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Rome and Carthage don’t start as mortal enemies, they start as trading partners signing treaties that quietly reveal who holds real power at sea. From the very first agreement, Carthage looks like the obvious favorite: a Phoenician-descended commercial empire with ships everywhere, deep trade routes, and wealth flowing in from silver and gold. Rome looks local, landlocked by comparison, and boxed into someone else’s maritime rules.

We follow how that imbalance breaks down into the Punic Wars, and why the outcome isn’t just about tactics. You’ll hear how Sicily becomes the spark, how Rome copies Carthaginian ship design, and how the Corvus turns naval combat into the kind of close-quarters fight Roman infantry can win. Then we shift to the real constraint behind every ancient campaign: paying for it. Bronze money floods, costs spiral, and both states face the same brutal problem of wartime finance, from improvised “war bonds” to desperate loans.

The story climaxes with Hannibal’s Spain-backed revival, the Alps crossing, the shock of Trasimene and Cannae, and Rome’s refusal to negotiate even while the treasury collapses. That’s where the denarius enters as a decisive financial technology, and where Iberian silver becomes the strategic prize that changes everything after Scipio’s victories. We close on the uncomfortable lesson Rome learns too late: commerce and credit can rebuild a defeated rival faster than armies can predict, feeding the paranoia that ends with “Carthago Delante Est” and the annihilation of a prosperous city.

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