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  2. Military of Carthage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_of_Carthage

    The Carthaginian military was a combined arms force, which comprised light and heavy infantry, siege engines, skirmishers, light and heavy cavalry, as well as war elephants and chariots. Supreme command of the military was initially held by the civilian Suffetes until the third century BC.

  3. Hellenistic-era warships - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hellenistic-era_warships

    Hellenistic-era warships. The famous 2nd century BC Nike of Samothrace, standing atop the prow of an oared warship, most probably a trihemiolia. From the 4th century BC on, new types of oared warships appeared in the Mediterranean Sea, superseding the trireme and transforming naval warfare. Ships became increasingly large and heavy, including ...

  4. Ships of ancient Rome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ships_of_ancient_Rome

    Ships of ancient Rome. Ancient Rome had a variety of ships that played crucial roles in its military, trade, and transportation activities. [1] Rome was preceded in the use of the sea by other ancient, seafaring civilizations of the Mediterranean. The galley was a long, narrow, highly maneuverable ship powered by oarsmen, sometimes stacked in ...

  5. Battle of Phintias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Phintias

    Treaty of Lutatius. The naval Battle of Phintias took place in 249 BC during the First Punic War near modern Licata, southern Sicily between the fleets of Carthage under Carthalo and the Roman Republic under Lucius Junius Pullus. The Carthaginian fleet had intercepted the Roman Fleet off Phintias, and had forced it to seek shelter.

  6. Marsala Punic shipwreck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marsala_Punic_shipwreck

    The shapes of the remains of the ships complement each other, in particular with a ram, and provide a unique document of the Carthaginian navy during the First Punic War. [29] [16] The information supplied by the excavation and the study of the Marsala Punic shipwreck corroborated naval depictions in Punic numismatics and Carthage tophet steles ...

  7. Punic Wars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punic_Wars

    Rome. Carthage. The Punic Wars were a series of wars between 264 and 146 BC fought between the Roman Republic and Ancient Carthage. Three wars took place, on both land and sea, across the western Mediterranean region and involved a total of forty-three years of warfare. The Punic Wars are also considered to include the four-year-long revolt ...

  8. Battle of the Bagradas River (255 BC) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_the_Bagradas...

    13,000 killed. 500 captured. The Battle of the Bagradas River (the ancient name of the Medjerda), also known as the Battle of Tunis, was a victory by a Carthaginian army led by Xanthippus over a Roman army led by Marcus Atilius Regulus in the spring of 255 BC, nine years into the First Punic War. The previous year, the newly constructed Roman ...

  9. Battle of Catana (397 BC) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Catana_(397_BC)

    The Battle of Catana took place in the summer of 397 BC. The Greek fleet under Leptines, the brother of Dionysius I of Syracuse, engaged the Carthaginian fleet under Mago near the city of Catana in Sicily. While the Greek army under Dionysius was present near the city of Catana during the battle, the Carthaginian army under Himilco was away in ...