The Roman Conquests series seeks to explain when and how the Romans were
able to conquer a vast empire stretching from the foothills of the
Scottish Highlands to the Sahara Desert, from the Atlantic to the
Persian Gulf. How did their armies adapt to and overcome the challenges
of widely varied enemies and terrain?
In this volume, Dr Simon Elliott draws on the latest research and
archaeological evidence to present a new narrative of the conquest
(never completed) of Britain. From Julius Caesar's initial incursions in
55 and 54 BC, through the Claudian invasion of 43 AD and the campaigns
of expansion and pacification thereafter, he analyses the Roman army in
action. The weapons, equipment, organization, leadership, strategy and
tactics of the legions and their British foes are described and
analyzed. The ferocity of the resistance was such that the island was
never wholly subdued and required a disproportionate military presence
for the duration of its time as a Roman province.