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Women Warriors From Amazon Fought for Britain's Roman Army

Dec. 22, 2004


By Lewis Smith
UK Times

The remains of two Amazon warriors serving with the Roman army in Britain have
been discovered in a cemetery that has astonished archaeologists. Women soldiers
were previously unknown in the Roman army in Britain and the find at Brougham in
Cumbria will force a reappraisal of their role in 3rd-century society.

The women are thought to have come from the Danube region of Eastern Europe, which
was where the Ancient Greeks said the fearsome Amazon warriors could be found.

The women, believed to have died some time between AD220 and 300, were burnt on
pyres upon which were placed their horses and military equipment. The remains were
uncovered in the 1960s but full-scale analysis and identification has been
possible only since 2000 with technological advances.

The soldiers are believed to have been part of the numerii, a Roman irregular
unit, which would have been attached to a legion serving in Britain. Other finds
show that their unit originated from the Danubian provinces of Noricum, Pannonia
and Ilyria which now form parts of Austria, Hungary and the former Yugoslavia.

Hilary Cool, the director of Barbican Research Associates, which specialises in


post- excavation archaeological analysis, said that the remains were the most
intriguing aspects of a site that is changing our understanding of Roman burial
rites.

"It seems highly probable that we have a unit raised in the Danubian lands and
transferred to Britain," she says in British Archaeology.

"Though the numerii are generally referred to as irregular units, they are not
thought of as having women among their ranks. However, the unit came from the area
where the Ancient Greeks placed the origin of women warriors called Amazons. Could
the numerii be even more irregular than anyone has ever dreamt?"

The cemetery at Brougham served a fort and the civilian settlement of Brocavum in
the 3rd century and analysis of the remains of more than 180 people showed that
everybody's ashes were buried there. Archaeologists have been able to determine
the ages and gender of the dead and to build up a detailed picture of Roman
funerals in Brougham.

One of the sets of women warrior's remains were found with the burnt remnants of
animals. Bone veneer, used to decorate boxes, was also found alongside evidence of
a sword scabbard and red pottery. The possessions suggest that she was of high
status and her age has been estimated at between 20 and 40 years old. The other
woman, thought to be between 21 and 45, was buried with a silver bowl, a sword
scabbard, bone veneer and ivory.

Copyright 2004 Times Newspapers Ltd.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-1411715,00.html

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