Having watched I Claudius in our pasts
we know everything about who he was (an heretofore obscure
member of the reigning Julian dynasty), how he came to power
(dragooned while hiding behind a curtain by the praetorian
guards, who had just killed his predecessor, Caligula), why
the praetorians thought he was good Emperor material
(Claudius was considered to to be weak and controllable, said
to walk hunched over, maybe physically disabled, oh, and also
mentally).
From watching the I Claudius
series we also learned about a rumor. There was a very
popular rumor, in those times, (which was "verified" by
later historians Tacitus and Dio Cassius) that Claudius's last
wife, Agrippina the younger, had poisoned him with a plate
of Porcini mushrooms. It was said that Agrippina
had a plan: she wanted her son from a previous marriage to
succeed Claudius as Emperor.
As it turned out, Claudius was neither weak
nor mentally mentally challenged. Claudius had
previously quietly written and published a history of the
Etruscans, the predecessors and the inspiration of the Romans,
included reading and writings of the Etruscan lost language --
Claudius's book was long ago lost and with that, Etruscan
linguistics are gone).
Claudius was empowered by the praetorians in
41 AD, and he ruled, some say ruthlessly, until 54 AD.
Two years after enthronement, and seeking a way to validate
his reign, he sent troops into Britain in 43 AD and followed
them there himself after the invasion's success during the
same fighting season. There he claimed the victory that
started the 350+ (more or less) year long Roman phase of
British history.
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Some modern psychologists put Claudius on the Autism Spectrum and say that he was what today might be classified as "highly functional". They also propose that, in his earlier life, before being drafted into his emperorship, he was smart enough to keep his head down while other members of his dynastic family were being eliminated. |
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Even if you read the two
Robert Graves novelizations, on which the I
Claudius TV series was based (as opposed to just watching
TV) you still might not have gotten the short
reference to the Claudian success in Britain that
Graves included in the books. The full story
would have been another Graves book.
We'll get to Boudica's "story" later.
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| When Alice ate the cake labeled "eat me" she just grew and grew to unmanageable size. The same thing happened to the Roman empire -- it must have eaten something really good to ultimately grow to the size it did by 117 AD, during Trajan's tenure. |
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What Rome continued to eat was European, was West Asian, and was North African territory -- land and people and their resources. Huge bites were the responsibility of Julius Caesar including all "three parts", into which "all Gaul", in north west Europe Europe was divided.
That small separate Britania bite was the
conquest of Emperor Claudius in 43 AD, and his conquest lasted
until the natives, sometimes called "Romano British (Celts)",
expelled the last Roman bureaucrats in 409/410 AD.
By then, Roman occupation troops, had already
been withdrawn from Britania (troops and the bureaucracy were separate
entities). The legions were needed to try
to halt the surge/spread of the Germanii into Gaul on the
continent after the 370s, leaving the civil servants in place
in Britain. The Germanic surge was a crisis closer to
home and, which had to be addressed (although ultimately not
successfully)
Both the arrival of Claudius's conquering
expedition (four initial legions, auxiliaries in equal
numbers, logistics train, camp followers, plus huge numbers of
civilian administrators) and the withdrawal of all that
apparatus centuries later are obviously landmarks in British
history.
| Roman conquest of Britain | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Roman conquest of Britain, showing the dominant local tribes/kingdoms conquered in each area |
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| Belligerents | |||||||||
| Roman Empire | Celtic Britons | ||||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
| Claudius Aulus Plautius Gaius Suetonius Paulinus Vespasian Gnaeus Julius Agricola |
Togodumnus †Caratacus (POW) Boudica †Calgacus |
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| Casualties and losses | |||||||||
| Boudican revolt: 30,000–40,000 killed (including 7,000 soldiers)[1] | 100,000–250,000 killed[2][3] | ||||||||
43 to 84 AD:
The Claudian legions entered Britain
commanded by a legate of Claudius named Aulus Plautius and
landing in the same area that had been used by Julius Caesar a
century earlier. After taking the southeast they moved
north and finally proved that Britain is really an island.
The conquest of Britain was the beginning of Roman Empire's military occupation of most of
the island of Britain, which was inhabited by the Celtic Britons.
It began in earnest in AD 43 under
Emperor Claudius, and was largely completed in the
southern half of Britain (most of what is now called England
and Wales) by AD 87, when the Stanegate was
established. The conquered territory became the Roman province of Britannia.
Following Julius Caesar's invasions of
Britain in
54 BC, some southern British chiefdoms had become allies of the Romans.
The exile of their ally Verica gave
Claudius a pretext for invasion. The Roman army was
recruited in Italia, Hispania, and Gaul (four legions plus auxiliaries)
and used the newly-formed fleet Classis
Britannica.
<--- Aulus Plautius (modern drawing) leading Claudius's legions ashore. |
Under their general Aulus Plautius,
the Romans pushed inland from the southeast, defeating the
Britons in the Battle of the
Medway.
The Battle of Medway in 43 AD was a decisive Roman victory for Aulus Plautius during the first season of the Claudian of invasion. The Roman forces soundly defeate the Briton Celts led by Caratacus and Togodumnus. The battle undeniably secured the Roman foothold in Southeast Britain, allowing for subsequent Roman occupation and the eventual establishment of Roman Rule for almost 400 years. After the battle was over, Claudius went to Britain to accept the surrender of the British leaders and to achieve the military prestige that he had sought. |
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The Way (mostly still visible
Roman military road) stretches about 225 miles from
Lincoln in the northeast to Exeter in the
southwest. It initially was built as a Roman
military road and marked the frontier shortly after the
invasion of 43 AD. Later it was used for trade and
communication, with small conurbations developing into
towns along its route. |
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| General Vespasian: Full Latin name, Titus Flavius Vespasianus, served as the commanding general of the Legio II Augusta during the initial Roman invasion of Britain in 43 AD under Emperor Claudius. His campaign in Britain focused on securing the southwest of England, where he led successful attacks against hill forts and tribes like the Durotriges and Dumnonii, capturing more than 20 oppida (oppidum = tribal settlement) and establishing a legionary base at Isca Dumnoniorum (Exeter). His distinguished service in Britain earned him triumphal honours and recognition, paving the way for his future ascent to the imperial throne as Emperor Vespasian. With his two sons, Titus and Domitian, he established the Flavian Dynasty. |
And Chasing down the
Druids
The isle of Mona, (modern Anglesey off the north coast of Wales) was a stronghold of the druids and was attacked in AD 60 by the Roman army of Gaius Suetonius Paulinus the Roman Governor. The Romans considered the Druids to be agitators leading the resistance against the military occupation and also were disgusted by Druidic religious practices, which were said to include human sacrifice. Destruction of Druidic sacred groves on the Island was documented by the historian Tacitus. |
| <--- The "Wicker Man". In his Gallic Wars, a century earlier, Julius Caesar has described the Wicker Man rite in which the Druids were said to sacrifice masses of victims by burning them in large wicker effigies. |
The conquest of Wales was
interupted by the eruption of an uprising in 60 AD led by "Boudica". During
the revolt, the Britons destroyed Camulodunum
(Colcester), Verulamium (Saint Albans),
and Londinium
(London).
Or, at least, many Romans and
Celtic Quislings bit the dust during extensive burnings and
lootings.
The Boudicca story:
| The Boudican revolt was a
major, but short lived uprising in eastern Roman Britain
around 60-61 AD led by Boudica, a hereditary queen of
the Iceni tribe, against Roman oppression. After
Romans flogged Boudica and raped her daughters following
the death of her husband and then disregarded his will,
which had left the women half of his Iceni territory
(the other half going to the Emperor, Nero), she was
said to have united several local tribes and led a
revolt. Her forces were reported to have have
killed up to 70,000 Romans and Roman Celtic sympathizers
while destroying Roman settlements at Colchester,
London, and St. Albans. Suetonius Paulinus Interupted his campaign against the Druids in Angelsey, Wales, to confront Boudicca's revolt. He finally reportedly chased her down (after having abandoned Londinium's populace to their fate by not fighting her there, and after not fighting her at St. Albans) at an "unknown location" along the major Roman road toward the north that is now known as Watling Street where he defeated her forces and ruthlessly executing all who were captured. The "Battle of Watling Street", of which no trace has ever been found, reportedly took place in 60 or 61 AD. Some British academics are now pointing out that there is very little written (i.e., "Historical") and no contemporary eye witness written (real, primary source, "Historical") written evidence of the Boudicca story. There also appears to be a complete absence of Archeological evidence (like artifacts) to back up what little was written. In fact, there is no real evidence that Boudica ever really existed. What is well attested, however, is that Suetonius Paulinus, moved his forces from "stabilized" southeast British territory, i.e., the Roman controlled side of the Fosse Way. He led legions off to campaign against Druids on Angelsy (Mona Island) but then was informed of widespread uprisings by Celts back in his stabilized area south and east of the Fosse Way . He pulled his troops off Mona, quickly marched back southeast, and reportedly killed a lot of Celts. And the story of Boudica became "History". And Suetonius Paulinus was soon recalled from Britain -- for excessive brutality. Notably, Academia now often refers to Boudicca as a "legendary heroine" in the fight against Roman conquest and military occupation. This can, of course, be thought of as part of the general "revisionism" concerning the whole period of the Roman stay in Britain. |
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So "the Romans
ruthlessly put down the rebellion by AD 61." Governor
Suetonius Paulinus was soon recalled and replaced for using
excessive force.
And the conquest of
Wales
ultimately took until about
AD 77.
After Watling Street
Boudica's fate was recorded differently by Roman
historians. Tacitus claims she poisoned herself to avoid
capture, but Dio Cassius says she died of an illness.
Tacitus lived closer to the time of the events
The Roman Governor, Suetonius
Paulinus, was later replaced by a more conciliatory Publius
Petronius Turpilianus, ushering in a period of greater Roman
control and stability in Britain.
Smaller revolts were
intermittently recorded, but none caused the reaction of tht of
60/61 AD.
Roman general Gnaeus Julius
Agricola conquered
much of northern Britain during the following seven years.
In AD 84, Agricola defeated a Caledonian army, led by Calgacus, at the Battle of Mons
Graupius. However,
the Romans soon withdrew from northern Britain.
After Hadrian's Wall was established (started 122 AD) as the northern border, tribes in the region repeatedly rebelled against Roman rule and forts continued to be maintained across northern Britain to protect against these attacks.