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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Polybius, Histories. Search the whole document.
Found 7 total hits in 3 results.
Carthage (Tunisia) (search for this): book 9, chapter 11
Spain
The leaders of the Carthaginians, though they had
The two Scipios fall in B. C. 212.
conquered their enemies, could not control
themselves: and having made up their minds
Hasdrubal Gisconis
tertius Carthaginiensium dux. Livy, 24, 41, cp. 25, 37.
that they had put an end to the Roman war,
they began quarrelling with each other, finding continual
subjects of dispute through the innate covetousness and
ambition of the Phoenician character; among
whom Hasdrubal, son of Gesco, pushed his
authority to such a pitch of iniquity as to
demand a large sum of money from Andobales,
the most faithful of all their Iberian friends,
who had some time before lost his chieftainship
for the sake of the Carthaginians, and had but recently
recovered it through his loyalty to them. When Andobales,
trusting to his long fidelity to Carthage, refused this demand,
Hasdrubal got up a false charge against him and compelled
him to give up his daughters as hostages. . . .
Spain (Spain) (search for this): book 9, chapter 11
Spain
The leaders of the Carthaginians, though they had
The two Scipios fall in B. C. 212.
conquered their enemies, could not control
themselves: and having made up their minds
Hasdrubal Gisconis
tertius Carthaginiensium dux. Livy, 24, 41, cp. 25, 37.
that they had put an end to the Roman war,
they began quarrelling with each other, finding continual
subjects of dispute through the innate covetousness and
ambition of the Phoenician character; among
whom Hasdrubal, son of Gesco, pushed his
authority to such a pitch of iniquity as to
demand a large sum of money from Andobales,
the most faithful of all their Iberian friends,
who had some time before lost his chieftainship
for the sake of the Carthaginians, and had but recently
recovered it through his loyalty to them. When Andobales,
trusting to his long fidelity to Carthage, refused this demand,
Hasdrubal got up a false charge against him and compelled
him to give up his daughters as hostages. . . .
212 BC (search for this): book 9, chapter 11
Spain
The leaders of the Carthaginians, though they had
The two Scipios fall in B. C. 212.
conquered their enemies, could not control
themselves: and having made up their minds
Hasdrubal Gisconis
tertius Carthaginiensium dux. Livy, 24, 41, cp. 25, 37.
that they had put an end to the Roman war,
they began quarrelling with each other, finding continual
subjects of dispute through the innate covetousness and
ambition of the Phoenician character; among
whom Hasdrubal, son of Gesco, pushed his
authority to such a pitch of iniquity as to
demand a large sum of money from Andobales,
the most faithful of all their Iberian friends,
who had some time before lost his chieftainship
for the sake of the Carthaginians, and had but recently
recovered it through his loyalty to them. When Andobales,
trusting to his long fidelity to Carthage, refused this demand,
Hasdrubal got up a false charge against him and compelled
him to give up his daughters as hostages. . . .