The Third Punic war was the only instance of Rome having the destruction of an enemy and the obliteration of a state as her war aim. Rome did destroy other cities in some of her wars. However, this was an outcome of military engagement and was not part of the initial war aim. Moreover, they did not involve the destruction of an enemy state. For example, the Romans destroyed Jerusalem after a long siege. However, this was not the initial intention and did not involve the destruction of the whole of Judea.
There was a similarity with Corinth. Rome destroyed Corinth, which was one of the cities of the Achaean League (an alliance of Greek city-states in southern Greece) which fought Rome. Both cities were destroyed in the same year (146 BC). Julius Caesar ordered the rebuilding of both cities as Roman colonies in 44 BC. However, again, destruction had not been the war aim in the case of Corinth.
The destruction of Carthage was advocated by a war party which won the day in Rome's politics. Their advocates argued that Carthage returned to prosperity and that there was a danger that she might rebuild her military might. This was not the case. Despite peace terms imposed by Rome after the Second Punic War which were meant to be economically crippling, Carthage did well. Her land was very fertile. It was one of the breadbaskets of the Mediterranean. Moreover, with the demilitarisation imposed by Rome she saved enormous amounts of money by not incurring military expenses. Later Carthage levied a military force to fend off attacks by her Numidian neighbours. However, she would not have been able to be a match for Rome's military prowess ever again. This policy was driven by resentment and fear due to the tens of thousands of Roman and Italian allies who lost their lives when Hannibal invaded. Carthage was destroyed and the 50,000 survivors of the siege were sold into slavery.
Carthage was not in Ancient Rome. It was in Tunisia and fought three wars against Rome. Carthage did not have any special weapons. It had a fleet which, together with those of the Greeks, was one of the most powerful in the Mediterranean and it had highly skilled sailors.
Some ancient historians wrote that Hannibal, the Carthaginian general, had a wife named Imilce.
military skills and fighting spirit
Spartans had spears swords Shields helmets and military formation called the phalanx
they train them and the women have to cook for the men
The ancient city of Carthage is in Tunisia.
Carthage is the ancient cit near tunis Carthage is the ancient cit near tunis
Tunisia.
Ancient Rome had a strong well disciplined land army, its legions were a force to be reckoned with. What Rome lacked was the ability to move its troops to places where it could establish a land military stance from which to fight the armies of Carthage. Commercial shipping and in fact most shipping in the Western Mediterranean Sea was controlled by Carthage's advanced naval fleets. The goal then was to build a naval fleet from scratch. In a war with immense pressure from Carthage, building a naval fleet from almost nothing was something Rome had to create and it did so, not without losses and time.
Ancient Carthage is located in the north of Tunisia (North Africa, Mediterranean coast) near the capital city of Tunis.
The Latin word Punic is an adjective that means "of or relating to ancient Carthage, the inhabitants of Carthage, or their language." It can also mean "having the treacherous character attributed to the inhabitants of Carthage by the Romans." As a noun, Punic can men the Phoenician dialect that was spoken in ancient Carthage.
Parenting, housekeeping.
Tunis .
Ancient Carthage which is now Tunisia .
The Latin word Punic is an adjective that means "of or relating to ancient Carthage, the inhabitants of Carthage, or their language." It can also mean "having the treacherous character attributed to the inhabitants of Carthage by the Romans." As a noun, Punic can men the Phoenician dialect that was spoken in ancient Carthage.
The ancient city of Carthage is in modern day Tunisia, which is in Africa. There are not a lot of historical records for Carthage, but it was said to be a place of great wealth.
The city of Carthage was located at modern day Tunis, in Tunisia on the Mediterranean coast of Africa.