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There is a legendary queen in ancient British history, named Boudicca. Officially, Boudicca was a queen and led rebels, but was not crowned queen. However, historians call her the queen. Perhaps this is why the English word "queen" is not distinguished whether she is a queen or a queen.
Julius Caesar of the Roman Empire invaded Britain twice in 55 and 54 BC, but he withdrew in the face of strong Celtic resistance. Celtic people lived on Britain Island before the Anglo-Saxons from northern Germany came over.
A century later, in AD 43, Emperor Cladius of Rome gave General Aulus Plautius 40,000 men to invade Britain. King Prasutagus, who ruled the small Iceni kingdom in the eastern part of Britain, was cooperative with the Roman army. He was granted autonomy as a vassal state in recognition of Rome's imperial status. Rome also adopted a strategy of attracting friendly tribes to weaken Celtic resistance. Emperor Cladius generously provided money to the Celts. The emperor's bounty was also lowered into the Kingdom of Iceny. Decianus, the governor of Britain, embezzled the money. The strapped Celts borrowed money from a Roman financier, who then borrowed from Seneca. Seneca, a later Roman politician and philosopher, was a dualist who made a lot of money on loan. Seneca had lent a large amount of 40 million Sestertius to Britannia and was resentful because it was collected harshly.
In 54 AD, the Emperor of Rome changed from Cledius to Nero. Before he passed away, Prasutagus left a will for Emperor Nero and his two daughters to co-rule the kingdom. Prasutagus died between 60 and 61 AD. Then Rome revealed its true colors. Rome confiscated the territory of Ikenny and turned it into a direct territory. When Butica, Prasutagus' queen, protested, Roman forces dragged and whipped her, and humiliated her two daughters. Gaius Suettonius Paulinus, the Governor-General of Rome, went to Anglesey Island in the north of Wales, creating a military vacuum in the eastern part of Britain. Butica led several tribes of the Ikenny and Trinobantes to revolt. Rebellion forces occupied Camulodunum (present-day Colchester) and Berulamium (St. Albans), the capitals of the Trinobantes, and advanced on Rondinium (London). Soon, the rebellion spread throughout the eastern part of the country, killing 70,000 Romans and Roman soldiers.
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