Please clarify what you mean by elf to room. Also note that Hannibal was not from ancient Rome. He was a Carthaginian.
Hannibal was not from ancient Rome. He was a Carthaginian. He invaded Italy by crossing the Alps. The exact location of his crossing is not known. It was somewhere on the stretch of the Alss which is now between Italy and France, near the River Rhone
Hannibal lost his siege machines when he crossed the Alps to get into Italy. Without these machines we could not hope to take a city the size of Rome, which would have had to be starved into submission with a long siege. After travelling from northern to central Italy and winning a battle there, Hannibal headed to the south instead attacking Rome for this reason.
it took 60,000 soldiers, 6,000 horsed, and 37 elephants
According to the founding myth of Rome, the city was founded on April 21, 753 B.C.
The slowest method of transportation in ancient Rome would have been the oxcart. A person could walk faster than some of them and take shortcuts that an oxcart could not.
Hannibal was not from ancient Rome. He was a Carthaginian. He invaded Italy by crossing the Alps. The exact location of his crossing is not known. It was somewhere on the stretch of the Alss which is now between Italy and France, near the River Rhone
Never. Hannibal did come into Italy, but never attacked Rome itself.Never. Hannibal did come into Italy, but never attacked Rome itself.Never. Hannibal did come into Italy, but never attacked Rome itself.Never. Hannibal did come into Italy, but never attacked Rome itself.Never. Hannibal did come into Italy, but never attacked Rome itself.Never. Hannibal did come into Italy, but never attacked Rome itself.Never. Hannibal did come into Italy, but never attacked Rome itself.Never. Hannibal did come into Italy, but never attacked Rome itself.Never. Hannibal did come into Italy, but never attacked Rome itself.
Tradition has it that Hannibal had poison hidden in a ring, and had been keeping it with him ever since Rome began pursuing him.
Hannibal lost his siege machines when he crossed the Alps to get into Italy. Without these machines we could not hope to take a city the size of Rome, which would have had to be starved into submission with a long siege. After travelling from northern to central Italy and winning a battle there, Hannibal headed to the south instead attacking Rome for this reason.
it took 60,000 soldiers, 6,000 horsed, and 37 elephants
Nothing, Ancient Greece came before Ancient Rome, and actually Ancient Rome took things from Greece, Romans were influenced by Greek religion and some of their architecture.
NO
In areneas such as the colosseum in rome
According to the founding myth of Rome, the city was founded on April 21, 753 B.C.
He went through spain, traveled over the Alps, the went into Italy.
You couldn't go by boat to Rome from Pompeii. Rome is north of Pompeii and inland.
Hannibal, the son of Hamilcar Barca, was a leading general for Carthage in what many historians refer to as the Second Carthaginian War, and as many know it the Second Punic War. Hannibal began his campaign against ancient Rome by attacking an ally of Rome in Spain, Saguntum in 219 BC. With a vast, fit & trained army along with 40 war elephants, Hannibal made a daring crossing of the Alps in 218 BC. He defeated a Roman army at Trasimine in 217 BC. He later gave the Roman legions one of their worst defeats at the battle of Cannae in 216 BC. He waged further campaigns in the Italian peninsula and had to depart from Italy in 203 BC to defend his capital of Carthage against Roman forces moving in Northern Africa. At the Battle of Zama, Hannibal was defeated by the Romans and their allies. Carthage had to surrender and take the terms of the peace treaty drawn up by Rome.