Boudica, the warrior queen: power, memory and feminism (2024)

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Boudica and the female facets over time: nationalism, feminism, power and the collective memory

Tais Pagoto Bélo, Pedro Paulo A. Funari

Boudica and the female facets over time: nationalism, feminism, power and the collective memory, 2020

This work is based on an episode from the history of Roman Empire, during the first century AD, more specifically 60/61 AD, the early days of the British social construction, in which a warrior queen, named Boudica or Boadicea, from the ancient Britannia – current England – was a protagonist and whose actions have provided consequences in social affairs up to our days. It is, therefore, a study of the first representative women-led movement claiming for liberty, as well as the demonstration of the uses of her figure in the Modern and Contemporary times, strengthening later social movements, such as the British suffragettes and creating a female icon that became reference to all other English women in power since then.

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Queen Boudica and Historical Culture in Britain: An Image of the Truth

Martha Vandrei

Cultural and Social History, 2019

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Boudica warrior woman of Roman Britain

Boudica warrior woman of Roman Britain, 2019

The book, Boudica: warrior woman of Roman Britain, by Caitlin C. Gillespie, an Assistant Professor in the Department of Classical Studies at Brandeis University, is part of a series that provided compact and accessible introductions to the life and history of women from the ancient world. In the beginning of the book, there are three maps that show the Roman Empire under Nero, the Britons tribes and the sites that are important to the narrative of Boudica’s rebellion against the Romans, AD 60/61. Subsequently, the work is divided in seven chapters and an Epilogue.

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Boadicea and British Suffrage Feminists

Marguerite Johnson

Outskirts online journal vol 31 2014

This paper redresses the limited attention to Boadicea in research on suffrage feminists of the twentieth century. It analyses her importance through the lens of dramaturgical theory that privileges a reading of social protest groups engaged in symbolic acts (protests, theatre, violence) and expressions (artwork, writing, manufacture, dress and costuming). Examining an appropriation of a historical figure like Boadicea this way enables emphasis to be placed on ‘the significance of ritual for expressing solidarity and evoking widely shared feelings among dominated groups.’ (Taylor and Whittier 164) It also builds on the work of Barbara Green (1997) on performativity and the spectacular in suffrage protests by examining how such strategies play out in terms of a particular icon.

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The Cultural and Ideological Significance of Representations of Boudica During the Reigns of Elizabeth I and James I

Samantha Frénée

2009

I certify that all material in this thesis which is not my own work has been identified and that no material has previously been submitted and approved for the award of a degree by this or any other University. ... This study follows the trail of Boudica from her rediscovery in ...

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Boudica the warrior queen

Caitlin Gillespie

https://aeon.co/essays/boudica-how-a-widowed-queen-became-a-rebellious-woman-warrior

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Boudica, Cartimandua, Messalina and Agrippina the Younger. Independent Women of Power and the Gendered Rhetoric of Roman History

Peter Keegan

It is not the purpose of this article to attempt a survey of the history of Rome’s involvement with the island of Britain during the early years of provincial expansion and rebellion. Nor is it my intention to rehearse in detail the background and significant events associated with the 1st century CE female rulers of the Iceni and Brigantes, Boudica and Cartimandua; or, more briefly, with the Julio-Claudian women of power and influence, Valeria Messalina and Julia Agrippina. Rather, I want to examine the literary sources that form the substance of the historical record as it relates to the years leading up to the rebellion of Boudica (43-60/61 CE ). I hope to show how these sources intersect with the representations of contemporary females of historical significance and to indicate some of the problems and difficulties encountered in their use. This will entail some comment on the representations in the same sources of the principes Claudius and Nero and their British contemporaries.

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The role of gender in the creation of Boudicca

Adam Lee

The role of gender in the creation of Boudicca, 2021

Throughout this paper, I try to find out what role gender played in the accounts on Boudicca and the British revolt she sparked between 60-61 AD. To achieve this goal, I provide an indepth analysis of the use of gender in the only ancient literary sources we have on this event: Tacitus’ Historiae and Annales and Cassius Dio’s Historia Romana. As such, the focus of this paper is on how the events described by the authors are manipulated through their perception of gender roles and how this has resulted in the creation of a Boudicca that fits the authors’ perspectives. Special attention hereby is paid to Boudicca’s pre-battle oration as cited by Tacitus and Cassius Dio and how historically accurate their accounts are. Both authors picture her as a valiant woman who displays Roman virtue through her fight for freedom, her desire to exact revenge for the violation of her daughters and her rejection of imperial enslavement. Yet they also describe her as a dangerous and savage ‘barbarian’. The depiction of her character thusly becomes incredibly complex. I believe the perceptions and usage of gender of both authors is a majorly influential underlining factor in their creation of Boudicca as such a complex, dynamic and transgressive character. With this paper, I hope to raise awareness of how an image of a notable character in ancient history can be distorted through the gender biases of the authors. Therefore, I hope that this paper serves as a reminder to maintain a critical attitude towards the depiction of ‘barbarians’ in Roman texts

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La signification culturelle et idéologique des représentations de Boudica pendant les règnes d'Elizabeth I et de James I

Samantha Frénée

2009

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An Indepth Analysis of the Lives of Boudica of the Iceni and Queen Cartimandua of the Brigantes.

Debbie Turkilsen

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Boudica, the warrior queen: power, memory and feminism (2024)
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