Item Number: IC-01
Item Name: Boadicca, Warrior Queen of the Iceni
Description: Boadicca, or Buddug in Welsh, was a queen of the British Iceni tribe who led an uprising against the conquering forces of the Roman Empire in AD 60/61. According to Roman sources, shortly after the uprising failed, she poisoned herself or died of her wounds, although there is no actual evidence of her fate. She is considered a British folk hero.Boudicca’s husband Prasutagus, with whom she had two children whose
names are unknown, ruled as a nominally independent ally of Rome, and
left his kingdom jointly to his daughters and to the Roman emperor in
his will. However when he died his will was ignored, and the kingdom was
annexed and his property taken. According to Tacitus, Boudicca was
flogged and her daughters assaulted.
Cassius Dio explains Boudicca’s response by saying that previous
imperial donations to influential Britons were confiscated and the Roman
financier and philosopher Seneca called in the loans he had forced on
the reluctant Celtic Britons.
In AD 60 or 61, when the Roman governor Gaius Suetonius Paulinus was
campaigning on the island of Mona (modern Anglesey) on the northwest
coast of Wales, Boudicca led the Iceni, the Trinovantes, and other
tribes in revolt. They destroyed Camulodunum (modern Colchester),
earlier the capital of the Trinovantes, but at that time a settlement
for discharged Roman soldiers and site of a temple to the Emperor
Claudius.
Upon hearing of the revolt, Suetonius hurried to Londinium. The 20 year
old commercial settlement was the rebels’ next target. Lacking
sufficient numbers to defend the settlement, he evacuated and abandoned
Londinium.
Boudicca led a very large army of Iceni, Trinovantes, and others against
a detachment of the Legio IX Hispana, defeating them, and burning
Londinium and Verulamium.
An estimated 70,000 – 80,000 Romans and Britons were killed in the
three cities by those following Boudicca, many by torture. Suetonius,
meanwhile regrouped his forces, and despite being heavily outnumbered,
he decisively defeated the Britons. The crisis caused Nero to consider
withdrawing all Roman forces from Britain, but Suetonius’s victory over
Boudicca confirmed Roman control of the province.
Boudicca then either killed herself to avoid capture or died of illness.