Everything about the Iceni totally explained
The
Iceni or
Eceni were a
Brythonic
tribe who inhabited an area of
Britain corresponding roughly to the modern-day county of
Norfolk between the
1st century BC and
1st century AD. The
Cenimagni, who surrendered to
Julius Caesar during his
second expedition to Britain in 54 BC, may have been a branch of the Iceni.
Archaeological evidence of the Iceni includes
torcs - heavy rings of
gold,
silver or
electrum worn around the
neck and
shoulders.
The Iceni began producing coins ca. 10 BC. Their coins were a distinctive adaptation of the Gallo-Belgic "face/horse" design, and in some early issues, most numerous near Norwich, the horse was replaced with a boar. Some coins are inscribed ECENI, making them the only coin-producing group to use their tribal name on coins. The earliest personal name to appear on coins is
Antedios (ca. 10 BC), and other abbreviated names like AESU and SAEMU follow.
Sir Thomas Browne the first British archaeological writer, said of the Roman occupation,
Boudica and Iceni coins:
That Britain was notably populous is undeniable, from that expression of Caesar. That the Romans themselves were early in no small Numbers, Seventy Thousand with their associates slain by Bouadicea, affords a sure account... And no small number of silver peeces near Norwich; with a rude head upon the obverse, an ill-formed horse on the reverse, with the Inscriptions Ic. Duro.T. whether implying Iceni, Dutotriges, Tascia, or Trinobantes, we leave to higher conjecture. The British Coyns afford conjecture of early habitation in these parts, though the City of Norwich arose from the ruins of Venta, and though perhaps not without some habitation before, was enlarged, built, and nominated by the Saxons.
The
Icknield Way, an
ancient trackway linking East Anglia to the
Chilterns may be named after the Iceni.
The Roman Invasion
Tacitus records that the Iceni were not conquered in the
Claudian invasion of AD 43, but had come to a voluntary alliance with the Romans. However they rose against them in 47 after the governor,
Publius Ostorius Scapula, threatened to disarm them. They were defeated by Ostorius in a fierce battle at a fortified place, but were allowed to retain their independence. The site of the battle may have been
Stonea Camp in
Cambridgeshire.
A second, more serious, uprising took place in 61.
Prasutagus, the wealthy, pro-Roman Icenian king, had died. It was common practice for a
Roman client king to leave his kingdom to Rome on his death, but Prasutagus had attempted to preserve his line by bequeathing his kingdom jointly to the Emperor and his own daughters. The Romans ignored this, and the
procurator Catus Decianus seized his entire estate. Prasutagus's widow,
Boudica, was flogged and her daughters raped. At the same time, Roman financiers called in their loans. While the governor,
Gaius Suetonius Paulinus, was campaigning in Wales, Boudica led the Iceni and the neighbouring
Trinovantes in a large-scale
revolt, destroying and looting
Camulodunum (
Colchester),
Londinium (
London) and
Verulamium (
St Albans) before finally being defeated by Suetonius Paulinus and his legions. Although the Britons outnumbered the Romans greatly, they lacked that superior discipline and tactics that won the Romans a decisive victory. The battle took place at an unknown location, probably in the
West Midlands somewhere along
Watling Street. Today, a large statue of Boudica wielding a sword and charging upon a
chariot can be seen in
London on the north bank of the Thames by
Westminster Bridge.
The Iceni are recorded as a
civitas of Roman Britain in
Ptolemy's
Geographia, which names
Venta Icenorum as a town of theirs. Venta, which is also mentioned in the
Ravenna Cosmography, and the
Antonine Itinerary, was a settlement near the village of
Caister Saint Edmunds, some 5 miles south of present-day
Norwich, and a mile or two from the
Bronze Age Henge at
Arminghall.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Iceni'.
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