Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
the battle of Mons Graupius in approximately a.d. 84. Tacitus claimed
Agricola’s forces slaughtered ten thousand Caledonians while losing
only 360 auxiliary soldiers.27
This seemingly decisive victory brought little long-term security
to Roman Britain. Agricola therefore gave up most of his northern
territory and withdrew to a fortifi ed frontier at the edge of the modern Scottish border. Beyond this line, the Romans relied on military
patrols, diplomacy, and subsidies to control the defi ant Caledonians,
which may well have been the most effective and economical strategy for dealing with the decentralized peoples across the frontier. It
is likely that Emperor Domitian ordered the retreat because the less
Roman
Britain 47
productive highland zones in Wales and Scotland were not worth the
cost of occupation.
Even after Agricola’s retreat, chronic resistance by tribal peoples
in the highlands and across the northern frontier was expensive and
diffi cult to contain. Consequently, the military garrison for Roman
Britain remained at roughly forty thousand men. This force, which
amounted to a signifi cant portion of the standing Roman army, would
have required eight thousand to twenty thousand metric tons of food
per day.28 Claudius’s imperial triumph thus turned out to be enormously expensive, and it is not surprising that Nero seriously considered withdrawing from Britain when he came to power in a.d. 54.
He did not, but the Romans were never able to reduce their British
garrison signifi cantly, and it remained a politically destabilizing drain
on the empire’s resources for the rest of the imperial era.
While hostile frontiersmen remained an ongoing threat to the
northern imperial border, it is far from clear how the people of occupied lowland Britain reacted to becoming Roman subjects. Some
scholars have argued that southern British elites were already so
romanized in the immediate preconquest era that they had little real
incentive to resist the invasion. Contemporary apologists maintain
that many Britons recognized the civilizing benefi ts of Roman rule
and welcomed the opportunity to join the empire.29
Perhaps, but there is no denying that some of Rome’s closest British clients revolted during the initial decades of Roman rule. The Iceni,
possibly one of the eleven kingdoms that submitted to Claudius, and
the Trinovantes, whose protection provided the excuse for the Caesarian invasion, were the most serious threats. Located in the Thames
region and modern East Anglia, these were two of the most romanized client states in all of Britain. The Iceni fi rst rebelled in a.d. 47
when the Roman governor ordered them to disarm. Imperial forces
crushed the revolt after storming their
oppidum
, but fourteen years
later the Iceni and the Trinovantes launched one of the gravest uprisings in the early principate. Led by the Icenian queen Boudicca, the
rebels sacked and burned the colony at Camulodunum, the Roman
settlement at the old Catuvellaunian
oppidum
at Verulamium (St.
Albans), and the commercial center of Londinium (London).
The Romans were caught entirely off guard by the scope and
intensity of the revolt. The rebels destroyed part of the Ninth Legion
48 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
as it attempted to defend Londinium. At Verulamium a small band
of legionnaires held out in Claudius’s temple for two days before the
Britons massacred them. All told, Cassius Dio recorded that the rebels tortured and killed eighty thousand Romans and Roman allies:
“They hung up naked the noblest and most distinguished women and
then cut off their breasts and sewed them to their mouths, in order to
make the victims appear to be eating them; afterwards they impaled
the women on sharp skewers run lengthwise through the entire body.
All this they did to the accompaniment of sacrifi ces, banquets, and
wanton behaviour.”30 For a time it looked as though Rome might lose
control of Britain, but the failure of the rebels to attract support from
other
civitates
gave Governor Suetonius time to bring in reinforcements, crush the uprising, and undertake merciless reprisals.
Cassius Dio attributed the Boudiccan revolt to Roman oppression.
Writing at least a century later, it is highly unlikely that he had access
to fi rsthand accounts of the rebellion. Nevertheless, he drafted a speech
for the Icenian queen, whom he depicted as terrifying and noble, that to
modern ears sounds like an explicit indictment of imperial exploitation:
What treatment is there of the most shameful or grievous sort that
we have not suffered ever since these men made their appearance in
Britain? Have we not been robbed entirely of most of our possessions? . . . Besides pasturing and tilling for them all our other possessions, do we not pay a yearly tribute for our very bodies? How much
better to have been slain and to have perished than to go about with
a tax on our heads!31
Dio used Boudicca to attack the corrupting infl uences of empire
on Roman society, but he was probably correct in linking the Icenian
uprising to imperial abuses. Tacitus also charged that Roman misrule
had driven the Iceni to revolt:
Prasutagus, king of the Iceni, after a life of long and renowned prosperity, had made the emperor co-heir with his own two daughters.
Prasutagus hoped by this submissiveness to preserve his kingdom
and [family] from attack. [But] . . . kingdom and household alike were
plundered like prizes of war, the one by Roman offi cers, the other by
Roman slaves. . . . His widow Boudicca was fl ogged and their daughters
raped. The Icenian chiefs were deprived of their hereditary estates as
Roman
Britain 49
if the Romans had been given the whole country. The king’s own
relatives were treated like slaves.32
Roman fi nanciers, who did a good business lending money to client kings, probably provoked the crisis by unexpectedly calling in
their debts. The Iceni’s inability to pay apparently gave Roman offi cials an excuse to loot and plunder. Similarly, Tacitus charged that
misbehavior by discharged legionnaires at Camulodunum provoked
the Trinovantes into joining the Icenian revolt.
The rebels’ destruction of temples and other symbols of Roman
culture in Camulodunum and Verulamium may also have refl ected
popular opposition to the imperial transformation of Britain. Questions over the extent to which Britons became Romans lie at the
heart of current debates over the character of Roman Britain.
According to Tacitus, Agricola aimed to bind British nobles more
closely to Rome by encouraging them to learn Latin, wear togas,
adopt a Roman diet, and build bathhouses. Ever the critic, the
Roman historian sneeringly noted that while the Britons viewed
these luxuries as a mark of “civilization,” in fact “they were only a
feature of enslavement.”33
In this sense, romanization went hand in hand with imperial
domination, but elites could earn substantial rewards by embracing the new social order. The nobleman Togodumnus used Claudius’s patronage to claim a portion of the old Atrebatian kingdom
after Verica either died or was deposed by feckless Roman offi cials.
Apparently, they conveniently forgot that returning him to power
was a central excuse for the Claudian invasion. Taking the Latin name
Tiberius Claudius Cogidubnus, which indicated that Claudius made
him a Roman citizen, he was a key ally during the Icenian revolt.
Tacitus may have considered him a dupe or slave, but his sumptuous
Italian-style palace at Fishbourne, near modern Chichester, testifi es
to the gilded nature of his chains.34
Cogidubnus and his peers used Roman ties to ensure that they
retained their status during the social turmoil that was an inevitable by-product of imperial conquest. This was a dangerous time
when Claudius’s triumph allowed senators, imperial administrators,
wealthy merchants, and discharged soldiers to acquire farms and
estates in Britain. The Roman colonists allowed cooperative
civitas
50 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
leaders to retain the rural bases of their authority, and the relatively
limited rewards of romanization eventually did produce a hybrid but
fairly narrow Romano-British cultural elite. For the most part, however, there were relatively few opportunities for Britons to play a role
in Roman governance and commerce. In contrast to other territories
such as Gaul and Spain, Britain produced no senators or emperors
during the early empire.
Commoners in particular did not have much of a chance or incentive to embrace the new imperial culture. Most were simple farmers, and archaeological evidence suggests considerable continuity in
rural settlement and landholding practices during the fi rst century
of Roman rule. Popular metalworking and pottery styles also survived into the imperial era. It is unclear if these preconquest cultural
institutions persisted because rural Britons refused to be romanized
or because the empire’s extractive reach lessened signifi cantly in the
countryside.
The Romans may not have been able to exploit their subjects
systematically, but tenacious resistance in Wales, northern England,
and Scotland, the Icenian rebellion, and accusations of corruption by
Tacitus and Cassius Dio suggest that romanization and the resulting reordering of British society were not particularly civilizing or
benign. Almost certainly, the imperial conquest resulted in mass
enslavement. Coerced British workers had to have built the grand
buildings and roads that so impressed later Romanophiles. The emperors were probably the largest landowners in Britain, and farmers in
the drained fenlands of East Anglia were most likely their tenants.
Similarly, Roman military and civilian entrepreneurs used local labor
when they developed the island’s gold, silver, lead, iron, and copper
deposits. Britons were also liable for conscription for military service
throughout the empire, and it is unlikely that any of the men in the
fourteen auxiliary units raised in the province by the end of the fi rst
century a.d. returned home. Finally, the Boudiccan uprising suggests
that Roman merchants and moneylenders had an unfair commercial
advantage over common Britons.
The imperial restructuring of local British institutions must have
been equally traumatic. The Romans were generally tolerant of exotic
religions, but Claudius made it a capital offense for Druids to practice
their religion. It is not exactly certain what Druidism entailed, but it
Roman
Britain 51
clearly became a focus of resistance, and Roman forces destroyed a Druidic center on the island of Anglesey during the conquest of Wales.
Female Britons probably also suffered in the immediate aftermath of the occupation. Excepting powerful queens such as Boudicca
and Cartimandua, they are largely missing from the historical and
archaeological record. But it does not take much imagination to envision that forty thousand legionnaires, who were forbidden to marry
under military law, might prey on subject women.35 It is equally
impossible to know how the soldiers viewed the general population.
Military records on tablets recovered near Hadrian’s Wall offer a hint
in their references to neighboring communities as “Brittunculi,” or
“wretched little Britons.”36
Comparatively speaking, the elites of most preconquest British
societies, particularly in the south, would have also looked down on
the rural population. It is therefore hard to determine if the Roman
empire builders treated common Britons better or worse than had
the kings and chieftains they overthrew. If the foreign administrators
and soldiers did in fact view the entire subject population as inferior, then Roman rule was most likely a much greater burden in the
fi rst decades of the occupation. Nonetheless, the bloody Icenian revolt
must have reminded succeeding Roman governors that there was a
signifi cant risk in pushing their subjects too far.
Roman Britain did in fact become more stable by the mid-fi rst
century a.d., but this was because the city-bound postconquest
administration did not exert direct authority in the countryside on
a day-to-day basis. Under the early empire, the island was a single
imperial province run by a governor based in London. His small staff
was essentially an informal circle of friends and advisors. An equally
undersized provincial bureaucracy consisting primarily of detached
army offi cers backed by a military guard was the formal imperial
administration in the province. An autonomous procurator answering directly to the emperor oversaw tax collection.
Roman rule was heavier in Wales and northern Britain, where
security considerations kept these restive frontier regions under direct
military control. Most Roman offi cials served short terms of less than
three years, which further limited the infl uence of the comparatively
minuscule civil administration. Emperor Septimus Severus was probably mindful of these realities when he introduced a greater measure
52 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
of bureaucratic control in a.d. 197 by dividing the island into two