Hannibal smashed the Roman armies he encountered in northern Italy. Within
two months, he had conquered all of northern Italy except for only two cities. These spectacular
victories brought more of Rome's enemies into the war. Fifty thousand Gauls from the north to help Hannibal. They,
too, hated Rome and wanted to be on the side of the winner.
The Romans were divided as to whether they could beat Hannibal in open warfare. The Romans, desperate because of their
losses, asked Fabius to become absolute dictator of Rome. Fabius avoided
open warfare with Hannibal and harassed the Carthaginian army until they were weaker. Fabius was
hated for this policy! The Romans called him "The Delayer" and eventually removed him from power. But then Hannibal marched
into southern Italy and started destroying the countryside in 216 BC.
The two new Roman generals sent an army of eighty thousand soldiers against Hannibal. This Roman army vastly
outnumbered the Carthaginian army, but it was completely wiped out by Hannibal. This was the largest defeat Rome
had ever suffered. The battle proved that Fabius was right all along to avoid direct battles, so the Romans went back to his
strategy of waiting out Hannibal.
Roman allies in the south of Italy ran to Hannibal's side. All of Sicily allied itself with the Carthaginians. In addition,
the king of Greece allied himself with Hannibal and began his own war against Roman possessions in 215 BC. Rome was in serious
trouble on all sides!
The situation looked bad for the Romans. Hannibal's army moved around the Italian countryside absolutely unopposed
Hannibal, however, was weak in numbers and in equipment. He didn't have enough soldiers to take large cities such
as Rome. He didn't have the men or equipment to attack those cities by force. All he could do was roam
the countryside and lay waste to it. In 211, he marched right up the walls of Rome, but he
never attacked it. The Romans were confident that Hannibal could do nothing to their city.
The Romans decided to fight the war by cutting off the supplies and men Hannibal needed. A young Roman general named Scipio
Africanus (237-183 BC) conquered all of Spain. He converted Spain into two Roman territories.
Hannibal was now left without his supplies or more soldiers in Italy.
Scipio then crossed into Africa in 204 BC and attacked the walls of Carthage itself. This forced the Carthaginians to
sue for peace with Rome. Rome demanded that Hannibal leave the Italian peninsula. Hannibal
was one of the great strategic generals in history. All during his war with Rome he never
once lost a major battle. Now, however, he was forced to retreat by his own people.
Despite winning every battle, he lost the war.
When Hannibal returned to Carthage, the Carthaginians took heart and rose up against Rome
one last time in 202 BC. In northern Africa, Hannibal fought against Scipio and his army. Here he met his first defeat
.