Prasutagus (died AD 60 or 61) was king of the Iceni, a British Celtic tribe, who, in the 1st century AD, inhabited roughly what is now Norfolk. He is best known as the husband of Boudica.
Prasutagus (died AD 60 or 61) was king of the Iceni, a British Celtic tribe, who, in the 1st century AD, inhabited roughly what is now Norfolk. He is best known as the husband of Boudica.
Prasutagus may have been one of the eleven kings who surrendered to Claudius following the Roman conquest in 43, or he may have been installed as king following the defeat of a rebellion of the Iceni in 47. As an ally of Rome his tribe were allowed to remain nominally independent, albeit disarmed, and to ensure this Prasutagus named the Roman emperor as co-heir to his kingdom, along with his two daughters. Tacitus says he lived a long and prosperous life, but when he died, the Romans ignored his will and took over, depriving the nobles of their lands and plundering the kingdom. Boudica was flogged and their daughters raped. Roman financiers called in their loans. All this led to the revolt of the Iceni, under the leadership of Boudica, in 60 or 61.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).