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British Pasts Ruled Britannia The Roman Conquest Romano Britain Celtic Tribes: Caledoni, Vacomagi, Taxali, Venicones, Dumonii, Selgovae, Novantae, Votadini, Brigantes, Parisi, Deceangli, Cornovii, Ordovices, Corieltauvi, Iceni, Demetae, Silures, Trinovantes, Catuvellauni, Dobunni, Atrebates, Cantii, Durotriges, Dumnonii First Roman Invasion • 55-54 BC: Attempted invasion by Julius Caesar • Romans joined forces with Trinovantes to defeat a British coalition under Cassivellaunus, king of Catuvellauni • Caesar foiled by rebellion in Gaul Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts Second Roman Invasion • May, 43 AD: Roman commander Aulus Plautius lands in Britain with four legions and about 20,000 auxiliary troops • Early autumn: Emperor Claudius arrives with reinforcements Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts Second Roman Invasion • 43 AD: Fall of Camulodunum (Colchester), centre of the Catuvellauni, to the Romans • Tribal kings surrender • 51 AD: Caractacus (King of the Catuvellauni) captured • AD 75-7: Wales subdued, conquest complete Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts • Legions penetrate as far as Cornwall, Wales, the Humber • Road construction begun, Londinium (London) founded Rebellion of the Iceni, 60-1 AD • Brutalisation of Iceni tribe and its queen, Boudica • Boudica raises rebellion against Rome with support of Trinovantes • Sacking of Colchester, London and St Albans • Defeat of British tribes by Roman governor, Suetonius Paulinus Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts “...a terrible disaster occurred in Britain. Two cities were sacked, eighty thousand of the Romans and of their allies perished, and the island was lost to Rome. Moreover, all this ruin was brought upon the Romans by a woman, a fact which in itself caused them the greatest shame....But the person who was chiefly instrumental in rousing the natives and persuading them to fight the Romans, the person who was thought worthy to be their leader and who directed the conduct of the entire war, was Buduica, a Briton woman of the royal family and possessed of greater intelligence than often belongs to women....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 divers colours over which a thick mantle was fastened with a brooch. This was her invariable attire.” Cassio Dio Images of Boudicca Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts Anglesey and the North, 77-83 AD • 77-83 AD: Governor Agricola campaigns against Ordovices in Wales and northern tribes • 78 AD: Agricola crosses Menai Strait to take Anglesey • 79-80 AD: Agricola consolidates military control of southern ‘Scotland’ • 81-83 AD: Agricola campaigns against the Calidoni Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts “The enemy lined the shore in a dense armed mass. Among them were black-robed women with dishevelled hair like Furies, brandishing torches. Close by stood Druids, raising their hands to heaven and screaming dreadful curses. This weird spectacle awed the Roman soldiers into a sort of paralysis. They stood still, and presented themselves as a target. But then they urged each other (and were urged by the general) not to fear a horde of fanatical women. Onward pressed their standards and they bore down their opponents, enveloping them in the flames of their own torches. Suetonius garrisoned the conquered island. The groves devoted to Mona's barbarous superstitions he demolished. For it was their religion to drench their altars in the blood of prisoners and consult their gods by means of human entrails.” Tacitus ‘Romanisation’ of Britain 43-409 AD • Roman civilisation flourishes in military and urban centres, particularly in the south • ‘Romanisation’ of architecture, dress, entertainment and religion • Improvements in areas of communication, sanitation and medicine Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts The Roman Baths, Bath Religious spa, constructed c. 45 AD Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts Towns built to house military and administrative personnel, including Corinium (Cirencester), Camulodunum (Colchester, Verulaminium (St Albans and Lindum (Lincoln) Palace at Fishbourne (Sussex), constructed early 70s AD • South of the country becomes a prosperous Roman province • North is continually troubled; defences constructed (Hadrian’s Wall, the Antonine Wall) Hadrian’s Wall, the Antonine Wall • 122-139 AD: Emperor Hadrian has 75-mile wall constructed along the Tyne-Solway line • 142-144 AD: Emperor Antonine has 37-mile wall built • 160 AD: Romans abandon gains north of Hadrian’s wall Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts Situation of Walls Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts Division of Britain, c. 216 AD • Britain divided into Britannia Superior, with legions at Caerleon and Chester, and Britannia inferior, with legions at York and Hadrian’s wall • Emperor Septimus Severus conducts campaigns in north Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts The Gallic Empire, 260-274 AD • Rebellion by Roman general Postumus: Britain and Gaul become independent Empire. • 274: Tetricus surrenders Gallic Empire back to Roman Empire Aurelian Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts Empire of Carausius, 286-296 AD • Carausius seizes Britain and northern Gaul; work begins on Saxon Shore • 293 AD: Carausius murdered by Allectus • 296 AD: Allectus falls to Emperor Constantius Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts Provinces Restructured, c. 296 • Britannia Superior split into: • Britannia Prima (centre Cirencester) • Maxima Caesariensis (centre London) • Britannia Inferior split into: • Britannia Secunda (centre York) • Flavia Caesariensis (centre Lincoln) Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts Constantine I and Christianity 314 AD • 306 AD: Constantine becomes Emperor • 312 AD: Constantine defeats his rival Maxentius at the Milvian Bridge after a religious visitation • Constantine makes Christianity imperial religion; foundation of Constantinople • 325 AD: Council of Nicea agrees on Nicene Creed Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts Invasions: Picts, Scoti, Saxons 367 AD • 367 AD: Land and sea invasion: Picts, Scoti, Attacotti, Saxons • By 400 AD: three nonRoman kingdoms established: Strathclyde, Goddoddin, Galloway Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts Invasions, c. 390 AD • From late fourth century: Angles, Saxons and Jutes settle extensively in southern and central Britain Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts Abandonment of Britain, 410 AD • From c. 400 AD: Roman troops continually withdrawn • 410 AD: Roman citizens of Britain petition Emperor Honorius for assistance; they are told to ‘look to their own defences’ Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts The final years of Roman Britain Next week: Saxons, Jutes and Vikings Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts Assignment for Next Week • Group 1: Find out what exactly we know about King Arthur. Where does historical fact end and myth begin? • Group 2: Find out about the life of Eric Bloodaxe. • Group 3: Find out about the life and achievements of King Offa. • Group 4: Find out about Anglo-Saxon religion, particularly with reference to the Anglo-Saxon calendar and the days of the week. • Group 5: Find out about the life and achievements of King Alfred. Look at the website (homework assignments) for a starting point Dewhurst: WS 2004/05 British Pasts