Calgacus
[Image:Calgacus.JPG|thumb|upright=1.3|19th-century print depicting Calgacus delivering his speech to the Caledonians.]
According to Tacitus, Calgacus was a chieftain of the Caledonian Confederacy who fought the Roman army of Gnaeus Julius Agricola at the Battle of Mons Graupius in northern Scotland in AD 83 or 84. Some older scholarship has proposed a Brittonic derivation, calg‑ac‑os, meaning ‘possessing a blade’ or ‘swordsman’, but this interpretation is highly speculative and not attested in contemporary sources. Several scholars have connected the name Calgacus with the Gaelic root calg, meaning “a prickle; the point of a weapon; anything pointed.” Related forms recorded in Dwelly’s Illustrated Gaelic–English Dictionary include calgach, calg and calgag, all belonging to the same semantic field of pointed or projecting objects. MacBain’s Etymological Dictionary of the Gaelic Language also records calg / colg as meaning “awn, bristle; anything pointed; a sword. Whether the word is a name or a title is unknown.
Biography
He was the first Caledonian to be recorded in history. The only historical source that features him is Tacitus' Agricola, which describes him as "the most distinguished for birth and valour among the chieftains". Tacitus wrote a speech which he attributed to Calgacus, saying that Calgacus gave it in advance of the Battle of Mons Graupius. The speech describes the exploitation of Britain by Rome and rouses his troops to fight.The following excerpt is from the speech attributed to Calgacus by the historian Tacitus in the Agricola, but most historians note that since Calgacus was fighting Tacitus' father-in-law, Gnaeus Julius Agricola, in the battle, the reader should assume some bias:
Calgacus is not mentioned during or after the battle, and he is not named as one of the hostages Agricola took with him after putting the Caledonians to flight. Both Calgacus and the speech may be figments of Tacitus's invention.
His speech is often quoted as "they make a desert and call it peace".