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Hannibal : leadership, strategy, conflict / Nic Fields ; illustrated by Peter Dennis.

Author: Fields, Nic.

Imprint:Oxford ; New York : Osprey, 2010.

Description64 p. : ill. (some col.), col. maps ; 25 cm.

Note:Introduction -- The early years -- The military life -- The hour of destiny -- Opposing commanders -- Inside the mind -- When war is done -- A life in words.

Bibliography Note:Includes bibliographical references (p. 61-63) and index.

Note:By the end of the First Punic War against Carthage, the Romans had reduced the capital city of the Carthaginian Empire to a heap of ashes and destroyed its culture. In 219 BC, however, Hannibal, the eldest son of the charismatic general Hamilcar Barca, began the Second Punic War and was so successful that he threatened to destroy Roman power completely. Hannibal was a cool, thoughtful general, and can arguably be described as the greatest general of antiquity. His genius rested on a mixture of bluff, double bluff, and an ability to use all troop types to their best advantage. The battle of Cannae remains a chef-d'oeuvre to which generations of subsequent generals have aspired.



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Author:
Fields, Nic.
Subject:
Hannibal, 247 B.C.-182 B.C.
Hannibal, 247 B.C.-182 B.C -- Military leadership.
Subject:
Generals -- Tunisia -- Carthage (Extinct city) -- Biography.
Punic War, 2nd, 218-201 B.C.
Cannae, Battle of, Italy, 216 B.C.
Carthage (Extinct city) -- History.
Rome -- History -- Republic, 265-30 B.C.
Contributor
Dennis, Peter, 1950-