tribes still smarting under their scarcely ended struggle
for independence, alien in race from the Italians,
and feeling their very existence endangered by the
chain of Roman fortresses and highways whose first
coils were even now being fastened around them, could
not but recognize their deliverers in the Phoenician
army (which numbered in its ranks numerous Spanish
Celts), and would serve as a first support for it to
fall back upon—a source whence it might
draw supplies and recruits. Already formal treaties
were concluded with the Boii and the Insubres, by
which they bound themselves to send guides to meet
the Carthaginian army, to procure for it a good reception
from the cognate tribes and supplies along its route,
and to rise against the Romans as soon as it should
set foot on Italian ground. In fine, the relations
of Rome with the east led the Carthaginians to this
same quarter. Macedonia, which by the victory
of Sellasia had re-established its sovereignty in
the Peloponnesus, was in strained relations with Rome;
Demetrius of Pharos, who had exchanged the Roman alliance
for that of Macedonia and had been dispossessed by
the Romans, lived as an exile at the Macedonian court,
and the latter had refused the demand which the Romans
made for his surrender. If it was possible to
combine the armies from the Guadalquivir and the Karasu
anywhere against the common foe, it could only be
done on the Po. Thus everything directed Hannibal
to Northern Italy; and that the eyes of his father
had already been turned to that quarter, is shown
by the reconnoitring party of Carthaginians, whom
the Romans to their great surprise encountered in
Liguria in 524.
The reason for Hannibal’s preference of the
land route to that by sea is less obvious; for that
neither the maritime supremacy of the Romans nor their
league with Massilia could have prevented a landing
at Genoa, is evident, and was shown by the sequel.
Our authorities fail to furnish us with several of
the elements, on which a satisfactory answer to this
question would depend, and which cannot be supplied
by conjecture. Hannibal had to choose between
two evils. Instead of exposing himself to the
unknown and less calculable contingencies of a sea
voyage and of naval war, it must have seemed to him
the better course to accept the assurances, which
beyond doubt were seriously meant, of the Boii and
Insubres, and the more so that, even if the army should
land at Genoa, it would still have mountains to cross;
he could hardly know exactly, how much smaller are
the difficulties presented by the Apennines at Genoa
than by the main chain of the Alps. At any rate
the route which he took was the primitive Celtic route,
by which many much larger hordes had crossed the Alps:
the ally and deliverer of the Celtic nation might
without temerity venture to traverse it.
Departure of Hannibal