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Hannibal's Children

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Language
  
English

Originally published
  
May 2002

Followed by
  
The Seven Hills

Cover artist
  
Scott Grimando

3.7/5
Goodreads

Country
  
United States

Publication date
  
May 2002

Author
  
John Maddox Roberts

Publisher
  
Ace Books

Genres
  
Alternate history, Novel

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Media type
  
Print (hardback & paperback)

Pages
  
368 p. (first edition, hardback) & 359 p. (paperback edition)

ISBN
  
0-441-00933-6 (first edition, hardback) & ISBN 0-441-01038-5 (paperback edition)

John Maddox Roberts books
  
The Seven Hills, The River God's Vengeance, The Tribune's Curse, The Catiline Conspiracy

Hannibal's Children is a 2002 alternate history novel by American writer John Maddox Roberts.

Contents

Plot summary

The novel opens at the alternate close of the Second Punic War. Hannibal offers terms to the Romans: abandon their city and move north of the Alps, or be destroyed. The Romans, under the dictator Quintus Fabius Maximus, accept the offer and withdraw into Germania, vowing to return. The Carthaginians declare victory and go home.

One chapter and several generations later, the Romans have long since reestablished their republic. These Romans, largely out of need, have adopted a practice of Cultural Romanization more pronounced than the historical Romans did: large numbers of Germans have been adopted into the Roman society, forming a large proportion of both the legions and the Senate. A series of auspicious omens prompt the Senate to send a delegation south into Latium. The expedition leaders are subtly but immediately at cross purposes: the commander, Marcus Scipio, a scion of the ancient patrician Cornelii Scipiones family, is wholly motivated by a desire to reestablish the Republic in the Mediterranean basin. His deputy, Titus Norbanus, one of the newer, Germanic Romans, seeks personal glory, at least in part to ensure that the Germans (particularly his own family) remain as powerful within the expanded Republic as they do under the current scheme.

It quickly becomes clear to the Romans that generations of constant warfare in Germania have strengthened them, whereas the Carthaginians have grown soft in the absence of real opposition. The Republic quickly begins playing the Carthaginians off against the Egyptians, the only other serious power in the Mediterranean, reclaiming Latium in the process. At the close of the novel, the Egyptian army led by Scipio and armed with fearsome weapons from the School of Archimedes from the Library of Alexandria, outlasts the Carthaginian force, which hurriedly retreats upon hearing the news of the Roman reconquest of Italy. The four Roman legions led by Norbanus, technically Carthaginian auxiliaries, decide to ignore Scipio's offer to join him in Alexandria, and chart their own path to Rome.

Characters

  • Marcus Scipio: Leader of Roman Expedition to Carthage and Egypt
  • Titus Norbanus: Second in command of Roman Expedition
  • Aulus Flaccus: Senator and diplomat, assistant and friend to Marcus Scipio
  • Selene II: Queen and Regent of Egypt
  • Hamilcar II: Shofet of Carthage
  • Princess Zarabel: Sister of Hamilcar, leader of the Cult of Tanit
  • Major themes

    As with Roberts's other series, Hannibal's Children and its sequel The Seven Hills explore the decline of the Republic in the face of ambition. In the former, the Caesars and in the latter Norbanus aggressively pursue power for its own sake, in the process exposing weaknesses in the Republic.

    Release details

  • 2002, USA, Ace Books (ISBN 0-441-00933-6), Pub date ? May 2002, hardback (First edition)
  • 2003, USA, Ace Books (ISBN 0-441-01038-5), Pub date ? March 2003, paperback
  • References

    Hannibal's Children Wikipedia