Follow the legendary path of Hannibal Barca from Spain to Italy on this immersive journey through history and cuisine. Traverse the same alpine passes that witnessed his audacious military campaign while indulging in regional delicacies paired with exquisite wines. Each evening, retreat to luxurious accommodations, including beautifully restored palazzos and historic estates. Guided by expert historians, explore key battle sites and engage in discussions about the pivotal moments that shaped Western civilization.
- 17-day adventure tracing Hannibal's route through Spain and Italy
- Luxurious stays in historic hotels with gourmet dining experiences
- Expert historian-led discussions at significant battle sites
- Small group size (15-20 travelers) for personalized experience
We will meet you at the AC Hotel Cartegena in the afternoon of Day 1. Details of meeting time will be forwarded closer to the trip date.
Guests arrive where the story begins: the harbour city that funded, armed, and launched Hannibal’s march toward Rome. The day sets the historical frame before the journey begins in earnest.
Sagunto was the flashpoint of the Second Punic War; Hannibal’s siege challenged Rome’s guarantee of the city’s independence.
The day ends in Valencia, staying above preserved Roman archaeology.
The Ebro marked the treaty boundary Carthage was not supposed to cross. Hannibal crossed it with his army and elephants.
A full-day guided hike through Cerdanya gives guests a physical sense of the first mountain stage, with Spain behind and France ahead.
The Rhône crossing was one of Hannibal’s great logistical feats, involving rafts, deception, and elephants. The journey moves into southern France, tracing Hannibal’s approach to the Rhône and the Roman world of Provence.
Nîmes evokes Roman Gaul, while the Rhône site connects directly to Hannibal’s crossing into transalpine territory. Guests visit Roman Provence and the river landscape where Hannibal outmanoeuvred opposing Gallic forces before pushing toward the Alps.
The pre-Alps mark the transition from Provence into the harder mountain country Hannibal’s army had to face. The terrain changes character: Roman arenas and lavender country give way to the first serious mountain landscapes. A scenic acclimatisation hike prepares guests for the Alpine crossing.
The Alpine crossing is the physical and symbolic heart of Hannibal’s campaign. Ancient sources describe snow, ice, panic, and near disaster. Guests climb into the high mountains, where the historian guide reads Polybius against the landscape. This is the rawest night of the trip: simple refuge, no phone signal, stars overhead.
The descent into Italy reveals the Po Valley, where Hannibal’s depleted army found Gallic allies hostile to Rome. After crossing the mountains, the group descends toward Italy. The contrast is deliberate: from cold Alpine hardship to vineyard hills and castle luxury.
Trebia was Hannibal’s first major victory in Italy, where Roman forces were lured across a freezing river and ambushed. Guests walk the riverbanks with the historian guide and reconstruct how Hannibal provoked, trapped, and destroyed a Roman army in December 218 BC.
At Trasimene, Hannibal used fog, hills, and the lake shore to trap the Roman consul Flaminius and his army. The group hikes the eastern shoreline near Tuoro with a local Umbrian historian, reading the narrow defile where Rome suffered one of its most devastating ambushes.
Cannae was Hannibal’s greatest victory and one of history’s most studied battles, famous for the double envelopment of a much larger Roman army. At the battlefield, the historian guide uses the plain, river, and terrain to explain the geometry of Hannibal’s trap and why Rome never forgot the name Cannae.
The Riace Bronzes are fifth-century BC Greek warrior statues recovered from the sea and among the finest surviving classical bronzes. The journey heads south through Calabria to the Strait of Messina. The Punic War story pauses for a wider encounter with the Greek world that shaped southern Italy and Sicily.
Syracuse was one of the great cities of the ancient Mediterranean, defended by Archimedes and famously difficult for both Athens and Rome to conquer. A short ferry crossing brings the group to Sicily. The day continues south to Syracuse, where the scale and sophistication of Greek Sicily come into focus.
Syracuse’s harbour and island-city setting were central to its ancient power and military resilience. A full day to absorb Syracuse: Greek, Carthaginian, Roman, and later Sicilian layers all overlap here. The city broadens the story beyond Hannibal into the wider struggle for control of the Mediterranean.
Lilybaeum was the last Carthaginian stronghold in Sicily. The museum holds the reconstructed hull of a Punic warship from the Battle of the Egadi Islands. The journey ends at the western edge of Sicily, where Carthage’s Sicilian story reached its final chapter. The farewell dinner takes place on a wine estate looking toward the Egadi Islands.
The salt pans near Marsala are pink-lit, often visited by flamingos, and make a fitting final Sicilian landscape. Guests depart from Trapani or Palermo. The page recommends a slow morning and, if time allows, a short detour to the salt pans.
All sales are final. No refund is available for cancellations.
This experience is non-refundable and cannot be changed for any reason. If you cancel or ask for an amendment, the amount you paid will not be refunded.
You will not receive a refund if you cancel.
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