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Carthage Rome
  The City of Carthage
.... In spite of all these reasons why Carthage and Rome should have been able to peacefully coexist, in 264 BC they found themselves at war. ....
(8710 35 )

Causes and Effects of the Punic Wars
.... According to Adrian Goldsworthy, "Dio felt that the real reason for the First Punic War was the mutual fear in both Carthage and Rome of the other's growing ....
(1473 6 )

Rome
.... The Romans launched a series of wars known as the Punic Wars, Carthage having begun as a Phoenician colony. During the second of these, Rome was almost ....
(826 3 )

Greek Period and Roman Period
.... At the conclusion of the third war with Carthage, Rome emerged triumphant and now turned eastward in its desired conquest of the Hellenistic World. ....
(2578 10 )

Hannibal's Military Skill
.... Hannibal's Failures as a Strategist Hannibal's initial strategy to invade Rome from the north made sense because Carthage had no other way to reach Italy by ....
(1457 6 )

St. Augustine and St. Francis
.... He received his initial schooling mainly in Latin literature, and he earned his living as a teacher in Carthage, Rome, and Milan. ....
(2467 10 )

Spanish
.... At this point in history, Rome and Carthage were either at war with each other or preparing to go to war, and the successful invasion of the Iberian peninsula ....
(1096 4 )

Hannibal Hannibal belongs to the select group
.... long-term objectives, as well as regarding the complex, effectively tripartite relationship between Hannibal, the home government of Carthage, and Rome. ....
(5894 24 )

Leptis Magna Ruins
.... After Carthage was destroyed by Rome in the Third Punic War (146 BC), Leptis Magna came under Roman protection as part of Numidia. ....
(3029 12 )

PRE-COLONIAL EXPLORATION OF AFRICA This researc
.... they had been blocked the far interior by an impenetrable swamp" (Iliffe, 1995, p. 1). In general, according to July (1992), "both Carthage and Rome seem to ....
(4220 17 )

Tunisia: A History
.... in 264 BC, Carthage clashed with the expanding Roman Empire in a series of bloody struggles known as the Punic Wars. In the third of these, in 149-146 BC, Rome ....
(2858 11 )

Theories of international relations
.... maritime power (Lane, 1973, 22ff); it was reduced to minor status only with the rise of national states that, like Rome against Carthage, could mobilize ....
(2156 9 )

Hannibal's Offensive Policy & Roman Campaign
.... further stretch Rome's resources. The overall balance might have swung inexorably toward Hannibal and Carthage, and against Rome. ....
(6976 28 )

Hannibal & the Second Roman War
.... Africa and march to the defense of the mother city, the end result would be a defensive war, visited upon Carthage's territories while Rome's remained untouched ....
(8185 33 )

Roman Republic Lit&Art
.... 487). He wrote an epic poem based on the Punic War, of which there were two. The first Punic War was fought between Rome and Carthage. ....
(1473 6 )

Roman artisans in Greek Influence
.... and view all conquered peoples as inferior and naturally subordinate to Rome. .... with Africans before their experience with Hannibal of Carthage, which left them ....
(1277 5 )

AL-ANDALUS
.... Carthage fought a series of wars with Rome, most famous now for the brilliant Carthagenian general Hannibal, who marched from Spain to Italy with an army ....
(4165 17 )

General Hannibal
.... It has been argued in this study that Hannibal's ultimate objective was to eliminate Rome as a threat to Carthage, not simply by defeating Roman armies in the ....
(7075 28 )

ROMAN INTERNATIONAL LAW
.... To take, for example, the first treaty with Carthage, the commissioner who conducted the .... as this stone is now." But there were also reasons in Rome by which a ....
(1408 6 )

Hannibal's Victory at Cannae & Continued War Strategy
.... of sheer necessity, the prospect of triggering a domino effect of defections from Rome, and perhaps continuing hope of direct support from Carthage--must have ....
(6703 27 )

Hannibal's Strategy
.... If the Romans abandoned Sardinia, not only would it be a psychological and political gain for Carthage (and corresponding loss for Rome), but the Carthagenians ....
(7701 31 )

St. Augustine
.... Up to the time of his conversion he remained a teacher of rhetoric, maintaining a school in Carthage in 376 AD but later in Rome and Milan in 373-386 AD As a ....
(2503 10 )

The Development of Roman Law
.... Territorial expansion was, if not the motive, then certainly the result of two wars with Carthage during the 3rd century BC, Rome's "only rival for control of ....
(1673 7 )

March of Hannibal
.... toga. From what we are told by Livy, it appears that there were two parties in Carthage on the question of war with Rome. A minority ....
(8349 33 )

Imperial Worship under Roman Caesars
.... Gaius Marcellus after he liberated Syracuse in Sicily from Carthage and Titus .... established in their honor, but the traditions of Republican Rome had militated ....
(2869 11 )

Imperial Worship System of the Early Caesars
.... Gaius Marcellus after he liberated Syracuse in Sicily from Carthage and Titus .... established in their honor, but the traditions of Republican Rome had militated ....
(2843 11 )

The Federalist Papers
.... "History informs us of no long-lived republic which had not a senate." The examples given are those of Rome, Sparta, and Carthage. ....
(2174 9 )

The Federalist Papers
.... "History informs us of no long-lived republic which had not a senate." The examples given are those of Rome, Sparta, and Carthage. ....
(2149 9 )

Objective of The Federalist
.... "History informs us of no long-lived republic which had not a senate." The examples given are those of Rome, Sparta, and Carthage. ....
(2174 9 )

Hannibal and Wars
.... the best service Hannibal could render to Carthage was to make whatever commitments on his own behalf might serve to bring in a useful ally against Rome. ....
(6345 25 )

 
 
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