Hasdrubal the Bald
Carthaginian general in the Second Punic War
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Second Punic War
- Prelude
- Saguntum
- Rhone
- Crossing of the Alps
- Italy
- Ticinus
- Trebia
- Mutina
- Placentia
- Victumulae
- Lake Trasimene
- Umbrian Lake
- Crossing of the Apennines
- Ager Falernus
- Geronium
- Cannae
- Silva Litana
- 1st Nola
- Nuceria Alfaterna
- 1st Casilinum
- Hamae
- 1st Petelia
- Cumae
- 2nd Nola
- 1st Beneventum
- 3rd Nola
- 2nd Casilinum
- Lucania
- Arpi
- 1st Tarentum
- 2nd Beneventum
- Campi Veteres
- 1st Capua
- Silarus
- 1st Herdonia
- 2nd Capua
- Rome
- Sapriportis
- 2nd Herdonia
- Numistro
- Canusium
- Manduria
- Caulonia
- 2nd Tarentum
- Locri
- 2nd Petelia
- Venusia
- Grumentum
- Metaurus
- Crotona
- Insubria
- Iberia
- Cissa
- Ebro River
- Ibera
- Illiturgis
- Munda
- Orongi
- Upper Baetis
- 1st New Carthage
- Baria
- Baecula
- Ilipa
- Sucro
- 1st Carteia
- 2nd Carteia
- 2nd New Carthage
- Sicily and Sardinia
- Lilybaeum
- Malta
- Decimomannu
- Leontini
- Syracuse
- Himera
- Agrigentum
- North Africa
- 1st Utica
- 2nd Utica
- Great Plains
- Cirta
- Zama
Hasdrubal the Bald (Latin: Hasdrubal Calvus; Punic: š¤š¤š¤š¤š¤š¤,[1] ŹæAzrubaŹæal, "Help of Baal") was a Carthaginian general in the Second Punic War. In 215 BCE, Hasdrubal was sent by Carthage to take the restive Roman territory of Sardinia, but his fleet was wrecked en route in a storm off the Balearic Islands.[2][3] By the time he regrouped and arrived, Manlius Torquatus had largely pacified the territory, defeating Hiostus, son of the Sardinian leader Hampsicora, and was well-prepared against Hasdrubal's arrival. Manlius handily defeated the combined Carthaginian and Sardinian forces in the Battle of Decimomannu, in which Hasdrubal the Bald was captured.
See also
- Other Hasdrubals in Carthaginian history
References
Citations
- ^ Huss (1985), p. 566.
- ^ Livy. The History of Rome by Titus Livius: Books Nine to Twenty-Six, trans. D. Spillan and Cyrus Edmonds. York Street, Covent Garden, London: Henry G. Bohn, 1868. 23.34
- ^ Astin, A.E., ed. (1953). The Cambridge Ancient History, Volume 8: Rome and the Mediterranean to 133 B.C (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 62. ISBN 9780521234481.
Bibliography
- Huss, Werner (1985), Geschichte der Karthager, Munich: C.H. Beck, ISBN 9783406306549. (in German)