Download Hannibal

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Military of ancient Rome wikipedia , lookup

Promagistrate wikipedia , lookup

Travel in Classical antiquity wikipedia , lookup

Food and dining in the Roman Empire wikipedia , lookup

Roman economy wikipedia , lookup

Roman army of the mid-Republic wikipedia , lookup

Education in ancient Rome wikipedia , lookup

Roman infantry tactics wikipedia , lookup

Roman historiography wikipedia , lookup

Roman army of the late Republic wikipedia , lookup

Berber kings of Roman-era Tunisia wikipedia , lookup

Culture of ancient Rome wikipedia , lookup

Rome (TV series) wikipedia , lookup

Roman agriculture wikipedia , lookup

Roman Republic wikipedia , lookup

Socii wikipedia , lookup

Early Roman army wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Hannibal
(247 BC- Bithynia 182 BCE),
Carthaginian general, leader of the
famous march across the Alps.
Hannibal is primarily known for his
efforts in the second Punic war, but was
just as important in the role he played in
the conquest of southeastern Spain in
the 220s BCE.
Hannibal was the son of Hamilcar
Barca, and started following his father on
his campaigns already at the age of 9,
when he set out to conquer Spain. From
the time he was 18 until he was 25, he
acted as a military leader under his
brother-in-law, Hasdrubal, in connection
with the extension and consolidation of
Carthaginian power in Spain.
With Hasdrubal's death in 221,
Hannibal was elected new commanderin-chief. Under his control, the Carthaginians made large territorial
advances, but with the conquest of Saguntum (Sagunto, Spain) in
218, he clashed with the Roman army. The Romans claimed that this
was a break of an existing treaty between Rome and Carthage, and
demanded Hannibal surrender to them. With the refusal of Carthage,
the second Punic war started.
Hannibal set out on his legendary march from New Carthage
(Cartagena, Spain) in 218 BCE. At first he crossed the Pyrenees; later
he traversed the Alps through narrow and dangerous passes of up to
more than 2000 metres above sea level. The exact crossing is not
known, but it was probably somewhere between the Little St. Bernard
and Mt. Geveva passes.
Even if many were lost to his army during this march, because of
snowstorms, landslides, and attacks from hostile local tribes, he
managed to recruit new personnel along the route. It is believed that
he lost about 15,000 men on the whole campaign.
Hannibal soon suppressed local peoples in northern Italy. The first
people were the Taurini, then the Ligurian and Celtic tribes north of
the Po river. Hannibal's victories at Ticinus and Trebia in 218, and at
Trasimene lake in 217 demonstrated the inadequacy of the Roman
army. Soon after, he invaded Roman territory, but never came closer
than 150 km to Rome, before he temporarily settled in Campania.
Hannibal faced the Roman general, Quintus Fabius, whose strategy
was to avoid decisive battles. Yet he managed to keep Hannibal away
from Rome. As years passed, Hannibal's morale and resources were
strained, while Rome rebuilt its military strength. After 216 Hannibal
established himself in Cannae (now Barletta), 400 km east of Rome.
From this vantage point, Hannibal enjoyed a period when he could
count some of his most impressive victories.
After some time the Carthaginian government stopped sending
reinforcements. When Hannibal finally attacked Rome in 211, a battle
which ended in failure, many of Hannibal's allies deserted him. In 207
his brother Hasdrubal tried to come to rescue Hannibal's, but he was
stopped by the Roman army.
In 203 Hannibal was summoned back to Carthage. Back on home
soil, Carthage faced Rome's forces on many fronts, but at the decisive
battle at Zama (near today's Maktar, Tunisia (see travel guide) in 202,
Hannibal's troops fled, because the army facing him was too strong.
This defeat brought the final end of the warfare, and Rome left as the
stronger force.
Peace was agreed upon in 201, according to Hannibal's own peace
terms. In 196 BCE, Hannibal became shophet, or chief magistrate, of
Carthage, and he took charge over Carthage's economy in order to
bring it back to the stage from which struggle against Rome could be
resumed.
The Romans reacted to his obvious ambitions by sacking him from
Carthage. Hannibal fled to Syria, to the court of Antiochus 3. Antiochus
fought together with Hannibal against Rome, but when Antiochus was
defeated in 190, Hannibal fled to Crete, and later Bithynia (now Izmit)
in northern Asia Minor. The story repeated itself, warfare together with
new allies against Rome resulted in defeat, but this time Hannibal
committed suicide by poison instead of surrendering.
http://i-cias.com/e.o/hannibal.htm