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Mountain Passes Failed to Stop the March Toward Italy. Hannibal's military campaigns and battlefield tactics during the Punic Wars
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- Nombre de pages181
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-47882-8
- EAN9783565478828
- Date de parution05/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille1 Mo
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
Hannibal transformed military history by proving that strategic imagination could challenge even the expanding power of Rome. His campaigns combined logistical audacity, psychological warfare, and battlefield flexibility on a scale rarely attempted in the ancient world.
This account reconstructs the military strategy behind Hannibal's invasion of Italy during the Second Punic War. The crossing of the Alps with war elephants and multinational forces demonstrated extraordinary logistical coordination under extreme environmental conditions.
Roman commanders confronted an opponent capable of adapting rapidly to terrain, morale, and shifting alliances. The book also analyzes the tactical brilliance displayed at battles such as Cannae, where Hannibal executed one of history's most devastating double-envelopment maneuvers. Roman numerical superiority repeatedly became a weakness against Carthaginian mobility and strategic deception. Yet prolonged war gradually exposed the limits of sustaining campaigns far from secure supply networks. The Punic Wars emerge here not simply as military conflict, but as a contest between competing systems of warfare, endurance, and imperial ambition.
Roman commanders confronted an opponent capable of adapting rapidly to terrain, morale, and shifting alliances. The book also analyzes the tactical brilliance displayed at battles such as Cannae, where Hannibal executed one of history's most devastating double-envelopment maneuvers. Roman numerical superiority repeatedly became a weakness against Carthaginian mobility and strategic deception. Yet prolonged war gradually exposed the limits of sustaining campaigns far from secure supply networks. The Punic Wars emerge here not simply as military conflict, but as a contest between competing systems of warfare, endurance, and imperial ambition.










