Carthage was the western Mediterranean's first superpower, long before
Rome, and her military history was powerful, eventful, and chequered
even before her 'Punic Wars' against Rome. Although characterized in the
surviving sources and modern studies as a predominantly mercantile
state, Carthage fought many wars, both aggressive and defensive, before
and in between the contests with the Roman parvenus. The Greek states of
Sicily, above all Syracuse under its tyrants Dionysius the Great and
then Agathocles, were her most resolute opponents, but in North Africa
itself, in Sardinia, and later on in Spain she won--and sometimes
lost--major wars. This is the first full-length study dedicated to these
other wars which furthered Carthage's interests for over half a
millennium. The book is based firmly and analytically on the ancient
sources, and among many insights is that Carthage, though usually
considered a naval power, did more fighting on land than at sea and with
more success.