I was wondering if there was any websites, books, magazines, etc. were available about the invasion by Claudius, any subsequent Emperors. I know Caeser, but I was curious about any other invasions.
I was wondering if there was any websites, books, magazines, etc. were available about the invasion by Claudius, any subsequent Emperors. I know Caeser, but I was curious about any other invasions.
"Nietzsche is dead" - God
"I agree, although I support China I support anyone discovering things for Science and humanity." - lenin96
Re: Pursuit of happiness
Have you just been dumped?
I ask because it's usually something like that which causes outbursts like this, needless to say I dissagree completely.
The Eagle series by Simon Scarrow are good historical novels set during the time of the Invasion of Britannia in 43 AD.
www.thechap.net
"We were not born into this world to be happy, but to do our duty." Bismarck
"You can't be a successful Dictator and design women's underclothing. One or the other. Not both." The Right Hon. Bertram Wilberforce Wooster
"Man, being reasonable, must get drunk; the best of life is but intoxication" - Lord Byron
"Where men are forbidden to honour a king they honour millionaires, athletes, or film-stars instead: even famous prostitutes or gangsters. For spiritual nature, like bodily nature, will be served; deny it food and it will gobble poison." - C. S. Lewis
Caesar invasion - http://www.athenapub.com/caesar1.htm
Claudius invasion - http://www.romans-in-britain.org.uk/...n_invasion.htm
"The essence of philosophy is to ask the eternal question that has no answer" (Aristotel) . "Yes !!!" (me) .
"Its time we stop worrying, and get angry you know? But not angry and pick up a gun, but angry and open our minds." (Tupac Amaru Shakur)
The Independent on Sunday had an interesting article on 26th June(http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/thi...icle294854.ece)
arguing
"The history of Britain will have to be rewritten. The AD43 Roman invasion never happened - and was simply a piece of sophisticated political spin by a weak Emperor Claudius."
Unfortunately it's too old to get free online access (it says you can buy the article for a pound), but from memory the argument they put forward was that at the time of the invasion several of the ancient British kingdoms in the south were basically protectorates of Rome and Claudius made an overblown statement of his intervention to bolster his image in Rome to consolidate his power in the early days of his rule.
They quoted archaeological evidence of Roman artifacts including pottery and a legionary's sword being found in Briton pre-dating AD 43.
I found the article interesting but not necessarily convincing. Pottery from Gaul seems to me just to prove trade links, and as far as I know there was never any doubt that there would be trade across the English Channel at the time. Neither does one gladius prove Roman occupation. I visited the Museum of Scotland in the Spring and they had a number of Roman artifacts from areas that were never under Roman control. Diplomatic contact and political bribery took Roman products past the imperial borders.
It was an interesting idea though - the Independent on Sunday seems to have a thing for ancient history at the moment, recently they've carried articles recently about the discovery of a luxurious Roman 'hotel' in Colchester and the suggestion Alexander the Great died of malaria.
Non me rogare, loquare non lingua latinus
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