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Hannibal and Scipio Simon Hornblower

Hannibal and Scipio By Simon Hornblower

Hannibal and Scipio by Simon Hornblower


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Summary

The intersecting lives of the great Carthaginian general Hannibal and his Roman adversary Scipio led to one of the most fateful rivalries of antiquity. This absorbing joint biography shows not only how their careers illuminate one another but also how they lived through momentous times which both helped to shape.

Hannibal and Scipio Summary

Hannibal and Scipio: Parallel Lives by Simon Hornblower

The Second Punic War between Carthage and Rome began in 218 BCE and ended in 202 with the dramatic defeat at the Battle of Zama of Carthage's commander Hannibal by his adversary, the Roman Scipio. The two men were born about a decade apart but died in the same year, 183, following brilliant but ultimately unhappy careers. In this absorbing joint biography, celebrated historian Simon Hornblower reveals how the trajectory of each general illuminates his counterpart. Their individual journeys help us comprehend the momentous historical period which they shared, and which in distinct but interconnected ways they helped to shape. Hornblower interweaves his central military and political narrative with lively treatments of high politics, religious motivations and manipulations, overseas commands, hellenisation, and his subjects' ancient and modern reception. This gripping portrait of a momentous rivalry will delight readers of biography and military history and scholars and students of antiquity alike.

Hannibal and Scipio Reviews

'The parallel lives of two of antiquity's greatest commanders, as told by one of today's greatest classicists. Assuming the role of a modern-day Plutarch, Hornblower delves into the families, formative years, military exploits, political struggles, and fraught twilight years of these colossal adversaries.' Michael J. Taylor, University at Albany
'A prominent ancient historian like Simon Hornblower does not entertain the idea of writing an intertwined history of two equally prominent figures from the Roman Republic and Ancient Carthage unless he intends to enjoy the ride. Despite the fact that Hannibal and Scipio were seen together only once, producing an intertwined narrative of their lives is wholly sensible and no sustained attempt to do so has yet been made. The author has built his project into a magnificent piece of scholarship.' Toni Naco del Hoyo, ICREA Research Professor at Universitat de Girona

About Simon Hornblower

Simon Hornblower, FBA, is a former Senior Research Fellow in Classical Studies at All Souls College, Oxford, and was previously (from 200610) Professor of Classics and Grote Professor of Ancient History at University College London. Over the past fifty years he has written, edited or co-edited twenty-five books, including Commentary on Thucydides (3 Volumes, 19912008), Herodotus: Histories Book V and VI (Cambridge, 2013 and 2017) and, most recently, Livy: Ab urbe condita Book XXII (Cambridge, 2020) and Lykophron: Alexandra (2022).

Table of Contents

Prologue; 1. Hannibal and Scipio on themselves; 2. Origins: Hannibal: 247221 BCE, birth to age 26 years, Scipio: 235218, birth to aged 17 years; 3. Hannibal victorious: 221216, aged 2631 years; 4. Scipio 216205, aged 1930 years; 5. Hannibal frustrated in Italy, 216208, aged 3139; 6. Overseas commands: freedoms and perils; 7. Politics and factions at Carthage and Rome; 8. The tipping-point: the battle at the Metaurus or Sena, 207, Hannibal aged 40; 9. Hannibal and Scipio meet and fight at last: Zama, 202, aged 45 and 33; 10. The religion of Hannibal and Scipio; 11. Scipio triumphant, 202193, aged 3342; 12. Hannibal as reformer at Carthage, 196, aged 51; 13. Hannibal, Scipio, and the Greek world; 14. Hannibal flees to Antiochus III; his intrigues: 1953, aged 5254; 15. Hannibal and Scipio as military advisers: Magnesia, 190, aged 57 and 45; 16. Hannibal and Scipio: the military comparison; 17. Hannibal's years of wandering, 190183, aged 5764; 18. The downfall and death of Scipio, 187183, aged 4852; 19. Afterlives; 20. Conclusion: parallel lives.

Additional information

NGR9781009453356
9781009453356
1009453351
Hannibal and Scipio: Parallel Lives by Simon Hornblower
New
Hardback
Cambridge University Press
2024-09-26
528
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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