Resultats de la recherche : Carthaginian

RTW - 64 Greeks vs 3200 Carthaginian - 586 sec
Rome Total War 64 mod swordmen for Greek vs 3200 Carthaginian
Auteur : samurai0000
Tags:Rome Total War Mod Greeks Carthage 300 Spartan
Rome Total War German Chronicle 73 Carthaginian Rebellion - 577 sec
Buy Rome: Total War on eBay at a low price: http://rover.ebay.com/rover/1/711-53200-19255-0/1?type=3&campid=5336051780&toolid=10001&customid=&ext=rome+total+war&satitle=rome+total+war Tired of price tag on you game box? Get your game from Amazon without any sticker on the box Here in the US http://www.amazon.com/gp/search?ie=UTF8&keywords=Rome%20Total%20War&tag=dateyourgamec-20&index=videogames&linkCode=ur2&camp=1789&creative=9325 Here in Canada http://www.amazon.ca/gp/search?ie=UTF8&keywords=Rome%20Total%20War&tag=creativitenet-20&index=video-games-ca&linkCode=ur2&camp=15121&creative=330641 Here in the UK http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/search?ie=UTF8&keywords=Rome%20Total%20War&tag=dateyourgamec-21&index=videogames&linkCode=ur2&camp=1634&creative=6738 Don't forget to subscribe to the Dateyourgame tips and tricks channel http://youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=dateyourgame http://total-war-campaign-chronicles.blogspot.com/ Rome Total War German Chronicles is a series of video showing all battle of a German Campaign in the game Rome Total War. It was made by Attila16 at the demand of fans of Rome Total War. This was the second Rome Total War chronicles after the Carthaginians one and will be the last series of videos made by Attila with the game Rome Total War. If you want to read the advice and comment on every battle of this campaign there was a blog on it and you can find it from the current Attila's web site: http://www.dateyourgame.com/
Auteur : Attila16
Tags: Rome Total War
Carthaginian Wreck Dive, Maui, Hawaii - 415 sec
Carthaginian Wreck Dive with Tim D. We saw a Comb Jelly on the way out the the wreck called a "Venus' Girdle" which was very cool. Here's the video
Auteur : scubapost
Tags: wreck dive carthaginian lahaina maui
MAUI CARTHAGINIAN:REST IN PEACE - 270 sec
www.pdmaui.com.The sinking of the Carthaginian, Maui's new artificial reef in Lahaina. logon to www.pdmaui.com to see more.
Auteur : PureDIGITALMaui
Tags:wreck diving ocean underwater maui hawaii
Hannibal Barca - Gretest Carthaginian General. - 191 sec
Hannibal Barca, the gretest carthage general.
Auteur : Warlord0567
Tags: rtw rome total war bi alexander 300 spartans mod battle huge Rome gladiator
The Carthaginian, 100 feet below the surface - 43 sec
While on the Atlantis IV near Lahaina we checked out the Carthaginian. It's an old cargo ship they made to look like a whaling ship for a museum. Then it got all decrepit and infested so the Sub company bought it for a dollar and sunk the thing.
Auteur : meyouseek
Tags:maui submarine shipwreck
In search of the Carthaginian, West Maui - 356 sec
Didn't find the wreck, but I checked out some of the nice reef from about 60 feet to 15 feet.
Auteur : scubapost
Tags: maui diving caraginian scubapost.net topofthereef.com hawaii coral
Rome Total War: Sinking Carthaginian Ships - 30 sec
This is me sinking carthaginian ships in my SPQR campaign, with the mod Roma Surrectum
Auteur : Ojf3
Tags: rome total war roma surrectum rtw battle rts mod
Duel between My Hero & the mighty Carthaginian Leader Scipio - 60 sec
An Epic battle goes horribly awry, and somehow I wound up in the air...
Auteur : 124VictoriaRoad
Tags: graduation party duel
true story of hannibal the great part 2 - 599 sec
One of history's greatest military leaders, at age nine Hannibal accompanied his father Hamilcar Barca on the Carthaginian expedition to conquer Spain. Before embarking, the boy vowed eternal hatred for Rome, his people's bitter rival. Twenty years later, in 218 BC, he left New Carthage (now Cartagena, Spain) to wage war on "The Eternal City" with an army of about 40,000, including cavalry and elephants. After crossing the Pyrenees and Rhone River, he traversed the Alps while beset by snowstorms, landslides, and hostile mountain tribes. This 2-hour special brings to life the story of the Carthaginian general who struck fear in all Roman hearts and wreaked havoc with his masterful military tactics, bringing the mighty Roman Republic to the brink of ruin. Archaeologists, historians, and military experts guide us through ancient Carthage and give insight into his military strategy up to defeat at Zama in 203 BC. Hannibal (Punic Hanniba'al חניבעל, Ba'al is my grace, or Ba'al has given me grace), son of Hamilcar Barca (247 BC -- ca. 183 BC,short form Hannibal) was a Carthaginian military commander and tactician, later also working in other professions, who is popularly credited as one of the finest commanders in history. He lived during a period of tension in the Mediterranean, when Rome (then the Roman Republic) established its supremacy over other great powers such as Carthage, Macedon, Syracuse, and the Seleucid empire. He is one of the best-known Carthaginian commanders. His most famous achievement was at the outbreak of the Second Punic War, when he marched an army, which included war elephants, from Iberia over the Pyrenees and the Alps into northern Italy. During his invasion of Italy, he defeated the Romans in a series of battles, including those at Trebia, Trasimene and Cannae. He maintained an army in Italy for more than a decade afterward, never losing a major engagement, but could not force the Romans to accept his terms for peace. A Roman counter-invasion of Africa forced him to return to Carthage, where he was defeated in the Battle of Zama. After the war he successfully ran for the office of shofet. He enacted political and financial reforms to enable the payment of the war indemnity imposed by Rome. However, his reforms were unpopular with members of the upper Roman class forcing Hannibal to go into exile. During his exile, he lived at the Seleucid court, where he acted as military advisor to Antiochus III in his war against Rome. After Antiochus III met defeat and was forced to accept their terms, Hannibal fled again, making a stop in Armenia, where he worked as a planner for the new capital. His flight ended in the court of Bithynia where he may have achieved an outstanding naval victory by means of biological warfare and was afterwards betrayed to the Romans. Hannibal is universally ranked as one of the greatest military commanders and tacticians in history.[citation needed] Military historian Theodore Ayrault Dodge once famously called Hannibal the "father of strategy", because his greatest enemy, Rome, came to adopt elements of his military tactics in its own strategic arsenal. This praise has earned him a strong reputation in the modern world and he was regarded as a "gifted strategist" by men like Napoleon Bonaparte, the Duke of Wellington and Fieldmarshal Erwin Rommel.
Auteur : moddyloc
Tags: kemet berber tunisia rome aryan african africa amazigh race white black
The Battle of Cannae - 433 sec
One of the most accurate ancient battle depictions in modern media. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Cannae Swearing vengeance against Rome for the humiliation they inflicted on Carthage, Hannibal Barca in his Iberian kingdom set out on an audacious plan to strike at Rome's heart in Italy, by marching an army of between 60,000 and 80,000 men overland through southern Gaul and over the Alps. Somewhere over 40,000 arrived in Italy with Hannibal some months later. With inferior numbers, Hannibal wielded a tactical and strategic genius which allowed him to twice outsmart and defeat the Roman armies at Lake Trasimene and the River Trebia. Appointed Dictator by the Senate of Rome, Quintus Fabius Maximus was not about to let Hannibal demolish and humiliate the Romans again. He began a policy of "delaying", a war of attrition which would starve Hannibal's army out of Italy. This policy lasted as long as Fabius Maximus's Dictatorship. After it expired, the new Consuls for the year, Gaius Terentius Varro and Lucius Aemilius Paullus, raised an army of some 16 legions numbering between 80,000 and 90,000 men, Roman and Italian, to meet Hannibal Barca and defeat him once and for all. The ensuing day's battle would be the turning point for the Second Punic War, and the course of Roman and Carthaginian history. Hannibal's tactics would be studied and admired by Rome for hundreds of years to come. The strategy, as it unfolded, began by presenting Rome with an unavoidably appealing target---the Carthaginian infantry line, slightly ragged, shaped like a crescent. The cavalry met first, with Hannibal's Iberian, Gallic, and Carthaginian cavalry quickly defeating the Romans, and chasing them off the field completely. The Roman army pressed into the infantry, which gave ground steadily, flexing the crescent shape around and creating a sort of crater for the front lines of the Romans to crash into. Much of the center would be stuck in place by the sheer mass of the army moving forward. On cue, the elite African and Libyan troops of Hannibal's army extended the lines and attacked the Roman flanks, leaving one line of escape. This was sealed shut by the returning heavy cavalry. While virtually every Carthaginian line could fight the Romans, only the Roman lines on the extreme flanks, rear, and front could fight while the rest were crushed in the center, left to panic that they were surrounded, and undoubtedly losing the battle. Estimates put the Roman casualties at 50,000, with Consul Paullus dead, and over eighty Roman Senators killed. Carthage lost 6,000 dead and 10,000 wounded. Despite the stunning victory, Hannibal Barca did not press on Rome itself. Theories range, claiming Hannibal could have taken Rome by force, while others put forth that because Barca had no siege equipment, he would have bled his army out on the walls, as the Romans had left a garrison in the city, and would scrape together all the troops they could to defend the city to the death. Hannibal was ultimately defeated by Publius Cornelius Scipio at the Battle of Zama, after spending over a decade in Italy, victim of returning Dictator Quintus Fabius Maximus's "delaying" tactics, an entire Roman army keeping Hannibal pinned in Italy while Scipio led another army to ultimately destroy Hannibal's "kingdom" in Iberia. Hannibal risked the journey to Carthage with his ragged army when Carthage itself was threatened by Rome.
Auteur : BloodyMargie
Tags: Hannibal Barca Carthage Rome Cannae Varro Alexander Siddig 300 Zama Elephant legionary Numidia Africa Gaul
Rome Total War - Battle of River Trebia (Part 1) - 479 sec
The following video begins with a few minutes of introduction of both Roman and Carthaginian military during the period of the Punic Wars, followed by a detailed, narrated battle of the Battle of River Trebia. Unit ratio comparing to the real battle is 10:1 (excluding elephants). Sorry if the narration is annoying.
Auteur : flyingduckie
Tags:total war battle river trebia elephant carthage rome roman carthaginian punic
submarine dive by zoli 7. - 317 sec
diving the carthaginian wreck of lahaina,maui while a submarine comes down.
Auteur : zolib
Tags:submarine carthaginian wreck hawaii maui lahaina scuba diving
Cartagena - 365 sec
Cartagena is a Spanish Mediterranean city and naval station in the southeast of the Iberian Peninsula. Cartagena has been the capital of the Spanish Navy's Maritime Department of the Mediterranean since the arrival of the Spanish Bourbons in the eighteenth century. As far back as the sixteenth century it was one of the most important naval ports in Spain. Cartagena was founded about 230 BC by Carthaginian general Hasdrubal as Qart Hadast, Punic for "new city". Hasdrubal extended the newly acquired Carthaginian empire in Iberia by skillful diplomacy, and consolidated it by the foundation of Qart Hadast in an excellent haven as the capital of a new province. Hannibal got silver from the mines there to carry on the war against Rome.
Auteur : akerm
Tags:cartagena españa spain spanishvida
true story of hannibal the great part 8 - 527 sec
One of history's greatest military leaders, at age nine Hannibal accompanied his father Hamilcar Barca on the Carthaginian expedition to conquer Spain. Before embarking, the boy vowed eternal hatred for Rome, his people's bitter rival. Twenty years later, in 218 BC, he left New Carthage (now Cartagena, Spain) to wage war on "The Eternal City" with an army of about 40,000, including cavalry and elephants. After crossing the Pyrenees and Rhone River, he traversed the Alps while beset by snowstorms, landslides, and hostile mountain tribes. This 2-hour special brings to life the story of the Carthaginian general who struck fear in all Roman hearts and wreaked havoc with his masterful military tactics, bringing the mighty Roman Republic to the brink of ruin. Archaeologists, historians, and military experts guide us through ancient Carthage and give insight into his military strategy up to defeat at Zama in 203 BC.
Auteur : moddyloc
Tags: kemet berber tunisia rome aryan african greek asia europe africa amazigh race white black
Tabarka/Tunisia-طبرقة ـ تونس - 186 sec
Tabarka (Arabic: طبرقة‎ , Phoenician Tabarka , Carthaginian : Thabarka or Barga by locals) is a coastal town located in north-western Tunisia, It has been famous for its coral fishing, the Coral Festival of underwater photography and the annual jazz festival. Tabarka's history is a colorful mosaic of Phoenician, Roman, Carthaginian , Arabic and Turkish civilizations. The town is dominated by an offshore rock on which is built a Genoese castle. Nationalist leader Habib Bourguiba, later to become president of post-independence Tunisia, was exiled here by the French colonial authorities in 1952.Thabraca was the last Numidian city in the direction of the Zeugitana and was a Roman colony. It was connected by a road with Simitthu, to which it served as a port for the exportation of its famous marbles. At Thabraca Gildo, the brother of Firmus, committed suicide. Under the Vandal king Gaiseric it had a monastery for men and one for women Confronting it, at a distance of about 365 yards, is the small island of Tabarka, where the Genoese Lomellini, who had purchased the grant of the coral fishing from the Ottoman Turks, maintained a garrison from 1540 to 1742. Here may still be seen the ruins of a stronghold, a church and some Genoese buildings. At Tabarka the ruins consist of a pit once used as a church and some fragments of walls which belonged to Christian buildings. There were also two Ottoman Turkish fortresses, one of which has been repaired. In 1741 it was surrendered to the (nominally Ottoman, de facto autonomus) Bey of Tunis. Part of the population was moved to the Sardinian island of San Pietro, whose population still speaks a variant of Genoese dialect originating from Tabarka. It became Tabarka, under French colonial rule annexed to the civil district of Souk el-Arba, now in the Tunisian governorate of Jendouba, and a rather important fishing centre. Thabarca still is the (Latin) name of a Roman Catholic titular see of the former Roman province of Numidia near the Mediterranean, between the Armua and the Tusca. The city contains several Christian cemeteries, many of the tombs having covers adorned with curious mosaics. An inscription (C.I.L., VIII, 173-82) mentions the cult of the martyr Anastasia and her companions. The bishops of Thabraca, who met with those of the African proconsulate, were: Victoricus, at the Council of Carthage (256); Rusticianus, at the conference of Carthage in 411, where his competitor was the Donatist Charentius, and signed in 416 the letter from the council of Proconsular Africa to Pope Innocent I; Clarissimus, who in 646 signed the letter from the same Council to Patriarch Paul of Constantinople against the Monothelites.
Auteur : elvanino
Tags: Tunisia Tunisie Tunis Tabarka north africa maghreb tourism arabic algeria UAE KSA Lebanon Syria morocco jordan france Cu
true story of hannibal the great part 7 - 570 sec
One of history's greatest military leaders, at age nine Hannibal accompanied his father Hamilcar Barca on the Carthaginian expedition to conquer Spain. Before embarking, the boy vowed eternal hatred for Rome, his people's bitter rival. Twenty years later, in 218 BC, he left New Carthage (now Cartagena, Spain) to wage war on "The Eternal City" with an army of about 40,000, including cavalry and elephants. After crossing the Pyrenees and Rhone River, he traversed the Alps while beset by snowstorms, landslides, and hostile mountain tribes. This 2-hour special brings to life the story of the Carthaginian general who struck fear in all Roman hearts and wreaked havoc with his masterful military tactics, bringing the mighty Roman Republic to the brink of ruin. Archaeologists, historians, and military experts guide us through ancient Carthage and give insight into his military strategy up to defeat at Zama in 203 BC.
Auteur : moddyloc
Tags: kemet berber tunisia rome aryan african greek asia europe africa amazigh race white black
true story of hannibal the great part 6 - 600 sec
One of history's greatest military leaders, at age nine Hannibal accompanied his father Hamilcar Barca on the Carthaginian expedition to conquer Spain. Before embarking, the boy vowed eternal hatred for Rome, his people's bitter rival. Twenty years later, in 218 BC, he left New Carthage (now Cartagena, Spain) to wage war on "The Eternal City" with an army of about 40,000, including cavalry and elephants. After crossing the Pyrenees and Rhone River, he traversed the Alps while beset by snowstorms, landslides, and hostile mountain tribes. This 2-hour special brings to life the story of the Carthaginian general who struck fear in all Roman hearts and wreaked havoc with his masterful military tactics, bringing the mighty Roman Republic to the brink of ruin. Archaeologists, historians, and military experts guide us through ancient Carthage and give insight into his military strategy up to defeat at Zama in 203 BC.
Auteur : moddyloc
Tags: kemet berber tunisia rome aryan african greek asia europe africa amazigh race white black
true story of hannibal the great part 3 - 571 sec
One of history's greatest military leaders, at age nine Hannibal accompanied his father Hamilcar Barca on the Carthaginian expedition to conquer Spain. Before embarking, the boy vowed eternal hatred for Rome, his people's bitter rival. Twenty years later, in 218 BC, he left New Carthage (now Cartagena, Spain) to wage war on "The Eternal City" with an army of about 40,000, including cavalry and elephants. After crossing the Pyrenees and Rhone River, he traversed the Alps while beset by snowstorms, landslides, and hostile mountain tribes. This 2-hour special brings to life the story of the Carthaginian general who struck fear in all Roman hearts and wreaked havoc with his masterful military tactics, bringing the mighty Roman Republic to the brink of ruin. Archaeologists, historians, and military experts guide us through ancient Carthage and give insight into his military strategy up to defeat at Zama in 203 BC.
Auteur : moddyloc
Tags: kemet berber tunisia rome aryan african greek asia europe africa amazigh race white black
true story of hannibal the great part 4 - 600 sec
One of history's greatest military leaders, at age nine Hannibal accompanied his father Hamilcar Barca on the Carthaginian expedition to conquer Spain. Before embarking, the boy vowed eternal hatred for Rome, his people's bitter rival. Twenty years later, in 218 BC, he left New Carthage (now Cartagena, Spain) to wage war on "The Eternal City" with an army of about 40,000, including cavalry and elephants. After crossing the Pyrenees and Rhone River, he traversed the Alps while beset by snowstorms, landslides, and hostile mountain tribes. This 2-hour special brings to life the story of the Carthaginian general who struck fear in all Roman hearts and wreaked havoc with his masterful military tactics, bringing the mighty Roman Republic to the brink of ruin. Archaeologists, historians, and military experts guide us through ancient Carthage and give insight into his military strategy up to defeat at Zama in 203 BC.
Auteur : moddyloc
Tags: kemet berber tunisia rome aryan african greek asia europe africa amazigh race white black