The Rest Is History - 643. Rome’s Greatest Enemy: Carthage Destroyed (Part 4)
Episode Date: February 12, 2026Three decades after the defeat of Hannibal, how had the Roman Empire managed to conquer vast swathes of the known world? Why did the predatory eyes of this terrifying behemoth turn once more to Cartha...ge? And, could this mighty city defy the odds and repel Rome one last time…? Join Tom and Dominic as they reach the climactic, final phase of the Punic Wars; the greatest military struggle of all ancient history. _______ 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
Transcript
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Who has words to capture that night's disaster?
Tell that slaughter.
What tears could match our torments now?
An ancient city is falling,
a power that ruled for ages, now in ruins.
Everywhere lie the motionless bodies of the dead,
strewn in her streets, her homes and the gods shrines.
All over now.
Devouring fire, whipped by the winds,
goes churning into the rooftops,
flames searching over them, scorching blasts raging up the sky.
Treasure hauled from burning temples, the sacramental tables, bowls of solid gold,
and the holy robes seized from every quarter, the enemy piling high the plunder.
Children and trembling mothers rounded up in a long, endless line.
So that was the greatest of all Roman poets Virgil,
and he was writing almost two centuries after Hannibal's Great War Against the Romans, the subject of this epic series,
and a century or so after the final defeat of one of the protagonists in this story, the Mediterranean city of Carthage.
And Tom, in that poem, the Aeneid, which is translated there by Robert Fagels, Virgil is taking us back, isn't he, to the legendary beginnings of Carthage.
So shrouded in myth, the story of its founding.
by the Phoenician Queen Dido, and the colonists from Phoenicia are laboring to build the new city.
They're raising the walls, they're building the palaces and temples, the harbors that the Romans will later destroy.
And at this point, this bedraggled group of refugees who've been shipwrecked off the African coast turn up.
And these people are Trojans.
They are.
So they are, as you say, refugees from the sack of Troy by the Greeks.
and the man speaking the lines that you read so powerfully is their leader,
a prince called Eeneas, who is the son of Venus, the goddess of love and beauty.
And Eneas, in that passage, is describing what it had been like to live through the destruction of Troy
to watch its topless towers consumed by fire.
And he is giving this account at a great feast that has been held in his honour by Dido,
because she has fallen in love with Aeneas.
And we talked about this in the very first episode that we did on Carthage.
I mean, about 400 years ago.
Actually, I think it was episode 421.
And people who listen to that may remember what happens next after this feast.
Because Aeneas and Ido go out hunting.
There's a storm.
They take shelter in a cave.
And while they're in the cave, the earth moves.
and Dido, although not Aeneas, assumes from this point on that they are now man and wife.
The problem for Dido is that Eneas has this destiny that has been plotted out for him by the gods,
and specifically by Jupiter, the king of the gods.
And this destiny is that Eneas has to sail to Italy and found a town there that in due course
will result in the founding of Rome.
And so Jupiter sends Mercury the messenger of the gods down to Aeneas and says, you know, stop hanging
around with this Carthaginian woman. Get on, go and found Rome. And Ineus is very obedient to the will of the
gods. And so he dumped Dido and he sails away from Carthage for Italy. And Dido is so distraught at being
portrayed like this that she stabs herself to death with Aeneas's sword. But not before she has called
for her descendants to nurture an undying hatred for the descendants of Ineus.
Shore clash with shore, sea against sea and sword against sword. This is my curse.
War between all our peoples, all their children. Endless war. That's her curse, isn't it? And that's
how it all begins. So she summons a demon to rise up from her bones, an avenger still unknown,
to stalk the descendants of Aeneas, and to hunt them down with her.
fire and iron. And Tom, who is this demon? Well, I mean, every Roman reading the Nied
when it came out in the age of Augustus knew exactly who was meant. It was Hannibal, Hannibal Barker,
that great military genius whose career we've been describing in our previous episodes,
who for almost two decades had indeed fought the Romans with fire and iron. Now Hannibal,
as we heard in our last episode, ends up this hunted fugitive, this defeated fugitive,
kills himself in 183 BC. But it's the measure of the shock he had given Rome and of the terror
that he had inspired in Roman hearts that still more than a century and a half after his death
in the age of Augustus, you know, when the Roman Empire stands splendid and without a conceivable
rival on the face of the planet, Hannibal continues to haunt the memory of the Romans. And so I think
it's not hard to imagine what a bogey man he must have seemed to Romans who had lived through
his invasion of Italy and who were born in the generation or two after the Great War that he
had prosecuted against the Romans. So that means that even though Carthage has been defeated
and forced to accept a punitive peace deal, the memory of Hannibal and of Carthage's assault on Italy
means that for the Romans, in their decades after victory, Carthage remains the supreme enemy.
You know, is that, would I be going too far to say there's still a sense of unfinished business
for the Romans?
Completely, completely.
Listeners may remember that in our previous series, we talked about Hannibal's preparations
for the invasion of Italy in 218.
And he has a dream.
And in that dream, he sees a giant serpent that is following in his weight.
as he invades Italy. And this serpent, quote, causing massive destruction to trees and bushes,
a deafening thunderstorm following in its wake. And a god then explains to him what this serpent is.
This serpent is Hannibal himself. And so the dream is pretending what the Romans called the Vastatio
Italia, the destruction of Italy. And that is exactly what Hannibal had inflicted on Italy. So, monstrous,
casualty figures, hundreds of thousands of people dead, fields, vineyards, orchards,
going up in flames year after year after year. And nothing like it had remotely been experienced
by the Romans or the peoples of Italy, you know, for two or three generations, there hadn't been
anything like this. And today there is considerable debate among historians about how bad
the damage inflicted by Hannibal on Italy actually was.
So opinions range from completely apocalyptic to merely, you know, pretty devastating.
Right.
But however bad it was, what mattered was that the Romans in the wake of Hannibal's war
remembered it as complete devastation.
So to quote Simon Hornblower on this, I mean, he's absolutely right.
The trauma of Hannibal's lengthy presence, however great or small, the actual damage he wrought,
will not have been easily forgotten.
To that extent, Hannibal's dream may have been a true prophecy.
perceptions are a kind of reality. I mean, we know that throughout history. And the Romans, I mean,
the damage that the Carthaginians have inflicted is so deeply embedded in the Roman imagination.
So the Romans come to talk about the Carthaginians, they use these expressions, Punica Fides,
punica frouse. The idea that the Carthaginians are the embodiments, almost the linguistic embodiments
of cruelty and deceit and infidelity and fraud and all of these kinds of things. And the
Carthaginians come to assume this almost kind of demonic place in the Roman imagination.
Yeah, I mean, I think if you think about how the British view of the Germans
in the wake of the First World War and even more the Second World War,
there is something of that, the way that the Romans view the Carthaginians.
And people who've listened to this series may well feel that this is a bit rich,
because the Romans as well have been known to display cruelty and deceit and treachery and so on.
But that doesn't really matter because the Romans felt what they felt.
And this wasn't just a kind of widespread loathing of the Carthaginians,
but something more, a kind of biding fear that was ultimately irrational.
Well, irrational because the Carthaginians had been completely beaten.
Yeah, you know, completely smashed.
It is so clear that the days of Carthage as a great power are finished
because the terms that the Romans had imposed on Carthage in the war,
wake of the defeat of Hannibal had been intended to cripple her forever. So just to remind listeners
of what those terms were, a devastating indemnity, payable in installments over the course of 50 years,
designed to kneecap Carthage's economy. The loss of all her overseas territories. Carthage had ruled
a great empire, you know, Sicily, Spain, whatever, all gone. Once she had been the greatest
naval power in the Western Mediterranean. Her fleet is now limited to 10 warships. And her foreign
policy is directly under the control of Rome, which means that she cannot go to war without
Roman permission. So at the same time of the Romans have done that, so they've, Carthage has been
kneecapped by all this, but on the western flank of Carthage, so that's, we're still in North
Africa, we've got this character that we talked about before. Massini,
Nisa, who is Numidian, and he's an old pal of Scipio Africanus, and he has basically been set up as a
counterbalance to the Carthaginians, hasn't he? So he's a great pal of the Romans. He is constantly
kind of biting off bits of Carthage's sort of hinterland, so they're kind of, I don't know,
the olive groves of North Africa and so on. Yeah, he's kind of nibbling away at them all the time.
Yeah, and he's, there are constant kind of border disputes and whatnot. And basically the Numidians
they're eroding Carthage's heartland year on year.
Yeah, and for Massanissa, I mean, this is the servant turning on the master, because the
Numidians had been a subject to Carthage.
And so by salami slicing Carthage's territory, I mean, he's getting his own back on,
you know, the old imperial mistress.
And so the poor Carthaginians, they can't really do anything about this because they're
not allowed to fight Massanissa off.
And so all they can really do is send embassies to Rome.
complaining about these encroachments by the Nimidians.
But obviously, Massinissa, he's an ally of the Roman people.
He can send embassies of his own and be assured of getting heard.
So in 171, for instance, Carthaginians have gone to Rome to complain.
Massinissa sends his own son.
And this son of Massanissa's is, he knows exactly how to play the Romans.
So he's endlessly going on about how the Carthaginians are treacherous and deceitful,
beware of punic deceit, all this kind of stuff. And so the Carthaginians don't get justice. And the Romans
ignore Carthaginian complaints not just because they are pro-Numidian, but also to reiterate, because
they are genuinely fearful that Carthage might make a comeback. And so they feel that she has to,
you know, her territory has to constantly be eroded. But this is mad. I mean, there's no prospect
of Carthage coming back. Well, to give people a sense of the map, so we're three decades on after
the defeat of Hannibal and the Romans power is spreading across the Mediterranean. So to give
the example of Spain, we talked a lot about Spain. Spain with its mineral wealth have been so
important to Carthaginian power. But the Romans have basically formalized their control of the
coastal bits of Spain. They've conquered from Carthage. They've organized them into provinces.
They're pushing inland in North Africa. So we've obviously talked about Numidia.
New Media is basically a Roman client state. I mean, in many ways, Carthage is a
Roman client state as well because it's subject to all the demands of the peace treaty.
We talked last time about Greece.
You know, we're getting into the kind of remnants of Alexander the Great Empire now.
So in Greece, the Romans have been launching these devastating strikes.
They've humbled the heirs of Alexander, the Macedonian kings.
We talked about that last time.
The legions have defeated the Macedonian phalanx.
And although the Romans are not ruling Macedonia or Greece direct.
Roman primacy, Roman control is basically acknowledged, isn't it, throughout Greece?
Yeah, and I think the Romans feel that if their strategic demands require the Greeks to knuckle down
and kind of surrender chunks of territory or autonomy or whatever, then they have to do it.
And there's perhaps slight element of Donald Trump's attitude to Greenland about all this.
and increasingly, the more that Greece and the Balkans kind of have to do what the Romans say,
the Romans decide what there's no point in allowing the Macedonians to have any autonomy at all.
I mean, we might as well snuff that out.
So in June 168, the legions once again meet with a Macedonian phalanx,
and it's fought in a great battle on the Macedonian coast, a place called Pidna.
and the guy in command of the Roman legions at this battle is called Imelius Paulus.
And if that sounds familiar, then it's because he is the son of the Imelius Paulus
who had died at Can I, Hannibal's great victory.
And Amelius Paulus at Pidna, he confessed that the advance of the Macedonian phalanx
was such a terrifying sight that he had briefly dreaded that he might suffer a defeat
similar to that, suffered by his father.
but in the event he wins this spectacular, utterly crushing victory.
So the legionaries, you know, they're much more flexible, much more mobile,
and they're able to infiltrate the phalanx through gaps that open up in its ranks.
And then it's just a massacre.
The people in the phalanx have these huge long spears,
so they're hapless against the gladius, the stabbing sword that the Romans are using.
And the whole battlefield just becomes this great sea of blood and viscera.
All their guts are kind of, you know, the Macedonian guts are spilling out.
The Macedonian king is captured, he's deposed, and ends up being led through the streets of Rome in Paulus's triumph.
And Macedon itself, the monarchy is abolished and it is divided up into these kind of four petty cantons under dodgy little republics.
And this is obviously a recipe for instability, but that for the Romans is precisely the point.
They're not there to administer direct rule, but what they do want is,
Macedon left both submissive and impotent
and that is what these reforms do
And then the same thing goes for other parts of southern Balkans
Doesn't it?
So Epirus is sacked
That's in the west that's towards sort of northern northwestern Greece
Albania
Powis takes more than 100,000 slaves there
And then in Greece itself they basically take a thousand
So bigwigs hostage from various cities
They take them all back to Italy
and these guys had been seen as two pro-Macedonian, two independent-minded.
And Tom, you've got a nice analogy here, which I'd share your analogy with us.
Yeah.
Well, to pursue the Donald Trump analogy, it's as though he were to invade Europe and take
back as hostages, you know, a raft of Eurocrats from Brussels, regulators of American
social media companies, and obviously the Director General of the BBC, and they would all be
taken back to Washington and kept as hostages.
Are there any people from the current government?
you'd like to see taken as hostages by Delta Force back to Washington.
Surely there must be.
No comment.
So all these Greek hostages are taken back.
And among them is a Greek from Arcadia, whose name we have been mentioning quite a lot throughout this series.
And that is Polybius, who will become the great historian of Rome's rise to dominance in the Mediterranean.
And the theme of Polybius's history, he kind of sets it out.
It's how the affairs of Italy and of Africa came to be interwoven with those of Asia and of Greece,
and all things point in concert to a single end.
And that single end is the establishment of a Roman Imperium, a Roman Empire over the Mediterranean.
And Polybius would end up spending 17 years as a detainee in Rome.
And so this is how he came by his incredible familiarity with Romanians.
in politics, Roman constitutional arrangements, Roman affairs, and he is able to interview veterans
of the war against Hannibal, people who had taken leading roles in that war.
But in the long run, the most useful contact that Polybius makes in Rome isn't a kind of veteran
of the war against Hannibal, but this guy still in his teens, he's very precocious, very
brilliant, and has an absolutely kind of glittering pedigree.
because this man is the son of the Emilius Paulus, who had won at Pidna, so he's therefore the grandson of the Emilius Paulus who had died at Can I.
He is also the adoptive grandson of Scipio-Africanus, the man who had defeated Hannibal.
And in Rome, adoption is taken very seriously.
So that means that he is basically seen by the Romans as the grandson of Scipio-Africanus.
Because he is the son of Amelius-Palus, he's called Amelianus.
So Scipio-Amelianus.
and you know he is a completely worthy grandson of the great conqueror of Hannibal when he was only 17 he had fought with his father at pittner covered himself in glory he'd then gone to spain he had won a military crown so basically the equivalent of a victoria cross by being the first over the wall of an enemy city at the same time like scipia africanus he is a great enthusiast for Greek culture
a great scholar, and actually this is how he'd come into contact with Polybius through the loan of some books and general literary chat.
So, Scipio, Emilianus and Polybius, it's like you and Tabby will be doing on your forthcoming podcast.
Who's tabby in that analogy?
I'm Scipio Emilianus, right?
Well, Scipio Emilianus is much younger, so it's probably tabby.
Yeah, but it's about charisma, isn't it?
You are this Greek hostage.
No, absolutely not.
Right, let's get back to Carthage.
So, Scipio Emilianus, the Dominic Sambrook of Roman history.
The Tabi Siret of the rest of his history.
What does he make of Carthage?
Because he's the adoptive grandson of the bloke who basically defeated it.
So does he feel that he has unfinished business with Carthage?
Does he want to do the same?
Actually, it seems not.
I think that Scipio Africanus,
because he was the guy who had forced terms on the Carthaginians
and got them to accept these terms.
He then felt a certain kind of responsibility towards Carthage,
because it's a bit like a patron with a client.
That is a relationship that is very important to the Roman aristocracy.
And I think that Scipio Afrikanus, you know, he took this seriously.
So, for instance, for as long as Hannibal was in Carthage,
Scipio Africanus back in Rome had had Hannibal's back.
And I think all the kind of the various members of Scipio's dynasty,
they share in this obligation.
So we can see this from Polybius,
who is obviously very influenced by what the Scipio dynasty think.
So he's always describing how the Carthaginians are going to Rome
to complain about Massanissa slicing off bits of their territory.
And Polybius, I mean, he emphasizes that these complaints are just.
And presumably in saying that,
he is picking up on the opinion of his scipionic patrons.
But I think it's fair to say that this.
This in Rome is a minority position.
And there is one person in particular who views any kind of attempt to water down the harshness with which Carthage is treated as essentially a form of treason.
And this is the old enemy of Scipio-Africanus.
So again, we met in the last episode, Marcus Porzius Cato.
Yeah.
Who by this point, he's just turned 80, but he is as flinty and as hardcore.
as ever. So that kind of, you know, that ginger hair that he had has gone. He's now
terrifyingly bald and got lots of crow feet and jowls. He's a terrifying man.
I hate him. I find Cato such an unpleasant person.
Well, I think there are good reasons for hating him as we will see as this episode progresses.
So Cato was sent, he goes to Carthage. I mean, of all people to go, he goes to Carthage and
152, doesn't he, to investigate yet another spat between.
the Carthaginians and the Numidians, Massinisa.
Massinisa, by this point, is also very old.
It should just be said.
And when Cato gets to Carthage, he is horrified by what he sees,
because basically he had assumed that the Carthaginians would be living like dogs in the gutter,
their city in ruins.
But actually, the Carthaginians, fair play to them, they've dragged themselves back
upright, and the city is actually doing quite well again.
And Cato doesn't like this at all.
They don't have an empire to run.
They don't have wars to fight.
And so the Carthaginians have been able to focus all their energies on getting rich.
So again, I mean, to pursue another analogy, it's a bit like West Germany after the Second World War.
They're not allowed to have an army or anything.
So they can just focus on kind of inventing televisions and stuff.
That old Carthage Bonn parallel.
So the Carthaginians are actually doing very well.
And despite the attempts of the Romans to kneecap its economy, the economy is booming.
They have this hinterland.
the Namidians may be snipping bits off, but Carthage still controls most of it. It's very fertile,
very rich. Carthage has massive grain silos. It's essentially become the breadbasket of the Western
Mediterranean, which is a role that it will play throughout the history, subsequent history of the Roman
Empire. They have upgraded their harbors, and they have this inner dockyard, which has berths for
170 ships. And Cato is obviously very suspicious of this. Why do they need births for 170 ships?
And he also notices storehouses in which there are piled great mounds of timber.
And so he's thinking, you know, is this timber for the construction of merchant shipping?
Or are the Carthaginians planning to reactivate a war fleet?
And Cato being Cato, he obviously assumes the worst.
And he returns to Rome convinced that the Carthaginians are preparing for vengeance.
And he stands before the Senate.
and he shakes out the folds of his toga and from his toga there drops a fig.
Cato bends down, he holds it up and he invites his fellow senators to admire it.
It's very plump, it's very beautiful, it's clearly still very fresh.
And Cato then reveals that this fig had come from Carthage, as he points out, a mere three days
sail from Rome.
And his message is twofold.
Firstly,
Carthage is back as a great power.
Yeah.
But secondly,
suppose a third Punic war
were to be launched,
a war of annihilation against Carthage.
Then all those lands
in North Africa,
currently ruled by Carthage,
would become Rome's.
And so from that point onwards,
whenever Cato stands up in the Senate,
and he gives us a
speech. He ends every speech the same way, doesn't he? He makes the same urgent, sort of
resounding pronouncement. What is more? I mean, it must be extremely boring for his listeners.
He says the same thing every time. Anyway, he says, what is more? I think that Carthage must be
destroyed. I mean, Dominant, you say it must be boring for his listeners. I don't think so at all.
His speeches are not necessarily about Carthage. Yeah. But he always makes this comment. And so
you're listening to it and you're kind of waiting for it.
How is you going to get Carthagin again?
He'll just mention it willy-nilly.
But it is a kind of drumbeat, isn't it?
And if there's one thing the Romans love, it's a drumbeat of war.
So I think he is essentially kind of provoking a war fever.
And this kind of statement that he's making, at the end of every speech,
what is more, I think, that Carthage must be destroyed, abbreviated.
It's become one of the most notorious of all Latin aphorisms.
Cathago del.
Lender est.
Carthage must be destroyed.
So the scene is set for the final confrontation and the annihilation of Carthage.
Come back after the break for this very sad story.
Welcome back to The Restis History.
The year is 152 BC.
And Cato, this crabby, miserable old man of Roman politics,
who everybody admires, or at least a lot of people admire,
for his sort of Republican austerity
and his ostentatious, performative, puritanical morality,
he is now calling for the total destruction of Carthage.
Tom, you've got the word genocide in the notes.
Presumably he's not calling for the extermination
of every last Carthaginian.
It's the city rather than the people,
or have I got that wrong.
I think if you're saying destroy a city,
you are effectively saying destroy a people.
To destroy the mother city of a people, effectively is to destroy a people.
So I think it's, I mean, it's anachronistic, but I think there is that element in it.
And I think that people should be aware of what is being planned, the scale of what is being planned.
I mean, it is horrific.
And some of the Romans think it's horrific, right?
Absolutely.
There are senators in Rome who oppose Cato.
And of course, many of these belong to the dynasty of Scipio-Africanus.
and one of them, a guy called
Scipio Nasica, he's coined his own catchphrase to counter
Cato's. So his is, Cathago Savander-est,
Carthage must be preserved.
Now, listeners may be wondering, what's his motivation
in coming up with this catchphrase?
Is it because he has a sense of humanity,
a concern for human rights?
Is it from, you know, the depths of his kindness?
It is not.
A concern with being kind does not really seem to have been a factor.
Those who are arguing against a war of annihilation against Carthage, their motivations were told by a Greek historian writing a century later.
Fundamentally is that Rome needs a worthy enemy.
Because having Carthage as this great bogey on their doorstep keeps them honest.
It keeps them on their toes.
And the worry is that if you destroy Carthage, then the Romans may become decadent and self-indulgent and may end up kind of turning on themselves if they don't have to guard against an outside enemy, all of which, of course, in a sense, does happen.
And so it's more than possible that that Greek historian is writing with the benefit of hindsight.
I mean, you know, not necessarily, but possible.
And I do think it's clear that at the time, the chief source of anxiety for Romans in the Senate,
listening to Cato, push for this war of annihilation, is actually that they're worried about breaking the treaty that they'd signed with Carthage,
because this will then offend the gods and bring down divine anger on the head of their city.
because the Romans, they saw themselves as being the most devout of peoples, and certainly they were kind of very legalistic.
So even when they are attacking Macedonian kings or taking Greek bigwigs hostage, they always needed to feel that they were legally justified in what they were doing.
They're not, as they see it, doing anything that is unmerited or unprovoked.
They always have to feel that the gods are on their side.
And so this is what large numbers in the Senate feel they need with regard to Carthage.
They can't attack Carthage without Akazas Beli.
And fortunately for them, they have one on hand because this is Massinissa.
Right.
So this bloke has been constantly having his border skirmishes with the Carthaginians
and attacking their farmland and snatching their olive groves or whatever.
But if you're Cato or one of the warhawks in Rome,
isn't this the perfect opportunity?
He's like the equivalent of the people in Donetsk and Luhansk in eastern Ukraine who Vladimir Putin used as a pretext basically for his war in Ukraine.
Yes.
And so Massinissa by now in his late 80s is as acquisitive as ever.
And so his men continue to launch attacks on farms and estates in Carthage's rural hinterland with the aim of appropriating them.
And in Carthage, there is now total despair that Rome will ever raise.
rein massinissa in. And this despair brings new leaders to power who are much more hawkish
than the previous generation. And these are men who are saying, well, look, we need a more
assertive foreign policy. We cannot go on like this. So in 151, ignoring the prescriptions
of the treaty that they had signed with Rome back in 201, the Carthaginians go to war with
Massinissa. They do not have the permission of the Romans to do this. And the result for the Carthaginians,
unfortunately, is disaster. So Massinissa, he's now basically 90, but he's still in the saddle.
He fights the Carthaginian army to a standstill near a town called Oroscopa, and he isolates
them on a hill. They don't have any water. So they have no option but to surrender and submit to
humiliating terms, which include, again, a kind of massive indemnity.
which is bad enough, but the real disaster is the open goal, obviously, that the Carthaginians have now given to the war party in Rome, because Hawks there can now argue that Carthage is in breach of her treaty obligations and that therefore, if the Romans attack Carthage, the gods will be backing them. So that's everything they need. So now the Romans have their opportunity to launch their strike. And what is more, there are financial motives, aren't there? Because in 151, the,
Carthaginians have paid off the very last instalments, basically of their reparations,
their war indemnity. So there's going to be no more money coming to Rome from Carthage.
If the Romans want the Carthaginian wealth, they have to go and seize it.
So they've both got the kind of the diplomatic opportunity because there's business with Massinisa,
but also now there is a very big financial incentive for greedy people in Rome to urge a war with Carthage.
It's like these people who say, well, it's like, I don't know, Saddam Hussein is a bad man and there's a lot of oil in Iraq, you know, let's go in.
Yeah, exactly. And so in 150, the Romans begin to mobilize for an invasion of Africa.
And back in Carthage, understandably, the news of this throws the entire city into panic.
And so they desperately try to appease the Romans. And they do this first of all by condemning the general who'd been defeated at Oroscopa to death.
and it will not surprise regular listeners to this series
to learn that the name of this general is of course
Hastrable, yet another
Yelch, and then the Carthaginians send an embassy to Rome,
basically to beg for mercy.
And when they arrive there,
they're appalled to discover that this Roman task force
has already left and is in Sicily,
so just across the sea from Carthage.
And they also find Cato on absolutely top form.
So he gives a kind of zinger of a speech.
what people can't be trusted to keep their treaties the Carthaginians what people are inveterate
warmongers notorious for their cruelty the Carthaginians what people left Italy a smouldering wasteland
the Carthaginians so still that harping on all the destruction that Hannibal had brought to Italy
and when the Carthaginian envoys you know they beg to know how can we make amends I mean what can we do
they receive this very menacingly Delphic response by
satisfying the Roman people.
But the Senate does not specify how this satisfaction can be obtained.
So let's take us to the next year, 12 months on.
The Romans have landed in North Africa.
They have established their base camp 30 miles northwest of Carthage.
The Carthaginians sent envoys to try and negotiate with the Romans and what happens next?
Well, they arrive at the Roman camp and as they approach there's this kind of great deafening blast of trumpets.
And then they enter the camp and they are led past the massed ranks of the legions who are all drawn up and who are totally silent.
I mean, it must have been terrifying.
Ahead of them are the two consuls sat down on a podium and the Carthaginian envoys are brought before the consuls.
and they start stammering, trying to make their excuses, but all these excuses are dismissed.
And then one of the consuls, Lucius Marcius, censorinus, he informs the envoys that there will be
no more negotiations until Carthage has handed over all the weapons in the city, all the armour,
all the war machines.
And so the envoys go back to Carthage and shortly afterwards great wagon loads of weapons
and armor kind of rumbling up to the Roman camp.
and also in their train over 2,000 catapults.
So these are all handed over to the Romans.
And then the envoys come back and they stand in front of the consuls again.
And now at last the terms are delivered and I will quote them.
Bear bravely the remaining commands of the Roman Senate, the envoys are told.
You must evacuate your city and surrender it to us.
You will be allowed to settle where you please within the limits of your own territory
provided that it is at least 10 miles from the sea.
As for us, we are resolved to level Carthage to the ground.
I just mean, the Carthaginian envoy is listening to that.
I mean, terrifying.
And of course, I mean, what can they do?
There's no way that the Carthaginians can possibly accept this, you would think.
I mean, just to emphasise for people,
talked about how people are identified with their mother city.
And in a sense, to lose your mother city is to lose your identity.
that city, it's not just about the history, it's also about the temples, the gods, whatever.
You know, you lose everything.
And of course, I mean, on the economic sense, if you no longer have a port, you no longer
really have a way of kind of making a living.
So, as you say, I mean, it would seem impossible for the Carthaginians to accept these terms.
And so it proves, because when the ambassadors from the Roman camp return to Carthage,
the people of the city refuse to accept it, even though they know that in effect, by doing
so they are signing their own death warrant.
And anyone who speaks up saying,
actually I think we should accept these terms,
I mean, you know, we've got no chance of keeping the Romans at bay.
They are lynched, they're stoned, whatever.
And so there is a mass effort to try and steal Carthage for the horrors that are to come
because, of course, they've handed over their catapults, their weapons, their armor, all of that.
So what measures do they take?
All the slaves in the city are freed, to the degree that the Carthage Union still have arms.
arms are given to these slaves. People rush out to quarries outside the city and haul in stones
because they're going to try and make more catapults. We're told all the shrines, the temples and
every other public space was turned into workshops where men and women worked day and night without
pause, taking turns to eat according to a fixed schedule. So basically, you know,
equivalence of munitions factories popping up across the city in their temples. And in these
workshops of course people are busy making swords spears shields anything made of metal in the city
is being melted down and women donate their hair so that it can be used as rope for the catapults
kind of twine it haztrable their general who'd lost the battle at orosoppa and is still on death
row he's reprieved and he's given back his old command and he leads out a makeshift army
and prepares for a guerrilla war against the romans and it is war for the
third time, Rome and Carthage are locked in what really is this time a death struggle.
It's not a death struggle for Rome, but it absolutely is for Carthage.
So it's the kind of war, it's a bit like, I don't know, when the Nazis invaded Poland in 1939
and the Germans had such a preponderance of forces, but allied sympathizers with Poland sort of said,
oh, you know, they will have all the pluck, you know, they've got such spirit, they're fighting for their home
you know, the people will rise and they will see off the invaders, all of this kind of thing.
And actually that turned out to be complete wishful thinking because the balance of forces was such that the attacker could not but win.
And in this case, well, actually, it's not an immediate walkover, is it, by any means?
So the Carthaginians do actually manage to hold out for much longer than the Poles do against the Nazis, as it turns out for several years.
And they're able to do this because even though the Carthaginians,
have had to, you know, have been tricked into handing over so much of their weaponry. The city is still
pretty well prepared for a siege. So it has the kind of great triple walls. And these walls in turn
are buttressed with ditches and banks. And I mentioned the grain silos. So they have a lot of
food inside the city. And they've also built huge cisterns for collecting rainwater. So again,
water shouldn't be a problem. And meanwhile, the Romans, as they advance up to the city,
they camp beside a stagnant lake and it's summer.
And so predictably they all start, you know, catching various horrible diseases.
And actually, Hasdrubal, who, you know, he proved an absolute dud in open combat.
When it comes to guerrilla warfare, he's actually pretty good.
He's very successful at attacking Roman supply lines, masterminding sallies.
And so all that year, 149, the siege carries on, 148, Roman setbacks continue.
they are going around trying to mop up Carthaginian strongholds beyond Carthage,
but these two are able to hold out.
And again, Sallies are launched out from the walls and they burn Roman siege engines and so on.
And then in 148, Massanissa, you know, the old warhorse, the man who had once been a
Carthaginian ally and then become their great enemy, he dies at the fabulous age of 91.
And that might have offered hope to the Carthaginians.
perhaps, you know, that this kind of inveterate enemy of theirs has gone.
And then there comes news from the Balkans that a pretender to the Macedonian throne has emerged.
So people remember that the kingdom of Macedon had been divided up into these four cantons.
A pretender has emerged and he wants to reunite these cantons and make himself king.
And he defeats a Roman army and sends messages to the Carthaginian saying,
will you enter into an alliance?
and of course the Carthaginians say yes.
So suddenly they do have an ally.
Now the Romans, you know, they're not despondent.
They're still fully expecting to win.
But I think there's a certain sense of alarm developing.
And so they start to look around for a saviour.
Someone qualified to step into the breach and prove himself a hero.
And there is, of course, really only the one candidate.
So the obvious person, I guess, the adoptive grandson of Skippio Afrikanus, it's the person we've
already talked about, Scipio Amelianus. And it's not just that he has got the right bloodline,
or the right heredity. He has experienced, doesn't he? He has already fought the Carthaginians.
He has. I mean, he's a very, very good soldier. So he'd been an observer at Oros Goppa where
Massenissa had defeated the Carthaginians. And so he had seen Hasdrable, the Carthaginian
commander in chief up close. You know, he knew what made him tick. And then for the past two years,
he'd been serving before the walls of Carthage itself, where he was basically the only senior
officer to have emerged with any credit at all. I mean, he'd had a very good war. The only drawback
is that he's still in his 30s, and people will remember that the minimum age to serve as consul
is 40. That had been waived for Scipio Africanus against the opposition of Roman conservatives.
But the people hadn't cared. They'd forced it through. And the same thing happens this time.
The people, and I quote, declared that he was the only worthy successor of his father,
Emilius Paulus, the conqueror of Macedon, and of the Scipio's. And so the Senate,
recognizing the force of public opinion, perhaps, you know, just a little desperate themselves,
agree to waive the prohibition and say, yeah, Skipio can run for consul and he's duly elected.
And the intriguing thing is that even the absolute spokesman for conservatism, Cato,
even Cato gives Scipio Emilianus the nod.
I mean, he really is the right man for the job.
So now at last we come to the final chapter in the story.
So the siege of Carthage, the end of the Punic wars,
and indeed the end of this great ancient city itself.
So the Romans have put all their hopes in Scipio Amelianus.
and when he arrives in Africa's consul in 146 Tom he has the the vigour and the dynamism and the ambition that his predecessors have lacked and he more than bears out the hope that the Senate had in him yes and hosrable who has clashed with scipio amelianus before i mean he's very respectful of his reputation and so he rather than continuing with his guerrilla war he withdraws all his troops inside carthage and hunkers down there
But this, of course, is only to play into Skippy Emilianus's hands, because now all the Carthaginian forces are trapped inside the great city.
And Emilianus knows that if he can only invest the city completely, completely surround it, cut off all supplies of food, then he will be able in the long run to starve the city into submission.
And so he orders his men to start constructing a massive mole across the entrance of the harbour, which to the Carthaginian see.
an impossible engineering project. But Skippy Emilianus is a very good engineer as well as a very
good soldier and is able to pull it off. And so this mole ends up being constructed. Access to the
harbour is now blocked off and there is no possibility of food coming into Carthage. And so
Scipio Emilianus knows that he can now sit back and wait. And with each day that passes,
the noose will tighten.
And what about the Carthaginians? Well, this noose is tightening. What are they doing?
Well, Carthage has always been run by a Senate. In that sense, it's always had a kind of civilian government. But Hasdrubal, he feels that the only way that Carthage survive is if he institutes a military dictatorship. And so this is what he does. He's got all the soldiers that his back. There's no one to stop him. And by doing that, of course, he is able to commandeer all the food supplies within the city and ensure that his men are well-fetched.
fed even while everyone else starts to starve and the corpses of those who no longer have
access to food begin to litter the streets of the dying city. And Hasdrable is anxious that this
experience of starvation on the part of the vast majority of the public may result in civic unrest,
may lead to pressure on him to open negotiations with the Romans and he's not prepared to do that.
So he takes Roman legionaries who've been captured in the fighting and he leads them up onto the walls of Carthage and there where the Romans far below can see what is being done to their comrades, they're tortured to death and their bodies are dumped into the Roman positions.
So that of course makes sure that there will be no negotiations.
And Skippy Amelianis is waiting for the morale in the city to hit rock bottom for people really to start dying.
for disease to spread. And then when that moment comes, he strikes. And he takes the Carthaginians
completely by surprise. And his assault, it's not over the walls, it's through the harbors from the mole.
That mole is a kind of launch pad. And so the Romans are able to, it's an amphibious attack.
They go through the outer harbor into that inner harbor that the Carthaginians have just been
built. And from there, there is easy access to the great marketplace in the center of the city.
and once the Romans have breached the harbour defences, they pour into this marketplace
and they essentially make it the base for the sack of the city that is now going to happen.
First of all, they strip this great temple that is standing there of all.
It's gold, pile that gold up, and then they start literally disassembling the city brick by brick.
So what they do, there are kind of very tight narrow streets fanning off from the marketplace,
and there are blocks of housing that reach up six stories.
And these are but the marketplace.
And the houses that are adjacent to the marketplace,
soldiers go in,
they clear all the opposition from all the enemy
from each of the stories of these houses.
And then once the houses have been cleared,
they take planks up to the top story
and they lay them out across the kind of narrow streets below.
And from there they can pass into the next...
block of houses and they do the same. And the process just goes on and on and on. And once the
houses have been cleared and the soldiers have gone from the one block to the next, they then set
the houses on fire. And you get masonry, you get beams, you get the corpses of the slain,
you get old men, women, children who might have taken shelter inside these houses. They all come
crashing down into the streets. And we have a horrific discreet.
of what this was like.
Once all the kind of the debris has fallen into the streets,
cleaners came, who had been charged with making the streets passable,
so that the soldiers can continue up the streets.
And these cleaners hauled the dead and the living alike into great pits they had dug,
disposing of them as though they were masonry and burning timbers, mere debris.
Some of the living were thrown in headfirst,
so that their legs stuck out of the ground,
and they were left to writhe where they had been buried a long time.
So a kind of hideous, grotesque,
image. Do you know what it reminds me of? It reminds me of the siege of Tenostitlan that we talked about
in the four of the Aztecs, the Spanish fighting house by house, destroying the houses to stop the
Aztecs from using them as kind of refuges. I mean, it's very, very similar, isn't it? It's this
Starlingrad-style battle. I mean, it's possible that there would have been Spaniards. Of course.
In the war, who had read these very accounts. I was thinking that. Yeah, they had classical education
a lot of these people, so they would have known about all this. And this, the destruction of Carthage is the
archetype of the destruction of a great and famous and beautiful capital. And the process of
clearance goes on for six days. And on the seventh day, the vast mass of the Carthaginians who
remained alive, surrendered. And the only resistance now is from Hasdrubal and 900 Roman deserters
who held out on the kind of the topmost fort, the Carthaginian equivalent of an Acropolis.
But in time, he too is brought to surrender and he's brought before Scipio Amelianus and grovels
before the feet of the Roman commander.
And his wife, who'd been with him, is utterly contemptuous of this.
And she takes a dagger, she slits the throats of their two sons,
and she throws the corpses of her sons into a fire that is blazing nearby.
And then she hurls herself into the flames as well.
Very diedo.
Yeah.
I mean, it's a bit sad that women tend only to appear in the series when they're killing themselves.
That's antiquity for you.
Yeah.
So what happens to Hasdrubal and what happens to the deserters?
The Hasdribal is spared and taken back to Rome, where he walks in Skippy Amelianus's triumph,
and then he's allowed to settle in a farm outside Rome, so he survives.
The Roman deserts, of course, are put horribly to death.
The Carthaginians who've surrendered, they are all enslaved, about 50,000 of them.
They're led out.
Men, women, children, all become slaves.
The city is systematically stripped of all its treasures.
No respect is shown the temples of the Carthaginian gods.
They are demolished.
Carthage had a rich and venerable literary tradition.
All the libraries are emptied and given to the Numidians who promptly seem to have lost them.
The Romans do keep one 28-volume treatise on agriculture,
which they have translated into Latin, because obviously,
they're thinking, well, we want to take over these lands.
And this is the guide to how to, you know, how to make the fields flourish.
So we'll keep that.
But otherwise, all the wealth of Punic literature is gone.
So we have nothing.
We have no histories written by the Carthaginians.
And so as so often, you know, in these stories, whether it's the Belgians in the Congo or whatever.
Yeah.
Or indeed the, you know, the Americans in the Great Plains.
We only have one side.
We only have the Roman side.
Yeah.
The news of Carthage's fall is sent to Rome
and the Senate then sent back instructions to Skippy Emilianus
that what remained of the city was to be raised to the ground
and that a curse was to be laid on anyone who in the future
might try to settle there.
So Carthage is to be left abandoned to weeds.
But here's an amazing thing.
They don't sew the ruins with salt.
They don't.
Everyone thinks they did that and they didn't.
No, they don't.
It was a metaphorical flourish in the Cambridge ancient history.
which came out in the 1920s.
And it's just spread like wildfire ever since.
But that did, you know, there's no reference to that happening in any of the ancient sources
at all.
But, you know, they might as well have sowed the fields with salt because the signal that
the destruction of this very famous, very ancient, very beautiful city, the signal sent
to the world was unmistakable that the Romans are no longer prepared to brook any rival, any
hint of disobedience. And that is a message that is rammed home a few months later. So people may
remember that, you know, there's this uprising in Macedon, this pretender to the Macedonian throne
has emerged. I mean, he does not last long. He gets crushed. And there's then a kind of,
there's an uprising in Greece and the Romans deal with that very brutally as well. And the suppression of
that uprising culminates in the annihilation of a second famous, ancient and beautiful city. And that is
the destruction of Corinth in Greece, commanding the isthmus that joins the Peloponnese to northern Greece.
And I think that anyone in the Mediterranean in 146 BC contemplating the destruction in the same year of Carthage and of Corinth are well aware that an era has dawned in which Rome is so preponderant that effectively no one in the Mediterranean has any real independence left at all.
And within a century, the whole of the Mediterranean will become a Roman lake.
But the story of how Rome rises to that position of preponderance, what it means for people
in the Mediterranean and what it means for the Romans themselves, I mean, that is a story for another
day.
But I just thought to end this series, we've done three series in all.
And we began the very first series with a passage that derives from Polybius' recollections.
Polybius had accompanied Skippio Amelianus to the siege and had witnessed it for himself,
so I'll just finish by reading this passage. It is said that Skippio Amelianus, as Carthage was going up
in flames, its annihilation almost complete, gazed at the city in its death rose, and openly
wept for his enemies. He stood wrapped in thought for a long time, pondering how every city, every
people, every empire must, as men do, meet with their doom in the end. For such had been the fate of Troy,
once a proud and flourishing city, and of the empires of Assyria, media and Persia, each in their own day
the greatest in the world, and of Macedon, which only recently had blazed with such a brilliance.
And then, either deliberately, or because he could not help quoting them, Scipio spoke two lines of Homer.
day will come when sacred Troy shall perish, and Priam and his people all be slain.
And when Polybius, speaking to him with the freedom he was granted, as Scipio's tutor in Greek
literature, asked him what he meant by these words. It is said that without any attempt to veil
his meaning, Scipio made reference to his own country. For when he pondered how all things that are
mortal must fall. He dreaded how Rome two would fall.
Craigie. Well, thank you very much, Tom. That's a salutary warning. And indeed, one that sets up
beautifully our next series on The Rest is History, which will be starting on Monday.
And that series is the tale of the fall of the Incas, one of the longest and largest
contiguous empires in world history that came crashing down at the hands of Francisco Pizarro and
his conquistadors. So on Monday, members of the rest is history club will get all six
episodes in that mighty series. And if you want to join them, if you want to plunge into the
streets of Cusco and Cajamaka and the jungles of the Amazon and scale the peaks of the Andes
with the Spaniards,
then you merely have to head
to the rest is history.com
to sign up
and you'll get all six episodes
on Monday.
But for now,
Tom,
what an amazing effort
to cover that epic story
in three mighty seasons.
Thank you so much.
And that was Carthage.
Bye,
everybody.
Ave, Aquivali.
