Carthage: Rome's Greatest Enemy and Hannibal's Revenge — Fexingo History
This episode explores the life and legacy of Mago the Carthaginian, a figure rarely mentioned in popular history: an agricultural writer whose 28-volume work on farming was so highly regarded that after Carthage fell, the Roman Senate ordered its translation into Latin. We dive into what Mago's manual actually covered—crop rotation, viticulture, beekeeping, and animal husbandry—and why these practical insights were so prized across the ancient world. Lucas and Luna discuss how Mago's work influenced Roman writers like Cato and Varro, and what it reveals about Carthaginian society: that one of Rome's greatest enemies also produced the definitive ancient guide to agriculture. They touch on the loss of the original Punic text and how fragments survive through Latin and Greek quotations. The conversation also considers the irony of Rome preserving and disseminating the knowledge of the city it had systematically destroyed. This is a story about agriculture, empire, and the unexpected ways conquered cultures can shape their conquerors. #Mago #CarthaginianAgriculture #PunicFarming #RomanAgriculture #Cato #Varro #AncientViticulture #BeekeepingHistory #OliveOil #CropRotation #LostTexts #PunicLanguage #NorthAfrica #History #FexingoHistory #AncientKnowledge #SecondPunicWar #AgriculturalHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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