Aftereffects in Hippo, Utica, and Sardinia
Most places in Libya submitted to Carthage after this
note
battle. But the towns of Hippo and Utica still
held out, feeling that they had no reasonable
grounds for obtaining terms, because their
original acts of hostility left them no place for mercy or
pardon. So true is it that even in such outbreaks, however
criminal in themselves, it is of inestimable advantage to
be moderate, and to refrain from wanton acts which commit
their perpetrator beyond all power of forgiveness. Nor did
their attitude of defiance help these cities. Hanno invested
one and Barcas the other, and quickly reduced them to accept
whatever terms the Carthaginians might determine.
The war with the Libyans had indeed reduced Carthage to note
dreadful danger; but its termination enabled her not only to
re-establish her authority over Libya, but also to inflict condign punishment upon the authors of the revolt. For the last
act in the drama was performed by the young men conducting
a triumphal procession through the town, and
finally inflicting every kind of torture upon
MathÅs. For three years and about four months did the
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mercenaries maintain a war against the Carthaginians which
far surpassed any that I ever heard of for cruelty and inhumanity.
And about the same time the Romans took in hand a note
naval expedition to Sardinia upon the request
of the mercenaries who had deserted from
that island and come to Italy; and when
the Carthaginians expressed indignation at this, on the
ground that the lordship over Sardinia more properly belonged to them, and were preparing to take measures against
those who caused the revolt of the island, the Romans voted
to declare war against them, on the pretence that they were
making warlike preparations, not against Sardinia, but against
themselves. The Carthaginians, however, having just had an
almost miraculous escape from annihilation in the recent war,
were in every respect disabled from renewing their quarrel with
the Romans. They therefore yielded to the necessities of the
hour, and not only abandoned Sardinia, but paid the Romans
twelve hundred talents into the bargain, that they might not
be obliged to undertake the war for the present.
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