Book contents
- Hannibal and Scipio
- Reviews
- Frontispiece
- Hannibal and Scipio
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Maps
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Notes for the Reader
- Additional material
- Additional material
- Timeline
- Abbreviations
- Prologue
- Chapter 1 Hannibal and Scipio on Themselves
- Chapter 2 Origins
- Chapter 3 Hannibal Victorious, 221–216
- Chapter 4 Scipio 216–205
- Chapter 5 Hannibal Frustrated in Italy, 216–208
- Chapter 6 Overseas Commands
- Chapter 7 Politics and Factions at Carthage and Rome
- Chapter 8 The Tipping Point
- Chapter 9 Hannibal and Scipio Meet and Fight at Last
- Chapter 10 The Religion of Hannibal and Scipio
- Chapter 11 Scipio Triumphant, 202–193
- Chapter 12 Hannibal as Political Reformer at Carthage, 196
- Chapter 13 Hannibal, Scipio, and the Greek World
- Chapter 14 Hannibal Flees to Antiochus III; His Intrigues; 195–193
- Chapter 15 Hannibal and Scipio as Military Advisers in the Late 190s: The Road to Magnesia, 190
- Chapter 16 Hannibal and Scipio
- Chapter 17 Hannibal’s Years of Wandering, 190–183
- Chapter 18 The Downfall and Death of Scipio, 187–183
- Chapter 19 Afterlives
- Chapter 20 Conclusion
- References
- Index
Chapter 1 - Hannibal and Scipio on Themselves
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2024
- Hannibal and Scipio
- Reviews
- Frontispiece
- Hannibal and Scipio
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Maps
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Notes for the Reader
- Additional material
- Additional material
- Timeline
- Abbreviations
- Prologue
- Chapter 1 Hannibal and Scipio on Themselves
- Chapter 2 Origins
- Chapter 3 Hannibal Victorious, 221–216
- Chapter 4 Scipio 216–205
- Chapter 5 Hannibal Frustrated in Italy, 216–208
- Chapter 6 Overseas Commands
- Chapter 7 Politics and Factions at Carthage and Rome
- Chapter 8 The Tipping Point
- Chapter 9 Hannibal and Scipio Meet and Fight at Last
- Chapter 10 The Religion of Hannibal and Scipio
- Chapter 11 Scipio Triumphant, 202–193
- Chapter 12 Hannibal as Political Reformer at Carthage, 196
- Chapter 13 Hannibal, Scipio, and the Greek World
- Chapter 14 Hannibal Flees to Antiochus III; His Intrigues; 195–193
- Chapter 15 Hannibal and Scipio as Military Advisers in the Late 190s: The Road to Magnesia, 190
- Chapter 16 Hannibal and Scipio
- Chapter 17 Hannibal’s Years of Wandering, 190–183
- Chapter 18 The Downfall and Death of Scipio, 187–183
- Chapter 19 Afterlives
- Chapter 20 Conclusion
- References
- Index
Summary
Hannibal and Scipio left no autobiographies, except that Hannibal in 205, before leaving Italy for Africa, inscribed a bilingual account of his military resources. Scipio’s contemporary funeral elogium (list of his offices and achievements, a kind of succinct obituary) does not survive (a much later one does). This chapter offers, by way of introduction, semi-fictional replacements for these missing documents and explains what Hannibal’s full inscription is likely to have contained. Other first-person evidence by the two men is quoted and discussed, such as letters reported in the literary sources. The chapter closes by asking what Hannibal and Scipio looked like. Appendix 1.1 lists and evaluates the sources for the book, and there is a sub-section on reliability of speeches. Appendix 1.2 addresses the problem of whether Plutarch’s lost Life of Scipio was about Hannibal’s opponent or Scipio Aemilianus, his younger relative by adoption. Appendix 1.3 is about ‘roving anecdotes’.
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- Hannibal and ScipioParallel Lives, pp. 9 - 40Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024