoint.

But overall, is this worth grabbing from an used book store? Meh.
Author 3 books2 followers
August 7, 2019
4.5 stars
A great alternative history tale with both action and intrigue.
319 reviews16 followers
September 6, 2022
Alternate history about a Roman Empire that never fell a good read.
Profile Image for Solim.
892 reviews
August 22, 2023
Unexpectedly good! Lots of twists, intense battles, and ulterior motives. The sequels will be a must!!!
Profile Image for chvang.
442 reviews60 followers
November 6, 2025
Abandoned. Quality-wise, a grade below your basic generic genre book. Disappointing, because the cover is awesome. Completely forgettable, as I only rediscovered I had this while looking through my library for another similar book (yes, I have a shelf dedicated to "Alternate history where the Roman Empire never falls", the best of which is Jonathan Hickman's Pax Romana).

Also, it's kind of racist, but it may have been ... worldbuilding instead of the author's personal views, since it was published before 9/11. Or it could've just been how things were in the 1980s.

Audience participation: I am torn between Rex Electi (I imagine it's something like the God Emperor of (Ro)Man is going to put his genetically engineered totally-not-primarch children through a test to see who's worthy enough to succeed him) and Faction Paradox: Warlords of Utopia (where a multi-universal Roman Empire fights a multi-universal Nazi empire). Comment below and help me decide my next read.
Profile Image for Lirio Dendron.
454 reviews1 follower
July 14, 2021
Die Synthese aus Römischen Strukturen und modernen Gegebenheiten ist nicht optimal gelungen. Trotzdem ein recht interessantes Buch, aber halt nicht weltenbewegend.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

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