SAINT PERPETUA: A Mother, a Martyr, a Rebel
She had everything to lose. A newborn son. A father who loved her. A future. Rome offered her life for two words: Caesar is Lord.
She chose death. And a pen.
From a Carthage prison cell in 203 AD, a 22-year-old noblewoman named Perpetua wrote the only surviving diary by a woman from the ancient world. She recorded her dreams, her defiance, her motherhood, and her march to the arena-where she faced a mad heifer in a torn white tunic and guided the executioner's sword to her own throat.
Rome wanted a spectacle. They got a resurrection.
This is not hagiography. This is war. A mother against an empire. A pen against the sword. A voice that Rome burned, buried, and banned-yet still echoes in every woman who has ever been told to kneel, be quiet, and recant.
She was a mother. She was a martyr. She was a rebel.
And she is not dead.
For readers of Circe, The Book of Longings, and Catherine Called Birdy-but this one is real. And she wrote it herself.