
audiobook
NIEBUHR’S LECTURES ON ROMAN HISTORY.
THE FIRST PUNIC WAR.
SICILY A ROMAN PROVINCE. PRÆTOR PEREGRINUS. WAR WITH THE FALISCANS. MUTINY OF THE MERCENARIES IN CARTHAGE. THE FIRST ILLYRIAN WAR. THE LEX FLAMINIA FOR THE DIVISION OF THE AGER GALLICUS PICENUS. WAR AGAINST THE CISALPINE GAULS. THE SECOND ILLYRIAN WAR. THE CARTHAGINIANS FOUND AN EMPIRE IN SPAIN.
THE SECOND PUNIC WAR.
THE MACEDONIAN WAR.
THE INSUBRIANS AND BOIANS VANQUISHED. WAR WITH ANTIOCHUS. WAR WITH THE GALATIANS.
IMPEACHMENT OF L. SCIPIO. END OF P. SCIPIO AFRICANUS AND OF HANNIBAL. DOMESTIC AFFAIRS. M. PORCIUS CATO.
LITERATURE OF THE ROMANS AT THIS PERIOD. ATELLANÆ, PRÆTEXTATÆ; LIVIUS ANDRONICUS; NÆVIUS; ENNIUS; PLAUTUS. ROMAN HISTORIANS IN GREEK.
WAR WITH THE LIGURIANS; WITH THE CELTIBERIANS. THE THIRD MACEDONIAN WAR. PEACE WITH THE RHODIANS. FURTHER WARS IN SPAIN. STATE OF AFFAIRS AT HOME.
THE THIRD PUNIC WAR.
These lectures take listeners deep into the early centuries of Rome, beginning with the clash that set the Mediterranean ablaze: the First Punic War. By weaving together classical accounts, Phoenician chronicles, and archaeological clues, the speaker paints a vivid picture of the rival powers that shaped Sicily, Sardinia, and the North African coast.
The narrative follows a clear chronological framework, breaking the conflict into five distinct phases—from Rome’s initial land‑only assaults to the dramatic naval engagements that eventually turned the tide. Along the way, the series examines Carthaginian colonization, the spread of the Punic language, and the diverse fighting styles of Greeks, Gauls, and Iberians, all while highlighting the strategic brilliance of figures like Regulus and Hamilcar Barcas.
Delivered in a measured, engaging tone, the lectures balance scholarly rigor with accessible storytelling, making the complex tapestry of early Roman‑Carthaginian rivalry approachable for anyone curious about the foundations of western civilization.
Language
en
Duration
~14 hours (813K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
London: Chatto & Windus, Piccadilly, 1875.
Credits
Wouter Franssen, Krista Zaleski and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2023-08-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1776–1831
A pioneering historian of ancient Rome, he helped turn history into a more critical, evidence-based discipline. He was also a diplomat and public servant whose work linked scholarship with public life.
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