![]() ![]() After the sack of Rome by the Gauls (traditionally dated to 390 BC), Carthage’s destruction was probably the single biggest event to have occurred under what came to be harked back to as the free Roman Republic. A little piece of Carthage was thus etched on every good – and indeed bad – Roman soul. Move on a hundred years, and leading Roman moralists and historians (often the same people) were taking Carthage’s destruction as the tipping point between the reign of the good old solid Roman values and the present prevalence of decadence and vice. Cato – the Elder, the Censor – probably didn’t say it in so many words, but there’s no doubt that he meant it, favoured it, and would have loved to have been alive to see it when it did actually happen in 146 BC, at the direction of the younger Scipio (he had died in 149). ![]()
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