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There may have been a wife, Imilce, but whether there was a son, seems even more doubtful.
Livy
notes: "Castulo, a powerful and famous city of Spain, and in such close
alliance with Carthage that Hannibal took a wife from there, seceded to
Rome."
Serge
Lancel in his "Hannibal", discusses this : "...It may be remembered
that [Hannibal's] predecessor, Hasdrubal the Fair, had taken a Spanish
woman as his second wife, soon after succeeding Hamilcar. In the same
way, we learn from Livy (XXIV, 41, 7) that Hannibal married an Iberian
woman from Castulo (a town on the Guadalquivir River), one of the most
important cities at that time in upper Andalusia, near Linares. Very
early on the town had aroused the interest of the Phoenicians of Gades
because of its mineral resources, and its ancient wealth had found
expression in some of the most beautiful works of orientalizing art.
Silius
Italicus tells us a little more about the bride. She was called
'Imilce', probably not from a Greek name as the Latin poet thinks
(Punica, 111, 97-105), but from a well and truly Punic name: it is
quite legitimate to recognize in it the barely modified Semitic root
mlk, the 'chief, the 'king' (Picard, 1967, p. 119). In contrast, it
appears harder to follow Silius any further in his romantic
elaborations.
Supposedly
from this union a son was born, before the very walls of besieged
Saguntum. Before leaving for Italy, Hannibal took the mother and still
young child to Gades, where he put them on a vessel bound for Carthage,
to protect them from the vicissitudes of war. (Hannibal's journey to
Gades is recorded by Livy). And the poet shows us this Imilce, fixing
her gaze on the shores of Spain until the ship's progress hides them
from her sight. "
He
later relates that Carthage's government decided to sacrifice
Hannibal's son. Imilce, the Spanish soldier's wife, was naturally
opposed to that terrible decision and obtained from the Council the
suspension of the sacrifice to inform her husband; Hannibal refused to
sacrifice his son and in exchange he swore to sacrifice a thousand
enemies.
At Baeza (49 kilometres from Ja�n) , in the plaza del P�pulo, the Los
Leones fountain is said to have been brought from the Roman city of
C�stulo. The female figure of the monument is said by some to be
Imilce, the wife of Hannibal (although the head is probably not
original).
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