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1887 Original Engraving Statue Queen BOADICEA Boudica |
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STUNNING AND RARE HISTORIC ANTIQUE ORIGINAL 1887 ENGRAVING OF A SCULPTURE OR STATUE (Has Printer Press Border Indentations, adding to it's authenticity), TITLED; "BOADICEA", SHOWING THE STATUE MONUMENT OF THE QUEEN WITH TWO YOUNG LADIES HONORING HER AT HER FEET, PRINTED by FAMOUS PRINTER/PUBLISHER, GEORGE BARRIE. (J. THOMAS, SC., & R. A. ARTLETT, ENGRAVER). PRINTED ON VERY THICK QUALITY CARD-LIKE PAPER IN 1887, (Making this actual print you will receive about 122-years-old).
MEASURES APPROX., 16 x 10.5" in INCHES (Full Edge-To-Edge), and THE ENGRAVING PORTION ALONE, INCLUDING LETTERING IS APPROX., 11 x 5" in INCHES.
THE TOTAL SHEET WAS BIGGER THAN MY SCANNER COULD CAPTURE, BUT MOST IS BLANK BORDER-SPACING. IT IS BLANK ON THE BACK-SIDE, AND HAS THIN PROTECTIVE PAPER COVERING. A GREAT ART PIECE FOR FRAMING AND DISPLAYED IN AN OFFICE OR HOME. IN EXCELLENT CONDITION, NO SIGNIFICANT FLAWS, ONLY A FEW AGE SPOTS, HARDLY NOTICEABLE, AND NOT AFFECTING IMAGE. WILL BE SHIPPED SECURELY, BACKED BY DOUBLE-THICK CARDBOARD, AND WRAPPED WELL. IT IS TOO THICK TO ROLL-UP FOR TUBE.
SOME ADDITIONAL INFO (From: Wikipedia):
Boudica (pronounced /?bu?d?k?/; also spelled Boudicca), formerly known as Boadicea (/bo???d??si??/) and known in Welsh as "Buddug")[1] (d. AD 60 or 61) was a queen of the Brittonic Iceni tribe of what is now known as East Anglia in England, who led an uprising of the tribes against the occupying forces of the Roman Empire.
Boudica's husband, Prasutagus, an Icenian king who had ruled as a nominally independent ally of Rome, left his kingdom jointly to his daughters and the Roman Emperor in his will. However, when he died his will was ignored. The kingdom was annexed as if conquered, Boudica was flogged and her daughters raped, and Roman financiers called in their loans.
In AD 60 or 61, while the Roman governor, Gaius Suetonius Paulinus, was leading a campaign on the island of Anglesey in north Wales, Boudica led the Iceni, along with the Trinovantes and others, in revolt. They destroyed Camulodunum (Colchester), formerly the capital of the Trinovantes, but now a colonia (a settlement for discharged Roman soldiers) and the site of a temple to the former emperor Claudius, built and maintained at local expense, and routed a Roman legion, the IX Hispana, sent to relieve the settlement.
On hearing the news of the revolt, Suetonius hurried to Londinium (London), the twenty-year-old commercial settlement which was the rebels' next target, but concluding he did not have the numbers to defend it, evacuated and abandoned it. It was burnt to the ground, as was Verulamium (St Albans). An estimated 70,000-80,000 people were killed in the three cities. Suetonius, meanwhile, regrouped his forces in the West Midlands, and despite being heavily outnumbered, defeated Boudica in the Battle of Watling Street. The crisis had led the emperor Nero to consider withdrawing all Roman forces from the island, but Suetonius's eventual victory over Boudica secured Roman control of the province.
The history of these events, as recorded by Tacitus[2] and Cassius Dio,[3] was rediscovered during the Renaissance and led to a resurgence of Boudica's legendary fame during the Victorian era, when Queen Victoria was portrayed as her "namesake". Boudica has since remained an important cultural symbol in the United Kingdom. The absence of native British literature during the early part of the first millennium means that Britain owes its knowledge of Boudica's rebellion to the writings of the Romans.
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