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1 See also  





2 References  














Battle of Nola (216 BC)






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Coordinates: 40°5534N 14°3139E / 40.9261°N 14.5275°E / 40.9261; 14.5275
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


First Battle of Nola

Part of the Second Punic War


Plan of the first battle of Nola

Date

Late 216 BC

Location

Nola, present-day Italy
40°55′34N 14°31′39E / 40.9261°N 14.5275°E / 40.9261; 14.5275

Result

Roman Victory [1][2]

Belligerents

Carthage

Roman Republic

Commanders and leaders

Hannibal

Marcus Claudius Marcellus

Prelude
Italy
Iberia
Sicily and Sardinia
North Africa

  • Mercenary
  • Second
  • Third
  • The First Battle of Nola was fought in 216 BC between the forces of Hannibal and a Roman force led by Marcus Claudius Marcellus. Hannibal was attempting to seize the town of Nola: He failed to do so, and would make two more unsuccessful attempts on the city over the next two years.

    Hannibal moved to capture the city of Nola due to some leaders in the city offering to open their gates to him.[1] A Roman force under the command of Marcellus arrived before Hannibal and was able to enter the city.[1] Hannibal camped near the city, and daily skirmishes took place between the two armies. Marcellus learnt that the only support he enjoyed was the senators in the city. Marcellus took action to prevent betrayal by undermining the pro-Hannibal faction in the city.[1] Marcellus learnt that some leaders in the city had been conspiring with Hannibal, and he discovered that should he make any sortie from the town or draw up for battle outside, they planned on plundering the baggage and closing the gates behind him.[1] After this, Marcellus decided his situation was not sustainable.[1]

    Map of the 216 BC Nola campaign

    He took action to protect himself from a revolt, pulled his troops from the walls, and secretly organized them behind the gates.[1] Hannibal drew up his men in battle order in anticipation of an attack or at least another skirmish. When nothing happened, Hannibal concluded that Marcellus had uncovered his plan and would not dare attempt a sortie with the threat of betrayal. Confident of this, he marched his soldiers forward to attempt an assault on the central gate.[1] The Carthaginian forces approached with ladders and machines useful for an assault. When they did this, Marcellus sprang his trap and ordered his forces to charge out of the gates and personally lead the centre.[1] Hannibal's troops found themselves caught off guard.[1] Hannibal made attempts to change the tide of the ensuing battle; however, when the second line of the Roman troops charged from the gates, it became clear he couldn't win the battle.[1] After sustaining heavy losses, Hannibal ordered a phased retreat from the field to save his army from further losses. Hannibal gave up hope of capturing Nola and withdrew to a camp near Acerræ. The victory, while not decisive enough to end Hannibal's fighting potential, was a boost to Roman morale.[1]

    The battle was a minor Roman victory.[1][2]

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Dodge, Theodore (2012). Hannibal. Tales End Press. pp. 338–345. ISBN 978-0306813627.
  • ^ a b Bradford, Ernle Dusgate Selby (2014). Hannibal. New York. pp. 118–119. ISBN 978-1-4976-3790-0. OCLC 905885573.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Battles of the Punic Wars

    First Punic War

  • Messana
  • Agrigentum
  • Lipari Islands
  • Mylae
  • Thermae
  • Sulci
  • Tyndaris
  • Cape Ecnomus
  • Aspis
  • Adys
  • Bagradas (Tunis)
  • Cape Hermaeum
  • Panormus
  • Drepana
  • Lilybaeum
  • Drepana (siege)
  • Mount Ercte
  • 1st Mt. Eryx
  • 2nd Mt. Eryx
  • Aegates
  • Treaty of Lutatius
  • Mercenary War

  • Bagradas
  • Hamilcar's victory with Naravas
  • Carthage
  • The Saw
  • Tunis
  • Leptis Parva
  • Second Punic War
    (Battles)

  • Lilybaeum
  • Malta
  • Rhone
  • Crossing of the Alps
  • Cissa
  • Ticinus
  • Trebia
  • Ebro River
  • Lake Trasimene
  • Ager Falernus
  • Geronium
  • Cannae
  • Silva Litana
  • 1st Nola
  • Ibera
  • 2nd Nola
  • Decimomannu
  • 3rd Nola
  • 1st Beneventum
  • Syracuse
  • 1st Tarentum
  • 2nd Beneventum
  • 1st Capua
  • Silarus
  • 1st Herdonia
  • Upper Baetis
  • 2nd Capua
  • 2nd Herdonia
  • Numistro
  • Canusium
  • 2nd Tarentum
  • New Carthage
  • Baecula
  • Petelia
  • Grumentum
  • Metaurus
  • Ilipa
  • Sucro
  • Carteia (land)
  • Carteia (naval)
  • Crotona
  • 1st Utica
  • 2nd Utica
  • Great Plains (Bagradas)
  • Cirta
  • Insubria
  • Zama
  • Third Punic War

  • 1st Nepheris
  • Port of Carthage
  • 2nd Nepheris
  • Carthage
  • Military history

  • t
  • e

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Battle_of_Nola_(216_BC)&oldid=1228158871"

    Categories: 
    216 BC
    Battles of the Second Punic War
    Military history of Campania
    210s BC conflicts
    Ancient Roman battle stubs
    Hidden categories: 
    Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
    CS1 maint: location missing publisher
    Coordinates on Wikidata
    Pages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback via Module:Annotated link
    All stub articles
     



    This page was last edited on 9 June 2024, at 19:25 (UTC).

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