Hannibal Barca: The General Who Nearly Destroyed Rome — Fexingo History
In 213 BC, Hannibal pulled off one of his most audacious strategic victories: the capture of Tarentum, a wealthy Greek city in southern Italy. Unlike Cannae or Lake Trasimene, this wasn't a pitched battle — it was a carefully orchestrated betrayal engineered by a Tarentine noble named Philemenos. Working with Hannibal's Numidian cavalry and a platoon of Iberian soldiers, Philemenos and his conspirators opened the city gates under cover of a moonless night, slaughtering the Roman garrison and handing the city to Carthage. Historians Polybius and Livy tell the story with dramatic flair, but what really happened? We examine the siege's logistics, the brutal aftermath, and why Tarentum — despite its defection — never fully trusted Hannibal. We also explore the broader political context: how Magna Graecia's Greek cities weighed Carthaginian promises against Roman retribution, and how Hannibal's failure to hold the citadel of Tarentum foreshadowed the long-term weakness of his Italian strategy. A fresh look at a pivotal moment in the Second Punic War. #HannibalBarca #Tarentum #Philemenos #SecondPunicWar #Carthage #Rome #Polybius #Livy #MagnaGraecia #NumidianCavalry #SiegeWarfare #AncientHistory #Betrayal #ItalianCampaign #HannibalStrategy #CarthaginianHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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