Hao Chunjie (above)
Hao Chunjie, just like his name, has been pure since he was a child. Pen, fun, pavilion www. biquge。 info
As an aspiring young man who yearned for an ancient society, he made a wish at the Pantheon when he visited Rome at his own expense.
Then his body was put in an ambulance because he was unconscious at the attraction, and his soul left the body and began an ancient life.
In the world described in "Game of Thrones" (for beginners), Hao Chunjie replaces Bran Stark to learn ancient life from scratch.
Not only did he have to learn to eat, dress, respect and humility, and etiquette, but Hao Chunjie also had to learn how to use weapons and how to save his life in battle.
Of course, the deception of children is not unequal to Bran, who has an adult soul.
As the saying goes, often walking by the river, how can there be no shoes that don't get wet. In order to pretend to be Bran, Hao Chunjie would climb the wall every once in a while.
Unexpectedly, he still failed to escape the adulterous fate of Queen Cersei, and was pushed off the city wall due to the disparity in strength.
Regardless of whether the real Bran will be crippled for life, Hao Chunjie has been out of the soul again the moment he fell to the ground.
This time he was no longer a child, but became a Roman nobleman who had just come of age - Tiberius Cornelius Lucius.
He was the son of the former dictator of Rome for life (Lucius Cornelius Sulla) and one of the brother-in-laws of the warlord Pompey.
Unfortunately, Sulla had already died of illness when he was possessed, and the rift between Pompey and the Cornelius family had already arisen.
As a tourist who came to enjoy the ancient life, Hao Chunjie was not like Sula's sons, he not only took the initiative to bow his head and become Pompey's son-in-law.
Since Pompey went to the Iberian Peninsula shortly after the marriage, Hao Chunjie naturally exercised the power of Pompey and Sula as the representative of his father-in-law.
Since his wife was the child of Pompey and a slave in his early years, he did not have a deep friendship with the young Gnaeus (Pompey's eldest son).
The chaotic and extravagant Rome allowed Hao Chunjie to live a life that can be called a wine pond and a meat forest, of course, when he was merry outside, his wife at home did not have the same unscrupulous pleasure with slaves and gladiators as other noblewomen because of her experience as a slave.
In the years that followed, Pompey suffered unprecedented setbacks in the West, and Lucius's position in the Covenant of Sons-in-Law rose, and he gradually gained his own team in the Senate.
If it weren't for the fact that he was on guard against Crassus, Lucius would have wanted to be the second Sulla.
The good things of the world are short-lived, and a gladiator from Thrace changed the world.
Lucius selected maids among the slaves newly shipped to Rome, but whipped the slave traders because there were no satisfactory candidates.
In order to avoid heavier beatings, the vendor reasoned that the best girl had been bought by Capua's gladiator training camp.
The slave girl named Sulla aroused Lucius's curiosity, and he left Rome with his escort for Capua, which was near the left.
Nominally, he was to urge the purchase of grain, but secretly he naturally wanted to wait for an opportunity to seize the military power in Grebo's hands.
The forces in the vicinity of Rome were key bargaining chips in the struggle for power, not to mention the integrated troops stationed in the grain-producing areas.
Graebor was a disgrace to his father-in-law in the eyes of Roman citizens, and he was often compared to Lucius.
Lucius's arrival was naturally unwelcome, but Lucius still licked his face and lived in Grebo's house with official duties.
There, Lucius obtained a slave girl named Sula from Batiatasna.
Poor Spartacus was still waiting in the training room, but he didn't know that his wife had become a gift from the boss and the powerful.
Although Batiatas's wife, Ludia, and Grebo's noble wife, Elicia, rejected Lucius, it didn't convince him that the world had changed.
Sure enough, Lucius first obtained a confession that Ludia had been cheating with Batiatas' gladiator (Cress) for a long time.
Along the way, Elicia's extreme dislike of the rookie gladiator (Spartacus) also surfaced.
Lucius can only be said to be worthy of Capua's two most famous model couples, and even the object of his wife's cheating is much the same.
The drought in the summer in Capua continues. This is not a good thing for the Apennines, which have been starved of food.
The consul Claves' visit to Capua took up most of Lucius's time, and he cherished the rare opportunity to strengthen his friendship with the consul.
In order to pray for rain, the archons decided to hold a best gladiatorial battle of life and death, which required good gladiators, and Batiatas decided to have Kress and Spartacus fight Diack (Shadow of Death) hired by Zoroneste.
Of course, Lucius also watched this wonderful gladiatorial fight as a guest of honor.
Although he had lived in Rome for a while, Lucius rarely watched life-and-death gladiatorial fights due to his own preferences, and never participated in gladiatorial training himself.
However, Lucius's greatest opponent in the Senate, Crassus, was precisely an experienced soldier trained as a gladiator.
The matter of military power can be slowly figured out, and the purchase of trustworthy gladiators was first included in the agenda by Lucius.
Perhaps the gods were genuinely pleased with Diack's sacrifice, or were genuinely rejoicing at Spartacus' victory, when a long-awaited rain descended at the end of the gladiatorial fight. Whether it was Lucius or the consul's business, it was a happy end.
Entrusted by the consuls, who were anxious to return to Rome, Lucius was also left behind to investigate the destruction of the noble Ovid's family.
While following up on the murder of the Ovid family, Lucius discovers a suitable warrior - the gladiator Barka (the murderer).
As luck would have it, when Lucius visited Batiatas at night, poor Mr. Barka was being hunted down by the guards of the training center.
Lucius's guards saved Barka. A secret conversation involving only two nobles put Batiatas at the mercy of Lucius.
Of course, taking in Barka would put Lucius at risk being mistaken for a murderer, but it was also a bond of trust between him and Batiatas.
Crassus's fortune came from his real estate business, while Pompey's wealth came from the spoils of war against pirates, Sicily, and the Black Continent.
And Lucius, who had long heard of the name of Spartacus (after all, a modern man), hit the idea of making money on the manors that suffered after the great uprising began.
In order to establish friendship with Spartacus in advance, although Lucius did not plan to return Sulla, he still half sold and half gave Spartacus a set of gorgeous armor. Of course, if it weren't for the poor jingle Battiatas being willing to pay the bill with a slave girl, and his villeries did have a few treasures, Lucius wouldn't have been so generous.
With gladiators and more slaves, Lucius bought a house in Capra and added a few female slaves to prevent the guards from encroaching on his treasures.
That's when the advantages of Barka come into play. The gladiators, who were inconvenient to show their faces, were mainly responsible for guarding the treasures, mainly for ensuring the safety of Sulla's life.
As a frequent visitor to the arena, Kravis admired Spartacus's martial arts, and even brought his soon-to-be-adult son, Numanris, to Capra to be taught by a gladiator.
After coaxing Kravis, Spartacus did not wait for his wife, only to get the sad news that he was dead and did not see the body.
Lucius began to concentrate on Calculating Elicia and plotting for the power support of her father, Abinos. Batiathas fantasized about becoming the richest gladiatorial merchant, making it to the Senate, and reaching the pinnacle of his life.
However, the world could not fulfill people's wishes, and Lucius had to return to Rome because of his official duties. Batiatas's training ground was also deprived of the tools to make money due to sudden gladiator infighting.
From the beginning of the gladiatorial fight of the Mocator family, the originally indebted Battiatas made a lot of money, and Spartacus gradually became a veritable hero.
Bringing Sulla, a Thracian witch, back to Rome caused Lucius a series of unexpected troubles. After dealing with these things, Lucius's reputation in the city also increased due to disaster.
In order to diversify his tools, Bhattiatas decided to buy six potential slaves to fill his training camp.
Elithia financed one of them, a Celtic named Segvax, and used freedom as bait to take Spartacus' life.
The assassination failed because of Kress's intervention, and Spartacus had a vague sense that unity was strength.
Reginia, the richest widow in Rome, accepted Capra's invitation after being taunted by her best friend Elisia when she was widowed.
Lucius, as one of Leginia's mistresses, led a team to escort her and her two friends to Capra to visit Elithia.
The arrival of the three Roman noblewomen did not comfort their former best friend Elithea, but rather a natural contempt for her husband, Grebeau.
Leginia was bewitched by Ludia and decided to try the taste of slavery on Spartacus.
When Ludia came to sell, Elithia, who was curious, deliberately chose Ludia's forbidden belly, the "Capra God of War", to accompany her.
Unwilling to give up her confinement, Ludia designed herself and Leginia to "coincidentally" bump into the union of Elithia and Spartacus.
All it takes is two masks, as well as the self-esteem of Elicia and Spartacus.
"You'll be the laughing stock of the Romans. Clotis Grebo's wife turned out to be with a slave Falck who almost ruined his future. “
Smug language was matched with laughter, and Lycinia's ridicule angered Elithia.
The pampered eldest lady Elithia smashed the head of the rich widow Leginia on the spot.
Lucius had been wearing a mask in the shadows of the hallway, looking at the figures in the tent, doing what Spartacus and Elisia were doing. After this great change, I was first frightened and weak, and immediately thought of the key. Excitedly covering the mouth of Sulla, who had only recognized Spartacus, dragged his struggling female companion, and secretly left Villa in Batiatas.
The dead Leginia was Crassus's cousin, and the rich inheritance was not something that Lucius could get, but if he could use this handle to control Elithia, or even further influence her father Abinos through her, Lucius would not have a chance to bring down Crassus before Pompey would meet Rome.
In order to prevent Sulla from secretly contacting Spartacus, Lucius personally took her back to Rome overnight.
Lucius returned home this time differently than usual, not only arranging for Sulla to be accompanied by two maids, but also sending four additional guards for her.
These actions, along with Sulla's unusual food treatment, infuriated Lucius's wife, Gnaia Pompey.
Because the Pompey family was not noble and long-standing, and because she was not treated by a noble lady as a child, Gneia has always tolerated Lucius's behavior.
However, when rumors spread among the slaves that Sula was the real master of the family, Gneia wanted to whip Sula in order to assert her authority.
This reasonable request was ignored by Barka, and the sound of the dutiful gladiators and guards fighting drew Lucius.
Lucius vetoed Gneia's proposal, praised Barka for his approach, and solemnly reaffirmed to all the slaves and guards that Sulla was under his protection.
Of course, all those who spread the message were whipped, some were sold to slave traders who had gone to distant lands, and some were ended in misery.
Since the other Pompey children were too young, Lucius quickly quelled the family riot.
In order to ensure Sura's safety, he walked with Gneia when he left.
The reason for returning to Capra this time was to attend the coming-of-age ceremony held by Archon Kravis for his only son, Numanris.
Of course, the entertainment of the reception was gladiatorial fighting, but Lucius found a more interesting program before the show began.
Lucius, who wanted to take the opportunity to threaten Elithia, found her alone in the bathroom when he was looking for her traces, and drove away the slaves inside.
Relying on his fairly good eyesight, Lucius rejoiced when he saw Elithia take the initiative to untie her clothes and enter the bath and the protagonist of the bar mig.
Before he knew it, the people watching the play drank all the wine in their glasses, smiled and shook their heads and returned to the banquet to see if there was any wife who dared to tease without opening his eyes.
The dinner party was still in harmony with the combination of rich material and obedient slaves, except for a few noblewomen who talked about Lyginia to stimulate Elithia.
At the beginning of the exhibition match, Numanris went so far as to ask Veros to play instead of Cress, insisting on staining the civilized dinner with blood.
The inexplicable loss of a gladiator made Bhattiatas furious, but for Kravis's ability to pull himself into the Senate before leaving office, blood still soaked the living room floor.
The killing made many of those present smile, but it reminded Gnaia of the past. The contempt for the death of the inferior made her afraid to leave Lucius.
When she turned to look at her husband, she found that he was also staring at the deceased with a solemn expression.
Before the show began, Lucius felt that the blonde gladiator looked familiar. It wasn't until he died that Lucius, stimulated by disgust, remembered the face he had seen when he first possessed him.
It was at his wedding to Gnaia, and the beautiful lady who accompanied him seemed to be attending the wedding as a relative, and Lucius was very impressed.
Veros could have turned to him for help, although Lucius might not admit it for the honor of the Cornelius family, but at least there was hope of survival.
At least Lucius, whose mind was blank, felt that if he had remembered earlier, he would have been able to stop it, after all, slaves and nobles of great families were different.
Verros's silence preserved the family's honor, and Lucius wanted to do something to calm the guilt in his heart.
Bhatiathas was visibly overwhelmed by Kravis's explicit refusal to support him in politics, and his sworn enemy Solonis was still mocking his poverty.
Lucius, who had also never thought of helping him into the Senate, did not want to provoke hatred, so he had to ask Genaia to consult with his mistress, Ludia.
Staring at his wife's distant back, Lucius felt as if something had happened to him that he didn't know about it.
The gambling husband decides to become a gladiator to make money to pay off his debts, the shameless hooligans enter the house, and the chaste wife defends herself against the unbearable disturbances, and this is what happens to Verros in his life.
Aurelia is the wife of Veros, while Titus is a rascal who has been castrated.
Lucius quietly settled Verros's debts, and returned home with a lady named Aurelia.
He confessed Verros's identity to his wife, but did not explain to Aurelia why she was paying her debts.
The helpless Aurelia had already given up on her request to become a slave after hearing the bad news, but Lucius insisted that she remain a citizen.
In order to appease her, Lucius not only sent for the boy to be fetched from her brother, but also gathered the slaves of Capra's residence and announced the adoption of the child.
Lucius surrounded the cute little boy every day, taught him to read, wrestled with him, and enjoyed family fun.
Spartacus fell ill and missed a number of gladiatorial matches, and Kravis, whose term was about to expire, was never heard from again.
The Senate will not stop arguing because there are a few fewer people, even if that person is an archon.
Lucius did not want to miss this opportunity, and he returned to Rome with his wife and began to woo the men of Kravis, while Aurelia and her son Janus continued to live in Capra, working part-time as a caretaker of the house and the slaves inside.
To ensure the safety of their mother and son, Lucius also hired Aurelia's brother to command the house's guards.
Sure enough, it didn't take long for the news of Kravis's death to reach Rome, and the naïve Numanris unexpectedly claimed that Kravis's friend, Batiatas's sworn enemy, and Capra's biggest gladiatorial merchant, Solonis, was the murderer.
In any case, Lucius took the lion's share of the pie by taking the lead. Since the part he chose greatly violated the interests of Numanris, the other elders easily acquiesced and waited for the two families to fight.
Life went on, and Numanris and his mother, intoxicated by gladiatorial matches, did not return to Rome to receive the inheritance in the first place.
When Lucius was free to go to Elithia again, her husband, Glebo, who had led the expedition, returned victorious.
He had already prepared the melons to enjoy the coercion in Rome, and the only ones who did not want to return from Capra were Grabo and some of his army.
Grebo, who was originally subservient to Crassus, also unconsciously distanced himself from Crassus at the banquet.
With the help of his father-in-law, he succeeded in becoming a civil official, although he was the most unpopular.
Others felt inexplicable, but Lucius knew very well that it was because of Leginia.
Caesar was still a priest at this time, but Lucius did not want to ruin a great man because of his intervention. After all, if Caesar had been changed, Gaul might not have been a joke in the future.
Emilia and her husband, Sexters, the former administrator, proudly showed off it to Lucius after receiving an invitation from Elicia.
Lucius may have been the only dignitary around Capra who did not go to Villa in Batiatas to attend the banquet.
After all, it was a lonely fortress built on a cliff far from the city.
In the scorching sun, when the people dared to go to the feast, Lucius, who had no wife by his side, was ignoring the fact that Aurelia was pregnant, venting his fear of the coming great commotion.
At dusk, the Great Riot of the Ages, which is famous, began in Ville, Batiatas. Poor Sexters is said to have been the first to be killed.
As for the confession, it was obtained from Elithia, and the ruthless eldest lady cruelly imprisoned all the dignitaries in Villeri in order to keep the secret, and indirectly helped Spartacus expand the results of the war.
As the last male nobleman in Capra, Aurelia of Lucius's miscarriage passed by Elicia and his party on his way to Viller, the house of Batiasta.
The massacre of the magnates by the slave revolt was reported to Rome in the name of Lucius. In the days between letters and the arrival of new officials in Rome, Lucius devoted himself to looting the ownerless wealth by day, and at night he captured the soldiers who locked the door, and enjoyed better treatment than Numanris.
Numanris's family attended the unfortunate feast, and Lucius made a series of compromises such as abandoning the civil magistrate and electing Crassus as the civil magistrate, in exchange for the Elders' sitting back and watching him and annex all of Numanris's property.
Crassus's father was already a supporter of Sulla, and as Lucius bowed down and was willing to help Crassus with all his might, Lucius's fortune soon began to function well, and Crassus's mansion had a welcome guest of honor.
A few months passed, and Spartacus's whereabouts were erratic, which made the people who went to clean it up very dishonorable.
Elithia is pregnant, and although it is impossible to tell whose child it is, Lucius does not care at all. He had already taken the mother and son of Olicia to Rome, and in addition to handling official duties during the day, he also had to educate the children, and at night there was also a Sula who wanted to escape at home to be monitored, and a pregnant Gnaia to take care of.
After Crassus and Lucius formed a fragile alliance, Pompey's army received more supplies, and the situation on the battlefield improved by chance.
Lucius took in the instructor of the training ground, Onomamus, and put him in charge of ensuring the safety of the mansion in Rome.
A new wife, a comfortable room, and a wide variety of food alone made Honoramus go to work willingly.
Unlike his previous master, Lucius allowed Onomamus to eat and live with his wife, forbidding the people of the house to order the wives of Onomamus' choosing.
Barka, who had long since changed his court, became the deputy of his old boss Onomamus after his mother and son came to Rome, and his usual job was mainly to protect the women and children who traveled.
As the cleanup of Batiatas's house drew to a close, Grebo, a civil magistrate who had not yet sat in his chair, was framed by Lucius and transferred to Capra to quell the rebellion.
Ludia, who survived, caused a lot of trouble for the Grabepers.
Grabo lived up to Lucius's high expectations of him, and made a series of tricks to make Spartacus bigger and stronger.
Both Crassus and Caesar followed the army and began a tug-of-war to exterminate the slave heroes.
With neither Pompey nor Crassus in Rome, Lucius emboldened himself to become a civil magistrate and began a real political life.
Taking advantage of being in the rear, Lucius made a fortune by reselling booty and slaves, and he also had many veterans and reservists under his command.
While Pompey, Caesar, and Crassus fought bloodily at the risk of assassination as they flanked Spartacus on the front lines, Lucius lived a life of wine and meat in the city of Rome. During this period, after Gnaia died in childbirth, he married young Sepia.
Through this marriage, Lucius took over the Eagle Banner of Cypia's brother, and shortly after the succession was completed, Cypia also died.
When Crassus was unfavorable at the front, Lucius could have become the leader of the Sulla faction, but for some reason he took the initiative to retreat.
After Spartacus was exterminated, Pompey and Crassus were elected consuls, while Lucius retreated and returned to his duties as civil magistrates and became ordinary senators.
The new number of knights and paupers grew, and the Sulas gradually lost the support of the people.
Three years later, a famine broke out in Rome, and a large number of citizens hovered above and below the lifeline, and the Sulla sect completely lost its mass base.
With Caesar's divorce of his new wife, Pompea Sulla, Crassus, Pompey, and Caesar began to unite to dismantle the Sulla sect.
Lucius was gradually forgotten by the Roman citizens, and he was not even seen in the VIP seats of the arena for several years.
Only the slave traders knew about him, as Lucius was still the most generous buyer of slave girls and gladiators in the city of Rome.
The people ignored this Lucius, but Lucius became Octavian's wild father by self-improvement.
....... Behind the scenes, he helped Lucius Warrenos and Octavian......