Hamilcar Barca has kept together his mercenary…
249 BCE to 238 BCE
Hamilcar Barca has kept together his mercenary troops only by his personal authority and by the promise of good pay.
Upon returning from Sicily to Carthage at the close of the First Punic War, these soldiers break out into open mutiny when their rewards are withheld by Hamilcar's opponents among the governing aristocracy, sparking the conflict later named the Mercenary War.
The serious danger into which Carthage has been brought by the failure of the aristocratic generals is averted by Hamilcar, whom the government in this crisis could not help but reinstate.
By the power of his personal influence among the mercenaries and the surrounding African peoples, and by superior strategy, he speedily crushes the revolt in 237 BCE.
Rome, which had dealt with Carthage with all due honor and courtesy during the crisis, going as far as to release all Punic prisoners without ransom and refusing to accept the offer from Utica and Sardinia to incorporate these territories into the Roman domain, seizes Sardinia and Corsica and forces Carthage to pay twelve hundred talents for her initial refusal to renounce her claim over the islands.
This is one of the causes of the Second Punic War and is held as the motivation of the subsequent activities of Hamilcar.