Hosker, G [Sword of Cartimandua 00.5] Ulpius Felix- Warrior of Rome (33 page)

Quintus Cerialis was the Legate who tried to relieve Camulodunum but, as I say in the novel, he only took 2,500 men and all but 500 of the cavalry, including the First Cohort of the Ninth were massacred. The procurator did behave as suggested in the novel.  He sent a mere 200 auxiliaries to face Boudicca and he did flee to Gaul. Boudicca was flogged and her daughters raped by Roman soldiers. In reality Cerialis is not implicated but it suited my novel to make him seem corrupt.  Nor was it auxiliaries who raped the queen’s daughters, it was legionaries; again it suited my novel.  The reasons for the rape are confused but it appears that the Romans were victims of their own sense of order.  Virgins could not be executed and therefore the rape would facilitate that sentence.  As they were the joint heirs with Nero this would seem a logical precursor to their death.  All of which begs the question, why, having committed such an outrageous act did the Romans not execute them? There was a time gap which Boudicca used to ignite the rebellion. I used the escape from the settlement as a means of explaining that.

The lines spoken by the Governor and Boudicca at the Battle of Watling Street are taken from Tacitus. I put them in italics to show what a lazy author I am. They may be fiction (he was writing many years after the event) but if you are going to steal lines then why not from a Roman. In terms of the numbers at the actions they are fairly accurate.  It is estimated that Boudicca slaughtered almost 80000 at the three colonia. Paulinus, who emerges as the real hero of the uprising, did only have ten thousand men to face an army estimated to be 100,000 in number.  He is reported to have only lost 400 hundred men whilst the rebels were slaughtered.  The wagons and their placement, with the families watching on, was an action which had occurred in other conflicts.  It cost the rebels their lives as it prevented their escape. The Prefect of the Second Augusta did fail to respond to an order to join Paulinus and, after the Governor’s victory, he did kill himself.  Apparently his men were a little miffed to have missed a great victory!

Quintus Cerialis did become Governor of Britannia when Vespasian became Emperor after the year of four Emperors in 69 A.D. He was not as good as Paulinus who was, probably, the reason why Britannia remained a colony for another four hundred years. His battle plans suited the Romans but even so the defeat of Boudicca by such a small number of men beggars belief.

The roads were not called Watling Street, Dere Street etc until Saxon times.  The roads were named after the Emperor in whose reign they were constructed. As most of them were constructed during the reign of Claudius this must have been confusing although as the action in this book is centred mainly along the A1 it is not such a problem.

Griff Hosker October 2013

 

 

 

 

  

 

 
 

 

 
 

 

 

 

People and places in the book.

Fictitious characters and places are in
italics
.

 

 
Name

 

 
Description

 

 
Abad

 

 Pannonian Chief

 

 Aulus Didius Gallus

 

 Governor of Britannia 52-57 AD

 

 
Aulus Murgus

 

 Cavalryman 9th Legion

 

 Bucco

 

 A name meaning fool

 

 Capsarius

 

 Medical orderly

 

 Caesius Nasica

 

 Legate who first defeated Venutius

 

 
Cava

 

 Pannonian warrior

 

 
Cavta

 

 Pannonian village

 

 
Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium

 

 Cologne Legionary Fortress

 

 cornicen

 

 The trooper with the cornu.

 

 Durobrivae

 

 Peterborough

 

 Dunum

 

 River Tees

 

 cornu

 

 Roman horn for signalling in battle

 

 Decius Spurius

 

 Prefect 1
st
Gallic Cohort

 

 
Darvas

 

 Pannonian warrior

 

 
Decimus Livius Bucco

 

 Corbulo’s aide

 

 
Decurion Spurius Ocella

 

 Cavalryman 9th Legion

 

 Durocobrivis

 

 Luton

 

 
Flavius Bellatoris

 

 Cavalryman 9th Legion

 

 Fossa Lindum

 

 Ermine Street (A1)

 

 
Gerjen

 

 Pannonian warrior and aquilifer

 

 Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo

 

 Legate- Germania Inferior

 

 Ituna Est

 

 River Solway, Cumbria

 

 
Gnaeus Marcius Celsus

 

 Tribune 9th Hispana

 

 
Herrmann

 

 Chauci chief

 

 
Julius Salvius Labeo

 

 Legate 5
th
Alaude

 

 
Kadarcs

 

 Pannonian warrior

 

 Marcomanni

 

 German tribe

 

 
Marcus Bulbus

 

 Legate Ninth Hispana

 

 
Marcus Sextus Maro

 

 First Spear of the Ninth

 

 
Marius Ulpius Proculus

 

 Prefect of 1
st
Pannonian Ala

 

 Navarchus

 

 In charge of ten ships

 

 
Numerius Buteo

 

 Cavalryman 9
th
Legion

 

 oppidum

 

 Hill fort

 

 Nundinal cycle

 

 A Roman week; it changed from 8 days to 7 in the 1
st
Century

 

 
Panyvadi

 

 Pannonian warrior

 

 
Publius Tullus

 

 Cavalryman 9th Legion

 

 
Quintus Atinus

 

 Cavalryman 9th Legion

 

 Quintus Petillius Cerialis

 

 Legate of the Ninth and later Governor

 

 Quaestor

 

 Roman official or tax collector

 

 sesquiplicarius

 

 Corporal

 

 
Sextus Vatia

 

 Cavalryman 9th Legion

 

 signifier

 

 The soldier who carries the standard

 

 
Spurius Ocella

 

 Decurion 9th Legion

 

 
Sura

 

 Pannonian warrior and deserter

 

 tonsor

 

 Roman barber

 

 Tuathal

 

 Iceni warrior

 

 Trierarch

 

 Captain of a Roman warship

 

 Via Claudia

 

 Watling Street (A5)

 

 Via Nero

 

 Dere Street (Al)-Eboracum North

 

 Via Hades

 

 Road to Hell (A1)

 

 Venta Icenorum

 

 Castor St Edmunds near Norwich

 

 Vicus pl vici

 

 Roman settlement close to a fort

 

 Vindonissa,

 

 Roman legionary fortress on Swiss border

 

 
Wolf (Lupus Ulpius Felix)

 

 Pannonian

 

 

 

Other books by Griff Hosker

If you enjoyed reading this book then why not read another one by the author?

The Sword of Cartimandua Series
(Germania and Britannia 50A.D. – 128 A.D.)

Ulpius Felix- Roman Warrior
Book 1 The Sword of Cartimandua
Book 2 The Horse Warriors
Book 3 Invasion Caledonia
Book 4 Roman Retreat
Book 5 Revolt of the Red Witch
Book 6 Druid’s Gold
Book 7 Trajan’s Hunters
Book 8 The Last Frontier
Book 9 Hero of Rome
Book 10 Roman Hawk
Book 11 Roman Treachery

They are all available in the Kindle format.

The Aelfraed Series
(Britain and Byzantium 1050 A.D.- 1085 A.D.)

Book 1
Housecarl
Book 2
Outlaw
Book 3
Varangian

These are available in the Kindle format.

The Wolf Warrior series
(Britain in the late 6
th
Century)

Book 1
Saxon Dawn
Book 2
Saxon Revenge
Book 3
Saxon England
Book 4
Saxon Blood
Book 5
Saxon Slayer

Also available in paperback and Kindle is the book aimed at 12-15 years olds,
Great Granny’s Ghost

Carnage at Cannes
is a modern thriller and is available in the Kindle format
.

Travel

        
Adventure at 63-Backpacking to Istanbul

 

The Lucky Jack Civil War series

        
Book 1
Rebel Raider

        
Book 2
Confederate Ranger

The Napoleonic Horseman Series


        
Book 1
Chasseur a Cheval

For more information on all of the books then please visit the author’s web site at
http://www.griffhosker.com
where there is a link to contact him.

 

 

Prologue

AD 50 Stanwyck

Claudius might have been Emperor of the largest Empire the world had ever seen but he still hated the rain. This outpost of the Empire was a foul, wet, disease ridden cesspit. In addition  he had a wicked and persistent cold; he never had a cold in Rome. He sneezed noisily and glowered angrily at the slave by his side. “Well? Why are we still waiting?” His famous stammer disappeared when he addressed servants or was angry and on this wet and dismal morning he was not at his best.

“I was assured, divine one, that she would be here presently.”

He shuddered at the title; like his Uncle Tiberius and his father Germanicus he despised the very notion that a mortal could become a living god. He had hoped that both the horrendous journey across the interminable land of Gaul, the ferocious ocean leading to this end of the world and the barbaric people he had so far met would make the journey worthwhile. The kings and queens who had been presented to him were all barbarians and the not so divine Claudius was glad that his Praetorians were on hand for he did not trust one of them.

Claudius was about to make some barbed comment about divinity when he heard the three blasts on the buccina which heralded the arrival of Queen Cartimandua, leader of the Brigantes. Even Claudius was impressed by the striking young woman who confidently manoeuvred her chariot between the waiting lines of legionaries. He had heard stories of her beauty but he was not prepared for both her presence and power; she seemed to dwarf her surroundings. Her jet black hair framed an incredibly white face. Her deep set violet eyes seemed to leap out from her face and her lips, obviously coloured by the crushed body of a scarab beetle, surrounded by remarkably white teeth looked like luscious plums. The Queen was, Claudius realised, everything he had heard and more.  He found it hard to countenance that a young woman who looked as though she had only seen a handful of summers as a woman should rule the most powerful tribe in Northern Britannia and had done so, successfully, for over seven years. The way she handled a chariot showed that she was a warrior as did the skulls adorning the outside of the chariot. He could make out, just behind the chariot, the wretch who was being dragged in chains. Although he had never seen him, the Emperor knew it was Caractacus the leader of the Britons in their fight against Rome. Caractacus was the charismatic leader who had sought refuge with the most powerful ruler in the North of these islands, Cartimandua. Caractactus he was also the ex-lover of the rapacious young Queen and  had been used and then discarded. If there was one thing that Claudius admired it was someone who could scheme, plot and survive as well as he had. She certainly had been a confident young queen who took over the rule of her land, Brigantia when her father was murdered. She ruled the largest tribal lands in Britannia; spanning the country from coast to coast. Claudius realised that she was wise beyond her years; she had seen the power of the Roman war machine and come to an accommodation rather than conflict. Perhaps that was why she ruled this enormous land of wild men and even wilder places. The Emperor of Rome himself would need to be careful about the promises he made.

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