Re: Great Commanders
Most of his supplies were via Spain and the Northern Alps or by looting. Some of it might have been via sea but then again without confirmation, that's just conjecture. What was known was through his campaign, Hannibal did not get a permanent sea port for resupply but somehow he manage to remain in contact - via the sea?
If I wasn't chuckling away, I be reaching for a trusty Browning right now. Alright you did not said specifically that logistics has nothing to do with success in war, so you can save yourself a trip to the shrink. Lets pass up on the logistics angle and assume that we both agree that without proper logistics, it be like wearing 2 left boots at the same time.veronius said:Whoa - so I said logistics has nothing to do with success in war? Man, I can't believe the stupid stuff I say sometimes! Once I finish this post I'm getting a checkup.
I can't find any reference as to how Hannibal and his forces from Italy manage to get to Carthage, so no comments on that. He might have got in by submarine for all I know. As for "command of the sea" and a "total blockade", there is a great difference. Perhaps I should be visiting my shrink since all I said was Rome "wrested control of the Med." - as in the Roman navy manage to kick Carthage's navy ass.veronius said:If Roman domination of the seas was so total, how did Hannibal get what was left of his army back to Africa before the battle of Zama? (No references to Airbus will be accepted.) Rome may have had 'command of the sea' but no ancient navy was capable of anything like a total blockade of an entire nation's coastline over open waters. Hannibal spent much of his time in Italy trying to capture a port so he could be resupplied by sea, which suggests that it was indeed possible.
Hannibal was not as successful at causing a mass defection, unlike what Scipio did with Massinissa and his Nubians. Southern Italy merely switch sides when Hannibal was threatening them but did not supply any troops. With Rome still undefeated and recent memory of how punitive she can get, most southern Italy cities just swear dubious loyalty.veronius said:But whether or not Hannibal got supplies through by sea, don't forget the many regions and cities that defected to him on his way to Italy and during his time there. In some respects Hannibal was in what might be considered friendly territory for much of his Italian campaign. The Gauls in northern Italy alone supplied several thousand soldiers and who knows what in the way of supplies when he passed through. Large parts of southern Italy went over to Hannibal and I'm sure the people there did more than just wave flags for him.
Most of his supplies were via Spain and the Northern Alps or by looting. Some of it might have been via sea but then again without confirmation, that's just conjecture. What was known was through his campaign, Hannibal did not get a permanent sea port for resupply but somehow he manage to remain in contact - via the sea?
Only after you pointed it out - perhaps the 13000 simply melted away in the face of Rome's might? If I can find a more reliable source I will post it when I come across any. Strange but the old book sources are more in-depth then the internet types and less full of personal skews.veronius said:The barca source you sent (I've seen it before) seems a bit inconsistent. In listing the opposing forces for Zama they give Scipio 43,000 men and then say 30,000 men - in the same paragraph! So I don't know that it's much help to either of us.
He did not have his cavalry at that time, his own supplies and allies were shaky and Scipio had spent time since his first encounter with Hannibal training his troops to counter Hannibal's tactics. If both had been equally match, my money would have been on Hannibal.veronius said:Finally, it is true that Hannibal had a high proportion of fairly raw, inexperienced troops, but his classic encirclement strategy depended for its success on the presence of large bodies of relatively weak troops in the centre, who would at best be able to just hold their own against the Romans, if not giving way slightly, while the flanks closed in.