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in Spain by 530 BC, either by armed conflict or by cutting off Greek trade. Carthage also besieged and took over Gades at that time. The
Persians had taken over Cyrene by then, and Carthage may have been spared a trial of arms against the Persian Empire when the Phoenicians refused to lend ships to
172:. The Etruscans took control of Corsica, and Carthage concentrated on Sardinia, ensuring that no Greek presence would be established in the island. The defeat also ended the westward expansion of the Greeks for all time.
295:
John
Bagnell Bury; Stanley Arthur Cook; Frank E. Adcock; Martin Percival Charlesworth; John Boardman; N. G. L. Hammond; A. E. Astin; Iorwerth Eiddon Stephen Edwards; Michael Whitby; D. M. Lewis; Andrew Lintott;
167:
in
Corsica (Greeks had been settled there since 562 BC), and began preying on Etruscan and Punic commerce. Between 540 and 535 BC, a Carthaginian-Etruscan alliance had expelled the Greeks from Corsica after the
179:
to Greek shipping, while
Massalians retained their Spanish colonies in Eastern Iberia above Cape Nao. Southern Spain was closed to Greeks. Carthaginians in support of the Phoenician colony of
300:; F. W. Walbank; J. A. Crook; Alan K. Bowman; Edward Champlin; Elizabeth Rawson; Averil Cameron; Andrew William Lintott; Peter Garnsey; Bryan Ward-Perkins (1928).
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in 525 BC for an
African expedition. Carthage may have paid tribute irregularly to the Great King. It is not known if Carthage had any role in the
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A war with
Hellenic Massalia followed. Carthage lost battles but managed to safeguard Phoenician Spain and close the
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148:, but acted increasingly independently. One of Mago's political achievements was an alliance with the
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Imperialism in the
Ancient World: The Cambridge University Research Seminar in Ancient History
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in 524 BC, after which
Etruscan power began to wane in Italy.
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In 546 BC, Phocaeans fleeing the
Persian invasion established
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expelled the
Etruscan kings. He was also active in Sicily.
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Under Mago, Carthage established itself as the dominant
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156:. This alliance lasted until around the time when
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233:The Sage in Israel and the Ancient Near East
183:in Spain also brought about the collapse of
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333:. Cambridge University Press. p. 77.
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327:Garnsey, Peter; Whittaker, C. R. (1978).
230:Gammie, John G.; Perdue, Leo G. (1990).
144:. It remained economically dependent on
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108:from 550 BC to 530 BC and the founding
16:King of Carthage from 550 BC to 530 BC
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356:The Ancient Mariners 2nd Edition
358:. Princeton University Press.
140:military power in the western
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303:The Cambridge Ancient History
468:6th-century BC Punic people
285:. Accessed 30 November 2008
236:. EISENBRAUNS. p. 77.
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120:. Mago I was originally a
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422:Geschichte der Karthager
463:6th-century BC monarchs
384:. Cooper Square Press.
354:Casson, Lionel (1981).
56:Hasdrubal I of Carthage
425:, Munich: C.H. Beck,
419:Huss, Werner (1985),
405:Justin, XLIII, 5, 2-3
380:Baker, G. P. (1999).
458:Monarchs of Carthage
177:Strait of Gibraltar
46:Malchus of Carthage
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116:dynasty of
100:), was the
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370:. P. 74-75
259:, p.
212:References
138:Phoenician
217:Citations
185:Tartessos
150:Etruscans
52:Successor
453:Magonids
382:Hannibal
279:Archived
276:Carthage
200:See also
190:Cambyses
152:against
118:Carthage
92:𐤌𐤂𐤍
68:Magonids
396:. P. 11
122:general
114:Magonid
112:of the
110:monarch
104:of the
63:Dynasty
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165:Alalia
78:
22:Mago I
181:Gades
88:Punic
84:Magon
34:Reign
427:ISBN
386:ISBN
360:ISBN
335:ISBN
308:ISBN
238:ISBN
158:Rome
146:Tyre
132:Rule
102:king
76:Mago
261:570
97:MGN
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