The Punic Wars
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The Punic Wars
Rome v. Carthage, 264-146 BC
Carthage was a colony of the Phoenicians and
controlled much of the island of Sicily
Main cause of Punic Wars was competition for
Mediterranean trade
Control of Sicily
Carthage
Advantages
Large Size
Huge navy
Great wealth from
trade
Mercenary army
(paid soldiers who
might not be loyal to
Carthage)
Rome
Smaller army of loyal
citizen soldiers
Warfare their
specialty
Recent success
controlling the Italian
peninsula
1st Punic War - 264 to 241 BC
Fought for control of Sicily & the
Mediterranean
Most battles at sea
- Carthage had
superior navy
- Rome builds a navy
by copying shipwrecked
Carthaginian warship
Results: Rome defeats Carthage & receives
island of Sicily
The Corvus (Latin for “raven” or
“crow”)
Crane/plank on a Roman
ship that turned naval
battle into a land battle
nd
2
Punic War - 218 BC
Carthaginian military genius Hannibal
Led 50,000 infantry, 9,000 cavalry, & 60
elephants to invade & conquer Rome
Traveled through
Spain, France, &
the Alps – lost half
his men, elephants
Strategy was to
convince Roman
allies to join
Carthage
2nd Punic War (Cont.)
For 10 years, battled up and down the Italian
peninsula
- Hannibal & his men lived off the land & by stealing
- Never able to capture Rome
Battle of Cannae
2nd Punic War (cont.)
Scipio – Roman general against Hannibal
- Planned to invade Carthage to force
Hannibal to leave Italy & return to N. Africa
Defeated
Hannibal
in 202 BC –
Battle of
Zama
Battle of Zama
Scipio Africanus
Hannibal
Hannibal and Scipio meet before the battle
3rd Punic War: 149 to 146 BC
Cato “the Elder” of Rome – “Carthage should be
destroyed!”
Rome invades Carthage as revenge for Hannibal’s
invasion of Italy
Carthage is seized & burned – 50,000 inhabitants
are sold into slavery
Rome dominates Mediterranean by 70 BC
East – conquered Macedonia, Greece, &
Anatolia
West – as far as Spain
Republic dominates the . . . “known world”