[History of Rome from the Earliest times down to 476 AD by Robert F. Pennell]@TWC D-Link book
History of Rome from the Earliest times down to 476 AD

CHAPTER XIX
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Hard as was this command, it was obeyed.

They were then told that Carthage had indeed shown her good will, but that Rome had no control over the city so long as it was fortified.

The preservation of peace, therefore, required that the people should quit the city, give up their navy, and build a new town without walls at a distance of ten miles from the sea.

The indignation and fury which this demand excited were intense.

The gates were instantly closed, and all the Romans and Italians who happened to be within the city were massacred.
The Romans, who expected to find a defenceless population, imagined that the storming of the place would be an easy matter.


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