
Cultures
Coritani
A comparatively diverse people who inhabit the lands previously encompassed by the civitate of Flavia Caesariensis. Depending upon the township they inhabit, the Coritani are more or less roman in their habits and cultural mores. Those who continue to benefit from the protection of the remnants of the Roman state consider themselves happily roman while those living in more outlying towns and villages have taken up their ancestors' culture including the tribal symbol of the dolphin. Rules by the Legate Sextus Tarwin.
Brigante
A people dwelling in the North of Britain. The first of the British people to fully embrace a distinct cultural identity. Drawing upon the remnants of their famously rebellious ancetral culture, roots keenly encouraged by an ambitious royal family, the Brigante are xenophobic, militaristic and stoically pagan. While pockets of more traditionally roman values exist, particularly among the existing nobility, the longevity of such counter-cultural trends seems questionable. Rules by King Tannicus and his son the Prince Affan (known as The War Wolf)
Iceni
A nation of fen-dwellers and fishermen from the East Cost, these traditionally savage warriors have suffered greatly by the retreat of the Legions and the arrival of the Saxons and so have earned themselves a reputation for being timorous and quick to flee battle though this may be due to the lack of clear political leadership despite the increasing concentration of the population around the ancient walled hillfort of Sitomagus.
Cantiaci
Ruled by the teenaged Legate Gorrongonius and his cadre of advisors, the Cantiaci are mainly a naval nation due to the fact that they live largely in the South East of Britain and so enjoy quite extensive links with the continent. They are rumoured to be a nation of devout Roman Christians who have stayed largely true to the Roman way.
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