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Carthage and Donatus
Later in 313, Miltiades presided over the Lateran Synod in Rome, which acquitted Caecilian of Carthage and condemned Donatus as a schismatic ( see Donatism ).
Probably in 311, a new bishop of Carthage was consecrated by someone who had allegedly been a traditor ; his opponents consecrated a short-lived rival, who was succeeded by Donatus, after whom the schism was named.
* Donatus Magnus, a 4th century bishop of Carthage who founded the Donatist sect of Christianity

Carthage and refused
However, Carthage refused to deliver to Rome the Roman deserters serving among their troops.
Nonetheless, they asked Carthage to hand Hannibal over, and when the Carthaginian oligarchy refused, Rome declared war on Carthage.
In Carthage the followers of Felicissimus elected Fortunatus as bishop in opposition to Cyprian, while in Rome the followers of the Roman presbyter Novatian, who also refused absolution to all the lapsed, elected their man as bishop of Rome, in opposition to Cornelius.
* July 17 – Twelve Christian inhabitants of Scillium in Numidia are executed in Carthage ( also in North Africa ) ( known as the Scillitan Martyrs ) – they had refused to swear an oath to the Emperor.
Next they recount an imaginary conversation between some respectable ships that have refused to carry the war to Carthage because the voyage was proposed by Hyperbolus, a man they despise.
Hyrum refused and, in 1844, traveled with Joseph to Carthage, Illinois where both were charged with riot and treason.
Pyrrhus tried to ally with Carthage against Rome, but the Carthaginians, seeing Pyrrhus as the greater threat, refused and sent a squadron up to the Tiber mouth to offer help against him.
Masinissa agreed but because of how unfavorable previous Roman decisions had been Carthage refused.

Carthage and surrender
In 149 BC, in an attempt to draw Carthage into open conflict, Rome made a series of escalating demands, one being the surrender of three hundred children of the nobility as hostages, and finally ending with the near-impossible demand that the city be demolished and rebuilt away from the coast, deeper into Africa.
The ensuing negotiations between the parties lead to Regulus demanding Carthage agree to an unconditional surrender, cede Sicily, Corsica and Sardinia to Rome, renounce the use of their navy, pay an indemnity, and sign a vassal-like treaty.
Rome demands that Carthage surrender Hannibal.
The second group are those Romans who have advocated surrender to Carthage after the Battle of Cannae, or who have made plans to flee Rome and offer their services in Greece, Egypt, or Asia Minor.
The Romans, who send envoys to Carthage in protest, demand the surrender of Hannibal.
The Libyan settlements that have rebelled surrender to Carthage, with the exception of Utica and Hippacritae.
Hicetas now received help from Carthage ( 60, 000 men ), but ill-success roused mutual suspicion ; the Carthaginians abandoned Hicetas, who was besieged in Leontini, and who was then compelled to surrender.
During the Second Punic War ( 218 to 201 BC ) Capua famously sided with Carthage, but after a lengthy siege she had to surrender unconditionally in 211 BC, after which the Capuans were harshly punished by Rome.
They two were then to proceed to Carthage to ask for his surrender as punishment for breaking the treaty that had been concluded at the end of the First Punic War.
* Libyan settlements surrender to Carthage, with the exception of Utica and Hippacritae.
< http :// penelope. uchicago. edu / Thayer / E / Roman / Texts / Polybius / 1 *. html ></ ref > Eventually, the forces of Carthage proved victorious, forcing Utica and Hippacritae to surrender after a short siege.

Carthage and buildings
Much of the city still boasted intact buildings and monuments from ancient Roman times, but Boniface razed it anyway, even spreading salt on the site as the Romans did in Carthage 1500 years before.
He favored his hometown above all other provincial cities, and the buildings and wealth he lavished on it made Leptis Magna the third-most important city in Africa, rivaling Carthage and Alexandria.
Carthage was systematically burned for 17 days ; the city walls, and its buildings were utterly destroyed.
By 1833, simple buildings had been erected in Carthage, and the town was platted in 1838.
Another large fire in 1884 spread across the river from West Carthage and caused extensive damage, reducing more than 150 buildings to ruin.
Several historic buildings on the narrow block at the intersection of Montgomery Road and Carthage Avenue were razed to " open up " the office park's visibility from Interstate 71.
Whitney Smith states that the crescent was first emblazoned on standards and buildings in the Punic state of Carthage, located in present-day Tunisia.
In 1818, Joshua Woodard arrived in the area and began constructing buildings just north of the village forming the " Upper Village " that would come to be known briefly as Carthage.
In 403 BC, Dionysius of Syracuse, deeming himself secure from the power of Carthage as well as from domestic sedition, determined to turn his arms against the Chalcidic cities of Sicily ; and having made himself master of Naxos by the treachery of their general Procles, he sold all the inhabitants as slaves and destroyed both the walls and buildings of the city, while he bestowed its territory upon the neighbouring Siculi.

Carthage and local
Desertification has played a significant role in human history, contributing to the collapse of several large empires, such as Carthage, Greece, and the Roman Empire, as well as causing displacement of local populations.
He also lifted the policy of persecuting the local Catholics, allowing them to hold a synod wherein they elected a new Catholic bishop of Carthage, Eugenius, after a vacancy of 24 years.
This had earlier been affirmed at the local Council of Carthage in 417.
Contemporary accounts show that the land surrounding Carthage was declared ager publicus and that it was shared between local farmers, and Roman and Italian ones.
Earl Williamson, a local politician in Shreveport who was a confidant of Louisiana Governors Huey Pierce Long, Jr., and Earl Kemp Long, was born in Carthage in 1903.
Champion Hill, located between Carthage and Watertown, is the birthplace of the majority of Watertown local TV stations.
A few days later, Gordian entered the city of Carthage with the overwhelming support of the population and local political leaders.
Sicily too was formed as a theme by the end of the century, but the imperial possessions in mainland Italy remained under the exarch of Ravenna or the local doukes, as did Byzantine Africa until the fall of Carthage in 698.
He offered rewards to the local Punic and Berber tribes for every Roman head they could bring, and sent agents to Carthage to attempt to have Belisarius's Hun mercenaries — vital to his success at Ad Decimum — betray him.
The land surrounding Carthage was eventually declared ager publicus, and it was shared between local farmers, and Roman and Italian ones.
When Smith submitted to imprisonment in the county seat of Carthage, the Governor of Illinois, Thomas Ford, left the jail, taking the only impartial local militia unit with him.
The final was against local rivals Morocco, and Brazilian-born striker Francileudo Santos put The Eagles Of Carthage 1 – 0 ahead on 4 minutes, Morocco equalised just before half-time, but Ziad Jaziri made the score 2 – 1 on 51 minutes to win the tournament for Tunisia.
This led to violent clashes between Mormons and non-Mormons, culminating in Smith's death on June 27, 1844 at the hands of a mob while he was jailed in Carthage, Illinois, awaiting trial for destroying the printing press of a local publication that painted him in a negative light.
She helps him meet up with Illioneus, Sergestus and Cloanthes, other surviving Trojans who have already received generous hospitality from the local ruler Dido, Queen of Carthage.
As types of local martyrologies we may quote that of Rome, formed from the Depositio martyrum and the Depositio episcoporum of the chronograph of 354 ; the Gothic calendar of IJililas Bible, the calendar of Carthage published by Mabillon, the calendar of fasts and vigils of the Church of Tours, going back as far as Bishop Perpetuus ( d. 490 ), and preserved in the Historia Francorum ( xi.
In Virgil's account of Dido's founding of Carthage, when Dido and her party were encamped at Byrsa, the local Berber chieftain offered them as much land as could be covered with a single oxhide.
When Carthage College relocated in 1964, Dr. Kibbe returned to her native state of Washington, dedicating much of her local property to public use.
After the capture of New Carthage five years later, local slaves were impressed by Scipio in his fleet on the promise of freedom after the war to those who showed good will as rowers.

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