-54 ⟶ Caesar's Invasions of Britain
55-54 BC: Caesar's invasions of Britain.Year
-54
43
78
⚔️ Caesar's Invasions of Britain
55-54 BC: Caesar's invasions of Britain.⟶

Ancient romeJulius CaesarRoman EmpireMilitary CampaignInvasionMilitary Expansion

⚔️ Roman Invasion and Conquest of Britain
In 43 AD, Aulus Plautius led a Roman invasion force of 20,000 soldiers, including future emperor Vespasian" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="text-blue-600 hover:underline dark:text-gray-300 dark:underline dark:hover:text-gray-100">Vespasian, landing in Kent and defeating British resistance led by Caratacus, with Emperor Claudius later arriving to accept the surrender of eleven British kings and establish Roman rule, with early infrastructure like forts and roads being constructed.⟶

Roman EmpireInvasionMilitary CampaignConquestAncient romeClaudiusVespasianIron Age

🐘 Claudius Leads Roman Invasion of Britain, British Kings Surrender
September – Emperor Claudius, who arrives with reinforcements including war elephants, leads the march on Camulodunum (modern Colchester). Eleven British kings, probably including those of the Iceni and Brigantes, submit without a fight. Plautius becomes the first Governor of Roman Britain.⟶

Roman EmpireInvasionMilitary CampaignClaudiusAncient romeBritonsConquestImperialism

🛡️ Romans Construct Forts and Ermine Street in Britain
The Romans begin to construct forts, such as at Peterborough, and a road that later becomes Ermine Street.⟶
Roman EmpireMilitary EngineeringInfrastructureFortificationAncient romeMilitary Campaign

🛡️ Agricola's Governorship of Britain and Expansionist Campaigns
Gnaeus Julius Agricola replaces Sextus Julius Frontinus as governor of Roman Britain, which leads to the conquering of portions of Wales and northern England.⟶

Roman EmpireAncient romeMilitary HistoryConquestExpansionismAgricolaMilitary Campaign
