Caratacus
Caratacus, commonly called Caractacus (and, in
Welsh Caradoc) was a son of Cunobelin or
Cymbeline, king of the Catuvellauni, a powerful tribe of south-east
England during the period immediately before the
Roman invasion of Britain. Along with his brother, Togodumnus, Caratacus led the defence of the country in AD
43, but they were defeated and Togodumnus was killed. Caratacus retreated westwards, and joined with the
Silures, a tribe of what is now south
Wales. The Romans inflicted a final, conclusive defeat on the British in around
50, and Caratacus was captured, thanks to the treachery of
Cartimandua, queen of the Brigantes. He was taken to
Rome, where the emperor
Claudius, impressed by his dignified appearance and conduct, pardoned him. Caratacus died in around
54.
His fame survived for several centuries. A genealogy of an otherwise unknown British king in the Historia Britonum traced his ancestory to Caratacus.