The Rest Is History - 641. Rome’s Greatest Enemy: Hannibal’s Nemesis (Part 2)
Episode Date: February 5, 2026What happened at the Battle of Ibera, a totemic though overlooked battle of the Punic Wars? With the forces of Carthage closing in on a depleted Rome, would a young Roman, Publius Cornelius Scipio res...urrect the fortunes of the Republic? And, could he destroy Carthage’s most crucial power base in Europe? Join Tom and Dominic, as they discuss this next phase of the Carthaginian Wars. _______ To hear our previous series on the rise of Carthage, Hannibal, and the battle of Cannae, go to episodes: 421, 422, 423, 424, 568, 569, 570, 571. _______ Join The Rest Is History Club: Unlock the full experience of the show – with exclusive bonus episodes, ad-free listening, early access to every series and live show tickets, a members-only newsletter, discounted books from the show, and access to our private Discord chatroom. Sign up directly at therestishistory.com For more Goalhanger Podcasts, head to www.goalhanger.com _______ Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Video Editors: Jack Meek + Harry Swan Social Producer: Harry Balden Producers: Tabby Syrett & Aaliyah Akude Executive Producer: Dom Johnson Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Masinissa had already heard a great deal about Scipio's prowess as a general and hugely admired him.
The Numidian had formed a picture of the Roman in his mind's eye as a man of powerful and striking physique.
But when at last he came face to face with Scipio, he was awe-struck.
for in the flesh
the Roman general was even
more impressive than he had
been in Massinissa's imaginings
that was Welsh exciting
naturally possessed of great dignity
Scipio also
thanks to his longer air
cut a most graceful figure
this however
owed nothing to any effeminate
fussing over fashion or
personal grooming
but rather to an appearance and bearing
that was virile indeed
stream, for he was the very model of a warrior.
Scipio was just at the age when his physical powers were at full strength, and even though he had
recently been ill, he had quite recaptured his youthful bloom. Indeed, he seemed more handsome than ever.
So that was Rob Bryden describing one of history's more homoerotic summit meetings.
Actually, it was the Italian-born Roman historian, Livy.
So that was your Roman accent, was it?
That was the accent of an Italian.
But actually, as it went on, it degenerated into the accent of an Italian who had set up an ice cream parlor and Swansea in the 1910s.
Dominant, you and Welsh history, we just can't stop you doing it.
It's great to have some Welsh history back on the show.
So that was the Roman historian Livy, and he's describing this exciting meeting in 206 BC.
We are on the Atlantic coast of Iberia, now Spain,
and the participants are two extremely strapping, well-oiled and handsome warlords.
One of them is Massinisa, who is a Berber prince from modern-day Algeria,
New Media, as it then was, and the other is Publius Cornelius Scipio,
who is a Roman patrician, a young man whom we met in their previous episode.
And Scipio, listeners may recall,
was the officer whom, 10 years before this meeting, had rallied the Met of Rome in the wake of
their shattering defeat at Can I, and he had made them swear, never to desert our country,
nor to permit any other citizen of Rome to leave her in the lurch. So, 10 years on, here he is
meeting this oiled warlord. Tom, explain what's going on. Well, I mean, an extraordinary
a way of accents, for starters. But there are some other puzzles as well.
first of all, attentive listeners may be wondering, what is a Numidian doing meeting up with a Roman? Because
people who've listened to our previous episodes in this ongoing series will recall that the
Numidians are the allies not of Rome, but of Carthage. And in fact, they are key allies, because they are
the best like cavalry in the world. They ride bareback. They don't bother with reins. They have spears
all kinds of things. And they are the horsemen who have provided Hannibal effectively with the
cutting edge throughout his invasion of Italy and his occupation of Italy. And the Romans have learned
to dread the Namedians possibly more than any other of the units in Hannibal's army. So what is
going on here? And secondly, what on earth is up with Scipio? Because Dominic, you read this
This kind of stern traditionalist statement of Roman pluck and determination.
I mean, Skippy is only 19 when he's saying that.
So he's very, very old school.
I mean, it's patriotic in exactly the way that Roman traditionalists expect young men to be patriotic.
But something has changed and something very, very sinister.
If you recall, people who are paying attention to that reading and frankly who wasn't,
Scipio now has long hair, the most un-Roman thing imaginable.
So is he like you going to India on your gap, yeah?
Is that what's going on?
Well, I mean, someone else he went to India, of course, is Alexander the Great.
And there's a definite hint of Alexander there.
And what is also a hint of Alexander is the fact that, according to Pliny the elder,
admittedly writing centuries later, but I think we can rely on him.
Scipio was the first Roman to shave daily.
So up until that point, Romans had generally been bearded, but now Scipio has introduced this fashion for a clean chin. And that again, of course, is very, very Alexander. And when you think of that description, that passage that you read, the sense of awe that Massenissa feels at seeing this kind of divine godlike figure, I mean, it's quite Homeric. It's the way that people are described in the Iliad, for instance, seeing Achilles. So all in all, in all, Scipio is cutting,
for Roman traditionalists, a disturbingly kind of Greek dash.
Because Roman commanders are supposed to be old and craggy and bearded and all of that.
And they are not supposed to look like Achilles.
They are not supposed to look like Alexander the Great.
So something odd is absolutely going on here.
So when Livy is describing Scipio, there is a sense here, isn't there, that Scipio is more than an ordinary Roman general, as you've described really.
this business about Alexander the Grave, for example.
There is a sense, isn't there, in Livy's description,
that Scipio is his marketing himself as something actually quite old-fashioned
as a Greek style, as indeed a Homeric hero, right?
Somebody who has been appointed by the gods to lead the Romans back from the abyss
of Cannae and Lake Trasamine and all the defeats that Hannibal is inflicted on them.
And do you think this is a conscious thing?
And do you think Livy is genuinely reported?
Skipio's PR strategy, as it were.
This is how Livy puts it.
He absolutely says it's a PR strategy.
So to quote Livy, from Skipio's earliest days, he used to present his policies and actions
as inspired by dreams or by warnings from heaven.
And this is very ostentatiously performative.
So Livy tells us that, Skipio, before he takes any course of action, he will go up to
the capital very obviously and sit in the Temple of Jupiter as though he is communing with the
God. And this in turn fosters what Livy describes as a very empty and foolish story once told of
Alexander the Great, that Scipio had been born from the embraces of a giant serpent, a monster that
had often visited his mother in her bedroom, but had always glided away and vanished the moment
someone came in. I mean, skeptics may say, well, there's absolutely no evidence for this at all,
but clearly what Scipio is doing is trying to imply that the serpent might have been due to.
Because, of course, Dominic, you will remember that very similar stories were told of Alexander,
that Jupiter had come in the form of a snake to Alexander's mother.
So, Scipio doesn't, obviously doesn't deny these stories, does he?
Why would he?
As Livy says in his account, whether he was truly so superstitious as to believe this nonsense
or whether he fostered reports of it so that people would obey him the more is unclear.
So Scipio just lets the stories kind of build and build.
Now, I guess Scipio knows that what the Romans are cravings,
is, well, at first what they were craving was a figure of reassurance, right? A conservative figure,
a memory of Roman virtues past. But he's changing, isn't he? And he's developing a new strategy
to sort of impress his personality on the Roman masses. And he's becoming, I dare, I mean,
Tom, you have compared him in your notes to a rock star. He's turning himself into a figure
of kind of rock star glamour and charisma. He's very good-looking. He's very swagger. He's very swar.
and he's kind of promoting himself as possibly as the son of a god. And of course, he is in a
republics. And republics don't tend to look favourably on kind of rock stars posing as the son of a
god. So there must be some people who think this guy's a terrible person. I mean, this is,
that he's showy and brash. And I mean, this is actually a complaint that people will level
a lots of Roman figures to come, isn't it? Yes. But Scipio is establishing a brand that, as you
say, many Romans to come will copy well into the period when
the Republic has actually collapsed and been replaced by an empire.
But Scipio is blazing the path for, you know, these kind of younger, showboating emperors who will appear.
But Scipio is going to end up.
So a lot of people listening to this may already know.
Scipio is going to end up as the great antagonist of Hannibal.
The two of them are kind of linked in the imagination for people who study the classical world.
And their encounter, their duel will become the great turning point in the Puneit Wars.
And Scipio gives the Romans the one thing they've craved all this time,
which is their own figure with the glamour, the charisma,
and the effectiveness, the military effectiveness of Hannibal.
Actually, Hannibal is relatively well-born, isn't he, in Carthaginian terms.
And Scipio is also extremely well-born.
I mean, he is positively posh.
He went to Harrow.
Christchurch.
Maybe Christchurch, or did he go to Durham?
No, he went to Christchurch.
because he I mean, he's the poshest of the posh. And he's very smart. He's very charismatic. I mean, he's got it all. Because he is a patrician. So he is from one of the ancient aristocratic dynasties of Rome. But having said that, actually, the Scipio's have only recently come into political prominence. And basically, the Punei Wars has been the making of the Scipio's and their reputation. So back in the first Punei War, two of them had done well enough to be awarded triumphs.
Scipio's uncle is called Calvus. He's nicknamed Calvus, which means baldy. He had been consul in 222 and was a great man for having a crack at the Gauls. The Romans always like people who could defeat the Gauls. And Calvus's brother, Scipio's father, Publius, people may remember, had been consul in 218, which was the year that Hannibal had invaded Italy. And admittedly, he hadn't exactly covered himself in glory in that campaign. He tried to stop Hannibal from.
invading Italy and failed and he'd been injured before the Battle of Trebia. But he hadn't totally
screwed things up. And compared to the record of other consuls who had taken on Hannibal,
I mean, that's, you know, that's not bad. And it suggested, I think, to the Roman people,
to the Roman government, that Publius, he had a kind of a basic competence. And that in the scale of
the crisis that Rome was facing was considered to be enough. And so by 217, both these Skippio brothers,
Calvus, who is the young Scipio's uncle, and Publius, his father, they have been sent to
Iberia, to Spain.
And to clarify, so Spain later on, it's obviously an integral part of the Roman Empire.
Hadrian comes from Spain, doesn't he?
But at the time, so, you know, we're 200 years before the birth of Christ, Spain is a very
alien and exotic and terrifying place for the Romans.
It's like something out of a science fiction.
epic. It's like being sent to a hostile planet because it is teeming with hostile barbarians
who clean their teeth with their own urine. I mean, completely shocking. And they are masters of
a lethal weapon. And this is a short stabbing sword which works by eviscerating an opponent. You
plunge it in and you slice it up and all the guts spill out. And the Romans call this weapon a
Gladius, which is a word that later Roman scholars will derive from the Latin word cladais,
which means slaughter. They're kind of synonymous with butchering your enemies. And the Romans have
already experienced the gladius because Hannibal has brought lots of Iberians with him to Italy.
And unsurprisingly, because the Romans are very, very adaptive, particularly when it comes to
kind of military matters, they have begun to use the gladius for themselves and a start
to master it, but obviously it's unsettling to be up against a whole peninsula full of warriors
who were born basically to use it. And so I think that the prime duty of the Scipio brothers, when
they arrive, and there's a kind of Roman outpost in the northwest of Iberia, basically what's now
Catalonia, their prime responsibility is not to be wiped out. And this is a huge challenge
because they have been sent as the news back in Italy is going from bad to worst.
So Hannibal has been inflicting, you know, these incredible defeats on the Romans that we did
in the previous series.
Lake Trasamine has just been fought.
You know, an entire army has been wiped out, a consul killed and all of that.
And this means that the Senate can't really send many men or many, you know, or supplies
or indeed cash to bribe the local tribes to Spain.
And so effectively, the two Scipio brothers are penned into, let's call it, Catalonia, anachronistically.
It's dangerous for them to venture out of that.
So they, if you think of Spain perhaps as being a little bit like Arachis, Dune in the Frank Herbert novels,
you know, they are hemmed in and they feel that it is perilous to leave that.
And I think that if people have a sense of this whole story that we're doing today as something
that could very easily provide the plot of a kind of one of those epic science fiction novel set on distant planets.
They will not be far wrong. The clash of mighty galactic empires, that kind of thing.
Okay, so to remind people exactly where we are, we are back at the point when Hannibal is kind of cutting a sway through Italy.
We're with the two Scipio brothers who are our Scipio, so the long-haired boat.
It's his father and uncle.
And so we've sort of gone back in time.
So we're in Spain.
and the problem for them is that they are now facing,
not just, you know, one Carthaginian general,
and not just the Iberians with these fancy swords,
but the entire Carthaginian Empire now controls the whole
of the southern part of the Iberian Peninsula, doesn't it?
And the guy in charge of the Carthaginians at this point
in this part of the world is Hannibal's younger brother, Hasdrable.
And he has with him a pretty mighty force,
13,000 infantrymen, 3,000 cavalry. He has 21 war elephants. He's got all these mines that are the
key really to Spain's wealth is what makes Spain so attractive to outsiders. So gold, silver, copper.
And he has a city that we talked about last time. They've called it Carthage. The Romans call it New Carthage.
And this is the sort of center, the base of the Carthaginian Empire in Spain. And this city is
on four hills, overlooking a fantastic harbour. It's to this day one of Spain,
Carthagena is one of Spain's key naval bases.
You know, like so many cities across the Mediterranean world,
it's got these amazing fortifications.
And it has a direct road link with the mines
that makes it extremely rich.
And basically, if Hasdrubal,
the Carthaginian can keep hold of this,
then the Scipio brothers,
basically they can do what they like,
but they're not going to dislodge him
from the Iberian Peninsula.
So the Greek historian Polybius,
who is our best source for the Puneic Wars,
I mean, he describes it as the chief ornament and the centre of the Carthaginian Empire in Spain,
because not only is it linked to the mines in the hinterland, but it is also, of course, open to the sea.
So it's what enables New Carthage to communicate with Carthage and, of course, with Italy.
And what this means is that Hasdrable and the powers in Carthage can coordinate to try and raise reinforcements
that can then be sent onwards to Italy.
And this is absolutely, it goes without saying,
the last thing that the Romans want.
They do not want a second Barker brother.
So Hannibal Barker, Hasdrable Barker.
They do not want Hasdrable Barker turning up in Italy
with yet another massive Carthaginian army
with his elephants and his Namedians and his Spaniards
with their terrifying stabbing swords and so on.
So essentially the Skippio brothers are where they are,
in the northwest corner of Iberia by the Pyrenees, essentially to block off Hasdribal's
access route to southern Gaul so that he can't follow Hannibal into Italy. And their objective
is not just to stop Hannibal, but to try and conquer and win over as many of the Iberian tribes
as possible. And ideally, you know, conquer them for Rome. But if they can't do that, then at the
very least, kind of foster anti-Carthaginian feeling so that Hasdrable will have his hands full
trying to kind of put out rebellions in Spain. And Hasdribal's goal is obviously to raise an enormous
army and march through Gaul into Italy. And for the Romans, the supreme moment of peril comes in
the spring of 215, which is the year after Can I. And Hasdrable has raised an enormous task force.
And he leaves New Carthage. And as Hannibal had done three years before, he advances northwards
at the head of this vast force. And his aim is to cross the Pyrenees, advance through Gaul, and
join his brother in Italy. And if he's successful, then Hannibal's forces will be doubled. And it is
hard to see in the wake of Cannae how the Romans then would have been able to carry on the fight.
So this is really a crucial moment in the war. So the two Scipio's, they are basically standing in his
way, and they meet Hasdrubal just south of the river Ebro, outside a town called Iberra.
and this is actually one of the most significant battles in history, arguably, that nobody has ever heard of.
Because as you say, if Hasdribal manages to cross the Alps, join Hannibal in Italy, that looks really dicey for the Romans.
But what happens, Tom, at the Battle of Iberra, it's actually a Roman victory.
It is.
The Roman infantry, always their strongest arm, meet with the Carthaginian infantry and essentially wipe them out.
Hasdribal is able to withdraw with his cavalry, so it's not a total victory.
but it is sufficient to abort Hasrable's onward march to Italy.
So there is a case for saying that this is the decisive moment of the war,
absolutely a candidate perhaps for the title of the most decisive battle in history
that no one has ever heard of.
However, as we say, it doesn't finish Hasdribal off because he has withdrawn with his cavalry.
And towards the end of that year, 215, he is joined in Iberia by a very, very glamorous figure indeed.
This is Hasdrable and therefore Hannibal's youngest brother.
And this is a guy called Mago.
And we talked about Mago in our series about Hannibal's invasion.
Mago had accompanied Hannibal into Italy.
And he had done very well.
So at the Battle of Trebia, the first of Hannibal's great victories,
people may remember the Carthaginian cavalry had hidden behind some bushes and then sprung out
and attacked the Romans in the rear.
And Mago had led them.
So, you know, an absolutely crucial part in that victory.
At Can I, he had stood next to his brother in the most critical and vulnerable position in the Carthaginian line.
So he's incredibly brave.
He had then been sent by Hannibal to Carthage to announce the news of the great victory at Cannae, which he had done very flamboyantly by bringing in an enormous sack full of the gold rings that had been taken from the slaughtered bigwigs in the Roman army.
And he kind of empties the sack full of rings onto the floor of the Carthaginian Senate House.
and everyone in the Senate is enormously impressed,
even people who normally would be very hostile to the Barker brothers
because they're kind of jealous and resentful of them.
And the Carthaginian Senate decides, you know, we need to weigh in here.
And so they have voted to raise more troops,
so infantry, cavalry, elephants, and to pay for it.
And these have now sailed from Carthage to New Carthage
and Hasdrubles forces have now been swollen again.
So to recap, we now have a situation on the Iberian Peninsula in Spain where we have two rival armies, one Roman, one Carthaginian, led by two rival pairs of brothers.
So this really does feel like sort of Frank Herbert's gone mad.
Exactly.
People haven't yet started turning into sandworms, but it's very science fiction, isn't it?
Yeah.
I mean, only in a science fiction epic or the second Punic War would you have a situation where you have two rival sets of brothers facing each other in a weird,
alien landscape. And basically, they're now pretty evenly matched. So Calvus and Publius, they succeed in
blocking Hasdrubel from leading reinforcements to Italy. You know, they feel that they're doing
their job. But Mago, who is by far the ablest commander in Spain, he succeeds in keeping the
native Iberians loyal to Carthage and blocking every attempt the Romans make to expand
beyond their northern enclave. And finally, in 2.11, the Skippeo brothers think, oh, this
is ridiculous. We've got to break out. We've got to try and, you know, take the battle to the Carthaginians.
And so they march southwards towards New Carthage, but it all goes horribly wrong. So first,
Mago wipes out an army led by Publius, who was Scipio's father. And then a few days later,
Hasdribal crushes the second Roman force, which was being led by Calvus, Scipio's uncle,
and both Publius and Calvus are killed. And two factors in particular lie behind these twin
defeats. And the first is the, I mean, we could call it the little big horn strategy that had been
adopted by the two Roman commanders. They had essentially divided their forces, meaning that it then
became easier for the Carthaginians to pick them off. But also another factor was the presence
in the Carthaginian ranks of a brilliant young cavalry commander. And this is a guy we have
already met. This is Massinissa, the Numidian who was so besie. And, you were so besieged.
sotted by the godlike appearance of the young Scipio. So at this point, he is barely 20, but he's
already very, very seasoned. He'd already won a war on behalf of his father back in Africa
against a rival Numidian king called Syfax, who we will be hearing about later. So he's seen
off Syfax. He's kept his dad on his throne in Numidia. And now he's arrived in Spain at the
head of 3,000 horsemen, and he is there to serve against the Romans. And he and his cavalry
had played the leading role in harrying the Romans under the two Scipio brothers to their doom.
And Livy records the details. Day and night, he would cut off parties of Romans who were
distant from their camp in search of wood or fodder. Often, Massinissa would ride right up to the
camp itself and charge at the gallop through the outposts guarding it, causing the most terrible
confusion. So, thanks to Hasdrubel and Mago, and particularly to this swashbuckling Numidian
Prince Massinisa, it looks like the Carthaginian presence in Spain, of course, access to those
crucial minds, is secure. Because you would think that if the Romans are fighting a life or death
struggle with Hannibal in Italy on home territory, they will not be able to spare or to muster
new forces to prosecute the war in Spain.
And the question, of course, is even if they could,
who on earth would they have left to send as their commander?
Well, the answer is there, surely, in Massunisa.
As Alex Ferguson would tell you in 1996,
sometimes you have to reach for the kids.
And maybe this is what the Romans have to do now, isn't it, Tom?
Because they are basically in the position of, what are they called?
The Fremen in Iraqis in June.
Tavi says, nice.
in the chat. I'm telling them to a bit of June. Yeah. So, as you say, the Carthaginians have got their
kind of dashing youth. Is it time that the Romans summon up a dashing youth of their own? And if they're
going to do that, who could this dashing youth possibly be? Where, Dominic, can they find a Dune Messiah?
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Hello, I'm Professor Hannah Fry.
And I'm Michael Stevens.
Together we host The Rest is Science, a brand new show from Gollhanger.
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We're going to pull apart what we take for granted to.
reveal the unexpected patterns and hidden logic just beneath the surface.
Because that's what moves science forward, not the polishing of answers, but the sharpening of
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Stick around until the end of this episode for a first listen. And if curiosity gets the better of you,
join us every Tuesday and Thursday for new episodes of The Rest is Science.
Welcome back to Frank Herbert's June, to The Rest is History. It is 210 BC. We are in the city of Rome.
And amid the marble halls of Hollywood's imagination, a young man called Scipio, Publius Cornelius,
Scipio, 25 years old. He's suspiciously clean-shaven, even more suspiciously,
long-haired. There's talk that he has been fathered by a snake. And this young man has just
been elected by public vote to command of the Roman armies in Iberia in Spain. Now, Tom,
I said elected by public vote. This is unusual, isn't it? Because isn't normally the Senate
that appoints commanders rather than the Roman people? Yeah, it's very unusual. Because as you say,
the Senate is very jealous of its prerogative. The Senate has the right to appoint commanders. What are the people doing, poking their noses into this important business? Because it is taken for granted that commanders should be elected magistrates. But Skipio is not an elected magistrate. He is a privatus, a private citizen. And it is also the Roman custom to put a premium on experience. They tend to regard youth not as something dashing, but as something.
potentially sinister, that a Roman commander who is under the age of 40 is generally assumed
to be kind of impulsive and headstrong and rash. So listeners may therefore be wondering,
well, how on earth did the 25-year-old Scipio, you know, this private citizen, how on earth
did he manage to get this command? I mean, it's undoubtedly the case that the people adore him.
He's glamorous, he's dashing. He provides him with a, you know, a touch of
color amid the kind of monochrome grind of the war against Hannibal. And although at the same time,
although lots of people in the Senate are indeed suspicious of him, I think there are also lots of
them that can recognize the advantages of sending him specifically to Spain. Because remember,
he is the son of one of the commanders who'd been in Spain and he is the nephew of another of those
commanders. So the name of Scipio in Iberia has a real cachet. And I think that even in the
Senate, there are people who feel, well, we would be mad not to capitalize on this. The issue for
them is they don't want to be seen to be appointing a 25-year-old. If they do it, it would
establish a sinister precedent. And so that's where the popular vote comes in. They can get
the people to vote for him. And essentially, they're kind of washing hands of the responsibility.
So, Scipio, he gets his command.
He leaves Rome.
He arrives in Spain.
And the situation that he finds waiting for him is a very, very rocky one.
So obviously the Romans have lost two major battles.
So their numbers in their kind of enclave in the northwest of Spain are badly depleted.
The Iberian tribes, you know, they're busy cleaning their teeth with urine, sharpening their stabbing swords, all of that.
These are people who only really respect success. And this in turn means that now the Romans have been so comprehensively defeated by the Carthaginians, they are much likelier to swing Carthaginian-wise. And this obviously is brilliant for the Carthaginian commanders, because their numbers have now swollen and they are able to put three armies in the field. So there is one under Hasdrable, Hannibal's younger brother, which is stationed in central Spain near what's
what would today be the city of Toledo.
There's another under Mago, who is Hannibal's youngest brother,
near the pillars of Hercules, what today is Gibraltar.
And there is a third army by the mouth of the Tagus,
so that is Dominate your favourite city, Lisbon.
I love Lisbon.
So the Carthaginians are not thinking about,
they don't think they're going to be having to fight a defensive war
to maintain their foothold in Spain.
They actually are thinking about expanding their empire, as it were.
They want to conquer northern Spain.
They want to get more manpower.
They want to get more mines, more natural resources.
And once they've done that, they think, right, we'll finish with the Iberia Peninsula.
And then Hasrabal can lead a task force into, you know, through southern France, across the Alps, into Italy, as we have been hoping to do for so long.
That, as always, is their prime goal.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So actually, that winter, the Carthaginians do not retire to their base at New Carthage, but they remain.
in their forward basis because they are on the front foot.
It's they believe who are prosecuting the war.
Yes.
And it's clear as well that they regard Skippeo with contempt.
They haven't factored him into this at all.
They feel that the Romans have been beaten.
And their focus now is essentially, as you say, on conquering the remaining
Iberian tribes.
But this is going to prove a very, very serious mistake because the young Skipio has arrived
to take up his command with a very, very bold plan in his head indeed.
And so that spring, his first, you know, it's his first campaigning season in Spain.
He musters every last soldier that he has.
And it comes to about 20,000 infantry, two and a half thousand cavalry.
And he heads south along the coast, as his father and uncle had done the previous year.
And as he goes, he is shadowed by the Roman fleet.
And this is commanded by his closest friend, a guy called Gaius Lilius.
And Lilius is the only other person in the task force who knows where they are heading.
The only person that Scipio has entrusted with his brilliant plan.
So southwards they march along the road, on and on and on.
And finally, a week after they've left, so on the seventh day, they arrive before their destination.
And this destination, Dominic, is the great city of New Carthage.
it's obviously an incredibly bold strategy.
It's been fostered by the fact that Scipio knows that the Carthaginian armies are at least 10 days march away.
And that the garrison that has been left in New Carthage is basically only about 1,000 strong.
But even so, we've said how it has these kind of bristling fortifications.
It's a very, very strong city.
I mean, it's a big, big ask to take it.
And I think that Scipio's men, when they realize the job that their young general has set them,
they feel a bit alarmed.
They think, oh, God, actually, you know, everybody says about young commanders is true.
They are rash.
They are headstrong.
They do come up with mad ideas.
But Scipio summons his men and he addresses them.
And he appears sublimely self-confident.
And he tells them, it is the God Neptune who first suggested this plan to me.
So he's now moved on from talking to Jupiter.
he's talking to Neptune, the god of the sea.
He appeared to me in a dream
and has promised to show his support for us
by means of a spectacular sign.
Well, to be fair, this is very,
you're compared with Alexander the Great.
This is certainly the kind of stuff
that Alexander the Great would come out with
and people would say, hurrah, yeah,
I completely believe this, let's do it.
And actually, you know, it's a good comparison.
What happens immediately is that Lilius,
the naval commander, you know,
he assembles his ships and they surround the harbour,
blocking off access.
And the main body of Scipio's men launch a massive
frontal assault on the city walls. And the defenders are entirely focused on resisting this.
Meanwhile, Scipio has recruited a crack squad of elite hand-picked men and he takes them on a secret
mission. Because north of the city, there stretches a lagoon. And because the waters are normally so deep,
and because every defender in New Carthage is required to stave off this kind of main Roman assault,
The walls that rise above the lagoon are unguarded because they assume that, well, no one will be able to cross the lagoon.
So, Scipio arrives with his crack squad of elite handpick men on the shores of the lagoon.
And they look out and there it is and then beyond the lagoon are the northern walls of New Carthage.
And as they gaze at the walls, there is a palpable miracle because a heron lands and stands in the water.
and this reveals to the Romans that the waters are ebbing.
You say a miracle, but isn't that pretty standard with waters that they ebb and flow?
It turns out that this is in fact a regular phenomenon, that it happens every so often.
Does it not happen every day?
It's not a regular tide, but every so often the tide does go out.
And Scipio has been informed about this, and he's worked out that this is the moment when he needs to be there.
But obviously, he doesn't tell this to his men, and they all assume that this is the sign from Neptune that Scipio had promised them.
And so they wade in through the shallows, reach the base of the walls.
They've brought ladders with them.
They put them up against the walls.
They climb over and there is no one to stop them.
And now they can rush forward.
They can open the gates of the city.
The Romans who've been doing the full frontal assault can pile in as well.
And there is unbelievable slaughter.
And we know this because Polybius, this Greek historian, he goes on to interview Lilius,
who is Scipio's friend who's been in command of the fleet.
And he revealed just how brutal the slaughter had been.
So to quote Polybius, the practice of the Romans is to inspire terror.
And so when they capture a city, you will often see not just the corpses of human beings,
but dogs cut in half and the dismembered limbs of other animals.
And Lilius specifies to Bolibius that this is what was happening in New Carthage
after the Romans had got in.
And so unsurprisingly, the Carthaginian commander, seeing the horror,
realizing that he has no prospect of keeping the city,
he duly surrenders and so the slaughter stops and new carthage unbelievably is scipios he has seized the great nerve center of the carthaginian empire i mean an amazing coup
so this is an extraordinary moment because what this has done is it means that um the romans now have the wealth of new carthage
they have the supplies they have the resources they have the harbour so they have a wonderful link now with the sea
and Scipio immediately turns it into what Polybius calls a workshop of war, doesn't he?
So he starts to recruit troops, he's drilling them, he's kind of endlessly schooling them
in kind of the tactics they will need that he has learned from Hannibal.
He's making weapons.
And the PR, the propaganda effects of this, perhaps the most crucial element,
because basically this is sending a message to the people of the Iberian Peninsula.
the Romans are back and they're here in a big way and they are the winners now.
Yeah, and the Iberians love a winner.
So by the spring of 208, Hasrable knows he's got a massive crisis on his hands because he's
lost his capital, but he is now increasingly losing the loyalty of all these kind of various
Siberian warlords who were thinking, well, Scipio's a winner.
Let's back him.
And a whole posse of warlords by the spring of 208 have decided that they are actually.
actively going to back the Romans. And so, again, to quote Polybius, they all prostrated themselves
before Scipio and hailed him as king. Of course, the word king is a very dirty word to the Romans.
They are a republic. They don't like kings. But Scipio accepts that, you know, the name has a kind of
glamour that will help his cause. And so he, you know, he accepts it, which in the long run
won't go down well in Rome, but, you know, needs must. So the issue now for Hasdrable, his
rival, Hasdrabel knows that basically the entire war hinges on this, right? Because Carthage really,
really needs Spain to continue being at the as well, the top table of international kind of
superpower rivalry. Well, and more than that, if they lose Spain, then there's no way that Hannibal
can win in Italy. Because if supplies and troops from Spain cannot reach Italy, then in the long
run Hannibal will lose. So do you think Hasdrabul at this point is thinking, right, well, I need to really
force the issue. Let's get this over and done with now, because having lost new Carthage,
I can't hang around. So this is why he basically rolls the dice and says, right, we'll go for Italy
right now. We will march there with the expeditionary force to give my brother the reinforcements
he needs and let's finish this. Yes. And so it is obvious to both sides that this is
the great fulcrum point of the whole war. This is the moment of supreme crisis. Everything hangs
on what happens next. So obviously, the Romans are desperate to stop Hasdrable. The best way for them
to stop Hasdrable joining up with Hannibal is to prevent him leaving Iberia at all. So early that summer,
Scipio advances into the depths of Iberia. He attacks Hasdribal's base and he manages to inflict serious
casualties. But he can't prevent Hasdribal from doing a withdrawal from his base and nor over the next few
months, can he prevent Hasdrabel from rebuilding his army? And by the winter of 208,
Hasdrable has advanced through Spain over the Pyrenees and has arrived in Southern Gaul where he
is wintering. And wintering in Southern Gaul gives him the opportunity to recruit lots of
warriors from Gaul. The Gauls hate the Romans. This is what Hannibal had done when he'd gone.
So his army is now really substantial. And come.
spring the next year, so the campaigning season, he leads his army complete with 10 elephants
over the Alps. And people may be wondering, well, we hear all about Hannibal crossing the Alps.
We never hear about Hasrable crossing the Alps. What's going on? I mean, the reason is that
he, you know, he does it expertly. He does it with incredible competence. And I think essentially
the reason that we remember Hannibal's crossing is that he doesn't do it nearly as competently as
Hasrable did. Anyway, so Hasdrable descends from the Alps. He arrives in northern Italy. And the
Roman's worst nightmare has happened. There are now two huge armies, each one led by a Barker
brother in their backyard. There are two consuls in Rome who have the job of stopping these two
brothers. And one is in the north. He has six legions and he's got to stop. Hasdrable. And then there's
one in the south with seven legions who's meant to be bottling up Hannibal. So the guy in
charge of the northern legions, I read in your notes, Tom, he is called Marcus Livius Salonitor.
and he is, and I quote from your notes,
a gloomy eccentric with terrible personal hygiene.
I assume that all eccentrics have bad personal hygiene.
How does his poor personal hygiene manifest itself, would you say?
He's feeling very hard done by,
and so as a protest, he has refused to wash or cut his hair,
and so he's notorious for his body odour.
That's no way to inspire your men.
And what about the guy in the South?
The guy in the South is a member of the Claudian dynasty,
one of the oldest and most prestigious dynasties.
So he's called Gaius Claudius Nero and he's beautifully groomed, is he?
Yeah, not a hint of body odour.
These two folks, perhaps because of their dispute about grooming, despise each other.
They absolutely loathe each other.
And so this is obviously a potential worry.
I mean, will they be able to team up?
But in the event, the contacts that exist between these two consuls
turn out to be much more secure than the communication links between Hasdribal and Hannibal.
So Hasdrable obviously is desperate to rendezvous with his elder brother and find a point where they can kind of meet up and combine their forces. And so he inevitably, you know, who are you going to turn to you when you want to deliver a message? Obviously in Numidians. So he gets a bunch of Numidians, supplements them with a few Gauls, writes out a message. And this message is meet in Umbria and he sends the Nehidians and Gauls off. And why Umbria? Well, this was the region where Hannibal had.
one at Lake Trasamine, it's in northern Italy, it's on the way from the foothills of the Alps
towards Rome. And this suggests that the Carthaginian plan was for the two brothers, once they
had met up, to march directly on the capital and force the Romans to face them in battle.
Because up to this point, the Romans, of course, had been avoiding meeting Hannibal in battle.
And I think that, you know, their aim is we will stake everything on a single throw.
see, for this to happen, Hasdrubal's message has to reach Hannibal. And the problem is that it doesn't,
because it falls into the hands of Nero, the beautifully groomed Claudian consul, whose job it is to
bottle up Hannibal in the South. And when he gets this message and reads it, he reacts,
as Hannibal would have done in his sandals, with boldness and with an incredible display of
initiative. So what Nero does is to trick Hannibal into thinking that he is still with his legions.
He does this while he is simultaneously siphoning off a very substantial body of infantry.
And he then marches with this body of infantry at incredible speed northwards towards where Salinator is
refusing to have a wash. And as he marches, he is joined along the way by enthusiastic volunteers.
so that by the time he reaches Salinators camp on the 22nd of June,
he is bringing a very, very large body of men
to join the Six Legions under Salinators camp.
And Hasdrable has no idea at all that Nero has arrived
until he hears in the morning
not the one blast of the trumpet that signals the presence of a consul,
but two.
And this indicates to him
that there are two consuls with their armies facing him.
And you can imagine, I mean, his heart must have turned to ice.
And so he thinks, oh God, this is terrible.
I can't, you know, I'm going to be annihilated if I meet them.
And so he tries to withdraw.
But he has a problem because his line of retreat is blocked by a river called the Mataurus.
And so he leads his men, they're kind of stumbling through the marshy banks of the Mataras
trying to find a fording place.
And as they're doing this, they're set upon by the Romans. And the battle is lost almost before it had begun. Now, it's true that the defeat was actually, I mean, it wasn't total. Had Hasdrubel survived, had he been able to lead his men and cross the Mataros and withdraw to the foothills of the Alps? I mean, he would entirely have been able to carry on the fight. But Hasrable dies in the thick of the fighting. I mean, he's very brave, but I think he's a bit stupid to have done that.
Polybius says that he displayed in his death a fortitude and an ability of spirit worthy of his family name.
But I don't think he displayed the shrewdness that Hannibal would have done in his situation,
because his plunging into the thick of the melee essentially dooms his army and therefore, in the long run as we will see, dooms Hannibal.
Now, when Hannibal had defeated the Romans at Can I, they had killed one of the commanders, a guy called Imelius Paulus.
and Hannibal had shown the corpse of Paulus great respect.
You know, he had not desecrated it.
Nero and Salinator, when they find the body of Hasdrable, do not show it a matching respect.
They cut off its head and they put Hasdribal's head into a sack and then they give it to a horseman.
And this horseman gallops southwards, reaches the outposts that surround Hannibal's camp,
gallops up to one of these outposts, hurls the sack at the feet of Hannibal's guards in this outpost, turns, wheels and gallops away.
And the sack is brought to Hannibal, and Hannibal opens it, and he pulls out the severed head of his brother.
And we are told that he mourns his brother, but that staring into his dead brother's features, he also mourns his city.
and he cries out we are told
now at last
I see the doom of Carthage Plain
this is the moment
I think when Hannibal knows
that probably
the game is up
but not quite up
because okay
he's not going to be getting
reinforcements to Liberia
but the Romans are still
they're so wary
of his enormous military reputation
they don't confront him in open battle
so he actually now heads
even further south doesn't he
away from Rome into the heel of Italy, into what's called Brutium, and that's the area that he can
hold most easily if the Romans are coming after him. He also, of course, does have a brother left.
He has Mago back in Spain. And if you're Hannibal, you are probably thinking, well, if Mago can
defeat Scipio in Spain, if he can win back the loyalty of the Iberians who've gone over to
the Romans, who knows, maybe Mago can recapture New York.
Carthage. Maybe he can raise a new army. Maybe he can send reinforcements to Italy. So, quite a lot of
ifs. Yeah, there's a lot of ifs in any war. Unfortunately, not all of these ifs work out to Hannibal's
advantage, do they? I mean, we said, Mago is a very good general. He's very, very dashing and very
competent. I mean, his problem is, for the first time, he is facing a Roman general who, you know,
essentially is as able and inventive as Hannibal himself. And Skipio essentially, essentially,
is going to crush all Hannibal's hopes because he is going to demolish the Carthaginian
Empire in Spain. So in the spring of 206, he has cornered Mago at a place called Ilypho,
which is north of what's now Seville, and they meet in battle. And alongside Mago is
Masonissa, who's no longer a prince by this point, but a king, because his father died a few
months before. And so he is now the leader of this kind of federation of Numidian tribes called the
Mysulians. So he is, you know, I mean, he's now a very, very big player for the Carthaginians,
not just a great commander, but an allied king. And so Mago and Massinissa, I mean, they must have
been hopeful that they would be able to defeat Scipio. Mago would back himself. He knows that the
Romans have always been kind of powerless against the Numidians. But no, it doesn't turn out at all.
actually they find the battle that Scipio now forces on them.
I mean, to put it mildly, a very, very bruising experience.
So first, Massenissa's Numidian horsemen, you know, these great, great cavalrymen,
they're swatted aside by Scipio's cavalry.
So people will remember that when Scipio captured New Carthage, he'd insisted on lots of drill,
lots of practice.
Yes.
And this is now paying off.
because essentially he has transformed his cavalry into the best horsemen that Rome has ever had.
And they just, you know, they, they swat massanista and his horsemen aside.
There's then a stalemate, but one day passes, another day passes, another day passes,
Mago's concentration drops, and this is the moment when Scipio attacks.
And Mago, who we said had been, you know, he's a veteran of Can I, he'd stood in the lines alongside Hannibal.
He now finds that he is the one who is being.
outflanked and enveloped by a smaller army. And Skipio has the winning of the battle. And although
both Mago and Massinissa are able to escape the slaughter, Mago's army, which was the last effective
force, left him in Iberia, is wiped out. I mean, to give mego credit, he still doesn't give up.
So first of all, he tries to do a Scipio and launch an attack on New Carthage. In his case,
it doesn't work. He gets beaten off. He then sails away. He found a new,
naval base on the island of Mioka in the Balearics, which to this day bears his name,
Mahon. And this apparently is where mayonnaise was invented. So in a way, mayonnaise is named after
Mago. I think it's the only popular condiment. It's a condiment, really? I was just thinking,
is it a condiment? Well, if it's not a condiment, I don't know what it is. It's not a source,
is it. It can be used as both, but it's, I think mayonnaise is more than, it contains multitudes.
It's something you'd have in your fridge. And it's probably the only thing you'd have in a
fridge that's named after a Carthaginian general. So it's kind of interesting detail. Anyway, so he's still
on the scene. And then in 205, he launches a very ambitious invasion of northern Italy. You know, he takes ships,
he takes men. He captures Genoa. So that's quite a feat. And he manages to hold out there against
the Romans for three years. There's an indecisive battle. He gets wounded. The Carthaginians summon him
back to his home city and on the trip. He dies. So an energetic end. But that's the end of Mago.
What about Massinissa? Well, for him, the days of fighting the Romans are now over, because this is the moment in the wake of Scipio's great victory at Ilippa, that he makes contact with the Roman victor. And the result is the meeting described by Livy, the homo erotic summit with which we began this episode. Because Massinissa is basically like the Iberians. I mean, he has no interest in fighting for a losing side. And it's very clear.
to him by this point that the Carthaginians have no future whatsoever in Iberia. And so he,
you know, he contacts Skippio. They get on tremendously well. And with Skipio's blessing, he returns to
Africa there to secure his rule as king, because this other rival king, Sifax, is still on the
scene. So he needs to sort that out. And Scipio, by sending Massinissa, now a Roman ally,
to Africa, is obviously looking ahead. Because the only way that the one,
war ultimately can be ended is if the Romans can take the war to Carthage itself.
And in late 206, Skippeer returns to Rome, doesn't he?
And he is now a real star.
He's had tremendous achievements in the battlefield.
He's glamorous.
He's charismatic.
He's got his exciting long hair.
And he is determined to win the prize that will confirm all this, which is the consulship.
Yeah.
Even though he's only 30 and legally you have to be 40 to become a consul.
So he gets the consulship and he is allocated province, a very rich strategically important
province that will be his once he has finished his consulship and that is Sicily.
And the command in Sicily comes not just with boots on the ground, i.e. the legions,
but it comes with a fleet of 30 warships.
So this is what he needs.
And on top of that, Dominic, crucially, he is given permission by the
Senate, and I quote, to cross to Africa if he judged it to be in the interests of the Republic.
But the big question, will Scipio judge it to be in the interests of the Republic, to cross the sea,
to invade Africa, and to attack the Carthaginians in their very backyard? There is only one way to
find out. So if you're a member of the rest is History Club, and you want to find out whether
the Scipio will indeed cross to Africa and launch the final assault on the Carthaginians.
You can find out right now, because if you're a member of that club, you can hear episode
three and indeed episode four of this series instantaneously.
If you're not a member of the club, you'll have to wait gnawing at your nails like Gordon
Brown in the aftermath of the financial crisis.
But either way, the Punic Wars will continue and they will reach a devastating heart-stopping
climax. Tom, thank you very much.
Goodbye, everybody.
Okay, so here's a glimpse of what's to come.
If it sparked something unexplainable,
then you can join us every Tuesday and Thursday
for new episodes of The Rest of Science.
I will figure it out together.
You mentioned earlier that a cup of water
is like a rock smoothie, right?
Because you've got rocks dissolved in it,
magnesium and calcium.
I would go a step further, though,
and say that a glass of water is actually just a glass of lava.
Right, right.
Because I've talked about this before,
and I bring it up whenever I can.
Ice is a rock.
Sure.
Because, well, hold on, ice is a mineral.
Because a mineral is just an inorganic material
that is solid and has a definite crystal structure,
which ice does.
Water is important for life, but it's inorganic, actually.
It would exist here, or whether there was life or not.
And what that then means is that a cube of ice
is made of a mineral.
So it's a monomeralic rock.
So melted ice
is molten rock.
Lava. So water is
lava. I'm here
for this. And this is not a joke. Ice won the
mineral cup back in 2015, I believe.
Some geologists all voted on their favorite
mineral and ice finally got
the recognition it deserves.
Got the prize. Yeah.
I mean, sure. I'm happy with that
classification. If the rock people say it so,
then I'm happy with it. They also
move the same way. I mean, when lava gets spurted out of volcano, it uses the way that it
moves and behaves is exactly the same. The fluid dynamics of lava. The fluid dynamics of lava
is the same as water at that stage. Yeah. A bit later on when it cools down, then it's
then it changes like ice. More like ice. There's a transition phase where it's more like toothpaste,
where it needs a certain amount of sheer forces in order for it to flow. But that would be analogous
to like slush maybe? Maybe. Yeah.
