We British are used to women commanders in war; I am descended from mighty men! But I am not fighting for my kingdom and wealth now. I am fighting as an ordinary person for my lost freedom, my bruised body, and my outraged daughters.... Consider how many of you are fighting — and why! Then you will win this battle, or perish. That is what I, a woman, plan to do!— let the men live in slavery if they will.These are the words of Queen Boudicca, according to ancient historian Tacitus, as she summoned her people to unleash war upon the invading Romans in Britain. Boudicca, sometimes written Boadicea, was queen of the Iceni tribe, a Celtic clan which united a number of British tribes in revolt against the occupying forces of the Roman Empire in 60-61 AD. While she famously succeeded in defeating the Romans in three great battles, their victories would not last. The Romans rallied and eventually crushed the revolts, executing thousands of Iceni and taking the rest as slaves. Boudicca’s name has been remembered through history as the courageous warrior queen who fought for freedom from oppression, for herself, and all the Celtic tribes of Britain.
Early years
Little is known about Boudicca's upbringing because the only information about her comes from Roman sources, in particular from Tacitus (56 – 117 AD), a senator and historian of the Roman Empire, and Cassius Dio (155 – 235 AD), a Roman consul and noted historian. However, it is believed that she was born into an elite family in the ancient town of Camulodunum (now Colchester) in around 30 AD, and may have been named after the Celtic goddess of victory, Boudiga.
As an adolescent, Boudicca would have been sent away to another aristocratic family to be trained in the history and customs of the tribe, as well as learning how to fight in battle. Ancient Celtic women served as both warriors and rulers, and girls could be trained to fight with swords and other weapons, just as the boys were. Celtic women were distinct in the ancient world for the liberty and rights they enjoyed and the position they held in society. Compared to their counterparts in Greek, Roman, and other ancient societies, they were allowed much freedom of activity and protection under the law.
Celtic woman were trained to use swords and other weapons. Image source.
In 43 AD, before the time that Boudicca reached adulthood, the Romans invaded Britain, and most of the Celtic tribes were forced to submit. However, the Romans allowed two Celtic kings to retain some of their traditional power as it was normal Roman practice to allow kingdoms their independence for the lifetime of their client king, who would then agree to leave his kingdom to Rome in his will. One of these kings was Prasutagus, whom Boudicca went on to marry at the age of 18. Their wedding was celebrated for a day and a night and during this time they also gave offerings to the Celtic gods. Together they had two daughters, called Isolda and Siora.
However, it was not a time of harmony for Boudicca and Prasutagus. The Roman occupation brought increased settlement, military presence, and attempts to suppress Celtic religious culture. There were major economic changes, including heavy taxes and money lending.
In 60 AD life changed dramatically for Boudicca, with the death of her husband. As Prasutagus had ruled as a nominally independent, but forced ‘ally’ of Rome, he left his kingdom jointly to his wife and daughters, and the Roman emperor. However, Roman law only allowed inheritance through the male line, so when Prasutagus died, his attempts to preserve his line were ignored and his kingdom was annexed as if it had been conquered.
“Kingdom and household alike were plundered like prizes of war.... The Chieftains of the Iceni were deprived of their family estates as if the whole country had been handed over to the Romans. The king's own relatives were treated like slaves.”To humiliate the former rulers, the Romans confiscated Prasutagus’s land and property, took the nobles as slaves, publicly flogged Boudicca, and raped their two daughters. This would prove to be the catalyst, which would see Boudicca demanding revenge against the brutal invaders of her lands. Tacitus records the words spoken by Boudicca as she vowed to avenge the actions of the Roman invaders:
— Tacitus
“Nothing is safe from Roman pride and arrogance. They will deface the sacred and will deflower our virgins. Win the battle or perish, that is what I, a woman, will do.”And so Boudicca began her campaign to summon the Britons to fight against the Romans, proving that ‘hell hath no fury like a woman scorned’.
‘Boadicea Haranguing the Britons’ by John Opie. Image source: WikipediaQueen Boudicca had every reason to hate the Romans – by 60 AD, the lands of the Iceni clan of Britain had been captured, her people had been killed or taken as slaves, she was publicly beaten and her daughters raped – but Boudicca, the Celtic warrior queen, would eventually leave the Romans quaking in their boots, at least for a time.
After the after the brutal attack on her daughters, Boudicca immediately began summoning her people for revolt. While the Romans were busy fighting the Druids, who had raised the native population and their leaders against the Romans in the west of Britain and North Wales, Boudicca spotted her chance for revenge.
Boudicca met with the leaders of the Iceni, Trinovanti, Cornovii, Durotiges, and other tribes, who also had grievances against the Romans, including the imposition of heavy taxes, grants that had been redefined as loans, the taking over of land, and Roman attempts to suppress Celtic religious practices. They planned to revolt and drive out the Romans, and Boudicca was chosen as their leader.
Roman senator and historian, Tacitus (56 – 117 AD), describes Boudicca exhorting troops from her chariot, her daughters beside her. She presented herself, not as a queen and an aristocratic avenging her lost wealth, but as an ordinary person and a mother, who was seeking revenge for her lost freedom, her battered body and soul, and the defilement of her daughters. She told her people, and those belonging to allied tribes, that their cause was just and the deities were on their side.
Roman historian, Cassius Dio (155 – 235 AD), wrote that Boudicca employed a form of divination, releasing a hare from the folds of her dress to interpret the direction in which it ran, and invoked Andraste, a British goddess of victory. He also described her appearance as she stood before her crowds of followers:
“In stature she was very tall, in appearance most terrifying, in the glance of her eye most fierce, and her voice was harsh; a great mass of the tawniest hair fell to her hips; around her neck was a large golden necklace; and she wore a tunic of diverse colours over which a thick mantle was fastened with a brooch.”
Queen Boudicca summoned troops from her chariot, her daughters by her side. Image source.Historical records suggest that Boudicca succeeded in gathering an army of up to 100,000 warriors. Her first target was Camulodunum (now modern-day Colchester), a town for discharged Roman soldiers and the site of a temple to the former Roman Emperor Claudius. The Iceni and their allies descended upon the town, and raised it to the ground. They levelled the houses, broke the Roman statues and tombstones, and burnt the entire settlement. They took no prisoners; every Roman citizen in the city was killed.
Upon hearing the news of the revolt, the Roman Governor Gaius Suetonius Paulinus hurried to Londinium (modern London), the twenty-year-old commercial settlement that was the Britons' next target. But the Romans, having concluded that they did not have the numbers to defend the settlement, evacuated and abandoned the town. Boudicca’s warriors burned and destroyed the entire settlement, killing anyone that had not been sensible enough to leave. There were no survivors.
Boudicca’s third and final annihilation was at Verulamium (now known as St Albans), which again was raised to the ground and completely destroyed. By the end of the final attack, an estimated 70,000 – 80,000 had been killed. The crisis caused the Emperor Nero to consider withdrawing all Roman forces from Britain. Boudicca believed her destruction of three key city’s would free Britain of the Roman’s, but she was sadly mistaken.
Boudicca led her people in a revolt against the Romans in Camulodunum, Londinium, and Verulamium. Image source.Romans rally
After Boudicca’s attack on Verulamium, Suetonius quickly regrouped his forces in the West Midlands. Boudicca's army had counted on seizing Roman food stores when the tribes abandoned their own fields to wage rebellion, but Suetonius had strategically seen to the burning of the Roman stores, and the lack of supplies weakened her forces.
Boudicca and her people fought one more battle, but it was not to be a victory. The precise location of this battle is unknown but it is believed to have taken place somewhere along the Roman road now known as Watling Street in the West Midlands.
The Britons came to face-to-face with the Romans, their numbers vastly outnumbering their opponents. What should have been an overwhelming victory, was one of disaster – Boudicca’s army had to attack uphill, and exhausted and hungry, the Romans quickly gained the upper hand. The lack of manoeuvrability of the Britons, caused by the narrowness of the field in which they fought, put them at a disadvantage to the Romans, who were skilled at open combat due to their superior equipment and discipline.
Boudicca's people had no choices but to retreat. However, they had been so certain of victory that they had asked their families to come along and watch from wagons surrounding the field. This was a big mistake, as the wagons now barred their escape route, and some 80,000 warriors and their spectators were killed. According to Tacitus, only 400 Romans died in the battle that day – although the accuracy of these numbers have been drawn into question.
In revenge, the Romans executed the Iceni and their allies or made them slaves. Their lands were taken over by the military, families lost their hereditary homelands and the great rebellion was over. The final result was that the Romans strengthened their military presence in Britain – they were there to stay.
Boudicca led her people in one last battle, but it was not to be their victory. Image source.It is not known exactly what happened to Boudicca after the war. Some people suggest that she escaped with her daughters to another part of Britain, where they drank from a poisoned chalice and died. Cassius Dio wrote that she fell sick and died and was given a lavish burial; though this may have just been a convenient way to remove her from the story.
Either way, it seems that Boudicca and her daughters were saved from a fate worse than death. Had they been captured, the Romans would have made them walk in a victory parade before torturing them and displaying their bodies to cheering crowds. The whereabouts of their bodies is also shrouded in mystery. Some people believe that Boudicca was buried at Stonehenge while others suggest Norfolk, Hampstead in north London or under a platform belonging to London's Kings Cross Station.
Boudicca’s legacy
Boudicca's story was nearly lost to the pages of history, until Tacitus' work, Annals, was rediscovered in 1360. This led to a surge of interest in Boudicca and her relentless campaign to free her people from Roman rule. It was in the Victorian era that Boudicca's fame took on legendary proportions as Queen Victoria came to be seen as Boudica's namesake, their names being identical in meaning. Victoria's Poet Laureate, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, wrote a poem, "Boadicea", and several ships were named after her.
Boudicca has since remained an important cultural symbol in the United Kingdom. A great bronze statue of Boudicca with her daughters in her war chariot was commissioned by Prince Albert and executed by Thomas Thornycroft. It was completed in 1905 and now stands next to Westminster Bridge and the Houses of Parliament, positioned in the city that she had once razed to the ground in her quest for freedom.
The statue of Boudicca, Queen of the Iceni, which now stands next to the Houses of Parliament in London. Credit: captainslack / deviantartFeatured image: Artist’s depiction of Queen Boudicca. Image source.
- See more at: http://www.ancient-origins.net/myths-legends/boudicca-celtic-queen-unleashed-fury-romans-part-2-002067#sthash.FzB8kmgo.dpuf
Featured image: Artist’s impression of Queen Boudicca. The Celts used to use a plant called Isatis Tinctoria to produce an indigo dye used as war paint. Image credit: beucephalus / deviantart
Queen Boudicca had every reason to hate the Romans – by 60 AD, the lands of the Iceni clan of Britain had been captured, her people had been killed or taken as slaves, she was publicly beaten and her daughters raped – but Boudicca, the Celtic warrior queen, would eventually leave the Romans quaking in their boots, at least for a time.
After the after the brutal attack on her daughters, Boudicca immediately began summoning her people for revolt. While the Romans were busy fighting the Druids, who had raised the native population and their leaders against the Romans in the west of Britain and North Wales, Boudicca spotted her chance for revenge.
Boudicca met with the leaders of the Iceni, Trinovanti, Cornovii, Durotiges, and other tribes, who also had grievances against the Romans, including the imposition of heavy taxes, grants that had been redefined as loans, the taking over of land, and Roman attempts to suppress Celtic religious practices. They planned to revolt and drive out the Romans, and Boudicca was chosen as their leader.
Roman senator and historian, Tacitus (56 – 117 AD), describes Boudicca exhorting troops from her chariot, her daughters beside her. She presented herself, not as a queen and an aristocratic avenging her lost wealth, but as an ordinary person and a mother, who was seeking revenge for her lost freedom, her battered body and soul, and the defilement of her daughters. She told her people, and those belonging to allied tribes, that their cause was just and the deities were on their side.
Roman historian, Cassius Dio (155 – 235 AD), wrote that Boudicca employed a form of divination, releasing a hare from the folds of her dress to interpret the direction in which it ran, and invoked Andraste, a British goddess of victory. He also described her appearance as she stood before her crowds of followers:“In stature she was very tall, in appearance most terrifying, in the glance of her eye most fierce, and her voice was harsh; a great mass of the tawniest hair fell to her hips; around her neck was a large golden necklace; and she wore a tunic of diverse colours over which a thick mantle was fastened with a brooch.”
Queen Boudicca summoned troops from her chariot, her daughters by her side. Image source.
Historical records suggest that Boudicca succeeded in gathering an army of up to 100,000 warriors. Her first target was Camulodunum (now modern-day Colchester), a town for discharged Roman soldiers and the site of a temple to the former Roman Emperor Claudius. The Iceni and their allies descended upon the town, and raised it to the ground. They levelled the houses, broke the Roman statues and tombstones, and burnt the entire settlement. They took no prisoners; every Roman citizen in the city was killed.
Upon hearing the news of the revolt, the Roman Governor Gaius Suetonius Paulinus hurried to Londinium (modern London), the twenty-year-old commercial settlement that was the Britons' next target. But the Romans, having concluded that they did not have the numbers to defend the settlement, evacuated and abandoned the town. Boudicca’s warriors burned and destroyed the entire settlement, killing anyone that had not been sensible enough to leave. There were no survivors
.Boudicca’s third and final annihilation was at Verulamium (now known as St Albans), which again was raised to the ground and completely destroyed. By the end of the final attack, an estimated 70,000 – 80,000 had been killed. The crisis caused the Emperor Nero to consider withdrawing all Roman forces from Britain. Boudicca believed her destruction of three key city’s would free Britain of the Roman’s, but she was sadly mistaken.
Boudicca led her people in a revolt against the Romans in Camulodunum, Londinium, and Verulamium. Image source.
Romans rallyAfter Boudicca’s attack on Verulamium, Suetonius quickly regrouped his forces in the West Midlands. Boudicca's army had counted on seizing Roman food stores when the tribes abandoned their own fields to wage rebellion, but Suetonius had strategically seen to the burning of the Roman stores, and the lack of supplies weakened her forces.
Boudicca and her people fought one more battle, but it was not to be a victory. The precise location of this battle is unknown but it is believed to have taken place somewhere along the Roman road now known as Watling Street in the West Midlands.
The Britons came to face-to-face with the Romans, their numbers vastly outnumbering their opponents. What should have been an overwhelming victory, was one of disaster – Boudicca’s army had to attack uphill, and exhausted and hungry, the Romans quickly gained the upper hand. The lack of manoeuvrability of the Britons, caused by the narrowness of the field in which they fought, put them at a disadvantage to the Romans, who were skilled at open combat due to their superior equipment and discipline.
Boudicca's people had no choices but to retreat. However, they had been so certain of victory that they had asked their families to come along and watch from wagons surrounding the field. This was a big mistake, as the wagons now barred their escape route, and some 80,000 warriors and their spectators were killed. According to Tacitus, only 400 Romans died in the battle that day – although the accuracy of these numbers have been drawn into question.
In revenge, the Romans executed the Iceni and their allies or made them slaves. Their lands were taken over by the military, families lost their hereditary homelands and the great rebellion was over. The final result was that the Romans strengthened their military presence in Britain – they were there to stay.
Boudicca led her people in one last battle, but it was not to be their victory. Image source.
It is not known exactly what happened to Boudicca after the war. Some people suggest that she escaped with her daughters to another part of Britain, where they drank from a poisoned chalice and died. Cassius Dio wrote that she fell sick and died and was given a lavish burial; though this may have just been a convenient way to remove her from the story.
Either way, it seems that Boudicca and her daughters were saved from a fate worse than death. Had they been captured, the Romans would have made them walk in a victory parade before torturing them and displaying their bodies to cheering crowds. The whereabouts of their bodies is also shrouded in mystery. Some people believe that Boudicca was buried at Stonehenge while others suggest Norfolk, Hampstead in north London or under a platform belonging to London's Kings Cross Station.
Boudicca’s legacy
Boudicca's story was nearly lost to the pages of history, until Tacitus' work, Annals, was rediscovered in 1360. This led to a surge of interest in Boudicca and her relentless campaign to free her people from Roman rule. It was in the Victorian era that Boudicca's fame took on legendary proportions as Queen Victoria came to be seen as Boudica's namesake, their names being identical in meaning. Victoria's Poet Laureate, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, wrote a poem, "Boadicea", and several ships were named after her.
Boudicca has since remained an important cultural symbol in the United Kingdom. A great bronze statue of Boudicca with her daughters in her war chariot was commissioned by Prince Albert and executed by Thomas Thornycroft. It was completed in 1905 and now stands next to Westminster Bridge and the Houses of Parliament, positioned in the city that she had once razed to the ground in her quest for freedom.
The statue of Boudicca, Queen of the Iceni, which now stands next to the Houses of Parliament in London. Credit: captainslack / deviantart
Queen Boudicca had every reason to hate the Romans – by 60 AD, the lands of the Iceni clan of Britain had been captured, her people had been killed or taken as slaves, she was publicly beaten and her daughters raped – but Boudicca, the Celtic warrior queen, would eventually leave the Romans quaking in their boots, at least for a time.
After the after the brutal attack on her daughters, Boudicca immediately began summoning her people for revolt. While the Romans were busy fighting the Druids, who had raised the native population and their leaders against the Romans in the west of Britain and North Wales, Boudicca spotted her chance for revenge.
Boudicca met with the leaders of the Iceni, Trinovanti, Cornovii, Durotiges, and other tribes, who also had grievances against the Romans, including the imposition of heavy taxes, grants that had been redefined as loans, the taking over of land, and Roman attempts to suppress Celtic religious practices. They planned to revolt and drive out the Romans, and Boudicca was chosen as their leader.
Roman senator and historian, Tacitus (56 – 117 AD), describes Boudicca exhorting troops from her chariot, her daughters beside her. She presented herself, not as a queen and an aristocratic avenging her lost wealth, but as an ordinary person and a mother, who was seeking revenge for her lost freedom, her battered body and soul, and the defilement of her daughters. She told her people, and those belonging to allied tribes, that their cause was just and the deities were on their side.
Roman historian, Cassius Dio (155 – 235 AD), wrote that Boudicca employed a form of divination, releasing a hare from the folds of her dress to interpret the direction in which it ran, and invoked Andraste, a British goddess of victory. He also described her appearance as she stood before her crowds of followers:
“In stature she was very tall, in appearance most terrifying, in the glance of her eye most fierce, and her voice was harsh; a great mass of the tawniest hair fell to her hips; around her neck was a large golden necklace; and she wore a tunic of diverse colours over which a thick mantle was fastened with a brooch.”
- See more at: http://www.ancient-origins.net/myths-legends/boudicca-celtic-queen-unleashed-fury-romans-part-2-002067#sthash.FzB8kmgo.dpuf
References
Boudicca, the Warrior Queen – Historical Writings
Boudicca: Celtic Warrior Queen – Women’s History
Boudicca – BBC
The Boudicca Chapters – Heroines of History
Boudica: Celtic War Queen Who Challenged Rome – History Net
By April HollowayQueen Boudicca had every reason to hate the Romans – by 60 AD, the lands of the Iceni clan of Britain had been captured, her people had been killed or taken as slaves, she was publicly beaten and her daughters raped – but Boudicca, the Celtic warrior queen, would eventually leave the Romans quaking in their boots, at least for a time.
After the after the brutal attack on her daughters, Boudicca immediately began summoning her people for revolt. While the Romans were busy fighting the Druids, who had raised the native population and their leaders against the Romans in the west of Britain and North Wales, Boudicca spotted her chance for revenge.
Boudicca met with the leaders of the Iceni, Trinovanti, Cornovii, Durotiges, and other tribes, who also had grievances against the Romans, including the imposition of heavy taxes, grants that had been redefined as loans, the taking over of land, and Roman attempts to suppress Celtic religious practices. They planned to revolt and drive out the Romans, and Boudicca was chosen as their leader.
Roman senator and historian, Tacitus (56 – 117 AD), describes Boudicca exhorting troops from her chariot, her daughters beside her. She presented herself, not as a queen and an aristocratic avenging her lost wealth, but as an ordinary person and a mother, who was seeking revenge for her lost freedom, her battered body and soul, and the defilement of her daughters. She told her people, and those belonging to allied tribes, that their cause was just and the deities were on their side.
Roman historian, Cassius Dio (155 – 235 AD), wrote that Boudicca employed a form of divination, releasing a hare from the folds of her dress to interpret the direction in which it ran, and invoked Andraste, a British goddess of victory. He also described her appearance as she stood before her crowds of followers:
“In stature she was very tall, in appearance most terrifying, in the glance of her eye most fierce, and her voice was harsh; a great mass of the tawniest hair fell to her hips; around her neck was a large golden necklace; and she wore a tunic of diverse colours over which a thick mantle was fastened with a brooch.”
Queen Boudicca summoned troops from her chariot, her daughters by her side. Image source.Historical records suggest that Boudicca succeeded in gathering an army of up to 100,000 warriors. Her first target was Camulodunum (now modern-day Colchester), a town for discharged Roman soldiers and the site of a temple to the former Roman Emperor Claudius. The Iceni and their allies descended upon the town, and raised it to the ground. They levelled the houses, broke the Roman statues and tombstones, and burnt the entire settlement. They took no prisoners; every Roman citizen in the city was killed.
Upon hearing the news of the revolt, the Roman Governor Gaius Suetonius Paulinus hurried to Londinium (modern London), the twenty-year-old commercial settlement that was the Britons' next target. But the Romans, having concluded that they did not have the numbers to defend the settlement, evacuated and abandoned the town. Boudicca’s warriors burned and destroyed the entire settlement, killing anyone that had not been sensible enough to leave. There were no survivors.
Boudicca’s third and final annihilation was at Verulamium (now known as St Albans), which again was raised to the ground and completely destroyed. By the end of the final attack, an estimated 70,000 – 80,000 had been killed. The crisis caused the Emperor Nero to consider withdrawing all Roman forces from Britain. Boudicca believed her destruction of three key city’s would free Britain of the Roman’s, but she was sadly mistaken.
Boudicca led her people in a revolt against the Romans in Camulodunum, Londinium, and Verulamium. Image source.Romans rally
After Boudicca’s attack on Verulamium, Suetonius quickly regrouped his forces in the West Midlands. Boudicca's army had counted on seizing Roman food stores when the tribes abandoned their own fields to wage rebellion, but Suetonius had strategically seen to the burning of the Roman stores, and the lack of supplies weakened her forces.
Boudicca and her people fought one more battle, but it was not to be a victory. The precise location of this battle is unknown but it is believed to have taken place somewhere along the Roman road now known as Watling Street in the West Midlands.
The Britons came to face-to-face with the Romans, their numbers vastly outnumbering their opponents. What should have been an overwhelming victory, was one of disaster – Boudicca’s army had to attack uphill, and exhausted and hungry, the Romans quickly gained the upper hand. The lack of manoeuvrability of the Britons, caused by the narrowness of the field in which they fought, put them at a disadvantage to the Romans, who were skilled at open combat due to their superior equipment and discipline.
Boudicca's people had no choices but to retreat. However, they had been so certain of victory that they had asked their families to come along and watch from wagons surrounding the field. This was a big mistake, as the wagons now barred their escape route, and some 80,000 warriors and their spectators were killed. According to Tacitus, only 400 Romans died in the battle that day – although the accuracy of these numbers have been drawn into question.
In revenge, the Romans executed the Iceni and their allies or made them slaves. Their lands were taken over by the military, families lost their hereditary homelands and the great rebellion was over. The final result was that the Romans strengthened their military presence in Britain – they were there to stay.
Boudicca led her people in one last battle, but it was not to be their victory. Image source.It is not known exactly what happened to Boudicca after the war. Some people suggest that she escaped with her daughters to another part of Britain, where they drank from a poisoned chalice and died. Cassius Dio wrote that she fell sick and died and was given a lavish burial; though this may have just been a convenient way to remove her from the story.
Either way, it seems that Boudicca and her daughters were saved from a fate worse than death. Had they been captured, the Romans would have made them walk in a victory parade before torturing them and displaying their bodies to cheering crowds. The whereabouts of their bodies is also shrouded in mystery. Some people believe that Boudicca was buried at Stonehenge while others suggest Norfolk, Hampstead in north London or under a platform belonging to London's Kings Cross Station.
Boudicca’s legacy
Boudicca's story was nearly lost to the pages of history, until Tacitus' work, Annals, was rediscovered in 1360. This led to a surge of interest in Boudicca and her relentless campaign to free her people from Roman rule. It was in the Victorian era that Boudicca's fame took on legendary proportions as Queen Victoria came to be seen as Boudica's namesake, their names being identical in meaning. Victoria's Poet Laureate, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, wrote a poem, "Boadicea", and several ships were named after her.
Boudicca has since remained an important cultural symbol in the United Kingdom. A great bronze statue of Boudicca with her daughters in her war chariot was commissioned by Prince Albert and executed by Thomas Thornycroft. It was completed in 1905 and now stands next to Westminster Bridge and the Houses of Parliament, positioned in the city that she had once razed to the ground in her quest for freedom.
The statue of Boudicca, Queen of the Iceni, which now stands next to the Houses of Parliament in London. Credit: captainslack / deviantart- See more at: http://www.ancient-origins.net/myths-legends/boudicca-celtic-queen-unleashed-fury-romans-part-2-002067#sthash.FzB8kmgo.dpuf
Queen Boudicca had every reason to hate the Romans – by 60 AD, the lands of the Iceni clan of Britain had been captured, her people had been killed or taken as slaves, she was publicly beaten and her daughters raped – but Boudicca, the Celtic warrior queen, would eventually leave the Romans quaking in their boots, at least for a time.
After the after the brutal attack on her daughters, Boudicca immediately began summoning her people for revolt. While the Romans were busy fighting the Druids, who had raised the native population and their leaders against the Romans in the west of Britain and North Wales, Boudicca spotted her chance for revenge.
Boudicca met with the leaders of the Iceni, Trinovanti, Cornovii, Durotiges, and other tribes, who also had grievances against the Romans, including the imposition of heavy taxes, grants that had been redefined as loans, the taking over of land, and Roman attempts to suppress Celtic religious practices. They planned to revolt and drive out the Romans, and Boudicca was chosen as their leader.
Roman senator and historian, Tacitus (56 – 117 AD), describes Boudicca exhorting troops from her chariot, her daughters beside her. She presented herself, not as a queen and an aristocratic avenging her lost wealth, but as an ordinary person and a mother, who was seeking revenge for her lost freedom, her battered body and soul, and the defilement of her daughters. She told her people, and those belonging to allied tribes, that their cause was just and the deities were on their side.
Roman historian, Cassius Dio (155 – 235 AD), wrote that Boudicca employed a form of divination, releasing a hare from the folds of her dress to interpret the direction in which it ran, and invoked Andraste, a British goddess of victory. He also described her appearance as she stood before her crowds of followers:
“In stature she was very tall, in appearance most terrifying, in the glance of her eye most fierce, and her voice was harsh; a great mass of the tawniest hair fell to her hips; around her neck was a large golden necklace; and she wore a tunic of diverse colours over which a thick mantle was fastened with a brooch.”
Upon hearing the news of the revolt, the Roman Governor Gaius Suetonius Paulinus hurried to Londinium (modern London), the twenty-year-old commercial settlement that was the Britons' next target. But the Romans, having concluded that they did not have the numbers to defend the settlement, evacuated and abandoned the town. Boudicca’s warriors burned and destroyed the entire settlement, killing anyone that had not been sensible enough to leave. There were no survivors.
Boudicca’s third and final annihilation was at Verulamium (now known as St Albans), which again was raised to the ground and completely destroyed. By the end of the final attack, an estimated 70,000 – 80,000 had been killed. The crisis caused the Emperor Nero to consider withdrawing all Roman forces from Britain. Boudicca believed her destruction of three key city’s would free Britain of the Roman’s, but she was sadly mistaken.
After Boudicca’s attack on Verulamium, Suetonius quickly regrouped his forces in the West Midlands. Boudicca's army had counted on seizing Roman food stores when the tribes abandoned their own fields to wage rebellion, but Suetonius had strategically seen to the burning of the Roman stores, and the lack of supplies weakened her forces.
Boudicca and her people fought one more battle, but it was not to be a victory. The precise location of this battle is unknown but it is believed to have taken place somewhere along the Roman road now known as Watling Street in the West Midlands.
The Britons came to face-to-face with the Romans, their numbers vastly outnumbering their opponents. What should have been an overwhelming victory, was one of disaster – Boudicca’s army had to attack uphill, and exhausted and hungry, the Romans quickly gained the upper hand. The lack of manoeuvrability of the Britons, caused by the narrowness of the field in which they fought, put them at a disadvantage to the Romans, who were skilled at open combat due to their superior equipment and discipline.
Boudicca's people had no choices but to retreat. However, they had been so certain of victory that they had asked their families to come along and watch from wagons surrounding the field. This was a big mistake, as the wagons now barred their escape route, and some 80,000 warriors and their spectators were killed. According to Tacitus, only 400 Romans died in the battle that day – although the accuracy of these numbers have been drawn into question.
In revenge, the Romans executed the Iceni and their allies or made them slaves. Their lands were taken over by the military, families lost their hereditary homelands and the great rebellion was over. The final result was that the Romans strengthened their military presence in Britain – they were there to stay.
Either way, it seems that Boudicca and her daughters were saved from a fate worse than death. Had they been captured, the Romans would have made them walk in a victory parade before torturing them and displaying their bodies to cheering crowds. The whereabouts of their bodies is also shrouded in mystery. Some people believe that Boudicca was buried at Stonehenge while others suggest Norfolk, Hampstead in north London or under a platform belonging to London's Kings Cross Station.
Boudicca’s legacy
Boudicca's story was nearly lost to the pages of history, until Tacitus' work, Annals, was rediscovered in 1360. This led to a surge of interest in Boudicca and her relentless campaign to free her people from Roman rule. It was in the Victorian era that Boudicca's fame took on legendary proportions as Queen Victoria came to be seen as Boudica's namesake, their names being identical in meaning. Victoria's Poet Laureate, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, wrote a poem, "Boadicea", and several ships were named after her.
Boudicca has since remained an important cultural symbol in the United Kingdom. A great bronze statue of Boudicca with her daughters in her war chariot was commissioned by Prince Albert and executed by Thomas Thornycroft. It was completed in 1905 and now stands next to Westminster Bridge and the Houses of Parliament, positioned in the city that she had once razed to the ground in her quest for freedom.
- See more at: http://www.ancient-origins.net/myths-legends/boudicca-celtic-queen-unleashed-fury-romans-part-2-002067#sthash.FzB8kmgo.dpuf
After the after the brutal attack on her daughters, Boudicca immediately began summoning her people for revolt. While the Romans were busy fighting the Druids, who had raised the native population and their leaders against the Romans in the west of Britain and North Wales, Boudicca spotted her chance for revenge.
Boudicca met with the leaders of the Iceni, Trinovanti, Cornovii, Durotiges, and other tribes, who also had grievances against the Romans, including the imposition of heavy taxes, grants that had been redefined as loans, the taking over of land, and Roman attempts to suppress Celtic religious practices. They planned to revolt and drive out the Romans, and Boudicca was chosen as their leader.
Roman senator and historian, Tacitus (56 – 117 AD), describes Boudicca exhorting troops from her chariot, her daughters beside her. She presented herself, not as a queen and an aristocratic avenging her lost wealth, but as an ordinary person and a mother, who was seeking revenge for her lost freedom, her battered body and soul, and the defilement of her daughters. She told her people, and those belonging to allied tribes, that their cause was just and the deities were on their side.
Roman historian, Cassius Dio (155 – 235 AD), wrote that Boudicca employed a form of divination, releasing a hare from the folds of her dress to interpret the direction in which it ran, and invoked Andraste, a British goddess of victory. He also described her appearance as she stood before her crowds of followers:
“In stature she was very tall, in appearance most terrifying, in the glance of her eye most fierce, and her voice was harsh; a great mass of the tawniest hair fell to her hips; around her neck was a large golden necklace; and she wore a tunic of diverse colours over which a thick mantle was fastened with a brooch.”
Queen Boudicca summoned troops from her chariot, her daughters by her side. Image source.
Historical records suggest that Boudicca succeeded in gathering an army of up to 100,000 warriors. Her first target was Camulodunum (now modern-day Colchester), a town for discharged Roman soldiers and the site of a temple to the former Roman Emperor Claudius. The Iceni and their allies descended upon the town, and raised it to the ground. They levelled the houses, broke the Roman statues and tombstones, and burnt the entire settlement. They took no prisoners; every Roman citizen in the city was killed.Upon hearing the news of the revolt, the Roman Governor Gaius Suetonius Paulinus hurried to Londinium (modern London), the twenty-year-old commercial settlement that was the Britons' next target. But the Romans, having concluded that they did not have the numbers to defend the settlement, evacuated and abandoned the town. Boudicca’s warriors burned and destroyed the entire settlement, killing anyone that had not been sensible enough to leave. There were no survivors.
Boudicca’s third and final annihilation was at Verulamium (now known as St Albans), which again was raised to the ground and completely destroyed. By the end of the final attack, an estimated 70,000 – 80,000 had been killed. The crisis caused the Emperor Nero to consider withdrawing all Roman forces from Britain. Boudicca believed her destruction of three key city’s would free Britain of the Roman’s, but she was sadly mistaken.
Boudicca led her people in a revolt against the Romans in Camulodunum, Londinium, and Verulamium. Image source.
Romans rallyAfter Boudicca’s attack on Verulamium, Suetonius quickly regrouped his forces in the West Midlands. Boudicca's army had counted on seizing Roman food stores when the tribes abandoned their own fields to wage rebellion, but Suetonius had strategically seen to the burning of the Roman stores, and the lack of supplies weakened her forces.
Boudicca and her people fought one more battle, but it was not to be a victory. The precise location of this battle is unknown but it is believed to have taken place somewhere along the Roman road now known as Watling Street in the West Midlands.
The Britons came to face-to-face with the Romans, their numbers vastly outnumbering their opponents. What should have been an overwhelming victory, was one of disaster – Boudicca’s army had to attack uphill, and exhausted and hungry, the Romans quickly gained the upper hand. The lack of manoeuvrability of the Britons, caused by the narrowness of the field in which they fought, put them at a disadvantage to the Romans, who were skilled at open combat due to their superior equipment and discipline.
Boudicca's people had no choices but to retreat. However, they had been so certain of victory that they had asked their families to come along and watch from wagons surrounding the field. This was a big mistake, as the wagons now barred their escape route, and some 80,000 warriors and their spectators were killed. According to Tacitus, only 400 Romans died in the battle that day – although the accuracy of these numbers have been drawn into question.
In revenge, the Romans executed the Iceni and their allies or made them slaves. Their lands were taken over by the military, families lost their hereditary homelands and the great rebellion was over. The final result was that the Romans strengthened their military presence in Britain – they were there to stay.
Boudicca led her people in one last battle, but it was not to be their victory. Image source.
It is not known exactly what happened to Boudicca after the war. Some people suggest that she escaped with her daughters to another part of Britain, where they drank from a poisoned chalice and died. Cassius Dio wrote that she fell sick and died and was given a lavish burial; though this may have just been a convenient way to remove her from the story.Either way, it seems that Boudicca and her daughters were saved from a fate worse than death. Had they been captured, the Romans would have made them walk in a victory parade before torturing them and displaying their bodies to cheering crowds. The whereabouts of their bodies is also shrouded in mystery. Some people believe that Boudicca was buried at Stonehenge while others suggest Norfolk, Hampstead in north London or under a platform belonging to London's Kings Cross Station.
Boudicca’s legacy
Boudicca's story was nearly lost to the pages of history, until Tacitus' work, Annals, was rediscovered in 1360. This led to a surge of interest in Boudicca and her relentless campaign to free her people from Roman rule. It was in the Victorian era that Boudicca's fame took on legendary proportions as Queen Victoria came to be seen as Boudica's namesake, their names being identical in meaning. Victoria's Poet Laureate, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, wrote a poem, "Boadicea", and several ships were named after her.
Boudicca has since remained an important cultural symbol in the United Kingdom. A great bronze statue of Boudicca with her daughters in her war chariot was commissioned by Prince Albert and executed by Thomas Thornycroft. It was completed in 1905 and now stands next to Westminster Bridge and the Houses of Parliament, positioned in the city that she had once razed to the ground in her quest for freedom.
The statue of Boudicca, Queen of the Iceni, which now stands next to the Houses of Parliament in London. Credit: captainslack / deviantart
Featured image: Artist’s depiction of Queen Boudicca. Image source. - See more at: http://www.ancient-origins.net/myths-legends/boudicca-celtic-queen-unleashed-fury-romans-part-2-002067#sthash.FzB8kmgo.dpuf
Queen Boudicca had every reason to hate the Romans – by 60 AD, the lands of the Iceni clan of Britain had been captured, her people had been killed or taken as slaves, she was publicly beaten and her daughters raped – but Boudicca, the Celtic warrior queen, would eventually leave the Romans quaking in their boots, at least for a time.
After the after the brutal attack on her daughters, Boudicca immediately began summoning her people for revolt. While the Romans were busy fighting the Druids, who had raised the native population and their leaders against the Romans in the west of Britain and North Wales, Boudicca spotted her chance for revenge.
Boudicca met with the leaders of the Iceni, Trinovanti, Cornovii, Durotiges, and other tribes, who also had grievances against the Romans, including the imposition of heavy taxes, grants that had been redefined as loans, the taking over of land, and Roman attempts to suppress Celtic religious practices. They planned to revolt and drive out the Romans, and Boudicca was chosen as their leader.
Roman senator and historian, Tacitus (56 – 117 AD), describes Boudicca exhorting troops from her chariot, her daughters beside her. She presented herself, not as a queen and an aristocratic avenging her lost wealth, but as an ordinary person and a mother, who was seeking revenge for her lost freedom, her battered body and soul, and the defilement of her daughters. She told her people, and those belonging to allied tribes, that their cause was just and the deities were on their side.
Roman historian, Cassius Dio (155 – 235 AD), wrote that Boudicca employed a form of divination, releasing a hare from the folds of her dress to interpret the direction in which it ran, and invoked Andraste, a British goddess of victory. He also described her appearance as she stood before her crowds of followers:
“In stature she was very tall, in appearance most terrifying, in the glance of her eye most fierce, and her voice was harsh; a great mass of the tawniest hair fell to her hips; around her neck was a large golden necklace; and she wore a tunic of diverse colours over which a thick mantle was fastened with a brooch.”
Queen Boudicca summoned troops from her chariot, her daughters by her side. Image source.Historical records suggest that Boudicca succeeded in gathering an army of up to 100,000 warriors. Her first target was Camulodunum (now modern-day Colchester), a town for discharged Roman soldiers and the site of a temple to the former Roman Emperor Claudius. The Iceni and their allies descended upon the town, and raised it to the ground. They levelled the houses, broke the Roman statues and tombstones, and burnt the entire settlement. They took no prisoners; every Roman citizen in the city was killed.
Upon hearing the news of the revolt, the Roman Governor Gaius Suetonius Paulinus hurried to Londinium (modern London), the twenty-year-old commercial settlement that was the Britons' next target. But the Romans, having concluded that they did not have the numbers to defend the settlement, evacuated and abandoned the town. Boudicca’s warriors burned and destroyed the entire settlement, killing anyone that had not been sensible enough to leave. There were no survivors.
Boudicca’s third and final annihilation was at Verulamium (now known as St Albans), which again was raised to the ground and completely destroyed. By the end of the final attack, an estimated 70,000 – 80,000 had been killed. The crisis caused the Emperor Nero to consider withdrawing all Roman forces from Britain. Boudicca believed her destruction of three key city’s would free Britain of the Roman’s, but she was sadly mistaken.
Boudicca led her people in a revolt against the Romans in Camulodunum, Londinium, and Verulamium. Image source.Romans rally
After Boudicca’s attack on Verulamium, Suetonius quickly regrouped his forces in the West Midlands. Boudicca's army had counted on seizing Roman food stores when the tribes abandoned their own fields to wage rebellion, but Suetonius had strategically seen to the burning of the Roman stores, and the lack of supplies weakened her forces.
Boudicca and her people fought one more battle, but it was not to be a victory. The precise location of this battle is unknown but it is believed to have taken place somewhere along the Roman road now known as Watling Street in the West Midlands.
The Britons came to face-to-face with the Romans, their numbers vastly outnumbering their opponents. What should have been an overwhelming victory, was one of disaster – Boudicca’s army had to attack uphill, and exhausted and hungry, the Romans quickly gained the upper hand. The lack of manoeuvrability of the Britons, caused by the narrowness of the field in which they fought, put them at a disadvantage to the Romans, who were skilled at open combat due to their superior equipment and discipline.
Boudicca's people had no choices but to retreat. However, they had been so certain of victory that they had asked their families to come along and watch from wagons surrounding the field. This was a big mistake, as the wagons now barred their escape route, and some 80,000 warriors and their spectators were killed. According to Tacitus, only 400 Romans died in the battle that day – although the accuracy of these numbers have been drawn into question.
In revenge, the Romans executed the Iceni and their allies or made them slaves. Their lands were taken over by the military, families lost their hereditary homelands and the great rebellion was over. The final result was that the Romans strengthened their military presence in Britain – they were there to stay.
Boudicca led her people in one last battle, but it was not to be their victory. Image source.It is not known exactly what happened to Boudicca after the war. Some people suggest that she escaped with her daughters to another part of Britain, where they drank from a poisoned chalice and died. Cassius Dio wrote that she fell sick and died and was given a lavish burial; though this may have just been a convenient way to remove her from the story.
Either way, it seems that Boudicca and her daughters were saved from a fate worse than death. Had they been captured, the Romans would have made them walk in a victory parade before torturing them and displaying their bodies to cheering crowds. The whereabouts of their bodies is also shrouded in mystery. Some people believe that Boudicca was buried at Stonehenge while others suggest Norfolk, Hampstead in north London or under a platform belonging to London's Kings Cross Station.
Boudicca’s legacy
Boudicca's story was nearly lost to the pages of history, until Tacitus' work, Annals, was rediscovered in 1360. This led to a surge of interest in Boudicca and her relentless campaign to free her people from Roman rule. It was in the Victorian era that Boudicca's fame took on legendary proportions as Queen Victoria came to be seen as Boudica's namesake, their names being identical in meaning. Victoria's Poet Laureate, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, wrote a poem, "Boadicea", and several ships were named after her.
Boudicca has since remained an important cultural symbol in the United Kingdom. A great bronze statue of Boudicca with her daughters in her war chariot was commissioned by Prince Albert and executed by Thomas Thornycroft. It was completed in 1905 and now stands next to Westminster Bridge and the Houses of Parliament, positioned in the city that she had once razed to the ground in her quest for freedom.
The statue of Boudicca, Queen of the Iceni, which now stands next to the Houses of Parliament in London. Credit: captainslack / deviantartFeatured image: Artist’s depiction of Queen Boudicca. Image source.
- See more at: http://www.ancient-origins.net/myths-legends/boudicca-celtic-queen-unleashed-fury-romans-part-2-002067#sthash.FzB8kmgo.dpuf
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