Podcasts about carthago

archaeological site in Tunisia

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Best podcasts about carthago

Latest podcast episodes about carthago

OVT
2e uur: Historische boeken met Fresco Sam-Sin, Het Spoor Terug: Slot op de mond, 02-03-2025

OVT

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2025 53:02


(01:01) Sinoloog en recensent Fresco Sam-Sin bespreekt: * Carthago: ooit verwoest, nooit verdwenen - Redactie: Diederik Burgersdijk, Dirk Vervenne * Eindelijk vrij - Emily Hemelrijk * Huis in de storm - Mauritshuis, Den Haag (14:39) Ket van Blokland (83) is intersekse. Haar hele leven had ze ‘een slot op de mond'. Verplicht zwijgen was sinds de jaren '50 onderdeel van de medische aanpak. Hoe kijkt Ket terug op een leven lang zwijgen? Het Spoor Terug: 'Slot op de mond' is gemaakt door Lara Aerts. Meer info: https://www.vpro.nl/programmas/ovt/luister/afleveringen/2025/02-03-2025.html

OVT Fragmenten podcast
#2032 - Historische boeken met Fresco Sam-Sin - Historische boeken met Fresco Sam-Sin

OVT Fragmenten podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2025 13:41


Elke week bespreken we historische boeken met afwisselend Nadia Bouras, Wim Berkelaar, Bart Funnekotter, Sanne Frequin en Fresco Sam-Sin. Deze week is de beurt aan Fresco Sam-Sin. Hij bespreekt twee historische boeken en een tentoonstelling: Carthago: ooit verwoest, nooit verdwenen - Redactie: Diederik Burgersdijk, Dirk Vervenne Eindelijk vrij - Emily Hemelrijk Huis in de storm - Tentoonstelling in het Mauritshuis, Den Haag

Boulevard BD
Carthago 15

Boulevard BD

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2025 2:57


Une chronique de Laurent Lafourcade

SER Historia
Museo Foro Romano Molinete: de Carthago Nova a nuestros días

SER Historia

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2024 16:11


La arqueóloga María José Madrid, que ya nos ha visitado en anteriores ocasiones en SER Historia para hablarnos de las excavaciones del Foro Romano de El Molinete, nos pone al día de sus trabajos y de la reciente apertura de un fantástico museo en el yacimiento. ¡Visita imprescindible si pasas por Cartagena!

il posto delle parole
Franco Forte "L'alba di Cesare"

il posto delle parole

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2024 22:37


Franco Forte"L'alba di Cesare"Il romanzo del De bello gallicoMondadori Editorewww.mondadori.itRoma, 58 a.C. L'Urbe è da secoli una repubblica, e il governo ufficialmente in mano al Senato. In realtà, il destino della Città Eterna si gioca sempre più lontano dal foro: a muovere le pedine è infatti il triumvirato di Marco Licinio Crasso, Gneo Pompeo Magno e Gaio Giulio Cesare, i tre uomini più potenti di Roma, uniti e insieme divisi da una complicata ragnatela di interessi. Quando le tensioni nella vicina Gallia esplodono, è Cesare a promettere una soluzione definitiva: per il Senato, il suo trasferimento è l'occasione di allontanare l'ex console dagli occhi della popolazione e spegnerne il crescente consenso; per i colleghi triumviri, rappresenta la possibilità di giocarsi il comando di Roma in una partita a due. Ma Cesare non è un parvenu della politica: sa bene di essere al momento il lato debole del triangolo, non avendo il denaro di Crasso, né i successi militari di Pompeo. Sa altrettanto bene, però, che la situazione può ribaltarsi in fretta, e i popoli da conquistare oltre le Alpi paiono il palcoscenico ideale per provarci… Inizia così una delle campagne militari più leggendarie e cruciali della Storia, otto anni di polvere, ferro e sangue, a combattere nemici spietati e orgogliosi, pronti a ogni sacrificio. Cesare sa che le sorti della guerra dipendono dalla sua presenza accanto alle legioni, eppure sarà costretto ad accettare che la battaglia più complicata si combatta proprio nell'Urbe… Usando i migliori attrezzi del narratore, Franco Forte riprende fatti e situazioni del De bello gallico di Cesare, restituendone non solo le gesta, ma anche i pensieri, i turbamenti, i sogni e gli incubi, così da far rivivere sulla pagina il ritratto del Cesare stratega e soldato, ma anche quello più affascinante dell'uomo che si nasconde dietro le grandi conquiste.Franco Forte è direttore delle collane Giallo Mondadori, Segretissimo e Urania. Per Mondadori ha pubblicato, tra gli altri, Karolus, L'uranio di Mussolini, La bambina e il nazista, Carthago, Roma in fiamme, Cesare l'immortale e Cesare il conquistatore e la serie dedicata ai sette re di Roma.IL POSTO DELLE PAROLEascoltare fa pensarewww.ilpostodelleparole.itDiventa un supporter di questo podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/il-posto-delle-parole--1487855/support.

De Africast
Wat Rome niet wilde dat je wist: de verborgen geschiedenis van Carthago (Africast Hoogtepunt)

De Africast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2024 8:24


Dit is Africast Hoogtepunten: het beste van De Africast in een aparte aflevering. Dit hoogtepunt komt uit aflevering 95, zeker de moeite van het naluisteren waard. Een fietstocht met Merijn de Boer door Carthago in het huidige Tunesië. Wat vind je van dit nieuwe concept? Reageer door te mailen naar africastpodcast@gmail.com of stuur een berichtje via onze LinkedIn of Instagram! Voor mooie beelden, quizjes en 'behind the scenes', volg onze Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/africast_podcast/LIVE EVENT, onze 100ste aflevering: De positie van Afrika in de wereld!

De Africast
88 - Fietsen door Carthago

De Africast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2024 46:52


In deze speciale aflevering loopt (en fietst) onze host Jos Hummelen met schrijver Merijn de Boer door de resten van het oude Carthago (Tunesië). Ze bespreken de geschiedenis van deze legendarische stad, welke rol de stad nu nog heeft in de huidige Tunesische samenleving, welke resten er nu nog zichtbaar zijn (zoals de oude Punische haven) en hoe Merijn nu tussen de ruïnes een nieuw thuis heeft gevonden. Wil je een bijdrage leveren aan REF FM, ga dan naar https://www.geef.nl/nl/actie/de-africast-voor-ref-fm-ukerewe/donateurs Volg onze LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/africastpodcast?originalSubdomain=nl Voor mooie beelden, quizjes en 'behind the scenes', volg onze Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/africast_podcast/ Link met Jos of Joeri via LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jos-hummelen/ & https://www.linkedin.com/in/joerinortier/ Stuur ons een mail via: africastpodcast@gmail.com

Boulevard BD
Carthago Vetus

Boulevard BD

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2024 3:13


Une chronique de Laurent Lafourcade

Sixième Science
Immersion : comment le son parvient à tromper nos sens

Sixième Science

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 26:47


Pour vous accompagner cet été, 20 Minutes a choisi de vous parler d'immersion à travers une série de l'été qui regroupe articles, vidéos et podcasts. Car qui dit immersion dit expos interactives, réalité virtuelle... mais aussi expériences sonores ! De la vieillerie « Virtual Barber Shop » (2007!) qui n'a rien perdu de son effet « wow » à la série Canal+ « Calls », ou la fiction « Styx » d'Audible, le son se fait enveloppant, 3D ou binaural, pour nous emporter dans des histoires sans image certes, mais pas sans frissons ! Mais par quels subterfuges les studios parviennent-ils à nous faire ressentir une présence derrière nous, la notion d'espace ou de mouvement ? Comment, en captivant nos oreilles, les créateurs parviennent-ils à nous faire voyager au point d'en oublier nos autres sens ? Tim Borne, le fondateur de Blynd, une application qui propose notamment des adaptations de bandes dessinées au format mp3 (Lanfeust, Blacksad, Carthago...), est venu armé de ses meilleurs extraits pour illustrer chacune de ses explications. Un conseil : enfilez des écouteurs ou un bon casque !

Planes, Trains and Comic Books

The megalodon, the prehistoric ancestor of the great white shark was the most ferocious predator of the seas, an 80 foot killing machine extinct for millions of years... But when divers drilling in an underwater cave are attacked by this living fossil, oceanographer Kim Melville discovers that this creature may not only have survived, but thrived, and is reclaiming its place at the top of the food chain. Support us at:  https://www.patreon.com/PlanesTrainsandComicBooks Follow us on social media: https://linktr.ee/planestrainsandcomicbooks

Have a Day! w/ The History Wizard
Day 5 - A Genocide at 6 pm?

Have a Day! w/ The History Wizard

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2024 14:04


Content warning for discussion of genocide and child death Episode music can be found here: https://uppbeat.io/track/paulo-kalazzi/heros-time Day 5 will take a look into the historic event known as the Asiatic Vespers, one of the only genocide committed against Rome instead of by it. Episode Notes Below: Hey, Hi, Hello, this is the History Wizard and welcome back for Day 3 of Have a Day w/ The History Wizard. Thank you to everyone who tuned in for Day 2 last week, and especially thank you to everyone who rated and/or reviewed the podcast. I hope you all learned something last week and I hope the same for this week. For this week's episode we're going to be talking about a genocide committed AGAINST the Romans. This is particularly unusual because usually the Romans are the ones committing genocides and war crimes. Historically speaking the event is called the Asiatic Vespers, which should explain the pun in the episode title. And if it doesn't, I'm not going to be explaining it. Google is free. Our timeline places us in the Roman Republic. The Punic Wars are over, Carthago cecidit and Rome had steadily been expanding its borders in all directions. By the time the Punic Wars were over Rome held all of Italy, most of Iberia, most of Greece, parts of northern Africa, including Carthage, and were on the cusp of moving into the Anatolia (what is today part of the nation of Turkey). You might think that Rome would be tired of wars after their decades of fighting against the Carthiginians, but their victories only made them hungry for more. During the final decade of the 2nd century BCE the Romans were engaged in 2 distinct wars. One in northwest Africa (the area that is today Algeria) against King Jurgatha of Numidia called the Jugurthine War and one fought around western Europe against various Celtic and Germanic tribes who had invaded from the Jutland Peninsula (modern day Denmark and parts of Northern Germany) called the Cimbrian Wars. Both wars would end in Roman victories, and we will discuss them very briefly now as they are relevant to our later discussion, but not the main focus of this episode. The Jugurthan War took place two generations after the fall of Carthage. King Massinisa, an ally of Rome against Carthage died in 149. He was succeeded by his son Micipsa, who was succeeded by two sons and an illegitimate nephew. Adherbal (son), Hiempsal I (son), and Jugurtha (the nephew). Micipsa, fearing conflict amongst his three heirs bid them split the kingdom up into three parts. One to be ruled over by each of them.  The Roman Senate has been given the authority, by Micsipa, to make sure his will was carried out, but being the corrupt piece of shit it was, the Senate allowed itself to be bribed by Jugurtha to overlook his crimes after he assassinated Hiempsal and forced Adherbal to flee to Rome for safety. Peace WAS declared, albeit briefly, between the two men, although in 113 BCE Jugurtha, once again, declared war on Adherbal. Rome, fearing instability in the region, acquiesced to Adherbal's request for aid and sent troops to the fight and ambassadors to Jugurtha to demand peace negotiations. Jugurtha was clever though, and knew how much the Romans loved to talk. So he kept them doing just that until Cirta, Adherbal's capital ran out of food and had to surrender. Jugurtha immediately had Adherbal executed as well as all Romans who had aided him in the defense of Cirta. Now, the Pax Romana didn't exist just yet, but Rome still took a hard line against anyone who dared to harm her citizens. So in 112 BCE the Jugurthine War was declared. We're not going to go into any great detail of the Jugurthine War, suffice it to say that Rome won, it lasted until 105 BCE, and that some historians see this war as the true beginning of the fall of the Roman Republic. Gaius Marius was the victorious general and consul of the Jugurthine War (and also the Cimbrian War we're going to talk about next) and he would use his successes in these, and other wars, to try and seize greater power in Rome. That brings us to the Cimbrian War. Although, to be perfectly clear, these two wars happened at, pretty much, the same time. The Jugurthine War was 112 to 105 BCE and the Cimbrian War was 113 to 101 BCE, and Gaius Marius fought in both of them. Dude must have had the speed force to be in both places at once.  The Cimbrian Wars were another war in a long line of “Rome didn't intend to conquer this region, but an ally called for help and they definitely planned on staying after they won the war”. According to Roman sources the Cimbrian peoples came down from the north and, eventually, attacked the Roman allied Celtic federation the Taurisci, who asked Rome for aid against the Cimbrians. One of the interesting things about the Cimbrian War was that, after an initial victory against the Roman general and consul Gnaeus Papirius Carbo the Cimbrians were perfectly poised to carry their invasion into Italy itself, but instead of doing so they turned and pushed their way into Gaul (modern day France). The war against the Cimbri was an unmitigated disaster until Marius came in and shored up the Roman strategy. Marius, it is interesting to note, was the uncle of Julius Caesar. Famed for being the worst hostage and the best knife practice dummy in history. The Cimbrian War would end with Roman victory and would also spark the rivalry between Gaius Marius and Lucius Cornelius Sulla Felix which would eventually lead to the first of Rome's great Civil Wars which would see Sulla march on Rome and see Marius outlawed and exiled, albeit very briefly. I said earlier that there were two major wars during the end of the 2nd century BCE. There were actually 3. The Third being the Second Servile War that took place from 104 until 100 BCE on the island of Sicily. Servile War was the name that Rome gave, or that historians gave, to the three large scale slave uprisings that occurred during the time of the Roman Republic. If you're wondering where Spartacus is, he won't be around until the Third Servile War. The reason to bring up the Second Servile War is that this one also involved our good friend Gaius Marius. He was not one of the generals in this war, but he was in northern Africa trying to recruit aid for the war with the Cimbri from the Roman province of Bithynia in Asia Minor. There, after discovering that King Nicodemus III had no one to spare for Rome as all able bodied men had been enslaved by tax collectors, the Senate issued an edict stating that no Roman ally could be enslaved. This led to discontent on the island of Sicily as several hundred slaves were freed, but many were not as they were not from Roman allied states. This, combined with the abuses that were rampant in Roman Republic slavery led to a massive, and ultimately futile, uprising against the Republic.   Now, Rome and the Kingdom of Pontus, which had been declared in 281 BCE and had been ruled over by a string of Kings all named Mithradates were neighbors across the Anatolia, but during the Cimbrian and Jugurthine Wars they, frankly, had nothing to do with each other. Rome had some interests in the area due to their alliance with Nocodemus and the Kingdom of Bithynia, but they were very occupied with the Cimbrian War, the Jugurthan War, the Second Servile War, and then in the beginning of the 1st century BCE, the Social Wars that they fought against former, autonomous, allies living on the Italian peninsula (the Social War also ended in Roman victory).  With the beginning of the Social War Mithradates VI saw the oppurtunity to expand further into the Anatolia and allied with Tigranes I of Armenia and declared war against the Roman client state of Cappadocia. Mithradates and Tigranes were quickly able to conquer Cappadocia and expel Nicodemus from Bithynia. When Rome heard about this they demanded that both kings be restored to their thrones and then, stupidly, urged those kings to go to war against Pontus and Armenia. Mithradates responded to this aggression by conquering Cappadocia and Bithynia and conquering most of Roman Asia with about a year. Once Rome was no longer distracted by the Social War they would turn their attention to Pontus and Mithradates, although it would take almost 2 years for Rome to mobilize armies against Mithradates.  See, at first the Roman general Sulla was placed in charge of the forces against Pontus, but political backbiting from Publius Sulpicius Rufus, a political opponent of Sulla, almost saw the army taken from him and placed in the hands of his rival Marius. Sulla responded to this threat by marching into Rome with his forces and taking control by force, forcing Marius into a brief exile. Mithradates would take the delay in Rome's response to carry out the event that would come to be called the Asiatic Vespers. The Vespers were a genocide targeted all Roman and otherwise Latin speaking peoples in the western Anatolia The genocide were a calculated response to the Roman declaration of war. It was meant to force cities to take a side: "no city that did his bidding now could ever hope to be received back into Roman allegiance". The killings took place probably in the first half of the year 88 BC, although precise dating is impossible. Valerius Maximus indicates a death toll of approximately 80,000, while Plutarch claims a death toll of 150,000. The reported numbers, according to fragments of Dio, are however probably exaggerated. They were planned, with Mithridates writing secretly to regional satraps and leaders to kill all Italian residents (along with wives, children, and freedmen of Italian birth) thirty days after the day of writing. Mithridates furthermore offered freedom to slaves which informed on their Italian masters and debt relief to those who slew their creditors. Assassins and informers would share with the Pontic treasury half the properties of those who were killed. Ephesus, Pergamon, Adramyttion, Caunus, Tralles, Nysa, and the island of Chios were all scenes of atrocities. Many of these cities were under the control of tyrants, and many of the inhabitants enthusiastically fell upon their Italian neighbours, who were blamed "for the prevailing climate of aggressive greed[,] acquisitiveness[,] and... malicious litigation". Based on this we can see the initial uprising against Roman rule in the region as a kind of class uprising against oppressors. This brings us to an important discussion about the use of violence in social revolutions. Violence is, and always will be, a necessary tool in creating social change. However, there will always be a line that should not be crossed.  Mithradates, in inciting enslaved peoples to rise up against their masters and in debtors to kill their creditors, was based as fuck. That's some capital G, capital S good shit. Those are the oppressors. Those are the people committing violence against the people of the Anatolia. Political violence SHOULD be directed at the people in positions of authority, especially if those people are using that authority to oppress marginalized communities. The part where the morality starts to slough off like flesh off a 5 day old corpse is when the WOMEN and CHILDREN start to be killed. The First Mithradatic War (there would be two others) would begin immediately after Rome heard of these massacres. The war would run from 89 BCE until 85 BCE and would, ultimately, end in Roman victory. The war ended with the signing of the treaty Dardanos and the end result was status quo ante bellum. Which is a Latin phrase that basically means. Everything is the same as it was before the war. Mithradates retreated back to Pontus and everything that had been a Roman client state returned to being so.  Of course none of this would bring back to roughly 80,000 Roman and Latin speaking civilians that had been killed during the Vespers, but necromancy doesn't exist and revivify can only be cast within a minute after death anyway.  That's it for this week folks. We don't have any more review at the time of recording this, so we're gonna jump right into the outro. Have a Day! w/ The History Wizard is brought to you by me, The History Wizard. If you want to see/hear more of me you can find me on Tiktok @thehistorywizard or on Instagram @the_history_wizard. Please remember to rate, review, and subscribe to Have a Day! On your pod catcher of choice. The more you do, the more people will be able to listen and learn along with you. Thank you  for sticking around until the end and, as always, Have a Day  

Have a Day! w/ The History Wizard
Day 4 - History's First Genocide... Probably

Have a Day! w/ The History Wizard

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2024 18:55


Content warning for discussion of genocide Episode music can be found here: https://uppbeat.io/track/paulo-kalazzi/heros-time Day 4 will take a deep dive into the Punic Wars and the Sacking of Carthage. The Fall of Carthage is widely considered to be the first recorded genocide in history and we will be looking at the hows the why and the whos of it all. Episode Notes below: Hey, Hi, Hello, this is the History Wizard and welcome back for Day 4 of Have a Day w/ The History Wizard. Thank you to everyone who tuned in for Day 3 last week, and especially thank you to everyone who rated and/or reviewed the podcast. I hope you all learned something last week and I hope the same for this week. This week we're going to be going all the way back to the purported origins of my field of study. This week we're going to be discussing History's first genocide… probably. Remember that genocide require intent to destroy a specific group of people, and the destruction of Carthage during the Third Punic war is the first time in history that was can demonstrate that intent, at least so far. As always we are not going to be diving right into the event itself. All history exists within specific cultural, national, and ethnic contexts. Genocide moreso than any other type of event. No nation just wakes up one day and suddenly decides to go on a mass murder spree. So what caused Rome and Carthage, two states that had been allies and friends for hundreds of years to suddenly fight three wars against each other and ultimately, in the case of Rome, wipe Carthage off the map? Following the Pyrrhic War and throughout the middle of the 3rd century BCE Rome and Carthage because the two preeminent powers of the Mediterranean. During this time Carthage would come to dominate southern Spain, much of the coastal regions of North Africa, the Balearic Islands, Corsica, Sardinia, and the western half of Sicily, in a military and commercial empire. Whereas Rome had subjugated almost the entirety of the Italian peninsula and finally driven the last Greek colonies off of the mainland. In 265 BCE a group of Italian mercenaries called the Mamertines appealed to both Carthage and Rome for aid after they had seized the city of Messana on the island of Sicily (modern day Messina) from the Kingdom of Syracuse. Carthage immediately entered the war, but on the side of Hiero II the King of Syracuse. The Romans, as Romans are wont to do, debated for a while about this. They didn't really want to go to war to support people who had stolen a city from its rightful owner, and as Carthage had already entered on Syracuse's side, entering the war at the Mamertine's request could lead to a war with Carthage. However,  Appius Claudius Caudex filled his fellow senator heads, as well as the heads of the general assembly, with thoughts of booty and plunder. Many of the senators were already arguing that there was a strategic and monetary advantage to gaining a foothold on Sicily. The First Punic War officially began when the first Roman sandal made landfall in 264 BCE. By the way, in case you're wondering why it's called the Punic war, and not the Carthaginian War, Punicus was a term the Romans used to refer to the people of Carthage, hearkening back to their Phonecian origins. When the Romans landed Messana was under siege by the combined forces of the Carthaginians and the armies of Syracuse. Sources are unclear as to why, but first the Syracusans and then the Carthiginians withdrew from the siege. Rome's armies, under the command of Caudex marched south and put Syracuse under siege, but having only brought two legions with them they did not have the forces or supplies for a protracted siege.  Immediately this war was looking to be a bad idea for Rome, as Carthage had nearly overwhelming naval superiority at the beginning of the war. Indeed it is somewhat shocking, at face value, that Rome was able to win the First Punic War as the majority of the 23 year long war was fought on, or very near the water. To try and counter the Carthiginians naval prowess the Romans introduces a device called a corvus to their ships. The corvus was a 4 foot wide and 36 foot long bridge that was attached to the front mast of a Roman quinquereme. It has a large, hooked spike attached to the underside of the front of the bridge and was used to attach Roman ships to Carthiginian ones and allow for swift boarding of enemy vessels. While the corvus did have some measure of success it made Roman ships very front heavy, made them far less maneuverable, and in heavy seas were practically useless. Now, Sicily was a nightmare for an attacking force. Its hilly and remarkably rugged terrain made moving large bodies of troops very difficult. The ground of Sicily heavily favored the defender. In fact, in 23 years of fighting on the island, only two full scale pitched battles were fought.The Battle of Agrigentum in 262, which was a Roman victory, and the Battle of Panormus, which was also a Roman victory. Agrigentum was a particularly interesting case. Both Roman consuls at the time  Quintus Mamilius Vitulus and Lucius Postumius Megellus were in the field with 40,000 Roman soldiers.  A large army has an even larger stomach though, and the consuls had two major problems. First, because of Carthage's naval superiority it was exceedingly difficult to keep their forces supplied by sea. And to compound those issues, neither consul had experience moving around armies of this size. So after seizing Agrirentum, right around harvest season. The consuls dispersed their men to the fields in order to harvest as much food as the possible could. And, of course, that was the moment that Hannibal Grisco (a different Hannibal than the one famous for marching elephants over the Alps) attacked the Roman forces. Rome's forces would rally after this initial assault and rout the Carthiginian forces before besieging and capturing the city, selling 25,000 people into slavery. The war was less direct after Agrigentum for a few years. Rome made failed attempts in Corsica, Sardinia, and Northern Africa. For several years the war followed a pretty simple pattern. Rome was superior on land. Carthage was superior at sea, and sieges sucked for everyone. In 265 BCE Rome gained two new consuls Marcus Atilius Regulus and Lucius Manlius Vulso Longus. Both men, frustrated by the stalemate that was raging on Sicily decided to take the fight to Africa itself. After a series of relatively quick sieges of Aspis and Adys Rome had taken the city of Tunis, this put them only 10 miles away from Carthage itself. Carthage tried to sue for peace, but the terms that Regulus offered were so harsh that Carthage decided to fight on. Rome would actually suffer one of its largest defeats at Tunis, though it wouldn't come from a Carthiginian general. Rome lost to a Spartan mercenary commander Xanthippus. In 255 BC Xanthippus led an army of 12,000 infantry, 4,000 cavalry and 100 elephants against the Romans and defeated them at the Battle of Tunis. Rome would lose much of its fleet and tens of thousands of allied soldiers in various storms around the Mediterranean. There was even a time, following the Battle of Phintias, that it looked like things were finally turning around for Carthage. However, by 248 Carthage only had control over two cities on the island, Lilybaeum and Drepana and both nations' coffers were nearly emptied. Carthage tried to get a 2000 talent (approximately 52,000 kilograms of silver)  loan from Ptolemaic Egypt, but was denied. Rome turned to its wealthiest private citizens. Asking them each to build a single quinquereme and promising repayments from the reparations they would make Carthage pay after the war. It should also bear mentioning that Rome lost about 17% of its fighting age men over the course of this war.  The consuls who finished off the war were Gaius Lutatius Catulus and Quintus Valerius Falto (Rome elected new consuls yearly). These two consuls defeated the last of Carthages fleet in the Battle of Aegates Island. After this battle was finished Rome continued to put pressure on Lilybaeum and Drepana until Carthage decided to sue for peace. The Treaty of Lutatius was signed and brought the First Punic War to its end: Carthage evacuated Sicily, handed over all prisoners taken during the war, and paid an indemnity of 3,200 talents over ten years. This wouldn't end Carthages' woes though. In 237 BC Carthage prepared an expedition to recover the island of Sardinia, which had been lost to the rebels (mostly foreign soldiers they were unable to pay fully after the war) In a fit of cruelty, the Romans stated they considered this an act of war. Their peace terms were the ceding of Sardinia and Corsica and the payment of an additional 1,200-talent indemnity. Weakened by 30 years of war, Carthage agreed rather than enter into a conflict with Rome again; the additional payment and the renunciation of Sardinia and Corsica were added to the treaty as a codicil. The tensions caused by THIS particular bit of tomfuckery would be one of the major determining factors in the start of the Second Punic War. The mark that the First Punic War made on history cannot be understated. It was not only the longest Rman war to date, but it was the most devastating maritime war of the ancient world. Over the course of it Rome built over 1000 ships and would use the skills they learned and honed in this war to rule the seas, virtually uncontested for the next 600 years. Following the First Punic War Carthage turned its eyes to the North. They knew they would need to expand their power base and accrue a much greater store of wealth if they were ever going to stand on equal footing with Rome again. The Italian Peninsula and the surrounding island were off limits, so they turned to Iberia. They would meet Rome again in Iberia, but in 226 the two powers signed the Treaty of Ebro, fixing the River Ebro as the border between the two empires. It's likely that Rome had no intention of maintaining the terms of this treaty as some few years after they established an alliance with the city of Saguntum, a city which existed within the Carthiginian sphere of influence. Hannibal (yes, that one, with the Elephants) saw this as an act of aggression from Rome and besieged the city of Saguntum, eventually seizing it after 8 months of siege. Rome sent Quintus Fabius Maximus to the Carthage senate with peremptory demands. When these were rejected, as Rome knew they would be, war was declared in the spring of 218 BC. The Second Punic War would last for 17 years and would, again, end in victory for Rome. The war got off to somewhat of an odd start. Both Rome and Carthage planned to invade the other, but neither side seemed to really know what the others were doing or where they would be. It's likely, given the way the previous war had gone, that Rome expected a naval attack from Carthage, and so they remained in the south putting together their plan to invade Africa again. Hannibal though had a different plan. He intended to swing up through Iberia, starting in modern Cartagena, cross the Alps, which he did in 15 days, and sweep down on Rome from the North. He successfully crossed the Alps with 20,000 infantry, 6,000 cavalry, and an unknown number of elephants (he'd left Iberia with 37 of them, but it's unclear how many survived the crossing.) Hannibal then proceeded to dog walk the Roman army around Italy for the next two years. The only challenge he really faced was from Quintus Fabius Maximus, nicknamed Cuncator (the Delayer) by his contemporaries for his adoption of the Fabian Strategy. Well, his creation really. The strategy is named after him. The Fabian strategy employs hit and run tactics and seeks to avoid pitched battle. Fabian hoped to use this harrying tactic to enter into a battle of attrition, hoping that Hannibal would run out of supplies and be forced to leave or surrender. In 216 Rome elected two new consuls Gaius Terentius Varro, who advocated pursuing a more aggressive war strategy, and Lucius Aemilius Paullus, who advocated a strategy somewhere between Fabius's and that suggested by Varro. The Senate also authorized the raising of a double sized army, some 86,000 men. The largest Roman army in history at that point. Varro and Paullus lost most of their army in Rome's greatest military disaster, the Battle of Cannae. Some 67,500 Roman troops died in this one battle. This was almost the end for Rome. They almost lost the whole war in that one Battle. Hannibal was supported by Gaulish and Spanish mercenaries, he was up against military incompetents, and he was about to be joined by the King of Macedonia as an ally. In 215 Phillip V launched the First Macedonian War. It was time for Rome to bring back the one man who had stood a chance against Hannibal. It was time to bring back Fabius. Fabius became consul again in 215 BC and was re-elected in 214 BC. Rome, now more desperate than they'd been in a long time also drastically reduced its standards for soldiers. Enrolling slaves, criminals and those who did not meet the usual property qualification. By early 215 BC they were fielding at least 12 legions; by 214 BC 18; and by 213 BC 22. By 212 BC the full complement of the legions deployed would have been in excess of 100,000 men, plus, as always, a similar number of allied troops. The majority were deployed in southern Italy in field armies of approximately 20,000 men each. This was insufficient to challenge Hannibal's army in open battle, but sufficient to force him to concentrate his forces and to hamper his movements. For 11 years after the Battle of Cannae, the war was raged across Southern Italy in a constant give and take as Carthage captured Roman cities, only for them to be recaptured. The fighting in Italy was fierce and seemed to be going mostly in Hannibal's favor, but Italy was not the only theatre of this war. The Iberian Theatre could best be described a a holding action for the first several years. As Rome sought to hold Carthiginian forces in Iberia and prevent them from reinforcing Hannibal by crossing the alps again (although Hannibal's brother Hasdrupal was able to cross the Alps with 35,000 additional troops).  Scipio Africanus was ultimately successful in Iberia, clearing it of Carthiginian control. He almost lost control of the region when the Iberian leaders sought to fight against the Romans who they had just fought with against the armies of Carthage. They'd expected Rome to leave after defeating Carthage here, but Rome wouldn't give up land it held and sent Claudius Nero over to stabilize the situation. This left Iberia under Roman control and Italy fighting for its life against Hannibal and Hasdrubal. In a move of some desperation and no little boldness Rome decided to finally launch its invasion of Africa in 204 BCE led by the famed Scipio Africanus, and after defeating Carthage in two major battles, Carthage elected to sue for peace and recall Hannibal and his brothers from Italy.  Rome and Carthage entered into peace negotiations. The Roman Senate ratified a draft treaty, but because of mistrust and a surge in confidence when Hannibal arrived from Italy, Carthage decided to take one last stab at achieving victory. Thus did the Battle of Zarna begin. Hannibal tried to use a charge of 80 elephants to break Rome's lines, but Rome was able to turn the charge back and the elephants wound up devastating their own forces. The new peace treaty dictated by Rome stripped Carthage of all of its overseas territories and some of its African ones. An indemnity of 10,000 talents of silver was to be paid over 50 years and hostages were taken. Carthage was forbidden to possess war elephants and its fleet was restricted to ten warships. It was prohibited from waging war outside Africa and in Africa only with Rome's permission. And so there would be peace for 50 years. Sort of, but not really. Carthage finished paying off their indemnity in 151, 50 years after the end of the Second Punic War and was, once again, economically prosperous. They were, really, no military threat to Rome anymore, but many Roman senators refused to believe that. Most famous of which was the senator Marcus Porcius Cato, also known as Cato the Censor. Cato had been part of an assembly sent to Carthage in around 153 BCE and notes how wealthy and prosperous it seemed. He was famous for ending all of his speeches before the senate with the phrase Ceterum (autem) censeo Carthaginem esse delendam ("Furthermore, I consider that Carthage must be destroyed"), which is often shortened to merely Carthago delenda est (Carthage must fall). In 149 BCE Rome sent its armies to Carthage, under the pretext of a punitive expedition because Carthage was allegedly engaging in illicit military operations. The Third Punic War, which lasted for a mere three years, really only had the one major engagement. That being the Siege of Carthage, which would eventually be led by Scipio Aemilianus, the adoptive grandson of Scipio Africanus. Initially Carthage tried to surrender and, indeed, surrendered all of their weapons. But Rome would not be swayed by this. They wanted Carthage destroyed, and ultimately it would be. The early years of the siege saw little success. Carthage was a hard city to besiege, and it still had some allies in the region. So in addition to contending with the city itself, Roman forces needed to be on guard for allied towns and cities who would try to come to Carthage's aid. After 3 years though it would end in a single week of some of the most horrific slaughter of the ancient world. In Spring of 146 Scipio launched a full scale adult on the harbor area and successfully breached the walls of Carthage. Over six days, the Romans systematically worked their way through the residential part of the city, killing everyone they encountered and setting the buildings behind them on fire. The city was razed to the ground, over 700,000 people were killed, including women and children, and some 50,000 survivors were sold into slavery. The next part of the story that you might know, if you know this story at all, is that Scipio then proceeded to salt the earth around Carthage so that nothing would ever grow there again. This story is almost certainly apocryphal. Which is fancy historian speak for “full of shit”. There are no ancient sources for this event. The salting story entered the academic literature in Bertrand Hallward's article in the first edition of the Cambridge Ancient History (1930), and was widely accepted as factual. What IS factual though is that Rome committed genocide in sacking Carthage. There was a clear and deliberate plan to destroy every single vestige of the people of Carthage, either through mass slaughter or slavery. There was clear intent to destroy planned and carried out by the duly elected leader of Rome and its armies. It literally doesn't get any more clear than this. Intent was vocally demonstrated by Cato and physically carried out by Scipio. That's it for this week my friend. Thank you for coming with me on this educational foray into the past. We've got some more reviews to read for this week, so let's jump right into them. *Read Reviews* Have a Day! w/ The History Wizard is brought to you by me, The History Wizard. PLease remember to rate, review, and subscribe to Have a Day! On your pod catcher of choice. The more you do, the more people will be able to listen and learn along with you. Thank you for sticking around until the end and, as always, Have a Day.

The Rest Is History
421. Ancient Carthage: Lords of the Sea (Part 1)

The Rest Is History

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2024 60:17


“Carthago delenda est.” Carthage must be destroyed: this was the rallying cry of Cato the Elder, the senator endlessly pushing for war against Rome's sworn enemy, Carthage. But what are the origins of this supposedly decadent and sinister city, and did the Carthaginians really sacrifice their children? Starting as a crafty, seafaring people called the Phoenicians, a mighty mercantile civilisation emerged, who would eventually come to be known as the Carthaginians. But who were the Phoenicians, and why are they so mysterious? From the Bible, the Iliad and the Odyssey, to Herodotus' account of the Persian Wars, and the conquests of Alexander the Great, their shadow haunts Antiquity… Join Tom and Dominic as they investigate the Phoenicians, the first masters of the Mediterranean. Pioneers of seafaring, craftsmanship and writing, these were the people who gave birth to Rome's most feared enemy, Carthage. Myths, legends, child-sacrifice, and the rise and fall of civilisations abound. *The Rest Is History LIVE in 2024* Tom and Dominic are back onstage this summer, at Hampton Court Palace in London!  Buy your tickets here: therestishistory.com Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Producer: Theo Young-Smith Assistant Producer: Tabby Syrett Executive Producers: Jack Davenport + Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Radio Maria België
De Kerkvaders: H. Cyprianus van Carthago

Radio Maria België

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2024 43:07


In deze uitzending leren we meer over de H. Cyprianus, bisschop van Carthago. Hij leefde in de eerste helft van de derde eeuw. In deze periode was de Afrikaanse Kerk nog zeer pril en leden de christenen er bovendien vervolging. Cyprianus onderging rond zijn 35e levensjaar een radicale bekering en werd vervolgens op korte tijd tot bisschop van Carthago verkozen. Hij toonde zich een zeer bekwame herder in een tijd van vervolging die voor veel angst onder de christenen zorgde. Uiteindelijk zou hij zelf de marteldood sterven. Hij hield veel van de Kerk en zette zich in voor haar eenheid. De bekende uitspraak 'Extra ecclesiam nulla salus' komt overigens van de H. Cyprianus.

Biblioteca Del Metal
Veto - (Ignorados Por El Metal / A Pesar De Su Buena Calidad)

Biblioteca Del Metal

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2024 47:14


Colabora Con Biblioteca Del Metal: En Twitter - https://twitter.com/Anarkometal72 Y Donanos Unas Propinas En BAT. Para Seguir Con El Proyecto De la Biblioteca Mas Grande Del Metal. Muchisimas Gracias. La Tienda De Biblioteca Del Metal: Encontraras, Ropa, Accesorios,Decoracion, Ect... Todo Relacionado Al Podcats Biblioteca Del Metal Y Al Mundo Del Heavy Metal. Descubrela!!!!!! Ideal Para Llevarte O Regalar Productos Del Podcats De Ivoox. (Por Tiempo Limitado) https://teespring.com/es/stores/biblioteca-del-metal-1 VETO era una banda alemana de Heavy Metal que tenía ciertas características propias como clase y alta calidad. Nace de la mente del núcleo original de guitarristas Roger Bredel y Klaus Schile. Veto se formó a principios de los 80, teniendo varios problemas con respecto a su formación. Más tarde consiguieron un vocalista muy competente, Harry Liebhauser, que también tocaba los teclados. El bajista Peter Schlattner se unió a la banda, lamentablemente ningún baterista pudo sentarse detrás de la batería como miembro permanente de la banda. Para 1984 consiguieron un contrato con el sello alemán GAMA recs, conocido por tener en su roster a bandas como GRAVESTONE, NOISEHUNTER, STORMWITCH, TYRANT, etc. El tiempo para la grabación de su LP debut se estaba acercando pero aún no tenían un baterista, por lo que el jefe del sello, Peter Garattoni, decidió tocar la batería como músico de sesión. Peter era conocido como baterista de algunos actos de blues y jazz de los años 70. Con su incorporación a la banda, VETO obtuvo ciertos beneficios como más promoción y dinero para gastar en el estudio que el resto de las bandas de GAMA y por tanto una mejor producción. Incluso la edición del álbum debut en CD años después, algo no muy común en los últimos años de la década de los 80. "Veto" fue el título de su álbum debut lanzado en 1986 bajo la dirección del productor local de GAMA, Batze Krammer, y mezclado por Tom Krüger. El resultado no fue muy celebrado por los medios (al igual que la mayoría de los lanzamientos de la banda GAMA), pero los fans del Heavy Metal apreciaron el material y le dieron buenas críticas y comentarios. Después de grabar el álbum, conocieron a Alwin Rainer, que parecía ser el hombre que buscaban. Lamentablemente no duró mucho en la banda y VETO se convirtió más en un proyecto de estudio que en una banda en vivo, decidiendo concentrar su trabajo en componer y grabar música. En 1987 todavía sufrían la falta de un buen baterista, por lo que Peter ayudó nuevamente a la banda para la grabación del segundo álbum "Carthago", lanzado en 1988. El resultado fue tan bueno como el de su primer álbum, pero nuevamente fueron ignorados por los medios, por lo que el disco tuvo una fama discreta. Poco tiempo después, Harry tuvo que dejar la banda y su reemplazo fue Dietmar Heiler pero VETO se disolvió poco después, a pesar de que sus álbumes tenían muy buena calidad. ​ Discografia Oficial: https://www.discogs.com/es/artist/1541653-Veto-6

Planeta Cuñao
Expendiente Astérix

Planeta Cuñao

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2023 51:22 Transcription Available


Ave caesar, morituri te salutant. Carthago delenda est; cogito, ergo sum. Quo vadis? Nunc est bibendum.  Veni, Vedi, Vici. Alea jacta est! ------- Estas notas del episosido están patrocinadas por JULIO CÉSAR. JULIO CÉSAR, CONQUISTAMOS TODA LA GALIA, MENOS UNA ALDEA. Todos los episodios de Planeta Cuñao están disponibles en Cuonda y nuestra web. Y si te apetece echarnos una mano, hazte mecenas en Patreon.

Militärhistoriepodden
Det tredje puniska kriget – Karthagos förstörelse

Militärhistoriepodden

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2023 35:56


Det tredje puniska kriget startade med att Karthago anföll Numidierna och Kung Masinissa i ett försök att stävja deras sakta maktövertagande i regionen. Trots att anfallet mot Numidierna blev ett fiasko, togs händelsen av Rom som intäkt för ett traktatsbrott, vilket ledde till att den romerska senaten beslutade att skicka militär bestraffningsexpedition till Karthago.Allt var nu upplagt för ett tredje, och för Karthagos del, avgörande krig mot Rom. Målet, den här gången, var inte att sätta Karthago på plats, utan att för sista gången helt och hållet slå ut den Kartagiska ekonomiska maktbasen, inkluderat själva staden i sig.I detta avsnitt av Militärhistoriepodden diskuterar idéhistorikern Peter Bennesved och professorn i historia Martin Hårdstedt det tredje puniska kriget och Karthagos förstörelse.Efter att det andra puniska kriget hade avslutats år 201 fvt. var den Karthagiska staten underkuvad den Romerska republiken. Det överenskomna fredstraktatet innebar att Karthago inte längre fick föra anfallskrig mot andra stater, och inte heller var de tillåtna att hålla sig med fler än tio krigsskepp. I praktiken innebar det att den Romerska republiken styrde landets utrikespolitik. Situationen utnyttjades snart av Numidierna, ett kungarike som kontrollerade stora delar av nordvästra Afrika och som tidigare varit allierat med Karthago.Det kan verka brutalt, men i bakgrunden låg en växande oro bland romerska senatsmedlemmar att Karthago var på väg att återuppbygga sin militära förmåga och ett ekonomiskt välstånd som kunde hota Rom. Det berömda citatet från Marcus Porcius Cato ” Carthāgō dēlenda est” (Sv. Övers: Karthago måste förstöras) härstammar från denna period i romersk utrikespolitik, och har sitt ursprung i Catos oro över Karthagernas välstånd efter ett besök några år före krigsutbrottet. Det fanns också andra omständigheter som tycktes peka på att den romerska republiken höll på att tappa greppet om Medelhavet. Dels skapade pågående krig på den Iberiska halvön oro och oreda i Romersk politik, dels pågick krig österut om makten över de grekiska stadsstaterna. Rom befann sig alltså i ett politiskt känsligt läge, som ansågs kunna nyttjas av konkurrerande stater.Karthagerna ville dock tillfredsställa Rom initialt, och önskade ingen konfrontation. År 149, när den romerska flottan anlände till Utica strax norr om staden Karthago, erbjöd Karthagerna därför sina vapen och sina återstående skepp i en fredsgest. Efter att konsulerna krävde stadens evakuering insåg dock de styrande i Karthago vilka motiv som egentligen styrde Roms agerande – d.v.s. total förintelse. Nu påbörjades förhandlingar för att rädda staden. Slutligen övergick detta till en romersk attack och hårdnackat kartagiskt motstånd.Bild: Romerska soldater som bemannar en katapult för en attack mot Karthagos murar, under belägringen som slutade i förstörelsen av Karthago 146 f.Kr. Cato den äldres berömda kommando, "Delenda est Carthago" (citerad i Pultarchs "Life of Cato") är huggen i träet på den enorma katapulten. Av Edward Poynter 1868, Public Domain.Lyssna också på Det första puniska kriget och Det andra puniska kriget – Hannibals revanschKlippare: Emanuel Lehtonen Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Popeular History Podcast
0.9 Rome II: Carthago Delenda Est (epitome)

The Popeular History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2023 5:57


0.9 Original, full-length episode: https://popeularhistory.podbean.com/e/carthago-delenda-est/ IMAGE CREDIT: By Jona Lendering - Naples National Archaeological Museum, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=73596987 

De Geschiedenis van het Romeinse Rijk
Afl. 68 - De Tweede Punische Oorlog: Deel XVIII - Qart Hadasht

De Geschiedenis van het Romeinse Rijk

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2023 18:18


In 210 v. Chr. vertrekt Publius Cornelius Scipio vanuit de Tiber naar Tarraco in Hispania om de eer van Rome, zijn familie en zijn vader te redden. Één seizoen later marcheert hij in 209 v. Chr. naar Qart Hadasht (nieuw Carthago) om de stad te veroveren op de Carthagers. Hier vindt u een link naar de website. Hier vindt u een link naar de Facebookpagina.De muziek in deze podcastaflevering wordt aan ons beschikbaar gesteld door:Mary Ann Tedstone Glover  en  Integrity PublishingAlbum: 'The Music of Ancient Rome' Nummer: ‘Odi et Amo' Klik hier voor een link naar het album

The Layman's Historian
Episode 51 - Carthago Delenda Est

The Layman's Historian

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2023 33:07


The thirty years following the deaths of Scipio and Hannibal saw Carthage revive economically. Relations with Rome and Numidia, however, remained strained to the utmost, especially due to the Numidian King Masinissa's continued encroachment on Carthaginian territory with tacit Roman approval. When the frustrated Carthaginians finally struck a blow to defend their land, Rome seized the opportunity to invade and finish her rival off - once and for all.   Check out The Warlords of History Podcast website   Link to the Episode 51 page on the Layman's Historian website Recommended further reading: The Histories by Polybius Hannibal's War by Titus Livius A Companion to the Punic Wars (Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World) Edited by Dexter Hoyos The Fall of Carthage by Adrian Goldsworthy Hannibal's Dynasty by Dexter Hoyos Carthage Must Be Destroyed by Richard Miles Implacable Enemies: The Barcid Armies at War by Karwansary Publishers Clash of the Colossi: The First Punic War by Karwansary Publishers Subscribe or leave a review on iTunes or Spotify Leave a like or comment on Facebook or Twitter Contact me directly through email  

il posto delle parole
Franco Forte "Karolus"

il posto delle parole

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2023 25:28


Franco Forte"Karolus"Il romanzo di Carlo MagnoMondadori Editorehttps://mondadori.it25 dicembre 800. Sono passati tre secoli da quando Roma ha cessato di esistere: nella pur turbolenta storia della Città Eterna, nessuno ormai immaginava che ci potesse essere un altro imperatore. E invece, nel giorno di Natale di un secolo appena nato, il Papa sta per proclamare un nuovo sovrano. Un nuovo Cesare. A ricevere la corona è Karolus Magnus, Carlo Magno, primogenito della stirpe dei Carolingi.Come è arrivato Carlo su quel trono? Per qualcuno che si è meritato, ancora in vita, l'appellativo di Magno la risposta dovrebbe essere scontata. E se invece la strada che porta a quella notte di Natale fosse lastricata non solo di coraggio, battaglie e trionfi, ma anche di complotti, intrighi e sangue? Se tra i fasti delle vittorie si nascondessero troppi segreti?Attingendo a una sterminata storiografia, Franco Forte ricostruisce in forma di romanzo le gesta del celebre sovrano, dalla primissima infanzia agli ultimi, intensi istanti di vita, immergendoci nel racconto di un'avventura irripetibile, segnata da sfide, successi e amori, ma anche da dubbi, rimpianti, dolorosissime perdite e ancor più struggenti addii. Che cosa si agitava nel cuore di Karolus, il grande condottiero, quando si preparava a diventare reggente unico del Sacro Romano Impero? Quali sogni – e quali incubi – ne popolavano l'animo?Franco Forte è nato a Milano nel 1962. Scrittore, sceneggiatore e giornalista, per Mondadori ha pubblicato, tra gli altri, Carthago, Roma in fiamme, Caligola, Cesare l'Immortale e Romolo, il primo di una serie di libri dedicati ai sette re di Roma.IL POSTO DELLE PAROLEAscoltare fa Pensarehttps://ilpostodelleparole.itQuesto show fa parte del network Spreaker Prime. Se sei interessato a fare pubblicità in questo podcast, contattaci su https://www.spreaker.com/show/1487855/advertisement

La storia di Roma: raccontata facile, come ai bambini

Vieni a conoscere gli altri sostenitori:www.buymeacoffee.com/lastoriadiroma---Niente sale sparso per non far crescere più l'erba. Quella è invenzione poetica. In realtà fu solo il buio di un sole spento, là dove una volta fu il porto più solare di tutto il Mediterraneo.---Recitano:Scipione Emiliano, consoleLucio Mumio, consolePartecipano:Catone †, censoreQuinto Cecilio Metello, pretoreAndrisco †, re usurpatore macedoneMassinissa †, re numidaPolibio, storico greco ---Canale Telegram:https://t.me/lastoriadiromaSe ti è piaciuta la puntata, trova il tempo per scrivere una recensione e condividere! Grazie!aruotelibere.com/lastoriadiroma

C'est plus que de la SF
Aurora, la surprenante série B de Christophe Bec #148

C'est plus que de la SF

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2023 46:35


Le dessinateur et scénariste de BD Christophe Bec nous présente sa dernière série d'anticipation et d'horreur sur notre podcast. Aurora est disponible en librairie à partir du 18 janvier.  Le Village des Damnés à la sauce SF  Christophe Bec revient ! L'auteur de Bunker, Carthago, Sanctuaire, présente dans notre émission son nouveau projet qui mixe anticipation et horreur. Rendant hommage à des films cultes comme La Malediction ou Le Village des Damnés, la série Aurora transpire la série B. Ce premier tome d'introduction, qui empreinte clairement au récit fantastique, convainc grâce à son découpage particulièrement efficace. Le lecteur suit d'effrayants d'enfants porteur de pouvoir pas comme les autres. Clasique dans sa forme, on est très curieux de connaître la suite.  Résumé : Une gigantesque aurore boréale enveloppe la Terre durant 24 heures, au cours desquelles naissent 222 000 enfants. Ils ne pleurent pas, ne rient pas, ne ressentent aucune empathie et ont un QI anormalement élevé. Ce sont les Enfants de l'Aurore.  Lien : https://www.editions-soleil.fr/bd/series/serie-aurora/album-aurora-t01 

Boulevard BD
Carthago 14

Boulevard BD

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022 2:46


Une chronique de Laurent Lafourcade

The Activation Phase - Saga Podcast
Carthago delenda est

The Activation Phase - Saga Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2022 38:40


We wrap up the Age of Hannibal with Hannibal's boys, the Carthaginians.

Po Sloveniji
Državna cesta med Bovcem in Kobaridom po neurju še ni prevozna

Po Sloveniji

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2022 22:59


Še drugi poudarki iz oddaje: - V Zasavju različne cene ogrevanja, najceneje bo z lesnimi sekanci - V Novem mestu več brezplačnih javnih prevozov za starejše - V Ormožu graditev tovarne Carthago napreduje po načrtih - Slovenj Gradec in Radeče praznujeta.

Everything Everywhere Daily History Podcast
Carthago Delenda Est: The Third Punic War

Everything Everywhere Daily History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2022 15:30


In 201 BC, the Romans were victorious over their archrivals, the city-state of Carthage, in the Second Punic War.  This was was the closest which Rome had ever come to defeat and almost spelled the end of the republic.  50 years later, some Romans felt that they left the job unfinished. In fact, some Romans could talk about nothing else.  Learn more about the Third Punic War and the destruction of Carthage on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast!  https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Darcy Adams Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen   Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EverythingEverywhere Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Everything Everywhere is an Airwave Media podcast." or "Everything Everywhere is part of the Airwave Media podcast network Please contact sales@advertisecast.com to advertise on Everything Everywhere. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Vanguard of the Veil
Alma Mater Ep 1

Vanguard of the Veil

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2022 52:41


Vanguard of the Veil, Season 2, starts with a new set of Hunters on the East Coast town of Carthago, Rhode Island.  Come follow Deandra (@happypuke) as she goes back to her Alma Mater and is joined by Professor Gundersson (@matthewmmorris) and student athlete Spin (@Josketh).  Students have been going missing for a while now.  Is there something sinister behind these disappearances?  

Radio Empire
Tralerighe Con Carthago Edizioni 22 Giugno 2022

Radio Empire

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2022 58:04


Ospite l'autore Giuseppe Pennisi (Amministratore), Margherita Guglielmino(Responsabile Editoriale) e Gaspare Edgardo Liggeri (Presidente) della Carthago Edizioni.

Radio Empire
Tralerighe Con Carthago Edizioni 3 Giugno 2022

Radio Empire

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2022 58:54


Ospite l'autore il Dott. Luigi Nicolosi, Margherita Guglielmino(Responsabile Editoriale) e Giuseppe Pennisi (Amministratore) della Carthago Edizioni.

CARTHAGO
EP17 L'héritière des carpates

CARTHAGO

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2022 22:05


En 2021, Lou est devenue à son tour océanologue. Elle replonge dans son passé lorsqu'on lui annonce qu'elle est désignée héritière de tous les biens de Feiersinger, récemment décédé. Avec les voix de : Léah Vaidis-Bogard, Jean-Marc Galéra, Bernard Gabay, Jérôme Fonlupt, Hyppolit Audouy, Frédéric Souterelle, Michaël Maïno, Pascal Carré, Sonia Petit, Dominique Chénet

CARTHAGO
EP16 L'héritière des carpates

CARTHAGO

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2022 19:36


En 2021, Lou est devenue à son tour océanologue. Elle replonge dans son passé lorsqu'on lui annonce qu'elle est désignée héritière de tous les biens de Feiersinger, récemment décédé. Avec les voix de : Léah Vaidis-Bogard, Jean-Marc Galéra, Bernard Gabay, Jérôme Fonlupt, Hyppolit Audouy, Frédéric Souterelle, Michaël Maïno, Pascal Carré, Sonia Petit, Dominique Chénet

CARTHAGO
EP18 L'héritière des carpates

CARTHAGO

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2022 24:42


En 2021, Lou est devenue à son tour océanologue. Elle replonge dans son passé lorsqu'on lui annonce qu'elle est désignée héritière de tous les biens de Feiersinger, récemment décédé. Avec les voix de : Léah Vaidis-Bogard, Jean-Marc Galéra, Bernard Gabay, Jérôme Fonlupt, Hyppolit Audouy, Frédéric Souterelle, Michaël Maïno, Pascal Carré, Sonia Petit, Dominique Chénet

Radio Empire
Tralerighe Con Carthago Edizioni 19 Aprile 2022

Radio Empire

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2022 55:31


Ospite l'autore il Prof. Mariano Indelicato, Margherita Guglielmino(Responsabile Editoriale) e Giuseppe Pennisi (Amministratore) della Carthago Edizioni.

Radio Empire
Tralerighe Con Carthago Edizioni 19 Marzo 2022

Radio Empire

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2022 56:24


Ospite l'autrice Giovanna Monterosso, Margherita Guglielmino(Responsabile Editoriale) e Giuseppe Pennisi (Amministratore) della Carthago Edizioni.

Radio Empire
Tralerighe Con Carthago Edizioni 4 Gennaio 2022

Radio Empire

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2022 56:51


Ospite l'autore il Prof. Santo Trimarchi, Margherita Guglielmino(Responsabile Editoriale) e Giuseppe Pennisi (Amministratore) della Carthago Edizioni.

Radio Empire
Tralerighe Con Carthago Edizioni 7 Dicembre 2021

Radio Empire

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2021 52:38


Ospiti Margherita Guglielmino(Responsabile Editoriale) e Giuseppe Pennisi (Amministratore) della Carthago Edizioni

Boulevard BD
Carthago 13

Boulevard BD

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2021 3:06


Une chronique de Laurent Lafourcade

Alle Geschiedenis Ooit
Vandaag in de Geschiedenis - De val van Carthago

Alle Geschiedenis Ooit

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2021 5:12


Arco en Thom vertellen je over de belangrijkste historische gebeurtenissen van 19 oktober. Van de Slag om Ieper via de val van de DSB naar de Slag bij Zama en het einde van Carthago.Weet je zelf een goed verhaal uit de geschiedenis? Deel die vooral met ons op Vriend van de Show!Alle Geschiedenis Ooit is een podcast van Dag en Nacht Media. Deze aflevering is speciaal gepubliceerd voor de Daily Feed van Spotify.Zie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Radio Empire
Tra Le Righe 12 Ottobre 2021

Radio Empire

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2021 60:46


El podcast de Francisco Marhuenda

Los romanos ganaron las tres guerras púnicas, pero no descansaron hasta destruir Cartago. Las dos naciones luchaban por la hegemonía en el Mediterráneo y solo podía quedar una. El senador Catón el Viejo odiaba profundamente a los cartagineses. Por ello, utilizaba la frase «Carthago delenda est» (Cartago debe ser destruida) o «Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam» (Además opino que Cartago debe ser destruida) cada vez que finalizaba sus discursos en el Senado romano durante los últimos años de las guerras púnicas.

El podcast macroscópico
Rumbo a Carthago. Encuentro de Maestros italianos

El podcast macroscópico

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2021 25:51


Presentación del evento que estamos preparando para el Día de la Familia de 2022. Toda la información aquí: www.diadelafamilia.es Los miembros de Macroscopio y alumnas/os de ESBA ya pueden preinscribirse. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/macroscopio/message

De Geschiedenis van het Romeinse Rijk
Afl. 62 - De Tweede Punische Oorlog: Deel XII - De Slag bij Cannae

De Geschiedenis van het Romeinse Rijk

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2021 68:33


Tijdens deze aflevering bekijken we de slag bij Cannae van 2 augustus 216 v. Chr. Op een veld van enkele vierkante kilometers nabij het stadje Cannae vindt de bloedigste eendaagse veldslag uit de geschiedenis plaats. Met 80.000 troepen gaan de Romeinen de strijd aan met de 50.000 troepen van Hannibal. Nog één laatste gevecht tussen Rome en Carthago waarbij de Romeinen eindelijk Hannibal zouden verslaan. De veldslag en de gebruikte tactieken worden duizenden jaren later nog steeds bestudeerd door militaire gezaghebbers in een poging de resultaten van de slag bij Cannae te evenaren, tot op heden zonder resultaat. De slag staat bekend als een van de grootste veldslagen uit de geschiedenis en heeft grote gevolgen voor de Tweede Punische oorlog en de politieke machtsverhoudingen rond de Mediterrane zee.Hier vind je een link naar de website. (kaarten staan er reeds op, rest wordt aangevuld.)Hier vind je een link naar de facebookpagina.

il posto delle parole
Franco Forte "L'uranio di Mussolini"

il posto delle parole

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2021 16:00


Franco Forte, Vincenzo Vizzini"L'uranio di Mussolini"Mondadori Editorehttps://www.librimondadori.it/Ragusa, 1934. Due uomini, un investigatore del Sud e un funzionario fascista del Nord. L'incontro-scontro tra il regime fascista, la mafia, e le più grandi potenze mondiali. E un progetto in grado di segnare le sorti del Secondo conflitto mondiale: la bomba atomica. L'uranio di Mussolini è un giallo storico che mescola insieme realtà e finzione, ispirato infatti da eventi poco conosciuti della nostra Storia, che vengono riportati a galla dai due autori, Franco Forte e Vincenzo Vizzini.Nella Sicilia del Ventennio, il commissario Vincenzo Ibla indaga su un delitto avvenuto alle cave di Spaccaforno. Un omicidio semplice, sembrerebbe, di natura passionale. Ma è l'arrivo del funzionario Franco Durante, inviato da Milano direttamente da Mussolini, a farlo insospettire: perché questo caso necessita di aiuto da parte di quell'uomo del Nord tutto d'un pezzo?La vittima, Vittorio Borgia, compagno d'armi del commissario, era un miliziano fascista, e il suo omicidio sembra aver scatenato la reazione degli alti vertici del Partito. I moventi dell'assassinio iniziano a essere in realtà molteplici, nascosti dietro una fitta rete di intrighi oscuri e complessi. Durante, che segue impazientemente il lavoro di Ibla, risulta un'ostacolo per Vincenzo, che vive con sospetto l'uomo di una cultura così lontana da quella siciliana.Franco Forte è nato a Milano nel 1962. Direttore delle collane Giallo Mondadori, Segretissimo e Urania, per Mondadori ha pubblicato, tra gli altri, Carthago, Roma in fiamme, Cesare l'Immortale, La bambina e il nazista e la serie dei 7 re di Roma, avviata con il fortunato Romolo - Il primo re.Vincenzo Vizzini, nato a Noto nel 1958, vive da sempre a Marina di Ragusa. È autore di racconti gialli per Mondadori, vicedirettore della Writers Magazine Italia, e ha scritto il manuale bestseller Come si scrive un racconto.IL POSTO DELLE PAROLEascoltare fa pensarehttps://ilpostodelleparole.it/

The After Dinner Scholar
Shakespeare's Rome: Politics and Eros by Dr. Tiffany Schubert

The After Dinner Scholar

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2021 37:53


As Aeneus becomes increasingly comfortable building Carthage with Queen Dido, the god Mercury appears to him. “You, so now you lay foundation stones for the soaring walls of Carthage! Building her gorgeous city, doting on your wife. Blind to your own realm, oblivious to your fate!” Aeneus is supposed to be headed for Italy to build Rome. Carthago delenda est--Carthage must be destroyed. The final presentation at The Wyoming School of Catholic Thought this past June focused on the story of Aeneas and Dido from Virgil's Aeneid, the great founding myth of Rome. The parallel with Antony and Cleopatra is obvious and was probably intended. But there's a most important difference: where Antony stayed in Egypt forsaking Rome, Aeneas fled Carthage for the sake of Rome. At the Wyoming School of Catholic Thought, Dr. Tiffany Schubert offered this presentation about the two couples and the relationship of politics and eros.

Everything's Political
Everything's Political Season 1 Episode 07 - Ceterum censeo Carthago delenda est

Everything's Political

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2020 34:10


Gateway Pundit: https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2019/05/obamas-illegal-spying-on-americans-labeled-operation-hammer-will-soon-be-exposed/Sidney Powell (Mike Flynn's Attorney) Exposes Hammer & Scorecard in 2020: https://davejanda.com/lou-dobbs-sidney-powell-tom-fitton-on-the-hammer-scorecard/

The Popeular History Podcast
0.9: Rome II: Carthago Delenda Est

The Popeular History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2020 46:07


(Mostly) updated Mondays Current series: "Catholic Worldbuilding"--building our Pope-colored glasses This episode: Rome II: The Punic Wars Next series: Quick overview of Papal history from Peter to Francis This week's recommendation: The Hellenistic Age Podcast: https://hellenisticagepodcast.wordpress.com/

Blue Peg, Pink Peg
Episode 150- Pipeline

Blue Peg, Pink Peg

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2019 152:39


During this week's episode: 1) The Pegs discuss their recent game plays including Walking in Burano, Honga, 7 Souls and many more; 2) All the Pegs review the engine building game Pipeline; and 3) Look back at Carthago. Click here for game play photos and show notes. NOTE: Board game discussion starts at 18:30. To access the direct download, click here. Certain of the aforementioned reviews derive from a copy of the reviewed game which was provided by the publisher, free of charge. 1:00- Mario trivia; 10:42- Origin's sick; 14:50- Robb massage; 18:30- Walking in Burano; 23:00- 7 Souls; 29:35- Roll Player; 39:28- Mountains; 46:27- Honga; 50:50- Karuba: TCG; 53:22- Krass Kraiert; 58:35- Songbirds; 1:03:31- Arcane Bakery Clash; 1:10:48- Caverna: Forgotten Folk; 1:14:13- Fate of the Elder Gods: Beast from Beyond; 1:16:11- Ginkgopolis; 1:22:34- Tasty Heroes; 1:25:53- Starting Roll; 1:26:58- CharCon; 1:29:00- Raiders of the North Sea: RPG; 1:31:00- Ticket to Ride: The TV Show; 1:36:35- Pipeline Rules; 1:40:20- Pipeline Review; 2:27:11- Carthago Reroll

BELLUMARTIS PODCAST
ESCIPIÓN EMILIANO,Delenda Carthago est. II parte

BELLUMARTIS PODCAST

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2019 138:01


En este relato sobre el gran Escipión Emiliano Africano Menor y Numantino desfilarán personajes de la talla de Catón el censor, Nasica, Anibal, Asdrubal el beotarca, Masinisa, Cayo Lelio. Gracias a Jose Enrique Lopez Jimenez, autor de la novela “Las memorias de Escipión Emiliano” evocaremos en esta segunda entrega de la serie, los momentos cruentos y a la vez gloriosos del final de Cartago. Nuestro protagonista tras su primera misión como tribuno regresará a África como cónsul para poner fin a la Tercera Guerra Púnica. https://bellumartishistoriamilitar.blogspot.com/2018/08/memorias-de-escipion-emiliano-novela.html Créditos Musicales: - ADE “Legions”- Carthago delenda est - Delenda Carthago, de Franco Battiato No olvidéis suscribiros al canal, si aún no lo habéis hecho. Si queréis ayudarnos, dadle a “me gusta” (el corazón a la derecha de Ivoox) y también dejadnos comentarios. De esta forma ayudaréis a que los programas sean conocidos por más gente. Y compartidnos con vuestros amigos y conocidos. ¿Queréis contactar con nosotros? Puedes escribirnos a bellumartishistoriamilitar@gmail.com Nuestra página principal es: https://bellumartishstoriamilitar.blogspot.com

Rahdo Talks Through
RTT Episode 39

Rahdo Talks Through

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2018 75:51


A Gencon Quickie! SHOW NOTES: •••[00:01:30] Top 10 To Get►►► Chimera Station, Tiny Epic Defenders 2nd Edition, Welcome To, Kashgar: Merchants of the Silk Road, Warsaw: City of Ruins, Carson City: The Card Game, Detective, Coimbra, Merlin, Forbidden Sky •••[00:14:25] 60 More Games to Check Out►►► Legendary Encounters: X-Files, Woodlands, Dragon Master, Amun Re: The Card Game, Jungli-La, Import/Export, Fantastiqa Rival Realms, Mesozooic, Catalyst, Professor Treasure's Secret Sky Castle, Wok Star 3rd Edition, Railways of the World, Race to the New Found Land, Kaosmos, Multiuniversum, Fortune City, Kick-Ass: The Board Game, Deckscape: Heist in Venice, Talisman: Legendary Tales, Shadows: Amsterdam, Mercado, Lucky's Misadventures, Superhot: The Card Game, Maiden's Quest, Now Boarding, Gearworks, Hardback, Railroad Rivals, The Big Score, Luxor, Shadowrun: Sprawl Ops, Sailing Toward Osiris, Rising 5, Scarbya, Railroad Ink, The Game, Kitchen Rush, Lost Cities: Rivals, Carthago, Speakeasy Blues, Minerva, Steamrollers, Tiny Epic Zombies, Spring Meadow, Paper Tales, Blue Lagoon, Carson City: Big Box, Newton, EXIT: (new titles), Altiplano, Gizmos, Rise of Queensdale, Everdell, The Mind, Reef, Century: Eastern Wonders, Brass, Reckoners, Root, Palm Island •••[01:11:27] Expansions to Get►►► Big Score: Crack the Safe, Sailing Toward Osiris: Governors & Envoys, Mottainai: Wutai Moutnain, Mystic Vale: Twilight Garden, Paper Tales: Beyond the Gates, Near & Far: Amber Mines, The Captain is Dead: Lockdown, Clank! The Mummy's Curse, Roll Player: Monsters & Minions, Kingdominio: Age of Giants, Clank! In! Space! Apocalypse!, Scythe: Rise of Fenris •••Help Rahdo run @ https://patreon.com/rahdo •••Send your questions to questions@rahdo.com