Punic
Punic (from Latin
pūnicus) was a
Latin version of the term "
Phoenician". (After the
Punic Wars, Romans used this term as an adjective meaning "treacherous".)
In archaeological and linguistic usage, it refers to the Greco-Roman era culture and dialect of
Carthage and its empire as distinct from their
Phoenician originals. Phoenicians settled in Northwest Africa (the
Maghreb) from the city of
Tyre (in modern
Lebanon) and their culture and political organisation separated into a distinct form. There were distinct Punic settlements from the
Iberian Peninsula and
Gibraltar in the West to
Cyprus in the East;
Sicily was a battleground between Punic and Roman forces for a long time. In the end, the Romans managed to defeat the Carthaginians and their allies, enabling a Roman settlement of Africa.
Cato the elder notoriously declared in his speeches that Carthage should be utterly crushed, a view summarised in Latin by the phrase
Delenda est Carthago, meaning simply, "Carthage must be destroyed".
See Phoenician languages and
Carthage for more on Punic.