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    • Double envelopment manoeuvre

      • By executing a double envelopment manoeuvre, Hannibal managed to encircle and annihilate the Romans. Hannibal’s clever use of the cavalry allowed him to outflank the Roman infantry. A year later, he adapted his strategy to a different terrain and used the fog at the Battle of Lake Trasimene to conceal his troops.
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HannibalHannibal - Wikipedia

    A counter-invasion of North Africa, led by the Roman general Scipio Africanus, forced him to return to Carthage. Hannibal was eventually defeated at the Battle of Zama, ending the war in a Roman victory. After the war, Hannibal successfully ran for the office of sufet.

  3. Oct 14, 2024 · Hannibal, whose army made up little more than half of the Romans, countered with his Iberian and Celtic cavalry alongside the river on his left, his heavy Libyan and Celtic infantry, wearing Roman armor taken from the dead at Trebia and Trasimene, in the middle, and his Numidians on the right.

  4. But how did Hannibal achieve these two early victories against the Roman Republic? At the start of the Second Punic War in 218 BC, Hannibal and his army of 20,000 men crossed the Alps into Italy. His goal was to defeat the Roman army and conquer Rome.

    • Tracing Hannibal's Route Through The Alps
    • Battles with Tribesmen
    • The Descent—As Treacherous as The Climb

    The precise route that Hannibal took through the Alps has been debated for more than 2,200 years. But research based upon ancient deposits of animal excrement, suggests that the Carthaginians may have gone through the Col de la Traversette, a narrow pass in southeastern France along the border with Italy that’s about 7,700 feet in altitude. When Ha...

    Nevertheless, as the tribesmen saw what a difficult time that the long trains of men and pack animals in the main Carthaginian force was having with the terrain, they decided to attack anyway. The Carthaginians suffered heavy losses. “The road leading up to the pass was not only narrow and uneven but flanked with precipices, and so the least moveme...

    Unfortunately for the Carthaginians, the descent was even steeper and more difficult than the hike into the mountains. In Polybius’ account, the Carthaginians slipped and slid down the slope. “It was impossible for a man to keep his feet,” he wrote, adding “the least stumble meant a fall, and a fall a slide, so that there was indescribable confusio...

  5. Hannibal led his Carthaginian army over the Alps and into Italy to take the war directly to the Roman Republic, bypassing Roman and allied land garrisons, and Roman naval dominance. The two primary sources for the event are Polybius and Livy, who were born c. 20 years and c. 160 years after the event, respectively. [2] .

  6. Nov 9, 2009 · In northern Italy in 208 B.C., Roman forces defeated an army of reinforcements led by Hannibal’s brother Hasdrubal, who had crossed the Alps in an attempt to come to Hannibal’s aid.