The Legacy of Carthage
The Legacy of Carthage
The Legacy of Carthage
‘The total destruction of Carthage by the Romans in 146BC was an act so extreme
that it shocked even the most hardened commentators and historians in the ancient
world’ (Chalk and Jonassohn, 1990, p.74). What contribution had Carthage made to
the Mediterranean world prior to its destruction?
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‘The total destruction of Carthage by the Romans in 146BC was an act so extreme
that it shocked even the most hardened commentators and historians in the ancient
world’ (Chalk and Jonassohn, 1990, p.74). What contribution had Carthage made to
the Mediterranean world prior to its destruction?
Carthage, a spectacularly prosperous city and once one of the largest in the western
Mediterranean, was destroyed by Rome in an act that was arguably genocide. While
remains with Greek and Roman sources, a greater understanding of Carthage and its
impact on the western world can be obtained. This includes looking at the city’s
Phoenician heritage, its ships, navigational skills and trade, its agriculture,
manufacturing and art, its political systems, taxation of colonies and the threat it posed
to Rome. When all of these things are considered, the conclusion is inescapable –
Carthage played a major role in the formation of the Mediterranean world and
The Phoenicians first appear in the Iron Age, absorbing the culture of the Bronze Age
Cannites.1 They were explorers and, as such, managed to expand their interests and
credited with paving the way for the western world through a mixture of Judeo-
shows that the city states established by the Phoenicians stimulated western
1
Charles Gates, Ancient Cities: The archaeology of urban life in the Ancient Near East and Egypt,
Greece and Rome, Abingdon, 2011, p. 189.
2
Gates, Ancient Cities: The archaeology of urban life in the Ancient Near East and Egypt, Greece and
Rome, p. 200
3
John C. Scott, ‘The Phoenicians and the formation of the Western World’, Comparative Civilisations
Review, issue. 78, 2018, p. 25.
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Mesopotamia, which used a mixture of public and private capital to invest in both long-
intermediaries of Europe and Asia.4 One such item of eastern culture was the abacus,
eastern goods and technologies by the Phoenicians to Archaic Greece became the
As major sea traders, ships and exploration were key aspects of Phoenician life. 7
These were merchant ships, capable of carrying cargo and of being steered. They
opened trade routes to Spain and founded the city of Gadir.8 They also started the art
of navigation, with the Northern Star known as the Phoenician Star by the Greeks. 9
lime mortar, which the Greeks used as the basis for cement and the Romans would
eventually turn into concrete.10 The Greeks also adopted the Phoenician use of
weights and measures for trade transactions and are said to have inherited their fine
music and a religious sporting festival from Phoenician culture as well.11 As talented
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enter into trade agreements.13 The Greeks, who had a high regard for Phoenician
accomplishments, borrowed this alphabet to create their own, which would become
the basis of the Latin alphabet in years to come.14 Written language, along with
numerical systems are necessary for a society to organise its information, and, as
such, the introduction of the Phoenician alphabet assisted in the transfer of culture
from the Near East to the West.15 The Phoenicians established territorial colonies and
sent forth their people, skilled in seafaring, engineering and manufacturing.16 Their
greatest accomplishment was then born into the world and it would eventually assume
Said to have been founded by a Phoenician princess in the eighth century BCE and
with a legend that it would one day be the most prosperous city in the world, Carthage
was an autonomous Phoenician city state.18 Archaeological finds confirm the date of
the city and show evidence of urban planning to house its sizeable population. 19 With
its own institutions, social classes, history and customs, the prosperous city of
Carthage would one day rule over an empire that included North Africa, Southern
Review, issue. 78, 2018, p. 31; John C. Scott, ‘The Phoenicians and the formation of the Western
World’, Comparative Civilisations Review, issue. 78, 2018, p. 32.
13
Robin Osborne and Andrew Wallace-Hadrill, ‘Cities of the Ancient Mediterranean’, The Oxford
Handbook of Cities in World History, 2013, p. 51.
14
Osborne and Wallace-Hadrill, ‘Cities of the Ancient Mediterranean’, p. 51; Carpenter, ‘Phoenicians in
the West’, p. 35.
15
Scott, ‘The Phoenicians and the formation of the Western World’, p. 28, 32.
16
Ibid., p. 25, 29.
17
Ibid., p. 36.
18
Justin, The Foundation of Carthage, XVIII.V-VI; Walter Ameling, ‘Carthage’, The Oxford Handbook
of the State in the Ancient Near East and Mediterranean, Peter Fibiger Bang and Walter Scheidel (eds),
2013.
19
Dexter Hoyos, Hannibal’s Dynasty: Power and politics in the western Mediterranean, 247-183 BC,
London and New York, 2003, pp. 24-25; Walter Ameling, ‘Carthage’, The Oxford Handbook of the State
in the Ancient Near East and Mediterranean, Peter Fibiger Bang and Walter Scheidel (eds), 2013.
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revenue and military service, and surrounded by fertile land, Carthage became a major
commercial hub and , eventually, the largest and richest city in the western
Mediterranean.23
With perhaps a quarter of a million people residing in it and dependent on it, Carthage
was defended by a massive wall, thirty-five kilometres in length, with tower blocks of
up to four stories situated every fifty-five to sixty-five metres. 24 In addition to this, the
city had an outer ditch, some twenty metres wide and an inner ditch of a little over five
metres wide. Carthage was a spacious city, with public buildings, temples and high
20
Ameling, ‘Carthage’; M. Cary and H.H. Scullard, A History of Rome, Hampshire and New York, 1975,
p. 115.
21
Cary and Scullard, A History of Rome, 1975, p. 113; Hoyos, Hannibal’s Dynasty: Power and politics
in the western Mediterranean, 247-183 BC, p. 24.
22
Hoyos, Hannibal’s Dynasty: Power and politics in the western Mediterranean, 247-183 BC, p. 25;
Matthew Dillon and Lynda Garland (eds), Ancient Rome: From the Early Republic to the Assassination
of Julius Caesar, London, 2005, p. 173.
23
Josephine M. Crawley, Imperialism and Culture in North Africa: the Hellenistic and Early Roman Eras,
Berkeley, 2003, p. 39; Naphtali Lewis and Meyer Reinhold, Roman Civilisation – Volume 1: The
Republic and the Augustan Age, New York, 1990, p. 207; H.H. Scullard, ‘Carthage’, Greece and Rome,
vol. 2, no. 3, 1955, p. 98; Cary and Scullard, A History of Rome, p. 115.
24
Mary Beard, SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome, London, 2015, p. 209; Hoyos, Hannibal’s Dynasty:
Power and politics in the western Mediterranean, 247-183 BC, p. 24; C.R. Whittaker, ‘Do theories of
the ancient city matter?’, Urban Society in Roman Italy, Tim J. Cornell and Katherine Comas (eds),
London and New York, 1995, p. 13.
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apartment style blocks lining a single main street that spiralled around the town.25 It
boasted comfortable houses, complete with bathrooms and drains and with rooms
arranged around a central courtyard with mosaic paving. Though little excavation has
been done in the residential area, the building style and pottery remains indicate an
eastern Mediterranean flair, which would influence the building designs of African
towns connected to the city.26 Further to this, Carthage had stabling for three hundred
elephants and barracks for twenty thousand infantry soldiers and another four
thousand cavalry. Outside the city was an industrial area with kilns, metalwork shops
and dye production, but it was the two enclosed harbours below the city that inspired
the most awe.27 Vividly described by Appian, they consisted of a rectangular bay for
merchants and a circular naval base, known as a Cothon, complete with docks and
wharves, surrounding an ‘Admiral’s Island’, on which was built a tower to see over the
outer walls.28 With over one hundred and fifty ship sheds built
engineering ingenuity.29
25
Strabo, Geography, in Dillon and Garland (eds), Ancient Rome: From the Early Republic to the
Assassination of Julius Caesar, XVII.III.XIV; Hoyos, Hannibal’s Dynasty: Power and politics in the
western Mediterranean, 247-183 BC, p. 24; Gordon Campbell (ed), The Grove Encyclopedia of
Classical Art and Architecture, 2007.
26
Scullard, ‘Carthage’, Greece and Rome, p. 98; Campbell (ed), The Grove Encyclopedia of Classical
Art and Architecture, 2007.
27
Richard Miles, ‘Carthage, the lost Mediterranean civilisation’, History Today, vol. 60, no. 2, 2010, p.
15.
28
Appian, The Punic Wars, XX.XCVI; Hoyos, Hannibal’s Dynasty: Power and politics in the western
Mediterranean, 247-183 BC, p. 24.
29
Strabo, Geography, XVII.III.XIV; Dexter Hoyos, ‘Carthage after 201BC: African prosperity and Roman
Protection’, Cassicum, vol. 41, no.1, 2015, p. 26; Henry Hurst and Lawrence G. Stager, ‘A Metropolitan
Landscape: The late Punic port of Carthage’, World Archaeology, vol. 9, no. 3, 1978, p. 341, 344.
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Necessity is the mother of invention and it goes without saying that harbours of this
nature must have been built to service not only a sizable navy, but a flourishing
shipping trade. As Phoenicians, the Carthaginians had a legacy of being the greatest
of seafarers.30 The had an undisputed command of the sea and were pioneers in the
fields of navigation and commerce.31 They used cedar from the mountains in Lebanon
for shipbuilding and were acknowledged as being superior at naval warfare, as they
trained for it longer and were better equipped than other cities. 32 Polybius spoke of
their occupation being more about sea-going than any other people and the size and
impact of their navy was admired during the Punic Wars.33 The Carthaginians were
ship, but also the method of production.35 Had the Romans not captured this ship,
they would have been unable to continue their warfare on water, as according to
30
Jo-Ann Thompson, ‘Hanno of Carthage’, Stamps, vol. 242, no. 9, 1993, p. 253; Scullard, ‘Carthage’,
p. 104.
31
Scullard, ‘Carthage’, p. 104.
32
Polybius, The Rise of the Roman Empire, London, 1979, VI.LII; Gates, Ancient Cities: The
archaeology of urban life in the Ancient Near East and Egypt, Greece and Rome, p. 189.
33
Polybius, The Rise of the Roman Empire, VI.LII.
34
Polybius, Histories, in Dillon and Garland (eds), Ancient Rome: From the Early Republic to the
Assassination of Julius Caesar, I.XX.XV; Dillon and Garland (eds), Ancient Rome: From the Early
Republic to the Assassination of Julius Caesar, p. 183; Scott, ‘The Phoenicians and the formation of
the Western World’, p. 37.
35
H.H. Scullard, ‘Carthage and Rome’, The Cambridge Ancient History, vol. 7.2, A. Drummond (ed),
1990, p. 549.
36
Polybius, Histories, I.XX.XVI.
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The Carthaginians were explorers who traded in goods and seeds found in the channel
around Carthage show that among other items, they were transporting figs, grapes,
pomegranates, peaches, melons, plums, olives, small quantities of nuts and lotus. 37
Hanno, the great Carthaginian sailor, explored the West African coast, a region that
the Portuguese would map two thousand years later. 38 Hanno was a man of
importance, who must have travelled south of the equator in order to see the gorillas
that were described in his journey, though the Carthaginians were secretive about the
was a major event of its time and is still viewed as historical in terms of Carthaginian
colonisation.40 So famous was the tale of Hanno, that when Roman playwright Plautus
depicts a Carthaginian explorer in his play The Little Carthaginian, he shows him to
Treaties made with Rome both before and between the Punic Wars indicate that
Carthage’s trading interests were of foremost importance to them.42 They are known
to have traded with Athens from around 600BCE and had trade routes across the
Black Sea and Strait of Gibraltar. 43 Their geographical location put them in a good
37
Cary and Scullard, A History of Rome, p. 116; Hurst and Stager, ‘A Metropolitan Landscape: The late
Punic port of Carthage’, p. 340.
38
The Voyage of Hanno the Navigator, XVIII; Erich Gruen, Rethinking the Other in Antiquity, Princeton,
2011, p. 137.
39
Thompson, ‘Hanno of Carthage’, p. 253.
40
Carpenter, ‘Phoenicians in the West’, p. 52.
41
Plautus, The Little Carthaginian, 1355; Frank Chalk and Kurt Jonassohn, ‘Carthage’, The History and
Sociology of Genocide: Analyses and Case Studies, 1990, p. 81.
42
Dillon and Garland (eds), Ancient Rome: From the Early Republic to the Assassination of Julius
Caesar, p. 175.
43
Nathan Pilkington, An Archaeological History of Carthaginian Imperialism, 2013, p. 359; Kirsten
Parkin, ‘Changing tides: how Carthage’s religious changes are reflective of their cultural changes’,
Classicum, vol. 44, no. 1, 2018, p. 33.
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trading position to trade with Spain and, eventually, their strong knowledge of the
oceans and exploitation of colonial manpower allowed them to control trade in the
Africa and silver from Spain.45 They exported horses, textiles, grain and slaves, along
with luxury goods, such as wine and robes.46 Knowledge of these goods comes from
ancient sources and, more recently, shipwrecks, with a Carthaginian ship located in
Spanish waters revealing that, at the time it was wrecked, it was transporting amber
from the Baltic region, local Phoenician ceramics, tin from northwest Iberia, elephant
tusks from North Africa and copper from throughout the Mediterranean.47
The Carthaginians also traded in fruit grown in their own fertile hinterland and much of
this was fruit that required grafting to grow, a considerable agricultural enterprise and
for this trade, that the Romans referred to the pomegranate as the Punic Apple. The
lavish territory outside of Carthage was divided into market gardens with orchards,
olives and vines, all under irrigation. There were also villas, gardens and livestock,
such as cattle, sheep and horses.49 Hannibal was said to have occupied his soldiers
during times of peace by employing them to plant olive trees and Diodorus described
the country houses and gardens of Cap Bon as being the wealthy farming estates of
44
Patrick Hunt, ‘The Locus of Carthage: Compounding Geographical Logic’, The African Archaeological
Review, vol. 26, no. 2, 2009, p.151.
45
Scullard, ‘Carthage’, p. 105; Simon Hornblower and Anthony Spawforth (eds), The Oxford Classical
Dictionary, New York, 2003, p. 295.
46
Chalk and Jonassohn, ‘Carthage’, p. 79; Gates, Ancient Cities: The archaeology of urban life in the
Ancient Near East and Egypt, Greece and Rome, p. 189.
47
Jason Urbanus, ‘Masters of the ancient Mediterranean’, Archaeology, vol. 69, no. 3, 2016, p. 42.
48
Hurst and Stager, ‘A Metropolitan Landscape: The late Punic port of Carthage’, p. 340.
49
Crawley, Imperialism and Culture in North Africa: the Hellenistic and Early Roman Eras, p. 219.
50
Hoyos, ‘Carthage after 201BC: African prosperity and Roman Protection’, p. 25.
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given to the famous twenty-eight volume work by Mago, which was preserved after
the destruction of the city and translated into Latin on command of the Roman
senate.52
The Carthaginians not only exported produce grown on their land, but also items
manufactured by them, such as luxury rugs, carpets, beds and cushions, ivory
carvings and glass.53 In addition, they had an industry that dried and salted fish and
another producing the greatly sought after Tyrian purple dye, made from a shellfish
known as Murex.54 There was also pottery industry, but finer articles were imported
from Greece and Southern Italy, both for trade and their own use. Their manufacturing
industry was capable of producing vast numbers of things in short periods of time,
such as described by Strabo, after having given over two hundred thousand suits of
armour, along with three thousands catapults to Rome before the commencement of
the third Punic War, they were then able to quickly manufacture more equipment, at a
rate of one hundred and forty shields, three hundred swords, five hundred spears and
one thousand catapult missiles per day. 55 In addition to this, they constructed one
hundred and twenty new ships in a period of two months and these feats were able to
expense.56
51
Miles, ‘Carthage, the lost Mediterranean civilisation’, p. 16.
52
Beard, SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome, p. 210.
53
Hornblower and Spawforth (eds), The Oxford Classical Dictionary, p. 295; ‘The Wealth of Africa:
Carthage’, British Museum, 2010.
54
Gates, Ancient Cities: The archaeology of urban life in the Ancient Near East and Egypt, Greece and
Rome, p. 189; Urbanus, ‘Masters of the ancient Mediterranean’, p. 41.
55
Strabo, Geography, XVII.III.XV.
56
Ibid.
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Carthaginian artwork was influenced by the Egyptians and the Greeks, but although a
reflection on Mediterranean style, it did not follow it exactly.57 Both Plutarch and H.H.
Scullard were of the view that Carthage produced little in the way of art and that their
literature was all technical manuals and no poetry. 58 Scullard went on to say that their
pottery was unadorned and subsequently cheap looking and that, although Rome had
not achieved much in the way of art by this time in their own period, they were capable
of doing so in a way that Carthage never could.59 This belief in the dullness and
inferiority of Carthaginian artwork stems from pro-Roman bias and aesthetic prejudice
There is a limit to what can be gleaned on the operation of a society by the study of its
cities, but where Carthage is concerned, the evidence of great qualities is reflected in
their domination of North Africa and the western Mediterranean.61 Carthage had been
a prosperous city long before Rome and its population consisted of free citizens, free
foreigners and the non-free.62 While its own citizens mainly served in the navy,
mercenaries were used to make up an infantry and although this has been criticised
57
Campbell (ed), The Grove Encyclopedia of Classical Art and Architecture, 2007; Miles, ‘Carthage,
the lost Mediterranean civilisation’, p. 17.
58
Cary and Scullard, A History of Rome, p. 149.
59
Scullard, ‘Carthage’, p. 105; Cary and Scullard, A History of Rome, p. 149.
60
Carpenter, ‘Phoenicians in the West’, p. 38.
61
Whittaker, ‘Do theories of the ancient city matter?’, p. 22; Scullard, ‘Carthage’, p. 103.
62
Lewis and Reinhold, Roman Civilisation – Volume 1: The Republic and the Augustan Age, p. 164;
‘Carthage’, Brill’s New Pauly Encyclopedia, 2006.
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by Roman writers as folly, they were still loyal, effective and capable, on occasion
besting Rome.63 Its system of government was admired by Aristotle, who included the
study of it in his school. 64 Aristotle was impressed that Carthage held the loyalty of
the common people and that it had had neither rebellion nor tyrant. 65 Carthage was a
large city that required officials to run it and Aristotle criticised what he saw as the
wealthy having control over the city through the sale of higher office. However, it
should be borne in mind that he did also consider the Carthaginians’ reasons for their
position of buying power, in that a person without wealth is without the leisure to rule
well.66 Aristotle was very willing to criticise constitutions, so his thoughts on Carthage
were largely praise. Polybius also wrote of Carthage’s well-designed constitution, but
being pro-Roman, detailed how the Carthaginian government was in decline, whereas
Rome’s was ascending.67 Despite writing of Rome’s primacy in this area, Carthage
and its government was still portrayed as the benchmark for success.68
Commerce in the Carthaginian empire was not only found in trade, but in taxing their
municipalities, a system continued by the Romans after Carthage fell. 69 Carthage had
considerable wealth and resources at its disposal, as is evident from their continued
prosperity after the end of the second Punic War, despite still owing money to Rome
as part of the peace treaty.70 The area of Africa surrounding the city of Carthage
63
Polybius, The Rise of the Roman Empire, VI.LII; Dillon and Garland (eds), Ancient Rome: From the
Early Republic to the Assassination of Julius Caesar, p. 174, 180.
64
Aristotle, ‘The Constitution of Carthage’, Politics, MCCLXXIIbXXIV-MCCLXXIIIbXXV; Denis
Feeney, ‘Carthage and Rome: Introduction’, Classical Philology, vol. 112, no. 3, 2017, p. 302.
65
Aristotle, ‘The Constitution of Carthage’, MCCLXXIIbXXIV-MCCLXXIIIbXXV.
66
Ibid.
67
Polybius, The Rise of the Roman EmpireVI.LI.
68
Erich Gruen, Rethinking the Other in Antiquity, Princeton, 2011, p. 120.
69
Whittaker, ‘Do theories of the ancient city matter?’, p. 14; Feeney, ‘Carthage and Rome: Introduction’,
pp. 305-306.
70
Livy, The War with Hannibal, XXX.XLII; Cary and Scullard, A History of Rome: Down to the Reign of
Constantine, p. 147.
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It was not just their technological and agricultural advancements that benefitted the
cities under Carthage’s rule, but their beliefs and systems of worship. The
Phoenicians who settled Carthage brought with them the old Near Eastern deity
Astarte, who would later be known as Tanit. The votive offerings on tombs suggest a
belief in the afterlife and although there is much speculation regarding their practise of
child sacrifice, there is little archaeological evidence to support the proposition. 72 They
were a musical people, with two cymbals located in the tombs of a priestess and
labelled their culture as ‘unattractive and repulsive’, but admitted that there was too
little evidence to gain a clear picture of their aesthetic nature, showing, again, his pro-
Roman bias on the subject.74 What is known though, is that Carthage developed from
a Phoenician outpost into a multicultural city state and a superpower in terms of its
political, trade and military prowess and this made it Rome’s ultimate foe. 75
Carthage and Rome fought three great Punic Wars against each other, with Rome
defeating Carthage each time, but suffering heavy and humiliating losses all the
same.76 The Battle of Cannae in 216BCE saw tens of thousands of Roman troops
71
Crawley, Imperialism and Culture in North Africa: the Hellenistic and Early Roman Eras, p. 194, 216.
72
J.H. Schwartz, F.D. Houghton, L. Bondioli and R. Macchiarelli, ‘Two tales of one city: date, inference
and Carthaginian infant sacrifice’, Antiquity, vol. 91, no. 356, 2017, p. 443, 452; Hoyos, Hannibal’s
Dynasty: Power and politics in the western Mediterranean, 247-183 BC, p. 27.
73
Mireia López-Bertran and Agnés Garcia-Ventura, ‘Music, gender and rituals in the Ancient
Mediterranean: revising the Punic evidence’, World Archaeology, vol. 44, no. 3, 2012, p. 400.
74
Scullard, ‘Carthage’, Greece and Rome, p. 105.
75
Parkin, ‘Changing tides: how Carthage’s religious changes are reflective of their cultural changes’, p.
33; Scott, ‘The Phoenicians and the formation of the Western World’, p. 39; Arthur Grenke, Genocide
from Antiquity to the Beginning of the Twentieth Century, 2011, p. 49.
76
Grenke, Genocide from Antiquity to the Beginning of the Twentieth Century, p. 48; John Boardman,
Jasper Griffin and Oswyn Murray (eds), The Oxford Illustrated History of the Roman World, Oxford and
New York, 1986, p. 29.
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crushed the much larger Roman army and sowed panic in the Roman populace.77
Hannibal could have continued to Rome and have likely taken the city at this point, but
did not and Carthage eventually lost the second Punic War, as they had the first. 78
Part of the peace settlement was the agreement not to wage war with any of Rome’s
allies without the permission of Rome and this would prove the catalyst to the third
and final Punic War, when after years of provocation, Carthage raised an army against
their neighbour, Masinissa. Although they lost and apologised, Rome, still haunted by
the memory of Hannibal, viewed this technical infraction as a breach of their peace
treaty.79 The Roman senator Cato the Elder had for years pushed for the destruction
of their old foe, calling out ‘Delenda est Carthago’ at the end of every speech – Cartage
that Carthage must abandon its city and move ten miles inland. For Carthage, a
people of the sea, who derived their livelihood, economic status and identity from their
ability to sail, explore and trade, this was a death sentence and with their refusal, came
Three years later and after a two year siege, the ancient city of Carthage was reduced
to rubble and most of its inhabitants sold into slavery.82 According to Appian, the
sacking of the city took six full days and nights, with soldiers rotated in order the
77
Livy, The War with Hannibal, XXII.LI; Polybius, Histories, III.CXVIII.V; Boardman, Griffin and Murray
(eds), The Oxford Illustrated History of the Roman World, p. 29; Beard, SPQR: A History of Ancient
Rome, p. 180.
78
Livy, Rome and the Mediterranean, London, 1976, XXXIII.XIII; Beard, SPQR: A History of Ancient
Rome, p. 181.
79
Grenke, Genocide from Antiquity to the Beginning of the Twentieth Century, p. 49; Cary and Scullard,
A History of Rome: Down to the Reign of Constantine, p. 148.
80
Plutarch, Life of Cato, in Lewis and Reinhold, Roman Civilisation – Volume 1: The Republic and the
Augustan Age, XXV.I-XXVI; Ben Kiernan, ‘The First Genocide: Carthage, 146BC’, Diogenes, vol. 51,
no. 3, 2004, pp. 27-28.
81
Cary and Scullard, A History of Rome: Down to the Reign of Constantine, p. 148; Grenke, Genocide
from Antiquity to the Beginning of the Twentieth Century, 2011, pp. 49-50.
82
Beard, SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome, p. 209.
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preserve their energy and provide respite from the hideous sights of slaughter that
remains of bones found at the site indicate the validity of these stories of the abject
horror inflicted on the Carthaginians.84 Polybius, who was present at the fall of
Carthage, wrote that the punishment meted out by the Romans was not only harsh,
but final.85 Mass killing, even in the ancient world, was exceptional, but Rome had
sought to set an example for others who might think of crossing them. 86 It was Roman
imperialism that led to the destruction of Carthage and Rome claiming its place in
history.87
As for what remained of this once great city, Polybius wrote how the Carthaginians
had been destroyed as a people, with the remnants of its citizens dispersed among
many groups, breaking social organisations and the networks of a community. 88 Their
ruling aristocracy died with their city and the man who ordered their destruction was
said to have wept over the ashes of the mighty capital and a people who had shown
courage and determination in the defence of their home.89 For Rome, their interactions
with Carthage had compelled them to define themselves and justify their actions,
83
Appian, Roman History, in Dillon and Garland (eds), Ancient Rome: From the Early Republic to the
Assassination of Julius Caesar, VIII.DCXX; Beard, SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome, p. 209.
84
Beard, SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome, p. 210.
85
Polybius, The Rise of the Roman Empire, XXXVI.IX.
86
Grenke, Genocide from Antiquity to the Beginning of the Twentieth Century, p. 44; Lewis and
Reinhold, Roman Civilisation – Volume 1: The Republic and the Augustan Age, p. 207.
87
Ameling, ‘Carthage’, The Oxford Handbook of the State in the Ancient Near East and Mediterranean,
Bang and Scheidel (eds),; Beard, SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome, p. 210.
88
Chalk and Jonassohn, ‘Carthage’, The History and Sociology of Genocide: Analyses and Case
Studies, p. 75; Grenke, Genocide from Antiquity to the Beginning of the Twentieth Century, p. 54.
89
Ameling, ‘Carthage’, The Oxford Handbook of the State in the Ancient Near East and Mediterranean,
Bang and Scheidel (eds); Gruen, Rethinking the Other in Antiquity, p. 139; Scullard, ‘Carthage’, Greece
and Rome, p. 104.
90
Livy, The Early History of Rome, London, 2002, p. 4; Feeney, ‘Carthage and Rome: Introduction’, p.
309; Richard Bauman, Human Rights in Ancient Rome, London and New York, 2012, p. 25.
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in argument, Sullust believed the seeds of Rome’s eventual downfall were sown when
they mercilessly destroyed Carthage, as not only were they lusting for power, but now
no longer had a rival to strive to meet. 91 Many modern scholars have also criticised
the unnecessary and brutal destruction of the long-standing city, but none with such
venom as the words put into the mouths of Carthaginians by Roman writers. 92
There is a temptation to believe that culture and knowledge exists, where perhaps
there was none.93 There is a temptation to dismiss the lack of evidence as a mixture
temptation to believe too much in the dream of a vibrant, prosperous culture, cut down
in its prime, but in the case of Carthage, such belief is probably too little. 95 The
accomplishments of Carthage far outlived their doomed city, with their language
becoming the official language in North Africa, their art, building and agricultural
appropriated by their enemy in Rome and their endurance renowned in the ancient
world.96 Carthage had an old relationship with Greece, of a similar status to that of
Rome and their books were said to contain great wisdom.97 The Greeks viewed them
91
Beard, SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome, p. 38; Ronald Syme, The Roman Revolution, Oxford,
2002, p. 154, 249; Lewis and Reinhold, Roman Civilisation – Volume 1: The Republic and the Augustan
Age, p. 490.
92
Dillon and Garland (eds), Ancient Rome: From the Early Republic to the Assassination of Julius
Caesar, p. 228; Beard, SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome, p. 516.
93
Miles, ‘Carthage, the lost Mediterranean civilisation’, p. 14.
94
Iván Fumadó Ortega, ‘Colonial representations and Carthaginian archaeology’, Oxford Journal of
Archaeology’, vol. 32, no. 1, 2013, p. 54.
95
Miles, ‘Carthage, the lost Mediterranean civilisation’, p. 17.
96
Chalk and Jonassohn, ‘Carthage’, The History and Sociology of Genocide: Analyses and Case
Studies, pp. 92-93; Ameling, ‘Carthage’, The Oxford Handbook of the State in the Ancient Near East
and Mediterranean, Bang and Scheidel (eds); Gruen, Rethinking the Other in Antiquity, pp. 139-140;
Scullard, ‘Carthage and Rome’, p. 486; Josephine Quinn, ‘Translating Empire from Carthage to Rome’,
Classical Philology, vol. 112, no. 3, 2017, p. 328.
97
Gruen, Rethinking the Other in Antiquity, p. 138; Miles, ‘Carthage, the lost Mediterranean civilisation’,
p. 17; Michael Sommer, ‘Networks of commerce and knowledge in the Iron Age: the case of the
Phoenicians’, Mediterranean Historical Review, vol. 22, no. 1, 2007, p. 104.
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Jordana Leavesley
as scientists and farmers and philosophers and they had a proud heritage, as is
evident from the depiction of elephants on their coins. 98 Rome, whose own city was
not materially richer than Carthage, had been determined in their will to destroy a
civilisation would have taken a decidedly different path.100 Carthaginian coin, source:
Carthaginian Coinage.
Historian H.H. Scullard believed that it was only fitting that Carthage fell to Rome, as
passing on Greek culture.101 This bias not only disregards the impact Carthage and
the Phoenician people had on Greek culture long before any Roman involvement, but
also ignores Polybius’ advice to historians. “For a good man ought to love his friends
and his country and share his friends’ hated of their enemies and their love of their
friends; but, when a person takes on the role of a historian, he has to forget everything
of this sort… for, just as a living creature deprived of its eyes is totally incapacitated,
so when history is deprived of truth, nothing is left but an unprofitable tale”. 102
surpassed the city of Carthage and its achievements are still on display. Among these
98
Gruen, Rethinking the Other in Antiquity, p. 122; Miles, ‘Carthage, the lost Mediterranean civilisation’,
p. 11.
99
Macrobius, Saturnalia, in Dillon and Garland (eds), Ancient Rome: From the Early Republic to the
Assassination of Julius Caesar, III.IX.VII; Dillon and Garland (eds), Ancient Rome: From the Early
Republic to the Assassination of Julius Caesar, p. 174.
100
Scullard, ‘Carthage’, Greece and Rome, p. 98; Parkin, ‘Changing tides: how Carthage’s religious
changes are reflective of their cultural changes’, p. 36.
101
Scullard, ‘Carthage’, Greece and Rome, p. 106; Beard, SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome, p. 170.
102
Polybius, Histories, I.XIV.IV-VI.
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Jordana Leavesley
were the creation of an alphabet adopted by the Greeks and ships copied by the
world; a world bound by culture, economics and politics. This trading nation, renowned
for their knowledge of navigation and bilingualism, set the standard in the Hellenistic
world. They were the descendants of the culturally giant Phoenicians and went on to
18
Jordana Leavesley
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