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Page 1: OMA MPERIOUS - HinterWeltroma.hinterwelt.com/downloads/RIT20Demo1.pdfRomulus and Remus, two brothers who were borne to the daughter of a deposed king. Their father was Mars, god of
Page 2: OMA MPERIOUS - HinterWeltroma.hinterwelt.com/downloads/RIT20Demo1.pdfRomulus and Remus, two brothers who were borne to the daughter of a deposed king. Their father was Mars, god of

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Roma ImperiousAlternative History Role-Playing Game

created by HinterWelt Enterprises

TM

Roma Imperious�

Copyright © by HinterWelt Enterprises, LLC 2004 All rights reserved. Any reproduction of the enclosed materials without the express written permission of HinterWelt Enterprises, LLC is prohibited.

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AcknowledgmentsThis is to acknowledge all the people who were indispensable to the creation of Roma Imperious and allit entails. The list is mainly the organizers of the game and not all there players. To those not mentioned,you still have our thanks and appreciation. Here�s to all of you.

Art CreditsCove r A r t : S .A . S k i nn e r I n s i d e Cov e r Map b y : C l a y t on Bun c e

I n t e r i o r A r t

CreditsSetting Designer/Writer: William Corrie III True20 Conversion by: Matthew Kaiser

Chief Editor: Linda Corrie Editor: Peter A. Schaefer, Inkmonkeys

Historical Consultant: John McCarten Layout and Graphic Design: William and Linda Corrie

HinterWelt Logo: Emily Bentgen

Produced under license from Green Ronin Publishing, LLC.

True 20, True20 Adventure Roleplaying, and the True20 logo are Trademarks of Green Ronin Pub-lishing, LLC and are used with permission.

John McCarten Darin RebertusTom Breed Jessica BreedScott Iverson Mike ThelenMike Crow Joseph F. Peshel (Stein-wielding Dwarf)Saida al-MisriMatthew Domeier

Andrea ParducciLucio Costa

Ron BacchusTors Sorens

Tom ColeSara Bens

With Special Thanks To:

Linda (My loving Wife)Anthony (The Ultimate Brother)

J e s u s C a rmona E s t e b an E r i k Roman S .A . S k i n n e rJ a v i e r C a rmona E s t e b an E r i c P omme r Gr e y Tho r nb e r r yMa r k B roo k s

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TABLE OF CONTENTSCHAPTER I: ROMA........................................................................ 7

CHAPTER II: THE IMPERIUM .......................................................... 17

CHAPTER III: KINGDOMS AND EMPIRES ........................................... 70

THE WIND ................................................................................ 97

CHAPTER IV: NEW ROLES & HEROIC PATHS.................................... 99

CHAPTER V: PREGENERATED CHARACTER ARCHETYPES .................... 113

CHAPTER VI: SKILLS AND FEATS.................................................. 125

CHAPTER VII: MAGIC ............................................................... 135

CHAPTER VIII: EQUIPMENT AND MONEY ...................................... 205

CHAPTER IX: FRIENDS & FOES .................................................... 225

CHAPTER X: MURDER IN ROMA .................................................. 275

APPENDIX A: CONVERTING FROM THE IRIDIUM SYSTEM TO TRUE20.. 279

APPENDIX B: CONVERTING FROM TRUE20 TO THE IRIDIUM SYSTEM... 285

OPEN GAME LICENSE VERSION 1.0A ...................................... 287

INDEX .................................................................................... 289

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IntroductionMy decision to write Roma started a long time agowith a love of the Roman historical period. I hadplayed in and run many different version but hadalways desired to see a treatment that went beyondthe Eternal City to the rest of the Empire and eventhe world. Also, I wanted to have magic involvedas I do in most of my games. To that end I set outon a two year journey in writing Roma Imperious.Originally, the setting was published with the Irid-ium System, a system I have developed and usedfor all my settings. The settings have all been writ-ten, though, with out a single system in mind. Thatis to say, one of the design goals have always beento allow readers to interject their favorite system.That precipitated several fans of the Roma settingasking for conversions to their favorite systems. Ilistened and learned. Eventually, almost all agreedthat a True20 conversion would be the best. I mentioned the project on a forum and Matthewmentioned an interest. Hewas very understanding tohow I work (somewhatchaotic) and handled theconversion in a very pro-fessional manner. I cannotpraise him enough. The goal of the book is tobe a resource for theTrue20 game system. Tothat end, when writing wehad to choose betweenadding to the page countand the final price or notincluding the core rules.We decided it would bebest to not include any ofthe OGL material forTrue20 and instead allowpeople to use Roma as anaddition to their True20settings. Some will notlike that decision and Ihave already received

some negative feedback from play testers about itbut in the end, they preferred the option to buy theTrue20 core rules and Roma separately if I couldkeep the final price down. Hopefully it will workout that way.A final note on the overall goals of the settingdesign. You should take this book as a guide andnot as an immutable rule book. Roma is meant tobe played in many different ways and has beenchanged and added to be many readers already.Some play in the Jade Empire and never mentionthe Romans while others never leave the EternalCity. In the end, it is your book now and your set-ting. That has always been my guiding philosophy,to give players and GMs the tools they need forgreat adventures.Thanks!www.h i n t e rwe l t . c omWe l come t o t h e Nex t L e v e l i n RPG s .

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Pronunciation Key For LatinThis is meant as a quick referencefor the reader and not as an indepth Latin reference.

VowelsA - "ah" as in "father"; short �A�as in �bat�E - usually "ay" as in "hey" but inet, est and sed, the E is like the 'e'in "debt"I - "ee" as in "beet," but in id andin like "bid"O - "oh" as in "low"U - "oo" as in "nude," But wordend ings -u s and -um a r epronounced like "full" and "tool"

DipthongsAE - the diphthong, as in "lye"AU - diphthong, as in "frown"OE - diphthong, as in "boy"

ConsonantsC - always as "k"Ch - always as in "chris"G - always as in "gale"I - as "y" when it's the first letter ina word and when followed by avowelQu- as in English "queen"R - usually rolledS - always soft, as in "soul"T - always a hard sound as in"tartar"V - always pronounced as "w"X - always as "ks"There are no letters for J, W, or Yin Latin.

The fol lowing let ters are al lp ronounced t he s ame a s i nEnglish:B,D,F,H,K,L,M,N,P and Z

SyllablesA Latin word will contain as manysyllables as it does vowels anddipthongs. The rules for findingthe syllables in a word are:� A single consonant between

vowels i s t aken wi th thesecond; a-va-rus, e-me-ti-or.

� Initial consonants belong tothe first and final ones to thelast; ge-li-dus, stri-dor.

� Where two or more consonantscome between vowels then thedivision comes right before thelast consonant; e-mer-go,in-for-tu-ni-um.

� Exceptions to the above are the�ph� as in e-le-phan-tus, as arethe �r� �l� whenever they arethe second of a consonantgroup as in pa-tris.

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AccentLatin is accented in the following ways:� Two syllables - emphasis on the first; FOR-tis� In most cases, more than two syllables will

mean the second to final syllable will take theaccent; spe-CU-lum, ros-CI-dus, ros-TRA-tus

PhrasesMy name is...-Meum nomen �YOUR_NAME�est. What is your name?-Quid est nomen tuum? How are you?-Quid agis? Maybe-fortasse Please-Te amabo Thank you-Gratia When-quando You sure are drinking a lot - Re vera, potas beneStupid Cow - Vacca foeda!I don�t know what you are talking about - Nescioquid dicas

Let them hate me provided they fear me - Odeintdum metuantThe play is over - Acta est fabulaMake haste slowly - Festina lenteWoe to the conquered! - Vae victis!With me all is well - Ego me bene habeoThey wished this - Hoc VolueruntBrother, hello and goodbye - Frater, ave atque valeFor glory! - Ad gloriam!Farewell - Vale

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Roman history spans 1000 years in the west and even longerin the east. It is, in itself, a formidable setting for any fantasyadventure. There are endless intrigues, exotic lands andconflict of all manner as the Republic and later, the Empire,expanded and took more lands and subjects. To restrict anadventure setting only to Roma seems a shame when somany events were happening around the world.

The Romans were considered a conservative people whotended towards simple, modest lives during the Republic.This was reflected in the Twelve Tables, the basic laws ofthe Republic, where the wealthy patricians were treatedbetter than the plebeians, who were treated better than theslaves. However, these laws were the first of their kind toapply across the social landscape. Punishment varied but acrime was still a crime, no matter what the rank of thecriminal. The nature of the laws, though, reinforced thestatus quo and nurtured a simple view of the world.

During the Imperial age the Romans began to enjoy excessesmade famous through Emperors like Nero and Caligula.Still, they had a conservative outlook towards other culturesand took time to assimilate the ideas present in thesecultures.

Roman expansion emerged early in their story as they beganto control and conquer the Latinium and Tuscan areas of theItalian peninsula. This set them on a road that made them amajor factor in world history and culture.

Alternate RomaThe western Roman Empire of history ended in a cloud ofconjecture. The precise date is not whole-heartedly agreedon, but for the sake of simplicity this book considers theabdication of the last acknowledged western Romanemperor, Romulus Augustus in 476 AD, the end of thehistorical Roman Empire.

The alternate western Roman Empire does not decline or fallbut expands to become a single entity again. This happensdue to many factors that will be detailed in this book, fromthe profound discovery and fostering of magic byConstantine to the subtly planned social assimilation ofGermania by Julius Caesar to more subtle reasons of keysocial points of the citizenry.

In this book dates will be given based on Ab Urbe Condita(A.U.C.), the founding of Roma in 753 B.C. This means thatthe date 753 A.U.C. is actually 0 A.D.

Republic History

The history of the Empire is founded in the Republic. Theroots of what will found the views and beliefs of the Romanpeople comes from their belief in the Republic. To themodern day, some Romans still refuse to think of the Empireas anything but a republic. The Emperor is viewed as a formof Dictator for life. The modern Empire, though, is not theRepublic of old no matter how much the citizens may want itto be.

The Founding of RomeThere are two myths of the founding of Rome. The first is ofRomulus and Remus, two brothers who were borne to thedaughter of a deposed king. Their father was Mars, god ofwar, who had come to Rhea Silvia while she was a VestalVirgin. King Amulius, who had deposed Rhea�s father,drowned her in the Tiber River and set the brothers adrift.The basket they floated in was caught far down river by a figtree. They were found by a she-wolf, sacred to Mars, whocared for them until a shepherd found them and gave theboys to his wife to raise.

An alternate version, written in Virgil�s Aeneid in theseventh century A.U.C, has Aeneas, a hero of Troy, settingthe basis of the city. Aeneas fled the destruction of Troy withhis aged father on his back and leading his son by the hand.He loses his wife as he flees but is able to lead many to

Chapter I: Roma

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safety. After a long journey they arrive in Latium where hebecame the progenitor of the Roman people through his sonAscanios. A more popular legend had Aeneas as the founderof Rome. Yet another version made Aeneas the forefather ofRomulus and Remus and had Romulus founding Rome.

As Romulus and Remus grew to manhood they were toldtheir true origin. King Amulius was slain in battle andNumitor, Romulus and Remus� grandfather, was restored tothe throne. The brothers decided to found a city near wherethey came ashore. They followed the omen of a flight ofgeese and founded the city on Palatine Hill, where Romuluswould be king. During the founding of the city, Romulusmarked the borders of the city by plowing with a white bulland cow; these sacred animals represented the blessing ofJupiter and Juno, the leaders of the gods. Jesting with hisbrother, Remus jumped across the furrows. This impious actso infuriated Romulus that he slew his brother in a fit ofrage.

The Rape of the Sabine women is also a tale of Romulus.When the village of Rome was founded its populationconsisted mostly of men. Romulus devised a plan andinvited the neighboring tribe of the Sabines to a harvestfestival. When the Sabines arrived it was not a festival butthe abduction of 600 daughters of Sabine at sword point.

The Mythic KingsThere is little historical information about the seven kings ofRome, and they are often referred to as the legendary kingsof Rome. After the city�s founding, Romulus ruled until 37A.U.C. for a total of 37 years. He founded the city and wasresponsible for the Rape of the Sabine Women.

During the rule of these kings, Rome laid the foundation forthe constitution of the Republic. A number of monumentswere built during this period, including the Temple of Jupiteron the Capitoline Hill. Ostia was founded during this time toserve Rome as a seaport. The first sewer, the CloacaMaxima, was built by Tarquinius Priscus as well as thefoundations for the Circus Maximus. Servius Tullius set updivisions based on class, setting the foundations for aconstitution based on wealth. During all this time the wallsand domain of Rome were extended.

The end of the kings came when Sextus, the son ofTarquinius Superbus, raped the wife of a patrician, Lucretia.This was the final straw as Tarquinius had burdened thepeople by using the lower classes in the construction ofmonuments instead of allowing them arms to fight in the warwith the Etruscans and Latins. He also recruited his armyfrom amongst his retainers and from foreign allies. His reignwas fraught with bloodshed. In the end, Lucius Junius Brutusled a revolt against the Tarquins and abolished the Romanmonarchy.

The effect of the revolution was to create a republic, agovernment by the patricians for the patricians. Certainconcessions were made to the plebeians but merely as apropagandist movement to get the buy-in of the masses. Inthe end, Lucius was killed by the son of Tarquinius, but notbefore he set the Republic on its path.

Slave RevoltsIn 619 A.U.C. one of the most horrifying things that theRomans could imagine occurred. Their prolonged militarysuccesses had generated a great abundance of slaves, and inSicily a revolt of these slaves resulted in atrocitiescommitted on their former masters. By its suppression in 621A.U.C. by Fluvius Flacchus, a consul had gone so far as tocrucify twenty thousand slaves. In 650 A.U.C. the slaves ofSicily revolted again, even in the face of the horribleconsequences. It took another three years to put down therevolt. Considering the horrible punishment dealt to theslaves in the first revolt, it indicates the terrible conditions ofthe slaves of Sicily. These revolts, though harshly dealt with,began the movement in Roman law towards slave reformsand better forms of slave management.

The First TriumvirateThe events leading up to the Triumvirate�s bid for power aremany. To summarize, Gnaeus Pompeius (known as Pompey)was a favored general of Sulla, a tyrant and despotic rulerwho maintained power through fear. Pompey made apowerful name for himself as a general who could solve theproblems the Romans faced. Crassus was by most accountsthe wealthiest senator of his time. During the slave revolts of682 A.U.C. he faced and defeated the gladiator Spartacus butwas robbed of the triumph by Pompey returning fromcampaigning in the east. Crassus stood aside and allowedPompey the triumph and an alliance was forged. JuliusCaesar entered the picture as an aspiring politician. He wascharismatic and garnered a great deal of support in theSenate. With his aid, Pompey was able to gain more andmore power over the navy and the military in general.

The Triumvirate of Pompey (the military man), Crassus (themoney man) and Caesar (the politician) came into being in693 A.U.C. It lasted for seven years until the death ofCrassus in the battle of Carrhae against the Parthians.

Name Ruled

Romulus 753-716 B.C.Numa Pompilius 715-674 B.C.Tullius Hostilius 673-642 B.C.Ancus Marcius 642-617 B.C.Tarquinius Priscus 616-579 B.C.Severus Tullius 578-535 B.C.Tarquinius Superbus 535-510 B.C.

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Increasing jealousy between Caesar and Pompey caused adeterioration of the alliance until 704 A.U.C., when Caesardefied the Senate and Pompey and crossed the Rubicon,effectively declaring war on Roma. The civil war had mostof the common people backing Caesar and the conservativesbacking Pompey. The war turned bad for Pompey and hefled to Aegyptus with hopes of aid from allies but he wasbetrayed. Pompey was assassinated by the Egyptians in 705A.U.C. against the wishes of Caesar.

Caesar spent four years reforming and solidifying theRepublic under the guise of Consul and later Dictator. In 711A.U.C. a group of Senators, calling themselves theLiberatores, killed Caesar for the good of the Republic.Believing they would be welcomed as heroes thesepatricians were reviled by the common people who had soadored Caesar and his social reforms. They were forced toflee as Octavian, Caesar�s adopted nephew, set out on acampaign of vengeance. He formed the Second Triumviratemade up of himself, Marcus Antonius and Marcus AemiliusLepidus, two former colleagues of his uncle.

The Second TriumvirateThe Second Triumvirate had a distinct advantage and wasquick to establish their dominance. The militarily influentialprovinces of Gallia and Hispania joined them and shortly theSenate declared the Triumvirs co-rulers of the Republic.Despite this declaration the Republic was essentially splitbetween Octavian in the west, Antonius in the east andLepidus in Africa. To solidify the power of the Triumvirateeven farther, the Senate legitimized the office and added it tothe Roman constitution. Unlike the first Triumvirate, theSecond was to be a legitimate power in Roma and not a backdoor deal.

The Second Triumvirate continued for ten years from 712A.U.C. to 722 A.U.C. with an increasing level of jealousyand contempt for the other members. Lepidus sided withAntonius in most matter but was no match for theaccomplishments of his fellow Triumvirs. In 717 A.U.C.after aiding in defeating Popeius, son of Pompey the Great,he tried to betray Octavian but failed. He was summarilydismissed from the Triumvirate but allowed to quietly retirefrom politics. By 722 A.U.C., the second five year term ofthe Triumvirate was up and neither Antonius nor Octavian,who had begun using the title Imperator, were interested incontinuing. Antonius, with Cleopatra at his side, made a bidto defeat Octavian but in turn was defeated by him and theRoman legions. In 725 A.U.C, they committed suicide inAlexandria. Octavian took the principate and the name GaiusJulius Caesar Octavianus Augustus, becoming the firstRoman emperor. The Republic had ended.

AugustusOnce he had quelled the final rumblings of the dissentersOctavian was free to return to Rome in triumph. Toemphasize his role as pacificator, he closed the doors of theTemple of Janus, a symbol of peace throughout the Romanrealm of influence. In 726 A.U.C. he set aside hisextraordinary powers only to have them reinstated in a guisemore constitutionally pleasing to the Senate and the people.He became the Princeps, or first citizen, and Pater Patriae,father of his country. At this time he took the name AugustusCaesar and would never be known as Octavian after that.This was the end of the Republic.

The Bohemian PlanAugustus conceived of a plan to conquer Germania and partsof Sarmatia in one offensive. Tiberius, Augustus� son, wouldlead an army north through Dacia and into the German plainwhere it would meet with another army marching east.Germanicus, a beloved general by the Legions for hisdedication to soldiers, led the armies heading eastward. Inthe 763 A.U.C. the two armies met after a decisive battleagainst the remaining German tribes near the head waters ofthe Elbe river. The city of Tiberia, which would become thedioecesis capital and be renamed in the time of Constantineto Constancia, was founded nearby. The Bohemian Plan hasbeen held as the definitive exercise of Roman planning andmilitary execution.

The Fall of the RepublicAt the end of the civil war, Augustus had 60 legions at hiscommand. He decided to reduce the number to 28 andstation them on the borders and as far from each other aspossible. The demobilized legions were settled in thecolonies in order to strengthen the expansion of Rome.Augustus maintained direct control of the frontier provincesand returned the inner provinces to the Senate. This allowedAugustus to retain control of the military while appearing tofavor the Republic and the Senate.

Under Augustus� rule the Empire grew more quickly than atany other time. To the north it expanded past the Elbe riverto include Germania, a number of kingdoms peacefullysubmitted to Roman rule in the east and most of central andeastern Europe came under its rule.

DiocletianDiocletian was an influential emperor who ruled in theeleventh century. He was the founder of many reforms, fromthe monetary system to the military to the manner in whichthe Empire was ruled. He introduced the concept of sharedrulers, creating two Augusti, one to rule the Empire in theEast and one in the West. Later, Diocletian and his fellowAugustus each named a Caesar as a successor and ruler ofroughly 1/4 of the Empire. Diocletian�s move weakened the

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office of Emperor allowing the Senate to regain even morepower for itself. The Empire did not know reunited ruleagain until Constantine and Julian the Reformer.

Constantine and MaxentiusConstantius, Diocletian�s Caesar, was promoted to Augustuswith Galerius when Diocletian abdicated. Constantius diedwithin a year in York, Britannia due toillness. His troops promoted his sonC o n s t a n t i n e t o A u g u s t u s u p o nConstantius� death. This did not sit wellwith Maxentius, son of Maximian, whothought he was entitled to his father�s titleas much as Constantine was entitled to hisfather�s. Maxentius took control of Africaand Italy. His father then came out ofretirement and insisted on the title ofAugustus again. It was not until 1077A.U.C. when Constantine defeated the lastof his rivals that the empire had a singleleadership.

Constantine ruled the Empire alone forthirty years. During this time he made hisreligious affiliation unclear but it iswithout a doubt that he wished to increasehis power and the stability of the Empirethrough the development of magic.Initially, he called upon the druids who hadaided h im in h is campaign agains tMaxentius to divulge their rituals and allthey knew of the function of magic. Theyflatly refused and this eventually led torevolts against the Roman rule. Notdissuaded, while still consolidating hispower Constantine founded the ComitiaMagi and began the study of magic.Although not fully realized within hislifetime, the founding of this organizationwould bear fruit with the first functionalgate between Roma and Ravenna beingopened in 1088.

In 1083 he es tab l i shed Byzan t ium( r e n a m ed C o n s t a n t i n o p l e ) a s t h eadministrative center of the empire. Heissued the Edict of Milan, which institutedreligious tolerance. Despite this he passedother laws that restricted conversion to theJewish faith, thought of as a rival to thetraditional cults of the Romans. As timewore on, Constantine also become moreunfavorable towards cults not directlylinked to the Sol Invictus or Mithristscults, passing laws banning sacrifices and

divination, destroying temples, confiscating holy lands andtreasures. He also refined Diocletian�s reforms including thecreation of frontier legions and reserve legions able to bedispatched at a moments notice. He nearly disbanded thePraetorian Guard but was convinced not to by their advancesin acquiring magic knowledge from the Celts, Norse andother sources.

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