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ICENI.
THe Region next unto the Trinobantes which afterwards [ B] was called East-England, and containeth Suffolke, Nor∣folke, and Cambridge-shire with Huntingdon-shire, was inhabited in times past by the ICENI, called elsewhere amisse TIGENI: and in Ptolomee more corruptly SIMENI: whom also I have thought hee••etofore to have been in Caesar by a confused name, termed CENIMAGNI: and so to thinke induced I was, partly by that most neere affinity betweene these names [ C] ICENI, and CENI-MAGNI, and in part by the consent of Caesar and Tacitus together. For Caesar writeth that the Cenimagni yeelded them∣selves unto the Romans: which Tacitus recordeth that the Iceni likewise did, in these words: They willingly joyned in amity with us. But (that which maketh most to the cleering of this poynt) in a Manuscript old booke for CENIMAGNI, we finde written with the word divided in twaine, CENI¦AGNI. For which if I might not be thought somewhat too bould a Criticke, I would reade instead thereof ICENI, REGNI. Neither verily can you finde the Cenimagni elsewhere in all Britain, if they be a diverse people from [ D] the Iceni and Regni. But of this name ICENI, there remaine in this tract very many footings, if I may so tearme them, as Ikensworth, Ikenthorpe, Ikbortow, Iken, Ikining, Ichlingham, Eike, &c. Yea and that high street-way, which went from hence, the Historians of the former age every where doe name Ichenild-Street,* 1.1 as one would say, the Icenes street.
What should be the reason of this name (so love me Truth) I dare not guesse, unlesse one would fetch it from the Wedge-like-forme of the country, and say, it lieth Wedgwise vpon the Sea. For the Britans in their language call a Wedge [ E] Iken, and for the same cause a place in Wales, by the Lake or Meere Lhinte∣gid, is of that forme named Lhan-yken, as Welsh-Britans enformed me: and in the very same sense a little country in Spaine (as Strabo writeth) is cleped SPHEN,* 1.2 that is, The wedge, and yet the same seemeth not to resemble a wedge so neere, as this of ours doth.
A mighty nation this was, as saith Tacitus, and after they had betaken themselves to the protection of the Romans, never shaken nor troubled unto Claudius his time. For then, when as Ostorius the Romane Lieutenant rai∣sed [ F] fortifications vpon the rivers and disarmed the Britans, they assembled their forces and made head against him: but after that the Romanes had broken through the rampier, wherewith they had fenced themselves, they were vanqui∣shed