242BC or as some historians place the end of the First Punic War in 241 BC/BCE.
No Hannibal was involved in the Second Punic war and Rome won all three Punic Wars.
The Romans won the first punic war .
The Battle of Zama came first. It was the last battle of the Second Punic War between Rome and Carthage and took lace in 202 BC. The destruction of Carthage was the outcome of the Third Punic War and occurred in 146 BC.
Rome and Carthage.
Rome andRome and Carthage were fighting the Punic wars for power and to control of the Mediterranean trade.Rome andRome and Carthage were fighting the Punic wars for power and to control of the Mediterranean trade.Rome andRome and Carthage were fighting the Punic wars for power and to control of the Mediterranean trade.Rome andRome and Carthage were fighting the Punic wars for power and to control of the Mediterranean trade.Rome andRome and Carthage were fighting the Punic wars for power and to control of the Mediterranean trade.Rome andRome and Carthage were fighting the Punic wars for power and to control of the Mediterranean trade.Rome andRome and Carthage were fighting the Punic wars for power and to control of the Mediterranean trade.Rome andRome and Carthage were fighting the Punic wars for power and to control of the Mediterranean trade.Rome andRome and Carthage were fighting the Punic wars for power and to control of the Mediterranean trade.
Sicily.
No Hannibal was involved in the Second Punic war and Rome won all three Punic Wars.
241 BCE.
It won Sicily and after the war it stole Sardinia and Corsica
The war.
Notably , the city of Carthage .
The Romans won the first punic war .
It was able to assemble power which the Carthagenians had no ability to match.
The Battle of Zama came first. It was the last battle of the Second Punic War between Rome and Carthage and took lace in 202 BC. The destruction of Carthage was the outcome of the Third Punic War and occurred in 146 BC.
Rome and Carthage.
The Roman republic on all three of the Punic Wars.
Harpax - a boarding plank with a beak which buried into a sip's deck and held the ships together.