"There was a smell of blood mingling with the smell of burning that
still clung about scorched timber and blackened thatch, and a great
wailing rose from the watching crowd. The old High Priest dipped a
finger in the blood and made a sign with it on Phaedrus's forehead,
above the Mark of the Horse Lord."
So began the ceremony that was to make young Phaedrus, ex-slave and
gladiator, Horse Lord of the Dalriadain. Phaedrus had come a long way
since the fight in the arena that gained him his freedom. He had left
behind his old Roman life and identity and had entered another, more
primitive, world--that of the British tribes in the far north. In this
world of superstition and ancient ritual, of fierce loyalties and
intertribal rivalry, Phaedrus found companionship and love, and
something more--a purpose and a meaning to his life as he came fully to
understand the significance of the Mark of the Horse Lord.
First published in 1965, The Mark of the Horse Lord, set in
second-century Britain, has been acclaimed by many readers as the finest
of Rosemary Sutcliff's many novels, imparting true insight into the
nature of leadership, identity, heroism, loyalty, violence, and
sacrifice.