
Masinissa, King of Numidia
'Masinissa' or 'Massinissa' (c.
238 BC - c.
148 BC) was the first
King of Numidia, an ancient
Amazigh North African nation of
ancient Libyan peoples, and is most famous for his role as a
Roman ally in the
Battle of Zama.
Early life
Masinissa was born in 238 BC in
Cirta the Capital of
Numidia Actually Known as
Constantine, the 2nd son of
Gaia, King of the
Massyli of eastern Numidia, his early years were spent in Carthage (as a hostage against his father’s loyalty) where he was educated in Latin and Greek, and was regarded as an accomplished as well as a naturally clever man.
Involvement in the Second Punic War
At the start of the
Second Punic War, Masinissa fought for Carthage against
Syphax, the King of the
Masaesyles of western Numidia (present day
Morocco), who had allied himself with the Romans. Masinissa, then seventeen years old, led an army of Numidian troops and Carthaginian auxiliaries against Syphax's army and won a decisive victory.
After his victory over Syphax, Masinissa commanded his skilled Numidian
cavalry against the Romans in Spain, where he was involved in the Carthaginian victories of Castulo and Ilorca. After
Hasdrubal Barca departed for Italy, Masinissa was placed in command of all the Carthaginian cavalry in Spain, where he fought a successful
guerrilla campaign against Scipio Africanus throughout 208-207, while
Mago and Hasdrubal Gisgo levied and trained new forces. In 206, with fresh reinforcements, Mago and Hadsrubal Gisgo, supported by Masinissa Numidian cavalry, met Scipio at the
Battle of Ilipa, where Carthage's power in Spain was finally broken in arguably Scipio Africanus's most brilliant victory.
When Gaia died in 206, his sons Masinissa and
Oezalces quarreled about the inheritance, and Syphax was able to conquer considerable parts of the eastern Numidian kingdom. Meanwhile, with the Carthaginians having been driven from Spain, Masinissa concluded that Rome was winning the war against Carthage and therefore decided to defect to Rome. This decision was aided by the move by Scipio Africanus to free Masinissa's nephew, Massiva, whom the Romans had captured when he had disobeyed his uncle and ridden into battle. Having lost the alliance with Masinissa, Hasdrubal started to look for another ally, which he found in Syphax, who married
Sophonisba, Hasdrubal's daughter who until the defection had been betrothed to Masinissa.
At the
Battle of Bagrades (203), Scipio overcame Hasdrubal and Syphax and while the Roman general concentrated on Carthage,
Gaius Laelius and Masinissa followed Syphax to Cirta, where he was captured and handed over to Scipio. After the defeat of Syphax, Masinissa married Syphax's wife Sophonisba, but Scipio, suspicious of her loyalty, demanded that she be taken to Rome and appear in the triumphal parade. To save her from such humiliation, Masinissa sent her poison, with which she killed herself. Masinissa was now accepted as a loyal ally of Rome, and was confirmed by Scipio as the king of the Massyli.
In the battle of Zama (202) (near modern-day
Maktar,
Tunisia) Masinissa commanded the cavalry (6,000 Numidian and 3,000 Roman) on Scipio's right wing, Scipio having delayed the engagement for long enough to allow for Masinissa to join him. With the battle hanging in the balance, Masinissa's cavalry, having driven the fleeing Carthaginian horsemen away, returned and immediately fell onto the rear of the Carthaginian lines. This decided the battle and at once
Hannibal's army began to collapse. For his services he received the kingdom of Syphax, and became king of Numidia.
Later life
With Roman backing he established his own kingdom of '
Numidia', west of Carthage, with ''
Cirta'' (present day
Constantine) as its capital city. All of this happened in accordance with Roman interest, as they wanted to give Carthage more problems with its neighbours. Masinissa and his sons possessed large estates throughout Numidia, to the extent that Roman authors attributed to him, quite falsely, the sedentarization of the Numidians. Major towns included
Capsa,
Thugga (mod.
Dougga),
Bulla Regia and
Hippo Regius.
All through his life Masinissa extended his territory, and he was cooperating with Rome when towards the end of his life he provoked Carthage to go to war against him. Based on descriptions from Livy, the Numidians began raiding around seventy towns in the southern and western sections of Carthage's remaining territory. Outraged with their conduct, Carthage went to war against them, in defiance of a Roman treaty forbidding them to make war on anyone, precipitating the
3rd and last Punic War. Ancient accounts suggest Masinissa lived beyond the age of 90 and was apparently still personally leading the armies of his kingdom when he died.
After his death, Numidia was divided into several smaller kingdoms ruled by his sons.
Reference
Livy (trans. Aubrey de Selincourt) (1965). ''The War With Hannibal''. New York: Penguin Classics. ISBN 0-14-044145-X
Masinissa in Literature
★
Pride of Carthage, by
David Anthony Durham