Hannibal Hits CTRL+Z
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
In 216 BC, at a place in southern Italy called Cannae, Hannibal destroyed the largest army Rome had ever raised, tens of thousands killed in a single afternoon. With the capital nearly defenseless, he chose not to march on it. That restraint let a broken Rome survive, and the Republic that lived went on to build the Western world.
It almost went the other way. Hannibal's own cavalry commander, Maharbal, urged him to take the horsemen and ride through the night, swearing they'd dine in the enemy capital within five days. Hannibal said he needed time to think. The reply Maharbal threw back has echoed for twenty-two centuries: you know how to win a victory, but you don't know how to use one.
What if he'd listened, and turned the horses north at dawn?
This week we hit Control Z on the victory Hannibal couldn't use, follow the march to the gates of Rome, and the very different world it leaves behind.