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Classical Sources:
Tacitus recalling the Druid Isle of Mona, and the matter of the Iceni Revolt
Tacitus, Annals, Book XIV, Chapters 29-37
Chapter 29. [Military campaign in Wales]
During the consulship of Lucius Caesennius Paetus and Publius Petronius Turpilianus
[AD 60-61], a dreadful calamity befell the army in Britain. Aulus Didius, as has
been mentioned, aimed at no extension of territory, content with maintaining the
conquests already made. Veranius, who succeeded him, did little more: he made a few
incursions into the country of the Silures, and was hindered by death from prosecuting
the war with vigour. He had been respected, during his life, for the severity of
his manners; in his end, the mark fell off, and his last will discovered the low
ambition of a servile flatterer, who, in those moments, could offer incense to Nero,
and add, with vain ostentation, that if he lived two years, it was his design to
make the whole island obedient to the authority of the prince.
Paulinus Suetonius
succeeded to the command; an officer of distinguished merit. To be compared with
Corbulo was his ambition. His military talents gave him pretensions, and the voice
of the people, who never leave exalted merit without a rival, raised him to the highest
eminence. By subduing the mutinous spirit of the Britons he hoped to equal the brilliant
success of Corbulo in Armenia. With this view, he resolved to subdue the isle of
Mona; a place in habited by a warlike people, and a common refuge for all the discontented
Britons. In order to facilitate his approach to a difficult and deceitful shore,
he ordered a number of flat-bottomed boats to be constructed. In these he wafted
over the infantry, while the cavalry, partly by fording over the shallows, and partly
by swimming their horses, advanced to gain a footing on the island.
Chapter 30. [The
Druids at Mona Island]
On the opposite shore stood the Britons, close embodied, and
prepared for action. Women were seen running through the ranks in wild disorder;
their apparel funeral; their hair loose to the wind, in their hands flaming torches,
and their whole appearance resembling the frantic rage of the Furies. The Druids
were ranged in order, with hands uplifted, invoking the gods, and pouring forth horrible
imprecations. The novelty of the fight struck the Romans with awe and terror. They
stood in stupid amazement, as if their limbs were benumbed, riveted to one spot,
a mark for the enemy. The exhortations of the general diffused new vigour through
the ranks, and the men, by mutual reproaches, inflamed each other to deeds of valour.
They felt the disgrace of yielding to a troop of women, and a band of fanatic priests;
they advanced their standards, and rushed on to the attack with impetuous fury.
The
Britons perished in the flames, which they themselves had kindled. The island fell,
and a garrison was established to retain it in subjection. The religious groves,
dedicated to superstition and barbarous rites, were levelled to the ground. In those
recesses, the natives [stained] their altars with the blood of their prisoners, and
in the entrails of men explored the will of the gods. While Suetonius was employed
in making his arrangements to secure the island, he received intelligence that Britain
had revolted, and that the whole province was up in arms.
Chapter 31. [Causes of
Boudicca's revolt]
Prasutagus, the late king of the Icenians, in the course of a
long reign had amassed considerable wealth. By his will he left the whole to his
two daughters and the emperor in equal shares, conceiving, by that stroke of policy,
that he should provide at once for the tranquility of his kingdom and his family.
The event was otherwise. His dominions were ravaged by the centurions; the slaves
pillaged his house, and his effects were seized as lawful plunder. His wife, Boudicca,
was disgraced with cruel stripes; her daughters were ravished, and the most illustrious
of the Icenians were, by force, deprived of the positions which had been transmitted
to them by their ancestors. The whole country was considered as a legacy bequeathed
to the plunderers. The relations of the deceased king were reduced to slavery.
Exasperated
by their acts of violence, and dreading worse calamities, the Icenians had recourse
to arms. The Trinobantians joined in the revolt. The neighboring states, not as yet
taught to crouch in bondage, pledged themselves, in secret councils, to stand forth
in the cause of liberty. What chiefly fired their indignation was the conduct of
the veterans, lately planted as a colony at Camulodunum. These men treated the Britons
with cruelty and oppression; they drove the natives from their habitations, and calling
them by the [shameful] names of slaves and captives, added insult to their tyranny.
In these acts of oppression, the veterans were supported by the common soldiers;
a set of men, by their habits of life, trained to licentiousness, and, in their turn,
expecting to reap the same advantages. The temple built in honour of Claudius was
another cause of discontent. In the eye of the Britons it seemed the citadel of eternal
slavery. The priests, appointed to officiate at the altars, with a pretended zeal
for religion, devoured the whole substance of the country. To over-run a colony,
which lay quite naked and exposed, without a single fortification to defend it, did
not appear to the incensed and angry Britons an enterprise that threatened either
danger or difficulty. The fact was, the Roman generals attended to improvements to
taste and elegance, but neglected the useful. They embellished the province, and
took no care to defend it.
Chapter 32. [Omens and early Roman setbacks at Camulodunum]
While the Britons were preparing to throw off the yoke, the statue of victory, erected
at Camulodunum, fell from its base, without any apparent cause, and lay extended
on the ground with its face averted, as if the goddess yielded to the enemies of
Rome. Women in restless ecstasy rushed among the people, and with frantic screams
denounced impending ruin. In the council-chamber of the Romans hideous clamours were
heard in a foreign accent; savage howlings filled the theatre, and near the mouth
of the Thames the image of a colony in ruins was seen in the transparent water; the
sea was purpled with blood, and, at the tide of ebb, the figures of human bodies
were traced in the sand. By these appearances the Romans were sunk in despair, while
the Britons anticipated a glorious victory. Suetonius, in the meantime, was detained
in the isle of Mona. In this alarming crisis, the veterans sent to Catus Decianus,
the procurator of the province, for a reinforcement. Two hundred men, and those not
completely armed, were all that officer could spare. The colony had but a handful
of soldiers. Their temple was strongly fortified, and there they hoped to make a
stand. But even for the defense of that place no measures were concerted. Secret
enemies mixed in all their deliberations. No fosse was made; no palisade thrown up;
nor were the women, and such as were disabled by age or infirmity, sent out of the
garrison. Unguarded and unprepared, they were taken by surprise, and, in the moment
of profound peace, overpowered by the Barbarians in one general assault. The colony
was laid waste with fire and sword.
The temple held out, but, after a siege of two
days, was taken by storm. Petilius Cerealis, who commanded the ninth legion, marched
to the relief of the place. The Britons, flushed with success, advanced to give him
battle. The legion was put to the rout, and the infantry cut to pieces. Cerealis
escaped with the cavalry to his entrenchments. Catus Decianus, the procurator of
the province, alarmed at the scene of carnage which he beheld on every side, and
further dreading the indignation of a people, whom by rapine and oppression he had
driven to despair, betook himself to flight, and crossed over into Gaul.
Chapter
33. [Suetonius abandons London to the Boudiccan forces]
Suetonius, undismayed by
this disaster, marched through the heart of the country as far as London; a place
not dignified with the name of a colony, but the chief residence of merchants, and
the great mart of trade and commerce. At that place he meant to fix the feat of war;
but reflecting on the scanty numbers of his little army, and the fatal rashness of
Cerealis, he resolved to quit the station, and, by giving up one post, secure the
rest of the province. Neither supplications, nor the tears of the inhabitants could
induce him to change his plan. The signal for the march was given. All who chose
to follow his banners were taken under his protection. Of all who, on account of
their advanced age, the weakness of their sex, of the attractions of the situation,
thought proper to remain behind, not one escaped the rage of the Barbarians. The
inhabitants of Verulamium, a municipal town, were in like manner put to the sword.
The genius of a savage people leads them always in quest of plunder; and, accordingly,
the Britons left behind them all places of strength. Wherever they expected feeble
resistance, and considerable booty, there they were sure to attack with the fiercest
rage. Military skill was not the talent of Barbarians. The number massacred in the
places which have been mentioned, amounted to no less than seventy thousand, all
citizens or allies of Rome. To make prisoners, and reserve them for slavery, or to
exchange them, was not in the idea of a people, who despised all the laws of war.
The halter and the gibbet, slaughter and defoliation, fire and sword, were the marks
of savage valour. Aware that vengeance would overtake them, they were resolved to
make sure of their revenge, and glut themselves with the blood of their enemies.
Chapter 34. [Suetonius prepares to counterattack]
The fourteenth legion, with the
veterans of the twentieth, and the auxiliaries from the adjacent stations, having
joined Suetonius, his army amounted to little less than ten thousand men. Thus reinforced,
he resolved, without loss of time, to bring on a decisive action. For this purpose
he chose a spot encircled with woods, narrow at the entrance, and sheltered in the
rear by a thick forest. In that situation he had no fear of an ambush. The enemy,
he knew, had no approach but in front. An open plain lay before him. He drew up his
men in the following order: the legions in close array formed the center; the light
armed troops were stationed at hand to serve as occasion might require: the cavalry
took post in the wings. The Britons brought into the field an incredible multitude.
They formed no regular line of battle. Detached parties and loose battalions displayed
their numbers, in frantic transport bounding with exultation, and so sure of victory,
that they placed their wives in wagons at the extremity of the plain, where they
might survey the scene of action, and behold the wonders of British valour.
Chapter
35. [Boudicca addresses her army]
Boudicca, in a [chariot], with her two daughters
before her, drove through the ranks. She harangued the different nations in their
turn: "This," she said, "is not the first time that the Britons have been led to
battle by a woman. But now she did not come to boast the pride of a long line of
ancestry, nor even to recover her kingdom and the plundered wealth of her family.
She took the field, like the meanest among them, to assert the cause of public liberty,
and to seek revenge for her body seamed with ignominious stripes, and her two daughters
infamously ravished. From the pride and arrogance of the Romans nothing is sacred;
all are subject to violation; the old endure the scourge, and the virgins are deflowered.
But the vindictive gods are now at hand. A Roman legion dared to face the warlike
Britons: with their lives they paid for their rashness; those who survived the carnage
of that day, lie poorly hid behind their entrenchments, meditating nothing but how
to save themselves by an ignominious flight. From the din of preparation, and the
shouts of the British army, the Romans, even now, shrink back with terror. What will
be their case when the assault begins? Look round, and view your numbers. Behold
the proud display of warlike spirits, and consider the motives for which we draw
the avenging sword. On this spot we must either conquer, or die with glory. There
is no alternative. Though a woman, my resolution is fixed: the men, if they please,
may survive with infamy, and live in bondage."
Chapter 36. [Suetonius meanwhile addresses
his army]
Suetonius, in a moment of such importance, did not remain silent. He expected
every thing from the valour of his men, and yet urged every topic that could inspire
and animate them to the attack. "Despise," he said, "the savage uproar, the yells
and shouts of undisciplined Barbarians. In that mixed multitude, the women out-number
the men. Void of spirit, unprovided with arms, they are not soldiers who come to
offer battle; they are bastards, runaways, the refuse of your swords, who have often
fled before you, and will again betake themselves to flight when they see the conqueror
flaming in the ranks of war. In all engagements it is the valour of a few that turns
the fortune of the day. It will be your immortal glory, that with a scanty number
you can equal the exploits of a great and powerful army. Keep your ranks; discharge
your javelins; rush forward to a close attack; bear down all with your bucklers,
and hew a passage with your swords. Pursue the vanquished, and never think of spoil
and plunder. Conquer, and victory gives you everything."
This speech was received
with warlike acclamations. The soldiers burned with impatience for the onset, the
veterans brandished their javelins, and the ranks displayed such an intrepid countenance,
that Suetonius, anticipating the victory, gave the signal for the charge.
Chapter
37. [The decisive battle]
The engagement began. The Roman legion presented a close
embodied line. The narrow defile gave them the shelter of a rampart. The Britons
advanced with ferocity, and discharged their darts at random. In that instant, the
Romans rushed forward in the form of a wedge. The auxiliaries followed with equal
ardour. The cavalry, at the same time, bore down upon the enemy, and, with their
pikes, overpowered all who dared to make a stand. The Britons betook themselves to
flight, but their waggons in the rear obstructed their passage. A dreadful slaughter
followed. Neither sex nor age was spared. The cattle, falling in one promiscuous
carnage, added to the heaps of slain. The glory of the day was equal to the most
splendid victory of ancient times. According to some writers, not less than eighty
thousand Britons were put to the sword. The Romans lost about four hundred men, and
the wounded did not exceed that number. Boudicca, by a dose of poison, [ended] her
life. Poenius Postumius, the Prefect in the camp of the second legion, as soon as
he heard of the brave exploits of the fourteenth and twentieth legions, felt the
disgrace of having, in disobedience to the orders of his general, robbed the soldiers
under his command of their share in so complete a victory. Stung with remorse, he
fell upon his sword, and expired on the spot.