On the northern coast of Africa, where the land juts into the Mediterranean like an outstretched hand, a group of Phoenician settlers from the city of Tyre laid the foundations of what would become one of the ancient world’s most consequential cities. They called it Qart-Hadasht — the New City. The Greeks and Romans would call it Carthage. And for nearly six centuries, it would shape the course of history across three continents.
Key findings
- Phoenician colonization: Settlers from Tyre, in what is now Lebanon, established Carthage on a strategic peninsula in the Gulf of Tunis, giving it natural harbors on two sides and making it nearly impossible to blockade.
- Carthage founding date: Ancient sources, including the Greek historian Timaeus, place the founding at approximately 814–813 B.C.E. — roughly 65 years before the traditional date of Rome’s own founding, a fact Carthaginian pride would not let Romans forget.
- Mediterranean trade network: Phoenician settlers brought with them an established maritime culture, including the alphabet, advanced navigation, and a web of trade relationships stretching from the Levant to the Atlantic coast of Iberia.
Who were the Phoenicians?
The Phoenicians were not a single kingdom or empire. They were a collection of city-states along the eastern Mediterranean coast — Tyre, Sidon, Byblos — united by a shared language, a genius for trade, and a willingness to sail where others would not.
They were the people who gave the Western world its alphabet, a gift so profound it reshaped how humans record thought. Their ships carried cedarwood, purple dye, glass, and silver from one end of the known world to the other. And when pressure from the Assyrian Empire began to squeeze Tyre in the 9th century B.C.E., the Tyrians looked west.
Carthage was not their first settlement abroad. They had already planted trading posts in Cyprus, Sardinia, Sicily, and Spain. But Carthage would surpass them all.
Why this location changed everything
The site the Phoenicians chose was not accidental. The Byrsa hill — the rocky outcrop at Carthage’s center — offered commanding views of the surrounding sea and land. The peninsula’s geography gave the city two harbors: one for commercial ships, one for the navy. Fresh water was available. Farmland surrounded the city in all directions.
Within a generation, Carthage had outgrown its status as a trading outpost and begun building its own network of colonies and client cities across North Africa and the western Mediterranean. It drew merchants and settlers from across the Phoenician world, from Berber communities in the North African interior, and eventually from across its expanding empire.
The city’s population would eventually reach several hundred thousand people, making it one of the largest urban centers in the ancient world — larger, at its height, than Rome itself.
A civilization on its own terms
Carthage developed its own identity, distinct from its Phoenician origins. It was governed not by kings but by a council of elders called the sufetes — a word sharing roots with the Hebrew shofet, meaning judge — alongside a popular assembly with genuine political power. This mixed constitution was admired by Aristotle, who wrote that it had helped Carthage avoid the civil strife that plagued Greek city-states.
Carthaginian religion centered on the gods Baal Hammon and Tanit. Their culture produced sophisticated art, architecture, and agricultural science. Mago of Carthage, writing in the 3rd or 4th century B.C.E., produced a 28-volume agricultural encyclopedia so comprehensive that the Roman Senate ordered it translated into Latin after the city’s destruction — preserving Carthaginian knowledge even as they erased Carthage itself.
The Berber peoples of the North African interior — known to the Romans as Numidians and Libyans — were essential to Carthage’s survival and expansion. Numidian cavalry formed the backbone of Carthaginian armies. Berber farmers fed the city. The relationship was often exploitative, marked by heavy taxation and periodic revolt, but it was also one of deep cultural entanglement. Carthage was always more than a Phoenician city. It was an African city.
Lasting impact
Carthage’s influence radiated outward in every direction. Its trade routes connected sub-Saharan Africa, the British Isles, and the Indian Ocean world into a single economic system centuries before Rome achieved comparable reach. The Carthaginian navigator Hanno sailed down the West African coast around 500 B.C.E., reaching possibly as far as modern Cameroon or Gabon — one of the longest documented ocean voyages of the ancient world.
The city’s wars with Rome — the three Punic Wars fought between 264 and 146 B.C.E. — shaped the Roman Republic more profoundly than almost any other external force. The terror of Hannibal Barca’s crossing of the Alps with war elephants, and his years of campaigning through the Italian peninsula, left scars and innovations in Roman military thinking that persisted for centuries. Hannibal remains one of the most studied military commanders in history.
When Rome finally destroyed Carthage in 146 B.C.E. — killing or enslaving its population and salting its fields, according to later tradition — it was not a story of civilization defeating barbarism. It was the destruction of one great civilization by another, driven by fear as much as ambition.
The Phoenician alphabet that Carthaginian merchants carried across the Mediterranean became the ancestor of Greek, Latin, Arabic, and ultimately most of the world’s modern alphabets. Every time you read these words, you are reading a technology those traders helped spread.
Blindspots and limits
Carthage’s history is largely known through Roman and Greek sources — written by people who were often at war with Carthage and had every reason to distort what they described. Carthaginian literature was either destroyed in 146 B.C.E. or scattered into sources that no longer survive. The question of child sacrifice at Carthage — a charge leveled by ancient enemies and debated by modern archaeologists examining the tophet burial sites — remains genuinely unresolved. The peoples of the North African interior whom Carthage taxed and conscripted left few written records of their own experience. Carthage’s story, even now, is told mostly by those who defeated it.
The traditional founding date of ~813 B.C.E. rests on ancient literary tradition rather than direct archaeological confirmation. Recent excavations at Byrsa Hill have found Phoenician materials consistent with a late 9th-century B.C.E. arrival, broadly supporting the traditional date — but the exact year remains uncertain.
Read more
For more on this story, see: World History Encyclopedia — Carthage
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana establishes a landmark marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Indigenous land rights: 160 million hectares recognized ahead of COP30
- The Good News for Humankind archive on ancient history
About this article
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