The Carthaginians Prepare
No such considerations, however, prevented the
note
Carthaginians in their hour of distress from
appointing Hanno general; because he had the
credit of having on a former occasion reduced
the city called Hecatompylos, in Libya, to obedience. They
also set about collecting mercenaries; arming their own citizens
who were of military age; training and drilling the city cavalry;
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and refitting what were left of their ships, triremes, penteconters, and the largest of the pinnaces. Meanwhile MathÅs,
being joined by as many as seventy thousand Libyans, distributed these fresh troops between the two forces which were
besieging Utica and Hippo Zarytus, and carried on those
sieges without let or hindrance. At the same time they kept
firm possession of the encampment at Tunes, and had thus
shut out the Carthaginians from the whole of outer Libya.
For Carthage itself stands on a projecting peninsula in a gulf,
nearly surrounded by the sea and in part also by a lake. The
isthmus that connects it with Libya is three miles broad: upon
one side of this isthmus, in the direction of the open sea and
at no great distance, stands the city of Utica, and on the other
stands Tunes, upon the shore of the lake. The mercenaries
occupied both these points, and having thus cut off the Carthaginians from the open country, proceeded to take measures
against Utica itself. They made frequent excursions up to
the town wall, sometimes by day and sometimes by night, and
were continually throwing the citizens into a state of alarm and
absolute panic.