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Great Lives

Jessica Fostekew on Boudica

Great Lives

BBC

History, Documentary, Personal Journals, Society & Culture

4.21.2K Ratings

🗓️ 10 February 2025

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

"The Queen Boadicea, standing loftily charioted, Brandishing in her hand a dart and rolling glances lioness-like, Yell'd and shriek'd between her daughters in her fierce volubility": so wrote Alfred, Lord Tennyson in the 19th Century, celebrating the story of an ancient English warrior queen who sparked a brutal and bloody rebellion against Roman rule in the first century AD.

Today, Boudica - or as the Victorians renamed her, Boadicea - remains a symbol of bravery, independence, and that indomitable British underdog spirit; although how much of that is true and how much should be attributed to the romanticising of her story in later years, is open to debate...

Bringing that debate to the Great Lives studio is comedian and erstwhile Boudica impersonator Jessica Fostekew, along with expert insight from Professor Miranda Aldhouse-Green, known for her research on the Iron Age and the Celts as well as books including 'Boudica Britannia: Rebel, War-leader and Queen'.

So was Boudica a brutal giant of a women hell-bent on personal revenge, or a forward-thinking feminist leader determined to overthrow her country's conquerors? And could her death possibly have been down to a war elephant? Jess, Miranda and Matthew thrash it out.

Presented by Matthew Parris, produced for BBC Studios Audio by Lucy Taylor.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Eleven climbers appeared to have died on the world's second highest mountain K2.

0:06.0

It was one of the deadliest days in mountaineering history.

0:10.0

Rock falls, avalanches.

0:11.0

Huge pieces of ice. All are big enough to kill you.

0:14.0

He just flew out into Devoid and he was gone.

0:17.0

How did it all go so wrong?

0:19.0

And is it really worth risking death to feel alive?

0:22.3

Why would somebody pay to go to a place called the death cell on a vacation?

0:27.4

Extreme.

0:28.3

Peak Danger.

0:29.3

With me, Natalia Melman Petrazella.

0:31.8

Listen to the full series now.

0:33.4

First on BBC Sounds.

0:34.9

If you can't wait for new episodes of this podcast and you're in the UK, more episodes are available now.

0:41.5

First on BBC Sounds.

0:44.3

BBC Sounds, music, radio, podcasts.

0:48.6

Hello, today we're digging into the story of an ancient English warrior queen who sparked a brutal and bloody rebellion against Roman rule in the first century AD.

1:00.3

Budica, queen of the eastern Isini tribe, led an uprising against the Roman forces who controlled Britannia.

1:08.1

Although unsuccessful, the revolt shook the empire to its core, changing Rome's

1:13.4

attitude towards this backwater province and cementing Budica's place in history. Today, her name

1:20.1

remained synonymous with bravery, independence, and that indomitable British underdog spirit.

1:26.8

Although how much of all this is true

...

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