Appointment with Death

Appointment with Death
Dust-jacket illustration of the first UK edition
AuthorAgatha Christie
Cover artistRobin Macartney
LanguageEnglish
SeriesHercule Poirot
GenreCrime novel
PublisherCollins Crime Club
Publication date
2 May 1938
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages256 (first edition, hardback)
Preceded byDeath on the Nile 
Followed byHercule Poirot's Christmas 

Appointment with Death is a work of detective fiction by British writer Agatha Christie, first published in the UK by the Collins Crime Club on 2 May 1938[1] and in the US by Dodd, Mead and Company later in the same year.[2][3] The UK edition retailed at seven shillings and sixpence (7/6)[4] and the US edition at $2.00.[3]

The book features the Belgian detective Hercule Poirot and reflects Christie's experiences travelling in the Middle East with her husband, the archaeologist Sir Max Mallowan. The main settings are Jerusalem and Petra.

Plot introduction

Crime map showing "Petra, the place of sacrifice" from Dell Mapback #105

Holidaying in Jerusalem, Poirot overhears Raymond Boynton telling his sister, "You do see, don't you, that she's got to be killed?" Their stepmother, Mrs Boynton, is a sadistic tyrant who dominates her family. When she is found dead on a trip to Petra, Poirot proposes to solve the case in twenty-four hours, even though he has no way of knowing whether it was murder.

Plot summary

The novel opens as the family and the victim are introduced through the perspective of newly qualified Dr Sarah King and Dr Gerard, who discuss the behaviour of the family. Mrs Boynton is sadistic and domineering, behaviours which she may have carried over from her original profession of prison warden - or, rather, she became a wardress because she enjoyed having power over people. She has mentally and psychologically tortured her three stepchildren, Lennox, Carol and Raymond since they were toddlers, and carried this on to her own daughter Ginevra (Jinny). Sarah is attracted to Raymond Boynton, while Jefferson Cope admits to wanting to take Nadine Boynton away from her husband, Lennox, subtly encouraged by Mrs Boynton, in hopes of further damage to Lennox. Jefferson, however, does not really understand the extent of Mrs Boynton's sadistic plans. Having been thwarted in her desire to free the young Boyntons, Sarah confronts Mrs Boynton whose apparent reply is a strange threat: "I've never forgotten anything – not an action, not a name, not a face." When the party reaches Petra, Mrs Boynton uncharacteristically sends her family away from her for a period. Later, she is found dead with a needle puncture in her wrist. Before her death is discovered, Raymond, having fallen in love with Sarah, and Lennox, finally realising he could lose Nadine, separately decide to tell their mother they are leaving. Carol, who with Raymond, had talked of trying to release the whole family, and Jinny, who is on the verge of a breakdown, also had motives for killing Mrs Boynton. Other visitors to Petra, including Lady Westholme and Miss Pierce have witnessed some of the events, and may have evidence to be ferreted out by Poirot.

Poirot claims that he can solve the mystery within twenty-four hours simply by interviewing the suspects. During these interviews he establishes a timeline that seems impossible: Sarah King places the time of death considerably before the times at which various of the family members claim last to have seen the victim alive. Attention is focused on a hypodermic syringe that has seemingly been stolen from Dr Gerard's tent and later replaced. The poison administered to the victim is believed to be digitoxin, something that she already took medicinally.

Poirot then calls for a meeting and explains how each member of the family has, in turn, discovered Mrs Boynton to be dead and, suspecting another family member, failed to report the fact. None of the family would have needed to murder the victim with a hypodermic, since an overdose could have been administered much more effectively in her medicine, to which they had access. This places the suspicion on one of the outsiders.

The murderer is revealed to be Lady Westholme who, prior to her marriage, had been incarcerated in the prison in which the victim was once a warden. It was not to Sarah, but to Lady Westholme standing behind her, that Mrs Boynton had addressed that peculiar threat; the temptation to acquire a new subject to torture had been too great for her to resist. Lady Westholme feared that Mrs Boynton would divulge her criminal past and disrupt her political career. Disguised as an Arab servant, she had committed the murder and then relied upon the suggestibility of Miss Pierce to lay two pieces of misdirection that had concealed her role in the murder. Lady Westholme, eavesdropping on Poirot's summation from an adjoining room, overhears that her crime is about to be revealed to the world and commits suicide with a revolver she carried when travelling. The family, free at last, take up happier lives: Sarah marries Raymond; Carol marries Jefferson; and Ginevra takes up a successful career as a stage actress and marries Dr Gerard.

Characters

  • Hercule Poirot, renowned Belgian detective
  • Colonel Carbury, senior figure in Emirate of Transjordan
  • Mrs Boynton, the victim
  • Ginevra Boynton, the victim's daughter
  • Raymond Boynton, the victim's stepson
  • Carol Boynton, the victim's stepdaughter
  • Lennox Boynton, the victim's stepson
  • Nadine Boynton, the victim's stepdaughter-in-law (Lennox's wife)
  • Jefferson Cope, a family friend
  • Dr Gerard, a French psychologist
  • Sarah King, a young doctor
  • Lady Westholme, a member of Parliament
  • Miss Amabel Pierce, a former nursery governess

Literary significance and reception

Simon Nowell-Smith's review in the Times Literary Supplement of 7 May 1938 concluded that "Poirot, if the mellowing influence of time has softened many of his mannerisms, has lost none of his skill. His examination of the family, the psychologists and the few others in the party, his sifting of truth from half-truth and contradiction, his playing off one suspect against another and gradual elimination of each in turn are in Mrs Christie's most brilliant style. Only the solution appears a trifle tame and disappointing."[5]

In The New York Times Book Review for 11 September 1938, Kay Irvin said, "Even a lesser Agatha Christie story holds its readers' attention with its skillful management of suspense. Appointment with Death is decidedly of the lesser ranks: indeed, it comes close to being the least solid and satisfactory of all the Poirot mystery tales. Its presentation of a family harried and tortured by a sadistic matriarch is shot full of psychological conversation and almost entirely deficient in plot. And yet, when the evil-hearted old tyrant has been murdered at last and Poirot considers the suspects, one follows with genuine interest the unraveling of even unexciting clues."[6]

In The Observer's issue of 1 May 1938, "Torquemada" (Edward Powys Mathers) said, "I have to confess I have just been beaten again by Agatha Christie. There was no excuse. I was feeling in particularly good form; and the worst of it is that she handicapped herself in the latest game with what in anyone else would be insolent severity. Murder on the Nile (sic) was entirely brilliant; Appointment with Death, while lacking the single stroke of murderer's genius which provided the alibi in the former story, must be counted mathematically nearly twice as brilliant, since the number of suspects is reduced by nearly half. Indeed, though we begin our story in Jerusalem and meet our murder in Petra, the Red Rose City, we might as well be in a snowbound vicarage as far as the limitation of suspicion is concerned. And it is in this respect that Agatha Christie repeats her Cards on the Table triumph and beats Steinitz with a single row of pawns."[7]

The Scotsman of 9 May 1938 said, "As usual, Miss Christie plays fair with her readers. While the solution comes with a shock of surprise, it is logical enough: the clues are there, one could fasten upon them and assess their importance. Perhaps it is another case of the reader being unable to see the wood for the trees; but there are so many trees. Not this author's best crime novel, Appointment with Death is yet clever enough and convincing enough to stand head and shoulders above the average work of the kind."[8]

E R Punshon of The Guardian in his review of 27 May 1938 summarised: "For ingenuity of plot and construction, unexpectedness of dénouement, subtlety of characterisation, and picturesqueness of background, Appointment with Death may take rank among the best of Mrs Christie's tales."[9]

Mary Dell in the Daily Mirror of 19 May 1938 said, "This is not a book I should recommend you to read last thing at night. The malignant eye of Mrs Boynton might haunt your sleep and make a nightmare of your dreams. It's a pretty eerily bloodcurdling tale. A grand book."[10]

Robert Barnard wrote: "Notable example of the classic-era Christie, with excellent Near East setting, and the repulsive matriarch as victim. The family tensions around her are conveyed more involvingly than usual. The detection, with its emphasis on who-was-where-and-when, is a little too like Ngaio Marsh of the period, and there is some vagueness in the motivation, but this is as taut and atmospheric as any she wrote."[11]

References to other works

The novel mentions several other Poirot investigations: the detective is seen to retell to Colonel Carbury the story of Cards on the Table, and Colonel Race from this investigation is mentioned. Nadine Boynton actually confronts Poirot with his own actions in the conclusion of Murder on the Orient Express, Poirot suggesting that she was told by one of the case's figures. Miss Pierce also comments on The A.B.C. Murders when she recognises Poirot as a great detective.

Publication history

  • 1938, Collins Crime Club (London), 2 May 1938, Hardback, 256 pp
  • 1938, Dodd Mead and Company (New York), 1938, Hardback, 301 pp
  • 1946, Dell Books, Paperback, (Dell number 105 [mapback]), 192 pp
  • 1948, Penguin Books, Paperback, (Penguin number 682), 206 pp
  • 1957, Pan Books, Paperback, 159 pp (Pan number 419)
  • 1960, Fontana Books (Imprint of HarperCollins), Paperback, 159 pp
  • 1975, Ulverscroft Large-print Edition, Hardcover, 334 pp ISBN 0-85456-366-0

The first true publication of Appointment with Death occurred in the US with a nine-part serialisation in Collier's Weekly from 28 August (Volume 100, Number 9) to 23 October 1937 (Volume 100, Number 17) with illustrations by Mario Cooper.

The UK serialisation was in twenty-eight parts in the Daily Mail from Wednesday, 19 January to Saturday, 19 February 1938 under the title of A Date with Death. Fifteen of the instalments contained illustrations by J. Abbey (Joseph van Abbé, brother of Salomon van Abbé). This version did not contain any chapter divisions and omitted various small paragraphs such as the quote in Part I, Chapter twelve from Dr Gerard which is taken from Book IV of Ecclesiastes. The political argument between Lady Westholme and Dr Gerard in chapter ten about the League of Nations was also deleted. Finally, the epilogue did not appear in the serialisation.

Four days before the first instalment appeared, in the edition dated Saturday, 15 January, a piece specially written by Christie as an introduction to the serialisation appeared in the Daily Mail. She charted the creation of Poirot and expressed her feelings about him in the famous quote, "There have been moments when I have felt: 'Why-why-why did I ever invent this detestable, bombastic, tiresome little creature!'"[12]

Adaptations

Stage

Christie adapted the book as a play of the same name in 1945. It is notable for being one of the most radical reworkings of a novel Christie ever did, not only eliminating Hercule Poirot from the story, but also changing the identity of the killer. In the play, the ill Mrs Boynton committed suicide and dropped several red herrings that pointed to her family members as possible suspects, hoping that they would suspect each other and therefore continue to live in her shadow even after her death. In addition, the character of Carol Boynton has been dropped, Ginevra is now a stepdaughter (rather than a natural child) of Mrs Boynton, Lady Westholme becomes an ex-Member of Parliament, Miss Pierce is now Miss Pryce, and Alderman Higgs has been added as a fellow vacationer/verbal sparring partner for Lady Westholme.

Film

The novel was later adapted into the sixth of six films to star Peter Ustinov as Poirot, and released in 1988. The film retained the essential plot of the book, though the location of the murder was changed from Petra to Qumran, an archaeological site in Palestine. The cast included Lauren Bacall, Carrie Fisher, Sir John Gielgud, Piper Laurie, Hayley Mills, Jenny Seagrove, and David Soul. In the film, Miss Pierce was renamed Miss Quinton, and the character of Dr Gerard was removed.

Television

United States

The first television adaptation was as an episode of the CBS anthology series Danger, broadcast on 16 January 1951.

British

The novel was adapted for the eleventh season of the series Agatha Christie's Poirot starring David Suchet as Poirot. The screenplay was written by Guy Andrews and it was filmed in Casablanca (with Mahkama du Pacha acting as Hotel Constantine in the adaptation and Kasbah Boulaouane as the excavation site) and El Jadida, Morocco in May 2008. It was directed by Ashley Pearce, who also directed Mrs McGinty's Dead and Three Act Tragedy. The cast included Christina Cole, Tim Curry, John Hannah, Elizabeth McGovern and Zoe Boyle.[13] The adaptation features a significant number of plot changes:

  • Mrs Boynton is now Lady Boynton after having married newly added character Lord Boynton, an archaeologist searching for John the Baptist's head. She was previously Mrs Pierce and all references to her having worked in the prison system are removed.
  • An added plot element features Sister Agnieszka, an agent of white slavers who attempts to abduct one of the Boynton girls.
  • Lady Westholme's background and motivation are considerably different. In this version she is Dame Celia Westholme, an acclaimed author and traveler who was originally Mrs Pierce's maid. After a night with visiting houseguest Dr Gerard, she became pregnant, and was forced to give up her daughter, Jinny (Ginevra). Westholme and Gerard work together to murder Lady Boynton as revenge for the trauma she inflicted on their daughter and the other children.
  • Additionally, Nanny Taylor, Lady Boynton's accomplice in the children's abuse, is also a new character.
  • Lennox Boynton and Jefferson Cope are combined into one character, Leslie Jefferson Cope, an adopted sibling of the Boyntons who was eventually sent away.
  • Nadine Boynton and Miss Amabel Pierce are absent.

French

The novel was adapted as a 2019 episode of the French television series Les Petits Meurtres d'Agatha Christie.

Japanese

The novel was adapted as a two hour special Shi to no Yakusoku (死との約束, lit. Promise of Death) by Fuji Television in Japan, continuing their series of adaptations of Christie stories for the Japanese market.[14]

Radio

Appointment with Death was adapted by Michael Bakewell for BBC Radio 4, featuring John Moffatt as Poirot.

References

  1. ^ The Observer, 1 May 1938 (p. 6)
  2. ^ John Cooper and B.A. Pyke. Detective Fiction – the collector's guide: Second Edition (Pages 82 and 86) Scholar Press. 1994. ISBN 0-85967-991-8
  3. ^ a b "American Tribute to Agatha Christie: The Classic Years: 1935 - 1939". J S Marcum. May 2007. Retrieved 19 December 2015.
  4. ^ Peers, Chris; Spurrier, Ralph; Sturgeon, Jamie (March 1999). Collins Crime Club – A checklist of First Editions (Second ed.). Dragonby Press. p. 15.
  5. ^ The Times Literary Supplement, 7 May 1938 (p. 318)
  6. ^ The New York Times Book Review, 11 September 1938 (p. 26)
  7. ^ The Observer, 1 May 1938 (p. 7)
  8. ^ The Scotsman, 9 May 1938 (p. 15)
  9. ^ The Guardian, 27 May 1938 (p. 6)
  10. ^ Daily Mirror, 19 May 1938 (p. 26)
  11. ^ Barnard, Robert (1990). A Talent to Deceive – an appreciation of Agatha Christie (Revised ed.). Fontana Books. p. 189. ISBN 0-00-637474-3.
  12. ^ Daily Mail. 15 January 1938, p. 8. Hercule Poirot – Fiction's greatest detective.
  13. ^ "Appointment with Death". Agatha Christie, Ltd. Retrieved 19 December 2015.
  14. ^ "Appointment with Death - Japan". Agatha Christie Ltd. Retrieved 1 April 2021.

Read other articles:

Bulbophyllum picturatum Klasifikasi ilmiah Kerajaan: Plantae (tanpa takson): Angiospermae (tanpa takson): Monocots Ordo: Asparagales Famili: Orchidaceae Genus: Bulbophyllum Spesies: Bulbophyllum picturatum Nama binomial Bulbophyllum picturatum(Lodd.) Rchb.f. in W.G.Walpers 1861 Bulbophyllum picturatum adalah spesies tumbuhan yang tergolong ke dalam famili Orchidaceae. Spesies ini juga merupakan bagian dari ordo Asparagales. Spesies Bulbophyllum picturatum sendiri merupakan bagian dari genus ...

 

 

Canadian war ship, 1966 Protecteur redirects here. For the former RCN naval base, see HMCS Protector. For other ships with the same name, see HMCS Protecteur. HMCS Protecteur in Pearl Harbor after a port visit in 2009 History Canada NameProtecteur Ordered16 December 1966 BuilderSaint John Shipbuilding Laid down17 October 1967 Launched18 July 1968 Commissioned30 August 1969 Decommissioned14 May 2015 HomeportCFB Esquimalt, British Columbia Identification IMO number: 6900678 MMSI number: 31...

 

 

ChioΧίοςL'isola vista dal satelliteGeografia fisicaLocalizzazioneMare Egeo Coordinate38°24′N 26°01′E / 38.4°N 26.016667°E38.4; 26.016667Coordinate: 38°24′N 26°01′E / 38.4°N 26.016667°E38.4; 26.016667 Superficie842,5 km² Geografia politicaStato Grecia Divisione 1Egeo Settentrionale Divisione 2Chio Centro principaleChio DemografiaAbitanti51.936 (2001) CartografiaChio voci di isole presenti su Wikipedia Chio[1], anticamente d...

Comune in Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol, ItalySpormaggioreComuneComune di SpormaggioreLocation of Spormaggiore SpormaggioreLocation of Spormaggiore in ItalyShow map of ItalySpormaggioreSpormaggiore (Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol)Show map of Trentino-Alto Adige/SüdtirolCoordinates: 46°13′N 11°3′E / 46.217°N 11.050°E / 46.217; 11.050CountryItalyRegionTrentino-Alto Adige/SüdtirolProvinceTrentino (TN)Area[1] • Total30.2 km2 (11.7 sq&...

 

 

Peta lokasi suku Aquitani Aquitani adalah suku yang tinggal di wilayah Aquitaine selatan dan Midi-Pyrénées barat daya, wilayah yang pada masanya disebut Gallia Aquitania oleh bangsa Romawi.[1] Penulis-penulis klasik seperti Julius Caesar dan Strabo membedakan mereka dari suku-suku lainnya di Galia dan telah menyadari kemiripan mereka dengan suku-suku lain di Semenanjung Iberia. Suku ini pada akhirnya mengalami proses Romanisasi dan secara bertahap mengadopsi bahasa Latin (Latin Vulg...

 

 

Jack GoodyBiographieNaissance 27 juillet 1919HammersmithDécès 16 juillet 2015 (à 95 ans)Cambridge (Royaume-Uni)Nom de naissance John Rankine GoodyNationalité britanniqueFormation St John's CollegeSt Albans School (en)Activités Anthropologue, historien, professeur d'université, sociologueConjoint Mary Joan WrightEsther Newcomb (1930-2018)Juliet Mitchell (1940)Autres informationsA travaillé pour Université de CambridgeMembre de Académie américaine des sciences (2004)British Acade...

P. K. NairLahirParamesh Krishnan Nair(1933-04-06)6 April 1933Thiruvananthapuram, KeralaMeninggal4 Maret 2016(2016-03-04) (umur 82)Pune, MaharashtraNama lainPria SeluloidPekerjaanArsiparis film, sarjana film, guru film, konsultan festival film Paramesh Krishnan Nair (6 April 1933 – 4 Maret 2016) adalah seorang arsiparis film dan sarjana film India, yang merupakan pendiri dan sutradara Arsip Film Nasional India (NFAI) pada 1964. Ia dianggap sebagai Henri Langlois dari India karena ...

 

 

Ця стаття потребує додаткових посилань на джерела для поліпшення її перевірності. Будь ласка, допоможіть удосконалити цю статтю, додавши посилання на надійні (авторитетні) джерела. Зверніться на сторінку обговорення за поясненнями та допоможіть виправити недоліки. Мат...

 

 

الإمبراطورية البرتغالية الإمبراطورية البرتغالية Império Português ↓ 1415–1999 ↓ الإمبراطورية البرتغاليةعلم البرتغال  الإمبراطورية البرتغاليةشعار البرتغال  المناطق التي كانت خاضعة للإمبراطورية البرتغالية حول العالم عاصمة لشبونةريو دي جانيرو نظام الحكم ملكية (1415–1910)جمهور...

American business executive Lynn J. GoodAlma materMiami UniversityOccupation(s)Chair, president and CEO of Duke EnergyYears activeCEO of Duke Energy on July 1, 2013Board member ofDuke Energy BoeingSpouseBrian[1]Children3 Lynn J. Good is chair, president and chief executive officer of Duke Energy, a Fortune 500 company. Good is an Ohio native and graduated from Miami University where she earned a BS in Systems Analysis and in Accounting (1981).[1] Early life and ...

 

 

Overview of notable advertising campaigns by Reebok This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Reebok advertising campaigns – news · newspapers · books · sc...

 

 

The Mataafa Storm of 1905 was named after SS Mataafa, which was wrecked during the storm. Winter storm naming in the United States has been used sporadically since the mid-1700s in various ways to describe historical winter storms. These names have been coined using schemes such as the days of the year that the storm impacted or noteworthy structures that the storm had damaged and/or destroyed. In the 2010s[update], winter storm naming became controversial with The Weather Chann...

Enclosed religious order Visitation Order redirects here. For governmental order, see Contact (law). Order of the Visitation of Holy MaryOrdo Visitationis Beatissimae Mariae Virginis[1]AbbreviationVSMNicknameVisitandinesFormationJune 6, 1610; 413 years ago (June 6, 1610)[1]FounderBishop Francis de SalesJane Frances de Chantal[1]TypeReligious Order of Pontifical Right for women[1]Members 1,529 members as of 2020[1]MottoLatin: Vivet JésuEngl...

 

 

Former legislative body (1871–1918) German Reichstag Deutscher ReichstagLegislative body of GermanyTypeTypeLower house HistoryEstablished18 January 1871Disbanded26 October 1918Preceded byNorth German ReichstagSucceeded byWeimar National AssemblySeats397 (at dissolution)ElectionsVoting systemTwo-round system withuniversal male suffrageFirst election3 March 1871Last election12 January 1912Meeting placeLeipziger Straße 4, Berlin (1871–1894)ConstitutionConstitution of the German Em...

 

 

69Poster JepangSutradaraSang-il LeeDitulis olehKankuro KudoPemeranSatoshi TsumabukiMasanobu AndoYuta Kanai Asami MizukawaPenata musikMasakazu SakumaNaoki TachikawaSinematograferKozo ShibasakiPenyuntingTsuyoshi ImaiDistributorToei CompanyTanggal rilis 2004 (2004) NegaraJapanBahasaJapanesePendapatankotor$4,551,540[1] 69 adalah film Jepang produksi tahun 2004 bergenre drama yang disutradarai oleh Lee Sang-il, berdasarkan skenario yang ditulis oleh Kankuro Kudo dengan mengadapt...

Lower part of some altarpieces This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Predella – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (October 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Altarpiece by Carlo Crivelli, 1468. The predella has four scenes from the Passion of Christ. Altarpiece with carved ...

 

 

1996 studio album by ComeNear-Life ExperienceStudio album by ComeReleasedMay 21, 1996RecordedNovember 1995 – December 1995Studio Idful, Chicago, Illinois Fort Apache, Cambridge, Massachusetts GenreAlternative rockBluesLabelMatador RecordsDomino RecordsProducerAndy BryantWally GagelJohn McEntireCome chronology Don't Ask, Don't Tell(1994) Near-Life Experience(1996) Gently, Down the Stream(1998) Singles from Near-Life Experience Secret NumberReleased: April 1996 Professional ratingsRev...

 

 

Roche Diagnostics International AGIndustriDiagnosis in vitroDidirikan1984KantorpusatRotkreuz, Swiss[1][2]TokohkunciThomas Schinecker (Direktur Utama)Pendapatan12,079 miliar franc Swiss (2017)Karyawan28.517 (2012)Situs webdiagnostics.roche.com Roche Diagnostics International AG adalah anak perusahaan dari perusahaan farmasi Hoffmann-La Roche. Lokasi utamanya adalah di Rotkreuz, Risch, Swiss.[2][3] Lokasi Selain lokasi utama di Rotkreuz, ada cabang di Mannheim, P...

This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. Please help improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (December 2016) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Coat of Arms of the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg This list contains the locomotives and railbuses of the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg State Railways (Großherzoglich Oldenburgische Eisenbahn orGOE). Locomotive classification a...

 

 

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Slavery in antiquity – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (September 2014) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Part of a series onForced labour and slavery Contemporary Child Labour Child soldiers Conscription Debt Forced marriage Bride buying...