- Sophonisba
:"For the Renaissance painter Sofonisba Anguissola (ca. 1532-1625), see
Sofonisba Anguissola . For the American activist Sophonisba Breckinridge (1866-1948), seeSophonisba Breckinridge ."Sophonisba (also Sophonisbe, Sophoniba; in
Punic , Saphanba'al) (fl.203 BC ) was a Carthaginian noblewoman who lived during theSecond Punic War , and the daughter ofHasdrubal Gisco Gisgonis (son of Gisco).Life
A celebrated beauty, until 206, she had been betrothed to
Massinissa , the leader of theMassylian (or eastern) Numidians. But in 206 Massinissa allied himself to Rome. Hasdrubal having lost the alliance with Massinissa started to look for another ally, which he found in Syphax, King of theMasaeisylian (or western Numidians). As was normal in those days, Hasdrubal used his daughter to conclude the diplomatic alliances with Syphax who had previously been allied to Rome.When
Syphax was defeated in203 BC byMasinissa , King of Numidia, and the Romans, Masinissa fell in love with Sophonisba and married her.Scipio Africanus refused to agree to this arrangement, insisting on the immediate surrender of the princess so that she could be taken to Rome and appear in the triumphal parade. Masinissa, upbraided by Scipio for his weakness, was urged to leave her.Masinissa feared the Romans more than he loved Sophonisba. Thus, he went to Sophonisba and swore his love to her. He told her that he could not free her from capitivity or shield her from Roman wrath, and so he asked her to die like a true Carthaginian princess. With great composure, she drank a cup of
poison that he offered her. The outrage that Sophonisba escaped through suicide may not have beenrape or physical violence, but from being led in a triumphal parade atRome , with its accompanying degradations and humiliations.Her story, probably much embellished, is told indirectly in
Polybius (14.4ff.); and more concretely inLivy (30.12.11-15.11),Diodorus (27.7),Appian (Pun. 27-28), andCassius Dio (Zonaras 9.11). Polybius, however, never refers to Sophonisba by name in his allusions to her marriage to Syphax, and in his extensive account of Laelius' maneuvers against Syphax. The historian had metMasinissa . Nevertheless, it has been proposed that Polybius' account provides the basis for the Sophonisba story. [http://www.barca.fsnet.co.uk/sophonisbe.htm] When Polybius does refer to her, he uses the diminutive in a tone that may be less than flattering. In one passage, Polybius ridicules Syphax for being less courageous than his own "child bride."Plays and operas
Her story became the subject of tragedies (and later operas) from the 16th to the 18th centuries. The first tragedy is credited to the Italian
Galeotto Del Carretto (c.1470–1530) which was written in 1502, but issued posthumously in 1546. The first to appear, however, wasGian Giorgio Trissino ’s play of 1524 which, “in codifying the forms of Italian classical tragedy, helped consign Del Carretto's Sofonisba to oblivion.” [ [http://hal9000.cisi.unito.it/wf/ATTIVITA_C/Pubblicazi/levia/english/CONTENTS-A/indicee2000.htm_cvt.htm Abstract] of the article “Galeotto Del Carretto’s ‘Sofonisba’” by Lovaniano Rossi, in "Levia Gravia" (2000). Universities of Turin and of Piemonte Orientale.] In France, Trissino's version was adapted byMellin de Saint-Gelais (performed in 1556), and may have served as the primary model for versions byAntoine de Montchrestien (1596) andNicolas de Montreux (1601). The tragedy byJean Mairet (1634) is one of the first monuments of French "classicism", and was followed by a version fromPierre Corneille (1663). The story of Sophonisbe also served as subject for works byJohn Marston (1606),Nathaniel Lee (1676), James Thomson (1730),Voltaire ,Vittorio Alfieri (1789),Daniel Caspar von Lohenstein ,Emanuel Geibel ,Antonio Caldara ,Henry Purcell ,Christopher Gluck ,Ferdinando Paer (1805), and others. Sophonisba also appears in Carmine Gallone's 1937 epic movie "Scipio the African: The Defeat of Carthage", about Roman commanderScipio Africanus 's victory over Hannibal.Some years after writing a play called "The Tragedy of Sophonisba", the aforementioned James Thomson authored the still-current patriotic British song "Rule, Britannia! "; Sophonisba's proud defiance and refusal to submit to slavery might have inspired that song's famous refrain "Britons never, never will be slaves!". In thehero ichigh fantasy novel The Worm Ouroboros byEric Rücker Eddison there is a character named "Queen Sophonisba", though her role in the book has little in common with the historic Sophonisba.Notes
References
Livy, "Ad urbe condita libri xxix.23, xxx.8, 12-15.8"
External links
* [http://www.livius.org/so-st/sophoniba/sophoniba.html Livius.org: Sophoniba]
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