D. Hoyos, Mastering the West. Rome and Carthage at War

Envoyer Imprimer

9780190663452.jpg

Dexter Hoyos, Mastering the West. Rome and Carthage at War, Oxford-New York, 2017.

Éditeur : Oxford University Press
Collection : Ancient Warfare and Civilization
360 pages
ISBN : 9780190663452
12,99 £

 

To say the Punic Wars (264-146 BC) were a turning-point in world history is a vast understatement. These vicious battles pitted two flourishing Mediterranean powers against one another, leaving one an unrivaled giant and the other a literal pile of ash. To later observers, a collision between these civilizations seemed inevitable and yet, to the Romans and Carthaginians at the time, war erupted seemingly out of nowhere and was expected to be a short and trivial skirmish.
Mastering the West offers a superlative narrative of all three wars as they are generally divided, while treating a full range of themes: the antagonists' military, naval, economic, and demographic resources and strategic opportunities; the political structures of both republics; questions of leadership and the contributions of leaders like Hannibal, Fabius the Delayer, Scipio Africanus, Masinissa, and Scipio Aemilianus; and the postwar impact of the conflicts on the participants and victims. Dexter Hoyos, a leading expert of the period, treats the two great powers evenly, without forgetting the important roles played by Syracuse, Macedon, and especially Numidia. Written with verve in a clear, accessible style, with a range of illustrations and newly-commissioned maps, Mastering the West is sure to restructure our understanding of this critical period in ancient history.


PART ONE
ROME AND CARTHAGE: 264 BC
1. Two Republics
2. Warfare
PART TWO
THE FIRST PUNIC WAR AND AFTERMATH: 264-218
3. Sicily and its Seas, 264-257
4. Africa and after: 256-249
5. Stalemate and Checkmate: 249-241
6. Between the Wars: 241-218
PART THREE
THE SECOND PUNIC WAR: 218-201
7. Hannibal's invasion, 218-211
8. The War beyond Italy
9. Scipio and Roman Victory: 210-201
PART FOUR
THE LAST CONFLICT
10. Rome, Masinissa, and Carthage
11. The Triumph of Rome
Conclusions
Appendix 152
the sources

 

 

Source : Oxford University Press