Dan Snow's History Hit - The Rise and Fall of Carthage
Episode Date: August 28, 2025In this episode, we tackle the Punic Wars - three epic clashes between Rome and Carthage for control of the Mediterranean. From naval battles to Hannibal’s daring Alpine crossing and Carthage’s fi...nal destruction, we uncover how these wars reshaped the ancient world.Joining us is Eve MacDonald, ancient historian and author of Carthage: A New History of an Ancient Empire, to explain why these two rising powers collided in a fight for supremacy.Produced by James Hickmann and edited by Dougal Patmore.Join Dan and the team for a special LIVE recording of Dan Snow's History Hit on Friday, 12th September 2025! To celebrate 10 years of the podcast, Dan is putting on a special show of signature storytelling, never-before-heard anecdotes from his often stranger-than-fiction career, as well as answering the burning questions you've always wanted to ask!Get tickets here, before they sell out: https://www.kingsplace.co.uk/whats-on/words/dan-snows-history-hit/.You can also get tickets for the live show of 'The Ancients' here - https://www.kingsplace.co.uk/whats-on/words/the-ancients-2/We'd love to hear your feedback - you can take part in our podcast survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on.You can also email the podcast directly at ds.hh@historyhit.com. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi, everybody. Welcome. Welcome to Dan Snow's history hit.
Today I'm going to take you all the way back to the third.
century BC, it's the ultimate clash of the Titans. It's the alien versus predator of the ancient
world. Whoever wins, well, everybody else loses, it is Rome versus Carthage. Two city-states
turned regional empires, powerhouses and champions of Europe and Africa, respectively,
locked in a struggle for supremacy that spanned more than a century. These weren't just
wars over specific bits of territory. They are battles to the death between two ancient
superpowers, fighting for dominance over the Mediterranean world. You're going to hear about
war elephants trudging through the snow of high alpine passes. You're going to hear about the
biggest, probably naval and land battles to that point in European history. There are year-long
sieges, there are scorched earth campaigns. It's the Punic Wars, folks. Some of the most
savage conflict the ancient world ever witnessed. There are the commanders, men like Hannibal,
men like Scipio-Africanus, men like Quintus Fabius Maximus Cunctartor, men who became the
stuff of legend for their campaigning brilliance in this period. And in the end, in the end,
only one of those two empires will be left standing. We now know who came out victorious. I don't
mind telling you, it's Rome. If you listen to this podcast, you really should know that. But at the
time at many stages during those punit wars, it could have gone either way. It was not a foregone
conclusion. Today we're going to unpack those legendary clashes between Rome and Carthage.
Why did they end up fighting? And what made these wars so long-lasting, so devastating?
And why finally did Rome emerge as the undisputed master of the Mediterranean?
Joining me is the very brilliant Eve McDonald's Senior Lecture in Ancient History at Cardiff University
and author of Carthage,
a new history of an ancient empire.
Enjoy.
T-minus 10.
The Thomas bombs dropped on Hiroshima.
God saves the king.
No black-quite unity
till there is first than black unity.
Never to go to war with one another again.
And lift-off, and the shuttle has cleared the tower.
Eve, thank you so much for coming on the show.
Tell me, at its height,
Should we think about Carthage as a global empire, one of the world's great ancient empires, you're sort of up there with the chin and the Romans and the Persians, perhaps the Inca in South America? Is that the kind of scale we're talking about?
Well, hello, Dan. Thank you for having me on the program. I actually think so. I really do. I mean, in the sense that it's very early in the history of the Mediterranean that Carthage is at its height. And so because of that, we don't have the same amount of evidence that we do for the Romans, but they were certainly a comparable power to the Romans.
in the third century BC, when the Punic Wars were fought, when you have this big clash
between these two really important city states, whether Carthage was an empire in itself is
something that people debate on and on about. And I think that you can, certainly in the third
century BC, call Carthagin Empire. It has allied territory in Sicily, all of the southern
part of Spain and Portugal, along the coast of Africa, all the way through what we consider to
be Libya all the way through to Morocco. So it's got a big landmass of people that are allied
to it. So I think it's fair to think of it as a big empire. I can see some allied there and I can
tell as an academic, you're trying to make things simple for me to understand here, but this is the
problem that empire doesn't mean what it means in the 19th century. It's not like the British Empire
painting everything pink, does it, or red. We're talking about tributary arrangements and sort of
alliances, which are a bit one-sided. And different in different places. Absolutely. And that's so
important too, because what we think of as empire is so heavily tainted by what comes hundreds of
years after the wars between Carthage and Rome. And so in many ways, what we have are these big city
states that are gaining more and more power and using their influence, their soft and hard power
really to acquire more and more territory, more and more land, and more money, more economic gains,
all that sort of stuff. So in the sense of Roman Carthage as big imperial powers, in the time that
they fought, they probably wouldn't technically be called empires. They're building towards that
almost. So we're seeing this idea of empire in formation, which is really interesting, both from
the Roman perspective and the Carthaginian perspective. But yes, they're having more of a dialogue with
the people they're engaging with most of the time, although of course not always. And sometimes it's
very much a hard power conquest situation. Okay, so I don't want to get too much into the weeds here,
but for example, in southern Spain, you might get a situation for a local city. They keep their
local magistrates, their local elites, but everyone knows that actually they have to do what the
Carthaginians tell them. They do, or they might face destruction. They have choices to make.
We all have these ideas of people doing this voluntarily, but in many ways when you're dealing with
these two bigger powers that are taking over the whole of the Western Mediterranean in this period,
everybody's making some pretty difficult choices.
Choices about which side you pick
in what is almost a century-long war,
all that sort of stuff at plays out.
And everyone knows they've got to pick a side.
Yeah.
Okay, so I've got way ahead of myself here.
Let's go back to the beginning.
What is the...
Because I'm always so struck.
But Carthage, it comes from the east, doesn't it?
It does.
It comes from the east.
And the name Carthage itself
is just a Roman, Latin term
for the Phoenician language word
for the new city.
Oh, really?
It just means, like Naples or Neapolis in Greek, means the new city.
It's the new city.
It's the new city founded from a city in Lebanon called Tyre that was part of a group of Phoenician-speaking urban settlements along the coast of the eastern Mediterranean that began to move out into the Western Mediterranean really early in the first millennium BCE.
So from the 10th century to about the 8th, 7th century.
So the Greeks rat it famously, they're going to southern Italy.
they're pushing to southern France.
What is to say southern France?
These Phoenicians are at it too.
The Phoenicians are at it.
In fact, the Phoenicians are probably the first to do it.
And we think that the Greeks come later.
The evidence points to very, very early settlements of Phoenician colonies all the way to the very
edge of the Mediterranean at Cadiz, which is outside on the Atlantic coast of Spain today.
So these are maritime.
You've got me at Maritime Empire, so I'm very excited.
That's my happy place.
So they're using their shipbuilding, superb shipbuilding.
They're wonderful materials on that coast to build ships as well,
and building these little nodes all around the Mediterranean world.
Yeah, they're working on the idea of trade and sort of exploration
and searching for new resource bases all the way around the Mediterranean.
So we know they first go to Cyprus, the Phoenicians,
then they go to Crete and Greece, then they move even further west.
They continue on to Sicily.
they found cities in the Balearic Islands on Corsica and Sardinia on the southern coast of Spain and Portugal,
and then all the way along the coast of Africa back. And it's following the trade winds and the natural currents in the Mediterranean that you know all about.
You know, that's how you would go if you're keeping always land in sight.
You need a sort of port by port by port movement across the sea.
And that's what the Phoenicians do.
So Carthage is just one of many Phoenician cities all around the Mediterranean.
Carthage becomes the most famous, the most powerful, but it's just the new city.
Okay, so it's the new city. It's got a cool sort of natural harbour going on there.
And it's quite, we don't want to get too technical geography, but the North African coast is bad for sailing,
not many natural harbors, unlike the southern European coast.
But Carthid's got a real natural advantage, hasn't it?
It does, in the Greek historian Polybius, describes in this minute detail how perfect the location of Carthage is.
It's protected on the bay of what we call the Bay of Tunis today.
It's protected in this big bay, but it's also on the southern part of a peninsula.
So it's protected from winds within the bay itself.
So you can pull up and harbor safely at the place that Carthage was founded.
And it maintains its importance all the way through well to today,
because Tunis is basically just inland from where ancient Carthage was.
So it has been an important city since it was founded in the 9th century BC.
And now let's just deal with Dido, this mythical figure.
everyone seems to want to have some connection with the origin myth, the Trojan War, the Iliad.
So this is like an extension of the sort of Marvel franchise, the Marvel universe.
We get Carthage drawn into this story as well. Explain that.
Dido is just a Roman construction.
And she was imagined in the first century BC.
So many, many centuries after Carthage was founded as the mythical founder of Carthage,
we know there was a princess from the city of Tyre who did exist in the time.
that Carthage was founded and she's called Elishat or Elisa in Greek. And she had a brother
whose name was Pygmalion, a bit more famous than she is in some ways. And that there was a
disruption in the city and then there was an expedition that was sent out to the west of the
Mediterranean. So we think there is some basis in this story of Dido. She becomes known as Dido
by the Romans because it means it's like an epithet. It's a nickname. They call her that because it means
the wanderer. And she wandered with her group of nobles from Tyre before they founded the city
itself where Carthage stands. And so she was known as this woman who wandered the Mediterranean.
She founds a city, 9th century BC, on the north coast of Africa. And in the Roman mythology,
it's Anias, who was the Trojan prince who left Burning Troy with his father and sailed to the
west of the Mediterranean and is really destined by the God.
to found the Roman people, to become a founding part of the Roman people.
That's all a little bit confusing.
It's like, wait a second, what about Romulus and Remus?
Hang on here, there's some confusion.
But the fact is that the Roman foundation myths have two different points of entry.
One is the sort of bigger Mediterranean, and one is the sort of local Italic version.
So Dido is founding her city on the north coast of Africa,
and Aeneas sails by with his Trojans, and they meet.
they become the ultimate star-cross lovers in the story, in the Roman myth of their foundation.
And it is really an important story because it is the way that the later Romans are explaining
the Punic Wars and what happened between Roman Carthage and why it happened. And so they use
this Dido character and the city of Carthage as a way of explaining how and why the Carthaginians
and the Romans went to war. And it is all about Star Cross lovers and Innius jilt his queen.
and leaves North Africa and moves off to Italy, and she takes her own life. And when she does that,
she hurls a curse down on her leaving lover. And it's this sort of hell hath no fury like a woman
scorned. And it's a curse that conjures up some avenger of her blood. And this, of course,
leads us directly to the Roman story around Hannibal. So it's all part of a big myth. But underlying that
myth. We have evidence that something did happen in the 9th century BC at Carthage and the city
was founded. And we have other versions of this myth, too. We don't just have the one story.
Right. So let's come forward. Are these Phoenician states all bound, well, obviously, language and
customs and trade? Is there any kind of political integrity or do they all just set off on their own
and found their new things? Not that we know of. And the thing is that we also know that they're really
mixed cities at this point. So you already mentioned the fact that there are lots of Greeks in the
mix as well at the same time. Founding cities, Marseille, Syracuse, all kinds of places are being
founded at the same time in the Western Mediterranean. And we have Etruscan cities, and we have Rome
becoming a city at the same time. So all these places are in the mix and at play. And they're also,
we know now way more mixed populations than we used to think. So it's not just like one group of
Phoenicians who speak Phoenician, go to Carthage and live there. They're mixed with the Numidian people
of North Africa, the people called Amazir today, or used to be called Berber. There's lots of
Greeks in Carthage, and we know there's people from all over the Mediterranean. And that's true,
actually, of all the different cities in the Mediterranean, in the West. I always sort of think of it
like a colonial sort of, you know, new land that's being settled, you know. And it really is
like... Like Singapore and the height of the British Empire. All sorts of people. I'm from Canada. I know
lots of cities, you know, so are you in origin at some point. And yeah, this idea that
it's like Toronto might have been or all these places might have been.
These are new cities. People are coming for opportunities. It's not just one group of people.
But back to the question, there is a connection between people who speak Phoenician
and are part of that Phoenician cultural heritage in the Western Mediterranean.
And certainly we see when Carthage becomes a more established city and goes out into the Mediterranean,
more as itself rather than just a colony of Tyre, we see people from Carthage.
interacting in the west of Sicily where there's a lot of Phoenician settled cities and things
like that. So we assume that's what's happening. We have early treaties between Carthage and Rome
that go back to the sixth century BC and they talk about the spheres of influence of the two
cities. Really already. Yeah. Right when Rome becomes a republic. Almost dating to the first year of the
republic, we have a treaty between Carthage and Rome. So it's so interesting because Rome was a very
important city, even in the 6th century BC, although the Romans kind of downplay that in their
myths and stories. And Carthage was active all across the sea, all around Sardinia, Corsica, the
coast of Italy. And so they interact right away. And we don't know if it's the Romans who go,
we're a new republic, we want to be acknowledged by other powers, or if it's Carthage saying,
oh, new kids on the block, we better figure out who they are and what they're doing. So yeah.
And these are what organizing, how they can trade with each other and yeah. Yeah, it's really
around trade. It's like where can Romans go to exchange goods and where can the Carthaginians go
and which allies are connected to which city and things like that. So we have a good idea
that Carthage is pretty well established and entrenched in the southern part of Sardinia and Sicily
at this point in the 6th century. And that makes sense geographically if you just, you know,
look at a map of where it is. And do these two growing powers, they coexist for a couple of centuries
then? Centries. Really? Yeah. Yeah. Periods, little bits of war or on the whole? No,
they're allied all the way through until the third century BC. It's really amazing. They spend
hundreds of more years at peace than they do at war and they know each other really well.
And again, we only get the narrative of later wars, but we understand underneath that.
There's a lot of connection between the two cultures. Fascinating. Now, Rome is embarking on a period
of conquest in Italy. Is Carthage extending its sphere influence, its conquest, if you'll
It's overlordship, now what, through Spain and other areas?
Yeah, the first war happens just over Sicily, and it happens in the mid-third century BC,
and it's really Pyrrhus.
I don't know if you've ever done a story about Pyrrhus.
We've never done the Pyrrhic victories on the Pyrrhus, Pyrrhic victories.
Pyrrhus, who brings elephants into Italy and fights the Romans on behalf of Greeks and
Southern Italy, actually is the person who sort of lights the spark of a war between Carthage and Rome,
because Rome has conquered into southern, the very south of Italy,
fights with Pyrrhus, Pyrrhus wins Pyrrhic victory.
He goes to Sicily.
He fights the Carthaginians.
He does better against the Carthaginians.
So he's fighting both Rome and Carthaginian.
Yeah.
And then he just scarper's back to a Pyrrhus where he's from across the Adriatic
because something at home is a problem.
And Rome and Carthage are just left there looking at each other
right across the Straits of Messina where the toe of Italy meets the very tip of Sicily.
So he's just thrown a huge match into the barrel of gunpowder.
Absolutely.
And so those wars against Paris, they've sort of entrenched Roman control of southern Italy
and Carthaginian control-ish or of Sicily.
Yes, more or less.
More or less.
With the city of Syracuse at play as well.
Okay.
So there's really three city-states in the beginning of the Punic Wars.
And then Rome turns up with this huge military force.
It's classic Roman behavior.
Both consuls, all their soldiers, 40,000 troops.
I mean, for the time, it's extraordinary.
So they really mean business.
And the Syracusans are like, they at first allied briefly with the Carthaginians,
who they had fought with a lot, but were also allied with.
And then they looked at the writing on the wall almost of what Rome was coming to Sicily with
and just said, no, I'm going over to the Roman side.
And so it becomes Rome with the power of Navy of Syracuse against Carthage.
Because Syracuse had been a sort of powerful.
state in this own right. Yeah. Important cities. Yeah, and we forget about it sometimes,
but we shouldn't because it really is. It, of course, gets sucked into this whole thing
and conquered eventually, but it's such an important city at the time and a cultural presence of
the Greeks in Sicily. Is this a sort of stumbling into war by Axton, or for a few generations now,
have people on both sides been like, there is an endgame approaching. We are going to end up
fighting Rome for, had these two imperial entities just got too big to get along? That's a really good
question. I don't know that we would all agree. So I'm going to give you my view. Well, that's what
you hear from. And there's lots of people who might disagree with this. So my instinct on this is that
they are a little surprised by what happens. And often, you know, people compare this to the First World War,
the First Punic War, that it's a war that everybody gets into and then it's like, oh, what have we done?
Sort of thing. And that seems to be the case with the First Punic War. Rome is very, very successful in the
beginning of the war, and it's a war that's literally fought in a clockwise motion around
Sicily, in land and on sea, and these huge battles. And it's massive. The expenditure for the
navies, for the soldiers must have just, and did we know, almost bankrupt both cities by the
time it's ended over 20 years later. So it's just madness that they both went into it. The Romans
were better prepared in the beginning, but Carthage really dug deep, and it shows us
how much they could draw on the resources they had, that they could continue to resist the power of Rome for all that time.
And the Romans, what did they hope, was they, they once, presumably like all was it, began with a great idea,
which is a short, sharp little thing down here and sees a bit of useful territory.
So it's about the city of Syracuse, is it?
It's about the Straits of Messina.
And that area between Italy and Sicily, that's where it starts.
It starts with these great group of people called the Men of Mammers, which is the Oskine word for Mars, the god of war.
So these are mercenary soldiers who've seized the city of Messina, which is right on the Sicilian coast.
And they are there, and the Syracusans are giving them a hard time because they're not enjoying these mercenaries, disrupting everything around them.
So they turn to both Carthage and to Rome and invite them in to help them against the Syracusians.
So it's really Carthage and Rome answering the call of these mercenary soldiers.
Interesting.
And that's how it starts.
I don't want to make clumsy parallels, but you know, thinking about little Serbia,
Yeah, a little local difficulty with Austria,
and before you know out, the great powers of the world
we're all piling into it.
Crazy.
Okay, so it's a 20-year brutal war all around Sicily,
fought on land and sea.
Who wins?
The Romans win, and the amazing thing,
is that they win in a sea battle in 241 BC
off the west coast of Sicily,
near the island of Le Vanzo,
which is one of the Agathe Islands,
and we have the battle site.
That's what's so extraordinary.
We have the bronze rams from the ships,
that fought this sea battle, it's absolutely extraordinary.
So we know almost exactly what happened.
And we have the archaeological evidence.
It's just unbelievable.
So on the seabed, off of the west coast of Sicily, lies the battle site from this huge
sea battle that took place.
And it was the last battle.
It was honestly a step too far for Carthage.
It was the new fleet had been raised.
And the Romans pulled together a force and were able to surprise the Carthaginians and defeat them
in this massive sea battle off of Trappany, the city of Trappany in Sicily.
What effect is this gigantic war having?
If you look at the Great Wars of the 18th century, we talk about the emergence of these
fiscal military states. Britain and France gets some more powerful as they're investing and discovering
new bits of technology. Is that what's happening here with the Romans? Are they, is it just
the expenditure and the longevity and the nature's war giving even more strength to the Romans?
It is. It really is. And it's showing them their own resource.
I think that's essential, too.
If anything, the Romans are almost undefeatable because of their manpower resources from Italy
and the way that they negotiate manpower with their allied citizens and cities in Italy.
So it shows the Romans incredible resource in just pure manpower or people power.
And it also, the Romans become a sea power in the first Punic War.
Of course, and they hadn't really been before, although we think that they certainly were more advanced
than they like to claim. The Romans always kind of undersell themselves in their own story to kind
of show that it was destiny rather than their true grit that wins them their big empire.
And yes, the technology, the sea power, there's all kinds of different attempts at different
weapons in these naval battles that takes place. So yeah, the Rome becomes, in its way,
it's the first time it goes off of the Italian peninsula in war, so it's a huge step. And really,
they don't stop after this. I mean, they go on and in 150 years conquer the whole Mediterranean.
They learn at a sail. The Rome was a bad enough before. Now they've got shit. Okay. Yeah, yeah.
So even though it's this massive 20 year, it seems quite geographically confined just to Sicily.
It's only, why doesn't it break out right across the western Mediterranean? Well, it's interesting
because it does. The one thing that happens in the first Punic War that I think is so important
is that the Romans invade Africa.
And nobody's done this to the Carthaginians before,
except for Agathocles briefly in the century before that,
a Syracusan tyrant.
And the Romans, of course, who are allied with the Syracusans,
must have learned from them that Carthage is quite vulnerable at home.
And that if you invade Africa,
you can cut Carthage off from its allies,
and therefore the city itself becomes quite isolated.
And nobody has thought about this in the centuries beforehand, but they certainly do by the third century.
And the Romans use this with an invasion and the consul Regulus invades Africa.
And really the Carthaginians are put under an enormous amount of stress and strain at home.
And they almost lose everything.
And it's only with this recruitment of new soldiers from the East and a Spartan general, whose name is Xanthippus, comes to the rescue and a lot of elephants.
And the first Punic War is when we see Carthage using elephants for the first time in battle.
And we really have this invasion of Africa.
It's almost a playbook for the way in which to defeat Carthage.
And so it'll be used.
It was used by Regulus in the first Punic War.
It'll be used by Scipio in the second Punic War.
And then it's, of course, used when Carthage is destroyed.
So it's an important thing that happens.
And it tells the Romans and everybody in the Mediterranean how to defeat Carthage.
So isn't that interesting?
It's funny that Carthage is so powerful.
but it has this essential vulnerability,
which is strike at the heart of it, the empire itself?
It does.
And some people would argue that that seems to be
because of the way in which they deal with their allies in Africa,
who are really important.
And you mentioned sort of 19th and 18th century wars
where we get bigger imperial wars that help to define new peoples
and local peoples that come into the historical record, really, in the time.
And this happens in the first Punic War and in the second Punic Wars.
We start to get the development of the Numidian people in North Africa.
as a historical entity. They've been there before in kingdoms, but they start to appear in the
historical record for the first time in this moment and as allies and also as enemies of the
Carthaginians. And if you're a clever, if you're a clever enemy, you can cause trouble right in the
backyard of the Carthaginians, split them from those North African allies. Okay, fascinating.
That invasion of North Africa is destroyed. They do enjoy success in naval battles. And yet,
what is it with the Romans? Roman history is littered with catastrophic defeats.
but they don't know when they're beaten those guys.
I know. It's so amazing.
I think any other power would have packed it in many times against the Carthaginians in the first Punic War, in the second Punic War.
And they didn't. They don't.
And they're not using the same conventions as everybody else's.
In what we call, you know, it's the Hellenistic world, really this is.
It's a post-Alexander the Great World in which we're talking about limitless conquest.
and the Romans really embrace this idea of never say defeat, almost,
and they always, always come back with more power.
And again, I think resting on the fact that they can draw on this enormous resource from Italy.
It's the Soviet way of war.
Yeah, it is absolutely.
Catoos off and Napoleon.
Just keep throwing new armies at it.
So that's fascinating.
So in the end, though, the Carthaginians suffer this decisive naval defeat.
What they go on Bendini, they offer a peace treaty, what's the mechanics?
So the mechanics are quite interesting. The city of Marsala is the sort of last holdout
of Carthaginian power in Sicily at the time of the defeat in 241. And the Roman consul who is
charged with dealing with the aftermath is named Lutatius. And that's this peace treaty that's
signed is called the Peace of Lutatius. We know that the Carthaginian commander in Sicily at the time
is a man whose name is Hamilcar Barca. So that is the father of the famous Hannibal Barca. And he
is charged with making peace, with Lutatius, and they meet, they have a peace treaty, and
that's the end of the war. Sicily is lost, and the Carthaginians have to withdraw completely
from Sicily. So that's a huge loss for them. And the Carthaginians, there is then trouble
at home? There is. It's a classic sort of interaction between a civic or civilian government
at home and the military in the field. The commander of the city of Marcella, which was known as
Lily Bam. His name is Gisco. And Gisco takes all the troops that have been fighting in Sicily
and sends them unit by unit back to Carthage so that they can be paid and disbanded. So it's
a demobilization, basically. But the Carthaginians in Carthage don't have the money, we think,
which is part of the problem. And they just let all these mercenary soldiers or paid soldiers
build up in the city of Carthage over the whole summer of 241. And it becomes a really
unruly situation and what eventually turns into a civil war. What's called the mercenary rebellion,
the Greek historian Polybius calls it the truseless war. And it really is both a rebellion of the
allies in North Africa as well as sort of an engagement with the mercenary soldiers too. And it's
pretty catastrophic for Carthage. It takes three years for them to defeat the soldiers that had
been fighting for them who are now fighting against them. But the Carthaginians must come back in some
way, because we then get the second Pinot War, which one of the greatest wars in the history of the
ancient world. Absolutely. I mean, this is, again, we talk about Roman resources, but obviously
the Carthaginian resources are equally impressive and that they can come back and come back so
quickly. It's absolutely amazing. So from the end of the mercenary war until the beginning of
the Second Punic War, our friend Hamilcar Barka takes his young sons, and they go off to find
new lands to conquer. And they go to Spain and Portugal.
They go to the city of Cadiz and to what we call in antiquity, Iberian Peninsula.
And it's there that they extend the Carthaginian territory.
So Carthage has lost the territory of Sicily and southern Sardinia.
And so they need to gain more territory.
So they do that in inland, Iberia.
And it's so, so important because it's one of the wealthiest mineral resources anywhere in the Mediterranean.
So there's this incredibly rich silver mines there.
And they start to gain a huge amount of power in wealth.
conquering in Spain.
Slight sidetrack here.
What is going on in Spain?
Are there settled communities?
Are there people using written words?
Yeah, okay, fine.
Yeah, no, there are.
And so the coastal areas are settled by Phoenician, speaking peoples, places like Cadiz
and Malaghan, along what we think of as Andalusia today.
And then the inland towns are hilltop fortified cities, and they're very sophisticated
sort of urban centers, and they trade.
And they are the ones who are in control of the silver.
mines and the resources and they trade with the coastal areas. And there's all kinds of really
interesting culture that grows up there that is a mix of an indigenous Iberian and Phoenician
culture there. And that's been going on and developing over the hundreds of years since the
cities were founded by the Phoenicians. And Hamilcar sets about, he does a good job. He does.
He becomes this sort of famous commander, Hamilcar Barka, and he conquers a big chunk of southern
Spain for Carthage sets up a Carthaginian. Perhaps when we talk about a Carthaginian empire,
this is when we begin to talk about it. It's in the third century. Direct military control.
They're in charge. They're in control. Some people argue they're also very much in charge,
or the people who support them are very much in charge in Carthage, too. And it's very quick
and easy to go back and forth across the coast there. And so it's a very successful part of
the world. They found new cities, new Carthaginian cities in Spain.
are founded in this period. In fact, Cartagena, the second Carthage, is founded during this period
of the sort of conquest of Spain by the Carthaginians, by Hamilcar. And Hamilcar dies in 229,
and then his son-in-law takes over because his young sons, Hannibal, Hasdrubel, and Mago are not
yet old enough to take control of the area, the military control in Spain. And then his son-in-law
rules for a couple of years, and then eventually he dies. He's killed by local
tribes and Hannibal takes over in 221 BC. And Hannibal has grown up in a military camp.
Yep. He's had it with his mother's milk. Exactly. From the time he's nine years old, he goes with
his father to Spain. Okay. And he grows up there. Now he's had tutors. We know he has Greek tutors.
He has tutors who teach him philosophy. He's very well educated, he and his brothers, as most
Carthaginians would be. They would have spoken Greek, which was the language that everybody in the
Mediterranean spoke at that time. He also obviously spoke Punic, Iberian. We think he might have
had an Iberian wife. He's grown up fighting. He's grown up learning to fight, but also to
study strategy and to be taught the skill of war, not just sort of random fighting. But it's a very,
very considered education for the boys, these bar kid boys, who are going to become the leaders
of the Carthaginian military. Now, Eve, why do we see war breakout again?
between Rome and Carthage.
Is it because powerful neighbours get jealous
each other throughout history
and tend to go to war?
Is that the biggest strategic context?
Or is again, is that something
that really impels people to conflict in?
So I think we can honestly say
we don't know, honestly,
because the Roman sources
and the Roman story is so confused
and muddled and mixed
and makes so little sense
that even sources who were writing
just after it happened
called their own sources
the common gossip of a barbershop.
So we don't know.
This story has been deeply constructed by the Romans,
but that doesn't mean we can't kind of assume
that what happens is, you know,
Hannibal comes to power in 2-21
and continues his father and his uncle's conquests,
pushing north into Spain.
There has been a treaty signed
between Roman Carthage in 226 BC.
And this is really important
because it says there was an agreement
that the Romans sphere of influence
would be everything north of what's called the Ebro River.
And the Carthaginian sphere of influence would be south.
It's called the Ebro Treaty.
Roughly speaking, Barcelona is on the Ebro today.
So we're into northern Spain now?
Northern Spain.
So the Romans get southern France into that,
pardon, Spain.
Carthage gets having costs.
They divide it up the world.
Yeah, or Roman allies too,
because it's not even Rome.
It's more Marseille or the Massalians
who are the Roman allies in southern Gaul,
in southern France, who really are the ones.
But then we have this event that happens out of the blue
over a city called Sagantam, which is well south of the Ebro River.
Okay.
Well south of the Ebro River, but all of a sudden, in 219 BC, Sagantam becomes this big issue.
And that is where the war starts.
It starts over the city of Sagantam.
The Romans warn Hannibal, the leader of the Carthaginians, to leave the Sagintines alone.
That's what they do.
They have an embassy.
And Hannibal's like, but wait a second, that's in my territory.
we have rumors and some of our more obscure sources about Romans interfering in internal Sagantine affairs
and getting rid of pro-carthaginian people within the city of Sagantam.
We were talking about this at the very beginning, about what happens for allies and making choices over two big powers.
And this is what happens to the people of Sagantam.
They are having to choose.
And naturally, as you do, I think, you don't always want to choose the powers that be who are bullying everybody around you.
You want to stand up for yourself.
And Sagantam is a really big, incredibly well-defended city just off the coast of Spain today.
And you can go to it in the walls.
I mean, that anybody could take this city is extraordinary.
And it really hasn't.
I think it fell in the peninsular war once.
And that was it since Hannibal took it in 219-218.
So this is where the war starts.
The war starts over Sagantam.
Is your gut telling you that there are people in Rome at this point who are thinking,
A, we're worried about the, we're worried about the Barker family, worried about the Carthaginians,
Hannibal seems quite useful, and B, you know, we want a war.
These people are in our way.
We've got manifest destiny to conquer the whole Western Mediterranean.
It's going to suit me personally and politically, and I'm a young man who wants to fight.
Like, do you think there's a war party in Rome at this point?
Definitely.
I know, absolutely.
And there is no question, because, you know, the way Roman magistracies worked, when you became
the consul, you were given a sphere of influence to operate in militarily.
and you had one year to do the best you could with the conquest.
I mean, it was a military machine.
So definitely there's that.
We know that.
And I would say that exactly the same thing about Hannibal.
I think perhaps we also have to think about this idea that for 20 years after the end of the first Punic War, Carthage had been paying a war indemnity to Rome.
So it's just after the end of that 20-year period that this happens.
So there's definitely some connection here between the payment.
and the Romans going to war with Carthage.
Who starts the second Punic War?
Well, the Romans blame Hannibal 100%.
It's Hannibal, Hannibal, Hannibal.
It seems to be both sides are pretty willing to fight this war.
And it takes place over the city of Sagantam, who really suffer for it.
Because Hannibal goes and laid siege to Sagantam.
It's a long siege.
It's six months we think it takes.
And he eventually takes it and completely sacks and destroys the city.
The Romans do nothing to help.
their so-called allies. So they claim they're allied to the Saganthines, but they don't do anything at that
point. Nothing happens. So we don't know, again, was this a bit of a trap for Hannibal to make the
moves that he did that give the Romans then the legitimate opportunity to declare war on Carthage?
Maybe that could be what happens. We don't really know. It's very much debated, but really interesting
to consider trying to figure out what happened when you only have one side of the story is really, really
difficult. But fascinating. We know what happened and we know that's what starts the war.
You listen to Dan Snow's history here. We're talking about the Puneck Wars more coming up.
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Rome declares war.
In January of 218.
Is their plan, do you think, to land in North Africa again?
Absolutely.
You know, again, like all Great Wars, short, sharp, shock, it'll be able by Christmas,
we'll bring the boys home.
They do two things, two-pronged attack.
They're going to send one of their consuls with an army to Spain,
to take on the Carthaginians in Spain,
and they're going to send their other consul,
send him to Sicily, raising an army and a navy,
and they're going to invade Africa.
And that's all set in January.
So by March, when the consuls take,
up their positions, they head out and they're starting off to raise their armies and do what they
need to do. So everybody knows this is coming, including Hannibal, of course, who lays siege to
and destroys Sagantam and then takes all the spoils of the war down to deposited at the
temple of Heracles in Cadiz, who is Hannibal's patron god. And he goes back to New Carthage
and he sets up his own plan, which he must have planned in advance as well, which is to take the war
to Rome, rather than let the Romans come to Carthage and to Hannibal.
Just a quick on that, though, it doesn't seem like Hannibal's spending much time in Carthage proper.
Is there a so attentionist?
So this is a war party, an engine of war that seems to be beginning and being sustained
out of Iberia.
Absolutely.
And to what degree the barcats are in charge in the Senate in Carthage.
You know, Carthage is a republic like the Romans.
We assume that they're on the ascendancy, and they're really getting whatever they need from
Carthage passed through the Senate and things like that.
It's funny.
So just as Carthage has outgrown its base in Tyre, it's almost like Carthaginian power
in Iberia is almost outgrowing and becoming more important than that original base in
Carthage.
It is.
And I think that the degree to which that is reflecting some dysfunction in the state of
their republic is pretty clear.
You know, at the same time, we see it in Rome.
And there's always this danger of making parallels where none exist.
But we see as Rome becomes more and more powerful, extends its territory more and
or its political system can't really sustain that, and it's the same with the Carthaginians.
Okay, so you mentioned Hannibal's got that the Carthaginians are not going to sit back and take it,
and instead Hannibal launches one of the great, surprising, ambitious, strategic counterstrokes
in military history that everyone knows and talks about, and what is it?
It is so audacious, and I think it's very difficult sometimes for us now to really even understand
and how crazy and bold it is what he did.
So instead of waiting for the Romans to attack,
Hannibal launches a land attack on Italy.
And to do that, of course, as we all know,
he has to leave Spain, cross all of southern France.
So through the Pyrenees Mountains.
Fight right through the Pyrenees.
Fight right, through enemy territory,
cross southern France, and then there's the Alps.
Yep, and cross over the Alps and descend into Italy to take the fight to Rome.
It's this sort of surprise attack, but of course it takes six months, so it can't be a total surprise.
But it is so bold.
It is so extraordinary at the time that people, when it happens, almost don't believe that he's doing it.
They cannot believe that this man and his army of almost 50,000 soldiers and horses and 37 elephants and pack animals and baggage and all the rest are moving themselves across all of Europe and up and over.
the Alps into Italy. It's just unbelievable achievement across the Rhone River, which is massive
to move elephants across the river and all the animals. And they're doing that under some pressure
as well, knowing that the Romans are heading to Spain and heading to Africa too. So it's a huge gamble
in terms of it. They could have just died in the snows of the Alps. Absolutely. They could have
drowned in the right, but also a huge gamble because there's enemy counterattacks going or does enemy
attacks go in the other way? Absolutely. And the Romans and the Carthaginian Army's
pass each other at Marseilles. Hannibal's four days north of Marseilles and Publius Scipio.
The elder is in Marseille where his allies are, and they almost contact on the Roan.
But Hannibal knows that he cannot fight Scipio and Marseille together in France, in Gaul.
That would just be insane. So he needs to get to Italy.
The reason he wants to get to Italy is because he knows that the Romans aren't the most popular
people among the Italians at this point. They have conquered all of Italy.
We have to always remember that, that Italy was not Rome.
And so Hannibal knows that he can get allies in Italy.
He can draw the Italian allies away from the Romans.
Just as the Romans did in North Africa.
In the first peanut war, he's thinking, well, hang on, we can do this same.
That's his plan.
But to do it, he has to get his army across the Alps.
And the Alps at that time are where monsters live.
They're the place of myth and legend.
The high Alpine passes all are over 2,000 meters.
By the time he gets there, it's October.
So there's snow, of course, on the high Alps at this point.
It's an absolutely extraordinary feat.
How he fed his army across this huge march.
It's just really shows us how little perhaps we understand of the technicalities
and also the food supply, the food chains of these towns in Iberia, in Gaul at this time.
It's not an area we know a lot about and it's really interesting, shows us more and more.
because we should be clear.
You say Scipio's moving the other way,
but he would be on a boat.
He'd be on a ship, right?
He's on a ship and he's coming from Pisa.
He's a harbour hopping along the coast.
Stopping in at allies.
And so no one's, as far as we know,
no one ever marched an army
across this stretch of territory
in European history to that point.
To that point, only the Greek god Heracles
or Hercules has done it.
And that's what Hannibal is channeling
at his point,
is this mythical story of the very last labor
of the Greek hero Hercules
who had gone to the west of the Mediterranean
and then marches the cattle of Geryon
back into Greece.
He's the only one who supposedly did this.
And even the road that Hannibal's following
was called in ancient times
the way of Heracles or Hercules.
So Hannibal very consciously knew what he was doing.
He's channeling this story.
He's using the myth
and he's using that kind of PR.
You really need your soldiers to believe in you
in order to get them to do this.
You know, because you're staring
at these massive mountains.
And so he's channeling this idea that this god, who is a Carthaginian god, Melchart, who's equated to the Greek Heracles, is with them on this journey. And it's a labor. It's a quest almost. It's like a mythical quest.
And so suddenly, a Roman policymaker is thinking, we're going to fight war against Carthage. Not in Italy, but we're probably going to be fighting maybe Sandinia, maybe Spain, Corsica, Sicily, maybe North Africa.
suddenly a Thunderbolt arrives in your backyard in northern Italy.
I mean, just the opposite to where you think you're going to be fighting.
Exactly. It's unbelievable.
And actually, you know, for the first few years of this war, it's really Hannibal's war.
He's in charge.
The Romans are on the back foot almost the whole time.
They have so miscalculated or underestimated their enemies at this point that they just continually seem to be making bad decisions and causing chaos.
One of the best decisions, though, made by a Roman commander at this point is that,
this Publius Scipio, the elder, he sends half of his army onto Spain, and he returns to Italy
with the other half of his army so that he knows Hannibal's going over the Alps. He sails back to
Pisa and marches up to the north of Italy to meet him. So that's probably one of the big moves
that saves Rome and this period, because first of all, he sends the half of his army on to Spain,
and that does destabilize Hannibal's supply. And also then there's troops in the north of Italy
to face Hannibal when he comes down.
So those two things are really important.
But Hannibal marches up the Alps.
He decimates his army in doing this as well.
I mean, his numbers, if we believe what he wrote on a bronze tablet in the south of Italy,
a decade or so later, he really almost lost half of his army in crossing the Alps
and fighting, abandonment, and also to the elements as well.
So it's an extraordinary sacrifice.
Because these local people of the Alps are rolling rocks down on them and they're not happy about this.
So you can imagine you're a local chieftain in the Alps and this huge army comes baggage train filled with silver and metals and all the weapons.
I mean, the sheer value of these soldiers to local chieftains in this area are just extraordinary.
So they're really vulnerable.
They have a guide.
The Romans in the south of France means they can't take the easier southern route so they have to go up further north and cross over one of the higher passes.
and they have to rely on guides, and they do that.
And it really is just such an amazing tale,
and we have these great descriptions of it.
And you can really imagine the way in which the soldiers who made it down from the Alps
must have believed they had been guided by a hero, not just anybody.
He then went to a string of victories, doesn't he?
Massive victories, yeah, one after the other.
He outmaneuvers, out things, and out sort of Romans, the Romans.
And that's the way I like to think about it. He really does think what are they going to do? And I'm going to counter it. And his strategic brilliance in this period is extraordinary. And so he wins four, one small and then three big battles, one at the river Trebia in the north on the winter solstice in December of 218. And it's just an amazing description of winter warfare. Again, something we hardly ever see in the ancient world fighting in the wintertime. And we have descriptions of it like people oiling up their skin.
and eating porridge, how Hannibal takes good care of his soldiers to make sure they're capable
of fighting and how unprepared the Romans are for fighting in the cold. And it's a bit of a wipeout
the consul who's come back from Marseille, Publius-Scipio is pretty seriously wounded at this time.
They have to wait for reinforcements and all these sorts of things happen. So it's a big disaster.
And then the winter sets in and fighting stops for the winter. And then in the early spring,
Hannibal sets out south, heading into Etruria.
land of Tuscany and Umbria, and he fights another enormous battle in 217 at Lake Trasimeno.
It's actually an ambush. He destroys one of the Roman legions of the consul, Gaius Flaminius, and kills the
consul. And then he defeats the other consul's cavalry. And so Rome is left completely in turmoil and
chaos. They elect a dictator at that point to take over their state because their consul has been
killed. The other consuls cut off from Rome. So he's in, really, in 217 BC, Hannibal's in pretty
great military control of the north of Italy. And so I'm fascinated by that, Zeta, because he's got a
different strategy for dealing with Hannibal, hasn't he? Yes, exactly. His name is Fabius
Maximus, and they call him Fabius Cunctator in Latin, which means the delayer.
Initially is a bit of an insult, right? Exactly. He's considered to be a bit timid and, you know,
this idea of bold Roman leadership at this point. We're undefeatable. We're great is being shattered.
And so Fabius decides to hold back and just basically track Hannibal around Italy. The Romans have
superior numbers. They still have a huge amount of allies. They can try and contain him. They follow him
around into the area of La Marque, which is on the east of the Apennonnes, down into Puglia, into
Campania. And Hannibal's going around trying to gain allies. He really knows that
he needs to win another big victory in order to get what he needs from the southern part of
Italy at this point. And so Fabius's don't take Hannibal on and no, you know, Romans want to
take Hannibal on at this point. He must be sort of shadowing him. Shadowing him. So quite
threat. But Hannibal's taunting the Romans. So while Fabius shadows him, Hannibal's burning
fields and he's causing all kinds of mayhem. And the Romans are shown as not being able to protect
their allies in these regions, and so it's causing all kinds of turmoil. And again, all these
local city-states have to make big decisions at this point about who to support.
Stopping a hard place. Very hard place. But the winter of 217-216 is really the political pressure
in Rome changes, and Fabius, his policies are overturned. They elect new consuls, and they decide
to take Hannibal on in a huge battle. And muster.
all their resources and go down to the south of Italy and fight Hannibal.
And that happens in 216.
And that's exactly what Hannibal wants.
Exactly.
He just cannot wait for that.
He has scouted all winter long for the perfect place to fight a battle.
He chooses a city called Can I, which is near the river Auschwitz in Apulia today.
And that's where he sets himself up and waits for the Romans to come.
And they come.
They come down from the center and north of Italy and supposedly.
And again, we know that we can't always believe numbers in ancient warfare, but supposedly
80,000 soldiers with them. Hannibal has maximum probably 50. 40 would be a likely number,
but it could be as high as 50. So half the number almost than the Romans. So he has a battle to
fight and he has to outthink his opponents. He can't possibly out-strengthen them.
He can't win by might. He has to win by strategy.
And the Romans oblige by seeing the trap and then just hurling themselves into it.
Hurling, and it's so brilliant.
People have studied Hannibal for centuries and centuries since then.
But they really do.
He's been testing what the Romans will do in the previous battles.
And you can see that at Kanai.
So he's literally been setting up his lines and seeing how the Roman soldiers react to different maneuvers.
And we see him playing out all of these different things in the Battle of Kanai.
and he is able to draw basically this huge long, extended Roman front line into a center
and he surrounds them, outflanks the cavalry, and they surround them and slaughter them.
Possibly the bloodiest day in human history to that point.
Possibly.
And when they kill people in these kinds of close combat, it's cutting your hamstrings and doing that kind of thing.
So a lot of people are wounded fatally but not dead.
and the stories of the scene the next day is really amazing
where it's like this just bloody battlefield
with steam rising up off all these half-dead bodies
and it's an extraordinary event.
The Carthaginians lose a lot of soldiers too, though.
That's one of the big things, and they have less to lose.
So although it's a great victory...
It's almost a pariict victory.
It's almost a pariard.
But it's weird because military historians can't agree.
Sometimes they say it's the great decisive picture all time,
even though, as we'll discover,
it doesn't win them the war, so it's not decisive in that respect.
Depending on the historian's point of view, it's anything they want it to be that battle.
It's a fascinating thing.
It's an extraordinary battle.
It's a battle of Roman resilience because it shows just how much they could suffer and come back from.
It's strategic brilliance, absolutely extraordinary that he manages to survive it.
But it takes a huge toll on both sides.
So, yeah, it doesn't actually have the impact.
It should.
One Roman consul killed?
Yeah, one active console is killed.
and the other flees and heads to a town with about 10,000 survivors.
But on the field of that battle are many ex-consuls
and many of the high elite serving magistrates of the Roman state.
I mean, it is absolutely devastating to the elite culture at Rome.
Shame for the Carthaginians that young Skippeo wasn't there.
But anyway, so after the battle, it's always talked about
as one of the great tactical victories of all time,
and then strategically after the battle, with hindsight,
Hannibal mishandles the advantage, would you say?
I mean, people want him to march on Rome and capture Rome at that point, but he doesn't do that.
No, he doesn't.
And one of his lieutenants famously says, Mahabal, famous he says, Hannibal, you know how to win a battle, but not the war sort of thing.
And Hannibal probably isn't in a position.
It's almost 600 kilometers to Rome from where Can I is to march on Rome and take a huge fortified
city at this point.
He knows how difficult that is.
So he sends an ambassador, along with some prisoners, to negotiate.
negotiate a piece because any general in the third century BC, anywhere in the whole Mediterranean,
having won a victory of this proportions, yeah, would expect the opposing side to sue for peace.
And they don't.
Wow.
The Romans are like, no way, no peace, get out of here.
And that is one of the most extraordinary decisions of the ancient world, isn't it?
It is. It really is.
They've lost virtually their entire field force effectively.
Yeah.
They've lost, I mean, enormous number of soldiers of allies, many, many, many of the allies.
are dead on the field, they refuse to give in. They refuse to make peace. They refuse to accept
that they've lost. Just go and get some more soldiers. Yeah, get some more soldiers, do all kinds of
weird things. They sacrifice a couple of people. Human sacrifice at that point in Rome.
They send envoys to the Oracle of God Apollo in Delphi at this point. We have all these
amazing things happening. But they gather together more forces and they
gather together more armies and they are able to then continue to return to Fabius's strategy
of isolate Hannibal, of track him around Italy, of never ever fight him again in the field
in Italy. Don't go away. More punit wars coming up.
Thank you for your patience.
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But they also have the courage, don't they, to send what few troops they do have,
to keep causing trouble for Hannibal elsewhere in this Mediterranean world.
So it's the temptation we do withdraw everything and just to protect Rome, but they don't.
And those counterattacks are probably quite important.
Very important.
And another thing that we always forget, and I think that we, you know, all eyes on Hannibal
for this whole period. And that actually belies what's going on in the Mediterranean. It's a war of
different theaters. And the theater in Spain is just as important as the one in Italy and perhaps
more so in the end. So it's actually the fact that we talked about at Marseille, the good decision made by
the elder Publius Scipio to go off and send his brother with half of his forces to Spain. And they
continue to fight there and they fight all the way through the period that Hannibal's in Italy. And it's
really that it means Carthage is distracted. It means Carthaginian resources are really thinned out.
And it means Hannibal can't necessarily get resupplied in Italy. Hannibal does not win a port
on the west side of Italy as an ally. And that's really, really important, too, because
they can't, then Carthage can't supply Hannibal by sea. So, yeah, there's all kinds of problems that
happened, but it takes a long time. And it's a huge fight. I mean, the battle over cities like Capua,
over Tarentum and Syracuse are absolutely fundamental in the way that the war is won.
And these cities go over to Hannibal's side, these big important cities that are Greek.
And Oskine, Capua is, which is in the near Naples, inland from Naples.
Yeah, we say Greek, they're of Greek origin.
Greek origin, yeah.
Yeah, they've been conquered by the Romans.
And they go over to Hannibal.
So Hannibal wins big important allies in this period from 216 down to about 209.
he wins and then loses these allies in battle after battle from the Roman perspective.
They own maneuver him and really manage to bring back the allies to their side.
Well, and when the Romans recapture an ally that's betrayed them, it's pretty ugly.
It's very ugly.
Yeah.
So these Southern Italians like, I don't know, geez, their choice is pretty grim.
It is really grim.
And the impact of Hannibal and the Second Punic War in southern Italy is felt for centuries
and centuries afterwards, and we forget that as well. Later, the Romans will fight a civil war,
they call the social war in around 90 BC. And many people connect that to the Hanibalic War as well,
because of the way that the allies are treated in the south of Italy is so harsh. And so these
massive sieges take place of these cities, and the Romans eventually are able to take them back,
and it's pretty brutal. And Hannibal can't be ever at once, can he?
No. He has maybe 50,000 soldiers. He can't confess. He can't.
Pete. You know, in 212, I think, I'm pulling this number off the top of my head, I think
is 27 legions. The Romans raised 27 legions. So when Augustus, when Octavian becomes the emperor
of Rome in the first century BC, he has 25 legions. So they are able to raise more troops
in this period than even two centuries later with Augustus. So it's incredible. The resources
they win as well by taking these cities reboots the whole Roman economy. So the Denarius, the
most famous of all the Roman coins that we have is first founded in 211 BC after the sack of the
city of Syracuse. And so it's a really, really important economic moment for the Romans.
It's a moment where they muster their full of potential in terms of abilities, manpower.
They also train a whole new generation of soldiers in fighting. And they fight like Hannibal.
I mean, Hannibal trains and makes the Romans better.
It's a savage apprenticeship.
You either die or you learn how to do it.
There's so many places we could alight on, but let's get to the end of the second Punic War
because the Romans, well, they play the hits from the first Punic War.
At some stage, they must feel confident enough to threaten Carthage in its backyard again.
Yes, that's exactly it.
So Hannibal is hemmed in in the south of Italy, and he's really not able to maneuver much
outside of what we think of as Calabria, I guess, today and parts of the boot of Italy.
and the war in Spain has been won, and it's been won by a young commander whose name is Scipio, Publius Scipio, the Younger,
whose uncle and father had been fighting the Carthaginians in Spain in the early part of the war.
And the young Scipio, who is a survivor of Can I and is a survivor of many battles, takes on the challenge of fighting the Carthaginians in Spain, and he wins.
he wins and he takes new Carthage, the Carthaginian city there, and then he comes back and he's
given the command to go to Africa to take Carthage. And basically Hannibal's still in Italy. So we have
to imagine Hannibal's still in Italy, Hannibal's brother, the youngest brother, Mago, is in the
north of Italy in the area around Genoa. And his middle brother, Hasdrubil, has been killed in 208.
So, Scipio launches attacks. And he does it from Sicily. And he does it from Sicily. And he does
it from launching sea raiding all this time along the coast of Africa. And then he basically
takes an invasion into Africa, following along the footsteps of what we've already talked about
from Regulus and everyone else. And it certainly works because Hannibal does go home to protect
his. He does. It's interesting. He's a bit of a reluctant warrior at this point. I think he's more
of somebody who, and it's more biased, we don't know if it's true or not, but who are sort of like
you should be making peace with Rome here. We have no legs to stand on. But yes, Hannibal goes back
reluctantly. He leaves southern Italy. It's obviously part of a negotiated deal. There's no question
that this is some kind of negotiated deal. Scipio has been marauding around Africa very successfully.
Really important to Scipio's success are the Numidians who have joined the Romans. So they had been
allies of Carthage. They've seen the writing on the wall. They've switched sides, especially a
king whose name is Massanissa, who is from them a silly tribe and is just an extraordinary guy who
lives to be 90-something years old, has 48 children, and fights really right through this whole
period. It's just unbelievable. So, Scipio has these great allies, and he's able to really force
Carthage's hand, and they negotiate some kind of deal in which Hannibal is returned from Italy.
And he sails from Italy down to the region of modern Seuss, which is on the east coast of Tunisia
today, which seems to be where his family may have had an estate or something. And he camps out there,
and Scipio and Massenissa eventually come together and they meet Hannibal at a place called Zama, which is in Tunisia today.
I remember my dad reading about this when I was a kid.
They found a way to negate the effect of the Carthaginian elephants at this point, don't they?
Yes, that's right.
That's right.
There's some great scenes around Zama.
You know, Scipio, the young Roman hero, meets Hannibal, the old Carthaginian general the day before the battle and they have a discussion.
Through the great military minds of ancient history.
Absolutely. It's an epic scene repeated over and over again, and they don't agree on making any peace, and then they fight a battle.
And Scipio has the superior fighting force at this point. Hannibal's is a bit pulled together, but he has elephants.
And the elephants are of almost no effect, because Scipio spreads out his front line and the elephants just run by, and they're not very maneuverable.
Of course, you can't turn an elephant around very quickly.
And so we really become obsolete in the battle at all.
There's all kinds of chaos within Hannibal's ranks.
It's a bit of a mess, a bit of a bloody mess.
But even the Roman sources say Hannibal did a pretty good job fighting Skippeo,
but it's hard to really know.
That's what the accounts of battles are difficult to understand.
Sure, especially at 2,000 years' range.
So that is the end, that Zama's the end.
Yeah, 201 peace treaty signed.
This time it's a 50-year war indemnity.
That indemnity, right.
That has to be paid from Carthage to Rome.
For 50 years, they have to pay the Romans a certain amount.
every year. Hannibal doesn't die on the field of battle, as we might assume. Hannibal lives on.
He becomes a magistrate at Carthage in the years after the war in the 90s BC. One 90s BC, he also
then has to flee Carthage because of internal turmoil in the city. So he's exiled from the city
of Carthage. He goes to the eastern Mediterranean. He sits at the court of Antiochus, the great
the lucid king and continues to advocate fighting the Romans from a different place.
And eventually, eventually, eventually his options are all narrowed down and he takes his
own life in 182 BC.
Lives to be pretty old for a guy who fought the way he did.
And now the Romans after the Second Punic War, like the first Punic War, they've
increased in strength and knowledge and capabilities.
They don't stop there.
They're now charging across the Mediterranean.
We're starting to see the Roman world really evolve here, as we might recognize it,
those maps of the Mediterranean world with...
Absolutely.
More in Spain,
Alkins, Greece.
All of it.
And into Syria
and the kingdom of Antiochus.
And is that second period
or kind of a launch pad for that?
Absolutely.
It's not coincidental.
Not at all.
And the second Punic four
connects Greece
and Carthage
against the Romans
because there's an alliance
that's formed
between the Macedonian King Philip
and Hannibal
into 16 after, can I?
You're next.
Yes, and they've also already been fighting in Illyria, so Croatia and down the coast of the Adriatic Sea, they've been fighting that whole time and they fight against the Macedonians as well in 205. So during the end of the Second Punic War, they're actually fighting a war in Greece already and they just continue to fight and win and expand. The interesting thing is Carthage really thrives in this period.
It bounces back.
Bounces back in a way that is really interesting.
So physically we see the city growing.
We see real visible prosperity in the city.
We see it in the archaeology.
We can see big villas being built.
We hear about a lot of political chaos in the city as well.
And we know there's the aftermath of the war is hugely traumatic for so many people.
So there's this juxtaposition between political chaos and material wealth.
But we know that Carthage is very dramatic.
very wealthy. They're so wealthy that they offer to pay the entire war indemnity off 10 years after the
war. So yeah, in 191 BC, they say to the Romans, oh, we'll pay you everything we owe you. Just leave us
alone. And the Romans are like, and no, we're not doing that. They want that idea of a yearly tribute
from Carthage to Rome because they think that's a way of keeping Carthage in its place. And they're
managing all these other cities that they've just conquered in places that they're fighting battles with.
So it's really a way of trying to settle their Mediterranean holdings.
But it's a difficult time for Rome.
It's a really chaotic time for the city of Rome and for the political situation in Rome, too.
So it's a really interesting period.
We don't know very much about Carthage because literally, as you can imagine,
our sources are all following Rome as they conquer in Greece, as they conquer against the Seleucids in Syria.
And they're not necessarily paying attention to what's happening in Carthage.
So we don't have the historical evidence that we do for the Second Punic War.
So we have to rely a lot more on archaeology, really, for that kind of thing.
And yet Rome does discover it has the bandwidth for one last war against Carthage.
Is this unfinished business?
What's going on here?
Yeah.
50 years of war indemnity being paid from Carthage to Rome ends in...
Not this whole thing again.
Yeah, 151 BC.
And just two years after that, the Romans are there laying siege to Carthage.
So it's a complicated situation in Africa because Massanissa, the Numidian ally, who had joined the Romans against Carthage eventually, has been given a big chunk of territory. He's the strongest Roman ally in Africa. And so he constantly takes Carthaginian land away during this whole 50 years. And the Carthaginians have to kind of suck it up because they're not allowed to wage war in Africa without Roman permissions. And Romans never given them permission. So it's kind of just like that.
So when the war payments end in 151, there's a group of Roman senators who go to Carthage and they look around at what's happening there and they're like, wow, things are really nice here in this beautiful city on the sea and it's with this huge wealthy port and, you know, the Mediterranean trade is expanded over this whole period despite constant warfare.
And they're like, Carthage is really thriving.
And so some of those old Romans, people like the very famous Cato, the elder, who are hawks, they, the war party are just like, no, that's it. We have to destroy Carthage.
So can he remember the depredation is the second Punic War? Does he remember?
Yes, yeah. Yeah, he would. Definitely. He would very much out the end.
So he's like, we need to stamp this out. We need to stamp this out. And it's an internal political situation that's happening. It's not about Carthage really itself. This is about.
competition within Rome's elite and how and what kind of Rome it's going to be.
Now, Rome is very imperial in these periods.
It's not like a friendly nice, oh, let's, you know, make nice provinces and make everybody feel
happy in Roman.
This is a period of incredible hard conquest and warfare.
Cato believes that Carthage has to be destroyed, that Carthage will never, ever be able
to sit within a Roman-dominated Mediterranean.
but other people who are directly related to it as well, like a man whose name is Scipio Nassica,
so of this great Scipio family who fought Hannibal believes Carthage must be saved.
And so we know this debate is going on.
So Telenda S. Cartago is the more famous Latin phrase of Carthage must be destroyed.
Which Cato says again and again.
Over and over.
Anoise everyone.
Yes.
And while Scipio responds, Carthage must be saved.
Interesting.
So it's a political split.
It's a military split.
It's again about individuals getting military glory.
and lots of them are willing to take on Carthage one more time
to live the dream of defeating Carthage
because that had in the Roman mind
that's where their greatest victories were.
And so they go and a little skirmish war breaks out
between the Numidians and the Carthaginians
after the peace treaty ends
and the Romans use that as a pretext
to lay siege to the city.
And it's not easy.
It's not easy.
It's an unbelievable scene
where you have the Roman consul sitting
just up the coast from Carthage
and he brings the Carthaginian envoys and he's like, well, you have to give up all your weapons.
And so the Carthaginians are like, okay, well, we better do this.
So they give up all their weapons.
They have to hand over 300 of their children as hostages to the Romans.
And we have eyewitness account of this almost from the Greek historian Polybius.
And we have this like scenes where the mothers are watching their children being put on to Roman ships and sailing away to Sicily.
And they're jumping in the water and swimming after them.
I mean, the emotional intensity of the descriptions of what happens at Carthage in this period are just extraordinary, considering it's from a Roman perspective.
But they give up their children, they give up all their arms, they go back to the Roman consul and he says, no, that's not going to work.
We actually need you to move from your land.
You have to move from your city.
You have to give up your city and move 15 kilometers inland.
You're no longer allowed to live where Carthage is.
So you're telling people to give up your religion.
Your identity, your family, your history, you're everything about you when you do that.
And the Carthaginians are like, no, we can't do that.
And they say no.
And the siege happens.
And they last for three years.
It's unbelievable how resilient they show themselves to be.
They build new fleets.
They defeat the Romans.
They do all kinds of crazy counter siege work.
But eventually, eventually, under the leadership of a man whose name is Scipio Amelianna.
So there's Scipio's all through this story.
He breaks through into the port, which is thought to be the weakest area of the city walls that surround Carthage.
And the Roman soldiers break in after three years.
And they fight their way through the city street by street.
The people in the city are still resisting.
They're doing everything they can to stop the Romans.
But all the people are killed.
The city is burnt.
It burns to the ground.
And Carthage, as we know it as a ancient Punic.
city ends in 146 BC. And the ground is consecrated at that moment. It's not sown with salt,
which is one of these great rumors that gets started. Somebody has done a paper about this. And the first
time that turns up is like in the 17th century. And it just appears. But they never sewed cartilage
with salt, but they consecrated. So they curse anyone living there again.
Although you do get a Roman Carthage. Well, you do. So the curse seems to be overturned.
Okay, okay. Not too long after. Because I've always thought if it's salt, why the Romans
build a lovely city there. Exactly. But it's what's called a Carthaginian peace, which is seen as
resolving a situation by just annihilation. Yeah, yeah, it's absolute annihilation. It's considered
by many people as one of the most egregious destructions by any power of another. And I guess it's
because the Carthaginian people disappear, whereas the city of Corinth is destroyed in exactly
the same year by the Romans in Greece. But the Greek culture of Corinth lives on, and so it doesn't
disappear in the same way, but because Carthage itself is an outpost of this long-finition,
long-held Phoenician culture, the destruction of it, the selling into slavery of all its
people, the sort of burning to the ground of the whole city itself, means that Carthage itself
is lost. It's gone in any way. Is that one of the reasons you talk about these sources,
we only have Roman sources? Do we think there might have been archives and libraries and texts
that were there that were destroyed in that great conflict? Yes, not only are there, do we think
there were libraries and things, and we know some things were given to be translated,
agricultural treatises of all things, telling us about how the Carthaginians grew things.
Important info.
Very technologically advanced people.
But also, we know there were lots of pro-Carthaginian histories written by people in Sicily,
by Greeks and things like that and others that some of our sources had access to and talk about,
but we don't have any evidence.
They weren't bestsellers under the Roman Empire.
No, exactly.
They didn't get propagated.
Yeah, went out of print.
And also this idea, as you say, the Romans found a new city on the city of Carthage
because it's too strategically important not to.
It's right at the center of the Mediterranean.
And so this new Carthage that's built there has to somehow engage with this old story.
And that's when we get what we were talking about at the beginning, the story of Dido and Annius coming together.
It's in this newly founded Roman city that tells the story of the old Carthaginian war.
and the Trojans and the mythological foundation.
So it's a way of rationalizing almost the reoccupation of this incredible place.
And they build a big prosperous city there.
And it becomes, again, this really important city in the Mediterranean,
it becomes a center for Western Christianity in the late Roman Empire.
And it's got an extraordinary history.
And then, of course, with the Arab conquests,
the city of Tunis becomes the center of another important empire in the Middle Ages,
the Haftids.
So the area is so strategically important that it thrives.
on. But the little bit that was ancient Carthage is gone. What a tour to force. Thank you for taking
me through the whole history of Carthage. Eve, thank you. What's your book called? My book is called
Carthage, a new history of an ancient empire. Go and get everybody. Thank you so much coming on.
Thank you. At pleasure.
Hello, everyone, Tristan here from the Ancients Podcast. I hope you enjoyed that awesome conversation
between Dan and Eve. And if you did, well, I've got good news for you, because
Eve and I are doing a special ancients live show all about this civilization. Dido, Hannibal,
the epic struggled with Rome for supremacy in the Western Mediterranean. We're covering all that
and so much more. It's happening on Friday the 5th of September at 7pm at King's Place in London.
Get your tickets now. I'd love to see you there.
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