-
Claudius to
spare him.
Caratacus'
speech to
Claudius has been a po****r
subject in
visual art.
Caratacus' name
appears as both
Caratacus and
Caractacus in...
- victory; the wife and
daughter of
Caratacus were captured, and his
brothers too were
admitted to surrender.
Caratacus himself escaped. He fled north, s****ing...
- Look up
Caratacus in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Caratacus or
Caractacus may
refer to:
Caratacus, a
British king at the time of the
Roman conquest...
- Tacitus's
account of her. She is
recorded betraying the
Celtic chieftain Caratacus,
insincerely offering him sanctuary, but
instead turning him in to the...
-
Early Medieval Caratacus Stone on Exmoor, Somerset. The
Early Medieval Caratacus Stone on Exmoor, Somerset. The
Early Medieval Caratacus Stone on Exmoor...
- the
native tribes who
attempted to
resist were the
Catuvellauni led by
Caratacus. Later, an
uprising led by Boudica,
Queen of the Iceni,
ended with Boudica's...
-
southeast of the
Fosse Way.
British resistance was led by the
chieftain Caratacus until his
defeat in AD 50. The isle of Mona, a
stronghold of the druids...
- the
Britons were
easily defeated.
Caratacus' wife and
daughter were
captured and his
brother surrendered while Caratacus himself fled to the
territory of...
-
Publius Ostorius Sca****
defeats Caratacus and the
Silures in the
territory of the
Ordovices in
central Wales.
Caratacus s****s
sanctuary with Cartimandua...
-
fiercely resisted Roman conquest about AD 48, with the ****istance of
Caratacus, a
military leader and
prince of the Catuvellauni, who had fled from further...