Punic Wars
Three wars for control of the western Mediterranean. Hannibal's crossing of the Alps and victory at Cannae (216 BC) nearly ended Rome. The Third Punic War ended with Carthage razed to the ground in 146 BC.
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Belligerents
- Roman Republic
- Carthaginian Empire
Casualties
~1.5 million
Key events
- 216 BC — Cannae (~50,000 Roman dead in a day, worst defeat)
- 202 BC — Zama (Hannibal defeated)
- 146 BC — Carthage destroyed
Aftermath
Made Rome the unchallenged Mediterranean power. The collapse of small farming under Hannibal's invasion produced landless veterans, the Gracchi reforms, and ultimately the civil wars that ended the Republic. Rome became permanently militarized.
Weapons & matériel
- Roman gladius (short stabbing sword)
- Pilum (heavy javelin)
- Quinquereme warships with corvus boarding ramp
- War elephants (Carthaginian)
- Onager catapults
Technology
The corvus let Roman infantry fight Carthaginian sailors as if on land; Roman roads accelerated logistics; first true blue-water navies in the West
Economy
After 3rd War, Carthage was salted and razed; Roman Republic gained Sicily, Sardinia, Iberia, North Africa as provinces; Latifundia agriculture replaced free farmers
Cost
Rome built 1,000+ warships; lost ~700 in Punic War I storms alone. Carthage paid 10,000 talents indemnity after 2nd War — crippling
Sources
- Polybius, Histories
- Livy, Ab Urbe Condita
- Appian, Punic Wars