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{{Short description|Wars between Rome and Carthage (264β146 BC)}} {{pp-vandalism|small=yes}} {{good article}} {{use British English|date=July 2020}} {{use dmy dates|date=July 2020}} {{Infobox military conflict | conflict = Punic Wars | campaignbox = {{Campaignbox Punic Wars}} | partof = | image = File:Domain changes during the Punic Wars BC.gif | image_size = 300px | alt = An animated display showing the territory controlled by Rome and Carthage at different times during the Punic Wars | caption = Territory controlled by Rome and Carthage at different times during the Punic Wars<br />{{legend|#ffcb90|Carthaginian possessions}}{{legend|#b4d5b1|Roman possessions}} | date = 264 BC β 146 BC | place = Western Mediterranean region | territory = Roman conquest of all [[Ancient Carthage|Carthaginian]] territories (except [[Numidia]]) | result = {{ublist|Roman victory}} | combatant1 = [[Roman Republic|Rome]] | combatant2 = [[Ancient Carthage|Carthage]] }} The '''Punic Wars''' were a series of wars fought between the [[Roman Republic]] and the [[Ancient Carthage|Carthaginian Empire]] during the period 264 to 146{{spaces}}BC. Three such wars took place, involving a total of forty-three years of warfare on both land and sea across the [[western Mediterranean]] region, and a four-year-long [[Mercenary War|revolt against Carthage]]. The [[First Punic War]] broke out on the Mediterranean island of [[Sicily]] in 264{{spaces}}BC as a result of Rome's expansionary attitude combined with Carthage's proprietary approach to the island. At the start of the war Carthage was the dominant power of the western Mediterranean, with an extensive maritime empire (a [[thalassocracy]]), while Rome was a rapidly expanding power in [[Roman Italy|Italy]], with a strong [[Roman army of the mid-Republic|army]] but no navy. The fighting took place primarily on Sicily and its surrounding waters, as well as in [[North Africa]], [[Corsica]] and [[Sardinia]]. It lasted twenty-three years, until 241{{spaces}}BC, when the Carthaginians were defeated. By the terms of the [[Treaty of Lutatius|peace treaty]] Carthage paid large [[War reparations|reparations]] and Sicily was annexed as the [[Sicilia (Roman province)|first Roman province]]. The end of the war sparked a major but eventually unsuccessful revolt within Carthaginian territory known as the [[Mercenary War]]. The [[Second Punic War]] began in 218{{spaces}}BC and witnessed the Carthaginian general [[Hannibal]]'s [[Hannibal's crossing of the Alps|crossing of the Alps]] and invasion of mainland Italy. This expedition enjoyed considerable early success and campaigned in Italy for fourteen years before the survivors withdrew. There was also extensive fighting in [[Iberians|Iberia]] (modern Spain and Portugal), Sicily, Sardinia and North Africa. The successful Roman invasion of the Carthaginian homeland in Africa in 204{{spaces}}BC led to Hannibal's recall. He was defeated in the [[battle of Zama]] in 202 BC and Carthage [[Suing for peace|sued for peace]]. A treaty was agreed in 201{{spaces}}BC which stripped Carthage of its overseas territories and some of its African ones, imposed a large indemnity, severely restricted the size of [[Military of Carthage|its armed forces]] and prohibited Carthage from waging war without Rome's express permission. This caused Carthage to cease to be a military threat to Rome. In 151{{spaces}}BC Carthage attempted to defend itself against [[Numidia]]n encroachments; Rome used this as a justification to declare war in 149{{spaces}}BC, starting the [[Third Punic War]]. This conflict was fought entirely on Carthaginian territory in what is now Tunisia and centred on the [[Siege of Carthage (Third Punic War)|siege of Carthage]]. In 146{{spaces}}BC the Romans stormed the city of [[Carthage]], [[looting|sacked]] it, slaughtered or enslaved its population and completely demolished the city. The Carthaginian territories were taken over as the [[Africa (Roman province)|Roman province of Africa]]. The ruins of the city lie east of modern [[Tunis]] on the North African coast. {{TOC limit|3}} ==Primary sources== [[File:Stele des Polybios.jpg|thumb|upright=0.55|alt=A monochrome relief stele depicting a man in classical Greek clothing raising one arm|{{center|Polybius{{sfn|Melfi|2017|p=192}}}}]] The most reliable source for the Punic Wars{{#tag:ref|The term ''Punic'' comes from the [[Latin]] word {{lang|la|Punicus}} (or {{lang|la|Poenicus}}), meaning "Carthaginian" and is a reference to the Carthaginians' [[Phoenicia]]n ancestry.{{sfn|Sidwell|Jones|1998|p=16}}|group=note}} is the historian [[Polybius]] ({{circa|200}} β {{circa|118 BC}}), a Greek sent to Rome in 167{{spaces}}BC as a hostage.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=20β21}} He is best known for [[The Histories (Polybius)|the ''Histories'']], written sometime after 146{{spaces}}BC.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=20β21}}{{sfn|Walbank|1990|pp=11β12}} Polybius was an [[Historian#History analysis|analytical historian]] and wherever possible interviewed participants from both sides in the events he wrote about.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=20β21}}{{sfn|Shutt|1938|p=55}}{{sfn|Champion|2015|pp=98, 101}} He accompanied his [[Patronage in ancient Rome|patron]] and friend,{{sfn|Astin|2006|p=5}} the Roman general [[Scipio Aemilianus]], in North Africa during the Third Punic War;{{sfn|Champion|2015|pp=96, 108}} modern historians consider Polybius to have treated Scipio and his relatives unduly favourably, but the consensus is to accept his account largely at face value.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=20β21}}{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|pp=xβxi, 82β84}} [[Craige B. Champion|Craige Champion]] describes him as "a remarkably well-informed, industrious and insightful historian",{{sfn|Champion|2015|p=102}} while the classicist [[Adrian Goldsworthy]] states that "Polybius' account is usually to be preferred when it differs with any of our other accounts".{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=21}} Polybius's work is considered broadly objective in spite of his pro-Roman point of view.{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|pp=xβxi}}{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=16}}{{sfn|Hau|2016|pp=23β24}} The details of the wars in modern sources are largely based on interpretations of Polybius's account.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=20β21}}{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|pp=xβxi, 82β84}}{{sfn|Tipps|1985|p=432}} The account of the Roman historian [[Livy]] is commonly used by modern historians, particularly where Polybius's account is not extant. Livy relied heavily on Polybius, but wrote in a more structured way, with more details about Roman politics, as well as being openly pro-Roman.{{sfn|Lazenby|1998|p=87}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=22}}{{sfn|Champion|2015|p=95}} His accounts of military encounters are often demonstrably inaccurate; the classicist [[Adrian Goldsworthy]] says Livy's "reliability is often suspect",{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=222}} and the historian [[Philip Sabin]] refers to Livy's "military ignorance".{{sfn|Sabin|1996|p=62}} Other, later ancient histories of the wars also exist, often in fragmentary or summary form.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=21β23}} Modern historians usually take into account the writings of various Roman [[annalists]], some contemporary; the [[Sicily|Sicilian]] Greek [[Diodorus Siculus]]; and later writers such as{{sfn|Champion|2015|p=95}} [[Plutarch]], [[Appian]], and [[Cassius Dio|Dio Cassius]].{{sfn|Mineo|2015|pp=111β127}}{{#tag:ref|Sources other than Polybius are discussed by Bernard Mineo in "Principal Literary Sources for the Punic Wars (apart from Polybius)".{{sfn|Mineo|2015|pp=111β127}}|group=note}} Other sources include coins, inscriptions, archaeological evidence and empirical evidence from reconstructions, such as the [[trireme]] [[Olympias (trireme)|''Olympias'']].{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=23, 98}} ==Background and origin== [[File:First Punic War 264 BC v3.png|thumb|left|upright=1.45|alt=a colour of the western Mediterranean region showing the areas under Roman and Carthaginian control in 264 BC|{{center|The map shows the approximate extent of territory controlled by Rome, Carthage and Syracuse immediately before the start of the First Punic War. Rome is shown in red, Carthage in grey, and Syracuse in green.}}]] The [[Roman Republic]] had been [[Roman expansion in Italy|aggressively expanding]] in the southern Italian mainland for a century before the [[First Punic War]].{{sfn|Miles|2011|pp=157β158}} By 270 BC, when the last Greek cities of southern Italy ([[Magna Graecia]]) submitted after the conclusion of the [[Pyrrhic War]], it had conquered all of peninsular Italy south of the [[Arno]] River.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=21β22}} During this period of Roman expansion Carthage, with its capital in what is now [[Tunisia]], had come to dominate southern [[Iberians|Iberia]] (modern Spain and Portugal), much of the coastal regions of North Africa, the [[Balearic Islands]], [[Corsica]], [[Sardinia]] and the western half of Sicily in a maritime empire (a [[thalassocracy]]).{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=29β30}} Beginning in 480{{spaces}}BC Carthage fought a [[Sicilian Wars|series of inconclusive wars]] against the Greek [[city-state]]s of Sicily, led by [[Syracuse, Sicily|Syracuse]].{{sfn|Miles|2011|pp=115, 132}} By 264{{spaces}}BC Carthage was in control of much of the island, especially in the south and the west. Carthage and Rome were the preeminent powers in the western Mediterranean.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=25β27}} Relations were good and the two states had several times declared their mutual friendship in [[Treaties between Rome and Carthage|formal alliances]]: in 509{{spaces}}BC, 348{{spaces}}BC and around 279{{spaces}}BC. There were strong commercial links. During the Pyrrhic War of 280β275{{spaces}}BC, against a king of [[Epirus]] who alternately fought Rome in Italy and Carthage on Sicily, Carthage provided [[materiel]] to the Romans and on at least one occasion provided its navy to ferry a Roman force.{{sfn|Miles|2011|pp=94, 160, 163, 164β165}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=69β70}} As Rome and Carthage came closer to sharing a joint border the chances of misunderstandings and hostilities increased. In the event they stumbled into war more by accident than design, with neither anticipating a prolonged conflict.{{sfn|Miles|2011|pp=175β176}}{{sfn|Hoyos|2015c|pp=145β147}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=71β72}} ==Opposing forces== ===Armies=== {{main|Roman army of the mid-Republic|Military of Carthage}} [[File:Altar Domitius Ahenobarbus Louvre n3 (cropped).jpg|thumb|upright=0.8|alt=A monochrome relief stele depicting two figures dressed as Roman legionaries|{{center|Detail from the second century BC [[Altar of Domitius Ahenobarbus|Ahenobarbus relief]] showing two Roman foot-soldiers}}]] Male Roman citizens who met a property requirement were liable for military service. Most were eligible and would serve as infantry, with a [[equites|better-off minority]] providing a cavalry component.{{efn|Those who did not meet the property requirement could be required to serve in the navy. At times of national emergency the property requirement might be waived and these poorer citizens conscripted into the army.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=22}}|group=note}} Traditionally, when at war the Romans would raise two [[Roman legion|legions]], each of 4,200 infantry{{#tag:ref|This could be increased to 5,000 in some circumstances,{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=23}} or, rarely, even more.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=287}}|group=note}} and 300 cavalry. Approximately 1,200 members of the infantry{{snd}}poorer or younger men unable to afford the armour and equipment of a standard [[legionary]]{{snd}}served as [[javelin]]-armed [[skirmisher]]s known as [[velites]]; they each carried several javelins, which would be thrown from a distance, as well as a short sword and a large circular shield.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=48}} The rest of the soldiers were equipped as [[heavy infantry]], with [[Body armor|body armour]], a large [[Scutum (shield)|shield]] and [[Gladius|short thrusting swords]]. They were divided into three ranks: the [[hastati|front rank]] also carried two javelins, while the [[principes|second]] and [[triari|third]] ranks had a [[Hasta (spear)|thrusting spear]] instead. Both legionary [[Maniple (military unit)|sub-units]] and individual legionaries fought in relatively open order. It was the long-standing Roman procedure to elect two men each year as senior [[Roman magistrate|magistrates]], known as [[Roman consul|consuls]], who in a time of war would each lead an army. An army was usually formed by combining a Roman legion with a similarly sized and equipped legion provided by their [[Socii|Italian allies]]; allied legions usually had a larger attached complement of cavalry than Roman ones.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=22β25}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=50}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2001|p=41}} Carthaginian citizens only served in their army if there was a direct threat to the city of [[Carthage]].{{sfn|Lazenby|1998|p=9}}{{sfn|Scullard|2006|p=494}} When they did they fought as well-armoured heavy infantry armed with long thrusting spears, although they were notoriously ill-trained and ill-disciplined. In most circumstances Carthage recruited foreigners to make up its army.{{efn|reference=Roman and Greek sources refer to these foreign fighters derogatively as "mercenaries", but the modern historian Adrian Goldsworthy describes this as "a gross oversimplification". They served under a variety of arrangements; for example, some were the regular troops of allied cities or kingdoms seconded to Carthage as part of formal treaties, some were from allied states fighting under their own leaders, many were volunteers from areas under Carthaginian control who were not Carthaginian citizens. (Carthaginian citizenship was largely reserved for inhabitants of the city of Carthage.){{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=33}}|group=note}} Many were from North Africa and these are usually referred to as Libyans. The region provided several types of fighters, including: [[Close order formation|close-order]] infantry equipped with large shields, helmets, short swords and long thrusting [[spear]]s; javelin-armed [[light-infantry]] skirmishers; close-order [[shock cavalry]]{{#tag:ref|[[shock troops|"Shock" troops]] are those trained and used to close rapidly with an opponent, with the intention of breaking them before, or immediately upon, contact.{{sfn|Jones|1987|p=1}}|group=note}} (also known as heavy cavalry) carrying spears; and [[light cavalry]], skirmishers who threw javelins from a distance and avoided close combat; the latter were usually [[Numidian]]s.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=31β34}}{{sfn|Koon|2015|pp=79β87}} The close-order African infantry and the citizen-militia both fought in a tightly-packed formation known as a [[phalanx]].{{sfn|Koon|2015|p=93}} On occasion some of the infantry would wear captured Roman armour, especially among the troops of the Carthaginian general [[Hannibal]].{{sfn|Rawlings|2015|p=305}} In addition both [[Iberians|Iberia]] and [[Gaul]] provided many experienced infantry and cavalry. The infantry from these areas were unarmoured troops who would charge ferociously, but had a reputation for breaking off if a combat was protracted.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=32β34}}{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=9}} The Gallic cavalry, and possibly some of the Iberians, wore armour and fought as close-order troops; most or all of the mounted Iberians were light cavalry.{{sfn|Carey|2007|p=13}} [[Balearic slinger|Slingers]] were frequently recruited from the Balearic Islands.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=32}}{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=8}} The Carthaginians also employed [[war elephant]]s; North Africa had indigenous [[African forest elephant]]s at the time.{{#tag:ref|These elephants were typically about {{convert|2.5|m|ftin|abbr=on}} high at the shoulder and should not be confused with the larger [[African bush elephant]].{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=240}}|group=note}}{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=9}}{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|p=27}} Garrison duty and land [[blockade]]s were the most common operations.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=82, 311, 313β314}}{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=237}} When armies were campaigning, surprise attacks, [[ambush]]es and [[Ruse de guerre|stratagems]] were common.{{sfn|Koon|2015|p=93}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=55}} More [[Pitched battle|formal battles]] were usually preceded by the two armies camping {{convert|2-12|km|mi|abbr=off|spell=in|sigfig=1}} apart for days or weeks; sometimes both forming up in battle order each day. If either commander felt at a disadvantage, he might march off without engaging; in such circumstances it was difficult to force a battle.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=56}}{{sfn|Sabin|1996|p=64}} Forming up in battle order was a complicated and premeditated affair, which took several hours. Infantry were usually positioned in the centre of the battle line, with light-infantry skirmishers to their front and cavalry on each flank.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=57}} Many battles were decided when one side's infantry force was [[Flanking maneuver|attacked in the flank or rear]] and it was partially or wholly [[Envelopment|enveloped]].{{sfn|Koon|2015|p=93}}{{sfn|Sabin|1996|p=66}} ===Navies=== [[File:Corvus.svg|thumb|left|alt=A diagram showing the location and usage of a corvus on a Roman galley.|{{center|The ''[[corvus (weapon)|corvus]]'', the Roman [[Naval boarding|ship boarding]] device}}]] [[Quinqueremes]] were large and powerful-for-their-time warships{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=98}} which provided the main components of the Roman and Carthaginian fleets throughout the Punic Wars.{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|pp=27β28}} So ubiquitous was the type that Polybius uses it as a shorthand for "warship" in general.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=104}} A quinquereme carried a crew of 300: 280 oarsmen and 20 deck crew and officers.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=100}} It would also normally carry a complement of 40 marines;{{sfn|Tipps|1985|p=435}} if battle was thought to be imminent this would be increased to as many as 120.{{sfn|Casson|1995|p=121}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=102β103}} In 260{{spaces}}BC the Romans set out to construct a [[Roman navy|fleet]] and used a shipwrecked Carthaginian quinquereme as a blueprint for their own.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=97, 99β100}}{{sfn|Tipps|1985|p=436 n. 6}} The Romans and their allies were unaccustomed to building quinqueremes and their early efforts were heavier than the Carthaginian vessels; thus they were slower and less manoeuvrable.{{sfn|Murray|2011|p=69}} Getting the oarsmen to row as a unit, let alone to execute more complex battle manoeuvres, required long and arduous training.{{sfn|Casson|1995|pp=278β280}}{{sfn|de Souza|2008|p=359}} As a result, the Romans were initially at a disadvantage against the more experienced Carthaginians. To counter this, the Romans introduced the [[corvus (weapon)|corvus]], a bridge {{convert|1.2|m|ft|sigfig=1|abbr=off}} wide and {{convert|11|m|ft|abbr=off}} long, with a heavy spike on the underside, designed to pierce and anchor into an enemy ship's deck.{{sfn|Casson|1995|p=121}} This allowed Roman legionaries acting as marines to [[Naval boarding|board enemy ships]] and capture them, rather than employing the previously [[Naval tactics in the Age of Galleys|more common tactic]] of [[ramming]].{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=178}} All warships were equipped with rams, a triple set of {{convert|60|cm|ft|sigfig=1|adj=mid|-wide}} bronze blades weighing up to {{convert|270|kg|lb|sigfig=2}} positioned at the waterline. In the century prior to the Punic Wars, boarding had become increasingly common and ramming had declined, as the [[Hellenistic-era warships|larger and heavier vessels]] adopted in this period increasingly lacked the speed and manoeuvrability necessary to ram effectively, while their sturdier construction reduced a ram's effect on them even in case of a successful attack. The Roman adaptation of the corvus was a continuation of this trend and compensated for their initial disadvantage in ship-manoeuvring skills. The added weight in the prow compromised both the ship's manoeuvrability and its seaworthiness, and in rough sea conditions the corvus became useless; part way through the First Punic War the Romans ceased using it.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=178}}{{sfn|Wallinga|1956|pp=77β90}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=100β101, 103}} ==First Punic War, 264β241 BC== {{Main|First Punic War}}{{Campaignbox First Punic War}} ===Course=== Much of the First Punic War was fought on or in the waters near Sicily.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=310}} Away from the coasts its hilly and rugged terrain made manoeuvring large forces difficult, which encouraged defensive strategies. Land operations were largely confined to [[Raid (military)|raids]], [[siege]]s and [[interdiction]]; in twenty-three years of war on Sicily there were only two full-scale pitched battles.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=82}} ====Sicily, 264β257 BC==== [[File:Sicilia - prima guerra punica key en.svg|left|thumb|upright=1.35|alt=A relief map of Sicily showing the main cities at the time of the First Punic War|{{center|Sicily, the main theatre of the First Punic War}}]] The spark that ignited the First Punic War in 264 BC was the issue of control of the independent Sicilian city-state of Messana (modern Messina),{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=74β75}}{{sfn|Warmington|1993|p=168}} with the Romans gaining control of the city and a foothold on Sicily at the [[battle of Messana]].{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=52β53}} They then pressed Syracuse, the only substantial independent power on the island, into allying with them{{sfn|Ameling|2015|p=56}}{{sfn|BarcelΓ³|2015|p=368}} and laid siege to Carthage's main base, Agrigentum (modern [[Agrigento]]) on the south coast.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=179}} A Carthaginian army of 50,000 infantry, 6,000 cavalry and 60 elephants attempted to lift the siege in 262{{spaces}}BC, but was badly defeated at the [[battle of Agrigentum]]. Carthaginian garrison escaped during the night after the battle and the Romans seized the city and its inhabitants, selling 25,000 of them [[Slavery in ancient Rome|into slavery]].{{sfn|Miles|2011|pp=179β180}} After this the land war on Sicily reached a stalemate as the Carthaginians focused on defending their well-fortified towns and cities; these were mostly on the coast and so could be supplied and reinforced without the Romans being able to use their superior army to interfere.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=64β66}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=97}} The focus of the war shifted to the sea, where the Romans had less experience. On the few occasions they had previously felt the need for a naval presence greater than anti-piracy squadrons they had relied on their Latin or Greek allies for larger warships.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=179}}{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=66}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=91β92, 97}} But the Romans did have extensive commercial maritime experience and access to a large pool of experienced sailors and [[shipwright]]s enabling them to rapidly build a navy to challenge Carthage's,{{sfn|Harris|2017|pp=24β26}}{{sfn|Potter|2014|pp=64β65}}{{sfn|Miles|2011|pp=180β181}} Using this navy and the corvus the Romans won a major victory at the [[battle of Mylae]] in 260{{spaces}}BC.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=109β110}}{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=65}}{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|pp=73β74}} A Carthaginian base on Corsica was seized, but an attack on Sardinia was repulsed; the base on Corsica was then lost.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=63β65}} In 258{{spaces}}BC a Roman fleet defeated a smaller Carthaginian fleet at the [[battle of Sulci]] off the western coast of Sardinia.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=65}} ====Africa, 256β255 BC==== Taking advantage of their naval victories the Romans launched an invasion of North Africa in 256{{spaces}}BC,{{sfn|Rankov|2015|p=155}} which the Carthaginians intercepted at the [[battle of Cape Ecnomus]] off the southern coast of Sicily. The Carthaginians' superior seamanship was not as effective as they had hoped, while the Romans' corvuses gave them an edge as the battle degenerated into a shapeless brawl.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=102β103}}{{sfn|Tipps|1985|pp=435, 459}} The Carthaginians were again beaten{{sfn|Rankov|2015|pp=155β156}} in what was possibly the [[largest naval battle in history]] by the number of combatants involved.{{efn|Polybius gives 140,000 personnel in the Roman fleet and 150,000 in the Carthaginian; these figures are broadly accepted by modern historians of the conflict.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=110β111}}{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|p=87}}{{sfn|Tipps|1985|p=436}}|group=note}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=110β111}}{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|p=87}}{{sfn|Tipps|1985|p=436}} The invasion initially went well and in 255{{spaces}}BC the Carthaginians [[Suing for peace|sued for peace]]; the proposed terms were so harsh they decided to fight on.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=87}} At the [[Battle of the Bagradas River (255 BC)|battle of Tunis]] in spring 255{{spaces}}BC a combined force of infantry, cavalry and war elephants under the command of the [[Sparta]]n mercenary [[Xanthippus of Carthage|Xanthippus]] crushed the Romans.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=188}} The Romans sent a fleet to evacuate their survivors and the Carthaginians opposed it at the [[battle of Cape Hermaeum]] (modern [[Cape Bon]]); the Carthaginians were again heavily defeated.{{sfn|Tipps|2003|p=382}} The Roman fleet, in turn, was devastated by a storm while returning to Italy, losing most of its ships and more than 100,000 men.{{sfn|Tipps|1985|p=438}}{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=189}}{{sfn|Erdkamp|2015|p=66}} It is possible that the presence of the corvus, making the Roman ships unusually [[unseaworthy]], contributed to this disaster; there is no record of their being used again.{{sfn|Scullard|2006|p=557}}{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|pp=112, 117}} ====Sicily, 255β241 BC==== [[File:Pompeii, Statuette of a war elephant.jpg|thumb|upright=0.9|alt=A small, white statuette of an elephant with a mahout|{{center|Roman statuette of a [[war elephant]] recovered from [[Pompei]]{{sfn|Sogliano|1897|pp=23β27}}}}]] The war continued, with neither side able to gain a decisive advantage.{{sfn|Scullard|2006|p=559}} The Carthaginians attacked and recaptured Akragas in 255{{spaces}}BC, but not believing they could hold the city they razed and abandoned it.{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|pp=114β116, 169}}{{sfn|Rankov|2015|p=158}} The Romans rapidly rebuilt their fleet, adding 220 new ships, and captured Panormus (modern [[Palermo]]) in 254{{spaces}}BC.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=80}} The next year they lost another 150 ships to a storm.{{sfn|Miles|2011|pp=189β190}} On Sicily the Romans avoided battle in 252 and 251{{spaces}}BC, according to Polybius because they feared the war elephants which the Carthaginians had shipped to the island.{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|p=118}}{{sfn|Rankov|2015|p=159}} In 250{{spaces}}BC the Carthaginians advanced on Panormus, but in a [[Battle of Panormus|battle outside the walls]] the Romans drove off the Carthaginian elephants with javelins. The elephants routed through the Carthaginian infantry, who were then charged by the Roman infantry to complete their defeat.{{sfn|Rankov|2015|p=159}}{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|p=169}} Slowly the Romans had occupied most of Sicily; in 250{{spaces}}BC they besieged the last two Carthaginian strongholds{{snd}}[[Lilybaeum]] and [[Drepana]] in the extreme west.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=190}} Repeated attempts to storm Lilybaeum's strong walls failed, as did attempts to block access to its harbour, and the Romans [[Siege of Lilybaeum (250β241 BC)|settled down to a siege]] which was to last nine years.{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|p=127}}{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=84β86}} They launched a surprise attack on the Carthaginian fleet, but were defeated at the [[battle of Drepana]]; Carthage's greatest naval victory of the war.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=117β121}} Carthage turned to the maritime offensive, inflicting another heavy naval defeat at the [[battle of Phintias]] and all but swept the Romans from the sea.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=88β91}} It was to be seven years before Rome again attempted to field a substantial fleet, while Carthage put most of its ships into [[Reserve fleet|reserve]] to save money and free up manpower.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=121β122}}{{sfn|Rankov|2015|p=163}} ====Roman victory, 243β241 BC==== After more than 20 years of war, both states were financially and demographically exhausted.{{sfn|Bringmann|2007|p=127}} Evidence of Carthage's financial situation includes their request for a 2,000-talent loan{{#tag:ref|Several different "talents" are known from antiquity. The ones referred to in this article are all Euboic (or Euboeic) talents, of approximately {{convert|26|kg|lb}}.{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|p=158}}{{sfn|Scullard|2006|p=565}} 2,000 talents was approximately {{convert|51|lt|kg|order=flip|abbr=off}} of silver.{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|p=158}}|group=note}} from [[Ptolemaic Egypt]], which was refused.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=92}}{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=193}} Rome was also close to [[Sovereign default|bankruptcy]] and the number of adult male citizens, who provided the manpower for the navy and the legions, had declined by 17 per cent since the start of the war.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=91}} Goldsworthy describes Roman manpower losses as "appalling".{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=131}} The Romans rebuilt their fleet again in 243{{spaces}}BC after the Senate approached Rome's wealthiest citizens for loans to finance the construction of one ship each, repayable from the [[War reparations|reparations]] to be imposed on Carthage once the war was won.{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|p=49}} This new fleet effectively blockaded the Carthaginian garrisons.{{sfn|Scullard|2006|p=565}} Carthage assembled a fleet which attempted to relieve them, but it was destroyed at the [[battle of the Aegates Islands]] in 241{{spaces}}BC,{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=196}}{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=96}} forcing the cut-off Carthaginian troops on Sicily to negotiate for peace.{{sfn|Scullard|2006|p=565}}{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|p=157}} The [[Treaty of Lutatius]] was agreed by which Carthage paid 3,200 talents of silver{{#tag:ref|3,200 talents was approximately {{convert|81|lt|kg|order=flip|abbr=in}} of silver.{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|p=158}}|group=note}} in reparations and [[Sicilia (Roman province)|Sicily was annexed]] as the first [[Roman province]].{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=196}} Polybius regarded the war as "the longest, most continuous and most severely contested war known to us in history".{{sfn|Scullard|2002|p=178}} Henceforth Rome considered itself the leading military power in the western Mediterranean and increasingly the Mediterranean region as a whole. {{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=128β129, 357, 359β360}} ==Interbellum, 241β218 BC== ===Mercenary War=== {{Main|Mercenary War}} {{Campaignbox Mercenary War}} [[File:First Punic War 237 BC.jpg|thumb|upright=1.45|left|alt=A map of the western Mediterranean showing the territory ceded to Rome by Carthage under the treaty.|{{center|Territory ceded to Rome by Carthage under the treaty is shown in pink}}]] The [[Mercenary War|Mercenary, or Truceless, War]] began in 241{{spaces}}BC as a dispute over the payment of wages owed to 20,000 foreign soldiers who had fought for Carthage on Sicily during the First Punic War. This erupted into full-scale mutiny under the leadership of [[Spendius]] and [[Mathos|Matho]]; 70,000 Africans from Carthage's oppressed dependent territories and towns flocked to join the mutineers, bringing supplies and finance.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=112β114}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=133β134}} War-weary Carthage fared poorly in the initial engagements, especially under the generalship of [[Hanno II the Great|Hanno]].{{sfn|Eckstein|2017|p=6}}{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=115}} [[Hamilcar Barca]], a veteran of the campaigns in Sicily, was given joint command of the army in 240{{spaces}}BC and supreme command in 239{{spaces}}BC.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=115}} He campaigned successfully, initially demonstrating leniency in an attempt to woo the rebels over.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=118}} To prevent this, in 240{{spaces}}BC Spendius tortured 700 Carthaginian prisoners to death and henceforth the war was pursued with great brutality.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=208}}{{sfn|Eckstein|2017|p=7}} By early 237{{spaces}}BC, after numerous setbacks, the rebels were defeated and their towns brought back under Carthaginian rule.{{sfn|Hoyos|2000|p=377}} An expedition was prepared to reoccupy Sardinia, where mutinous soldiers had slaughtered all Carthaginians. The Roman Senate stated they considered the preparation of this force an act of war and demanded Carthage cede Sardinia and Corsica and pay an additional 1,200-talent indemnity.{{#tag:ref|1,200 talents was approximately {{convert|30|lt|kg|order=flip|abbr=in}} of silver.{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|p=158}}|group=note}}{{sfn|Scullard|2006|p=569}}{{sfn|Miles|2011|pp=209, 212β213}} Weakened by 30 years of war, Carthage agreed rather than again enter into conflict with Rome.{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|p=175}} Polybius considered this "contrary to all justice" and modern historians have variously described the Romans' behaviour as "unprovoked aggression and treaty-breaking",{{sfn|Scullard|2006|p=569}} "shamelessly opportunistic"{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=136}} and an "unscrupulous act".{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=124}} These events fuelled resentment of Rome in Carthage, which was not reconciled to Rome's perception of its situation. This breach of the recently signed treaty was to be one the greatest causes of war with Carthage breaking out again in 218{{spaces}}BC in the [[Second Punic War]].{{sfn|Collins|1998|p=13}}{{sfn|Hoyos|2015|p=211}}{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=213}} ===Carthaginian expansion in Iberia=== [[File:Carthage, quarter shekel, 237-209 BC, SNG BM Spain 102.jpg|thumb|upright=0.9|alt=Image of both sides of a coin: one depicting a man's head; the other an elephant|{{center|A [[Carthaginian currency|Carthaginian]] quarter-[[shekel]], dated 237β209{{spaces}}BC, depicting the Punic god [[Melqart]] (who was associated with [[Hercules]]/[[Heracles]]). On the reverse is an elephant; possibly a [[war elephant]], which were linked with the [[Barcids]].{{sfn|Miles|2011|pp=226β227}}}}]] {{Main|Barcid conquest of Hispania}} With the suppression of the rebellion, Hamilcar understood that Carthage needed to strengthen its economic and military base if it were to again confront Rome.{{sfn|Hoyos|2015|p=77}} After the First Punic War, Carthaginian possessions in Iberia were limited to a handful of prosperous coastal cities in the south.{{sfn|Hoyos|2015|p=80}} Hamilcar took the army which he had led in the Mercenary War to Iberia in 237{{spaces}}BC and carved out a [[Carthaginian Iberia|quasi-monarchicial, autonomous state]] in its south east.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=220}} This gave Carthage the silver mines, agricultural wealth, [[manpower]], military facilities such as [[shipyard]]s and territorial depth to stand up to future Roman demands with confidence.{{sfn|Miles|2011|pp=219β220, 225}}{{sfn|Eckstein|2006|pp=173β174}} Hamilcar ruled as a [[viceroy]] and was succeeded by his son-in-law, [[Hasdrubal the Fair|Hasdrubal]], in the early 220s{{spaces}}BC and then his son, [[Hannibal]], in 221{{spaces}}BC.{{sfn|Miles|2011|pp=222, 225}} In 226{{spaces}}BC the [[Ebro Treaty]] was agreed with Rome, specifying the [[Ebro River]] as the northern boundary of the Carthaginian [[sphere of influence]].{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=143β144}} At some time during the next six years Rome made a separate agreement with the city of [[Saguntum]], which was situated well south of the Ebro.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=144}} ==Second Punic War, 218β201 BC== {{Main|Second Punic War}} {{Campaignbox Second Punic War}} In 219{{spaces}}BC a Carthaginian army under Hannibal [[Siege of Saguntum|besieged, captured and sacked Saguntum]]{{#tag:ref|There is scholarly debate as to whether Saguntum was a formal Roman ally, in which case attacking it may have been a breach of the clause in the Treaty of Lutatius prohibiting attacking each other's allies; or whether the city had less formally requested Rome's protection, and possibly been granted it. In either case, the Carthaginians argued that relationships entered into after the signing of the treaty were not covered by it.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=144}}|group=note}}{{sfn|Collins|1998|p=13}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=144β145}} and in spring 218{{spaces}}BC Rome [[declaration of war|declared war]] on Carthage.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=145}} There were three main [[Theater (military)|military theatres]] in the [[Second Punic War]]: Italy, where Hannibal defeated the Roman legions repeatedly, with occasional subsidiary campaigns in Sicily, Sardinia and Greece; Iberia, where [[Hasdrubal (Barcid)|Hasdrubal]], a younger brother of Hannibal, defended the Carthaginian colonial cities with mixed success before moving into Italy; and Africa, where the war was decided.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=310β311}} ===Italy=== ====Hannibal crosses the Alps, 218β217 BC==== [[File:Map of Rome and Carthage at the start of the Second Punic War Modified.svg|upright=1.45|thumb|alt=a map of the western Mediterranean region showing the territory and allies of Rome and Carthage in 218 BC|{{center|The territory and allies of Rome and Carthage immediately before the start of the Second Punic War.}}]] In 218{{spaces}}BC there was some naval skirmishing in the waters around Sicily; the Romans [[Battle of Lilybaeum|defeated a Carthaginian attack]]{{sfn|Briscoe|2006|p=61}}{{sfn|Edwell|2015|p=327}} and [[Capture of Malta (218 BC)|captured the island of Malta]].{{sfn|Castillo|2006|p=25}} In [[Cisalpine Gaul]] (modern northern Italy), the major [[Gauls|Gallic]] tribes attacked the Roman colonies there, causing the Roman settlers to flee to their previously established colony of Mutina (modern [[Modena]]), where they were besieged. A Roman relief force broke through the siege, but was then ambushed and itself besieged.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=151}} A Roman army had been assembled to campaign in Iberia; one Roman and one allied legion was detached from it and sent to northern Italy. Raising fresh troops to replace these delayed the army's departure for Iberia until September.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=151β152}} Meanwhile, Hannibal assembled a Carthaginian army in New Carthage (modern [[Cartagena, Spain|Cartagena]]) in Iberia and led it northwards along the coast in May or June. It entered Gaul and took an inland route, to avoid the Roman allies to the south.{{sfn|Briscoe|2006|p=47}} At the [[battle of the RhΓ΄ne Crossing|battle of the RhΓ΄ne crossing]] Hannibal defeated a force of local Gauls which sought to bar his way.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=161β162}} A Roman fleet carrying the Iberian-bound army landed at Rome's ally Massalia (modern [[Marseille]]) at the mouth of the RhΓ΄ne,{{sfn|Fronda|2011|p=252}} but Hannibal evaded the Romans and they continued to Iberia.{{sfn|Zimmermann|2011|p=291}}{{sfn|Edwell|2015|p=321}} The Carthaginians reached the foot of the Alps by late autumn and [[Hannibal's crossing of the Alps|crossed them]] in 24 days, surmounting the difficulties of climate, terrain{{sfn|Erdkamp|2015|p=72}} and the [[Guerrilla warfare|guerrilla tactics]] of the native tribes. The Carthaginians arrived in what is now [[Piedmont]], northern Italy, in early November. They comprised 20,000 infantry, 6,000 cavalry and an unknown number of elephants{{snd}}the survivors of the 37 with which they left Iberia. The Romans were still in their winter quarters. The Carthaginians' surprise entry into the Italian peninsula led to the cancellation of Rome's planned campaign for the following year: an invasion of Africa.{{sfn|Zimmermann|2011|pp=283β284}}{{sfn|Erdkamp|2015|p=71}}{{sfn|Hoyos|2015b|p=107}} ====Roman defeats, 217β216 BC==== [[File:Hannibal Slodtz Louvre MR2093 (cropped2).png |left|upright=0.75|thumb|alt=a photograph of a marble head depicting Hannibal|{{center|Hannibal, as envisaged in 1704}}]] The Carthaginians captured the chief settlement of the hostile [[Taurini]] Gauls (in the area of modern [[Turin]]) and seized its food stocks.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=171}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=168}} In late November the Carthaginian cavalry routed a Roman force of cavalry and light infantry at the [[battle of Ticinus]].{{sfn|Fronda|2011|p=243}} As a result, most of the Gallic tribes declared for the Carthaginian cause and Hannibal's army grew to 37,000 men.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=177β178}} A large Roman army was lured into combat by Hannibal at the [[battle of the Trebia]], encircled and destroyed.{{sfn|Fronda|2011|pp=243β244}}{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=175β176}} Some 10,000 Romans out of 42,000 were able to fight their way to safety; most of their comrades were killed or captured. Gauls now joined Hannibal's army in large numbers.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=175β176, 193}}{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=270}} The Romans stationed an army at [[Arretium]] and one on the [[Adriatic]] coast to block Hannibal's advance into central Italy.{{sfn|Zimmermann|2011|p=285}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=182}} In early spring 217{{spaces}}BC the Carthaginians crossed the [[Apennine Mountains|Apennines]] unopposed, taking a difficult but unguarded route.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=184}} Hannibal attempted to draw the westernmost of the two Roman armies into a pitched battle by devastating the area it had been sent to protect.{{sfn|Fronda|2011|p=244}} This provoked its commander into ordering a hasty pursuit without proper reconnaissance. Hannibal set an ambush and in the [[battle of Lake Trasimene]] completely defeated this Roman army, killing 15,000 Romans, including their commander, and taking 15,000 [[Prisoner of war|prisoners]]. A cavalry force of 4,000 from the Roman army based at Arretium was also engaged and wiped out.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=189β190}}{{sfn|Fronda|2011|p=244}} The prisoners were badly treated if they were Romans, but released if they were from one of Rome's allies. Hannibal wished to stir up disaffection in the states which made up many of Rome's allies in Italy.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=270}} These allied states provided more than half of Rome's military manpower.{{sfn|Rawlings|2015|pp=311β312}} The Carthaginians marched deeper into Italy, hoping that the ethnic Greek and [[Ancient peoples of Italy|Italic]] states of southern Italy in particular could be persuaded to [[Defection|defect]].{{sfn|Lazenby|1998|p=86}} The Romans, panicked by these heavy defeats, appointed [[Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosus|Quintus Fabius]] as [[Roman dictator|dictator]], with sole charge of the war effort.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=183}} Fabius introduced the [[Fabian strategy]] of avoiding open battle with his opponent, but constantly skirmishing with small detachments of the enemy. This was not popular with parts of the Roman army, public and Senate, since he avoided battle while Italy was being devastated by the enemy.{{sfn|Zimmermann|2011|p=285}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=195β196}} Hannibal marched through the richest and most fertile parts of Italy, hoping the devastation would draw Fabius into battle, but Fabius refused.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=184β188}} In the 216{{spaces}}BC elections [[Gaius Terentius Varro|Gaius Varro]] and [[Lucius Aemilius Paullus (consul 219 BC)|Lucius Paullus]] were elected as consuls; both were more aggressively minded than Fabius.{{sfn|Zimmermann|2011|p=286}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=199β200}} The Roman Senate authorised the raising of a force of 86,000 men, the largest in Roman history to that point.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=191, 194}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=198β199}} Paullus and Varro marched southward to confront Hannibal, who accepted battle on the open plain near [[Cannae]] in south-east Italy. In the [[battle of Cannae]] the Roman legions forced their way through Hannibal's deliberately weak centre, but Libyan heavy infantry on the wings swung around their advance, menacing their flanks. Another Carthaginian commander named [[Hasdrubal, commander of the service corps|Hasdrubal]]{{snd}}not the same man as Hasdrubal Barca, one of Hannibal's younger brothers{{sfn|Carey|2007|p=64}}{{snd}}led the Carthaginian cavalry on the left wing which routed the Roman cavalry opposite. It then swept around the rear of the Romans to attack the cavalry on the other wing, before charging into the legions from behind. As a result, the Roman infantry was surrounded with no means of escape.{{sfn|Fronda|2011|p=245}} At least 67,500 Romans were killed or captured.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=192β194}} The historian Richard Miles describes Cannae as "Rome's greatest military disaster".{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=279}} Toni Γaco del Hoyo considers the Trebia, Lake Trasimene and Cannae to be the three "great military calamities" suffered by the Romans in the first three years of the war.{{sfn|Γaco del Hoyo|2015|p=377}} Brian Carey writes that these three defeats brought Rome to the brink of collapse.{{sfn|Carey|2007|p=2}} Within a few weeks of Cannae a Roman army of 25,000 was ambushed by [[Boii]] Gauls at the [[battle of Silva Litana]] and annihilated.{{sfn|Roberts|2017|pp=viβ1x}} Fabius was elected consul in 215 BC and re-elected in 214 BC.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=227}}{{sfn|Lazenby|1998|pp=94, 99}} ====Roman allies defect, 216β207 BC==== Little survives of Polybius's account of Hannibal's army in Italy after Cannae and Livy is the best surviving source for this part of the war.{{sfn|Lazenby|1998|p=87}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=222}}{{sfn|Sabin|1996|p=62}} Several of the city-states in southern Italy allied with Hannibal or were captured when pro-Carthaginian factions betrayed their defences. These included the large city of [[Capua]] and the major port city of Tarentum (modern [[Taranto]]). Two of the major [[Samnium|Samnite]] tribes also joined the Carthaginian cause. By 214 BC the bulk of southern Italy had turned against Rome, although there were many exceptions. The majority of Rome's allies in central Italy remained loyal. All except the smallest towns were too well fortified for Hannibal to take by assault and blockade could be a long-drawn-out affair, or, if the target was a port, impossible. Carthage's new allies felt little sense of community with Carthage, or even with each other. The new allies increased the number of places that Hannibal's army was expected to defend from Roman retribution, but provided relatively few fresh troops to assist him in doing so. Such Italian forces as were raised resisted operating away from their home cities and performed poorly when they did.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=222β226}}{{sfn|Rawlings|2015|p=313}} [[File:Second Punic war (cropped).png|thumb|upright=1.35|alt=a map of southern peninsular Italy showing the maximum extent of Carthaginian control|{{center|Hannibal's allies in southern Italy {{circa}} 213{{spaces}}BC, shown in light blue}}]] When the port city of [[Locri]] defected to Carthage in the summer of 215{{spaces}}BC it was immediately used to reinforce the Carthaginian forces in Italy with soldiers, supplies and war elephants.{{sfn|Lazenby|1998|p=98}} It was the only time during the war that Hannibal received reinforcements from Carthage.{{sfn|Erdkamp|2015|p=75}} A second force, under Hannibal's youngest brother [[Mago Barca|Mago]], was meant to land in Italy in 215{{spaces}}BC but was diverted to Iberia after the Carthaginian defeat there at the [[battle of Dertosa]].{{sfn|Lazenby|1998|p=98}}{{sfn|BarcelΓ³|2015|p=370}} Meanwhile, the Romans took drastic steps to raise new legions: enrolling slaves, criminals and those who did not meet the usual property qualification.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=226}} By early 215{{spaces}}BC they were fielding at least 12 legions; two years later they had 18; and a year after that, 22. By 212{{spaces}}BC the full complement of the legions deployed would have been in excess of 100,000 men, plus, as always, a similar number of allied troops. The majority were deployed in southern Italy in field armies of approximately 20,000 men each. This was insufficient to challenge Hannibal's army in open battle, but sufficient to force him to concentrate his forces and to hamper his movements.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=227}} The war surged around southern Italy as cities went over to the Carthaginians or were taken by subterfuge and the Romans recaptured them by siege or by the support of pro-Roman factions.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=222β235}} Hannibal repeatedly defeated Roman armies; in 208{{spaces}}BC both consuls were killed in a cavalry skirmish. But wherever his main army was not active the Romans threatened Carthaginian-supporting towns or sought battle with Carthaginian or Carthaginian-allied detachments; frequently with success.{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|p=158}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=236}} By 207{{spaces}}BC Hannibal had been confined to the extreme south of Italy and many of the cities and territories which had joined the Carthaginian cause had returned to their Roman allegiance.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=237β238}} ====Greece, Sardinia and Sicily==== During 216{{spaces}}BC the Macedonian king, [[Philip V of Macedon|Philip V]], [[MacedonianβCarthaginian Treaty|pledged his support]] to Hannibal,{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=199β200}} initiating the [[First Macedonian War]] against Rome in 215{{spaces}}BC. In 211{{spaces}}BC Rome contained this threat by allying with the [[Aetolian League]], a coalition of Greek city-states which was hostile towards Macedonia, and persuading them to participate in the war. In 205{{spaces}}BC this war ended with a [[Treaty of Phoenice|negotiated peace]].{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=253β260}} A rebellion in support of the Carthaginians broke out on Sardinia in 213{{spaces}}BC, but it was quickly put down by the Romans.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=288}} [[File:Archimedes before his death with the Roman soldier, Roman mosaic.jpg|upright=1.15|thumb|alt=a colourful mosaic of a sword-armed soldier gesturing to a seated man in ancient-style robes|{{center|Archimedes before being killed by the Roman soldier β an early-modern mosaic}}]] Up to 215{{spaces}}BC Sicily remained firmly in Roman hands, preventing the easy seaborne reinforcement and resupply of Hannibal from Carthage. [[Hiero II of Syracuse|Hiero II]], the tyrant of Syracuse for the previous forty-five years and a staunch Roman ally since 263 BC, died in 215 BC and his successor [[Hieronymus of Syracuse|Hieronymus]] was discontented with his situation. Hannibal negotiated a treaty whereby Syracuse defected to Carthage, in exchange for a Carthaginian pledge to allow the whole of Sicily to become a Syracusan possession. The Syracusan army proved no match for a Roman army led by [[Marcus Claudius Marcellus|Claudius Marcellus]] and by spring 213{{spaces}}BC [[Siege of Syracuse (213β212 BC)|Syracuse was besieged]].{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=327}}{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=200}} The siege was marked by the ingenuity of [[Archimedes]] in inventing war machines to counteract the traditional siege warfare methods of the Romans.{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=328}} A large Carthaginian army led by [[Himilco (fl. 3rd century BC)|Himilco]] was sent to relieve the city in 213{{spaces}}BC.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=288}}{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=329}} It captured several Roman-garrisoned towns on Sicily; many Roman garrisons were either expelled or massacred by Carthaginian partisans. In spring 212{{spaces}}BC the Romans stormed Syracuse in a surprise night assault and captured several districts of the city. Meanwhile, the Carthaginian army was crippled by [[Plague (disease)|plague]]. After the Carthaginians failed to resupply the city, Syracuse fell that autumn; Archimedes was killed by a Roman soldier.{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=329}} Carthage sent more reinforcements to Sicily in 211{{spaces}}BC and went on the offensive. A fresh Roman army attacked the main Carthaginian stronghold on the island, [[Agrigentum]], in 210{{spaces}}BC and the city was betrayed to the Romans by a discontented Carthaginian officer. The remaining Carthaginian-controlled towns then surrendered or were taken through force or treachery{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=330}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=266β267}} and the Sicilian grain supply to Rome and its armies was secured.{{sfn|Rawlings|2015|p=311}} ====Italy, 207β203 BC==== In the spring of 207{{spaces}}BC [[Hasdrubal Barca]] repeated the feat of his elder brother by marching an army of 35,000 men across the Alps and invading Italy. His aim was to join his forces with those of Hannibal, but Hannibal was unaware of his presence. The Romans facing Hannibal in southern Italy tricked him into believing the whole Roman army was still in camp, while a large portion marched north under the consul [[Gaius Claudius Nero|Claudius Nero]] and reinforced the Romans facing Hasdrubal, who were commanded by the other consul, [[Marcus Livius Salinator|Marcus Salinator]]. The combined Roman force attacked Hasdrubal at the [[battle of the Metaurus]] and destroyed his army, killing Hasdrubal. This battle confirmed Roman dominance in Italy and marked the end of their Fabian strategy.{{sfn|Zimmermann|2011|p=290}}{{sfn|Miles|2011|pp=304β306}} In 205{{spaces}}BC Mago landed in Genua (modern [[Genoa]]) in north-west Italy with the remnants of his Spanish army where it received Gallic and [[Liguria]]n reinforcements. Mago's arrival in the north of the Italian peninsula was followed by Hannibal's inconclusive [[battle of Crotona]] in 204{{spaces}}BC in the far south of the peninsula. Mago marched his reinforced army towards the lands of Carthage's main Gallic allies in the [[Po Valley]], but was checked by a large Roman army and defeated at the [[battle of Insubria]] in 203{{spaces}}BC.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=286β287}} After a Roman army invaded the Carthaginian homeland in 204{{spaces}}BC, defeated the Carthaginians in two major battles and won the allegiance of the Numidian kingdoms of North Africa, Hannibal and the remnants of his army were recalled.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=310}} They sailed from Croton (modern [[Crotone]]){{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=244}} and landed at Carthage with 15,000β20,000 experienced veterans. Mago was also recalled; he died of wounds on the voyage and some of his ships were intercepted by the Romans,{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=312}} but 12,000 of his troops reached Carthage.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=289}} ===Iberia=== ====Iberia, 218β209 BC==== The Roman fleet continued on from Massala in the autumn of 218{{spaces}}BC, landing the army it was transporting in north-east Iberia, where it won support among the local tribes.{{sfn|Zimmermann|2011|p=291}} A rushed Carthaginian attack in late 218{{spaces}}BC was beaten back at the [[battle of Cissa]].{{sfn|Zimmermann|2011|p=291}}{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=321}} In 217{{spaces}}BC 40 Carthaginian warships were defeated by 55 Roman and Massalian vessels at the [[battle of Ebro River|battle of the Ebro River]], with 29 Carthaginian ships lost. The Romans' [[lodgement]] between the Ebro and the [[Pyrenees]] blocked the route from Iberia to Italy and greatly hindered the despatch of reinforcements from Iberia to Hannibal.{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=321}} The Carthaginian commander in Iberia, Hannibal's brother Hasdrubal, marched into this area in 215{{spaces}}BC, offered battle and was [[Battle of Ibera|defeated at Dertosa]], although both sides suffered heavy casualties.{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=322}} The Carthaginians suffered a wave of defections of local [[Celtiberians|Celtiberian]] tribes to Rome.{{sfn|Zimmermann|2011|p=291}} The Roman commanders captured Saguntum in 212{{spaces}}BC and in 211{{spaces}}BC hired 20,000 Celtiberian mercenaries to reinforce their army. Observing that the three Carthaginian armies were deployed apart from each other, the Romans split their forces.{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=322}} This strategy resulted in two separate battles in 211{{spaces}}BC, usually referred to jointly as the [[battle of the Upper Baetis]]. Both battles ended in complete defeat for the Romans, as Hasdrubal had bribed the Romans' mercenaries to desert. The Romans pulled back to their coastal stronghold north of the Ebro, from which the Carthaginians again failed to expel them.{{sfn|Zimmermann|2011|p=291}}{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=322}} Reinforcements arrived in 210{{spaces}}BC and stabilised the situation.{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=322}} [[File:Bust of Sulla (loan from Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek) - Glyptothek - Munich - Germany 2017.jpg|alt=a black and white photograph of a marble bust of a man, with the nose broken off|thumb|upright=0.7|left|{{center|2nd century BC marble bust, identified as Scipio Africanus{{sfn|Coarelli|2002|pp= 73β74}}{{sfn|Etcheto|2012|pp= 274β278}}}}]] In 210{{spaces}}BC [[Scipio Africanus|Publius Cornelius Scipio]] arrived in Iberia with further Roman reinforcements.{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=323}} In a carefully planned assault in 209{{spaces}}BC [[Battle of Cartagena (209 BC)|he captured New Carthage]], the lightly-defended centre of Carthaginian power in Iberia.{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=323}}{{sfn|Zimmermann|2011|p=292}} Scipio seized a vast booty of gold, silver and siege artillery, but released the captured population. He also liberated the Iberian hostages, who had been held there by the Carthaginians to ensure the loyalty of their tribes.{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=323}}{{sfn|BarcelΓ³|2015|p=362}} Even so, many of them later fought against the Romans.{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=323}} ====Roman victory in Iberia, 208β205 BC==== In the spring of 208{{spaces}}BC Hasdrubal moved to engage Scipio at the [[battle of Baecula]].{{sfn|Edwell|2015|p=323}} The Carthaginians were defeated, but Hasdrubal was able to withdraw the majority of his army and prevent any Roman pursuit; most of his losses were among his Iberian allies. Scipio was not able to prevent Hasdrubal from leading his depleted army through the western passes of the Pyrenees into Gaul. In 207{{spaces}}BC, after recruiting heavily in Gaul, Hasdrubal crossed the Alps into Italy in an attempt to join his brother, Hannibal, but was defeated before he could.{{sfn|Edwell|2015|p=323}}{{sfn|Carey|2007|pp=86β90}}{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=211}} In 206{{spaces}}BC at the [[battle of Ilipa]], Scipio with 48,000 men, half Italian and half Iberian, defeated a Carthaginian army of 54,500 men and 32 elephants. This sealed the fate of the Carthaginians in Iberia.{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=323}}{{sfn|Zimmermann|2011|p=293}} The last Carthaginian-held city in Iberia, Gades (modern [[Cadiz]]), defected to the Romans.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=303}} Later the same year a [[Mutiny at Sucro|mutiny]] broke out among Roman troops, which attracted support from Iberian leaders, disappointed that Roman forces had remained in the peninsula after the expulsion of the Carthaginians, but it was effectively put down by Scipio. In 205{{spaces}}BC a last attempt was made by Mago to recapture New Carthage when the Roman occupiers were shaken by another mutiny and an Iberian uprising, but he was repulsed. Mago left Iberia for Cisalpine Gaul with his remaining forces.{{sfn|BarcelΓ³|2015|p=362}} In 203{{spaces}}BC Carthage succeeded in recruiting at least 4,000 mercenaries from Iberia, despite Rome's nominal control.{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=333}} ===Africa=== In 213{{spaces}}BC [[Syphax]], a powerful [[Numidians|Numidian]] king in North Africa, declared for Rome. In response, Roman advisers were sent to train his soldiers and he waged war against the Carthaginian ally [[Gala (king)|Gala]].{{sfn|Edwell|2011|p=322}} In 206{{spaces}}BC the Carthaginians ended this drain on their resources by dividing several Numidian kingdoms with him. One of those disinherited was the Numidian prince [[Masinissa]], who was thus driven into the arms of Rome.{{sfn|BarcelΓ³|2015|p=372}} ====Scipio's invasion of Africa, 204β201 BC==== [[File:Publius Scipio's Invasion of Africa, 204β201 BC.png|upright=1.65|thumb|alt=a terrain map of northern Tunisia, with the manoeuvres of Scipio's army in 204β203 BC superimposed on it|{{center|[[Scipio Africanus|Scipio]]'s military campaign in Africa 204β203{{spaces}}BC}}]] In 205{{spaces}}BC Publius Scipio was given command of the legions in Sicily and allowed to enrol volunteers for his plan to end the war by an invasion of Africa.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=286β288}} After landing in Africa in 204{{spaces}}BC he was joined by Masinissa and a force of Numidian cavalry.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=291β292}} Scipio gave battle to two large Carthaginian armies and destroyed both.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=310}} After the second of these, Syphax was pursued and taken prisoner by Masinissa at the [[battle of Cirta]]; Masinissa then seized most of Syphax's kingdom with Roman help.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=282β283}} Rome and Carthage entered into peace negotiations and Carthage recalled Hannibal from Italy.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=298β300}} The Roman Senate ratified a draft treaty, but because of mistrust and a surge in confidence when Hannibal arrived from Italy Carthage repudiated it.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=287β291}} Hannibal was placed in command of an army formed from his and Mago's veterans from Italy and newly raised troops from Africa, but with few cavalry.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=302}} The decisive [[battle of Zama]] followed in October 202{{spaces}}BC.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=315}}{{sfn|Carey|2007|p=119}} Unlike most battles of the Second Punic War, the Romans had superiority in cavalry and the Carthaginians in infantry.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=302}} Hannibal attempted to use 80 elephants to break into the Roman infantry formation, but the Romans countered them effectively and they routed back through the Carthaginian ranks.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=291β293}} The Roman and allied Numidian cavalry then pressed their attacks and drove the Carthaginian cavalry from the field. The two sides' infantry fought inconclusively until the Roman cavalry returned and attacked the Carthaginian rear. The Carthaginian formation collapsed; Hannibal was one of the few to escape the field.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=315}} The new peace treaty dictated by Rome stripped Carthage of all of its overseas territories and some of its African ones; an indemnity of 10,000 silver talents{{#tag:ref|10,000 talents was approximately {{convert|265|lt|kg|order=flip|abbr=in}} of silver.{{sfn|Lazenby|1996|p=179}}|group=note}} was to be paid over 50 years; hostages were to be taken; Carthage was forbidden to possess war elephants and its fleet was restricted to 10 warships; it was prohibited from waging war outside Africa and in Africa only with Rome's express permission. Many senior Carthaginians wanted to reject it, but Hannibal spoke strongly in its favour and it was accepted in spring 201{{spaces}}BC.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=308β309}} Henceforth it was clear that Carthage was politically subordinate to Rome.{{sfn|Eckstein|2006|p=176}} Scipio was awarded a [[Roman triumph|triumph]] and received the {{lang|la|[[agnomen]]}} "Africanus".{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=318}} Under the pressure of the war, the Romans developed an increasingly effective system of logistics to equip and feed the unprecedented numbers of soldiers they fielded. During the last three years of the war this was extended to the transporting by sea from Sicily to Africa of almost all the requirements of Scipio's large army. These developments made possible the subsequent Roman overseas wars of conquest.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=359β360}} ==Interbellum, 201β149 BC== At the end of the war, Masinissa emerged as by far the most powerful ruler among the Numidians.{{sfn|Kunze|2015|p=398}} Over the following 48 years he repeatedly took advantage of Carthage's inability to protect its possessions. Whenever Carthage petitioned Rome for redress, or permission to take military action, Rome backed its ally, Masinissa, and refused.{{sfn|Kunze|2015|pp=398, 407}} Masinissa's seizures of and raids into Carthaginian territory became increasingly flagrant. In 151{{spaces}}BC Carthage raised an army, the treaty notwithstanding, and [[counterattack]]ed the Numidians. The campaign ended in disaster for the Carthaginians at the [[battle of Oroscopa]] when their army surrendered.{{sfn|Kunze|2015|p=407}} Carthage had paid off its indemnity and was prospering economically, but was no military threat to Rome.{{sfn|Kunze|2015|p=408}}{{sfn|Le Bohec|2015|p=434}} However, elements in the Roman Senate had long wished to destroy Carthage and with the breach of the treaty as a ''[[casus belli]]'', war was declared in 149{{spaces}}BC.{{sfn|Kunze|2015|p=407}} ==Third Punic War, 149β146 BC== {{Main|Third Punic War}} {{Campaignbox Third Punic War}} In 149{{spaces}}BC a Roman army of approximately 50,000 men, jointly commanded by both consuls, landed near [[Utica, Tunisia|Utica]], {{convert|35|km}} north of Carthage.{{sfn|Le Bohec|2015|pp=436β437}} Rome demanded that if war were to be avoided, the Carthaginians must hand over all of their armaments. Vast amounts of materiel were delivered, including 200,000 sets of armour, 2,000 [[Ballista#Early Roman ballistae|catapults]] and a large number of warships.{{sfn|Le Bohec|2015|p=438}} This done, the Romans demanded the Carthaginians burn their city and relocate at least {{convert|10|mi|km|order=flip}} from the sea; the Carthaginians broke off negotiations and set to recreating their [[Arsenal|armoury]].{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|pp=309β310}} ===Siege of Carthage=== {{Main|Siege of Carthage (Third Punic War)}} [[File:Bronze statue of a Hellenistic prince, 1st half of 2nd century BC, found on the Quirinal in Rome, Palazzo Massimo alle Terme, Rome (31479801364).jpg|thumb|upright=0.7|alt=a bronze head, believed by some experts to depict Scipio Aemilianus|{{center|The "[[Hellenistic Prince]]", tentatively identified as Scipio Aemilianus{{sfn|Coarelli|1981|p=187}}}}]] As well as manning the walls of Carthage, the Carthaginians formed a [[field army]] under [[Hasdrubal the Boetharch]], which was based {{convert|25|km}} to the south.{{sfn|Le Bohec|2015|p=439}}{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=343}} The Roman army moved to lay siege to Carthage, but its walls were so strong and its citizen militia so determined it was unable to make any impact, while the Carthaginians struck back effectively. Their army raided the Roman [[Line of communication|lines of communication]],{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=343}} and in 148{{spaces}}BC Carthaginian [[fire ship]]s destroyed many Roman vessels. The main Roman camp was in a swamp, which caused an outbreak of disease during the summer.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=314}} The Romans moved their camp, and their ships, further away{{snd}}so they were now more blockading than closely besieging the city.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=315}} The war dragged on into 147{{spaces}}BC.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=343}} In early 147{{spaces}}BC [[Scipio Aemilianus]], an adopted grandson of Scipio Africanus who had distinguished himself during the previous two years' fighting, was elected consul and took control of the war.{{sfn|Kunze|2015|p=407}}{{sfn|Le Bohec|2015|p=440}} The Carthaginians continued to resist vigorously: they constructed warships and, during the summer, twice gave battle to the Roman fleet, losing both times.{{sfn|Le Bohec|2015|p=440}} The Romans launched an assault on the walls; after confused fighting they broke into the city, but, becoming disoriented in the dark, withdrew. Hasdrubal and his army retreated into the city to reinforce the garrison.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|pp=348β349}} Hasdrubal had Roman prisoners tortured to death on the walls, in view of the Roman army. He was reinforcing the will to resist in the Carthaginian citizens; from this point there could be no possibility of negotiations. Some members of the city council denounced his actions and Hasdrubal had them put to death and took control of the city.{{sfn|Le Bohec|2015|p=440}}{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=349}} With no Carthaginian army in the field, those cities which had remained loyal went over to the Romans or were captured.{{sfn|Bagnall|1999|p=318}} Scipio moved back to a close blockade of the city and built a [[Mole (architecture)|mole]] which cut off supply from the sea.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=2}} In the spring of 146{{spaces}}BC the Roman army managed to secure a foothold on the fortifications near the harbour.{{sfn|Le Bohec|2015|p=441}}{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=346}} Scipio launched a major assault which quickly captured the city's main square, where the legions camped overnight.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=3}} The next morning, the Romans started systematically working their way through the residential part of the city, killing everyone they encountered and burning the buildings behind them.{{sfn|Le Bohec|2015|p=441}} At times, the Romans progressed from rooftop to rooftop, to prevent missiles being hurled down on them.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=3}} It took six days to clear the city of resistance; only on the last day did Scipio take prisoners. The last holdouts, including Roman [[deserter]]s in Carthaginian service, fought on from the Temple of [[Eshmun|Eshmoun]] and burnt it down around themselves when all hope was gone.{{sfn|Miles|2011|pp=3β4}} There were 50,000 Carthaginian prisoners, a small proportion of the pre-war population, who were sold into slavery.{{sfn|Scullard|2002|p=316}} There is a tradition that Roman forces then [[Salting the earth|sowed the city with salt]], but this has been shown to have been a 19th-century invention.{{sfn|Ridley|1986|pp=144β145}}{{sfn|Baker|2014|p=50}} ==Aftermath== [[File:Carthage-1958-PortsPuniques.jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|left|alt=a colour photograph of a semi-urban area by the sea on a sunny day|{{center|The site of Carthage in 1958, showing the circular war harbour capable of holding 170 galleys.{{sfn|Miles|2011|p=2}}}}]] The remaining Carthaginian territories were annexed by Rome and reconstituted to become the [[Africa Province|Roman province of Africa]] with Utica as its capital.{{sfn|Scullard|2002|pp=310, 316}} The province became a major source of grain and other foodstuffs for Rome.{{sfn|Whittaker|1996|p=596}} Numerous large Punic cities, such as those in [[Mauretania]], were taken over by the Romans,{{sfn|Pollard|2015|p = 249}} although they were permitted to retain their Punic system of government.{{sfn|Fantar|2015|pp=455β456}} A century later, the site of Carthage was [[Roman Carthage|rebuilt as a Roman city]] by [[Julius Caesar]]; it became one of the main cities of Roman Africa by the time of the [[Roman Empire|Empire]].{{sfn|Richardson|2015|pp=480β481}}{{sfn|Miles|2011|pp=363β364}} Rome still exists as the capital of Italy;{{sfn|Mazzoni|2010|pp=13β14}} the ruins of Carthage lie {{convert|24|km|sigfig=2}} east of [[Tunis]] on the North African coast.{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=296}}{{sfn|UNESCO|2020}} {{-}} ==Notes, citations and sources== ===Notes=== {{reflist|30em|group=note}} ===Citations=== {{reflist|20em}} ===Sources=== {{refbegin|30em|indent=yes}} * {{cite book |editor1-last=Hoyos |editor1-first=Dexter |first=Walter |last=Ameling |chapter=The Rise of Carthage to 264 |date=2015 |orig-year=2011 |title=A Companion to the Punic Wars |location=Chichester, West Sussex |publisher=John Wiley |pages= 39β57|isbn=978-1-119-02550-4}} * {{cite web |url=http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/37 |title=Archaeological Site of Carthage |date=2020 |website=UNESCO |access-date=26 July 2020 |ref={{sfnRef|UNESCO|2020}} }} * {{cite book |first=A. E. |last=Astin| chapter=Sources |pages=1β16 | editor2-first= F. W. |editor2-last=Walbank |editor1-first=A. E. |editor1-last=Astin |editor3-first=M. W. |editor3-last=Frederiksen |editor4-first=R. M. |editor4-last=Ogilvie |editor2-link=F. W. Walbank |title=Cambridge Ancient History: Rome and the Mediterranean to 133 B.C., Volume 8, 2nd Edition| location=Cambridge|publisher=Cambridge University Press |name-list-style=amp |year=2006 |orig-year=1989| isbn= 978-0-521-23448-1}} * {{cite book |last=Bagnall |first=Nigel |date=1999 |title=The Punic Wars: Rome, Carthage and the Struggle for the Mediterranean|location=London |publisher=Pimlico |isbn=978-0-7126-6608-4|author-link=Nigel Bagnall}} * {{cite book |last1=Baker |first1=Heather D.|chapter='I Burnt, Razed (and) Destroyed those Cities': The Assyrian Accounts of Deliberate Architectural Destruction |editor1-last=Mancini |editor1-first=JoAnne |editor2-last=Bresnahan |editor2-first= Keith |date=2014 |title=Architecture and Armed Conflict: The Politics of Destruction |location=New York |publisher=Routledge |pages=45β57 |isbn=978-0-415-70249-2 }} * {{cite book |editor1-last=Hoyos |editor1-first=Dexter |first=Pedro |last=BarcelΓ³ |chapter=Punic Politics, Economy, and Alliances, 218β201 |date=2015 |orig-year=2011 |title=A Companion to the Punic Wars |location=Chichester, West Sussex |publisher=John Wiley |pages= 357β375|isbn=978-1-119-02550-4}} * {{cite book |editor1-last=Hoyos |editor1-first=Dexter |first=Yann |last=Le Bohec |chapter= The "Third Punic War": The Siege of Carthage (148β146 BC) |date=2015 |orig-year=2011 |title=A Companion to the Punic Wars |location=Chichester, West Sussex |publisher=John Wiley |pages=430β446 |isbn=978-1-1190-2550-4 |author-link=Yann Le Bohec}} * {{cite book|last=Bringmann|first=Klaus|author-link=Klaus Bringmann|title=A History of the Roman Republic|location=Cambridge, United Kingdom|publisher=Polity Press|year=2007|isbn=978-0-7456-3370-1}} * {{cite book |last=Briscoe |first=John |year=2006 |title=The Cambridge Ancient History: Rome and the Mediterranean to 133 B.C. |volume=VIII |location=Cambridge |publisher=Cambridge University Press |pages=44β80 |isbn=978-0-521-23448-1 |chapter=The Second Punic War |editor1-last=Astin |editor1-first=A. E. |editor2-last=Walbank |editor2-first=F. W. |editor3-last=Frederiksen |editor3-first=M. W. |editor4-last=Ogilvie |editor4-first=R. M.|editor4-link=Robert Maxwell Ogilvie}} * {{cite book |last=Carey |first=Brian Todd |date=2007 |title=Hannibal's Last Battle: Zama & the Fall of Carthage |url= |location=Barnslet, South Yorkshire |publisher=Pen & Sword |page= |isbn=978-1-84415-635-1 |author-link= }} * {{cite book |title=Ships and Seamanship in the Ancient World |first=Lionel|last= Casson |author-link= Lionel Casson|location=Baltimore |publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press |year=1995 |isbn=978-0-8018-5130-8}} *{{cite book |last1=Castillo |first1=Dennis Angelo |title=The Maltese Cross: A Strategic History of Malta |date=2006|location=Westport, Connecticut |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |isbn=978-0-313-32329-4}} * {{cite book |editor1-last=Hoyos |editor1-first=Dexter |first=Craige B. |last=Champion |chapter=Polybius and the Punic Wars |date=2015 |orig-year=2011 |title=A Companion to the Punic Wars |location=Chichester, West Sussex |publisher=John Wiley |pages=95β110 |isbn=978-1-1190-2550-4 }} * {{cite book |last=Coarelli |first=Filippo |date=1981 |title=Gli Etruschi e Roma : atti dell'incontro di studio in onore di Massimo Pallottino : Roma, 11-13 dicembre 1979 |language=it |location=Rome |publisher=G. Bretschneider |pages=173β188 |isbn=978-88-85007-51-2 |author-link=Filippo Coarelli |editor1-last= Pallottino |editor1-first=Massimo |chapter=La doppia tradizione sulla morte di Romolo e gli auguracula dell'Arx e del Quirinale}} *{{Cite journal | volume =II | issue =1 |pages=47β75 |last=Coarelli |first=Filippo | title =I ritratti di 'Mario' e 'Silla' a Monaco e il sepolcro degli Scipioni | journal =Eutopia Nuova Serie | date =2002 | issn =1121-1628 |language=it }} * {{cite book|last=Collins|first=Roger|location=Oxford; New York|author-link=Roger Collins |title=Spain: An Oxford Archaeological Guide|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=1998|isbn=978-0-19-285300-4}} * {{cite book |last=Eckstein |first=Arthur |date=2006 |title=Mediterranean Anarchy, Interstate War, and the Rise of Rome |location=Berkeley |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-24618-8 |author-link=Arthur Eckstein }} * {{cite encyclopedia | encyclopaedia =The Encyclopedia of Ancient Battles |last= Eckstein |first=Arthur |title = The First Punic War and After, 264β237 BC|date=2017 |pages = 1β14|publisher=Wiley Online Library |doi=10.1002/9781119099000.wbabat0270 |isbn = 978-1-4051-8645-2}} * {{cite book |editor1-last=Hoyos |editor1-first=Dexter |first=Peter |last=Edwell |chapter=War Abroad: Spain, Sicily, Macedon, Africa |year=2011 |title=A Companion to the Punic Wars |location=Chichester, West Sussex |publisher=John Wiley |pages= 320β338|isbn=978-1-119-02550-4}} * {{cite book |editor1-last=Hoyos |editor1-first=Dexter |first=Peter |last=Edwell |chapter=War Abroad: Spain, Sicily, Macedon, Africa |year=2015 |orig-year=2011 |title=A Companion to the Punic Wars |location=Chichester, West Sussex |publisher=John Wiley |pages= 320β338|isbn=978-1-119-02550-4}} * {{cite book |editor1-last=Hoyos |editor1-first=Dexter |first=Paul |last=Erdkamp |chapter=Manpower and Food Supply in the First and Second Punic Wars |date=2015 |orig-year=2011 |title=A Companion to the Punic Wars |location=Chichester, West Sussex |publisher=John Wiley |pages= 58β76 |isbn=978-1-1190-2550-4}} * {{cite book |last=Etcheto |first=Henri |date=2012 |title=Les Scipions. Famille et pouvoir Γ Rome Γ l'Γ©poque rΓ©publicaine |url=https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01984245/document |location=Bordeaux |publisher=Ausonius Γditions |isbn=978-2-35613-073-0 |language=fr }} *{{Cite journal | volume = 64 | issue = | pages =14β26 | first = William | last = Harris | title =Rome at Sea: The Beginnings of Roman Naval Power | journal =Greece & Rome | date = 2017 |oclc=8272528735 | jstor = }} * {{cite book |editor1-last=Hoyos |editor1-first=Dexter |first=Mβhamed-Hassine |last=Fantar |chapter=Death and Transfiguration: Punic Culture after 146 |date=2015 |orig-year=2011 |title=A Companion to the Punic Wars |location=Chichester, West Sussex |publisher=John Wiley |pages=449β466 |isbn=978-1-1190-2550-4}} * {{cite book| editor-last1 = Hoyos| editor-first1 = Dexter| title = A Companion to the Punic Wars| chapter=Hannibal: Tactics, Strategy, and Geostrategy |author-last=Fronda|author-first=Michael P. |pages=242β259| publisher = Wiley-Blackwell| location = Oxford| year=2011| isbn = 978-1-405-17600-2}} * {{cite book|last=Goldsworthy|first=Adrian|author-link=Adrian Goldsworthy|title=The Fall of Carthage: The Punic Wars 265β146 BC|publisher=Phoenix|location=London|year=2006|isbn=978-0-304-36642-2}} * {{cite book |last=Goldsworthy |year=2001 |first=Adrian |title=Cannae |place=London |publisher=Cassell |isbn=0-304-35714-6}} * {{cite book |last=Hau |first=Lisa |date=2016 |title=Moral History from Herodotus to Diodorus Siculus |location=Edinburgh |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |isbn=978-1-4744-1107-3 }} * {{cite book | editor1-last=Hoyos | editor1-first=Dexter | first=Toni | last=Γaco del Hoyo | chapter= Roman Economy, Finance, and Politics in the Second Punic War | date=2015 | orig-year=2011 | title=A Companion to the Punic Wars | location=Chichester, West Sussex | publisher=John Wiley | pages= 376β392 | isbn=978-1-1190-2550-4 }} * {{Cite journal | volume =143 | issue =3/4 | pages =369β380 |first=Dexter |last=Hoyos |date=2000 | title =Towards a Chronology of the 'Truceless War', 241β237 B.C. | journal =Rheinisches Museum fΓΌr Philologie | jstor =41234468}} * {{cite book |first=Dexter |last=Hoyos |date=2015 |orig-year=2011 |title=A Companion to the Punic Wars |location=Chichester, West Sussex |publisher=John Wiley |isbn=978-1-1190-2550-4 }} *{{cite book|last=Hoyos|first=Dexter|title=Mastering the West: Rome and Carthage at War|year=2015b|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |location=Oxford |isbn=978-0-19-986010-4}} * {{cite book |editor1-last=Hoyos |editor1-first=Dexter |first=Dexter |last=Hoyos |chapter=The Outbreak of War |date=2015c |orig-year=2011 |title=A Companion to the Punic Wars |location=Chichester, West Sussex |publisher=John Wiley |pages= 131β148|isbn=978-1-119-02550-4}} * {{cite book|editor1-last=Hoyos|editor1-first=Dexter|last=Koon |first=Sam|chapter=Phalanx and Legion: the "Face" of Punic War Battle |date=2015 |orig-year=2011|title=A Companion to the Punic Wars|location=Chichester, West Sussex|publisher=John Wiley|pages=77β94 |isbn=978-1-1190-2550-4}} * {{cite book |last=Jones |first=Archer |date=1987 |title=The Art of War in the Western World |location=Urbana |publisher=University of Illinois Press |isbn=978-0-252-01380-5 }} * {{cite book|editor1-last=Hoyos|editor1-first=Dexter|last=Kunze |first=Claudia|chapter=Carthage and Numidia, 201β149 |date=2015 |orig-year=2011|title=A Companion to the Punic Wars|location=Chichester, West Sussex|publisher=John Wiley|pages=395β411 |isbn=978-1-1190-2550-4}} * {{cite book|last=Lazenby|first=John|title=The First Punic War: A Military History|location=Stanford, California|publisher=Stanford University Press|year=1996|isbn=978-0-8047-2673-3}} * {{cite book |last=Lazenby |first=John |date=1998 |title=Hannibal's War: A Military History of the Second Punic War |location=Warminster |publisher=Aris & Phillips |isbn=978-0-85668-080-9 }} *{{Cite journal | volume =28 | pages =13β29 | last =Mazzoni | first =Cristina | title =Capital City: Rome 1870β2010 | journal =Annali d'Italianistica | date =2010 | jstor =24016385 }} * {{cite book |last=Melfi |first=Milena |date=2017 |title=Writing Matters: Presenting and Perceiving Monumental Inscriptions in Antiquity and the Middle Ages |chapter=The Stele of Polybios: Art, Text and Context in Second-Century BC Greece |editor1-last=Berti |editor1-first=Irene |editor2-last=Bolle |editor2-first=Katharina |editor3-last=Opdenhof |editor3-first=Fanny |editor4-last=Stroth |editor4-first=Fabian |name-list-style=amp |url= |location=Berlin; Boston |publisher=De Gruyter |pages=191β203 |isbn=978-3-11-053459-7 |author-link= }} * {{cite book|last=Miles|first=Richard|author-link= Richard Miles (historian) |title=Carthage Must be Destroyed|location=London|publisher=Penguin |year=2011|isbn=978-0-14-101809-6}} * {{cite book |editor1-last=Hoyos |editor1-first=Dexter |first=Bernard |last=Mineo |chapter=Principal Literary Sources for the Punic Wars (apart from Polybius) |date=2015 |orig-year=2011 |title=A Companion to the Punic Wars |location=Chichester, West Sussex |publisher=John Wiley |pages= 111β128 |isbn=978-1-1190-2550-4 }} * {{Cite book|title=The Age of Titans: The Rise and Fall of the Great Hellenistic Navies|last=Murray|first=William |publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2011|isbn=978-0-19-993240-5|location=Oxford}} * {{cite book |last=Pollard |first=Elizabeth |date=2015 |title=Worlds Together, Worlds Apart: A History of the World: From the Beginnings of Humankind to the Present |location=New York |publisher=W. W. Norton |isbn=978-0-393-92207-3 }} * {{cite book |last=Potter |first=David |date=2014 |title=The Cambridge Companion to the Roman Republic |url= |location=New York |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=54β77 |isbn=978-1-107-03224-8 |author-link=David Stone Potter |chapter=The Roman Army and Navy |editor1-last=Flower |editor1-first=Harriet |edition=Second }} * {{cite book |author-link=Boris Rankov |editor-last1=Hoyos |editor-first1=Dexter |title=A Companion to the Punic Wars |chapter=A War of Phases: Strategies and Stalemates |pages=149β166 |author-last=Rankov |author-first=Boris |location=Chichester, West Sussex|publisher=John Wiley |date=2015|orig-year=2011|isbn=978-1-4051-7600-2 }} * {{cite book |editor1-last=Hoyos |editor1-first=Dexter |first=Louis |last=Rawlings |chapter=The War in Italy, 218β203 |date=2015 |orig-year=2011 |title=A Companion to the Punic Wars |location=Chichester, West Sussex |publisher=John Wiley |pages= 58β76 |isbn=978-1-1190-2550-4 }} * {{cite book |editor1-last=Hoyos |editor1-first=Dexter |first=John |last=Richardson |chapter=Spain, Africa, and Rome after Carthage |date=2015 |orig-year=2011 |title=A Companion to the Punic Wars |location=Chichester, West Sussex |publisher=John Wiley |pages= 467β482 |isbn=978-1-1190-2550-4 }} *{{Cite journal | volume =81 | issue =2 | pages =140β146 | last =Ridley | first =Ronald | title =To Be Taken with a Pinch of Salt: The Destruction of Carthage | journal =Classical Philology | date =1986 | doi =10.1086/366973 | jstor =269786 | s2cid =161696751 }} * {{cite book | last=Roberts | first=Mike | date=2017 | title=Hannibal's Road: The Second Punic War in Italy 213β203 BC | url= | location=Pen & Sword | publisher=Barnsley, South Yorkshire | page= | isbn=978-1-47385-595-3 | author-link= }} *{{Cite journal | volume =41 | issue =67 | pages =59β79 | last =Sabin | first =Philip | title =The Mechanics of Battle in the Second Punic War | journal =Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies. Supplement | date =1996 | doi = 10.1111/j.2041-5370.1996.tb01914.x | jstor =43767903 |author-link= Philip Sabin }} * {{cite book |last=Scullard |first=Howard H.|author-link= Howard Hayes Scullard |date=2002 |title= A History of the Roman World, 753 to 146 BC |location=London |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-415-30504-4 }} * {{cite book |first=Howard H. |last=Scullard |chapter=Carthage and Rome |pages=486β569 |editor1-first= F. W. |editor1-last=Walbank |editor2-first=A. E. |editor2-last=Astin |editor3-first=M. W. |editor3-last=Frederiksen |editor4-first=R. M. |editor4-last=Ogilvie|title=Cambridge Ancient History: Volume 7, Part 2, 2nd Edition| location=Cambridge|publisher=Cambridge University Press|name-list-style=amp |year=2006 |orig-year=1989| isbn= 978-0-521-23446-7}} * {{Cite journal | volume =8 | issue =22 | pages =50β57 | last =Shutt | first =Rowland | title =Polybius: A Sketch | journal =Greece & Rome | date =1938 | jstor =642112 | doi =10.1017/S001738350000588X| s2cid =162905667 }} * {{cite book | last1 = Sidwell | first1 = Keith C. | last2=Jones | first2= Peter V. |author-link2= Peter Jones (classicist) | title = The World of Rome: An Introduction to Roman Culture | publisher=Cambridge University Press | year = 1998 | location=Cambridge | isbn = 978-0-521-38600-5}} *{{Cite journal | volume = 32 | issue = | pages =14β40 | last = Sogliano | first = A. | title = Regione I: IX Pompei | journal =Notizie degli scavi di antichitΓ | date = 1897 | oclc= 919722697 | lang=It }} * {{Cite book | first = Philip | last = de Souza | chapter=Naval Forces | pages = 357β367 | editor1-first = Philip | editor1-last = Sabin | editor2-first = Hans | editor2-last = van Wees | editor3-first = Michael | editor3-last = Whitby |name-list-style=amp | title = The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare, Volume 1: Greece, the Hellenistic World and the Rise of Rome | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 2008 |location=Cambridge | isbn = 978-0-521-85779-6 }} * {{Cite journal | volume = 34 | issue = 4 | pages =432β465 | last = Tipps | first = G.K. | title = The Battle of Ecnomus | journal = Historia: Zeitschrift fΓΌr Alte Geschichte | date = 1985 | jstor = 4435938}} * {{Cite journal | volume =96 | issue =4 | pages =375β385 | last = Tipps | first = G. K. | title =The Defeat of Regulus | journal =The Classical World | year =2003 | doi =10.2307/4352788 | jstor =4352788 }} * {{cite book |last=Walbank |first=F. W. |date=1990 |title=Polybius |location=Berkeley |publisher=University of California Press |isbn= 978-0-520-06981-7}} * {{cite book|last=Wallinga|first=Herman|title=The Boarding-bridge of the Romans: Its Construction and its Function in the Naval Tactics of the First Punic War|oclc=458845955|publisher=J.B. Wolters|location= Groningen|year=1956}} * {{cite book|last=Warmington|first=Brian|author-link= Brian Herbert Warmington|title=Carthage|publisher=Barnes & Noble, Inc|year=1993|orig-year=1960|location=New York|isbn=978-1-56619-210-1}} * {{cite book|editor1-last=Bowman|editor1-first= A.|editor2-last= Champlin|editor2-first= E.|editor3-last= Lintott|editor3-first= A.|date=1996 |title=The Cambridge Ancient History|location= Cambridge|publisher= Cambridge University Press|doi=10.1017/CHOL9780521264303.022 |volume=X|pages= 595β596|chapter=Roman Africa: Augustus to Vespasian|last1=Whittaker|first1=C. R.|isbn= 978-1-139-05438-6}} * {{cite book| editor-last1 = Hoyos| editor-first1 = Dexter| title = A Companion to the Punic Wars| chapter=Roman Strategy and Aims in the Second Punic War|pages=280β298 |author-last=Zimmermann|author-first=Klaus |author-link= Klaus Zimmermann | publisher = John Wiley| location = Oxford| year = 2011| isbn = 978-1-405-17600-2}} {{refend}} {{Punic Wars navbox}} {{Ancient Roman Wars}} {{Subject bar|History|Phoenicia|Ancient Rome|Italy|Portugal|Spain|Africa |commons = Category:Punic Wars |d = Q124988 |s = Portal:Punic Wars |wikt = Punic War }} {{Authority control}} [[Category:Punic Wars| ]]
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