Edit The Providence Journal
09 Oct 2011
PHILADELPHIA. “Carthage Must Be Destroyed,” by Richard Miles; Viking (544 pages, $35). You know a story is great when it grips you even when you know how it turns out ... This center of power rivaled Rome for centuries ... Carthage is a different case ... His ancestral family, the Barcids, had set up what amounted to a quasi-empire for themselves in the Iberian peninsula, keeping ties to Carthage but doing pretty much what they wanted....(size: 6.7Kb)
Edit The State
21 Sep 2011
"Carthage Must Be Destroyed" by Richard Miles; Viking (544 pages, $35). You know a story is great when it grips you even when you know how it turns out ... This center of power rivaled Rome for centuries ... Today's news video ... Telling it is a tough assignment ... His ancestral family, the Barcids, had set up what amounted to a quasi-empire for themselves in the Iberian peninsula, keeping ties to Carthage but doing pretty much what they wanted ... ....(size: 6.8Kb)
Edit Wall Street Journal
23 Jul 2011
By ADRIAN GOLDSWORTHY. View Full Image Erich Lessing/Art Resource, NY. A modern depiction of the military and commercial harbors constructed in Carthage in the second century B.C ... Recently—too recently for the information to be included in "Carthage Must Be Destroyed"—the site of the Battle of Baecula in 208 B.C., where Scipio Africanus defeated a Carthaginian army under Hannibal's brother Hasdrubal, was discovered in Spain....(size: 10.7Kb)
Edit Newsvine
22 Mar 2011
Gideon Rachman of Financial Times in his article “Hotheads, fainthearts and Gaddafi” wrote that the argument over whether to fight in Libya had many aspects to it – ideology, national interest, diplomacy, military calculation ... 1 ... Scipio studied Hannibal's tactics and brilliantly devised some of his own, and finally defeated Rome's nemesis at Zama having previously driven Hasdrubal, Hannibal's brother, out of Spain ... 2 ... ....(size: 4.0Kb)