Following the successful
suppression of
Boudica's uprising in 60 or 61, new Roman governors continued the conquest by edging north.
Conquests to the North The
casus belli presented itself in 69 when
Cartimandua queen of the Brigantes following a rebellion by her husband
Venutius was forced to ask the Romans for aid, who evacuated her leaving Venutius in power. About Venutius one speculation is that he might have been a
Carvetian and may therefore have been responsible for the incorporation of Cumbria into a Brigantian federation whose territory straddled Britain along the
Solway-
Tyne line; furthermore Cartimandua may have ruled the Brigantian peoples east of the Pennines (possibly with a centre at
Stanwick, Yorkshire), while Venutius was the chief of the Brigantes west of the Pennines (or Carvetii), in Cumbria (with a possible centre based at
Clifton Dykes). In any case Tacitus says that in 71 Cerialis (governor AD 71–74) waged a successful war against the
Brigantes. He praises both Cerialis and his successor,
Julius Frontinus (governor 75–78). Much of the conquest of the north may have been achieved under the governorships of
Vettius Bolanus (governor AD 69–71), and of
Quintus Petillius Cerialis. From other sources it seems that Bolanus had possibly dealt with Venutius and penetrated into Scotland, and evidence from the carbon-dating of the gateway timbers of the Roman fort at Carlisle (
Luguvalium) suggests that they were felled in AD 72, during the governorship of Cerialis. Nevertheless,
Gnaeus Julius Agricola played his part in the west as commander of the legion XX
Valeria Victrix (71–73), while Cerialis led the
IX Hispania in the east. In addition, the
Legio II Adiutrix sailed from Chester up river estuaries to surprise the enemy. The western thrust was started from
Lancaster, where there is evidence of a Cerialian foundation, and followed the line of the Lune and Eden river valleys through Low Borrow Bridge and
Brougham (
Brocavum). On the Cumbrian coast,
Ravenglass and
Blennerhasset were probably involved from evidence of one of the earliest Roman occupations in Cumbria.
Beckfoot and
Maryport may also have featured early on. At some point between 72 and 73, part of Cerialis's force moved across the Stainmore Pass from Corbridge westwards to join Agricola, as evidenced by campaign camps (which may have been previously set up by Bolanus) at
Rey Cross, Crackenthorpe,
Kirkby Thore and Plumpton Head. Signal- or watch-towers are also in evidence across the Stainmore area: Maiden Castle, Bowes Moor and Roper Castle, for example.
Frontinus Frontinus (who was sent into Roman Britain in 74 to succeed Cerialis as
governor) returned to the conquest of Wales interrupted years before and with steady and successful progress finally subdued the
Silures (around 76) and other hostile tribes, establishing a new base at
Caerleon for
Legio II Augusta (
Isca Augusta) in 75 and a network of smaller forts apart for his auxiliary units. During his tenure, he probably established the fort at
Pumsaint in west Wales, largely to exploit the gold deposits at
Dolaucothi. He left the post in 78, and was later appointed water commissioner in Rome. ==Campaigns of Agricola (AD 78–84)==