By the time of the
Punic Wars, the government of
Ancient Carthage was headed by a pair of annually elected
sufetes.
Livy's
account of the Punic Wars affords a list of the procedural responsibilities of the Carthaginian
sufet, including the convocation and presidency of the senate, the submission of business to the People's Assembly, and service as trial judges. Their number, term, and powers are therefore similar to those of the
Roman consuls, with the notable difference that Roman consuls were also commanders-in-chief of the Roman military, a power apparently denied to the
sufetes. The term
sufet was not, however, reserved for the heads of the Carthaginian state. Towards the end of their Western Mediterranean dominance, political coordination between local and colonial Carthaginians was likely expressed through a regional hierarchy of
sufetes. For example, some epigraphic evidence from Punic-era
Sardinia is dated with four names: the years' magistrates not only on the island, but also at home in North Africa. Further inscriptional evidence of
sufetes found in the major settlements of
Roman Sardinia indicates that the office, having endured there for three centuries under Carthaginian sovereignty, was utilized by the descendants of Punic settlers to refuse both cultural and political assimilation with their mainland Italian conquerors. Punic-style magistracies appear epigraphically unattested only by the end of the first century BCE, although two
sufetes wielded power in
Bithia as late as the mid-second century CE. ==Later use==