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30-Day Sardinia History Project Day Three

03 Wednesday Jul 2024

Posted by Marie Antonia Parsons in General

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Carthage, hampsicora, hannibal, ilienses, iolaus, Rome, sardegna, Sardinia

Part One: The Rebellion of Hampsicora

By the year 215 BC Hannibal Barca, having invaded Italy, had won three victories over the Roman legions. His third and greatest of these victories was at Cannae in August 216. BC.

As this news spread, towns and cities in Italy (eg Capua) defected over to Hannibal. News was even brought to Carthage that in Sardinia, the Roman army left there was small, that the praetor Aulus Cornelius Mammula was returning to Rome and that a new one would be sent in his place. The news also said that the Sardinians were wearied under the long and severe Roman rule due to heavy taxes and oppressive demands for corn to supply the legions.

According to the Roman historian Livy (who wrote during the rule of Caesar Augustus) the leader of this Sardinian embassy sent to Carthage was Hampsicora, a ma n of wealth and influence. The new Roman Praetor Quintus Mucius Scaevola soon fell ill due to the bad air and water and thus unable to ensure that peace and Roman control continued in the island. T Manlius Torquatus was thus sent to Sardinia with 5000 infantry and 400 cavalry, which later grew to 22,000 infantry and 1200 cavalry. Carthage also sent a fleet to Sardinia under Hasdrubal te Bald but a violent storm drove the ships onto the Balearic Islands, losing time in making repairs.

Torquatus marched his troops from near the port of Carales (modern Cagliari) in the south to the region around Cornus. Hampsicora had set up a camp in that area and Torquatus set his camp nearby. Livy later writes that the Sardinian camp already held at least 3000 men but Hampsicora wanted further aid from the the Sardi Pelliti, the hill and mountain people (especially the tribe called the Ilienses. These people, according to legend and the writings of Pausanias, traced back to the Greek hero Iolaus, nephew and friend of Hercules, who had brought the THespiades, fifty sons of Hercules by the daughters of the King of THespis, to settle and establish a colony in Sardinia)

Hampsicora had left his son Hostus in command at his camp. Livy describes Hostus as having the presumption of youth, as he decided to engage the legions. In the ensuing battle Livy says as many as 3000 Sardinians died,, and about 800 taken prisoner. Hostus fled after the rout, perhaps to the nearby city of Cornus, where the remainder of his army arrived.

THe Romans returned south to Carales, giving Hampsicora, having reunited with his son (Livy does not say if the Ilienses or others joined_ a chance to finally meet with Hasdrubal and his fleet, which had belatedly arrived. THe two armies again met first in several skirmishes and small encounters. Finally, they fought a four-hour pitched battle until Carthaginians and Sardinians were again routed. Torquatus turned their intended flight into a carnage, killing 2000 and capturing 3700, including Hasdrubal.

Hostus was among the slain, but Hampsicora had managed to flee with a few cavalry. Learning of his son’s death, he committed suicide during the night. Afterwards all cities which had gone over to Hampsicora surrendered to the Romans and gave hostages, money and corn..

Part Two: Hannibal Barca’s links to Sardinia

When the origins of the Second Punic War (between Carthage and Rome) are discussed, the usual reason has to do with the Carthaginian expansion in Spain and its possible violation of a treaty signed between Rome and Carthage, centered around the Spanish city of Saguntum.

While that was certainly a factor in Hannibal’s decision, he also makes reference to Sardinia’s loss to Rome. He does this in two different ways.

The first is in a speech given by Hannibal to his troops, shortly after they successfully crossed the Alps into Italy. As written by Livy, Hannibal says, “If it were only Sicily and Sardinia, wrested from our fathers, that we were going to recover by our valor, these would still be great enough rewards.” Later in the same speech Hannibal makes reference to Rome’s interference with Carthage in Spain, and again refers to Sardinia: ” [[Rome]] circumscribes and hems us in with boundaries [[and tells us ‘Do not cross the Ebro! Have nothing to do with the Saguntines!’ Is it not enough they have taken away my ancient provinces of Sicily and Sardinia? Are they taking away Spain as well?”

Polybius, the Greek historian who wrote roughly 100 years after the Second Punic War, describes the oath and treaty made between and by Hannibal and King Philip V of Macedon. Hannibal had wanted aid against Rome after the battle of Cannae. In his Fragments of Book VII, Part III, Affairs of Greece, Polybius writes that Hannibal swore his oath of common cause by the gods Zeus, Hera and Apollo in the presence of the “genius” of Carthage (thought to be the goddess Tanit), of Heracles and Iolaus, in the presence of Ares, Triton and Poseidon.

It is most appropriate that Hannibal would invoke the Carthaginian gods in some say for his oath, It also seems appropriate that he might also invoke Greek gods, as his hoped-for ally was from Macedon. Why would he include Hercules and Iolaus, if not for their links to having colonized Sardinia. It should also be noted that Hercules had assimilated with the Carthaginian deity Melqart, but Iolaus bore no role in that, except that he was sent by Hercules to Sardinia.

Both of these aspects seem to indicate that Sardinia’s loss to Rome was felt profoundly intensely by Hannibal. While the question of Saguntum in SPain and Carthaginian expansion there was an economic and political issue of conflict, Sardinia’s loss, like the face of Helen of Troy in that previous war, seems to have been a more visceral casus belli for Hannibal in his desire to conquer Rome and take back what Carthage had lost.

30-Days of Sardinian History: Day One-Sardinia Becomes a Roman Province.

01 Monday Jul 2024

Posted by Marie Antonia Parsons in General

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ancient-history, Carthage, Rome, sardegna, Sardinia

The island of Sardinia lies just south of Corsica, off the western coast of the Italian peninsula.

In the year 227 BC, ie 526 years after the founding of Rome and 282 years after Rome ended its monarchy and became a Republic, the island became one of the first two overseas provinces for the Roman Republic (Sicily being the other). No ancient source usually providing details about Rome’s history provides us any details. but we have a Summary for Livy’s Book XX that would have covered this period that “The number of praetors (provincial governors) was enlarged to four” and it is assumed that the two new praetors were for Sicily and Sardinia.

Fourteen years earlier, Rome had finally won a victory over the North African city-state of Carthage after twenty-years of warfare, from 264 to 241 BC. The resulting peace treaty between the two cities made no mention of Sardinia. Polybius records that in 509 BC Carthage and Rome had signed a treaty, which apparently was renewed several times up until shortly before 264 BC. This treaty clearly stated that Sardinia was part of Carthaginian, not Roman, economic and political control.

Carthage’s armies had for centuries relied on mercenaries as well as native troops. Mercenaries came from Libya, Gaul, the Balearic islands, the Italian peninsula, and Sardinia itself. Mercenaries had to be paid, but Carthage’s treasury was seriously depleted and she began a delaying game to avoid payment.

This did not sit well with the mercenaries, as Polybius Book 1. 79 records in some detail.

Rebellion among the mercenaries took lasted about three years, from 241 to about 237 BC. Trouble broke out first in Libya, and spread to the Carthaginian garrison in Sardinia, particularly its mercenaries. These decided to kill their Carthaginian commander and officers, then attacked the Carthaginians in the towns and countryside surrounding the garrison. It was left to the indigenous Sardinians, according to Polybius, who drove the mercenaries out of the island and they sailed to the Italian peninsula.

The mercenaries sent pleas for aid to Rome, who at first declined but later decided it could not take the chance of allowing any non-Roman force to control the island and its waters. When Carthage sent word that it intended to take back its governance of Sardinia, Rome had enough, taking this as a new prelude to war–which Carthage was not prepared for, and so in 237 the peace treaty was amended with Sardinia becoming a province of Rome.

There is far more to this tale than in this brief record.

Two things stand out.

The first is that Polybius clearly refers to native, indigenous (ie not Carthaginian or other non-Sardinian) people who have enough strength and willpower to take action. Rome’s legions would face more of these indigenous during the next few years and decades. One has to wonder when Sardinia was first populated-how far back does its pre-Roman, pre-Carthaginian, human culture go?

More on this in later days.

The second item of interest is that Hannibal Barca (he who crossed the Alps and invaded Italy in the Second War between Carthage and Rome) took this “seizure of Sardinia by Rome” as a cause for his invasion. The Roman historian Livy, writing in the age of Emperor Augustus, believed this to be so because in his Book XXI. 43 he writes Hannibal speaking to his troops, saying “If it were only Sicily and Sardinia, wrested from our fathers, that we were going to recover by our valor, these would still be great enough rewards,” And again, “our hearts are kindled and pricked by rancor, wrongs and insults…Most inhuman and most arrogant of nations [[referring to Rome]] they reckon the world is theirs and subject to their pleasure…Is it not enough that you have taken away my ancient provinces of Sicily and Sardinia?”

So Sardinia and her people became a causus belli for Hannibal (along with the trouble Rome made over his expansion in Spain) to invade Italy and threaten Rome.

One of those “What Ifs?” What if Hannibal had been victorious and Sardinia reverted to Carthaginian control? How would that have played out?

Here Ends Day One.

Day Two: For decades Rome’s Legions fight to subdue indigenous rebellions.

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