Everything about The Catuvellauni totally explained
The
Catuvellauni were a
Celtic/
Belgic tribe or state of south-eastern
Britain before the
Roman conquest.
The fortunes of the Catuvellauni and their kings before the conquest can be traced through
numismatic evidence and scattered references in classical histories. They are mentioned by
Dio Cassius, who implies they led the resistance against the conquest in AD
43. They appear as one of the
civitates of
Roman Britain in
Ptolemy's
Geography in the
2nd century, occupying modern
Hertfordshire,
Bedfordshire and southern
Cambridgeshire and based around the town of
Verlamion (modern
St Albans).
The Catuvellauni may be related to the
Catalauni, a people of
Belgic Gaul attested in the region of
Châlons-en-Champagne.
Before the Roman conquest
Cassivellaunus, who led the resistance to
Julius Caesar's first expedition to Britain in
54 BC, is often taken to have belonged to the Catuvellauni. His tribal background isn't mentioned by Caesar, but his territory, north of the
Thames and to the west of the
Trinovantes, corresponds to that later occupied by the Catuvellauni. The extensive earthworks at
Devil's Dyke near
Wheathampstead,
Hertfordshire are thought to have been the tribe's original capital.
Tasciovanus was the first king to mint
coins at
Verlamion, beginning ca
20 BC. He appears to have expanded his power at the expense of the Trinovantes to the east, as some of his coins, ca
15-
10 BC, were minted in their capital
Camulodunum (modern
Colchester). This advance was given up, possibly under pressure from
Rome, and a later series of coins were again minted at Verulamium.
However, Camulodunum was retaken, either by Tasciovanus or by his son
Cunobelinus, who succeeded him ca AD
9 and ruled for about thirty years. Little is known of Cunobelinus's life, but his name survived into British legend, culminating in
William Shakespeare's play
Cymbeline.
Geoffrey of Monmouth says he was brought up at the court of
Augustus and willingly paid tribute to Rome. Archaeology indicates increased trading and diplomatic links with the
Roman Empire. Under Cunobelinus and his family the Catuvellauni appear to have become the dominant power in south-eastern Britain. His brother
Epaticcus gained territory to the south and west at the expense of the
Atrebates until his death ca AD
35.
Three sons of Cunobelinus are known to history.
Adminius, whose power-base appears from his coins to have been in
Kent, was exiled by his father shortly before AD
40 according to
Suetonius, prompting the
emperor Caligula to mount his abortive invasion of Britain. Two other sons,
Togodumnus and
Caratacus, are named by Dio Cassius. No coins of Togodumnus are known, but Caratacus's rare coins suggest that he followed his uncle Epaticcus in completing the conquest of the lands of the Atrebates. It was the exile of the Atrebatic king,
Verica, that prompted
Claudius to launch a successful invasion, led by
Aulus Plautius, in AD
43.
Dio tells us that by this stage Cunobelinus was dead, and Togodumnus and Caratacus led the initial resistance to the invasion in Kent. They were defeated by Plautius in two crucial battles on the rivers
Medway (see
Battle of the Medway) and
Thames. He also tells us that the Bodunni, a tribe or kingdom who were tributary to the Catuvellauni, switched sides. This may be a misspelling of the
Dobunni, who lived in
Gloucestershire, and may give an indication of how far Catuvellaunian power extended. Togodumnus died shortly after the battle on the Thames. Plautius halted and sent word for the emperor to join him, and Claudius led the final advance to Camulodunum. The territories of the Catuvellauni became the nucleus of the new
Roman province.
Under Roman rule
Caratacus, however, had survived, and continued to lead the resistance to the invaders. We next hear of him in
Tacitus's
Annals, leading the
Silures and
Ordovices in what is now
Wales against the
Roman governor Publius Ostorius Scapula. Ostorius defeated him in a set-piece battle somewhere in Ordovician territory (see
Battle of Caer Caradoc) in AD
51, capturing members of his family, but Caratacus again escaped. He fled north to the
Brigantes, but their queen,
Cartimandua, was loyal to the Romans and handed him over in chains.
Caratacus was exhibited as a war-prize as part of a
triumphal parade in Rome. He was allowed to make a speech to the
Senate, and made such an impression that he and his family were freed and allowed to live in peace in Rome.
Verulamium, the Roman settlement near Verlamion, gained the status of
municipium ca
50, allowing its leading magistrates to become
Roman citizens. It was destroyed in the rebellion of
Boudica in
60 or
61, but was soon rebuilt. Its
forum and
basilica were completed in
79 or
81, and were dedicated in an
inscription by the governor,
Gnaeus Julius Agricola, to the emperor
Titus. Its theatre, the first
Roman theatre in Britain, was built ca
140.
An inscription records that the
civitas of the Catuvellauni were involved in the reconstruction of
Hadrian's Wall, probably in the time of
Septimius Severus in the early
3rd century.
Saint Alban, the first British
Christian martyr, was a citizen of Verulamium in the late
3nd or early
4th century, and was killed there. The city took its modern name from him. The tombstone of a woman of the Catuvellauni called Regina, freedwoman and wife of Barates, a soldier from
Palmyra in
Syria, was found in the
4th century Roman fort of
Arbeia in
South Shields in the north-east of England.
List of leaders of the Catuvellauni
- Cassivellaunus, a military leader and possibly chieftain, often associated with the Catuvellauni c. 54 BC
- Tasciovanus, c. 20 BC - AD 9
- Cunobelinus, AD 9 - AD 40
Further Information
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