Overview
Hannibal Barca was the Carthaginian commander whose invasion of Italy came closer than any foreign enemy to destroying Rome. His crossing of the Alps, victories at Trebia, Trasimene, and Cannae, and long presence in Italy left a scar in Roman memory that outlived the war itself. Even generations later, Hannibal remained more than a defeated enemy: he was the warning that Rome’s existence had once hung by a thread.
Why It Matters
The fear of Hannibal shaped Roman attitudes toward security, mercy, and the destruction of rivals. The later destruction of Carthage cannot be understood without the terror his campaign had planted in Rome.
In the Livarva Trilogy
In The First Breach, Hannibal appears as part of the world that made Rome severe, expansionist, and deeply suspicious of any surviving rival power.
Ancient and Modern Sources
Polybius, Livy, Plutarch, Appian, and later Roman memory.
This first atlas entry is drafted from the Livarva manuscripts and will be expanded with exact chapter and source references in a later version.