tribute on none; Carthage despatched her overseers
everywhere, and loaded even the old-Phoenician cities
with a heavy tribute, while her subject tribes were
practically treated as state-slaves. In this
way there was not in the compass of the Carthagino-African
state a single community, with the exception of Utica,
that would not have been politically and materially
benefited by the fall of Carthage; in the Romano-Italic
there was not one that had not much more to lose than
to gain in rebelling against a government, which was
careful to avoid injuring material interests, and
which never at least by extreme measures challenged
political opposition to conflict. If Carthaginian
statesmen believed that they had attached to the interests
of Carthage her Phoenician subjects by their greater
dread of a Libyan revolt and all the landholders by
means of token-money, they transferred mercantile
calculation to a sphere to which it did not apply.
Experience proved that the Roman symmachy, notwithstanding
its seemingly looser bond of connection, kept together
against Pyrrhus like a wall of rock, whereas the Carthaginian
fell to pieces like a gossamer web as soon as a hostile
army set foot on African soil. It was so on
the landing of Agathocles and of Regulus, and likewise
in the mercenary war; the spirit that prevailed in
Africa is illustrated by the fact, that the Libyan
women voluntarily contributed their ornaments to the
mercenaries for their war against Carthage. In
Sicily alone the Carthaginians appear to have exercised
a milder rule, and to have attained on that account
better results. They granted to their subjects
in that quarter comparative freedom in foreign trade,
and allowed them to conduct their internal commerce,
probably from the outset and exclusively, with a metallic
currency; far greater freedom of movement generally
was allowed to them than was permitted to the Sardinians
and Libyans. Had Syracuse fallen into Carthaginian
hands, their policy would doubtless soon have changed.
But that result did not take place; and so, owing
to the well-calculated mildness of the Carthaginian
government and the unhappy distractions of the Sicilian
Greeks, there actually existed in Sicily a party really
friendly to the Phoenicians; for example, even after
the island had passed to the Romans, Philinus of Agrigentum
wrote the history of the great war in a thoroughly
Phoenician spirit. Nevertheless on the whole
the Sicilians must, both as subjects and as Hellenes,
have been at least as averse to their Phoenician masters
as the Samnites and Tarentines were to the Romans.
In Finance
In a financial point of view the state revenues of Carthage doubtless far surpassed those of Rome; but this advantage was partly neutralized by the facts, that the sources of the Carthaginian revenue—tribute and customs—dried up far sooner (and just when they were most needed) than those of Rome, and that the Carthaginian mode of conducting war was far more costly than the Roman.