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Can Computerised Terrain Analysis Find Boudicas Last Battlefield?

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Can Computerised Terrain Analysis Find Boudicas Last Battlefield?

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We have few details of the native response to the Roman invasion of Britain in AD43, but one episode entered folklore: the rebellion of an East Anglian queen. Steve Kaye thinks he knows how to narrow down the search for the elusive site of Boudica’s last stand. Boudica, the rebellious queen of the Iceni, lost her final confrontation with Roman power in AD60–61 or 61–62. She had previously destroyed the towns of Colchester, London and St Albans, and possibly Silchester, but the site of the concluding battle – though much debated – is not known. Our understanding of events comes from accounts written by the near-contemporary Roman historians Tacitus and Cassius Dio, and archaeological evidence for destructive burning. What I am to describe here began with the thought that interesting insights into the battle’s location might be gained by combining the techniques of modern terrain analysis with Tacitus’s description of the battle site. As Tacitus describes it in his second and more detail

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