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Carthage

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Carthage

Ancient Phoenician port in North Africa founded by colonists from Tyre in the late 9th century BC; it lay 16 km/10 mi north of Tunis, Tunisia. A leading trading centre, it was in conflict with Greece from the 6th century BC, and then with Rome, and was destroyed by Roman forces in 146 BC at the end of the Punic Wars. About 45 BC, Roman colonists settled in Carthage, and it became the wealthy capital of the province of Africa. After its capture by the Vandals in AD 439 it was little more than a pirate stronghold. From 533 it formed part of the Byzantine Empire until its final destruction by Arabs in 698, during their conquest in the name of Islam.

Carthage is said to have been founded in 814 BC by Phoenician emigrants from Tyre, led by Princess Dido. It developed an extensive commerce throughout the Mediterranean and traded with the Tin Islands, whose location is believed to have been either Cornwall, England, or southwestern Spain. After the capture of Tyre by the Babylonians in the 6th century BC, Carthage became the natural leader of the Phoenician colonies in North Africa and Spain, and there soon began a prolonged struggle with the Greeks, which centred mainly on Sicily, the east of which was dominated by Greek colonies, while the west was held by Carthaginian trading stations. About 540 BC the Carthaginians defeated a Greek attempt to land in Corsica, and in 480 BC a Carthaginian attempt to conquer the whole of Sicily was defeated by the Greeks at Himera.

The population of Carthage before its destruction by the Romans in 146 BC is said to have numbered over 700,000. The constitution was an aristocratic republic with two chief magistrates elected annually and a senate of 300 life members. One aristocratic clan, the Barcids, which included Hannibal, traced their descent from Mago in the late 6th century BC. The religion was Phoenician, including the worship of the Moon goddess Tanit, the great Sun god Baal-Hammon, and the Tyrian Meklarth; human sacrifices were not unknown. The original strength of Carthage lay in its commerce and its powerful navy; its armies were for the most part mercenaries.

Carthage

City in west-central Illinois, USA, 23 km/14 mi east of Keokuk, Iowa; seat of Hancock County; population (1990) 2,700. It is an agricultural trading centre.

The city was laid out in 1833. In Old Carthage, open to the public, Mormon founder Joseph Smith and his brother were murdered by a mob on 17 June 1844.

Carthage

City in southwestern Missouri, USA, on the Spring River, 23 km/14 mi northeast of Joplin; seat of Jasper County; population (1990) 10,700. The city is known for its quarries, which produce a fine grey marble that has been used in major buildings throughout the US, including Macy's department store in New York City. In an agriculturally rich livestock raising and lead and zinc mining region, it manufactures food products and is a commercial and shipping centre.

Site of a Civil War battle (on 5 July 1861), it was virtually destroyed during the conflict and rebuilt afterward.

Carthage

Town in north-central Tennessee, USA, on the Cumberland River where the Caney Fork River joins it, 72 km/45 mi east of Nashville; seat of Smith County; population (1990) 2,400. Carthage is a tobacco market town and also produces cheese.

Founded in 1804, Carthage is known as the home of Albert Gore, Jr, US vice-president. The Cordell Hull Dam, which forms Cordell Hull Lake on the Cumberland, is 3 km/2 mi to the north.


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The government of Carthage seems well established, and in many respects superior to others; in some particulars it bears a near resemblance to the Lacedaemonians; and indeed these three states, the Cretans, the Lacedaemonians and the Carthaginians are in some things very like each other, in others they differ greatly.
Sparta, Athens, Rome, and Carthage were all republics; two of them, Athens and Carthage, of the commercial kind.
The Romans, in order to hold Capua, Carthage, and Numantia, dismantled them, and did not lose them.
 
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