Carthage now controls southern Italy and all…
621 BCE to 478 BCE
Carthage now controls southern Italy and all islands of the Western Mediterranean except Sicily.
The Greeks, similar to the Phoenicians, are expert sailors who have set up trade posts throughout the Mediterranean.
These two rivals fight their wars on the island of Sicily, which lies at Carthage's doorstep.
Both the Greeks and Phoenicians, from their earliest days, had been attracted to the large island, establishing a large number of colonies and trading posts along its coasts.
Small battles had been fought between these settlements for centuries.
Phalaris, despot of Agrigentum in Greek Sicily, supplies the city with water, adorns it with fine buildings, and strengthens it with walls.
Groups
Phoenicians
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Medes
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Ionians
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Dorians
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Aeolians
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Hallstatt culture
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Cimmerians
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Greece, classical
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Persian people
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Assyrian people
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Carthage, Kingdom of
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Scythians, or Sakas
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Chinese Kingdom, Zhou, or Chou, Eastern Dynasty
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Roman Kingdom
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Assyria, (New) Kingdom of (Neo-Assyrian Empire)
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Etruria
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Neo-Babylonian, or Chaldean, Empire
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Medes, Kingdom of the
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Roman Republic
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Topics
Younger Subboreal Period
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Iron Age, Near and Middle East
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Iron Age Europe
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Greek colonization
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Iron Age Cold Epoch
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Spring and Autumn Period in China
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Classical antiquity
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Assyrian Wars of c. 745-609 BCE
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Iron Age China
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Babylonian Captivity
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Roman-Etruscan Wars, Early
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Persian Conquests of 559-509 BCE
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Pre-Roman Iron Age of Northern Europe
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Greco-Persian Wars, Early
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Sicilian Wars, or Carthaginian-Syracusan Wars
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