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The Epic Of Rome: The Punic Wars

Decent Essays

How Carthage became almost the equal of Rome, and how their conflict led to Rome becoming a naval power.
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University Of the People

Abstract
The Punic Wars were a turning point in the history of Rome in political, economic, and military terms. In fact, before the conflict with Carthage, Rome had never gone to war with non-Italian populations, although naturally they did not ignore their existence. In fact, the Romans had maintained peaceful relations and agreements with Carthage itself long before the Punic Wars. These relations and agreements had their reason in fundamentally different interests: the Romans were almost peasants and had their interests in the mainland (and in fact they did not have a naval fleet), while …show more content…

and 600 BC. The Phoenicians were people originating from the eastern coasts of the Mediterranean Sea, near present-day Lebanon, and were dedicated to trade (Hunt, 2016). The Phoenicians were skilled navigators and were able to trace the routes and navigate even at night by taking as their reference point the circumpolar constellations (like the Big Dipper). They used very sturdy ships built with cedar wood. These ships were also particularly suitable for trade because of the ability to contain large quantities of goods. The Phoenicians were therefore one of the first populations, together with the Greeks, to found their own colonies in the Mediterranean Sea, and Carthage was born as a Phoenician colony (Hunt, 2016). During the sixth century BC, Carthage established a vast network of trade throughout the western Mediterranean sea, and it founded a series of smaller colonies that soon gave it control of the Western Mediterranean area and brought it into contact with the Italic …show more content…

In this last territory, the opposing interests of the Carthaginians and Romans, the one masters of the western part of the island, the others of the eastern part, determined the outbreak of the first Punic war. During this war, which took place largely on the Sicilian territory, the Romans soon realized that in order to be able to completely drive away the Carthaginians from Sicily they would have had to defeat the powerful Punic navy. In fact, within a few years the Romans managed to equip themselves with their own fleet of over 100 warships (Vermeule & Ferguson, 2018); with this navy, the Romans succeeded in defeating the Carthaginians first at Milazzo in 260 BC, and then at the Egadi Islands in the 241 BC. The Carthaginians accepted at this point the peace with the Romans, and they were forced to evacuate Sicily and to pay an indemnity to Rome. They remained an independent nation, though. For Rome this was the beginning of its naval

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