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To: neverdem
Livy, History of Rome, Book 26, Section 11

The following day Hannibal crossed the Anio and led out the whole of his force to battle; Flaccus and the consuls did not decline the challenge. When both sides were drawn up to decide an action in which Rome was the victor's prize, a tremendous hailstorm threw the two armies into such disorder that they had difficulty in holding their arms. They retired to their respective camps, fearing everything rather than their enemy. The following day, when the armies were drawn up in the same position, a similar storm separated them. On each occasion, after they were once more in camp, the weather cleared up in an extraordinary way. The Carthaginians looked upon the occasion as preternatural, and the story runs that Hannibal was heard to say that at one time he lacked the will, at another the opportunity, of becoming master of Rome. His hopes were further damped by two incidents, one of some importance, the other less so. The more important was his receiving information that while he was actually in arms near the walls of Rome a force had marched out fully equipped, under their standards, to reinforce the army in Spain. The other incident, which he learnt from a prisoner, was the sale by auction of the spot on which he had fixed his camp, and the fact that, in spite of his occupation of it, there was no abatement in the price. That any one should have been found in Rome to buy the ground which he was holding in possession as spoil of war, seemed to Hannibal such an insulting piece of arrogance that he instantly summoned a crier and made him give notice of the sale of the silversmiths' shops round the Forum of Rome.

5 posted on 04/05/2011 6:38:22 PM PDT by vbmoneyspender
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To: vbmoneyspender

Livy is completely unreliable in the recounting of the history of Hannibal V Rome.

An ancient version of CBS reporting the war news.


7 posted on 04/05/2011 7:01:07 PM PDT by bill1952 (Choice is an illusion created between those with power - and those without)
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To: vbmoneyspender

psychological war :-)


18 posted on 04/06/2011 12:40:54 AM PDT by Cronos (Wszystkiego najlepszego!)
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To: vbmoneyspender
....[Hannibal] instantly summoned a crier and made him give notice of the sale of the silversmiths' shops round the Forum of Rome.

The Vicus Argentarius, or Silversmiths' Quarter (the word vicus <= IE *owikos => Gk oikos "house", Engl. "eco-"; the Latin diminutive of vicus is villa), lay at the foot of the Capitoline below the Arx on its northern flank, entering the Forum at its busy corner next to the Comitia, the Rostra, and the Mamertine Prison. It overlooked (barely) what was built-out later as the Forum of Julius Caesar. It and the Velabrum and Vicus Jugarius (Yokemakers' Quarter) on the south side were the two ways out of the western end of the Forum, for anyone whose business did not take him up the Capitoline Hill.

25 posted on 04/06/2011 4:23:30 AM PDT by lentulusgracchus (Concealed carry is a pro-life position.)
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