Courage and Consequence – The Slave Woman the State Could Not Erase
A slave with no second name. A crowd that wanted her dead. Torturers working in shifts, from morning until dark, who quit before she did. A built exit held open the whole time: say you are not a Christian, burn a pinch of incense, and walk home to the ordinary years. In the Roman city of Lyon, in the year 177, Blandina would not say it. She answered every instrument the empire owned — the arena, the beasts, the hot iron, the bull — with one sentence, repeated until the torturers admitted they were beaten. Rome burned her body and poured the ash into the river so no grave would remain. It missed the letter already carried out of Gaul. The most powerful state on earth spent everything it had to erase one enslaved woman, and lost. Blandina needs to be remembered.
Read More…