Carthago Nova
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Carthago Nova ("New Carthage", Carthage already meaning "new city" in Punic) is the Latin name of the most important Carthaginian coastal trading colony in the Iberian peninsula.
It was a port city founded by the Carthaginian Hasdrubal, who extended the newly acquired Carthaginian empire in Iberia by skilful diplomacy, and consolidated it by the foundation of Carthago Nova in an excellent haven as the capital of a new province. By a treaty with Rome he fixed the river Ebro as the boundary between the two powers.
Ruins identified as a temple to Melqart have been uncovered. The city was captured by Rome during the Second Punic War 218—204 BCE.
It gave its name (without the 'new') to the youngest province in the Hispaniae diocese, in the form of an adjective: Carthaginiensis.
The modern city, in Murcia, is known as Cartagena, and still is the main military haven of Spain.