The Mysterious British Folk Hero Queen Boudica

The Mysterious British Folk Hero Queen Boudica

Alexander Meddings - August 25, 2017

The Mysterious British Folk Hero Queen Boudica
Golden Aureus of 54 AD depicting the Emperor Nero and his mother Agrippina. Was Boudica the antithesis to Nero’s meddling mother? Johndclare.net

Cassius Dio’s description is certainly evocative, portraying someone who is aggressively masculine and, for a Roman, captivatingly alien. But it also raises a lot of questions, the most pressing of which relates to how he possibly could have known this. There were no coins with Boudica’s image. No statues have been found, or mosaics or any other type of artwork. True, he could have based it on an eyewitness source, but it’s difficult to imagine any Roman would have seen or heard her addressing her troops from a chariot, nevermind been able to identify what she had been wearing (and, for that matter, always wore).

We arrive closer to understanding the true Boudica when we think about how the ancient’s viewed history. History writing was more of an art than a science in the ancient world, and when it came to producing artworks Tacitus, more than Cassius Dio, was a true master. One of Tacitus’s signature techniques was to use events in the provinces to further his overall agenda: showing how corrupt and decadent Roman politics and culture had become. So, if we take the reign of Emperor Nero for example, we can see how Tacitus juxtaposes the vain, artistic pretensions of the emperor with the loyalty, nobility and militarism (all good honest Roman values) of his general Corbulo in Armenia.

But Nero wasn’t even Tacitus’s most odious character. If there was one thing a member of the Roman elite hated more than a powerful man, it was a powerful woman, and up until her murder in 59 Nero’s mother, Agrippina, had been the most powerful person on the planet. She’d achieved such power through sex, firstly with her uncle, the former Emperor Claudius, and then allegedly with her son, Nero. She then wielded it through secrecy and manipulation. It was even said that she would listen in on senatorial meetings—something unthinkable for a woman to do—from behind a curtain.

Where does Boudica tie into this? The answer, I’d suggest, is that she becomes a lot more comprehensible when we think of her as a literary device—as an antithesis to Agrippina—rather than as a historical figure. To clarify, I’m not suggesting that Boudica didn’t exist. To do so would be making a claim based on nothing other than the negation of evidence: bad historical practice. What I am saying is that the Boudica we think we know (that is the Boudica of our ancient sources) is too much the antithesis of Agrippina to be real.

The antitheses are striking: Where Boudica went to war to avenge her children, Agrippina was ultimately murdered by hers. Where Boudica led from the front, spear-in-hand like a true warrior, Agrippina led from behind the closed doors of the imperial palace. Where Boudica gave a rousing speech exhorting freedom over slavery, Agrippina was at the helm of a political institution that enslaved the Romans to a series of capricious emperors. Where Boudica ruled over an army of warriors, Agrippina ruled over decadent imperialists; too focused on their warm baths, their unmixed wine and their perfumes to care about proper Roman military values.

To reiterate, there’s little doubt in my mind that a British queen did exist who rose up against the Romans and came close to removing their foothold from the island. However, in terms of conduct, beliefs, even appearance, she would have born little resemblance to the figure that has come down to us today. The Boudica we know is too Roman; too much of a literary caricature: a foil to the manipulative Agrippina (or, for that matter, the all-singing all-dancing Nero who is so effeminate that Boudica herself calls him a woman). Short of any new and illuminating archaeological discoveries, uncovering the final battlefield perhaps, she is likely to remain just that.

 

Keep Reading:

Atlas Obscura – Boadicea and Her Daughters

History Net – Boudica: Celtic War Queen Who Challenged Rome

Historic UK – Boudica and The Slaughter at Camulodunum

History Channel – These Are the 7 Weapons the Barbarians Used to Take Down Rome

BBC News – Roman Coin Stash ‘May Have Been Linked to Boudiccan Revolt’

History Extra – Agrippina the Younger: the first true empress of Ancient Rome

The Grunge – Queen Boudica: The Crazy Life and Death of The Celtic Warrior Queen

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