Hannibal Barca: The General Who Nearly Destroyed Rome — Fexingo History
In 211 BCE, Hannibal Barca marched his Carthaginian army to the very gates of Rome, the ultimate gamble of the Second Punic War. This episode unpacks the dramatic three-day siege that never was, exploring why Hannibal chose to advance on the city after years of stalemate in southern Italy, and why he ultimately withdrew. Lucas and Luna examine the strategic context: the simultaneous Roman sieges of Capua and Syracuse, the role of the dictator Quintus Fulvius Flaccus, and the psychological impact on a city that had not seen an enemy army in centuries. They discuss the tactical challenges for Carthage—lack of siege equipment, the strength of the Servian Wall, and the loyalty of Rome's Latin allies. Polybius and Livy offer contrasting accounts of the march, with Livy's dramatic narrative of Roman mothers on the walls and Polybius's cooler military analysis. The episode also considers the long-term consequences: how Hannibal's failure to assault Rome cemented his reputation as a master of field battles but not of sieges, and how the Eternal City's survival became a founding myth of Roman invincibility. For listeners who know Hannibal's genius at Cannae, this is the story of the gamble that nearly changed history—and why it didn't. #Hannibal #SecondPunicWar #SiegeOfRome #QuintusFulviusFlaccus #Capua #Syracuse #Polybius #Livy #ServianWall #Carthage #RomanRepublic #MilitaryHistory #AncientWarfare #Barcid #HannibalAtTheGates #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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