The Ancients - How to Survive in Carthage
Episode Date: August 10, 2025From towering tenements to Punic porridge — step into the streets of ancient Carthage.In this immersive episode of The Ancients, Tristan travels back to 210 BC to explore daily life in the heart of ...one of the ancient world’s richest and most vibrant cities. Joined by Dr Eve MacDonald, together they uncover what it took to survive in Carthage before its fall — from bustling markets to religious rituals. Discover how Carthaginians lived, worked, ate, and worshipped in this thriving cosmopolitan hub - arguably the capital of the ancient Mediterranean.MOREOrigins of Carthage:https://open.spotify.com/episode/522qoJ8gm5pQT0IYunKiTJFall of Carthage:https://open.spotify.com/episode/5C37HVbPQnUujk2qBZ45HAPresented by Tristan Hughes. Audio editor is Aidan Lonergan and the producer is Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.All music courtesy of Epidemic SoundsThe Ancients is a History Hit podcast.LIVE SHOW: Buy tickets for The Ancients at the London Podcast Festival here: https://www.kingsplace.co.uk/whats-on/words/the-ancients-2/Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on
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is Tristan here and I have an exciting announcement. The ancients will be returning to the London
podcast festival. Now last year tickets they sold out at record speed. So this time we've been
upgraded. We've got a bigger room. And you, you can be there too on Friday the 5th of September
at 7pm at King's Place. Now I've invited Friend of the podcast, the fabulous Dr Eve MacDonald,
to join me on stage where we will be exploring the gripping story
of ancient Carthage.
Carthage, the Phoenician city that became a superpower,
an empire that rivaled Rome for control in the Western Mediterranean,
and ultimately had a terrible traumatic demise.
Of course, the ancients is nothing without you,
so we want you to be there in the audience taking part
and asking us your burning questions.
Tickets for the festival always sell fast.
So book yourself a seat now at www.
forward slash what's on. We'll click the link in the show notes of this episode. The team and I
cannot wait to see you there.
Hey guys, I hope you're doing well. Welcome to today's episode of the ancients, all about
ancient Carthage, daily life and society in this great rival city of Rome in the Western
Mediterranean. Forget Hannibal, forget Queen Dido. We're exploring what we know about how
people lived in this great trading cosmopolitan city, including the controversial question of
whether the Carthaginians really did sacrifice children. Our guest today is Dr. Eve MacDonald
from the University of Cardiff, who is also going to be our guest for our special live show
in London on the 5th of September. More information on that you can find in the show notes.
It's 210 BC, and you're walking through the streets of one of the wealthiest cities
in the Mediterranean. Overlooking the Bay of Tunis in North Africa, this was the flourishing
cosmopolitan port city of Carthage. People from far and wide sailed into its majestic
port. They traded in its great market and walked.
looked along streets in the shadow of towering apartment blocks and religious sanctuaries.
So what would it have been like to live in Carthage in its prime?
What glimpses can we get into the daily routines of those who called this metropolis their
home before it was brutally destroyed by the Romans?
This is your guide on how to survive in Carthage with our guest, Dr. Eve McDonald.
Eve, it is such a pleasure to have you back on the podcast today.
Thank you, Tristan. You know I love coming on this podcast and chat with you.
I mean, last time we did The Fall of Carthage, and what a story that was.
This is a bit less catastrophic.
It feels like with Carthage, you can cover the big topics, like The Fall of Carthage,
or Hannibal or Dido and so on.
But the story of everyday lives of Carthaginians is extraordinary,
but that feels a bit more enigmatic, a bit more difficult to get a sense of what life was like
for someone who lived in ancient Carthage?
Oh, it is so difficult because it was totally destroyed by the Romans.
We really don't have that long memory of daily life or what went on in Carthage.
And I think that to get a sense of it, you have to dig into literally what we found in the
archaeological remains and little bits and pieces that are scattered all throughout Roman
sources that talk about Carthage.
So it's bringing together these two ideas of the physical remains on the ground and then the resonance in other tales about daily life or about how Carthaginians looked or what they wore and that sort of thing that we pick up and sort of put together to make a story of day to day Carthage.
So can we get glimpses of it from Greek and Roman sources looking from outside looking towards Carthage and then combining that with archaeological work on
the ground. Absolutely. We can. We make big assumptions by doing that, of course, as you know,
and it's not necessarily absolute truth, but we get a feeling for certain aspects. When you think
about what an enemy might perceive as a common feature, what they might make fun of, what they
make jokes about, all that sort of stuff turns up in Roman comedies, for example, from the times
of the Punic Wars. So we get little bits and pieces from that perspective. And that's really
interesting to figure out, you know, almost the familiarity between the Carthaginians and the Romans
is a big part of that story too. They knew each other really, really well. And we don't always get
that aspect perceived in Roman history. So picking up on the knowledge of the two and then looking
also at other places where Carthaginians were so influential. So Sicily, obviously, is a really
big part of the story. We pick up pieces from the archaeology in Spain. And there's been tons of
really interesting work done there, on the Balearic Islands, work in Sardinia, all those sorts of
things play into what we know about Carthaginians. That's amazing. And I didn't realize,
because you mentioned it earlier, Roman comedy. So Roman plays is also a source of information,
Roman entertainment for learning about ancient Carthaginian society. Yes, absolutely. And in fact,
it's a play by a late third, early second century playwright, Latin playwright named Plautus,
who wrote a play called The Little Punic, the Poignolus, so making fun, sort of diminishing
the Carthaginian figure. And it has tons of really interesting details about what Carthaginians
were, what they sounded like to people in Southern Italy. Ploutis was from Southern Italy.
So he would have really understood the connection.
between the two cultures and also what life was like for people just after the second Punic War
and the reality of that pretty stark existence for many, many people on the ground.
So I was thinking for this chat, as it's going to be how to survive in Carthage,
almost thinking as if we arrive in Carthage at its height and get a sense of living,
religious worship, what they wore, what they ate, and so on and so forth.
First off, with Carthage at its height, what time period?
do you think we should be talking about there, that we know the most information about life
in Carthage? I think we really have to think about Carthage in the century before it was destroyed
or, you know, the 150 years, maybe the third century BC is probably our best documented
physical Carthage. You know, we can go a little bit further back into the fourth century as well
because we have some good evidence from that period too, but really it's what was left on the ground
is mostly the material was there when it was destroyed. So that's our best view of Carthage,
when it was at its biggest, possibly, too. So if we were sailing into Carthage at its height,
I mean, first off, when you first see Carthage on the horizon, Eve, paint a picture for us.
What would we see? Well, first of all, it's a beautiful landscape today to sail into the Bay of Tunis.
It's a big, huge bay on the north coast of Africa.
There's mountains on the left side of the bay, so the east side of the bay.
Beautiful mountains, Bukornin, they're called, and they're really dominant markers
when you're coming into the bay or when you're looking from Carthage out to sea.
So that's what you would see in the landscape.
And then you would sail up to Carthage.
And Carthage had big sea walls, sea-facing walls with monumental.
gate, so that would have been very, very impressive. And then behind those walls, because there was
the Bersa Hill, which was the center of life, really, and the oldest part of the city would have
stood up quite high behind the walls. And then on top of that hill was a big temple complex,
which was where the Senate met in Carthage, the temple of Eshmun, it was called. And there was
monumental architecture throughout the city, as well as these very big, tall, multi-story buildings
that Carthaginians lived in, and they were famous for this. So they used a kind of masonry building
technique called Opus Africanum, which is the Latin Roman word for it, but the Romans gave it this
term, and it's like the African masonry, basically. And it allowed for the Carthaginians to build
very tall buildings. And it used these big ashlar blocks solid and then rubble fill on either
sides. And it was a way in which they could build up. Now, what do we know about cities that
build up, not out, is that they have limited space for their urban environment. So that I think
is something that's really interesting about Carthage that tells us something, that they had a sort
of restricted area in which their city existed in. I was itching to ask, do we imagine it as
being quite a sprawling city with that one high point being the bursa hill in the center.
But from what you're saying, I actually think it is quite compact because of the style of the
buildings.
Yes, it was very, very dense.
And it was very, very dense and where it was occupied.
And there was this, the city walls were 17 kilometers, though.
So they encompassed a big area of space that's called, we call the Megara.
And that was all orchards and greenlands and agricultural lands.
So the city wall included an area that was the garden, of course.
Carthage, really, and is what allowed Carthage to survive for so long during the siege of Carthage
at the end of the city's history in 149 to 146, and also the fact that they had these very
sophisticated harbors and sea-facing walls. So you're sailing into Carthage, you would come in
perhaps on a merchant ship, not on a military ship, hopefully. If you were coming in on a military
ship, you were probably a war captive. We'll do a merchant ship, then. We won't say we're a slave
or capture booting or something like that. We don't want to be that person. And you would come in
and you would sail into what was a big rectangular harbour. The entrance to the harbor was to the
south. So that was where it was most protected from winds and currents and things like that.
And you'd come in and pull up on one of these docks that lined the merchant harbor. And the view
would have been pretty spectacular from inside that harbor as well. Because we know it, we know
It was very well built, so there were different ship sheds.
There was a lot of industrial space around this area.
But there were also facades to kind of make it a more ornate and decorated experience.
And then in front of you would have been another wall around a big circular harbor, which was their military harbor.
And there was a big hill in the middle of that where the Admiralty sat on the top of and could direct traffic basically in and out of the ports.
and the entrances to the ports.
But the military and the commercial harbors were separated.
They could be joined, but there was a gate.
So you couldn't actually see into the military harbor from the commercial harbor.
But it almost sounds like that tower in the middle is like an air traffic control tower,
kind of guiding in ships, in and out of the harbors.
It was super sophisticated.
And we know what does Aristotle tell us?
He talks about what kind of jobs people did at Carthage.
And one of the jobs that he mentions is the pilots for the boats in the ports.
So they had little boats coming out and guiding in bigger ships and doing just what we do in ports today, which is really interesting.
So you would have been guided in with a pilot boat, and that would have taken you to your mooring, and then you would have unloaded and gotten off the ship and been in Carthage.
Signed your signature or whatever with the portmaster.
I'm thinking of Pirates the Caribbean now or something like that, but to kind of moor your vessel in the harbour, that idea.
Pirates and the Carthaginians.
now Tristan. We can't say anything about everyone was a pirate back then. But no, actually,
we do know that there was a fair bit of, as far as we can tell, not just that Carthage all across
the Mediterranean, individuals would pull up, you know, make ships and organize them, fund them,
and perhaps man them as well. And, you know, individual commanders were very, very important
in sort of what their ships did. And people, some people believe that we should be thinking
about the Carthaginians a little bit more like a merchant navy when we're talking about them,
when they're fighting big sea battles out in the Mediterranean. Is there a little bit more geared
towards a merchant kind of navy? So even when you arrive in Carthage in its port, given the
prominence of Carthage at the time and the importance of its port, can we imagine as soon as
you get off the ship, there'd be people here there and everywhere, doing lots of different jobs,
speaking lots of different languages as well? Yes, absolutely. And I mean, we know so much about
Carthaginian multiculturalism from, and that was one of the things the Romans always think about
and Carthage is criticized for is that they speak many language. Carthaginians are multilingual
and that they are not one ethnicity. There are many ethnicities. And all of our evidence points
to that being true, that we know that there would have been the Amazir people of North Africa
today who were we call Numidians, really, or Libyans in ancient sources.
They were a big part of Carthaginian culture, as were the original founders, the Phoenician
people who spoke a Semitic language that developed into Punic, what we called the Punic
language.
But we know there were citizen groups of Greeks.
There were all kinds of people from Liberia.
There would have been people from all over the Mediterranean there.
and from law a big part of Africa as well. So do we think that most Carthaginian citizens,
do you think their education would have meant that they had to learn several different languages?
Well, I don't think we can really know for sure, but we do know that most Carthaginians spoke Greek
if they were educated. So Greek, as you know, at this time of history and in the ancient world
was the lingua franca of the Mediterranean, and so anyone who was educated spoke Greek, and it was a language
that would have allowed a lot of communication between different groups of people.
So, you know, Scipio and Hannibal both spoke Greek, but they chose not to speak Greek when they
spoke to each other, but they both could have. And most Carthaginians would have had an education
in Greek if they were educated. Now, they would have learned their own Punic language, too,
and that would have been the language probably of religion and ritual and culture. But we know
that there were Greek religions that were, you know, formally adopted into the Carthaginian
Pantheon, too, so there were Greek rights. And we have authors who tell us about this,
Diodor Siculus, tells us that when the Carthaginians adopted the cult of Demeter and Cori
into Carthage, the Greek citizens of Carthage or the Greek-speaking citizens of Carthage
were the ones the priests who administered the cult. So we know that's part of it. And we would
imagine that there's all sorts of other cults and people as well. So, yeah, multicultural,
multilingual, the language that most people would have spoken, we assume was Punic from the
inscriptions, the vast number of inscriptions that we have from Carthage are in the Punic language.
The official inscriptions that hung on temple walls are in Punic. So that would have been the
official language of the city. And then people would have been able to communicate, perhaps more
internationally in Greek. But if we go a little bit further back, because, of course, the Romans
fight wars with the Etruscans and really, you know, they take over that area.
That's northern Italy, Tuscany area today. Quite early. But we know that in the 5th century,
BC, Carthaginians and Etruscans are allied together. They're doing commerce. We have these
really cool little business cards found in tombs in Carthage and in the Etruscan language. So
we have an example of one business card that says, I am Puneal from Carthage, but it's written
in Etruscan. It's found in a Carthaginian tomb in Carthage. So, and it's only half of one of these
ivory business cards that would have been really beautifully carved. And the other half went with
somebody's shipload to wherever it was destined somewhere in Etruria, so in north of
Rome. And, and that's where the other half of that card rested. So that's,
I love that story because we can see both how business was done.
Long-distance trade was carried out between merchants of different cultures
and the fact that they use these cards to express themselves to each other
and to make sure that the goods met the buyer sort of thing when they do business deals.
That's amazing.
That's almost kind of like with the tablets that have survived from Roman London
and some of the earliest tablets, which I think the earliest surviving wooden tablet from London,
which predates Budica, is a business transaction.
and it was found in the city of London, of all places.
So it's really interesting.
That sounds a similar case there.
And also the multitude of languages makes me think of a previous chat I've done with
Lloyd Llewellyn Jones about Babylon and the Tower of Babel, the Babel idea, this idea that
all these languages were spoken in Babylon as well.
But do we get a sense then, just keeping on the port a little longer?
He mentioned the multitude of jobs that were available, that the trading bureaucracy must have
been a monstrous task, so many people involved, and maybe the official language for
that was Punec, and yet all the people involved in that kind of that huge trading network
of the Carthaginians, they would have been speaking so many different languages, but maybe
when they come to the port of Carthage, they have to for the official documents, write them
in Pune. Possibly, and that's something we don't really have any evidence for most of the
inscriptions that we have are more ritually based. And I think that's a super interesting
idea to think about the possibility. So if we go back to that business card, that's written
in Etruscan. So it's really interesting to try and perceive how power and the politics of power
would have played out into that. So I'm assuming that the perhaps translations had to be made.
You can imagine that if you arrived from somewhere in the Eastern Mediterranean with some
Rhodes say, because we know the Carthaginians loved Rhodian wine. And they imported a lot of
Rodean wine. They loved wine, we think. And of course, grew a lot of really beautiful grapes in
North Africa, too, and made good wine. But they imported a lot of Rodeon wine. So when we get the
amphry that are imported with the wine in it, we have the writing on those, and that's in Greek.
So that tells, you know, where they came from, what's inside, how much is in the amphra,
what volume we're talking about.
So those must have arrived in the port, been unpacked by people who then would be able to
note this down and possibly had them translated into Punic.
Because taxes would have been involved in the Carthaginian state, the city itself,
would have taken taxes off on goods coming and going.
And for the treaties that we have that exist between Carthage and Rome that Polybius records,
we have really incredible detail about the fact that who, what and where goods are allowed
to be unloaded, which ports. And it often defines these kinds of ideas around trade. So it was
something that was very carefully regulated. There you go. Well, you mentioned imports and
exports. So if you're walking out of the port of Carthage, I mean, what are some of the big
imports and dexports that we hear about with Carthage at its height that you may well have seen
going through the port of Carthage at that time? Well, we can,
imagine that if you're walking out of the commercial port of Carthage, you would enter directly
into the big space that was the market. The Agorra. The Greek word, we're using, not the Punic
word, because we don't really know it. But that was a really important part of this, the space,
and it would let, it was direct access from the ports into the marketplace. So that's really
telling, isn't it? A big hint of what's so important.
and what's happening, and all of the different things that get mentioned are all very, really
interesting stuff.
So a lot of fish, and my suspicion, not ever yet, and I'd love somebody to prove this for
me, is that the Roman fish sauce that they're so famous for, the Garum.
I'm almost certain that must have come from the Iberian Peninsula, the Phoenician cities like Cadiz
and that were allied to Carthage.
Spain and Portugal today, that area, right?
The Spain and Portugal, yeah, Spain and Portugal.
Because that was such an important fishing culture.
And, you know, they were Punic, Phoenician speaking.
People, West Phoenicians, we call them.
And they developed, you know, fish as such an iconic part of their identity on coinage and things like that.
And then at Carthage as well, fish is really, really important.
And we have lots of evidence in various places.
of amfrey full of scaled fish and things like that.
And in fact, there's a house that was excavated in Corinth of all places,
another very, very important port in the Mediterranean,
and in fact destroyed by the Romans the same year that Carthage was.
And it was a house that's filled with Amphrey that came from Carthage.
And the scales of the fish that were in the house were then limed over into the floor.
So there were so much fish arriving in this house.
There's so many fish scales and fish bones.
The smell must have been extraordinary, so they limed it.
But, yeah, so export from Carthage, we definitely know fish is involved.
So I always think the fermented fish sauce that the Roman becomes so important with the Romans may very well have originated either in the Western Mediterranean, Phoenician or Carthaginian places that they took over.
And in regarding imports, you mentioned wine earlier.
should we also be thinking more infamously things like slaves or metals?
I mean, do we know much what would have been brought in and sold en masse at the market as well?
Yes, all of the above.
And sheepskins we know about from, say, Plautus we were talking about earlier.
The playwright talks about sheepskin from Sardinia being part of the merchant cargoes of the Carthaginians.
The enslaved is one of those really difficult issues because we really don't have evidence
for unfree people in Carthage.
We don't have the same level of evidence
that we do from the later Roman period.
And if we were looking at Rome in this period as well,
we wouldn't have very much evidence from Rome either.
So we assume, yes,
that slavery was a part of Carthaginian culture,
that slavery was a part of Carthaginian culture,
and that it existed,
but like so many things that we see with the enslaved
is that they were almost invisible to us in, and again, in the archaeological record, they were very
ephemeral, the enslaved and the process of that. That being said, we assume like all the rest of
the Mediterranean cultures that there were, the unfree existed at Carthage, did jobs. We don't
know a lot about what the Carthaginians did with their war captives. We know much more about
what the Romans did. We have a good idea about what Hannibal did when he was in Italy, you know,
he would let go the auxiliary forces of the Romans and keep the Roman citizen soldiers who were
captured and to be ransomed. So that kind of engagement back and forth of being enslaved and
then bought or freed, that went on. But we don't really know. And we have no idea whether they
participated in the large scale kind of enslavement and slave marketing that the Romans did. We can't
make that. But yes, we assume yes. There were the enslaved. We definitely know that there would
have been metal traded and the Carthaginians go to Spain and Portugal because of the draw of
their incredible metal reserves along the Guadalcavier River, the silver, the iron ore. So that's
very much a part of what would be bought and sold. But there was a great deal of wealth in the
landscape of North Africa. And we see Carthage in the archaeological record very early becoming
self-sustaining, growing enough food to feed itself and exporting food. We see that really early
on. So we don't really know about what kinds of foods that they needed to import and what they
produced. We know they produced lots of olive oil, lots of olives. They grew wine, but they
They imported wine from Rhodes, as I was saying.
They had big grain production, barley, all the different fruits and legumes.
That sort of stuff was all grown in North Africa.
So those things may have come into.
But they were incredibly connected to Sicily, which also had a huge amount of resource.
And so those sorts of back and forth between Sicily and Carthage was happening all the time as well.
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Presumably, were there places then within Carthage, if we go a bit away from the market,
were there places that you could visit, almost, I guess, the ancient Carthaginian equivalent
of restaurants and places to get food? Do we know much about that?
We don't know anything about that. Oh, it's not like Pompeii, damn.
No, and that's again really too bad. Of course, we're talking so many centuries before that must have been.
Of course.
You know, the idea of Carthaginian food and recipes only is preserved in bits and pieces in later stories
and then in Archaeobotanical remains in the archaeology.
And so we don't have a lot to connect the two.
Cato, the great Roman who really wanted to destroy Carthage over and over again.
He did have this really famous book of the Carthaginians translated into Latin.
And that was an agricultural treatise by a man whose name was Mago.
And so we know that agronomy and the science of growing things at Carthage was very well known and renowned.
So that is something that turns up in bits and pieces and later agricultural writers.
But what we what and how the, what kind of public engagement with food almost, I guess we could call it, we're not really sure.
we can't say that bathing and there were public bathing spaces and public toilets. So there was a
public life. And so along with all of the things that go with that, washing and using the loos,
basically, you would have probably had food as well. And we can assume the one of the only recipes
that we know about from the Carthaginians is a kind of porridge. Yes, let's explore the porridge.
Because you mentioned this when we were exchanging emails about this very topic.
Exactly.
So Punic porridge turns up in a couple of different places.
So we know, and Ploutis, back to our friend Ploutis again, the comedian makes fun of the Carthaginians and calls them porridge eaters.
So think about how we make fun of other cultures today, and we can assume that they are pretty renowned for their porridge.
And it was a kind of cheesy porridge.
It was a savory porridge that used barley, we think, and lots of cheese and salt.
And it was, yeah, would have been really nourishing.
It would have had protein and it would have had all the grains you needed and things like that, the pulses.
We don't think that the Carthaginians ate a lot of meat, as most people in the ancient world,
wouldn't have eaten a lot of meat because meat was very expensive.
Animals were very expensive.
So it wasn't sort of vast general consumption of meat, but it wouldn't.
have been consumed at festivals. The priests in ancient Carthage were in charge of the sacrifice
of animals and animal sacrifices in most ancient societies were part of public banquets.
So priests, I always like to think of that dual role that priests played in the ancient
world of being both in charge of ritual and like butchers too. And so they would have been
really good at cutting up the meat and leaving some for the gods and giving some to the feasts.
And so the proper distribution of an animal would have taken place.
They were definitely, you know, the nose to tail consumers of meat,
but they wouldn't have eaten a lot of meat.
Or your average Carthaginian probably wouldn't have eaten a lot of meat.
It was very, very expensive.
But they would have eaten fish.
Fish was readily available.
And then grains and pulses and vegetables and what people could grow as well.
Fish, do we think fish is it?
Fish, yeah.
And a lot of fish, yeah.
So meat's special, fish less so, but fish is still important.
So if we keep on this idea of the everyday Carthaginian,
what should we be imagining with the everyday Carthaginian?
Should we get the Hannibal Barker out of our mind?
Well, should we?
It's really interesting to think about how average the Barkett family were
because we don't really know where they came from.
We've talked about the fact that there's a theory
that they might have been of Greek or Greek and Libyan origin
from the eastern part of what is Libya.
today, that they would have certainly, and we know, been intermarried into Numidian royalty,
so your average, they may have been actually quite typical in terms of ethnicity of their average
Carthaginian. But were they typical in terms of what they and how they presented themselves?
No, they were elites, right? So they had big estates outside of the city. They probably had a home in the
city as well, your average Carthaginian is really very, very difficult to get a grasp on.
The men wore long tunics.
We know that.
Again, descriptions from our friend Plautus makes fun of the fact that they wear very long,
long robes.
They don't wear short ones.
There's also little jokes about them wearing underwear, which I find really interesting.
How bizarre?
How could they, right?
Yes.
But why how that plays out?
We don't know.
And we know almost nothing about what women wore.
Assuming, though, that people, because if we take the idea that they're renowned for being multicultural,
the assumption is that when you went to Carthage, that was visibly on display.
So not just the language is, but also what people wore.
And we see that, you know, that's something people comment on when they talk about the Carthage.
military, everybody's wearing their own distinctive dress. That must have probably been true in the
city as well. So it would have been sort of various different ethnicities were wearing whatever
was their local garb. Materials like linen obviously would have been used and hemp type
things and, you know, like sort of basic clothing. The climate hot and cold in the winters can be
really cold and we hear about sheepskins being imported into Carthage from Sardinia again,
so bringing up the sheepskin. So those must have been used in various ways. And yeah, so
because is it quite an enigmatic topic? Because I appreciate, as we've explored in this chat,
there are these amazing little glimpses we get into the lives of people living in Carthage,
but there's still so much which is mysterious we don't know too much about. But do we get
any more idea about that whole social hierarchy idea at Carthage? I mean, if it
was so multicultural, do we think that foreigners actually outnumbered Carthaginians within the city
and so on? No, and I think, no, in fact, I don't think that's true. I think that the citizens
were multicultural. Oh, okay, right. Thank you, right. Yeah, I don't think that's the case,
in fact. And we know that what made you a Carthaginian was definitely not your ethnicity.
Interesting. That is an absolute certainty. There's a recent paper that's been published in
antiquity on the evidence taken from Carthaginian period cemeteries in various parts of the
Mediterranean. And the DNA certainly turns up no one ethnicity and lots of people from the
Aegean who are buried in Carthaginian period cemeteries. So in fact, we know as well that Hannibal,
for example, again, we know so much about Hannibal, was, had many soldiers with him whose
mothers were Greeks and fathers were Carthaginians. We have absolute evidence that the Numidian people
were a big part of the genetic makeup of the Carthaginians. So being a Carthaginian citizen was not
your ethnicity. It was your relationship to the city, which is really interesting. But I think
very common, especially in the Western Mediterranean, which are these colonial cities, you know,
made up of people who are coming from all different places. So you became a citizen in Carthage,
not because you were of any sort of origin of Carthaginian. That may have happened, but also because
you were part of the city and how you became a citizen. We only know a little bit about that
through military, of course, and that soldiers could become citizens after they had served in the
Carthaginian army. We understand that from the story of Agathocles' army. So is it potentially
possible, then let's say if we are arriving in Carthage. Let's say we're from Atruia,
we're in Etruscan, or we're one of the lucky few who still comes themselves in a Truscan
at this time, although I'm sure that there was still some proud Etruscans out there.
But you had arrived in Carthage and you had a lot of contacts with the city already through many
years of trade, and then you decide to stay in Carthage and maybe work in the market or somewhere
else. So there is certainly, although we can't say for sure the exact details of it,
your relations with Carthage are there, your contacts with Carthage, are there,
that you could become a Carthaginian in name.
You could become a Carthaginian.
Yes, you could become a Carthaginian, definitely.
And you could marry into a Carthaginian family.
That seems not to be a problem at all, as far as we understand.
Marrying between different groups of people is not at all restricted.
And so you could become a Carthaginian by marriage.
You could become a Carthaginian by serving in their military.
We assume there are other ways as well.
perhaps you, I don't know
they have a resident, you know, how long you lived in Carthage.
You could apply to the temple of Eshmun, you know,
on the Versa Hill and make an application to become a Carthaginian.
What were the advantages of being a Carthaginian is what
is always really hard to know.
What made it worthwhile being a Carthaginian?
Because that's really what people become citizens, isn't it?
We see that today all the time.
And as a Canadian who lives in London, I've been through the process.
why do you choose to become a citizen? And I think those are things to think a little bit more
about and that there must have been, or there was likely a mechanism for that. But it was
probably through personal relationships and intermarriage. That seems to be the way that things
worked. I'd like to ask quickly, before we go on to religion and law and punishment and so on
as the chat goes on, a bit about residential areas in the city. Now, do we know that Carthage
you've got the harbour, you've got the market, you've got the Bursa Hill, the Citadel area.
Do we know whether the rest of Carthage, of course, you've got that wide open countryside farming area as well, the megra that you mentioned.
Was it very much divided into districts? Would there be a clear residential district and other districts and so on?
Yes, and that evolves over the period of the history of the city. We understand that too.
And there were all the way up the Bersa Hill, so were streets, three main streets, and along those
streets were houses. These multi-story, we think they were six stories high. Houses, internal
courtyards, exits facing onto the streets. And we know that as the city went on, and we
archaeologically, we know this from the last, say, 50 years of the city, there were big urban
villas on the hill of Juneau, which is the hill beside the Bursa Hill. So Carthage is made up of
three big hills at least as well and that this is a these develop in the later period so we don't
know if they're there before we just don't have the evidence and we can't access the archaeology
because Carthage is today a really beautiful place to live with modern houses and and a modern
community and an absolutely stunning spot and so it's difficult to really get the full layout of
the area in this period but we know there were these multi-story houses.
We know there were individual larger villa-type houses within the city or more, you know, stately homes, we might call them.
We know there were cemeteries in the early period that then you hemmed in the city.
Within the walls from the early period.
And then those were, they stopped using those when the city had to expand because of its population growth.
And so the walls encompassed a big, large area.
but those early cemeteries were actually are inside the later city walls.
And we also know that there would have been the urban poor, of course.
Like we always see, and certainly in the third century BC,
we don't have very much evidence for urban poor,
assuming they're living in rammed earth or mud brick kind of structures,
and we have evidence for mud brick use at Carthage as well,
and that they're in areas that were perhaps not as well connected,
perhaps not as well connected to the sewer systems and the irrigate, the canal systems.
Carthaginian houses had cisterns in them that collected water.
They were very sophisticated for a third century BC housing.
The other really important thing I think for life at Carthage connects to the city walls
and that those walls were what we call casemate walls.
So these have two, like an exterior and interior wall and then rooms in between.
And inside those casemates, inside these rooms in the urban, in the walls, where animals were kept.
That's where the Carthaginians kept their elephants.
That's where soldiers lived.
They catch their elephants within the walls of the city of Carthage.
Yeah, they would have, of course, been sitting to the exterior.
But yeah, that's what we're told anyway.
So we have to believe what we're told in these cases because we don't have them anymore.
but that, yeah, the big walls of Carthage were living walls.
And this is true of many ancient cities who have these big casemate walls,
these double walls, is that the space in between them is too valuable.
So they're part of the living entity of the city.
And so then people coming and going from the land gates
would have been controlled as well in that area.
That's incredible.
And also to think that you would have probably,
I mean, there's potential to see elephants
when you're walking through the streets of Carthage at the same time.
Exactly, this idea.
hard to imagine. Now, of course, that's only from the 3rd century BC onwards once the Carthaginians
started to use elephants, but their military engagement would have been part of the walls.
Oh, interesting. I must ask one other question on this is almost once again if you're
arriving in Carthage, but also bringing in the idea of other big ports in the Mediterranean
like Corinth. I mean, surely alongside the houses for the people who lived in Carthage all
the time. Even if we don't have evidence, archaeological evidence for it yet, surely there must
have been the equivalent of inns or hotels or rooms you can rent and so on for people who
were just passing through? Must have been. And they must have been a key part of the landscape.
And we assume, you know, almost like diplomatic missions must have existed in some of these
ports as well, even if they were, you know, not full. I mean, I always think that we shouldn't
use terms like, you know, full state function in this period because really was a much more
lawless than that. But I think a place like Delos in the Cycladic Islands, yes, which was an
amazing international port in its later phases, is a really good example. There's a house on
Delos, the house of the Carthaginian merchant. And the reason that it's called that is because
it has a mosaic of the sign of Tanet, which is the little stick figure.
round-headed looks like an Egyptian-onk almost figure that we find in Carthage as well.
But it's thought that a Carthaginian merchant lived in Delos and used that house,
so we can only make the same assumption going back and forth.
In Carthage, there must have been houses for merchants coming from other regions as well,
maybe connected to religious cults, to guilds, to all those things that we know
that when we certainly know guilds existed at Carthage too.
Well, you mentioned Tenet.
So what sorts of artwork would you see, or just, I guess we can call it artwork, maybe even, because I'm going back to Pompeii now, I'm thinking of graffiti and so on, and things like that.
Do we get any sense from our surviving sources or from the archaeology, what types of art you would have seen in Carpage?
Mosaic floors were part.
The story, very little of the walls exist, and so we don't know, but we assume they were decorated.
We have a bit of evidence from other sites that are better preserved.
places like Kerkuan, which is up on the Capon Peninsula across the bay from Carthage
and up on the east side of what is modern Tunisia today is this incredible site that you can
still, you can go and visit, and it is the closest thing that you can get to a Carthaginian period
settlement.
Kerouan.
Kerouan, yeah.
And it's really, really cool.
They seem to have processed the Murex shells there, the purple dye, which of course the Phoenicians
were very famous for, and the name Phoenician comes from the Greek word for this purple dye.
And they fished and the agricultural land around there is really, really beautiful, this beautiful little
walled town. And so there's mosaic floors there, so we know that. And the mosaic floors are very
early. Their third century BC, so very much at the same period as the Hellenistic cities in the east,
much probably a little more developed in terms of, I want to say,
kind of visual unity perhaps in the city, then we find that Rome, which develops a little bit
later with a lot of that. But I think one of the things that you would have seen at Carthage
that Rome was very famous for is loot from other cities. And the story is, is that when Carthage
fell, Scipio Amelianus, who took the city of Carthage, found pieces of art and things like that
around the city that were renowned to have come from places that the Carthaginians had sacked
over their history. And so they were, you know, given back or other cities were invited to come
and take back their things. So stolen loot was a big part of the ancient world. So Syracuse,
Rome, Carthage all had it. And we, I'm sure it would have existed in a public space in Carthage.
We don't know very much about how people decorated their homes and things.
like that. We just don't have that evidence. What we have is very much the substructures only. But we can make
these assumptions from places like Kerouin, that they were mosaic floored and they had, you know, painted
walls and, you know, all that sort of stuff. Can you explain them what this tannet symbol is? It's got like a
triangle and a circle and then a hand, like two arms sticking out. Like a triangular stick man.
Yeah, it's like, yeah, or a stick woman really because it's the triangle as the body. Absolutely.
That's the sign of tannet. We don't know if it was called.
the sign of Tanet by the Carthaginians, that's what we call it, because it's associated with
one of the really, really important and famous religious sites at Carthage, the precinct of
Tanet, as it's called, or the sanctuary of Tanet, otherwise known as the Toffet.
And so that sign, which appears in inscriptions, and it appears on mosaic flowers, at Kerouan
most famously, and then, as I said earlier, at Delos in the hosts of the Carthaginians.
So it seems to have been an important sign.
It is very, very close in decoration to the Egyptian ink symbol.
And so there is this possibility that it has the same kind of implications of being a life symbol, almost.
But it's called the sign of Panette, after the Carthaginian goddess, Tanit, who's like the chief goddess of the Carthaginian pantheon next to her consort, who is Baal.
Yeah, which just means, as you know, Lord in the Phoenician Punic language.
I had no idea.
So thank you for telling me that.
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So if you are at Carthage, how would you go about doing your worship of the gods? Do we know much about that?
We have some idea based on some inscriptions that have been found that are thought to have hung.
on the walls of the temples.
And this one inscription, that's now,
there's part of one in Toulon or in Marseille,
that was an inscription that was being taken away
during the French colonial period, back to France,
that was preserved, and it came from Carthage.
And there's another one, I think, at the British Museum,
that show the regulation of worship
at a temple called Bal Saffon.
Balsafon, my colleague, who I know you've talked to,
Dylan Johnson.
who's excellent and knows all sorts of things about near-eastern gods has told me is a version of
a sort of a sky thunder god perhaps, but the gods that are worshipped in the Near East that get
transported to Carthage do not necessarily have the same meaning and function in Carthage,
and you always have to remember that. So Thalsaphan exists at Carthage in a temple,
and the regulation of how people could worship
exists in these inscriptions.
And the inscriptions are great
because they tell us about guilds.
So guilds of people would get together
to offer the sacrifice of an animal.
So all the pilots in the port
or all the maybe seamstresses in the workshops.
So guilds according to professions.
Yes, we think those are guilds according to professions.
We just know that's the sort of word.
But we assume that might be, but they might be
religious guilds.
They could be people who worship this goddess or that goddess, but they're community connections anyway.
And so they exist and they get together and you can, you know, what price for a goat, what price for a sheep, what price for a pig, what price for a cow, and all the way down to birds and also the offerings of milk and honey and things that poor people could have offered.
And that what the charges should be by the priests for the butchering of the different animals and also.
all that sort of stuff. So it was very regulated. And I mean, it would have been everywhere, most
likely, that this was something that was part of the community process. And it was adapted to you
based on your own personal circumstances, I guess. Yeah. So that, I think, is really interesting.
So we know that happened. We know that they sacrificed animals on an altar. Usually animals are
sacrificed outside of the actual temple space because the temples are where the gods live. So you don't
sacrifice the animals inside the temples. You do it outside on an altar, and then you offer the
goods into the temple itself, which is the house of the gods. So that's most likely what we understand.
And we do have some examples of remaining of altars and visuals of the sacrifice of a cow,
a bull or a cow, with the lying on its back on an altar. So having been sacrificed,
So the butchering is probably taking place, you know, with the stomach opened up and things like that.
If you're, I mean, that's a little leap by me, but we know just the imagery is there.
So that happened and yeah, so everything and anything.
And then I've already talked about the fact that there were Greek cults.
There would have been Egyptian cults, we assumed too, because there is, when we've talked a little,
we talked just earlier about the visual presence in the city, certainly in the graves that have been excavated in,
in Carthage from the earlier period,
the presence of a very strong Egyptianizing style,
if that works.
And things like scarabs,
a lot of faeons, objects,
and Egypt culturally was very strong visual presence
in the material culture of Carthage that we find in the tombs.
And so that I think is really key
and might have been, could have existed as well.
There's a really, really famous,
sculpture on the top of a sarcophagus.
It's called the priest and priestesses sarcophagus,
but she's certainly not a priestess because she is lying face up
on the top of this marble sarcophagus.
She's very, very beautiful woman,
and she is an Egyptian-style goddess like nephethyst.
We see with the wings.
The Egyptian goddess nephethysts, no idea, yeah.
And the wings, these beautifully painted,
wings cover her legs and she's got her head covered in. She would have had the Eurea, you know,
the symbol, the snake symbol of crown as well. That's gone now. But so we know from the existing
visual culture at Carthage that there would have been that sort of strong Egyptianizing
input and that they were painted these sarcophagy as well. So color, we have to think about
color. We should have way more color in the ancient world as many, many people have done lots of
research on. Things were painted. Things were bright. Things were, you know, colorful and
exposed. And it's also really interesting there very quickly before we move on, is the fact that
when you initially said Egyptian elements, I would have thought, oh, okay, so probably from
that, you know, the Ptolemaic, Alexandria, so like third century Egypt and the idea of ships
going from Alexandria on the coast, maybe past Sirene in Libya, and then onto Carthage back
and forth. But it sounds like the Egyptian artifacts there are even older than that.
much older 6th century BC, even, and going all the way through.
And that is, we know, for example, Phoenician sailors sailed, circumnavigated Africa
for the Egyptian pharaoh, Niko, or Nibo, just the last of the native Egyptian pharaohs in the 6th century
before the Persians take over Egypt.
So there's a strong connection between, and geographically when you think about Egypt and
the Levant, the cities of the Levant, and then all the way along the coast of Africa.
But that's something that you could also imagine as well.
And I guess this is more imagination, but given the strong heritage of the Carthaginians as explorers and their Phoenician heritage, you could imagine stories being told in Carthage of previous voyages of Carthaginian ships, you know, going past the Straits of Gibraltar, circumnavigating, maybe in some cases you say the whole of Africa and coming back up the Red Sea and, you know, that kind of area. It's extraordinary.
Absolutely. And we have Phoenicians, we, and Herodotus tells us what a Phoenician ship that does it. We have Hano, the navigator.
of course. I think you've done a podcast.
Does he go all the way to almost kind of Burkina Faso area?
Yeah, the Gulf of Cameroon, perhaps. Maybe. Maybe. There are questions. There are many questions.
And we know that he brings back skins of animals, that there's wood, exotic woods they bring
back and collect. And they would have had a big, you know, and of course, Carthaginians traded
across the Sahara South too. So that is an important part of the material culture, although we have
less evidence for Carthage than we do for the later period with the Romans trading with Garamontes.
But we assume the Carthaginians did as well because the region south of the Sahara needed salt
and the Carthaginians needed the gold and the Niger Delta existed. It was the home of a lot of
gold. And so there's a natural trading kind of connection there. And Sahara and caravans were
crossing the Sahara all the way through this period. So it would have definitely been part of it.
We can't forget ostrich eggs. Painted ostrich eggs. They're really important. And they turn up in graves in Carthage as well. He's beautiful, painted, decorated ostrich eggs.
If we go back to religion a little more, because you mentioned animal sacrifices. And I find it striking this idea of, you know, you've got priests who are your gateway to the gods, but they're also your butchers at the same time. But we've got to also ask, and I think we'll get to the name the Tofet now, could there also have been human sacrifice?
Well, yes, indeed, I'm going to say that. And of course, there was human sacrifice in ancient Rome as well. So we're not, and many other cultures seem to have had or practiced human sacrifice that is eventually outlawed and banned. And by the Romans in the first century BC, it is. And so we have to imagine that human sacrifice at Carthage may very well have been eventually sort of phased out. And it seems like that was a possibility. But yes, we have evidence, certainly.
for the sacrifice or dedication of children.
His children in particular.
Children, very young children, children now with the most recent work
by an excellent Tunisian archaeologist called Imed Bendjurbania.
He's just done a recent excavation at the site that we call Toffet or the sanctuary of Tanit.
and they've done analysis on the ages of the fines there and also on the sex and have been able to
show us that it is both girls and boys, which I think is really important because the ancient
sources say that it's only boys who are being sacrificed. So the ancient sources that tell us that
the Carthaginians sacrificed their children in mass numbers and do this sort of callous mass sacrifice
I say it's boys and it isn't. It's both. And also that they're very, very young. So they're
newborns, really, mostly. Although some, there is some evidence of a little bit later, older children
too. And we have to add that not everyone agrees that this is a child sacrifice site and that
the argument, which is very, very difficult to prove, but perhaps may have some validity. I'm not saying
that we know for certain, for certain what this site is. The argument is perhaps that this is a place
where the Carthaginians dedicated their stillborn children or the children who died almost
immediately after birth because infant mortality would have been enormous in the ancient, well,
in the pre-modern world. And so there is this ongoing debate, although I think fairly convincingly,
the argument has fallen on this being a place where throughout the time that,
the city existed, children were dedicated to the gods, Bal and Tanid, the two chief deities of the city
at this site. And they were ritually deposited in urns. They had been cremated and then deposited in the
urns. And then usually a little stone steely was set up to commemorate that. This goes back to the
very beginning of the city. So from the earliest, earliest phases, and goes right through to the end of the
and almost to the post-Roman period.
There's dedications made.
These dedications are not just made by Carthaginians.
They're made by people with Greek names too.
And that they are obviously being made as individual deposits by individuals
who sometimes leave an inscription in Punic that says,
because he or she heard our voice.
that is the most common inscription on the, and sometimes the name of the people as well.
So that's one of the reasons, and I think it's a pretty strong argument, that people think this is a sacrifice site,
because it's the fulfillment of a vow made to the God that the deposit is then placed.
if it is a place where you would deposit your children who die of natural death,
then the kind of fulfillment of the vow doesn't seem necessarily as clearly explained by the inscriptions.
That's the argument that is most convincing to me,
but I know that there are different people, there are very many people who feel very strongly about this,
and then we don't really have a clear answer.
We have to remember that Romans, Greeks, and every,
else exposed their children, unwanted children, to die.
This happened all through the ancient worlds.
It wasn't a very nice process, but it is something that we kind of can't get our heads
around, of course, in the modern world.
But that this is ritualized in some way at Carthage is the difference, I think, between the
Carthaginians and the other cultures.
I mean, it's gruesome, but still very important to highlight.
And so, as you say, you know, it's still very much, lots of people are debating.
this topic and this very, very prickly topic.
The one thing I would say is the location of it, too, is really, really very key to what
we were already talking about, because if you arrived at the Merchant Harbor, you could go
in the military harbor is next door, the Agorra is right next door, but the Toffet was found
just behind the Merchant Harbor as well.
Now, whether you could access it or not, we don't know for sure, but it's very close to
the very center of the city, so it was a very important place.
for the idea of what Carthage was.
And these sites don't just exist in Carthage either.
They exist in other sites in North Africa.
They exist on Malta, we think, because of inscriptions that are found there.
They exist in Sardinia.
And they exist in Sicily on the island of Maltia as well,
which is just about the greatest place to go if you want to get a sense of a Carthaginian city as well.
It's really worth our late, you know, West Venetian city worth going.
I'd love to go to Machia.
Let's go together, Tristan.
Oh, well, absolutely.
I love that idea.
I love that idea.
I love that idea.
We can talk about Dionysius the Elder as well.
Oh, my God.
And the siege of Mozart.
That's another episode entirely.
We've got limited time, but I would also like to ask a bit about kind of crime and justice and crime and punishment, I guess, in ancient Carthage.
Obviously, getting rid of this idea that there was a police force that, you know, getting mugged, you could go to an authority and then they would help you out, probably not going to.
to be that case, is it? But was there certain cases where the Carthaginians could capture a
criminal and then could punish them? There could be public showing of what not to do and how
you'd be punished if you did wrong? So big questions, we do not know all the answers to,
but some interesting hints in some of the sources we've already discussed. Aristotle being
the pseudo-aristotle, it's called the document, which is about the comparative constitutions of
other nations to the, to the Athenians. It's such an interesting source base. He talks about
Carthage. What's legal, what's illegal, and how the Carthaginians regulate themselves.
So there were sitting magistrates at Carthage. There were two magistrates every year in the
Republican period of Carthage, which we think is like six, like six century BC, maybe fifth
all the way through to the end of Carthage. So two sitting magistrates, called Sufittes. So you were a
Sufet, and you were elected from a group of senator types called Adderim, and you sat as a magistrate
then in the city, and that made you, the word Sufet comes from the Hebrew word, or is similar to
the Hebrew word Shofetam, which is a judge. So interestingly, that the magistrate role in Carthage
was connected to judge, and that seems to be in the civic magistrate, so that we know they sat in the
marketplace, these judges, these suffets or the sitting magistrates. So Aristotle talks about
who shouldn't drink in Carthaginian constitutional law, as it might be called, and the people
who shouldn't drink, which is very wise, drink alcohol, are, if you think about this, it's very
modern. I'm always like, so are judges sitting in the coin the markets. So I think I would like
my judge to be sober. So I'm pretty fond of that. The pilots of boats in the ports. That's probably
good one, yeah. That's another one, too. They absolutely should not be drinking and couples who are
trying to get pregnant. So, you know, when we think about that, that's pretty wild. I always think
while the Carthaginians knew a thing or two about who should and shouldn't be consuming alcohol.
Anyway, so what does that tell us? That tells us there were judges sitting in the markets.
So these magistrates were obviously controlling what was happening within the public spaces.
at some level, I guess you could go if so-and-so stole something from so-and-so,
you go up to the magistrate.
Keeping an eye out for pickpockets and the like.
All those sorts of things, yeah.
And then the other things that we know about crime and punishment at Carthage,
of which we know very little, are that they used the punishment of crucifixion
for people who were deemed to have committed treason.
And again, I've wondered, and maybe somebody out there knows.
But my instinct is that the earliest evidence of crucifixion,
may be in the Carthaginian records or records of,
then they're not Carthaginian self-expressed records.
Of course, these are records told to us by other sources about Carthage,
but that the use of crucifixion as a punishment for treason
is something that turns up in military stories
where a Carthaginian general is thought to have failed,
thought to have committed some sort of poor acts,
and they are crucified.
whether they're crucified with a trial or not. We're not sure, but other sources tell us that
there are trials held. So we know they have courts. We know they have judges that we know they
held trials. Now we don't know very much more about that. And we know that crucifixion
for the most extreme crimes in the state seems to have been used. But where and how that took
place, we don't really know. And if the Romans adapted crucifixion, which of course they're very
famous for mass crucifixions, in fact, obviously, then perhaps they took that from the
Carthaginians. We just don't know. And again, I'm not claiming that as absolute fact, but it's my hunch.
It's interesting. Very, very interesting tie like that as well. Eve, we've covered so much ground
over the last hour. Is there anything else you'd like to highlight about the glimpses we have
into life at Carthage, how to survive in ancient Carthage before we wrap up?
music. Music, of course. How can we forget?
Exactly. And I think that we always forget music and that we know from other cultures in the
Western Mediterranean and we know from the use of these, you know, like the big conch shells
for military. Oh, yes. Yeah. We know that Hannibal's Army seems to have use that.
People mention it. And I think there's no question that music would have been a really important
part of the culture and part of public life and part of the rituals around death and
commemoration. And I think that's something to think about is the sound. We always forget sounds.
And I think to think about what it sounded like to land in Carthage and to have, you know,
people speaking all sorts of different languages and calling out and this large sort of the sound of
the sea and then also music and the importance of music in that story. And I think we should
always try and remember that. And the evidence for it comes from various different places and
graves, and it's not a certain thing, but I think one of the later ideas that I talk about this
a lot is this, the girls of Cadiz, that's what they're literally called the Puellae gadetanai,
were famous in the later Roman period for it as being dancing girls from the city of Cadiz.
And the Romans liked the women of Cadiz, these girls of Cadiz. But the music from Cadiz, for example,
seems to have been really important, and we have these little figurines from graves in Ibiza,
which was a Phoenician city musical figurines and things like that. So we can make assumptions
that music was a big part of this story too. So Ibitha, big for music back then.
Back then too. And continues down to the present day. Pretty quite different.
Eve, this has been absolutely fantastic. Last but certainly not least, you cover all of this
and so much more in your all-encompassing book, which is called?
new book is Carthage, and it's, you know, a new history of an ancient empire. The history of the
city-state of Carthage, its rise, it's full, and as much as possible about a lot of the things
we've talked about today, the new archaeology, the DNA, the science behind helping us
understand who the Carthaginians were as people. Amazing book, and when is it coming out?
It's coming out August 7th in the UK, and then in the December, January, in the US.
Okay, fantastic. So it will already be out in the UK by the time we released this episode.
Eve, it just goes to me to say thank you so much for taking the time to come on the podcast today.
Thank you so much. Pleasure. Love it.
Well, there you go. There was Dr. Eve MacDonald talking you through how to survive in ancient Carthage, street by street, building by building, really giving you a wonderful insight into Carthage at its height, as it was this rival of Rome. I hope you enjoyed the episode.
And if you want more of Eve and myself,
well, you can come and see us in the flesh.
We'd love to see you because we are doing another special episode on Carthage for our live show
on the 5th of September at 7pm at King's Place in London.
I really am looking forward to it.
As is Eve.
She's brilliant.
I'd love to see you there.
It's really good fun.
Let's see.
We've got a link to where you can buy tickets in the description in the show notes of this episode.
So I really do hope to see you there.
Thank you for listening to this episode of The Ancients.
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