fbpx
Wikipedia

Masinissa

Masinissa (Numidian: , Masnsen; c. 238 BC – 148 BC[3]: 180, 183 ), also spelled Massinissa,[4] Massena and Massan,[5] was an ancient Numidian king best known for leading a federation of Massylii Berber tribes during the Second Punic War (218–201 BC), ultimately uniting them into a kingdom that became a major regional power in North Africa. Much of what is known about Masinissa comes from the Livy's History of Rome, and to a lesser extent Cicero's Scipio's Dream. As the son of a Numidian chieftain allied to Carthage, he fought against the Romans in the Second Punic War, but later switched sides upon concluding that Rome would prevail. With the support of his erstwhile enemy, he united the eastern and western Numidian tribes and founded the Kingdom of Numidia. As a Roman ally, Masinissa took part in the decisive Battle of Zama in 202 BC that effectively ended the war in Carthage's defeat; he also allowed his wife Sophonisba, a famed Carthaginian noblewoman who had influenced Numidian affairs to Carthage's benefit, to poison herself in lieu of being paraded in a triumph in Rome.[3]: 180–181 [citation needed]

Masinissa
King of Numidia
Coin of King Massinissa
King of Numidia
Reign202 BC–148 BC
PredecessorNew establishment
SuccessorMicipsa
King of the Massylii
Reign206 BC–202 BC
PredecessorLacumazes
SuccessorHimself as King of Numidia
Bornc. 238 BC
Died148 BC (aged about 90)
Burial
Royal tomb of El Khroub[1]
SpouseQueen Sophonisba of Numidia
Issue
TribeMassylii
FatherGaia

After inheriting a larger, more powerful kingdom now backed by Rome, Masinissa played a decisive role in provoking Carthage into triggering the Third Punic War, which ended in the city's complete destruction, and left Numidia the sole power in northwest Africa. He ruled for 54 years until his death at age 90. He was regarded as a staunch ally of Rome, and an unusually vigorous ruler, leading troops until his death and fathering some 44 sons.[3]: 181 [6] His tomb in Cirta (modern-day Constantine in Algeria) bears the inscription MSNSN, read Mas'n'sen, or "Their Lord".

The Greek historian Polybius, who wrote extensively about the Punic Wars and is reputed to have met Masinissa, described him as "the best man of all the kings of our time", writing that "his greatest and most divine achievement was this: Numidia had been before his time universally unproductive, and was looked upon as incapable of producing any cultivated fruits. He was the first and only man who showed that it could produce cultivated fruits just as well as any other country". In the following centuries, Numidia would become known as the breadbasket of Rome.

In addition to his legacy as a major figure in the Punic Wars, Masinissa is largely viewed as an icon by the Berbers, many of whom consider him their forefather.[7]

Early life edit

Masinissa was the son of the chieftain Gaia of a Numidian tribal group, the Massylii.[8] He was brought up in Carthage, an ally of his father.[9] At the start of the Second Punic War, Masinissa fought for Carthage against Syphax, the king of the Masaesyli of western Numidia (present day Algeria), who had allied himself with the Romans. Masinissa, then about 17 years old, led an army of Numidian troops and Carthaginian auxiliaries against Syphax's army and won a decisive victory (215–212 BC). He was betrothed to the daughter of the Carthaginian general Hasdrubal Gisgo.[3]: 180 

 
Massinissa of Numidia

After his victory over Syphax, Masinissa commanded his skilled Numidian cavalry against the Romans in Spain, where he was involved in the Carthaginian victories of Castulo and Ilorca in 211 BC. After Hasdrubal Barca departed for Italy, Masinissa was placed in command of all the Carthaginian cavalry in Spain, where he fought a successful guerrilla campaign against the Roman general Publius Cornelius Scipio (Scipio Africanus) throughout 208 and 207, while Mago Barca and Hasdrubal Gisgo levied and trained new forces. In c.206 BC, with fresh reinforcements, Mago and Hasdrubal Gisgo—supported by Masinissa's Numidian cavalry—met Scipio at the Battle of Ilipa, where Carthage's power over Hispania was forever broken in arguably Scipio Africanus's most brilliant victory.

When Gaia died in 206 BC, his son Masinissa and his brother Oezalces quarreled about the inheritance, and Syphax was able to conquer considerable parts of eastern Numidia. Meanwhile, with the Carthaginians having been driven from Hispania, Masinissa concluded that Rome was winning the war against Carthage and therefore decided to defect to Rome. He promised to assist Scipio in the invasion of Carthaginian territory in Africa. This decision was aided by the move by Scipio Africanus to free Masinissa's nephew, Massiva, whom the Romans had captured when he had disobeyed his uncle and ridden into battle. Having lost the alliance with Masinissa, Hasdrubal started to look for another ally, which he found in Syphax, who married Sophonisba, Hasdrubal's daughter, who until the defection had been betrothed to Masinissa. The Romans supported Masinissa's claim to the Numidian throne against Syphax, who was nevertheless successful in driving Masinissa from power until Scipio invaded Africa in 204. Masinissa joined the Roman forces and participated in the victorious Battle of the Great Plains (203).

At the Battle of Bagbrades (203), Scipio overcame Hasdrubal and Syphax and, while the Roman general concentrated on Carthage, Gaius Laelius and Masinissa followed Syphax to Cirta, where he was captured and handed over to Scipio. After the defeat of Syphax, Masinissa married Syphax's wife Sophonisba, but Scipio, suspicious of her loyalty, demanded that she be taken to Rome and appear in the triumphal parade. To save her from such humiliation, Masinissa sent her poison, with which she killed herself. Masinissa was now accepted as a loyal ally of Rome, and was confirmed by Scipio as the king of the Massylii. Following the capture of Syphax, the King Bokkar, ruler of what is now Morocco with his capital based in Tingis, had become a vassal of Masinissa.[10][11][12]

At the Battle of Zama, Masinissa commanded the cavalry (6,000 Numidian and 3,000 Roman) on Scipio's right wing, Scipio delayed the engagement long enough to allow for Masinissa to join him. With the battle hanging in the balance, Masinissa's cavalry, having driven the fleeing Carthaginian horsemen away, returned and immediately fell onto the rear of the Carthaginian lines. This decided the battle and at once Hannibal's army began to collapse. The Second Punic War was over and for his services Masinissa received the Kingdom of Syphax, and became King of Numidia.

Masinissa was now king of both the Massylii and the Masaesyli. He showed unconditional loyalty to Rome, and his position in Africa was strengthened by a clause in the peace treaty of 201 between Rome and Carthage prohibiting the latter from going to war even in self-defense without Roman permission. This enabled Masinissa to encroach on the remaining Carthaginian territory as long as he judged that Rome wished to see Carthage further weakened.

Later life edit

 
 
The tomb of Masinissa above (in El Khroub, Algeria), and the completely restored Libyco-Punic Mausoleum of Dougga (near Téboursouk, Tunisia), which may be a cenotaph for him, below.

With Roman backing, Masinissa established his own kingdom of Numidia, west of Carthage, with Cirta — present day Constantine — as its capital city. All this happened in accordance with Roman interest, as they wanted to give Carthage more problems with its neighbours. Masinissa's chief aim was to build a strong and unified state from the semi-nomadic Numidian tribes. To that end, he introduced Carthaginian agricultural techniques and forced many Numidians to settle as peasant farmers. Masinissa and his sons possessed large estates throughout Numidia, to the extent that Roman authors attributed to him, quite falsely, the sedentarization of the Numidians. Major towns included Capsa, Thugga (modern Dougga), Bulla Regia and Hippo Regius.

All through his reign, Masinissa extended his territory, and he was cooperating with Rome when, towards the end of his life, he provoked Carthage to go to war against him. The Punic city answered in kind, even though it could not legally declare war due to its treaty with Rome. In one occasion, Masinissa had to march to assist one of his sons to fight off an attack of Hispanics, possibly the 153 BC Lusitanian invasion headed by Caucenus, who has been speculated to have been in league with Carthage. The city certainly capitalized to sack Masinissa's lands.[13]

Any hopes Masinissa may have had of extending his rule right across North Africa were dashed, however, with the Roman commissions sent to Africa to decide the territorial dispute between Masinissa and Carthage. He defeated the Punics, however, at the Battle of Oroscopa in 151 BC. In any case, animated probably by an irrational fear of a Carthaginian revival, but possibly by suspicion of the victorious Masinissa's ambitions, the elderly Marcus Porcius Cato advocated among the Romans, finally with success, the destruction of Carthage. Based on descriptions from Livy, the Numidians began raiding around seventy towns in the southern and western sections of Carthage's remaining territory. Outraged with their conduct, Carthage went to war against them, in defiance of the Roman treaty forbidding them to make war on anyone, thus precipitating the Third Punic War (149–146 BC). Masinissa showed his displeasure when the Roman army arrived in Africa in 149 BC, but he died early in 148 BC without a breach in the alliance. Ancient accounts suggest Masinissa lived beyond the age of 90 and was apparently still personally leading the armies of his kingdom when he died.

In 179 B.C. Masinissa received a golden crown from the inhabitants of Delos as he had offered them a shipload of grain. A statue of Masinissa was set up in Delos in honour of him as well as an inscription dedicated to him in Delos by a native from Rhodes. His sons too had statues of them erected on the island of Delos and the King of Bithynia, Nicomedes, had also dedicated a statue to Masinissa.[14]

After his death, Micipsa succeeded to the throne, Micipsa had two sons, Hiempsal I and Adherbal, who took the power for a short period before being overthrown by their cousin Jughurta. Some of his descendants were the elder Juba I of Numidia (85 BC–46 BC) and younger Juba II (52 BC–AD 24).

In literature, art and film edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Tombeau de Massinissa" (in Arabic and French). AlgeriePresseService. 22 May 2013. Retrieved 20 August 2017.
  2. ^ "Libyan' Inscriptions in Numidia and Mauretania".
  3. ^ a b c d Law, R.C.C. (1979), "North Africa in the Hellenistic and Roman periods, 323 BC to AD 305", in Fage, J.D. (ed.), Cambridge History of Africa, vol. 2, Cambridge University Press, pp. 148–209, doi:10.1017/CHOL9780521215923.005
  4. ^ "MASSINISSA ou MASINISA (-240 env.--149) roi des Numides". Encyclopædia Universalis (in French). Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  5. ^ Fowler, Paul; Grocock, Christopher; Melville, James (13 July 2017). OCR Ancient History GCSE Component 2: Rome. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 132. ISBN 9781350015210.
  6. ^ Walsh, P.G. (1965). "Massinissa". The Journal of Roman Studies. 55 (1/2): 149–160. doi:10.2307/297437. JSTOR 297437. S2CID 250349824.
  7. ^ Can North Africa unite over couscous? Gulf News
  8. ^ Fage, John Donnelly; Fage, J. D.; Clark, John Desmond; Oliver, Roland Anthony; Gray, Richard; Flint, John E.; Roberts, A. D. (1975). The Cambridge History of Africa. Vol. 2. Cambridge University Press. p. 180. ISBN 9780521215923.
  9. ^ Smith, William, ed. (1873). "Masinissa". A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology. London: Spottiswoode and Co. – via Perseus Digital Library.
  10. ^ Villes et tribus du Maroc: documents et renseignements, Volume 7 Morocco. Direction des affaires indigènes: “Les rois indigènes . Bokkar . Au début du troisième siècle avant JésusChrist , le Maroc obéissait à Bokkar , qui résidait à Tanger , capitale du royaume , et qui était un lieutenant du roi de Numidie Syphax. En 202 avant Jésus - Christ , après la capture de Syphax , il devint le vassal de Massinissa” H. Champion
  11. ^ Histoire du Maroc Coissac de Chavrebière Payot: “ La guerre tourna à l'avantage de Massinissa , allié des Romains . Syphax fut fait prisonnier ( 202 ) et Bokkar devint le vassal du vainqueur . « Massinissa , dit St. Gsell , rêvà d'être pour la civilisation punique ce que le Macédonien...”
  12. ^ Le Maroc Prosper Ricard Hachette: “En 202 avant J.-C. , elle était la résidence , disent les Anciens , de Bokkar , roi du Maroc , lieutenant de Syphax le numide , vassal de Massinissa . En 105 avant J.-C. , Bokkus [ er , allié de Sylla , livre aux Romains son gendre”
  13. ^ Toni Ñaco del Hoyo, Fernando López Sánchez (2017). War, Warlords, and Interstate Relations in the Ancient Mediterranean. Brill. ISBN 978-90-043540-5-0.
  14. ^ Itineraria Phoenicia - Edward Lipiński

Bibliography edit

External links edit

Preceded by
Himself (as King of the Massylii), Archobarzane (as King of the Masaesyli)
King of Numidia
202–148 BC
Succeeded by

masinissa, later, numidian, king, numidian, masnsen, also, spelled, massinissa, massena, massan, ancient, numidian, king, best, known, leading, federation, massylii, berber, tribes, during, second, punic, ultimately, uniting, them, into, kingdom, that, became,. For the later Numidian king see Masinissa II Masinissa Numidian Masnsen c 238 BC 148 BC 3 180 183 also spelled Massinissa 4 Massena and Massan 5 was an ancient Numidian king best known for leading a federation of Massylii Berber tribes during the Second Punic War 218 201 BC ultimately uniting them into a kingdom that became a major regional power in North Africa Much of what is known about Masinissa comes from the Livy s History of Rome and to a lesser extent Cicero s Scipio s Dream As the son of a Numidian chieftain allied to Carthage he fought against the Romans in the Second Punic War but later switched sides upon concluding that Rome would prevail With the support of his erstwhile enemy he united the eastern and western Numidian tribes and founded the Kingdom of Numidia As a Roman ally Masinissa took part in the decisive Battle of Zama in 202 BC that effectively ended the war in Carthage s defeat he also allowed his wife Sophonisba a famed Carthaginian noblewoman who had influenced Numidian affairs to Carthage s benefit to poison herself in lieu of being paraded in a triumph in Rome 3 180 181 citation needed MasinissaKing of NumidiaCoin of King MassinissaKing of NumidiaReign202 BC 148 BCPredecessorNew establishmentSuccessorMicipsaKing of the MassyliiReign206 BC 202 BCPredecessorLacumazesSuccessorHimself as King of NumidiaBornc 238 BCDied148 BC aged about 90 BurialRoyal tomb of El Khroub 1 SpouseQueen Sophonisba of NumidiaIssueMicipsa Gulussa MastanabalRegnal name 2 TribeMassyliiFatherGaiaAfter inheriting a larger more powerful kingdom now backed by Rome Masinissa played a decisive role in provoking Carthage into triggering the Third Punic War which ended in the city s complete destruction and left Numidia the sole power in northwest Africa He ruled for 54 years until his death at age 90 He was regarded as a staunch ally of Rome and an unusually vigorous ruler leading troops until his death and fathering some 44 sons 3 181 6 His tomb in Cirta modern day Constantine in Algeria bears the inscription MSNSN read Mas n sen or Their Lord The Greek historian Polybius who wrote extensively about the Punic Wars and is reputed to have met Masinissa described him as the best man of all the kings of our time writing that his greatest and most divine achievement was this Numidia had been before his time universally unproductive and was looked upon as incapable of producing any cultivated fruits He was the first and only man who showed that it could produce cultivated fruits just as well as any other country In the following centuries Numidia would become known as the breadbasket of Rome In addition to his legacy as a major figure in the Punic Wars Masinissa is largely viewed as an icon by the Berbers many of whom consider him their forefather 7 Contents 1 Early life 2 Later life 3 In literature art and film 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksEarly life editMasinissa was the son of the chieftain Gaia of a Numidian tribal group the Massylii 8 He was brought up in Carthage an ally of his father 9 At the start of the Second Punic War Masinissa fought for Carthage against Syphax the king of the Masaesyli of western Numidia present day Algeria who had allied himself with the Romans Masinissa then about 17 years old led an army of Numidian troops and Carthaginian auxiliaries against Syphax s army and won a decisive victory 215 212 BC He was betrothed to the daughter of the Carthaginian general Hasdrubal Gisgo 3 180 nbsp Massinissa of NumidiaAfter his victory over Syphax Masinissa commanded his skilled Numidian cavalry against the Romans in Spain where he was involved in the Carthaginian victories of Castulo and Ilorca in 211 BC After Hasdrubal Barca departed for Italy Masinissa was placed in command of all the Carthaginian cavalry in Spain where he fought a successful guerrilla campaign against the Roman general Publius Cornelius Scipio Scipio Africanus throughout 208 and 207 while Mago Barca and Hasdrubal Gisgo levied and trained new forces In c 206 BC with fresh reinforcements Mago and Hasdrubal Gisgo supported by Masinissa s Numidian cavalry met Scipio at the Battle of Ilipa where Carthage s power over Hispania was forever broken in arguably Scipio Africanus s most brilliant victory When Gaia died in 206 BC his son Masinissa and his brother Oezalces quarreled about the inheritance and Syphax was able to conquer considerable parts of eastern Numidia Meanwhile with the Carthaginians having been driven from Hispania Masinissa concluded that Rome was winning the war against Carthage and therefore decided to defect to Rome He promised to assist Scipio in the invasion of Carthaginian territory in Africa This decision was aided by the move by Scipio Africanus to free Masinissa s nephew Massiva whom the Romans had captured when he had disobeyed his uncle and ridden into battle Having lost the alliance with Masinissa Hasdrubal started to look for another ally which he found in Syphax who married Sophonisba Hasdrubal s daughter who until the defection had been betrothed to Masinissa The Romans supported Masinissa s claim to the Numidian throne against Syphax who was nevertheless successful in driving Masinissa from power until Scipio invaded Africa in 204 Masinissa joined the Roman forces and participated in the victorious Battle of the Great Plains 203 At the Battle of Bagbrades 203 Scipio overcame Hasdrubal and Syphax and while the Roman general concentrated on Carthage Gaius Laelius and Masinissa followed Syphax to Cirta where he was captured and handed over to Scipio After the defeat of Syphax Masinissa married Syphax s wife Sophonisba but Scipio suspicious of her loyalty demanded that she be taken to Rome and appear in the triumphal parade To save her from such humiliation Masinissa sent her poison with which she killed herself Masinissa was now accepted as a loyal ally of Rome and was confirmed by Scipio as the king of the Massylii Following the capture of Syphax the King Bokkar ruler of what is now Morocco with his capital based in Tingis had become a vassal of Masinissa 10 11 12 At the Battle of Zama Masinissa commanded the cavalry 6 000 Numidian and 3 000 Roman on Scipio s right wing Scipio delayed the engagement long enough to allow for Masinissa to join him With the battle hanging in the balance Masinissa s cavalry having driven the fleeing Carthaginian horsemen away returned and immediately fell onto the rear of the Carthaginian lines This decided the battle and at once Hannibal s army began to collapse The Second Punic War was over and for his services Masinissa received the Kingdom of Syphax and became King of Numidia Masinissa was now king of both the Massylii and the Masaesyli He showed unconditional loyalty to Rome and his position in Africa was strengthened by a clause in the peace treaty of 201 between Rome and Carthage prohibiting the latter from going to war even in self defense without Roman permission This enabled Masinissa to encroach on the remaining Carthaginian territory as long as he judged that Rome wished to see Carthage further weakened Later life edit nbsp nbsp The tomb of Masinissa above in El Khroub Algeria and the completely restored Libyco Punic Mausoleum of Dougga near Teboursouk Tunisia which may be a cenotaph for him below With Roman backing Masinissa established his own kingdom of Numidia west of Carthage with Cirta present day Constantine as its capital city All this happened in accordance with Roman interest as they wanted to give Carthage more problems with its neighbours Masinissa s chief aim was to build a strong and unified state from the semi nomadic Numidian tribes To that end he introduced Carthaginian agricultural techniques and forced many Numidians to settle as peasant farmers Masinissa and his sons possessed large estates throughout Numidia to the extent that Roman authors attributed to him quite falsely the sedentarization of the Numidians Major towns included Capsa Thugga modern Dougga Bulla Regia and Hippo Regius All through his reign Masinissa extended his territory and he was cooperating with Rome when towards the end of his life he provoked Carthage to go to war against him The Punic city answered in kind even though it could not legally declare war due to its treaty with Rome In one occasion Masinissa had to march to assist one of his sons to fight off an attack of Hispanics possibly the 153 BC Lusitanian invasion headed by Caucenus who has been speculated to have been in league with Carthage The city certainly capitalized to sack Masinissa s lands 13 Any hopes Masinissa may have had of extending his rule right across North Africa were dashed however with the Roman commissions sent to Africa to decide the territorial dispute between Masinissa and Carthage He defeated the Punics however at the Battle of Oroscopa in 151 BC In any case animated probably by an irrational fear of a Carthaginian revival but possibly by suspicion of the victorious Masinissa s ambitions the elderly Marcus Porcius Cato advocated among the Romans finally with success the destruction of Carthage Based on descriptions from Livy the Numidians began raiding around seventy towns in the southern and western sections of Carthage s remaining territory Outraged with their conduct Carthage went to war against them in defiance of the Roman treaty forbidding them to make war on anyone thus precipitating the Third Punic War 149 146 BC Masinissa showed his displeasure when the Roman army arrived in Africa in 149 BC but he died early in 148 BC without a breach in the alliance Ancient accounts suggest Masinissa lived beyond the age of 90 and was apparently still personally leading the armies of his kingdom when he died In 179 B C Masinissa received a golden crown from the inhabitants of Delos as he had offered them a shipload of grain A statue of Masinissa was set up in Delos in honour of him as well as an inscription dedicated to him in Delos by a native from Rhodes His sons too had statues of them erected on the island of Delos and the King of Bithynia Nicomedes had also dedicated a statue to Masinissa 14 After his death Micipsa succeeded to the throne Micipsa had two sons Hiempsal I and Adherbal who took the power for a short period before being overthrown by their cousin Jughurta Some of his descendants were the elder Juba I of Numidia 85 BC 46 BC and younger Juba II 52 BC AD 24 In literature art and film editAfrica late 1330s an epic poem by Petrarch Sophonisbe 1680 a German mourning play by Daniel Casper von Lohenstein Cabiria 1914 classic Italian silent film directed by Giovanni Pastrone Masinissa is portrayed by Vitale Di Stefano Scipio the African 1971 Italian film directed by Luigi Magni Masinissa is portrayed by Woody Strode Pride of Carthage 2005 a novel by David Anthony Durham nbsp Scipio at the deathbed of Masinissa nbsp Central wall depicting Sophonisba requesting help from Massinissa nbsp Scipio Africanus freeing MassivaSee also editList of kings of NumidiaReferences edit Tombeau de Massinissa in Arabic and French AlgeriePresseService 22 May 2013 Retrieved 20 August 2017 Libyan Inscriptions in Numidia and Mauretania a b c d Law R C C 1979 North Africa in the Hellenistic and Roman periods 323 BC to AD 305 in Fage J D ed Cambridge History of Africa vol 2 Cambridge University Press pp 148 209 doi 10 1017 CHOL9780521215923 005 MASSINISSA ou MASINISA 240 env 149 roi des Numides Encyclopaedia Universalis in French Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 1 October 2018 Fowler Paul Grocock Christopher Melville James 13 July 2017 OCR Ancient History GCSE Component 2 Rome Bloomsbury Publishing p 132 ISBN 9781350015210 Walsh P G 1965 Massinissa The Journal of Roman Studies 55 1 2 149 160 doi 10 2307 297437 JSTOR 297437 S2CID 250349824 Can North Africa unite over couscous Gulf News Fage John Donnelly Fage J D Clark John Desmond Oliver Roland Anthony Gray Richard Flint John E Roberts A D 1975 The Cambridge History of Africa Vol 2 Cambridge University Press p 180 ISBN 9780521215923 Smith William ed 1873 Masinissa A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology London Spottiswoode and Co via Perseus Digital Library Villes et tribus du Maroc documents et renseignements Volume 7 Morocco Direction des affaires indigenes Les rois indigenes Bokkar Au debut du troisieme siecle avant JesusChrist le Maroc obeissait a Bokkar qui residait a Tanger capitale du royaume et qui etait un lieutenant du roi de Numidie Syphax En 202 avant Jesus Christ apres la capture de Syphax il devint le vassal de Massinissa H Champion Histoire du Maroc Coissac de Chavrebiere Payot La guerre tourna a l avantage de Massinissa allie des Romains Syphax fut fait prisonnier 202 et Bokkar devint le vassal du vainqueur Massinissa dit St Gsell reva d etre pour la civilisation punique ce que le Macedonien Le Maroc Prosper Ricard Hachette En 202 avant J C elle etait la residence disent les Anciens de Bokkar roi du Maroc lieutenant de Syphax le numide vassal de Massinissa En 105 avant J C Bokkus er allie de Sylla livre aux Romains son gendre Toni Naco del Hoyo Fernando Lopez Sanchez 2017 War Warlords and Interstate Relations in the Ancient Mediterranean Brill ISBN 978 90 043540 5 0 Itineraria Phoenicia Edward LipinskiBibliography editLivy trans Aubrey de Selincourt 1965 The War With Hannibal New York Penguin Classics ISBN 0 14 044145 XExternal links editMassinissa Livius org Massinissa Archived 31 August 2013 at the Wayback MachinePreceded byHimself as King of the Massylii Archobarzane as King of the Masaesyli King of Numidia202 148 BC Succeeded byMicipsa Gulussa and Mastanabal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Masinissa amp oldid 1205818519, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.