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Punica

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Punica
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The Punica is Silius Italicus's only surviving work, possibly the first great Historical Fiction about the Punic Wars. It is a Latin Epic Poem in seventeen books, the longest ever found in that language, and serves as a sequel of sorts to The Aeneid.
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2023-07-16T08:00:15Z
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2023-07-16T08:00:15Z
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Dropped link to ShaggyDogStory: Not a Feature - ITEM
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DBTropes
 Punica / int_1439161f
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Heroic BSoD
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Heroic BSoD: Hannibal has one when Sychaeus dies in Trebia.
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 Punica / int_1b5fa24a
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The Brute
 Punica / int_1b5fa24a
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The Brute: The Punic side has a few near-superhuman giants who lay waste before being killed by some hero. This includes the Africans Otris and Maraxes, the Syracusan Poliphemus and the Cantabrian Larus.
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 Punica / int_1dfd19f9
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Papa Wolf
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Papa Wolf: Mago shows shades of this towards his son-in-law Isalces in his fight against Apius.
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 Punica / int_1f799027
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Obstructive Bureaucrat
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Obstructive Bureaucrat: Hanno the Great, who refuses to send Hannibal reinforcements or supplies out of political rivalry.
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 Punica / int_23473ae7
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Adaptation Expansion
 Punica / int_23473ae7
comment
Adaptation Expansion: Hannibal's army in real life was your typical period Carthaginian force, meaning it was probably composed by Punic officers along with several bodies of Numidians, Libyans, Mauritanians and several tribes of Hispanics and Gauls, complete with horses and elephants. Its portrayal in the Punica, however, receives a massive upgrade in diversity, containing not only the aforementioned, but also troops of all kinds and almost every nationality considered minimally exotic at the time: Nubians, Ethiopians, Greeks, Phoenicians and peoples from just every corner of Hispania. It includes even warrior women and war chariots.
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 Punica / int_25bc8511
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Generation Xerox
 Punica / int_25bc8511
comment
Generation Xerox: A Roman officer named Valerius Corvinus is said to be a descendant from the historical Valerius Corvinus who fought against the Gauls. A Hispanic named Viriathus killing a memer of the Servilia family also implies there was a family feud when Quintus Servilius Caepio later led a campaign against Viriathus the Lusitanian.
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 Punica / int_2673425b
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Kid Hero
 Punica / int_2673425b
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Kid Hero: The battle of Syracuse introduces Podetus, a prepubescent prodigy captain who was also apparently a great athlete. However, he is killed by a rogue spear, and even the text pities him.
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 Punica / int_2ae29c0d
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The Dreaded
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The Dreaded: The sole name of Hannibal is enough to make the entire Rome panic.
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 Punica / int_2bdae2ae
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Awesome, but Impractical
 Punica / int_2bdae2ae
comment
Awesome, but Impractical: Isalces, Mago's son-in-law or something like it, wields a giant double axe due to his juvenile vanity. His weapon is so cumbersome that the Roman Apius kills with him just a big stone, a classical Boring, but Practical weapon.
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 Punica / int_3036294e
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Scary Black Man
 Punica / int_3036294e
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Scary Black Man: Tunger the Mauritanian, who rides a black war chariot with black horses that scares everybody. (Somewhat subverted because being a Mauritanian would mean he was just dark-skinned, not solid black.) Ironically, he gets scared himself of Cato's attack and is killed by him.
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 Punica / int_319e4a2f
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Even Evil Has Standards
 Punica / int_319e4a2f
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Even Evil Has Standards: Capua is portrayed a a city of pathetic hedonists, and even Hannibal himself is disgusted by it when he allies himself to them. However, he ends up adopting some of their lifestyle, which is said to be part of his downfall.
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 Punica / int_36e63b81
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Rule of Cool
 Punica / int_36e63b81
comment
Silius doesn't hide the fact that he is naturally telling a pro-Roman story, so he tends to paint things in the most heroic light possible for Rome and the most villainous one for Carthage. The work also features loads and loads of the Rule of Cool and Adaptation Expansion expected in an Epic Poem, though in this case we cannot safely attest how much Silius is embellishing, tweaking or just plain making up, given that many ancient chronicles and books about the Second Punic Wars which he might have used for research have not survived.
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 Punica / int_37d94ed9
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Agony of the Feet
 Punica / int_37d94ed9
comment
Agony of the Feet: The African soldier Sicca suffers it when he steps on a sword while barefoot.
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Punica / int_37d94ed9
 Punica / int_3ed195b4
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Human Pincushion
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comment
Human Pincushion: Hannibal's Lusitanians throw so many javelins at Roman officer Mamercus at Trebia that he ends up turned into this. Flaminius and Paulus later gets the same treatment.
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 Punica / int_49fb5ccb
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Combat Pragmatist
 Punica / int_49fb5ccb
comment
Combat Pragmatist: At the end of the Battle of Trebia, a Libyan named Tires kills a Roman soldier, Levinus, by biting his face off while dying himself.
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Punica / int_49fb5ccb
 Punica / int_4a852458
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Big Good
 Punica / int_4a852458
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Big Good: Fabius is the wisest and most competent Roman general, only surpassed by The Hero Scipio.
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 Punica / int_4f23179
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Hit-and-Run Tactics
 Punica / int_4f23179
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Hit-and-Run Tactics: Cleadas, a Sidonian in Hannibal army's, uses the famed Parthian shot.
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 Punica / int_4ffde1e0
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Luckily, My Shield Will Protect Me
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comment
Luckily, My Shield Will Protect Me: The Gallaeci present Hannibal with a fancy shield, probably meant to be a decorated Celtic/Gaul style one.
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 Punica / int_53f5119f
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The Dragon
 Punica / int_53f5119f
comment
The Dragon: Sychaeus, Hannibal's son-in-law and Hasdrubal the Fair's son, though only for a short time given that he is killed.
 Punica / int_53f5119f
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Punica / int_53f5119f
 Punica / int_56515a39
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Artistic License – History
 Punica / int_56515a39
comment
Artistic License – History: Silius doesn't hide the fact that he is naturally telling a pro-Roman story, so he tends to paint things in the most heroic light possible for Rome and the most villainous one for Carthage. The work also features loads and loads of the Rule of Cool and Adaptation Expansion expected in an Epic Poem, though in this case we cannot safely attest how much Silius is embellishing, tweaking or just plain making up, given that many ancient chronicles and books about the Second Punic Wars which he might have used for research have not survived. Hannibal's army contains here a lot of northern Hispanian tribes, when it would have been much more likely to contain southern and eastern ones. The poem doesn't describe the battles clearly, focusing more on the individual duels that happen on it, but the most detailed one, that of Cannae, is completely different from real life. This version of Cannae sees Hannibal putting the Africans on the left under a fictional character named Nealces, the Hispanics in the right under Mago, and Hannibal with the Gauls and a single elephant in the center, and he later turns the tide by bringing many elephants as reinforcements. To begin with, there was no elephants in the historical Battle of Cannae, and the deployment saw Hannibal with Hispanics and Gauls in the middle, Hanno with African cavalry on the right, and Hasdrubal (not Hasdrubal Barca) with Hispanic and Gaul cavalry on the left.
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 Punica / int_590e1c70
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Frontline General
 Punica / int_590e1c70
comment
Frontline General: A staple of epic poems, not any less used here. Hannibal is directly at the front lines in Saguntum, cutting people down right and left (less so in other battles, but still), and Fabius has a similar Let's Get Dangerous! moment to rescue Minucius.
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 Punica / int_6439de78
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Heroic Sacrifice
 Punica / int_6439de78
comment
Heroic Sacrifice: A Punic soldier named Gestar shields Hannibal from a spear thrown by Marcellus and dies of it. The Roman Tadius is impaled by a weaponized elephant tusk in Cannae, but he blinds both of its eyes with his last breath.
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 Punica / int_64e975cf
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Manly Tears
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comment
Manly Tears: Fabius sheds those after seeing Minucius going to be butchered in a Leeroy Jenkins moment.
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Punica / int_64e975cf
 Punica / int_72455542
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Adaptational Intelligence
 Punica / int_72455542
comment
Adaptational Intelligence: Lucius Aemilius Paulus is portrayed as being unambiguously on the side of Fabius about the right strategy against Hannibal, while in real life he was more indecisive and ultimately supported the approach that became the massacre of Cannae.
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 Punica / int_7360a6b6
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Noble Demon
 Punica / int_7360a6b6
comment
Noble Demon: Hannibal is portrayed as callous and hateful, but also honorable and loyal to his allies, as well as an adept of the stoic philosophy (which was a big deal for Silius, a fellow stoic), at least until Capua affects him.
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 Punica / int_736d791f
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Adaptational Badass
 Punica / int_736d791f
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Adaptational Badass: Many historical characters who were originally generals and strategists are turned here into frontline heroes, the most ludicrous examples being Hannibal and Fabius, who kill many opponents personally.
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Punica / int_736d791f
 Punica / int_7b80226d
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GoodCounterpart
 Punica / int_7b80226d
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Good Counterpart: Both Fabius and Scipio are this to Hannibal, as stated several times in the text.
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 Punica / int_7eb73553
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Bullying a Dragon
 Punica / int_7eb73553
comment
Bullying a Dragon: A Roman mercenary named Christa tries to take down Hannibal with the help of his six sons, but Hannibal proves why he is in charge of the Carthaginian army and promptly decimates them.
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 Punica / int_9d17b859
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Made of Iron
 Punica / int_9d17b859
comment
Made of Iron: The African giant Otris is hit with an arrow in his eye in Trebia, yet he remains alive and functional enough to try to run away.
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 Punica / int_a9de87d2
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Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass
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comment
Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: Xanthippus, the Spartan general who saved Carthage in the First Punic War, is described as short and ugly.
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 Punica / int_b7248073
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My Country, Right or Wrong
 Punica / int_b7248073
comment
My Country, Right or Wrong: When Fabius Jr. tells his father to just watch while their political rival Minucius is butchered by Hannibal, Fabius reminds him that he is a fellow Roman after all and orders their forces to help him.
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 Punica / int_b7c53a22
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Blood Knight
 Punica / int_b7c53a22
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Blood Knight: Celts are portrayed this way, as in general in Roman media. Hannibal himself is often a bit too eager to kill Romans.
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 Punica / int_ba23caad
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Pelts of the Barbarian
 Punica / int_ba23caad
comment
Pelts of the Barbarian: An interestingly heroic example is Alius, an Italian fighter who wears a bear skin and boar fangs in his helmets. He is such a good warrior that it takes both Mago and Maharbal to gang up on him to kill him.
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 Punica / int_bb067aba
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Cool Mask
 Punica / int_bb067aba
comment
Cool Mask: Celtiberian horsemen from Uxama are describes as wearing beast's jawbones in their helmets in order to scare away enemies.
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 Punica / int_c87660d5
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Get a Hold of Yourself, Man!
 Punica / int_c87660d5
comment
Get A Hold Of Yourself Man: Tiburna, widow of the Saguntine chief Murrus, does a verbal variation of this in the city.
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 Punica / int_ca3a6dbd
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Informed Ability
 Punica / int_ca3a6dbd
comment
Informed Ability: Arauricus the Turdetanian is introduced as a great warrior, but in his only battle appearance in Trebia, he flees from the Roman Viriasius and is killed by him.
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 Punica / int_ccb3498d
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Escape Artist
 Punica / int_ccb3498d
comment
Escape Artist: Hasdrubal Barca performs a couple great escapes with all his army, first against Nero (whom he deceived with negotiations while he secretly evacuated his forces) and Scipio (by retreating in the right moment in Baecula). He was still trying to perform one in the Metaurus when his luck finally abandoned him.
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 Punica / int_d001c42c
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Anti-Villain
 Punica / int_d001c42c
comment
Anti-Villain: While Hannibal is described as cruel and a bit of a Blood Knight, the text also admits at some points that his only real crime is having been born in the opposite side of the war, and his service to Carthage is constantly compared to Scipio's and Fabius' to Rome. Viriathus, Hannibal's Lusitanian captain, is explicitly described in the text as "the most magnanimous of the Iberian kings". This redeeming quality comes out weirdly just before he butchers Servilius Geminus and celebrates like a barbarian Blood Knight, so it is apparently meant to show that even the most brutal enemies of Rome are not necessarily completely evil.
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 Punica / int_d5b3df2d
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Dark Action Girl
 Punica / int_d5b3df2d
comment
Dark Action Girl: Asbyte, Hannibal's female lieutenant is almost sympathetic to the reader when she is chased by the brutal Mopsus.
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 Punica / int_d9d2c40b
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Amazon Brigade
 Punica / int_d9d2c40b
comment
Amazon Brigade: Asbyte, Hannibal's Libyan princess, leads a contingent of horsewomen and female war charioteers. Sadly, they receive little time on page and seem to return to Libya after Asbyte is killed.
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 Punica / int_d9f97805
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Wins by Doing Absolutely Nothing
 Punica / int_d9f97805
comment
Wins by Doing Absolutely Nothing: Fabius does this through his famed Fabian tactics, which involve denying pitched battles while at the same time using guerrilla. It makes Hannibal run low of supplies and his mercenaries become impatient.
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 Punica / int_dbb414ed
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Hand Wave
 Punica / int_dbb414ed
comment
The text adheres to the probably apocryphal Roman tradition that Carthage callously executed their own mercenary general, Xanthippus, after he had successfully defended Africa for them in the First Punic War. However, Xanthippus's sons are shown fighting in the Carthaginian side without any ill feeling. This contradiction is never explained; if they were unaware of their father's fate or some similar Hand Wave, it is not stated.
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 Punica / int_dca70c44
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Reasonable Authority Figure
 Punica / int_dca70c44
comment
Reasonable Authority Figure: Fabius, highlighted becase he happens to be the only in the Roman Senate most of the time.
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 Punica / int_df51a129
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Pendulum War
 Punica / int_df51a129
comment
Pendulum War: Perhaps the greatest departure from reality in the poem is the way Silius shows the war as a succession of epic duels between larger than life characters.
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 Punica / int_df582b0b
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Continuity Snarl
 Punica / int_df582b0b
comment
Continuity Snarl: The text adheres to the probably apocryphal Roman tradition that Carthage callously executed their own mercenary general, Xanthippus, after he had successfully defended Africa for them in the First Punic War. However, Xanthippus's sons are shown fighting in the Carthaginian side without any ill feeling. This contradiction is never explained; if they were unaware of their father's fate or some similar Hand Wave, it is not stated. The poem also identifies wrongly the falarica as a large ballista, but later describes it correctly as a handheld javelin.
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 Punica / int_e34ada78
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Authority Equals Asskicking
 Punica / int_e34ada78
comment
Authority Equals Asskicking: Every general has at least a moment in which he intervenes personally and kicks much ass in battle. Killing named warriors of the opposite side is an usual way to establish he is a man among men.
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Punica / int_e34ada78
 Punica / int_e993da98
type
Equal-Opportunity Evil
 Punica / int_e993da98
comment
Equal-Opportunity Evil: A trait of the Carthaginian side, done presumably in order to make it more exotical and bizarre to the conservative Romans. Hannibal's army contains women and people of all skin tones, in marked contrast to the all white male Roman army.
 Punica / int_e993da98
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Punica / int_e993da98
 Punica / int_e9f517e1
type
Artistic License – Geography
 Punica / int_e9f517e1
comment
Artistic License – Geography: Silius often slaps names of rivers on characters who were supposed to inhabit its nearby lands, like Sicoris, Tagus (in which this is lampshaded), Bagradas and Rhone. However, some of his choices are strange, as there are two Spanish chieftains named Cydnus and Rhyndacus, which are names of Middle-Eastern rivers. The mentioned Rhyndacus leads a force from the Celtiberian city of Uxama, which is then described in the text as having "Sarmatian walls." While it is unclear what did he mean by this, he seems to imply Sarmatians had somehow something to do with ancient Celtiberians. As in the previous, however, this might be a reference to ancient folklore connecting the Iberian Peninsula with the Persian land also called Iberia.
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Punica / int_e9f517e1
 Punica / int_eaf5a1ac
type
Groin Attack
 Punica / int_eaf5a1ac
comment
Groin Attack: Phorcys the Turdetanian is killed by Paulus while he attempted one against him, leaving him open for a downward cut.
 Punica / int_eaf5a1ac
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 Punica / int_eaf5a1ac
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Punica / int_eaf5a1ac
 Punica / int_ee7a60e9
type
One-Steve Limit
 Punica / int_ee7a60e9
comment
One-Steve Limit: Averted, as for instance, there are an Astur mercenary named Cydnus in Hannibal's army and a Carthaginian soldier of unidentified nationality and the same name in Syracuse. There is also a lieutenant named Nealces with Hannibal and an incestuous soldier of the same name.
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Punica / int_ee7a60e9
 Punica / int_fea42091
type
Badass Preacher
 Punica / int_fea42091
comment
Badass Preacher: Bogus, a Carthaginian priest/diviner that also fights. He scores an important death on Ticinus before being felled by the Roman consul at Trebia.
 Punica / int_fea42091
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Punica / int_fea42091
 Punica / int_name
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ItemName
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Punica

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 Punica
hasFeature
Legend / int_cd0f732b