The Britons, never to back away
from a fight faced them on the second day and were broken with a flank
attack, Vespasian, who eventually became Emporer himself, discovered
a ford higher up. This victory marred the stage-management of the campaign.
Plautius had won his battle too soon, and in the wrong place, and something
had to be done to show that the Emporer's presence was necessary for
victory. So Claudius, who had been waiting for events in France, crossed
the English channel and brought with him substantial reinforcements,
including a number of elephants. A battle was eventually procured and
the Romans won.
Claudius returned to
Rome to receive from the Senate the title "Britannicus" and permission
to celebrate a triumph. But the war continued. The Britons having learned
to respect the Roman legions would not come to close quarters but took
refuge in the swamps and the forests with the hope that the invaders would
be worn out in the search for them, and as the in the days of Julius Caesar
would then return whence they came with nothing accomplished. Meanwhile
Caractacus escaped to the Welsh border, and, arousing its tribes, maintained
a fair resistance for six years and it was not until A.D. 50 that Caractacus
was finally defeated by a new general, Ostorius, the successor of Plautius,
who reduced to submission the whole of the more settled regions from the
Wash to the Severn.
Caracticus sought help from the
Brigantes in the North but their Queen eventually handed him over to
the Romans. Suetonius wrote -- "The fame of the British prince
had by this time spread over the provinces of Gaul and Italy; and, upon
his arrival in the Roman capital the people flocked from all quarters
to behold him. The ceremonial of his entrance was conducted with great
solemnity. On a plain adjoining the Roman camp the Pretorian troops
up in martial array.
The Emporer and his
court took their stations in front of the lines, and behind them was ranged
the whole body of the legions. The procession commenced with the different
trophies that had been taken from the Britons during the progress of the
war. Next followed the brothers of the vanquished prince, with his wife
and daughter, in chains, expressing by their supplicating looks and gestures
the fears with which they were actuated. But not so Caractacus himself".
On the next page I
will copy out the speech in which Caractacus made to the Senate and the
Emporer that I have taken from C. Suetonius Tranquilillius, "The lives
of the twelve Caesars."