Discover the lost history of the Mediterranean’s seafaring superpower. From its legendary founding to Hannibal’s bold crossing of the Alps, we explore the empire that nearly rewrote Western history.

Carthage was this sophisticated, globalized corporate empire that functioned like a massive corporation where the board of directors was constantly at odds with its most aggressive regional managers.
Carthage achieved its immense wealth by acting as the primary middleman of the Mediterranean, controlling the strategic bottleneck at the Strait of Sicily. They maintained a strict monopoly on valuable resources, such as Tyrian purple dye and metals like tin and silver. Their "corporate security" was so intense that captains would reportedly wreck their own ships rather than reveal secret trade routes to competitors. By bartering low-priced consumer goods for raw metals in the west and trading those for luxury finished goods in the east, they created a highly profitable globalized trade empire.
Under the leadership of the Magonid family around 550 BC, Carthage transitioned to a military model that utilized subject peoples and mercenaries from Libya, Iberia, Sardinia, and Corsica. This strategy was designed to protect their vast trade network without depleting their own small population. By paying others to fight, Carthage could keep its own citizens working at the docks and in warehouses to maintain the economy. However, this created a "mercenary trap" where the soldiers' loyalty was tied strictly to payment rather than national ideology, leading to disastrous conflicts like the "Mercenary War" when funds ran low.
The corvus, or "crow," was a specialized boarding bridge with a heavy spike that the Romans added to their warships. Because the Romans lacked the naval expertise of the Carthaginians, they used the corvus to latch onto enemy vessels, effectively turning a sea battle into a land battle where their superior legionaries could dominate. While it led to early Roman victories at battles like Mylae, the device made ships top-heavy and unseaworthy, causing Rome to lose hundreds of ships and over a hundred thousand men to storms during the war.
While the story of Romans sowing the ground with salt to ensure nothing would ever grow again is a famous historical anecdote, it is actually a myth. There is no ancient evidence to support the claim that salt was used during the destruction of the city in 146 BC. In reality, the Romans were practical and recognized the value of the location; they declared the territory "public land" and eventually rebuilt it as a Roman city under Julius Caesar and Augustus, where it became one of the wealthiest hubs in the Roman Empire.
Punic culture proved remarkably resilient, persisting for centuries under Roman rule. The Punic language continued to be spoken in North Africa as late as the 7th century AD, and many Roman leaders, including Emperor Septimius Severus, had Punic roots. Additionally, the Romans adopted significant aspects of Carthaginian knowledge, such as the agricultural techniques of the writer Mago, and integrated Punic deities into the Roman pantheon. This "Neo-Punic" civilization meant that while the political empire was gone, the cultural heart of Carthage remained embedded in the region's identity.
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