Anyone find it weird that we simply don’t know where some significant historically documented battles took place.
Like Boudicea’s final stand is somewhere near the London part of Watling street (a street that extends from Dover to Wroxeter via St Albans), with 80 000 losses, and we’ve just… never found the bones.
Same with the Battle of Stamford Bridge, where we know 8000 people died (including Harald Hardrada) somewhere in the Derwent River, but no bridge or bones found.
We know these events happened from written record, but the physicality of it just isn’t present.
I don’t know what I’m really trying to say other than that I feel there’s a weird disconnect to a past that existed.
I find it easier to understand that we don’t know where events took place in a time without GPS or even vaguely accurate maps, than the fact our country is littered with massive Neolithic creations like Avebury and Silbury hill and we have no real clue as to their usage.
Not having GPS at a time of mass sprawl, sure I can understand how bewildering that can be.
But back in those days there were very few roads, and the rivers and mountains haven’t changed. To me it’s more suggestive that the site of these important events were so commonly known for the next few generations after that people didn’t bother to document it, until it became as vague as the location of Shropshire
It could be that it might have been considered normal, or quite unimportant to the vast majority of people at the time (and subsequent generations) that it just wasn’t documented or remembered. Plus Boudica was quite a way from home, maybe it wasn’t such a big deal to the local people.
And as for the bones maybe they’ve been eaten away completely by certain types of soil? I’m no archaeologist!
I’d argue that a mass grave of 80k people at a time when there were less than a million people in the UK, is something that would be hard to miss or forget
If I knew two very large armies were heading my way for a massive fight, I think I’d have got out of the way. Maybe there wasn’t anyone around who could have told you where it happened. Maybe they were more concerned with where their next turnip was coming from.