A gripping account of Agricola’s bloody campaigns in Scotland,
revealing how Rome pushed beyond its frontier. Agricola was the great
Flavian warrior governor of Britain tasked by the emperor Vespasian
with conquering the far north of its main island for the first time.
Initially campaigning in Wales and then the north of modern England to
secure his rear, he launched his first assault into modern Scotland at
the end of the 70s AD. Four more bloody campaigns beyond the Solway
Firth-Tyne frontier followed, each time the Romans heading further and
further into the heart of darkness, as they would have seen it.
Famously, at one stage during the campaigns he also contemplated
invading Ireland, only to be told no by the new emperor, Domitian.
Ultimately, the primary sources say he defeated the combined armies of
the natives in far north at the Battle of Mons Graupius in AD 83.
After this, the successful conquest of the whole island was declared,
Agricola commanded the Classis Britannia (the Roman navy in Britain)
to circumnavigate the whole province for the first time, and Domitian
ordered a monumental arch to be built at Richborough on the east coast
of Kent to celebrate the Roman triumph. This became the imperial
gateway into Roman Britain. In this new, generation-defining book on
Agricola’s campaigns in Scotland new archaeological evidence will be
used to show how Agricola was able to campaign so far north of the
imperial frontier and in such numbers (with over 30,000 men, plus the
fleet), and the exact routes he followed. Thus, for the first time,
the true story of Agricola in Scotland can be told.
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The Northern Campaigns of Roman Britain’s Great Warrior Governor
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781399068307
Publisert
2026
Utgiver
Casemate Publishers and Book Distributors, LLC
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter