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Richard Miles is Professor of Classics at the University of Sydney and a Fellow of Trinity Hall, Cambridge University. He has written widely on Punic, Roman and Vandal North Africa and has directed archaeological excavations in Carthage and Rome. He is also the author of Ancient Worlds (Allen Lane, October 2010) and the presenter and writer of the series Ancient Worlds for BBC2.
Mr. Miles has skilfully fused the works of ancient historians such
as Polybius and Livy, a wide range of modern studies and recent
archaeological research to create a convincing and enthralling
narrative
*The Economist*
Richard Miles's Carthage Must be Destroyed is a refreshing addition
to the debate
*Financial Times*
This is a lively and compelling, chronological account of Carthage
from its Phoenician foundation to its reception in Emperor
Augustus's Rome
*Literary Review*
Richard Miles tells this story with tremendous élan, combining the
best of modern scholarship with narrative pace and energy. It is a
superb achievement, a model for all such endeavours. He is even
better on the little-known background to this tale
*Telegraph*
The dramatic story of these events is set out in gripping
detail
*The Scotsman*
A fine, sweeping survey of the rise and fall of an empire and a
glimpse into the diversity of the ancient world ... Richard Miles
is ... concerned with the wider context ... and his book is all the
more valuable for that
*Wall Street Journal*
In the spring of 146 B.C.E., the Roman commander Scipio Aemilianus ordered his army's final assault upon the very weakened North African city of Carthage. Surrounded on all sides by the Romans and facing starvation and death, many Carthaginians, including the city's commander, Hasdrubal, surrendered into certain slavery while others, refusing to submit, died in a hellish conflagration that consumed their city. In destroying the physical city of Carthage, the Romans also destroyed much of its history. Until now, Rome's version of the history and significance of Carthage has been unchallenged. Drawing deeply upon fresh archeological evidence, Miles dynamically recreates daily life in ancient Carthage by examining the numerous inscriptions and monuments that bring to life the religious and public rituals of the city's inhabitants. Such material evidence offers a glimpse of Carthage's social hierarchies while also providing clues to the city's reputation as an agricultural center known for its figs and pomegranates, and its invention of the Punic cart, a primitive but highly effective threshing machine. Miles breathtakingly narrates Carthage's rise to fame as an ancient cultural and commercial center and its demise before its rebuilding as a Roman city by the emperor Augustus in the first century C.E. Illus.; maps. (July) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
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