Boudicca Buy on Amazon
Facebook LinkedIn

Boudicca

Author C G Feltham
Publisher C G Feltham
Price not available for France

You can still browse on Amazon. Try another country above.

Book Details
Author(s) C G Feltham
Publisher C G Feltham
ISBN / ASIN B00D19L5DS
ISBN-13 978B00D19L5D5
Marketplace France 🇫🇷
Description
Brittania was the most recent, and westerly province of the Roman Empire. Mostly pacified, and stable. Secure under Roman rule.

In A.D. 61, King Prasutagus, of the Iceni, had died, leaving two daughters, and his widow, Boudicca, known later by the latin name of Boadicea. She now ruled as Queen of the Iceni. The kingdom, situated in East Anglia, had been a friendly client state, the Romans having agreed to some autonomy. This was about to change. While the Governor, General Suetonius Paulinus was away, fighting the Druids, and their affiliated tribesmen, in North Wales, Decianus Catus, the Procurator, had been left in charge. His extreme treatment of the Iceni, led to subjucation, and the rape of Boudicca's daughters, and, when she protested, the scourging and lashing of Boudicca herself. An atrocity that turned the Iceni into uproar, revolt, and a thirst for bloody revenge.

Boudicca, at the head of one hundred and thirty thousand, well armed, warriors, was now imposing the biggest threat to the Romans, since the slave revolt of Spartacus. With their forces split between England and Wales, the Romans faced, not only annihilation, but, being swept back into the sea.

The Roman cities of Camulodinum, Verulamium, and Londinium, lay before the warrior Queen. Her blood lust, even threatened to turn into longings of a different kind.

The Iceni had been joined by the Trinovantes, with their leader, Denophias, a shrewd, and calculating, man.

The Iceni, were also well served by their nobles, particularly, Cembanus. Also, the Iceni warrior, and, now, ex-sheepherder, Unatrax, so muscle bound, and a formidable wielder of the Iceni long sword, he became known as Unatrax the Strong.

Paulinus, and the Tribune, Julius Agricola, a Gaul, of merit, and the legionaries from the Fourteenth, and Twentieth Legions, tried their best to hurry back with all haste. The nearest legion to the uprising, was the Ninth Hispana, led by the young Legate, Quintus Petillius Cerialis, garrisoned at the fortress of Lindum. But, were his five thousand legionaries of the Ninth, plus auxiliaries, a match for Boudicca's one hundred and thirty thousand, revenge-seeking tribesmen, and their four hundred, scythed, Iceni war chariots?
Donate to EbookNetworking
No Prev
No Next