Schlacht von Cannae
Battle of Cannae, in Catalan

Hannibal Barca at the battle of Cannae (216 BC)

IdentificatieTitel(s): Dood van Lucius Aemilius Paulus IPaolo Emilio moribondo alla Battaglia di Canne, ricusa il cavallo che gli offre il Tribuno Lentulo, volendo morire frà la strage de' suoi Romani (titel op object). Geschiedenis van het Romeinse Rijk (serietitel). Frontespizio della Istoria Romana (serietitel)Objecttype: prent Serienummer: 57/101Objectnummer: RP-P-1929-223Catalogusreferentie: Marini&Fagiolo 57Opschriften / Merken: verzamelaarsmerk, verso, gestempeld: Lugt 2228; opschrift, recto midden onder, handgeschreven in inkt: ‘Paulus Aemilius weigert in den slag van Canna, stervend het paard dat de Tribuun Lentulus hem aanbiedt, daar hij ster-/ ven wil, temidden der slachting onder zijne Romeinen’Omschrijving: De gewonde Lucius Aemilius Paulus I weigert een paard aan te nemen van de tribuun Lentulus. Lucius Aemilius Paulus I kiest ervoor te sterven te midden van zijn soldaten tijdens de Slag bij Cannae.VervaardigingVervaardiger: prentmaker: Bartolomeo Pinelli (vermeld op object), naar eigen ontwerp van: Bartolomeo Pinelli (vermeld op object)Plaats vervaardiging: RomeDatering: 1817Fysieke kenmerken: etsMateriaal: papier Techniek: etsenAfmetingen: plaatrand: h 315 mm × b 425 mmToelichtingDeze prent maakt deel uit van een reeks van 101 prenten over de geschiedenis van Rome.OnderwerpWat: (story of) Lucius Aemilius Paul(l), us - death of person from classical historyVerwerving en rechtenCredit line: Schenking van J.J. de Man, EdeVerwerving: schenking 1929Copyright: Publiek domein

Il fiume Fortore della battaglia di Canne nella zona comune delle fonti antiche

Lodovico Pogliaghi - Roman women in the temple of Mars after Cannae, 215 BC

Punti storici d’Italia: campo della battaglia di Canne.
Placchette rinascimentali
Il moderno, battaglia di canne, 1503-1504

Picture from a bird's eye view of a roman maniple. Image was created in Autodesk 3DS Max with extracted models of Legio XX Roman Legionaries from the Roma Surrectum II mod for Rome Total War.

Romuleon-BnF365-fol. 89, Bataille de Tarente

Schieramento iniziale battaglia di Canne

Livy, Histoire romaine. Translation from the Latin by Pierre Bersuire: The battle of Cannae Place of origin, date: Paris, follower of the Luçon Master, First Master of the Grande Bible Historiale Complétée of Jean, Duc de Berry (Paris, BNF, fr. 159) or Ravenelle Master (illuminators); c. 1390-1400 Material: Vellum, ff. 228+196+160 (3 vols.), 415x303 (279x188) mm, 52 lines, littera textualis, Bindings: 18th-century brown leather; gilt Decoration: Vol. I: 1 two-column miniature (145x185 mm); 9 column miniatures (80/70x85/80 mm); 2 illustrations in the margin (emblems); decorated initials with border decoration (ff. 9r, 12v, 19r, 23v, 26v, etc.); penwork initials throughout. Vol. II: 1 two-column miniature(154x185 mm); 9 column miniatures (100/80x105/80 mm); 2 illustrations in the margin (emblems); decorated initials with border decoration (ff. 5r, 8r, 25r, 46r, 64r, etc.); penwork initials throughout. Vol. III: 1 two-column miniature (140x188 mm); 8 column miniatures (85/70x90/80mm); 2 illustrations in the margin (emblems); decorated initials with border decoration (ff. 5r, 10r, 22v, 36r, 55r, etc.); penwork initials throughout. Added: coats of arms, emblems and motto of Philip of Cleves on the opening pages of all three volumes Provenance: possibly made for Bertrando de Rossi, Count of San Secundo (emblem). Louis de Luxembourg, connétable de France (d. 1475; signature); by descent to his granddaughter Françoise de Luxembourg and her husband Philip of Cleves (d. 1528; coats of arms, emblems, motto;signature); purchased in 1531 from Philip's estate by Henry III, Count of Nassau (d. 1538); by descent to the Princes of Orange-Nassau, the later Stadholders, at The Hague; carried off in 1795 to Paris by the French and restituted to the Koninklijke Bibliotheek in 1816

The Death of Aemilius Paulus

Данное изображение было использовано в статье «Аннибал» опубликованной во втором томе «Военной энциклопедии», который был издан книгоиздательским товариществом Ивана Дмитриевича Сытина в 1911 году в столице Российской империи городе Санкт-Петербурге.

The sumptuous illustration on this volume was attributed to Bartolomeo della Gatta (1448-1502). Framed by allegorical figure, there is a tableau showing eight dignitaries, and a standing character, illustrating the passage in which Mango Barca (243-203 B.C.) arrived in Carthage announcing the victory in Cannae (Punic War Ⅱ, 216 B.C.).
Historische Übersicht
Hannibals Meisterstück. Durch eine doppelte Umfassung kesselte er das zahlenmäßig weit überlegene römische Heer ein und vernichtete es fast vollständig.
Fakten auf einen Blick
Karthago
- Befehlshaber: Hannibal Barkas
- Truppenstärke: ca. 50.000 Mann
- Verluste: ca. 6.000 - 8.000
Römische Republik
- Befehlshaber: Terentius Varro
- Truppenstärke: ca. 80.000 Mann
- Verluste: ca. 50.000 - 70.000
Strategischer Kontext
Hannibals Versuch, Rom durch eine vernichtende Niederlage auf eigenem Boden zur Kapitulation zu zwingen und Bundesgenossen abzuwerben.
Konflikt / Krieg
Punische Kriege
Weiterführende Literatur
Historische Orte
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