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  1. Hannibal was a fierce enemy of Rome who almost brought them to defeat. Sometimes rendered "Hannibal ante portas", with similar meaning: "Hannibal before the gates" haud ignota loquor

    Latin
    Translation
    [we command] that you have the body ...
    we have a pope
    Books have their destiny [according to ...
    hac lege
    with this law
    • Early Life
    • Crossing The Alps & Early Victories
    • Hannibal's Tricks & The Battle of Cannae
    • Further Campaigns & The Battle of Zama
    • Later Years & Legacy

    Although Hannibal is easily one of the most famous generals of antiquity, he remains a figure of some mystery. Scholar Philip Matyszak notes: Nothing is known of his mother and, although he was married at the time of some of his greatest victories, no records make mention of his wife other than her name, Imilce, and the fact that she bore him a son...

    Following the First Punic War the treaty between Carthage and Rome stipulated that Carthage could continue to occupy regions in Spain as long as they maintained the steady tribute they now owed to Rome and remained in certain areas. In 219 BCE the Romans orchestrated a coup in the city of of Saguntumwhich installed a government hostile to Carthage ...

    Hannibal's strategy of presenting himself as a liberator worked and a number of cities chose to side with him against Rome while his victories on the field continued to swell his ranks with new recruits. After the Battle of Trebbia (218 BCE), where he again defeated the Romans, he retreated for the winter to the north where he developed his plans f...

    Among the Roman warriors who survived Cannae was the man who would come to be known as Scipio Africanus the Elder. Scipio's father and uncle, two of the former commanders, had been killed fighting Hasdrubal Barca in Spain and, when the Roman senatecalled for a general to defend the city against Hannibal, all of the most likely commanders refused be...

    After the war, Hannibal accepted a position as Chief Magistrate of Carthage at which he performed as well as he had as a military leader. The heavy fines imposed on defeated Carthage by Rome, intended to cripple the city, were easily paid owing to the reforms Hannibal initiated. The members of the senate, who had refused to send him aid when he nee...

    • Joshua J. Mark
  2. May 24, 2017 · Hannibal ad portās! " Hannibal is at the gates!" Used to express fear or anxiety, or to instill it in others (particularly children). Categories: Latin lemmas.

  3. The Second Punic War (The Hannibalic War) was fought between Carthage and Rome between 218 and 201 BCE. The war involved confrontations in Spain, Italy, Sicily, Sardinia, and North Africa.

    • Mark Cartwright
    • Publishing Director
  4. A new stage of the war. A turning point in the war. Expedition to Africa. Results of the war. The main reasons for the Roman victory. Economic and socio-political consequences of the Punic Wars. The emergence of contradictions between Rome and Carthage. Subjugating the south of the Apennine Peninsula.

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  6. Found in Cicero's first Philippic and in Livy's Ab urbe condita Hannibal was a fierce enemy of Rome who almost brought them to defeat. Sometimes rendered "Hannibal ante portas", with verisimilar meaning: "Hannibal before the gates".

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HannibalHannibal - Wikipedia

    Hannibal caused great distress to many in Roman society. He became such a figure of terror that, whenever disaster threatened, Romans would exclaim "Hannibal ad portas" ("Hannibal is at the gates!") to emphasize the gravity of the emergency, a phrase still used in modern languages.

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