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Forget Rome – this was the ancient empire that made the modern world

Forget Rome – this was the ancient empire that made the modern world

Yahoo3 days ago
Napoleon is relatively unusual in western history for aligning himself with the brutal Hannibal – not Hannibal's Roman enemy, Scipio Africanus. The Frenchman's interest in the Carthaginian bordered on obsessional. He read every book about him he could find, including the Latin histories of Livy, and made copious notes. He could work examples from Hannibal's life into conversation with ease, and when he crossed the Alps in 1800, he knew precisely whose footsteps he was following in. Hannibal was more than a man: he was, like Napoleon, a god.
Hannibal was no stranger himself to self-mythologising. His name meant 'he who is favoured by Ba'al': Ba'al Hamon being the chief god of the Carthaginians, who reached the apex of their global powers from their city near Tunis (in modern Tunisia) in the third and second centuries BC. Hannibal had the air of an immortal, but also believed that he enjoyed the protection of Melqart, the Phoenician equivalent of Hercules. Melqart was often equated with the sun itself. Such confidence in one's divine credentials can only breed an appetite for risk-taking.
Hannibal was clever, charismatic and fair. His success as a commander, argues Eve MacDonald in her comprehensive new book, Carthage: A New History of an Ancient Empire, 'rested in his soldiers and their loyalty to him'. The general was known for distributing bounties to his soldiers – a professional army drawn from many territories, including North Africa, Iberia, Greece and Italy – and following with further payments. The Romans, of course, despised him as the apparently unbeatable foe. The phrase Hannibal ad portas ('Hannibal is at the gates') gained currency during the Punic Wars between the two ancient superpowers, epitomising the fear as well as the awe he inspired in his adversaries.
But has Hannibal's fame eclipsed that of his civilisation? This is one of the questions MacDonald, a senior lecturer in Ancient History at Cardiff, poses in Carthage. The fact that Greek and Roman sources dating from soon after Hannibal's time focus so heavily upon him, she suggests, 'tends to skew our evidence about Carthage around the life of one man and his great deeds and adventures.' As a result, wider-ranging historical interest in the region 'gets lost in the appetite for daring deeds of great soldiers'. Napoleon's fascination is a prime example. MacDonald's history, then, is not so much revisionist as expansionist. Its subtitle might have been: 'Who Were the Carthaginians?'
Inhabitants of the ancient city were committed to comfortable living. Men – we know far more about them than we do the women – wore long tunics and earrings for pierced ears. On the evidence of Aristophanes, the Greek comedian, we can conjecture that they were mainly circumcised. From as early as the third century BC, the wealthier members of society had bathrooms with cisterns in their homes. They dined well on fish and a porridge consisting of grain with eggs, curd and honey. Meat was consumed mainly after religious sacrifices. One very early banquet, the remains of which were recently uncovered in the former Carthaginian city of Utica (near modern Bizerte), featured goat, oxen, pig, horse, and even turtle and dog.
The ruins of Carthage's Antonine baths in modern-day Tunisia - Getty
The architects of Carthaginian cities gave some consideration to the breeding and keeping of animals. MacDonald, who draws effectively upon her background in archaeology, describes stabling for horses and spaces inside the double 'casemate' walls of Carthage for raising elephants. Before Hannibal famously led 37 of the beasts across the Alps, Pyrrhus, King of the region of Epirus, introduced 20 to Italy, prior to his expedition to expel Carthaginians from Sicily. Having seen elephants in action, the Carthaginians were smitten, and went on to use them during their conquests of the Iberian Peninsula. The animals provided unparalleled cover for their retreat during a river-crossing beset by an hostile Celtic tribe. There's no consensus over which species the Carthaginians used, but a combination of African and Asian elephants is likely.
The Carthaginians would not have been nearly so famous had they not fought with Rome. And the Romans might never have created their enduring empire had it not been for Carthage, which they mercilessly destroyed in 146 BC following a lengthy siege. The difficulty for the modern historian is that, in putting Carthage on the map, the Romans cast shadow on its virtues.
It's a typical story of history being written by the conquerors. MacDonald's ambition to retell the history of Carthage from a Carthaginian perspective, then, is hampered by the limitations of the written material. This is unavoidable and only to be expected. No historian of the ancient world should be taken to task over the gaps in the sources; it's how they navigate those gaps that matters.
MacDonald pieces the material together admirably and succeeds in creating a thickly-layered portrait of a culture that has often struck readers as peculiar and violent. She takes a particularly sensitive approach to the interpretation of phenomena such as child-sacrifice. An open-air sanctuary in Carthage has been found to contain thousands of urns filled with the cremated bodies of babies, young children and animals. It is known as a tophet – from the Hebrew name of a valley in Jerusalem where the Philistines were said to 'sacrifice their children through fire'. Greek and Roman writers wrote with abhorrence of Carthaginian children being rolled into flame-filled pits.
Dido Building Carthage by J.M.W. Turner, 1815 - Getty
Were children sacrificed in prayer for the wellbeing of the city? Or are these the dedicated remains of infants who died from natural causes? Most were very young when they died and we know that the rate of infant mortality was high. MacDonald draws attention to the inscriptions upon the stelae erected next to the urns, and particularly to the words, 'because he / she heard our voice'. This looks very much like a divine offering in fulfilment of a vow or an answered prayer. While it remains unclear exactly what was happening here, it is interesting to observe, as MacDonald does, that similar sanctuaries have been discovered in Malta, Sardinia, Sicily and elsewhere in north Africa.
MacDonald is more vehemently myth-busting in her examination of the foundation of Carthage. According to the legend elaborated in Virgil's Aeneid, the city was established by Dido (known to the Carthaginians as Elissa), who fled her home in the Phoenician city of Tyre (in modern Lebanon) to escape her tyrannical brother Pygmalion. Having made landfall on the coast near Tunisia, the beleaguered Dido requested a piece of land only as large as an ox-hide. Her wish was granted, and she proceeded to chop up a hide into skinny strips, which she laid end to end to encompass a sizeable area for her new city. The citadel at Carthage was known thereafter as Byrsa, from the Greek for 'ox-hide'.
It's a brilliant story, and according to MacDonald, calls on the well-known concept of 'using an ox to plough an area of land to mark out boundaries'. That sounds plausible. One thing the ancient writers did get absolutely right was that Carthage was founded in the 9th century BC and had Phoenician origins. The earliest inscription found at Carthage – on a gold pendant placed in a tomb – dates to then and even refers to a 'Pygmalion'. Radiocarbon dating further supports a foundation date in the 9th century BC.
MacDonald writes clearly and frankly, and has produced an enjoyable and readily digestible introduction to Carthage. Hers is not a book of stylish prose or vivid description. The closest we come to the latter is in the opening pages, which recount the final destruction of Carthage, and in a survey of the aftermath of the Battle of Cannae, when 'steam rose in the morning off the still warm bodies of the dead and injured'. Some readers will favour such an information-over-atmosphere approach, and there is much to be said for giving it to us straight. But there were moments in which I felt that MacDonald could have let go a little. If Hannibal has one lesson for writers, it is surely that triumph is dependent upon risk.
★★★★☆
Daisy Dunn is the author of books including The Missing Thread: A New History of the Ancient World Through the Women Who Shaped It. Carthage: A New History of an Ancient Empire is published by Ebury at £22. To order your copy, call 0330 173 0523 or visit Telegraph Books
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
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Shipwreck found by schoolboy on Scottish island identified as Revolutionary War frigate later used to hunt whales in Arctic
Shipwreck found by schoolboy on Scottish island identified as Revolutionary War frigate later used to hunt whales in Arctic

CBS News

time2 days ago

  • CBS News

Shipwreck found by schoolboy on Scottish island identified as Revolutionary War frigate later used to hunt whales in Arctic

When a schoolboy going for a run found the ribs of a wooden ship poking through the dunes of a remote Scottish beach, it sparked a hunt by archaeologists, scientists and local historians to uncover its story. Through a mix of high-tech science and community research, they have an answer. Researchers announced Wednesday that the vessel is very likely the Earl of Chatham, an 18th-century warship that saw action in the American War of Independence before a second life hunting whales in the Arctic - and then a stormy demise. "I would regard it as a lucky ship, which is a strange thing to say about a ship that's wrecked," said Ben Saunders, senior marine archaeologist at Wessex Archaeology, a charity that helped community researchers conduct the investigation. The group posted video about the shipwreck early Wednesday. "I think if it had been found in many other places, it wouldn't necessarily have had that community drive, that desire to recover and study that material, and also the community spirit to do it," Saunders said. The wreck was discovered in February 2024 after a storm swept away sand covering it on Sanday, one of the rugged Orkney Islands that lie off Scotland's northern tip. As CBS News partner BBC News reported at the time, the timbers were held together with large wooden pegs, and locals on the island said they believed the ship may have been released from the seabed by violent winter storms. It excited interest on the island of 500 people, whose history is bound up with the sea and its dangers. Around 270 shipwrecks have been recorded around the 20-square-mile island since the 15th century. Resident David Walker told BBC Radio he was a history buff and he headed straight to the scene to take photos when he heard word of the discovery. "My interest made me jump straight in the van and head over and have a look," he told BBC Radio Orkney. "It's incredible, that was why I took so many pictures." Local farmers used their tractors and trailers to haul the 12 tons of oak timbers off the beach, before local researchers set to work trying to identify it. "That was really good fun, and it was such a good feeling about the community – everybody pulling together to get it back," said Sylvia Thorne, one of the island's community researchers. "Quite a few people are really getting interested in it and becoming experts." In September 2024, the shipwreck was put in a water tank for preservation and study, BBC News reported. Dendrochronology - the science of dating wood from tree rings - showed the timber came from southern England in the middle of the 18th century. That was one bit of luck, Saunders said, because it coincides with "the point where British bureaucracy's really starting to kick off" and detailed records were being kept. "And so we can then start to look at the archive evidence that we have for the wrecks in Orkney," Saunders said. "It becomes a process of elimination. "You remove ones that are Northern European as opposed to British, you remove wrecks that are too small or operating out of the north of England and you really are down to two or three … and Earl of Chatham is the last one left." Further research found that before it was the Earl of Chatham, the ship was HMS Hind, a 24-gun Royal Navy frigate built in Chichester on England's south coast in 1749. Its military career saw it play a part in the expansion - and contraction - of the British Empire. It helped Britain wrest control of Canada from France during the sieges of Louisbourg and Quebec in the 1750s, and in the 1770s served as a convoy escort during Britain's failed effort to hold onto its American colonies. Sold off by the navy in 1784 and renamed, the vessel became a whaling ship, hunting the huge mammals in the Arctic waters off Greenland. Whale oil was an essential fuel of the Industrial Revolution, used to lubricate machinery, soften fabric and light city streets. Saunders said that in 1787 there were 120 London-based whaling ships in the Greenland Sea, the Earl of Chatham among them. A year later, while heading out to the whaling ground, it was wrecked in bad weather off Sanday. All 56 crew members survived - more evidence, Saunders says, that this was a vessel blessed with luck. The ship's timbers are being preserved in a freshwater tank at the Sanday Heritage Centre while plans are discussed to put it on permanent display. Saunders said that the project is a model of community involvement in archaeology. "The community have been so keen, have been so desirous to be involved and to find out things to learn, and they're so proud of it. It's down to them it was discovered, it's down to them it was recovered and it's been stabilized and been protected," he said. For locals, it's a link to the island's maritime past - and future. Finding long-buried wrecks could become more common as climate change alters the wind patterns around Britain and reshapes the coastline. "One of the biggest things I've got out of this project is realizing how much the past in Sanday is just constantly with you - either visible or just under the surface," said Ruth Peace, another community researcher.

Forget Rome – this was the ancient empire that made the modern world
Forget Rome – this was the ancient empire that made the modern world

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

Forget Rome – this was the ancient empire that made the modern world

Napoleon is relatively unusual in western history for aligning himself with the brutal Hannibal – not Hannibal's Roman enemy, Scipio Africanus. The Frenchman's interest in the Carthaginian bordered on obsessional. He read every book about him he could find, including the Latin histories of Livy, and made copious notes. He could work examples from Hannibal's life into conversation with ease, and when he crossed the Alps in 1800, he knew precisely whose footsteps he was following in. Hannibal was more than a man: he was, like Napoleon, a god. Hannibal was no stranger himself to self-mythologising. His name meant 'he who is favoured by Ba'al': Ba'al Hamon being the chief god of the Carthaginians, who reached the apex of their global powers from their city near Tunis (in modern Tunisia) in the third and second centuries BC. Hannibal had the air of an immortal, but also believed that he enjoyed the protection of Melqart, the Phoenician equivalent of Hercules. Melqart was often equated with the sun itself. Such confidence in one's divine credentials can only breed an appetite for risk-taking. Hannibal was clever, charismatic and fair. His success as a commander, argues Eve MacDonald in her comprehensive new book, Carthage: A New History of an Ancient Empire, 'rested in his soldiers and their loyalty to him'. The general was known for distributing bounties to his soldiers – a professional army drawn from many territories, including North Africa, Iberia, Greece and Italy – and following with further payments. The Romans, of course, despised him as the apparently unbeatable foe. The phrase Hannibal ad portas ('Hannibal is at the gates') gained currency during the Punic Wars between the two ancient superpowers, epitomising the fear as well as the awe he inspired in his adversaries. But has Hannibal's fame eclipsed that of his civilisation? This is one of the questions MacDonald, a senior lecturer in Ancient History at Cardiff, poses in Carthage. The fact that Greek and Roman sources dating from soon after Hannibal's time focus so heavily upon him, she suggests, 'tends to skew our evidence about Carthage around the life of one man and his great deeds and adventures.' As a result, wider-ranging historical interest in the region 'gets lost in the appetite for daring deeds of great soldiers'. Napoleon's fascination is a prime example. MacDonald's history, then, is not so much revisionist as expansionist. Its subtitle might have been: 'Who Were the Carthaginians?' Inhabitants of the ancient city were committed to comfortable living. Men – we know far more about them than we do the women – wore long tunics and earrings for pierced ears. On the evidence of Aristophanes, the Greek comedian, we can conjecture that they were mainly circumcised. From as early as the third century BC, the wealthier members of society had bathrooms with cisterns in their homes. They dined well on fish and a porridge consisting of grain with eggs, curd and honey. Meat was consumed mainly after religious sacrifices. One very early banquet, the remains of which were recently uncovered in the former Carthaginian city of Utica (near modern Bizerte), featured goat, oxen, pig, horse, and even turtle and dog. The ruins of Carthage's Antonine baths in modern-day Tunisia - Getty The architects of Carthaginian cities gave some consideration to the breeding and keeping of animals. MacDonald, who draws effectively upon her background in archaeology, describes stabling for horses and spaces inside the double 'casemate' walls of Carthage for raising elephants. Before Hannibal famously led 37 of the beasts across the Alps, Pyrrhus, King of the region of Epirus, introduced 20 to Italy, prior to his expedition to expel Carthaginians from Sicily. Having seen elephants in action, the Carthaginians were smitten, and went on to use them during their conquests of the Iberian Peninsula. The animals provided unparalleled cover for their retreat during a river-crossing beset by an hostile Celtic tribe. There's no consensus over which species the Carthaginians used, but a combination of African and Asian elephants is likely. The Carthaginians would not have been nearly so famous had they not fought with Rome. And the Romans might never have created their enduring empire had it not been for Carthage, which they mercilessly destroyed in 146 BC following a lengthy siege. The difficulty for the modern historian is that, in putting Carthage on the map, the Romans cast shadow on its virtues. It's a typical story of history being written by the conquerors. MacDonald's ambition to retell the history of Carthage from a Carthaginian perspective, then, is hampered by the limitations of the written material. This is unavoidable and only to be expected. No historian of the ancient world should be taken to task over the gaps in the sources; it's how they navigate those gaps that matters. MacDonald pieces the material together admirably and succeeds in creating a thickly-layered portrait of a culture that has often struck readers as peculiar and violent. She takes a particularly sensitive approach to the interpretation of phenomena such as child-sacrifice. An open-air sanctuary in Carthage has been found to contain thousands of urns filled with the cremated bodies of babies, young children and animals. It is known as a tophet – from the Hebrew name of a valley in Jerusalem where the Philistines were said to 'sacrifice their children through fire'. Greek and Roman writers wrote with abhorrence of Carthaginian children being rolled into flame-filled pits. Dido Building Carthage by J.M.W. Turner, 1815 - Getty Were children sacrificed in prayer for the wellbeing of the city? Or are these the dedicated remains of infants who died from natural causes? Most were very young when they died and we know that the rate of infant mortality was high. MacDonald draws attention to the inscriptions upon the stelae erected next to the urns, and particularly to the words, 'because he / she heard our voice'. This looks very much like a divine offering in fulfilment of a vow or an answered prayer. While it remains unclear exactly what was happening here, it is interesting to observe, as MacDonald does, that similar sanctuaries have been discovered in Malta, Sardinia, Sicily and elsewhere in north Africa. MacDonald is more vehemently myth-busting in her examination of the foundation of Carthage. According to the legend elaborated in Virgil's Aeneid, the city was established by Dido (known to the Carthaginians as Elissa), who fled her home in the Phoenician city of Tyre (in modern Lebanon) to escape her tyrannical brother Pygmalion. Having made landfall on the coast near Tunisia, the beleaguered Dido requested a piece of land only as large as an ox-hide. Her wish was granted, and she proceeded to chop up a hide into skinny strips, which she laid end to end to encompass a sizeable area for her new city. The citadel at Carthage was known thereafter as Byrsa, from the Greek for 'ox-hide'. It's a brilliant story, and according to MacDonald, calls on the well-known concept of 'using an ox to plough an area of land to mark out boundaries'. That sounds plausible. One thing the ancient writers did get absolutely right was that Carthage was founded in the 9th century BC and had Phoenician origins. The earliest inscription found at Carthage – on a gold pendant placed in a tomb – dates to then and even refers to a 'Pygmalion'. Radiocarbon dating further supports a foundation date in the 9th century BC. MacDonald writes clearly and frankly, and has produced an enjoyable and readily digestible introduction to Carthage. Hers is not a book of stylish prose or vivid description. The closest we come to the latter is in the opening pages, which recount the final destruction of Carthage, and in a survey of the aftermath of the Battle of Cannae, when 'steam rose in the morning off the still warm bodies of the dead and injured'. Some readers will favour such an information-over-atmosphere approach, and there is much to be said for giving it to us straight. But there were moments in which I felt that MacDonald could have let go a little. If Hannibal has one lesson for writers, it is surely that triumph is dependent upon risk. ★★★★☆ Daisy Dunn is the author of books including The Missing Thread: A New History of the Ancient World Through the Women Who Shaped It. Carthage: A New History of an Ancient Empire is published by Ebury at £22. To order your copy, call 0330 173 0523 or visit Telegraph Books Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

School steps back in time to celebrate its 150th anniversary
School steps back in time to celebrate its 150th anniversary

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

School steps back in time to celebrate its 150th anniversary

Children and staff at a county primary school have dressed up in costumes from bygone days to mark its 150th anniversary. Ysgol Llys Hywel, Whitland, was founded in 1875, and the original school building was the perfect backdrop for commemorative photographs of the groups in their Victorian garb. 'It has been a joy to see pupils dress up for various themed days throughout the year, but this particular occasion was especially meaningful,' said a spokesperson for Ysgol Llys Hywel. 'Both pupils and staff made a wonderful effort to dress in Victorian clothing, reflecting the era in which the school was built.' The school, named after the Welsh king and law-maker, Hywel Dda, has around 150 pupils aged from four to 11. In addition to the historic main school building, it also has a modern school hall and additional classrooms. Staff at the school entered into the spirit of the occasion by donning Victorian costumes. (Image: Ysgol Llys Hywel) The school is now making an appeal for old photographs and memorabilia and can be contacted on admin@ The spokesperson added: 'As part of the celebration, pupils explored what life was like all those years ago and deepened their understanding of history through engaging activities. The day included a special picnic lunch, adding to the celebratory atmosphere." Read more Fears closure of fire-ravaged village school being 'steamrolled' through Schoolkids create 'welcome' artwork to greet visitors to town's museum "Throughout the day, pupils have developed a wide range of skills including being knowledgeable about their culture and community. These experiences have helped to nurture curiosity, empathy, and a sense of belonging to their local area." The school's 150th anniversary celebrations will continue into the autumn term. It is then hoped to host an open day for former pupils, parents, staff and members of the community to visit and see how the school building has evolved over time. Anyone who has any old photographs or memorabilia related to the school which can be included in the open day displays, contact admin@ linked above.

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