CuZ tha roman toke her husbands stuff wiped her and raped her kids
beacause she was queen of rome >>>> Ancient British Queen
Queen Boudicca became queen of the Celtics in 43 A.D at the age of 17
what diid the romans do that they killed her mum and she was in the present and her two daughter went to sex with some and the stole all the money from their six person While the Roman army was busy on the northwest coast of Wales-Boudica led a revolt. They destroyed Camulodunum (Colchester) an ex capital of a Celtic tribe turned into a Roman colony for discharged Roman soldiers. She routed a Roman legion sent to relieve the colony. She burned Londinium (London, which had been evacuated) and Verulamium (St Albans). She was then defeated the Roman army that had reassembled its contingents for around the province.
Caeser did not directly have anything to do with Boudicca. He did stage two invasion attempts of Britain in 55 and 54 B.C., which set precedence and paved the way for the later Roman conquest of Britain that made Boudicca's tribe, the Iceni, into a client kingdom. However, Boudicca's rebellion took place in 60 or 61 A.D., over a century after Caesar's initial invasions of Britain, as well as his death (44 B.C.), so he only indirectly had anything to do with Boudicca.
Mary Scots was a bad queen because she wanted to kill queen Elizabeth ,so her head got chop off.
beacause she was queen of rome >>>> Ancient British Queen
As with so many things about Boudicca, we don't know the names of her daughters nor do we know their fate.
Queen Boudicca became queen of the Celtics in 43 A.D at the age of 17
Yes there is a ghost of queen Boudicca. Her ghost has been spotted periodically throughout the years. Sightings of her have included in and around Theydon Bois (Essex) Iron age hillfort in the epping forest.Her daughters have also been sighted with her in this area. Boudicca and her soldiers are reported to haunt the icknield way in Ipsden (oxfordshire) along with some Roman soldiers. Other places where Queen Boudicca's ghost has been sighted include Cammeringham Lincolnshire in the area around Ermine street, where she travels around the village. Boudicca's ghost has also been seen at the Ambresbury Hillfort in Essex. There are numerous reports of her loitering in the area. So yes, Boudicca's ghost is still haunting Britain, maybe she has unfinished business or she can't rest because the Britons lost the battle with the Romans and she can't deal with it. It is hard to say....I guess that is a question that we would have to ask Boudicca herself.
In my opinion, probably not. By doing so, her tribe was basically killed off.--------Yes she was right to start a revolt. You see, after the death of her husband, the Romans beat her and raped her daughters.All of the Britons were being treated unfairly and so Boudicca wanted to put an end to the tyranny of the Romans.
She was 15, but no one thought she was old enough Given that the average lifespan was 28-35 years if she lived in a modern city like Rome or Athens or Alexandria or 20-27 in Britannica or Gallia she was equivelant of a modern age of 30-50.
Probably. The Britons most powerful unit of war at the time of the Roman invasion was the chariot. So it is likely that Boudicca would have had her own horse.
Boudicca was not terrifying to her own people. In fact, she was a hero to them. But she was terrifying to the Romans as she had no control over her so-called army and they rampaged and committed atrocities against the Romans.
what diid the romans do that they killed her mum and she was in the present and her two daughter went to sex with some and the stole all the money from their six person While the Roman army was busy on the northwest coast of Wales-Boudica led a revolt. They destroyed Camulodunum (Colchester) an ex capital of a Celtic tribe turned into a Roman colony for discharged Roman soldiers. She routed a Roman legion sent to relieve the colony. She burned Londinium (London, which had been evacuated) and Verulamium (St Albans). She was then defeated the Roman army that had reassembled its contingents for around the province.
Caeser did not directly have anything to do with Boudicca. He did stage two invasion attempts of Britain in 55 and 54 B.C., which set precedence and paved the way for the later Roman conquest of Britain that made Boudicca's tribe, the Iceni, into a client kingdom. However, Boudicca's rebellion took place in 60 or 61 A.D., over a century after Caesar's initial invasions of Britain, as well as his death (44 B.C.), so he only indirectly had anything to do with Boudicca.
Boadicea is a misreading by later authors of the way the Roman historian Tacitus spelled her name: "Boudicca". Since the Icceni, Boudicca's tribe, did not leave any written sources, this is very probably how her name sounded to Roman ears when they heard it. The Icceni tribe was Celtic, so there may be some basis in the way the Celtic Welsh spell her name today: "Buddug".
Neither she, her husband nor the Iceni people thought so.