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Boudicca
Queen of the Celts

Very little historical evidence survives about the queen named
Boudicca, ruler of a small tribe of Celtic peoples known as the
Iceni during the first century C.E. The Iceni made their home
near what is now Norfolk, England, and it is known that Boudicca
inherited her crown upon the death of her husband. Not long
afterward, she was integral in forming a pan-tribal alliance of
Celtic warriors who carried through a decisive, bloody, and very
nearly successful uprising against their despised Roman
colonizers in C.E. 61. The revolt that bears Boudicca's name
would be remembered in history as one of the most significant
insurrections against the mighty Roman Empire during Europe's
classical era.
The Iceni and Pre-Roman Britain
Boudicca, whose name is sometimes spelled Boadicea, may or may
not have been of direct Icenian heritage; it is only known that
she was married to the Iceni king, Prasutagus, and among royal
Celtic houses marital alliances with other tribes were not
unusual. Knowledge of Boudicca survives from the writings of two
historians of the Roman empire, Tacitus and Cassius Dio. The
latter penned his impression of the Iceni queen: Boudicca, wrote
Dio as quoted in The Rebellion of Boudicca, "was huge of frame,
terrifying of aspect, and with a harsh voice. A great mass of
bright red hair fell to her knees: she wore a great twisted
golden necklace, and a tunic of many colours, over which was a
thick mantle, fastened by a brooch."
The Iceni held the territory in what is present-day Norfolk,
England, and historians assume they migrated at one point in the
late Bronze Age from the European continent. In England they
established a farming economy, were weavers of cloth and also
made pottery. Their stability was threatened by the arrival of
the Belgae from Gaul (France). The Belgae had earned the enmity
of the Roman emperor Caesar for providing help to their brethren
back in Gaul who were resisting Caesar and Roman rule there. For
this, Caesar began attacking Britain around 55 B.C.E.
Matters were further complicated by the superiority of the
Belgae over their Celtic neighbors, such as the Iceni. The
Belgae were skilled ironsmiths, more adept at farming, and most
importantly, possessed a well-organized military force. They
soon began taking over other tribes in the area. The Iceni built
forts against them, but when the Romans launched a massive
military invasion of the British Isles in C.E. 43, the Belgae
capitulated. In total, eleven kings of varying Celtic tribes
surrendered in a formal signing. The Arch of Claudius in Rome
commemorates this historic surrender. Two kings, however, had
engineered agreements with the Romans early on in exchange for
retaining some power over their tribes. These rulers were
Cogidubnus of the Regni tribe and Prasutagus, Boudicca's
husband.
The Roman Empire in Britain
Over the next few years, Romans established a strong military
presence in Britain, as they did elsewhere in Europe, North
Africa, and the Middle East. Roman colonization meant financial
hardship for the conquered peoples. Their economy was
immediately forced to gear itself toward the production of food
for the massive legions of Roman soldiers stationed in their
lands. Also, Roman officials imposed heavy taxes for an array of
services and goods, and Roman moneylenders arrived in Britain to
take advantage of the situation by making loans. Britain's
Rome-appointed governor, Suetonius Paulinus, was also dedicated
to eradicating Druidism, the native Celt religion. Its priests
retained a great deal of influence over both common Celts and
royal lines.
The origins of Boudicca's revolt began when the despised
Procurator Catus Decianus rescinded the terms of a financial
agreement between the Emperor Claudius and Prasutagus. It had
been called a grant, but then was renamed a loan. In response,
Prasutagus left a stipend of half his kingdom in his will to
Nero, Claudius's successor, to satisfy the debt. Roman officials
under Catus Decianus arrived in Iceni lands and instead took the
whole. Boudicca, who had inherited the kingdom since she and
Prasutagus had no male heirs, was arrested and beaten, and her
two daughters raped. The estates of wealthy Iceni were
liquidated, and lesser relatives of the royal house sold into
Roman slavery.
Boudicca's Revenge
During the summer months of C.E. 61, after nearly two decades of
Roman rule and at a time when Suetonius was leading an attack on
the Celts in Wales, a revolt against Roman rule was planned.
Such insurrections were not new to the Romans, despite their
famously peremptory conquests of nearly all of Western and
Southern Europe. Gaul resisted Caesar a hundred years before in
the Gallic Wars, and a Germanic prince, Arminius, almost stalled
Roman entry into Germany with his C.E. 9 victory at the
Teutoburg Forest. Tacitus wrote that the Britons' knowledge of
Arminius's victory fueled their resistance.
The uprising began with a secret meeting of Boudicca, her Iceni,
and several other tribes-among them the Trinovantes, who were
resentful of Roman imposition at their lands near Camulodunum
(now Colchester), a tribe from the west known as the Cornovii,
and the Celts of Dorset known as the Durotiges. The historian
Cassius Dio claims that this well-planned and unnoticed
conference may have numbered as high as 120,000. A propaganda
campaign was launched in Camulodunum, then the center of Roman
rule in Britain. Designed to worry the Romans, it included such
actions as turning the river red and toppling the Roman victory
statue erected in the center.
In the summer of C.E. 61, Boudicca's legions of united Briton
tribes attacked Camulodunum in chariots. The uprising was
launched there because the negligent Romans had erected little
in the way of walls or forts for the city's defense. Celtic
soldiers painted themselves blue to frighten the enemy; women
also played a decisive role by remaining at the rear of the
battles with the wagons and draught-oxen. Sometimes the wives
appeared near the battlefront in black robes carrying torches,
as did Druid priests who shouted curses meant to frighten
Romans. Just as Suetonius achieved victory in Wales with nearly
two-thirds of the total Roman forces in Britain with him, he
received word about the uprising in the East. He hurried back,
but by then Catus Decianus had fled by ship, along with other
top Roman officials.
Subdued London
Over the next three weeks, Boudicca's army-estimated by
historians to be around 100,000 warriors-launched two other
successful attacks on Roman strongholds. The second victory came
at Londinium (London). Suetonius had no time to evacuate Roman
citizens from what was then Britain's largest city (25,000), and
the Britons slaughtered them mercilessly. Horrific atrocities
were inflicted on its women, and the heads of Romans were
offered up by Druid priests in ceremonies honoring the goddess
of victory. Next, Boudicca and the Britons took Verulamium (St.
Albans) a few days later. This was the capital of the
Catuvellauni tribe and had won official status as Roman
Britain's first municipium, the all-important "city"
designation; for this its Briton inhabitants were seen as
collaborators with the Romans, and they too were treated without
mercy.
By this point, Boudicca's rebellion had devastated the three
main cities in Roman Britain, and the number of dead Romans and
collaborating Britons was estimated at 70,000. Yet the Britons
had not tended to their spring harvest, since they assumed they
would be able to easily plunder Roman stores-which Suetonius
ordered burned-and the troops soon faced famine. Moreover,
Boudicca had difficulty in controlling such a large,
non-homogenous army, which possessed little military discipline
in comparison to the Roman troops. The last tactical error came
in her army's failure to capture Roman military installations:
these were well-defended, and housed Roman troops and supplies,
including food, that Suetonius could use to his advantage.
A huge final battle marked the end of Boudicca's uprising
against the Roman colonization of Britain. It is not known when
or where exactly this battle took place, but probably occurred
near the end of summer in C.E. 61 at some place between
Towchester and Wall. According to later accounts, Suetonius and
the Romans had amassed on a rocky landscape that offered good
protection, and Briton troops then charged uphill. When they
were out of breath and tactically vulnerable, the Romans
attacked. Boudicca's army was soundly defeated. She herself fled
back to the Norfolk area, and in anticipation of a terrible end
at Roman hands, ingested a deadly poison. She was the last ruler
of the Iceni royal line, and was allegedly buried with all its
treasure in a grave that remained a well-kept secret to both her
Roman foes and modern archaeologists.
Boudicca's Legacy and Legend
Boudicca's rebellion was a crucial moment in early British
history, especially in light of the Roman occupation that
radically altered its course over the next four centuries. Her
confederacy of Briton tribes had taken the placid Roman
occupiers literally by surprise; they had assumed that the
Celtic "barbarians" were far too disorganized to mount any
insurrection. As a result, the Romans made certain that their
installations were secure and that the Briton population never
more posed such a threat. Roman officials also instituted
reforms that meant a lessening of some of the onerous demands of
their colonial rule, including a fairer system of taxation.
England's occupiers departed only when the Roman Empire itself
fell into disintegration in the fifth century C.E.
Boudicca remained nearly lost to historical record after her
death. Much of what was later written about Britain's Roman era
failed to mention her. It was only when the Italian writer
Giovanni Boccaccio (The Decameron) visited a little-known
monastery in 1360 and found Tacitus's manuscript that historical
scholarship became aware of her role in history. Boudicca's
reputation grew to great proportions during the reign of Queen
Elizabeth I, as historians and writers trumpeted the legacy of
strong female leaders in the British Isles' past-especially ones
who attempted to battle mighty foreign powers. The first
official biography of Boudicca came in 1591 from an Italian
living in England, Petruccio Ubaldini, The Lives of the Noble
Ladies of the Kingdom of England and Scotland. In 1610 John
Fletcher's play, Bonduca, a variant of the name Boudicca,
debuted on the London stage; it and other works of the era
celebrated her as a "virago," or a woman with masculine traits.
John Milton wrote of her in his History of Britain, published in
1670.
The significance of Boudicca's heroic exploits endured well into
the twentieth century-Winston Churchill wrote of her in his
History of the English-Speaking Peoples. The former prime
minister of England during World War II declared that her revolt
was "probably the most horrible episode which our Island has
known. We see the crude and corrupt beginning of a higher
civilization blotted out by the ferocious uprising of the native
tribes. Still, it is the primary right of men to die and kill
for the land they live in, and to punish with exceptional
severity all members of their own race who have warmed their
hands at the invader's earth."
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This web page was last updated on:
09 December, 2008
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