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"The Warrior Race" | |
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Short story by L. Sprague de Camp | |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Science fiction |
Publication | |
Published in | Astounding Science-Fiction |
Publisher | Street & Smith Publications, Inc. |
Media type | Print (Magazine) |
Publication date | October 1940 |
"The Warrior Race" is a classic science fiction short story by L. Sprague de Camp. It was first published in the magazine Astounding Science-Fiction for October, 1940.[1][2] It first appeared in book form in the collection The Wheels of If and Other Science Fiction (Shasta, 1948),;[1][2] it later appeared in the anthologies The Edward De Bono Science Fiction Collection (The Elmfield Press, 1976),[2] Isaac Asimov Presents The Great SF Stories 2 (1940) (DAW Books, 1979),[1][2] and Barbarians II (Signet/New American Library, Feb. 1988).[2]
"Earth is under the rule of the incorruptible Centaurans. They are a warrior race of extraterrestrial humanoids known for their inhumanly high standards of conduct and rigic discipline. Shortly after arriving in Philadelphia, Juggins, a Centaurian, begins to submit to the pressures of living among corrupt humans. He begins smoking, taking bribes and otherwise touching off the decline and fall of the Centurian conquerors."
Commenting on this story in Laughlin and Levack's comprehensive bibliography of de Camp's works, Loay H. Hall writes "In this tale, de Camp again employs his vast knowledge of history--in this case the Spartan warrior race and its decline and fall, which he draws upon to explain the corruption of the Centurians. Despite de Camp's tongue-in-cheek claim in the foreword to The Wheels of If (Shasta, 1948) that he does not write satire, there is little doubt that this tale—and "The Contraband Cow"—are intended to be satire."[1]
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The story was nominated for the 2016 Retro Hugo Award for Best Novelette, but placed below the cutoff for finalists for the award.[2]
Category:Science fiction short stories Category:Short stories by L. Sprague de Camp Category:1940 short stories
"The Soaring Statue" | |
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Short story by L. Sprague de Camp | |
File:The Soaring Statue.jpg | |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Science fiction |
Publication | |
Published in | Other Worlds Science Stories |
Publisher | Clark Publishing Company |
Media type | Print (Magazine) |
Publication date | July 1952 |
"The Soaring Statue" is a classic science fiction short story by L. Sprague de Camp. It was first published in the magazine Other Worlds Science Stories for July, 1952.[1][2] It first appeared in book form in the anthology Tomorrow's Universe (Hamilton & Co., 1953),[1][2]
"An earthly archaeologist settles a quarrel between two nations on another planet, rescues the wife of the terran governor, and liberates archaeological relics the governor has wrongly collected."
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De Camp's theme of scientists plying their trade amid administrative, local and environmental difficulties and sometimes resorting to extreme expedients in defence of their professions and professional standards is a common one in his fiction. Other examples include the short stories "Employment" (1939), "Living Fossil" (1939), "The Colorful Character" (1949), "In-Group" (1952), and "The Saxon Pretender" (1952) and the novels The Great Fetish (1978), The Bones of Zora (1983), The Stones of Nomuru (1988), and The Venom Trees of Sunga (1992).
In its portrait of a medieval-level society in the shadow of a technologically advanced one, "The Soaring Statue" complements the Krishna and Kukulkan stories in de Camp's Viagens Interplanetarias series.
Category:Science fiction short stories Category:Short stories by L. Sprague de Camp Category:1952 short stories
"The Best-Laid Scheme" | |
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Short story by L. Sprague de Camp | |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Science fiction |
Publication | |
Published in | Astounding Science-Fiction |
Publisher | Street & Smith Publications, Inc. |
Media type | Print (Magazine) |
Publication date | February 1941 |
"The Best-Laid Scheme" is a classic time travel science fiction short story by L. Sprague de Camp. It was first published in the magazine Astounding Science-Fiction for February, 1941, and was reprinted in Fantastic Story Magazine for March, 1953.[1][2] It first appeared in book form in the collection The Wheels of If and Other Science Fiction (Shasta, 1949).[1][2] The story has been translated into German.[1]
This parody on other time travel stories is about a scientist who uses a time travel device to threaten all of North America with destruction through time travel paradoxes, and the secret agent attempting to stop him using a copy of the device.
"A tale of time travel and time paradox. Russell Hedges, seeking to rule his world of the future, threatens mass destruction unless he is made Chief Executive of the North American Continent. Agent Mendez de Witt is called in and proceeds to chase Hedges forward and backward in time. De Witt catches up with him in 1959 and during a foot chase space-time is ruptured and the two find themselves curiously changed."
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Category:Science fiction short stories Category:Short stories by L. Sprague de Camp Category:1941 short stories
"The Round-Eyed Barbarians" | |
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Short story by L. Sprague de Camp | |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Science fiction |
Publication | |
Published in | Amazing Stories |
Publisher | TSR, Inc. |
Media type | Print (Magazine) |
Publication date | January 1992 |
"The Round-Eyed Barbarians" is an alternate history science fiction short story by L. Sprague de Camp. It was first published in the magazine Amazing Stories for January, 1992.[1] It first appeared in book form in the collection Alternate Americas (Bantam Spectra, Oct. 1992),[1] subsequently gathered into the omnibus collection What Might Have Been: Volumes 3 & 4: Alternate Wars / Alternate Americas (Bantam Spectra/SFBC, Dec. 1992); it later appeared in the anthology The Year's Best Science Fiction: Tenth Annual Collection (St. Martin's Press, Jun. 1993), issued in the UK as Best New SF 7 (Robinson, Sep. 1993)[1] Translation: Italian by Rosanna Petino as "I barbari", in I mondi del possibile (ed. Piergiorgio Nicolazzini), q.v."
"What if: The Chinese discovered the Americas before Columbus. Summary: C. 1560, Spanish and Chinese explorers meet in North America, and a dispute over a Spaniard's elopement with a AmerInd girl must be settled."
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Category:Alternate history short stories Category:Short stories by L. Sprague de Camp Category:1992 short stories
=Gratitude
=A Thing of Custom
=Impractical Joke
=New Arcadia
"Captain Leopard" | |
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Short story by L. Sprague de Camp | |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Historical fiction |
Publication | |
Published in | Classical Stories: Heroic Tales from Ancient Greece and Rome |
Publisher | Past Times |
Media type | Print (Anthology) |
Publication date | July, 1996 |
"Captain Leopard" is a historical fiction short story by L. Sprague de Camp. It was first published in the anthology Classical Stories: Heroic Tales from Ancient Greece and Rome (Past Times, July, 1996).[1] It later appeared in the anthology Heroic Adventure Stories: From the Golden Age of Greece and Rome (Robinson, Jan. 1998), and the magazine Strange Tales of Mystery and Terror no. 9, Sep. 2005.[1]
Retiring Roman Legionary Captain Pantera is looking to invest his savings in the partnership of a Syrian inn. In the course of conversation with his prospective partners it emerges that he once fathered an illegitimate child by a Judean woman who grew up to be a obscure preacher, Jesus of Nazareth, about whose teachings and fate a rising cult has since been founded.
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Category:Historical fiction Category:Short stories by L. Sprague de Camp Category:1996 short stories
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John R. Fultz | |
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Born | (1969-10-09) October 9, 1969 (age 55) Breathitt County, Kentucky, U.S. |
Occupation | Author, teacher |
Genre | speculative fiction |
Website | |
johnrfultz |
John Ray Fultz is an American teacher and writer of speculative fiction and comics,[1][2] best known for his Books of the Shaper and Tall Eagle novels. He writes as John R. Fultz.[2]
Fultz was born in 1969[3] in Kentucky,[1][2][4] where he was also raised.[3] He later lived in Chicago, and moved to California in 1998.[3] He lives in the North Bay Area,[1][4] and teaches high school level English Literature[4] in the Napa Valley Unified School District.[5][6]
Fultz's fiction has appeared in Weird Tales, Black Gate, and Space & Time; his comic book work has appeared in the comic book anthologies Zombie Tales and Cthulhu Tales. His graphic novel Primordia was published by Archaia Comics.[4]
Scaleborn
Saved here to be reworked away from the current back-and-forth deletion war. 3/21/2023.
Chalcis | |||||||||||||
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Vassal state of Roman Empire | |||||||||||||
c. 80 BC–92 CE | |||||||||||||
Capital | Chalcis sub Libanum (Anjar, Lebanon?) | ||||||||||||
Government | |||||||||||||
Tetrarch (King between 41 - 48 CE) | |||||||||||||
• c. 80 – 40 BCE | Ptolemaeus Menneus | ||||||||||||
• 40 – 33 BCE | Lysanias | ||||||||||||
• 23 – 20 BCE | Zenodorus | ||||||||||||
• 41 – 48 CE | Herod of Chalcis | ||||||||||||
• 48 – 53 CE | Agrippa II | ||||||||||||
• 57 – 92 CE | Aristobulus of Chalcis | ||||||||||||
Historical era | Classic era | ||||||||||||
• dissolution of the Seleucid Empire | c. 80 BC | ||||||||||||
• Chalcis becomes Roman vassal state | 64 BCE | ||||||||||||
• death of Aristobulus of Chalcis, incorporation into Roman Syria | 92 CE | ||||||||||||
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Today part of | Israel Syria Lebanon |
Chalcis was a small ancient Iturean majority state situated in the Beqaa Valley, referred to at various times either as a kingdom or tetrarchy, named for and originally based from the city of the same name. The ancient city of Chalcis (a.k.a. Chalcis sub Libanum, Chalcis of Coele-Syria was located midway between Berytus and Damascus.[1] The modern town of Anjar in Lebanon is believed to be the site of ancient Chalcis sub Libanum, although this has not been definitively demonstrated. The ruins of a Roman temple are located a few kilometers south-west of Anjar near Majdal Anjar. Other sources indicate that Chalcis sub Libanum is located at "Husn esh-Shadur" near Baalbek.[2][3]
Originally, Chalcis was a city in Coele-Syria. When the Seleucid influence in the area began to dissipate, the Itureans took over a region stretching from the Mediterranean Sea to near Damascus. They made Chalcis the capital of their realm, while Baalbek was the center of worship. The founder of this realm seems to have been Ptolemaeus, son of Menneus, an Ituraean dynast.[citation needed]
During the time of Alexander Jannaeus, Hasmonaean king of Judea, Ptolemaeus had to cede part of his territory to the Hasmonaeans. This area was later known as Iturea (Iturea, in an ethnic sense, covered the much larger area in which the Itureans were settled). In 64 BCE Ptolemaeus bribed the Roman general Pompeius to refrain from annexing his realm and allow him to continue to rule as Tetrarch. Pompey also returned to him the areas lost to Jannaeus when he brought an end to the independent Hasmonaean state in 63 BCE.[citation needed]
Chalcis was a vassal state under Roman rule during the remainder of Ptolemaeus' reign. In 40 BCE, he was succeeded by his son Lysanias. Lysanias supported the efforts of the Hasmonean scion Antigonus II Mattathias to take the throne of Judea in 42 and 40 BCE, allying with him against the Roman client king Herod, whom he temporarily supplanted on his Parthian-supported second attempt. Lysanias's anti-Roman sympathies eventually led to his execution by Mark Antony in 33 BCE, at the instigation of Cleopatra VII of Egypt, who had eyes on his territories.[4]
Though Antony gave Lysanias' territory to Cleopatra, a remnant realm of Chalcis persisted after this disaster, with the most important cities being Chalcis and Abila. Cleopatra leased it to Zenodorus, possibly a son of Lysanias, and following her suicide in 30 BCE, Augustus initially allowed Zenodorus to rule as Tetrarch, only to depose him in 23 BCE for conducting raids into Trachonitis, which had prompted complaints from his neighbors. Augustus then gave some or all of his lands to Herod, including Iturea, Batanaea, Trachonitis and Auranitis. Little is known about Chalcis itself in the time immediately after Lysanias' death; Chalcis sub Libanum and its district may have been made part of the Roman province of Syria, while Abilene, the area around Abila, appears to have made up a separate statelet at least part of the time.[citation needed]
The districts surrendered to Herod continued to be ruled by him and his family, who in time came to control the core regions of the former kingdom as well. After Herod's death in 4 BCE, Iturea, Trachonitis, Gaulanitis, Batanea, Paneas and Auranitis became a tetrarchy under Philip, one of his sons, who ruled as a tetrarch until his death in AD 34. Meanwhile, Abilene may have gone to another Lysanias, mentioned in the Gospel of Luke 3:1 as tetrarch of Abilene in the time of John the Baptist. It is possible, however, that the reference to Lysanias in Luke is an anachronistic reference to the Lysanias put to death by Antony.[citation needed]
In AD 37, Emperor Caligula gave Herod Agrippa I the former tetrarchies of Philip (namely Iturea, Trachonitis, Gaulanitis, Batanea, Paneas and Auranitis) and Lysanias (Abilene) with the title of king. His realm was subsequently augmented in AD 40 by the regions of Galilee and Perea, formerly ruled by Herod Antipas (4 BCE - AD 39),[5][6] and in AD 41 by the regions of Judea, Idumea and Samaria, formerly ruled by Herod Archelaus (4 BCE - AD 6) and then formed the province of Judaea (AD 6 - 41). Agrippa I ruled all these territories until his death in AD 44.
Meanwhile, in AD 39, the district of Iturea was given by Caligula to a certain Soemus, who is called by Dio Cassius (lix. 12) and by Tacitus (Annals, xii. 23) "king of the Itureans." Soemus reigned until his death in AD 49, when his kingdom was incorporated into the province of Syria (Tacitus, l.c.).
In AD 41, at Agrippa's request, his brother Herod was given Chalcis and allowed the title of basileus (king) by Claudius.[7] King Herod of Chalcis reigned until his death in AD 48, whereupon his kingdom was given to Agrippa's son Agrippa II, though only as a tetrarchy.[8][1]
Agrippa II was forced to give up the tetrarchy of Chalcis in AD 53, but in exchange Claudius made him ruler with the title of king over the territories previously governed by Philip (Iturea, Trachonitis, Gaulanitis, Batanea, Paneas and Auranitis), and Lysanias (Abilene).[9][10][11] In 55, the Emperor Nero added to his realm the cities of Tiberias and Taricheae in Galilee, and Livias (Iulias), with fourteen villages near it, in Perea.
The tetrarchy of Chalcis, previously surrendered by Agrippa II in AD 53, was subsequently in AD 57 given to his cousin Aristobulus, the son of Herod of Chalcis (Acts 25:13; 26:2,7). After the death of Aristobulus in AD 92, Chalcis was absorbed into the province of Syria.
According to Photius, Agrippa II died at the age of seventy in the third year of the reign of Trajan (AD 100,[12] but statements of Josephus, in addition to the contemporary epigraphy from his kingdom, cast this date into serious doubt.[citation needed] The modern scholarly consensus holds that he died before 93/94.[13] Following his death his realm as well came under the direct rule of Rome.
Category:Ancient Lebanon Category:Roman Syria Category:Former kingdoms
In 2023 Gary Grossmann circulated his own take on the chronology, again including only those stories written by Howard. He focuses on the 21 completed stories, but also makes an effort to place the fragments and outlines, where possible. Grossmann bases his story placements on close readings of the texts and the chronological hints and evidence on Conan's maturation and accumulation of experience therein, together with a minimalistic approach to where he might have been when, giving weight to geographical proximity of the various adventures in appraising their nearness to each other in time. He differs most radically from his predecessors in the always-speculative bridges between the stories, envisioning links he views as truer to the character and circumstances than others provide. He notes that all chronologies (including his) agree in assigning the stories into early, middle and late groupings, with the disagreements between schemes applying only to the arrangements of stories within these groupings.
Early stories
Middle stories
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Late stories
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