- one of the
largest metropoleis in the world. It was the
centre of the
Carthaginian Empire, a
major power led by the
Punic people who
dominated the ancient...
- The term
Carthaginian (Latin:
Carthaginiensis [karˌtʰaːgɪniˈẽːsɪs])
usually refers to the
civilisation of
ancient Carthage. It may also
refer to: Punic...
- Africa.
After immense materiel and
human losses on both sides, the
Carthaginians were once
again defeated. Macedonia,
Syracuse and
several Numidian kingdoms...
- 𐤇𐤍𐤁𐤏𐤋, romanized: Ḥanībaʿl; 247 –
between 183 and 181 BC) was a
Carthaginian general and
statesman who
commanded the
forces of
Carthage in
their battle...
- Corsica, and Sardinia. It
lasted 23 years,
until 241 BC, when the
Carthaginians were defeated. By the
terms of the
Treaty of
Lutatius (241, amended...
- city of the
Roman Empire in the
province of Africa. The
question of
Carthaginian decline and
demise has
remained a
subject of literary, political, artistic...
- a
Carthaginian army
commanded by Hannibal. The
battle was part of the
Second Punic War and
resulted in such a
severe defeat for the
Carthaginians that...
-
Carthaginian Iberia was a
province of the
larger Carthaginian Empire. The
Carthaginians conquered the
Mediterranean part of
Iberia and
remained there...
- Wiktionary, the free dictionary. The
Punic people,
usually known as the
Carthaginians (and
sometimes as
Western Phoenicians), were a
Semitic people who migrated...
-
Carthaginian or
Punic currency refers to the
coins of
ancient Carthage, a
Phoenician city-state
located near present-day Tunis, Tunisia.
Between the late...