Carausius
List carausius
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To where a junior roman officer his boss soon dubs 'triton' is drawn as rapidly into the rebel regime of that charismatic admiral-turned-usurper, mauseus carausiuswhat ashman calls 'the carausius stone' - a roman milepost (see his drawing on the back-cover) now forming the centrepiece to the roman gallery of the tullie house museum in carlisle, cumbria, ukthe man with whose spectacular rise and fall as british 'emperor' he is inextricably linked, including the very stone it ends atfirst released in by voreda books as a paperback, his 'mosaic' marked the 60th anniversary of a mysterious, true-life 'heritage crime' from which it's based on337 ad) to the roman villa the floor in question came fromplus a second, parallel strand about what happened (cthe still-unsolved crime clive rediscovered years later, practising as a criminal lawyerone that starts briefly enough, in italy, with scenes from a famous road-race, the mille miglia; then those two newcastle lawyers from our own time (michael tryton & william cariss) we encounter competing over there in a modern, recreation eventsee oxfam website for delivery information read moreexcellent pages, a little edge and cover wear) 'mosaic' weaves two distinct narratives: firstly, a roman pavement found in wartime east yorkshire, england, , then a police investigation into its baffling overnight-theft, seven years laterits much-anticipated sequel was released in , but 'two-eight-six' is also a prequelhis 'enthralling' (to quote one reader's reviewoxfam bookshop carlisle the foreword to his 'mosaic' summarises clive ashman as "artist, writer, motor mechanic and qualified lawyer" - varied backgrounds shaping unique novels described belowracing in a period car they'd nicknamed 'xenobia', both men are mysteriously drawn back to the same places/crimes as in 'mosaic', with the competition number on xenobia's doors only a pointer to another parallel narrative, this time from 286 ad
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Selling indian stick insect in groups of 5 juveniles for £3 feeding on privet and kept at room temp easy to keep and breed read more
3 €
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Indian stick insects(carausius morosus) for sale £1each collection only read more
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Indian stick insects (carausius morosus) a very easy, inexpensive and interesting species to keep, they eat bramble, privit, rose or oak leaves although i've found that they seem to prefer bramble leaves the mosteggs 50p each or 5 for £2 nymphs £1 each or 5 for £4 can be posted at buyers expense usually no more than £1 or £2 if you have any questions about the care requirements please don't hesitate to contact me anytime
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