General Hannibal Barca (247BC-183BC)
Hannibal's march into Italy is legendary. The Roman Senate felt secure from land
invasion and took too few precautions. Their confidence is understandable. There
was Hannibal in Spain. He had to fight his way through a Roman army, cross the Pyrenees
(themselves a difficult range of mountains), then fight his way across southern
France, for this area was under Roman control, then cross the formidable Alps.
The scope of the accomplishment is sometimes overlooked in survey textbooks. Crossing
the Alps was remarkable, but Hannibal did much more than that.
When word came that Hannibal had escaped from Spain, Rome was concerned but not
panicked. The Senate sent a second army to hold the bridges at the Rhône River.
This river is deep and swift in its lower courses. The Romans were sure they could
prevent Hannibal from crossing, then defeat him in their own good time in southern
Gaul.
Again Hannibal fooled them. He sent his brother northward, avoiding Roman sentries,
and crossed the river on pontoons and by swimming. Hanno (the brother) then ambushed
the Gauls who were supposed to be guarding that crossing, then Hannibal followed
with the rest of his army. He even got the elephants across on a ferry by building
a large raft and covering it with earth so that the beasts thought they were still
on solid ground. He was across the Rhône and now nothing stood between him and Italy.
Except the Alps.