Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Carthaginian Empire

View through CrossRef
The Carthaginian Empire: 550 – 202 BCE argues for a new history of the Phoenician polity. In contrast to previous studies of the Carthaginian Empire that privileged evidence from Greco-Roman sources, Nathan Pilkington bases his study on evidence preserved in the archaeological and epigraphic records of Carthage and its colonies and dependencies. Using this evidence, Pilkington demonstrates that the Carthaginian Empire of the 6th– 4th centuries BCE — as recovered archaeologically and epigraphically — bears little resemblance to currently accepted historical reconstructions. He then presents an independent archaeological and epigraphic reconstruction of the Carthaginian Empire. In this presentation, the author argues that the Carthaginian Empire developed later, chronologically, and was less extensive, geographically, than reconstructions based on the Greco-Roman source tradition suggest. Pilkington further shows that Carthage developed a similar infrastructure of imperial power to those developed in Rome and Athens. Like its contemporaries, Carthage used colonization, the establishment of metropolitan political institutions at dependent polities, and the reorganization of trade into a metropolitan hub-and-spoke system to develop imperial control over subordinated territories.
Lexington Books
Title: The Carthaginian Empire
Description:
The Carthaginian Empire: 550 – 202 BCE argues for a new history of the Phoenician polity.
In contrast to previous studies of the Carthaginian Empire that privileged evidence from Greco-Roman sources, Nathan Pilkington bases his study on evidence preserved in the archaeological and epigraphic records of Carthage and its colonies and dependencies.
Using this evidence, Pilkington demonstrates that the Carthaginian Empire of the 6th– 4th centuries BCE — as recovered archaeologically and epigraphically — bears little resemblance to currently accepted historical reconstructions.
He then presents an independent archaeological and epigraphic reconstruction of the Carthaginian Empire.
In this presentation, the author argues that the Carthaginian Empire developed later, chronologically, and was less extensive, geographically, than reconstructions based on the Greco-Roman source tradition suggest.
Pilkington further shows that Carthage developed a similar infrastructure of imperial power to those developed in Rome and Athens.
Like its contemporaries, Carthage used colonization, the establishment of metropolitan political institutions at dependent polities, and the reorganization of trade into a metropolitan hub-and-spoke system to develop imperial control over subordinated territories.

Related Results

Rethinking early Carthaginian coinage
Rethinking early Carthaginian coinage
The coins minted by the Carthaginians in silver, gold, electrum, billon and bronze comprise one of the largest coinages that circulated in the W Mediterranean before the Roman conq...
‘Carthage Must Be Destroyed’, 400 BC–146 BC
‘Carthage Must Be Destroyed’, 400 BC–146 BC
While the war between Athens and Sparta for control of the Aegean was at its peak, other conflicts, further to the west, embroiled Greek cities in struggles for their life. Carthag...
Classical-Hellenistic Carthage Before the Punic Wars (479–265 bce)
Classical-Hellenistic Carthage Before the Punic Wars (479–265 bce)
Carthage in 479–265 bce reached a size and prosperity equaling any leading Greek city-state. Despite its defeat in Sicily in 480 bce, its economic reach across the Mediterranean gr...
The Punic Wars
The Punic Wars
The three wars between the Romans and the Carthaginians (the Poeni, an alternative name reflecting their Phoenician origins) contrasted with their earlier relations. Rome and Carth...
Mastia Tarseion Revisited - The Geographical Limits of Polybius’ Second Romano-Carthaginian Treaty
Mastia Tarseion Revisited - The Geographical Limits of Polybius’ Second Romano-Carthaginian Treaty
Polybius reports that the second Romano-Carthaginian treaty included a clause forbidding the Romans to pillage, trade, or found cities beyond the Fair Promontory (modern Cape Bon) ...
Childhood and Empire
Childhood and Empire
Since at least the 1990s, scholarship within and beyond the disciplinary boundaries of history, cultural studies, and literary studies has systematically attended to the coming tog...
Architecture of the Eastern Roman Empire
Architecture of the Eastern Roman Empire
The topic of architecture of the eastern parts in the Roman Empire is wide-ranging geographically and broad-ranging chronologically, including architecture that ranges from Greece ...
The Punic Wars (264–146 bce)
The Punic Wars (264–146 bce)
The chapter provides a narrative in broad strokes of the period between 264 and 146 bce. The sources for the period are heavily biased in favor of the Romans, but the Romans did lo...

Back to Top