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Encyclopedia > Catuvellauni


The Catuvellaunii (meaning probably good in battle) were one of the Celtic tribes living in the British Isles, before the Roman invasion of Britain. The tribe lived in southern England, in modern Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire and southern Cambridgeshire. Their capital was Verulamio or Verulamion (meaning settlement above the marshes), close to modern St Albans. The Romans Latinised this name as Verulamium, for the town it built nearby.


The first record of the Catuvellaunii dates from 54 BC, during Julius Caesar's second exploratory landing in Britain. Despite the fact that they are not mentioned as a tribe, in his reports on the Gallic Wars (De bello gallico), Caesar names one Cassivellaunus as the leader of the combined force opposing the Roman invasion, . This king was the warlord of the lands ascribed to the tribes, permitting the inference. The Catuvellaunii are probably the otherwise unknown Cassi tribe described by Caesar.


In the following years, the Catuvellaunii become a powerful tribe and their first king known by numismatic evidence is Tasciovanus, who was the probable founder Verulamion. In the 20s, evidence suggests a state of war with the neighbour tribe of the Atrebates, during the rule of Cunobelin. It was this conflict that provided the excuse for the Roman invasion led by emperor Claudius. Following the Roman conquest of 43, they become quickly Romanised. Nevertheless, the adoption of a Roman lifestyle did not prevent the birth of a rebel in the tribe: Caratacus.




Notable Catuvellaunii

Kings

Note: Different sets of issued coins suggest the existence of several sub-kings of the Catuvellauni, organised in a federation, which are not listed here.

Others

  • Adminius, son of Cunobelin, struggled for power with Togodummus
  • Caratacus, son of Cunobelin, leader of Welsh resistance against Rome
  • Epaticcus (died ca. 35 AD), brother of Cunobelin, issued his own coinage and fought actively against the Atrebantes

See also: List of Celtic tribes


External link

  • Comprehensive information on Roman Britain (http://www.roman-britain.org)





  Results from FactBites:
 
Romans in Britain - The Catuvellauni tribe (1921 words)
The Catuvellauni were something of an enigma in that they were not recorded by Julius Caesar anywhere in his writings on Britain.
Yet when Claudius invaded in 43AD, the Catuvellauni were the most dominant tribe in Britain, having taken control by force of much of South East England.
The next identifiable ruler of the Catuvellauni was Tasciovanus who took the throne around 20BC, though whether he was the son or grandson of Cassivellaunus is unknown.
Catuvellauni - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (949 words)
The Catuvellauni may be related to the Catalauni, a people of Belgic Gaul attested in the region of Châlons-en-Champagne.
The territories of the Catuvellauni became the nucleus of the new Roman province.
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.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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