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Carthage: Punic Apocalypse II

Carthage: Punic Apocalypse II

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In October of 218 BC a twenty-eight-year-old marched the last of his elephants over a 10,000-foot Alpine pass that no Mediterranean army had ever attempted. He came down into Italy with roughly 26,000 men, half of what he’d started with, and over the next eighteen months he handed the Roman Republic the three worst military disasters in its history. At Cannae alone, more Romans died in a single afternoon than Americans died in the entire Vietnam War.

His name was Hannibal Barca, and this is the complete story of his war and everything it set in motion: the crossing, the slaughter, the thirteen-year stalemate in which he never lost a battle and never won the war, the day his own tactics were turned against him at Zama, and the long, cold patience of a Republic that decided one defeated rival still wasn’t dead enough.

This is a single long-form telling: the back half of Dead Empires’ Carthage season assembled into one continuous show. It runs from the snow of the Alps to the ashes of a half-million-person city burning for six days while the Roman general who ordered it stood on the hill and wept, quoting Homer. It is a story about military genius and the limits of genius; about a state that gave its greatest soldier everything and a state that gave its greatest soldier nothing; and about what it means when the winners get to write, and then physically destroy, the loser’s entire record.

Carthage was richer, older, and in many ways more sophisticated than the caricature Rome left us. The harbor engineering, the grid-plan city, the agricultural science: all of it survives only in fragments, because the point of 146 BC was to make sure nothing survived at all. This is the war that earned that ending, told in full.

Featuring: the Alpine crossing · Ticinus, Trebia, and Lake Trasimene · the double envelopment at Cannae · Fabius and the strategy of exhaustion · the war in Spain and the rise of Scipio · Hasdrubal’s march and the Metaurus · the invasion of Africa · the only face-to-face meeting between Hannibal and Scipio · the Battle of Zama · Hannibal’s exile and death · Cato’s fig · the siege and destruction of Carthage.

Chapters

0:00 I. OVER THE ALPS: the crossing & the first three victories (218 to 217 BC)

2:37 The Army Assembles

14:08 The Mountains

32:06 The Three Blows: Ticinus, Trebia & Lake Trasimene

55:40 Reflection

58:15 II. CANNAE: the perfect battle (August 2, 216 BC)

1:00:44 The Ground and the Armies

1:14:52 The Killing

1:29:34 The Aftermath

1:49:39 III. THE LONG DEFEAT: thirteen years that led nowhere (216 to 207 BC)

1:51:32 The Strategy of Exhaustion (Fabius)

2:07:16 The War in Spain

2:26:55 Hasdrubal’s Crossing: the Metaurus

2:38:50 The Lion in the Cage

2:44:36 Reflection

2:48:00 IV. ZAMA: the student beats the master (202 BC)

2:48:00 The Invasion of Africa

2:58:23 The Return

3:02:41 The Meeting: Hannibal & Scipio, face to face

3:05:49 Zama

3:19:27 The Peace and the Exile: Hannibal’s last years & death

3:33:29 Reflection

3:36:42 V. SALT THE EARTH: the destruction of Carthage (149 to 146 BC)

3:38:25 The Fifty-Year Peace & Cato’s Obsession

3:50:06 The Arsenal

3:53:05 The Siege

4:03:53 The Fall: six days

4:14:03 The Erasure

4:24:03 Epilogue: What Came After

Sources & Further Reading

Ancient sources

  • Polybius, Histories (the march, Trebia, Trasimene, Cannae, the African campaign and Zama; fragments for the Third Punic War)
  • Livy, History of Rome, books XXI to XXX; XXXIII & XXXIX (Hannibal as Suffete and his death); Periochae (summaries of the lost books)
  • Appian, Punic Wars / Libyca
  • Plutarch, Fabius Maximus, Marcellus, Flamininus, Cato the Elder
  • Cornelius Nepos, Hannibal (exile and death)
  • Pliny the Elder, Natural History (Cato’s fig; Mago’s agricultural treatise)
  • Pausanias, Description of Greece; Strabo, Geography (the parallel destruction of Corinth, 146 BC)

Modern scholarship

  • Adrian Goldsworthy, The Fall of Carthage (2000)
  • J.F. Lazenby, Hannibal’s War (1978)
  • Richard Miles, Carthage Must Be Destroyed (2010)
  • B. Dexter Hoyos, Mastering the West: Rome and Carthage at War (2015)
  • Eve MacDonald, Hannibal: A Hellenistic Life (2015)
  • Gregory Daly, Cannae: The Experience of Battle in the Second Punic War (2002)
  • Victor Davis Hanson, Carnage and Culture (2001)
  • P.A. Brunt, Italian Manpower, 225 BC to AD 14 (1971)
  • Serge Lancel, Carthage: A History (1995)
  • A.E. Astin, Scipio Aemilianus (1967)

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