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Carthage: Punic Apocalypse I

Carthage: Punic Apocalypse I

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In the spring of 146 BC, Roman soldiers spent seventeen days burning the wealthiest city in the Western Mediterranean. When the fires went out, they plowed the ground and burned the libraries. Seven hundred years of accumulated knowledge: histories, philosophy, poetry, law, science, gone. Almost everything we know about Carthage today comes from the people who destroyed it.This is the story of how that city was built. The full rise, told end to end. Phoenician origins on the coast of Lebanon, a refugee queen who tricked a Libyan chief with an ox hide, a circular military harbor that could launch 220 warships invisibly, an explorer who sailed past the equator two thousand years before the Portuguese, and the greatest generation of a family, the Barcids, who would carry their father's grudge against Rome all the way to the gates of Rome.This is Part I of the Punic Apocalypse — roughly four hours covering five hundred years, from the founding of Carthage to the eve of Hannibal's crossing of the Alps. We move through four chapters:THE PURPLE CITY (c. 815–550 BC) — The Phoenician homeland. Tyrian purple, the dye extracted from sea snail glands that cost more than gold. The 22 characters that became every Western alphabet. Tyre, the island fortress that resisted siege for thirteen years. The murder of a high priest, the flight of a princess named Elissa, and the founding of Qart Hadasht on a hill encircled by a single ox hide.MASTERS OF THE SEA (c. 550–264 BC) — The living city. A double harbor unlike anything else in the ancient world. A constitution Aristotle praised alongside Sparta's. Hanno the Navigator's voyage past the equator. Himilco's expedition to Britain. The Mago farming manuals; the only Carthaginian text Rome preserved. And the question Greek and Roman authors would not stop asking: did the Carthaginians really sacrifice their own children?BLOOD AND SILVER (264–241 BC) — The First Punic War. Twenty-three years of continuous fighting between a maritime empire and an agrarian republic that had never built a warship. The corvus. The Battle of Cape Ecnomus: 680 warships, 290,000 men on the water, the largest naval battle in human history. The sacred chickens of Publius Claudius Pulcher. The loss of over a hundred thousand Romans to storms alone. And the slow, grinding Roman discovery that they could lose major battles and still win the war.THE TRUCELESS WAR (241–238 BC) — The reckoning. Twenty thousand unpaid mercenaries land in North Africa and nearly destroy Carthage from within. Polybius calls it the most impious war ever fought. Hamilcar Barca emerges from the rubble as the most feared man in the state, builds a new empire in Spain on Tartessian silver, and raises three sons who will become Rome's worst nightmare.CHAPTERS00:00:00 Open — Seventeen Days of Fire00:03:00 Chapter 1: The Purple City00:45:00 Chapter 2: Masters of the Sea02:05:00 Chapter 3: Blood and Silver03:11:00 Chapter 4: The Truceless WarPRIMARY ANCIENT SOURCESPolybius, Histories (Books I–VI, comprehensive coverage of First Punic War and Truceless War) • Livy, History of Rome and Periochae • Diodorus Siculus, Universal History (Books XI–XX, XXV) • Appian, Punic Wars and Iberian Wars • Cornelius Nepos, Lives (Hamilcar, Hannibal) • Cicero, De Natura Deorum • Plutarch, De superstitione • Aristotle, Politics (Book II) • Herodotus, Histories • Strabo, Geography • Pliny the Elder, Natural History • Justin, Epitome of Pompeius Trogus (Book XVIII, the Dido narrative) • Josephus, Against Apion (Menander's Tyrian king list) • Virgil, Aeneid (Books I and IV) • Hanno the Navigator, Periplus (Codex Heidelbergensis 398) • Avienus, Ora Maritima (Himilco fragments) • Suetonius, Nero • Valerius Maximus, Memorable Deeds • Columella and Varro, De Re Rustica • Kleitarchos fragments • Duilius inscription, CIL VI 1300 • Diocletian's Price Edict (301 AD) • I Kings 5–7; II Chronicles 2–4; Ezekiel 26–29 • Papyrus Anastasi I • Mishnah Ketubot 7:10MODERN SCHOLARSHIPRichard Miles, Carthage Must Be Destroyed (2010)Adrian Goldsworthy, The Fall of Carthage (2000)Serge Lancel, Carthage: A History (1995)Donald Harden, The Phoenicians (1962)B. Dexter Hoyos, The Carthaginians (2010)B. Dexter Hoyos, Truceless War: Carthage's Fight for Survival (2007)B. Dexter Hoyos (ed.), A Companion to the Punic Wars (2011)J.F. Lazenby, The First Punic War (1996)J.F. Lazenby, Hannibal's War (1978)Josephine Quinn et al., "Phoenician Bones of Contention," Antiquity (2013)Jeffrey Schwartz et al., "Skeletal Remains from Punic Carthage," PLOS ONE (2010)Lawrence Stager & Samuel Wolff, "Child Sacrifice at Carthage," Biblical Archaeology Review (1984)Patricia Smith et al., "Aging cremated infants," Antiquity (2013)Dead Empires is written, narrated, and produced by Jacob for Bad Optics Media.https://www.youtube.com/@DeadEmpiresPodcasthttps://www.tiktok.com/@deadempirespodcasthttps://deadempirespodcast.com/
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