Boudica: Difference between revisions

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Warrior Women.
'''Boudica''' (probably pronounced  /bɒʊˈdiːka:/ ; spelled variously Boudicca, Boadicea, Bodicea, Boudicea, and variants thereof) was a queen in Eastern Britain who led a local uprising against Roman occupying forces.  She is frequently cited as a "[[List of historical female warriors|woman warrior]]".
 
 
==Fictional representations and other allusions==
* "Boudica" (2003 historical film; "Warrior Queen" in the US)
* "Warrior Queen" (1978 historical TV series)
* "Boadicea" (1928 historical film)
* "[[The Deliverer]]", a [[Xena: Warrior Princess]] episode 3x04 (1997); Boadica played by Jennifer Ward-Lealand
* [[Mary Mackey]], ''The People of the Horse'' (1987)
* [[Rosemary Sutcliff]], ''[[Song for a Dark Queen]]'' (1978 YA historical fiction)
* [[Harry Turtledove]], ''[[Ruled Britannia]]'' (alternate history; Boudica is the subject of a Shakespearean commission)
* [[Alice Borchardt]]'s ''[[Tales of Guinevere series]]'' - Guinevere is a matrilineal descendant of Boudica
* "Witchblade" comic book series DC; historic backstory is that the witchblade was wielded by Boudicca back in the day
* "Demon Killer" and "Queen of Witches" (1993-94) arcs in "Sláine" series in "2000 AD" comic were a rewrite of Boudica
* "From Hell" - Boudica's defeat described as a the final triumph of the patriarchy
* "[[Ghosts of Albion]]" created by [[Amber Benson]] and Christopher Golden - Bodicea is one of the ghost defenders
* Boadicea's Books, a Kensington, CA, women's bookstore (closed circa 2003)
* "[[History Bites (TV series)|History Bites]]" episode "Xena's Evil Sister" (History Bites was a 1998-2004 historical sketch comedy  TV series)
 
==References==
* "Warrior Women" episode 5 Discovery Channel documentary
* "Warrior Queen Boudica" (2006 History International Channel documentary)
* "Battlefield Britain" (2004 BBC documentary)
 
[[category:Historical female warriors]]
[[Category:Warriors and military personnel]]
[[Category:1st century CE deaths]]
[[Category:Year of birth unknown]]
[[Category:1st century CE births]]

Latest revision as of 06:43, 30 April 2007

Boudica (probably pronounced /bɒʊˈdiːka:/ ; spelled variously Boudicca, Boadicea, Bodicea, Boudicea, and variants thereof) was a queen in Eastern Britain who led a local uprising against Roman occupying forces. She is frequently cited as a "woman warrior".


Fictional representations and other allusions

  • "Boudica" (2003 historical film; "Warrior Queen" in the US)
  • "Warrior Queen" (1978 historical TV series)
  • "Boadicea" (1928 historical film)
  • "The Deliverer", a Xena: Warrior Princess episode 3x04 (1997); Boadica played by Jennifer Ward-Lealand
  • Mary Mackey, The People of the Horse (1987)
  • Rosemary Sutcliff, Song for a Dark Queen (1978 YA historical fiction)
  • Harry Turtledove, Ruled Britannia (alternate history; Boudica is the subject of a Shakespearean commission)
  • Alice Borchardt's Tales of Guinevere series - Guinevere is a matrilineal descendant of Boudica
  • "Witchblade" comic book series DC; historic backstory is that the witchblade was wielded by Boudicca back in the day
  • "Demon Killer" and "Queen of Witches" (1993-94) arcs in "Sláine" series in "2000 AD" comic were a rewrite of Boudica
  • "From Hell" - Boudica's defeat described as a the final triumph of the patriarchy
  • "Ghosts of Albion" created by Amber Benson and Christopher Golden - Bodicea is one of the ghost defenders
  • Boadicea's Books, a Kensington, CA, women's bookstore (closed circa 2003)
  • "History Bites" episode "Xena's Evil Sister" (History Bites was a 1998-2004 historical sketch comedy TV series)

References

  • "Warrior Women" episode 5 Discovery Channel documentary
  • "Warrior Queen Boudica" (2006 History International Channel documentary)
  • "Battlefield Britain" (2004 BBC documentary)