<p>Nobody will blame me for placing here&nbsp;the touching history of these Martyrs. It&nbsp;illustrates the period of history we are now&nbsp;considering and sheds light on the preceding&nbsp;treatise. I can hardly read it without tears and it&nbsp;ought to make us love &ldquo;the noble army of&nbsp;martyrs.&rdquo; I think Tertullian was the editor of the&nbsp;story not its author. Felicitas is mentioned by&nbsp;name in the De Anima: and the closing&nbsp;paragraph of this memoir is quite in his style. To&nbsp;these words I need only add that Dr. Routh who&nbsp;unfortunately decided not to re-edit it ascribes&nbsp;the first edition to Lucas Holstenius.</p><p>Perpetua and Felicitas suffered&nbsp;martyrdom in the reign of Septimius Severus&nbsp;about the year 202 A.D. Tertullian mentions&nbsp;Perpetua and a further clue to the date is given&nbsp;in the allusion to the birthday of &ldquo;Geta the&nbsp;C&aelig;sar&rdquo; the son of Septimius Severus. There is&nbsp;therefore good reason for rejecting the opinion&nbsp;held by some that they suffered under Valerian&nbsp;and Gallienus. Some think that they suffered at&nbsp;Tuburbium in Mauritania; but the more general&nbsp;opinion is that Carthage was the scene of their&nbsp;martyrdom.</p>
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