READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
BIOGRAPHYCAL UNIVERSAL LIBRARY |
DIONYSIUS THE
SECOND
AND
TIMOLEON
I. SICILY, 367 TO 330 BC
ON the death
of Dionysius I in the spring of 367 his empire passed to his eldest son, who
bore his name. The succession met with no opposition from the people of
Syracuse and of other cities: what danger there was lay within the ruling house
itself. We are told that, when Dionysius seemed likely to die, Dion, the
husband of his daughter Arete and brother of his wife Aristomache,
tried to influence Dionysius to designate as his successors Hipparinus and Nysaeus, the children of Dionysius and Aristomache. These were probably not yet of age, and, if
Dion had had his way, the power would doubtless have remained in his own hands.
But the court-physicians denied him access to Dionysius’ sick-bed, and are said
to have hastened the tyrant’s end in order to ingratiate themselves with the
heir. This story, however, is very likely groundless and invented some years
later, after the younger Dionysius had quarrelled with Dion. If he had already shown himself disaffected in this way, it is
improbable that the new ruler would have kept him in the position of a trusted
minister, as he did for some months.
Dionysius II
kept his power for ten years; but unfortunately the record of his actions
during those years has almost completely vanished. We possess one or two scraps
of information about his foreign and domestic policy and some general remarks
on his character. But all that we know in any detail about his rule is the
manner in which he lost it. In fact what we possess is really an account of the
exploits of Dion, who overthrew him. The account exists partly in the
biographies written by Plutarch and Nepos, partly in the history of Diodorus.
It is in no way surprising that we should have these biographies, for Dion
lived for nine years in Greece, where he became a well-known figure and in
particular formed a close connection with the Platonic Academy, whose members
did much to preserve his memory. What is more curious and disappointing is that
the account of Diodorus hardly adds anything, and is written from the same
standpoint; the Sicilian historian has scarcely a word to say of events In
Sicily between the exile of Dion, which seems to have occurred little more than
a year after Dionysius’ accession, and his return in the guise of liberator in
357 BC. If, as we must suppose, he found nothing of interest to extract from
Timaeus’ record of these years, the inference is that they were in the main
peaceful and uneventful.
What we are
told of the character and actions of Dionysius confirms this. He was weak,
dissolute, and unenterprising; in the eyes of Plato and the Academy he was
crafty and treacherous, and utterly belied the fair hopes which they had
conceived of him. Rigidly debarred during his father's lifetime from playing
any part in affairs, he had taken up carpentry as a hobby; and on coming into
power when less than thirty years of age his policy, so far as he had one, was
to preserve and enjoy his inheritance. Peace was soon made with Carthage on the
basis of the status quo, later also with the Lucanians after a
war which had dragged on indecisively for some months. Two colonies were
founded on the coast of Apulia, to protect the commerce of the southern
Adriatic from pirates; Rhegium was restored under the
name of Phoebia, and Tauromenium received as an addition to its mixed population the Naxians expelled by the elder Dionysius. This last act is described by Diodorus, who
assigns it to the year 358—7 BC, as being wholly the work of an eminent and
wealthy citizen, Andromachus, father of the historian
Timaeus; but it is plain that filial piety has exaggerated and that the new
settlement was an act of the Syracusan state, that is to say, of the tyrant. We
also hear of the return of political exiles and the remission of taxation. All
these acts are best interpreted as measures designed to increase the tyrant's
security and popularity. For a time they were successful; but we may believe
that throughout these ten years hatred of the tyranny smouldered in the breasts of the Syracusans and the subjects of other Sicilian cities that
had once been proud of freedom. The power of the elder Dionysius had been
tolerated so long principally because he was a conqueror and a champion against
the Punic foe; now that the danger from Carthage seemed at an end, the hatred
of tyranny revived. Hence when a liberator, real or pretended, appeared in the
person of a member of the tyrant's own family, he was welcomed with boundless
enthusiasm, and his intentions were for the moment unquestioned.
When quite a
young man Dion had met Plato on the occasion of the philosopher’s first visit
to Sicily in 389—8, and an attachment had sprung up between the two men which
had not weakened twenty years later. Fired with enthusiasm for Plato’s
political ideas, Dion saw in the young Dionysius the possibility of fulfilling
that essential condition without which, as Plato had declared, his Republic
could not come into being: the king should turn philosopher. It was of course a
necessary antecedent to this conversion that the tyrant should turn king, that
is to say, constitutional monarch; and in this lay the real crux of the matter,
as the sequel was to show.
A pressing
invitation from the tyrant, seconded by Dion himself, could not well be refused
by Plato, ageing though he already was and reluctant to quit the professor’s
chair. If we may believe the evidence of the seventh Platonic letter, his
decision to go to Syracuse was due not so much to any hopes of realizing Dion’s
aspirations as to his fear of being held untrue to his own philosophy. There
were passages in his writings which seemed to contemplate just such a situation
as had now arisen at Syracuse, if indeed Dion’s account of the possibilities of
reforming the young tyrant through education were true. Dion did not minimize
the need of such reform; but he represented that it was still possible to
remedy the evils due to the tyrant’s upbringing, and he had himself begun to
prepare the way. In truth Dionysius himself, who was athirst if not for
philosophy at all events for a philosophical reputation, was eager to have
Plato at his court; and for a time all seemed to go according to Dion’s plan.
In conformity with the regular Academic course the pupil was started on the
study of mathematics, and geometry became the fashion at court. To this no one
could object; but Plato's ethical and political teaching was not so harmless.
We hear that on one occasion when sacrifice was being offered in the domestic
chapel and the customary prayer for the safe continuance of the tyranny was
recited, the tyrant, to the great consternation of his ministers, exclaimed
“Stop cursing us”. Philosophy then, it seemed, meant the end of the tyranny and
the abasement of all who throve thereon. It is not surprising that Dion’s plan
aroused opponents, who prevailed upon the tyrant to recall from exile the
historian Philistus, who had for many years been
living at Hadria.
Philistus,
in spite of his banishment, was still a strong supporter of the tyranny, which
as we have seen he had helped to create; he set himself deliberately to thwart
and discredit Dion. Rumours were spread that
Dionysius was being induced to give up power, which would be assumed by Dion
himself as regent for his nephews, the sons of Dionysius I and Aristomache; alarm was created by the suggestion that the
national safety was beinsr endangered by plans for
military and naval disarmament. Finally a letter from Dion to the Carthaginian
Government was intercepted: the peace had not yet been concluded and Dion had
written urging that his own presence should be insisted upon at any peace
conference. This advice doubtless implied no disloyalty but the letter was
invaluable to Philistus and his party, who convinced
Dionysius that It meant that Dion was treacherously promising to secure better
terms for the enemy in order to strengthen his position by foreign support.
Without an opportunity of defence Dion was at once
expelled from Sicily, probably before the end of 366.
But though expelled
Dion was not yet openly disgraced. His friends and supporters were too numerous
to be disregarded, and they prevailed with the tyrant to allow Dion to continue
to enjoy the Income from his estates, which were considerable, and to forward
his movable property to Greece. He was thus enabled to support a magnificent
establishment in Athens, which became his home for the next nine years
(366—57). He kept in close touch with the Academy, and was particularly
intimate with Speusippus its future head, to whom, on
his return to Sicily in 357, he left an estate which he had bought in Attica.
He also travelled to other cities, where his wealth and culture won him
numerous friends. Amongst other marks of esteem he received the most unusual honour of Spartan citizenship, although Sparta was at this
time In alliance with Dionysius, who had in 365 sent a contingent to assist her
against Thebes; it is however possible that Plutarch has misdated this event,
and that Dion had received Spartan citizenship before his banishment, perhaps
before the death of the elder Dionysius.
The reports
which reached Syracuse of Dion’s mode of life soon began to arouse the tyrant's
suspicions; not unnaturally the connections that he was continually forming
with prominent statesmen were interpreted as hostile to Dionysius. How far this
interpretation was just It Is hard to say, but It does not seem probable that
Dion was from the first deliberately planning to recover his position by force
of arms; he was a man of many interests, and doubtless his association with the
Academy and with men of culture elsewhere was maintained for its own sake, and
not merely as a means of disguising political plans. But it was Inevitable that
the sympathy and admiration so universally manifested towards the exile should
foster resentment at his injuries, and awaken in him a sense that he was called
to be the liberator of his countrymen; doubtless, too, these feelings were
accompanied by the desire for power. Meanwhile the conduct of Dionysius
constantly afforded further provocation; he postponed fulfillment of the
assurance given to Plato that Dion should be recalled, he held back the revenue
from Dion’s property and sold part of it, he proposed to find his wife Arete
another husband.
Plato, who
had remained for a while at the Syracusan court after Dion’s expulsion, had
been vainly endeavoring to act as mediator. The attitude of Dionysius to Plato
presents a curious mixture of sentiments: while admiring the philosopher, he
disliked and distrusted the friend of Dion; and although Plato was unable to
heal the ever-widening breach, yet his personal relatioship to the two men had the effect of postponing the inevitable conflict. Dionysius
feared that if he went to extremes in his treatment of Dion he would lose his
hold on Plato, and this he wished to avoid, principally from motives of
personal vanity. He believed himself proficient in philosophy, and it was his
ambition to prove himself so; he even went to the length of composing a sort of
metaphysical handbook purporting to give the substance of Plato's doctrine.
Plato had
taken his measure after a very brief acquaintance; he knew that he had no real
capacity for philosophy, and that his professions in favour of political reform were only the froth of an impulsive temperament; his sole
reason for continuing to maintain relations with Dionysius was the belief that
he might contrive the restoration of Dion. Hence, after one refusal, he was
prevailed upon to make a second visit to Syracuse, early in 361, accompanied by Speusippus and other members of the Academy.
Dionysius sent a trireme to fetch him, and when he arrived treated him at first
with marked respect and deference. But he found the Syracusan court, with its
atmosphere of suspicion and intrigue and its shallow culture, fully as
uncongenial as he had expected. Particularly distasteful must have been the
presence of Aristippus, the so-called Socratic who had twisted the teaching of
his master into a theory of more or less refined hedonism. Aristippus had gone
to Syracuse frankly to get anything he could out of a munificent patron of
learning; he had found high favour with Dionysius,
and now resented the higher favour accorded to Plato,
whose refusal of the tyrant's bounties merely increased his rival's jealousy. Plato
was unable even to raise the question of Dion's recall, and his repeated
attempts to do so soon began to annoy Dionysius. The increasing estrangement
was hailed with delight by Aristippus and other rival philosophers at the
court; it is recorded that, when an eclipse of the sun had been predicted by
Helicon of Cyzicus, Aristippus remarked that he too had a prediction to make;
and that, on being asked what this was, he replied “I predict that there will
soon be a breach between Dionysius and Plato”.
Plato’s visit
was in fact quite useless, and in the end the wayward tyrant came to treat him
virtually as a prisoner; indeed it needed the intercession of Archytas, the
ruler of Tarentum, to procure his escape. Meanwhile Dionysius’ conduct towards
Dion had grown even more hostile: he sold the remainder of his property and
gave Arete in marriage to Timocrates. It must be
admitted that there were some grounds for this hostility. Speusippus had been sounding the populace, and predisposing them in Dion’s favour, while Heracleides, a friend of Dion who co-operated
in his subsequent enterprise, was suspected of engineering a mutiny of
mercenaries which occurred during Plato's visit.
II. THE
ENTERPRISE OF DION
By the summer
of 360 BC, when Plato met Dion at Olympia, it was clear, at least to Dion, that
no satisfaction could be procured save by an appeal to arms, and we may believe
Plutarch’s statement that it was now that Dion definitely contemplated this
course; the indignities to which the aged philosopher had been subjected
perhaps turned the scale. Speusippus, who had taken
pains to discover the sentiments of the Syracusans, had found them longing for
Dion to come as their deliverer. With the aid of Heracleides, who had escaped
arrest and fled from Sicily, Dion now set about collecting mercenaries, but it
is probable that he found this a more difficult task than he had anticipated:
he got together a force of 3000, and took three years in doing so. It was not
until August 357 that the expedition was ready to sail; only 1500 accompanied
Dion, the rest being left to follow later with Heracleides: the reason no doubt
lay in difficulties of commissariat. Several prominent members of the Academy
accompanied the force, but Plato himself held aloof, feeling perhaps that a
private quarrel did not justify the spilling of Syracusan blood.
The
destination had been kept secret: it was not until the last moment that the
troops, at their rendezvous on the island of Zacynthus,
learnt against whom they were to serve. Their dismay at the discovery was not
unnatural, and they were only with difficulty reassured by being told that the
whole Syracusan population was ready to rise, and that they themselves would be
used mainly as officers.
The enemy
however, was well informed. Philistus, the admiral of
Dionysius, was cruising off the coast of Iapygia,
ready to intercept Dion, whom he expected to take the ordinary route across the
Adriatic and down the coast of Italy. Dion, however, wisely sailed direct to
Sicily, and after a hazardous voyage landed at Heraclea Minoa, the Carthaginian
outpost on the south coast. The resistance offered by the garrison was only
nominal: Dion, doubtless, had an understanding with its Greek commander. After
a short rest the troops started for Syracuse, leaving behind their surplus
baggage and arms. Dion had counted upon greatly increasing his numbers on the
march, and his expectations were amply fulfilled. Volunteers flocked to his
standards from Acragas, Gela. and Camarina; Sicels too and Sicans, even
it is said men from Messana and the cities of Italy;
their number it is impossible to give, for Plutarch represents that on the way
to Syracuse the original force had been increased by no more than 5000
recruits, while Diodorus makes them as many as 50,000; it is plain that nothing
approaching the latter number could have been equipped, but Plutarch perhaps
under-estimates in order to heighten the glory of his hero's achievement.
As they drew
nearer Syracuse the inhabitants of the rural districts added their quotas. The
last halt was made at the old Syracusan outpost of Acrae,
about twenty miles west of the city. While encamped there, Dion received a
welcome piece of news : the Campanian mercenaries, drawn from Aetna and Leontini, who guarded the fort of Euryalus had quitted their post, owing to a rumour spread by
Dion's agents to the effect that his first objects of attack would be their own
two cities. Dion was now able to enter Syracuse without opposition, amidst the
acclamations of the citizens who welcomed their deliverer with divine honors.
Only the Island fortress was held by the troops of Dionysius; the tyrant
himself chanced to be absent on a visit to his Italian colony of Caulonia, and a dispatch sent to him by Timocrates,
whom he had left behind as his deputy, had miscarried, so that it was not until
six days later that he returned to Ortygia. Timocrates meanwhile, after vainly attempting to prevent the desertion of the Campanians
on Epipolae, had found it impossible to rejoin the
garrison and had fled.
The festal
entry culminated in a mass meeting of the liberated populace in front of the
five gates which gave access to the Island from Achradina.
Taking his stand on the sundial which Dionysius had erected on this spot, Dion
harangued the assembly, exhorting them to grasp their liberty and select their
leaders. The first cries were for Dion himself and his brother Megacles to act under the title of “generals with full
power”; such, in fact, was the faith of the masses that they had no hesitation
in conferring on the liberators the office which had clothed the tyranny with a
semblance of constitutional authority. But Dion was unwilling to accept a
position which would in effect concentrate all power in his own single person;
and his refusal must surely be interpreted as evidence that he had not
returned, as some have supposed, simply to expel Dionysius and take his place.
As a convinced adherent of Plato he could tolerate neither tyranny nor
democracy; the alternatives were constitutional monarchy and aristocracy, and
it is probable that the ‘freedom’ which he had come to win for Syracuse was
intended ultimately to take the form of an aristocratic constitution. But he
must have realized that for the present executive power must remain in the
hands of a few- persons upon whom he could rely. It was therefore arranged
that, in addition to Dion and Megacles, twenty
generals should be appointed, of whom ten were selected from the fellow-exiles
of Dion who had returned with him; who the other ten were we are not told. No doubt
the whole twenty were in fact selected by Dion himself rather than by the
massed citizens. How far Dion really meant them to have a share in the
government it is impossible to say: but they appear in the event to have been
mere ciphers.
So far everything
had been easy; but from the military point of view Dion’s task was as yet
hardly begun. The freedom of Syracuse was wholly illusory so long as Dionysius
held the Island with his mercenaries and the sea with his fleet. Dion’s first
measure was to build a wall from the greater to the lesser harbour,
barring off the Island from the rest of the city. Plainly, defensive action
alone was possible on land: the only chance of defeating Dionysius effectively
was by sea, and for this Dion had to wait until Heracleides should arrive with
the second force. During the winter the Syracusans were active in building
triremes, of which they had as many as 60 at their disposal in the sea-fight
which ensued in the summer of 356 BC.
Meanwhile
Dion’s difficulties were increasing. After the first outburst of enthusiasm his
popularity rapidly waned: an aristocrat in behavior, he lacked the arts of the
popular leader, nor did he care to acquire them; the necessities of defence compelled him to act arbitrarily, to disregard his nominal
colleagues, in fact to act to all intents and purposes as a tyrant. In these
circumstances Dionysius was quick to seize every opportunity to increase his
enemy’s unpopularity. He first tried secret negotiations with Dion personally
instead of through the Syracusan people, intending no doubt to repudiate his
proposals after Dion had compromised himself by replying to them; but in this
he was foiled, as Dion told him to address himself to the people; in other
words, to make his proposals public. The tyrant’s next trick was to send a
letter purporting to come from Dion’s son, in which he reminded Dion of his
zealous services on behalf of tyranny, and suggested that it would be wiser for
him to assume the tyranny now himself rather than abolish it: only so would he
be safe from the vengeance of those who remembered him as the prop of tyrants.
The contents of this clever document somehow became known to the populace, as
was of course intended by the writer, and convinced many that the deliverer was
playing false. To supplement propaganda by force, an attack was launched on
Dion’s cross-wall, but was repulsed after sharp fighting in which Dion himself
was wounded and showed conspicuous bravery.
It was at
this moment that Heracleides arrived with his ships. His arrival was a great
encouragement to the Syracusans, but a considerable embarrassment for Dion,
whose opponents found Heracleides very ready to side with them. He accepted
from the assembly nomination as admiral, but Dion insisted that this
appointment was an infringement of his own position as c general with full
powers; we hear nothing at this point of Dion’s twenty colleagues. In his
contention Dion had precedent to go upon, for under the regime of the elder
Dionysius the office of admiral had undoubtedly been subordinate to that of the
General from whom he received the appointment. The precedent was indeed the
precedent of tyranny, yet Dion can hardly be blamed for resisting a measure
which was plainly designed to undermine his position. Another assembly was
convened in which Dion himself appointed Heracleides to the command at sea; in
truth he had no choice but to do so, for the warships were already under
Heracleides’ orders.
In the naval
battle which ensued in the early summer of 356 BC a decisive victory was won by
the patriots; the ship of the enemy admiral Philistus was captured, and in his despair the aged warrior took his own life. The
virulence of hatred which made civil warfare so horrible in Syracuse, as indeed
in all Greek cities, is brought home to us when we read how the corpse was
subjected to outrage and mutilation; such conduct was unhappily very common
throughout antiquity, but it comes as something of a shock to find the gentle
and philosophical Plutarch remarking that it was perhaps pardonable that those
who had been wronged by Philistus should thus exact
their vengeance.
Dionysius had
suffered a severe blow. Not only had he lost a capable and trusty servant, but,
what was even more serious, he had lost the command at sea and therewith the
possibility of indefinitely sustaining the siege. He therefore offered to
surrender the Island, together with his mercenaries and munitions, on condition
that he should be allowed to retire to Italy in the enjoyment of the revenues
from his private estate in Syracusan territory. This offer was however refused.
Dionysius now cared for little but his personal safety, and contrived to get
away by sea with a few friends and some of his possessions; he reached Locri, eluding the vigilance of Heracleides’ fleet, and
left his son Apollocrates to hold the Island. A storm
of indignation burst upon Heracleides for his negligence, and in order to save
himself he lent his sanction to the demands of the extremists amongst the
opponents of Dion, the doctrinaire republicans who clamored for equality—by
which they meant a redistribution of land—as the complement of liberty. With
the support of Heracleides this measure was carried in the assembly, and
further it was decided to discontinue the pay of Dion’s mercenaries, and to
elect new generals in place of the existing nominees of Dion. Thus was the
liberator's advice to the people to grasp their liberty accepted in full
measure. The reaction from despotism is apt to be violent: to the newly freed,
liberty may mean anarchy. So Dion had found to his cost. He had no choice but
to withdraw from Syracuse with his mercenaries, to the number of more than
3000. They came to Leontini, where Dion was received
with honor and the soldiers were given citizen rights.
The garrison
of Ortygia had by this time almost exhausted its provisions and had begun
negotiations for surrender, when an unexpected relief appeared. Dionysius, who
perhaps saw a chance of recovering his position now that Dion was gone, had
contrived to secure a body of mercenaries, under the command of one Nypsius, a Campanian soldier of fortune. These were
dispatched to Syracuse together with food and money for the starving garrison,
and were accompanied by some triremes, sufficient In number to have a chance of
coping with the Syracusan ships guarding the entrance to the harbour. The arrival of this force was a complete surprise
to Heracleides and his colleagues, and men and stores were landed without
opposition. The Syracusan admiral, anxious to atone for his negligence, went
out to give battle; four of the enemy's triremes were captured, and in
exultation over this success the whole population gave Itself up to revelry.
Discipline under the regime of the triumphant democrats was despised, and
danger disregarded. In the night that followed, Nypsius’
men carried Dion’s wall and were let loose upon the city, sacking, plundering
and murdering. In their extremity the miserable Syracusans had no choice but to
send a deputation to Leontini, to implore aid from the
men whom they had driven out. And they did not plead in vain. Dion and his 3000
men came back; we are told that they came slowly, that their advance was
delayed by fresh messages from Syracuse. Nypsius had
called back his troops to the Island at nightfall, and the democratic leaders,
Imagining that the worst was over, repented of their haste in agreeing to call
upon Dion, whose attitude towards themselves they might well expect to be
pitiless. It needed a second night of terror to convince them that it was
better to trust to the doubtful mercies of a fellow-citizen than to abandon
themselves, their women and children and all that they had, to the savagery of
blood-thirsty barbarians. How great was the havoc wrought by fire and sword on
that second night we cannot say, but we know that Nypsius,
acting presumably on orders from Dionysius anticipating such a situation, sent
forth his men not to conquer or to capture, but to burn and kill. It is to be
supposed that some quarters of the city, probably Upper Achradina and Epipolae, escaped, and that some of the
population In the lower town fled thither; otherwise there would have been none
for Dion to save.
On the third
day the brother and uncle of Heracleides, who himself was wounded, appeared as
suppliants before Dion, now eight miles distant; in hot haste Dion advanced at
the head of his men and re-entered the burning city; through blood and fire and
the masses of dead lying in the streets they fought their way, and at last
overpowered the enemy, most of whom, however, escaped into their fortress.
It might have
been expected that the position of Dion, now that he had rescued Syracuse a
second time, would be secure, and that his democratic opponents would be
permanently silenced. His biographers fail to give any adequate explanation why
this was not so; but it seems plain that the leniency which he displayed on the
morrow of the victory was a grave error of judgment. All the prominent
demagogues had taken to flight except Heracieides and Theodotes, and Dion would have been amply justified
in executing these two, as his friends advised, or at the least in expelling
them from Sicily.
The beau geste of a free pardon was certain, as he
might have realized, to have deplorable results. It was interpreted, naturally,
as a sign of weakness, as in fact it was; but if we are surprised at this
action it is indeed amazing to find Dion soon afterwards consenting to the
restoration or continuance of Heracleides’ command at sea. We can hardly
believe that Dion still preserved any faith in Heracleides, nor that a desire
to conciliate the popular party could by itself have induced him to consent to
the appointment. The probability is that the crews of the triremes were masters
of the situation, and would tolerate no other commander: they had presumably
not suffered like the townsfolk in the recent sack of Syracuse. While he gave
way on this point, Dion insisted on the repeal of the popular decree for
redistribution of land; and the odium which this aroused was sufficient to
encourage Heracleides to resume his machinations.
The relations
of Dion and Heracleides were now complicated by the momentary appearance of two
enigmatic figures from Sparta, Pharax and Gaesylus who, perhaps in Dionysius’ interest, sought to use
against Dion the prestige of Sparta. The only result of their intervention was
that Heracleides, who had intrigued with them in turn, was once more
discomfited, and that Dion now felt strong enough to insist on demobilizing the
crews of the triremes, probably immediately after the capitulation of Apollocrates in 355 BC. The son of Dionysius was at length
starved out and his mercenaries were mutinying: he was allowed to depart with
five triremes, but surrendered all his munitions and equipment.
Even now,
when the deliverance from tyranny was completed, the dissensions amongst the
Syracusan population continued with melancholy persistence and wearisome
reiteration. Dion still fails to conciliate his opponents, and seeks advice and
support from Corinth in his endeavor to establish his aristocratic
constitution; Heracleides still intrigues until at last Dion connives at his
assassination. According to the account of Nepos, financial difficulties forced
him to impose heavy taxes upon the richer citizens, and consequently he lost
their support. In the end he was murdered. In June 354, as the result of a plot
devised by his former friend of the Platonic Academy, Callippus.
Dion had
failed, as he himself fully realized before the end. His connivance at the
murder of Heracleides was the act of one disillusioned and half distraught.
Considering the provocation that he had suffered, we cannot blame him overmuch;
but the action was fatal to his prospects, for It convinced all men that they
had only exchanged one tyrant for another. Dion had Indeed become a tyrant In
spite of himself. His tragedy is the tragedy of an Idealist who wholly lacks
the ability to accommodate his ideals to the realities of time and place.
Syracuse was not a favorable ground for the establishment of aristocratic
government, for owing to the numerous changes of population which it had
suffered it lacked a genuine aristocracy of birth. No one at Syracuse sincerely
wished to realize the political Ideals of Dion and of Plato, and hence Dion
could never have formed a strong party to support his projects, even If he had
been born with the gifts of a party leader. Moreover, generous, high-minded and
patriotic as he certainly was, he could not win the affections of his
fellow-citizens, for he was handicapped both by his kinship with tyrants and by
his spiritual affinity with the philosopher who had for the common people
nothing but contempt.
The murderer
of Dion affected to be a liberator, and was the hero of the hour; but there is
no reason to suppose him to have been anything but an adventurer who had seized
his opportunity. After ruling thirteen months he succeeded in establishing a
tyranny at Catana, but only at the cost of losing
Syracuse, where he was displaced in 352 by Hipparinus,
the elder son of Dionysius I and Aristomache. After
two years the new tyrant met his end in a drunken quarrel, and his place was
taken by his brother Nysaeus. Of the character of Nysaeus and his rule we know nothing, but the fact that he
maintained himself for five years proves that he was a man of some ability.
Finally in 347 he was expelled by Dionysius himself, who thus regained his
power ten years after he had lost it. During all these years, since the murder
of Dion, the condition of Syracuse seems to have been miserable In the extreme.
A large proportion of the population had perished in the constant civil strife,
poverty and destitution were widespread, and there seemed no escape from the
series of hated tyrants.
Dionysius,
who during his ten years’ exile had ruled at Locri,
had there displayed all the worst features of the despot, and his second period
of power at Syracuse proved so intolerable that the despairing citizens
appealed for aid to Hicetas, a Syracusan by birth,
who now ruled at Leontini. At the same time danger
threatened from abroad, for a Carthaginian force had made its appearance in
Sicily, and it seemed likely that the last traces of Greek freedom would be
obliterated. Indeed the condition of the Island as a whole at this date was
pitiable. The majority of the Greek cities had either been devastated and
depopulated, or were crowded with Italian mercenaries who had been brought in
by the tyrants and who constituted their effective support. So extensive had
been the settlements of these foreigners that according to a contemporary
writer there seemed a real danger of the Greek language falling out of use, and
being replaced by the tongue of the Oscan or of the Carthaginian.
III.
TIMOLEON: THE DELIVERY OF SYRACUSE
It was in
these circumstances that an appeal was made, probably early in 345 BC, by the
Syracusans to Corinth, their mother-city; we may suppose that it was made from Leontini, whither the followers of Dion, who had most to
fear from the returned Dionysius, had fled for refuge. The selection of Corinth
was natural, not only because she had a reputation for befriending her colonies
but also because Dion himself had sought the help of Corinthians in his
legislative reforms; Sparta, on the other hand, was mistrusted in view of the
conduct of Pharax and of Gaesylus.
It is not clear whether Syracuse expected or asked for troops or warships : in
view of the disturbed state of Greece at the time it could hardly be thought
likely that Corinth would be willing or able to supply troops in any numbers,
but the main requirement was a commander who would inspire confidence and could
not be suspected of harbouring personal ambitions.
According to
Plutarch, it was the fear of an attack by the Carthaginians that occasioned
this appeal. This may very well be true, and it might be expected that
assistance would more readily be granted against a barbarian attack than
against a Greek tyrant. Nevertheless there was pressing need also for help
against domestic foes; for Hicetas was known or
believed to be intriguing with Carthage. He supported the appeal, but not in
good faith; for while ready enough to help the Svracusans to get rid of Dionysius. he intended to fill the vacant position himself.
Doubtless he felt, and not altogether without reason, that freedom and
democracy m contemporary Syracuse were vain dreams, and that he had as good a
right as any other to rule; any commander sent from Corinth could only appear
to him a rival or an impediment. It is doubtful whether he seriously
contemplated enlisting Carthaginian help before the appeal to Corinth was
suggested; in any case, it was the threat of the interference of old Greece in
Sicilian affairs that moved Carthage to respond. Apart from that, it seems
likely that she would have preserved the non-aggressive policy that she had
followed since her conclusion of peace with Dionysius II in 367 BC. She had on
that occasion acquiesced in the Halycus frontier, and
the little that we know of Carthaginian history between 367 and 345 suggests
that mercantile interests now dominated her policy rather than schemes for
territorial expansion. In 348 BC she concluded the second treaty with Rome,
which, on the one hand, reiterated her claim to a mare clausum,
going beyond the first treaty by excluding Rome from trade in Sardinia and the
whole of Libya except Carthage itself, and, on the other, embodied clauses for
the restriction of piracy. And at some time between these dates, or possibly a
little later, she had to suppress a dangerous attempt by Hanno to overthrow the
constitution and seize supreme power. The failure of Hanno’s coup may perhaps be
interpreted as a triumph of the commercial and peace-loving party over the
landed aristocracy which had come into prominence during the past century and
favored an imperialistic policy.
The presence
of a Punic army in the island in 345 BC was a lucky accident from Hicetas’ point of view: it was occasioned, so far as we can
judge, simply by the need of defensive or repressive action in the Carthaginian
province. It would seem that the town of Entella,
occupied since the time of the elder Dionysius by Campanian settlers, was
heading an anti-Carthaginian movement in the province, and endeavoring to gain
support from without its borders also. The attempt proved a complete failure:
the Carthaginians laid siege to Entella, and a
contingent of 1000 men, sent by the Sicels of Galaria, a town near the western slopes of Mt Aetna, was
annihilated before reaching its goal. Help had been promised also by the
Campanians of Aetna, but on the news of the Galarians'
defeat their efforts were abandoned. It is probable that Entella thereupon capitulated: at all events we find the town once more in Carthaginian
possession three years later.
Hicetas,
who, as we have seen, joined in the Syracusan appeal to Corinth, seems to have
expected that it would not meet with success; and he may have reflected that,
in that case, his policy of calling in the national enemy might be acquiesced
in by the Syracusans as the only remaining alternative to the tyranny of
Dionysius. But his calculations were wrong.
On reaching
Corinth the Syracusan envoys were sympathetically received, and the magistrates
at once invited candidates for the honorable commission to submit their names
for election by a popular assembly. Amongst others the name of Timoleon, son of Timodemus, was
put forward, not by himself but by a humble admirer: it was received with
acclamation and Timoleon was elected. The choice was
abundantly justified by the event, but it was a strange one. Timoleon was a man of good birth possessed of sagacity and
courage, but for the past twenty years he had lived under a cloud; his brother Timophanes, in or about the year 365, had abused his
position as commander of a mercenary force employed by the city to make a bid
for tyranny, and Timoleon, unable to deter him, had
either slain him with his own hands or contrived his assassination. It was an
act of pure patriotism, but men’s minds were divided between admiration for a
tyrannicide and detestation of a brother’s murderer. Ever since, Timoleon had lived in mourning and seclusion; his response
to the call from Syracuse was, we may conjecture, inspired by the feeling that
divine favour now offered him an opportunity for
wiping out the memory of the past. We are told that after his election a
prominent citizen named Teleclides observed in the
Assembly that if Timoleon should be successful in his
enterprise his fellow-citizens would account him a tyrannicide, if he should
fail, a fratricide.
The choice of
Corinth must have seemed a curious one to the Syracusans; Timoleon,
though his bravery in war was proved, had no reputation as a general: and a man
long withdrawn from public life was likely to be a stranger to the diplomacies
and duplicities necessary for securing the goodwill of the Sicilians and for
coping with a Dionysius: in fact his reception when he first arrived in Sicily
was far from enthusiastic. The task which he had set himself was formidable; it
was not to be confined to securing the freedom of Syracuse; that was of course
his first and main purpose, but other Greek cities had associated themselves
with the Syracusan appeal, and Timoleon aimed at
freeing the whole Island from tyranny. To accomplish this he must of course
mainly rely upon the Sicilians themselves, and it was by no means certain that
he would inspire confidence or win active support: so dubious and complex were
the political conditions in Sicily that the appeal which had reached Corinth
could by no means be taken as representing a universal sentiment. Timoleon, however, set about his task with energy, uplifted
by a belief in divine protection manifested in visible signs from the outset,
and In a trust In his own good luck, a trust which was amply borne out by
subsequent events and to which he gave expression in later days by building a
shrine to a strangely impersonal goddess, Automatia.
The force
with which Timoleon sailed In the spring of 344
consisted only of seven triremes supplied by Corinth, together with one from
Leucas and one from Corcyra, sister colonies of Syracuse, and of some 1000
mercenary troops, most of whom had been recently employed by the Phocians in the Sacred War. Unlike Dion, he took the
ordinary route down the Italian coast instead of making direct to Sicily across
the open sea. On arriving at Metapontum he was met by a Carthaginian trireme
and warned to proceed no farther. Carthage, taught by Hicetas,
saw in Timoleon the would-be restorer of Dionysius’
empire, the opponent of that particularism In Sicily which suited her policy. Hicetas had shown his hand before Timoleon left Corinth, and had sent a letter to the Corinthians urging them to lend no
support to Timoleon’s venture; he had, he said, been
forced by their delay in sending help to have recourse to the Carthaginians,
and the latter would not allow Timoleon’s force to
approach Sicily. The threat had no effect save to increase the enthusiasm of
the Corinthian people for Timoleon’s venture.
Disregarding the warning given him at Metapontum, the deliverer proceeded down
the coast to Rhegium, now a democratic state. In
their readiness to aid the cause of freedom, and in their cordial dislike of
the Carthaginians as neighbors, the men of Rhegium had promised Timoleon assistance, and it was due to
them that Timoleon now found it possible to elude the
Carthaginians and cross over to Sicily. Twenty Punic triremes had sailed into
the straits, and envoys from Hicetas were on board:
their message was that Timoleon himself might if he
wished give Hicetas the benefit of his counsel, but
that, since the war against Dionysius was well-nigh finished, his ships and
troops should be sent back to Corinth, more especially as the Carthaginians
would not permit their crossing the straits. Timoleon affected compliance, but proposed that their compact should be made before
witnesses, in the assembly of the Rhegines. His ruse,
concerted with the Rhegine authorities, was to detain
the Punic envoys by lengthy speeches, during the delivery of which Timoleon’s ships should put to sea one by one. Waiting
until news was brought to him that all his ships except one had got safely
away. Timoleon slipped unnoticed through the crowd
and put off on the remaining ship. To the Carthaginians, indignantly protesting
at the trick that had been played upon them, the men of Rhegium expressed their astonishment that any Phoenician should be displeased at guile.
It was to Tauromenium, the newly refounded city just outside the Straits, that Timoleon’s squadron sailed. Andromachus now ruled there, with
the authority, it would seem, of a constitutional king rather than of a tyrant;
the picture drawn by Plutarch of this monarch, the friend of liberty and bitter
enemy of tyrants, may reflect something of the partiality of his son, the
historian Timaeus; but the facts remain that Tauromenium was the only Sicilian city that had promised Timoleon support before his arrival, and that it was likewise the only one left under
the control of a single ruler when Timoleon’s work
was done. To the Carthaginian envoy who now appeared and demanded the expulsion
of the Corinthians Andromachus returned a spirited
and defiant answer; and so for a time Tauromenium became Timoleon’s headquarters. At first he could
see little prospect of success. In the message from Hicetas which reached him at Rhegium there was this much
truth, that Hicetas had three days earlier defeated
Dionysius and become master of the whole of Syracuse except the Island of
Ortygia, where the tyrant was now blockaded. He had now induced the
Carthaginian fleet to enter the great harbour, so
that in any attempt on Syracuse Timoleon was
confronted by a threefold enemy. From the numerous tyrants that ruled in the
other cities, such as Hippo of Messana, Mamercus of Catana, and Leptines of Apollonia he could only expect opposition. If
any of the victims of these tyrants' oppressions had joined in the invitation
which brought Timoleon to Sicily, they showed no sign
of supporting him now that he had come. He might, they felt, after all be only
another adventurer like Pharax or Callippus,
or a half-genuine liberator like Dion.
But during
the summer of this same year, 344, Timoleon won a
success which completely changed his prospects. In the small town of Adranum it was felt that the citizens must choose between Hicetas and the Carthaginians on one side, and Timoleon on the other: opposite counsels were favored by
opposite parties, and in the end each made Its appeal. Hicetas and Timoleon were both prompt to respond, and reached
the vicinity of Adranum at the same time. But Timoleon took Hicetas by
surprise, and though his force is said to have numbered only 1200—one-fifth of
his opponent’s—he was completely successful, taking a large number of prisoners
and capturing the enemy's camp. The pro-Carthaginian party at Adranum must have been extinguished by this event, for Timoleon now established his headquarters there. By what
was accounted, and indeed almost was, a miracle, he escaped assassination at
the hands of an agent of Hicetas, and the general
belief in a special providence that watched over him gained ground. It was
perhaps in part due to this belief that several cities now declared their
adherence to his cause: amongst these were Tyndaris on the north coast, and Catana, where Mamercus was tyrant; It is doubtful however whether Mamercus was sincere in his profession of a change even for
the moment; in any case he did not long remain so.
But the most
important result of Timoleon’s victory was the
surrender of Dionysius. This came as a great surprise to Timoleon,
but from the tyrant’s point of view it was undoubtedly a wise and natural
proceeding. He could not sustain a siege indefinitely, and he preferred to
surrender to Timoleon rather than to Hicetas. The reason which Plutarch (and perhaps Timaeus)
assigns for this preference is that he despised Hicetas for his recent defeat, and admired Timoleon; but we
may guess that a more cogent reason influenced the tyrant’s choice. He realized
that his career in Sicily was now finally closed, and that the only chance of
saving his life was to escape to Greece; Hicetas,
even supposing him to be willing to accept anything less than unconditional
surrender, had no ships at his disposal; nor. If he had, would his Carthaginian
allies have tolerated an arrangement guaranteeing Dionysius a safe passage out
of the harbour; but to Timoleon the possession of the Island without a struggle would seem so desirable that he
might be expected to accept the offer on condition of facilitating the tyrant’s
escape. The details of that escape are not recorded; but it was of course by
sea, and must have been on a ship provided by Timoleon.
The risk of capture by the Carthaginian ships had to be faced, but it was
probably not great, nor was this the first time that Dionysius had been
successful in running a blockade. Accompanied by a few friends he reached Timoleon’s camp, which had probably been transferred to Catana since the adherence of Mamercus;
thence he was sent to Corinth to end his days in beggary and to provide
innumerable anecdotes for historians and moralists.
The surrender
of the Island had taken place within fifty days of Timoleon’s landing in Sicily, that is to say, towards the end of the summer of 344 BC. Timoleon had good cause to congratulate himself and to
confirm his belief in his automatic deity: immense quantities of war material
came into his possession, together with 2000 mercenaries. Best of all, he had
justified the choice of the Corinthian people, who hastened to dispatch
reinforcements to the number of 2000 foot-soldiers and 200 horsemen.
Nevertheless his task was still considerable, with the Island blockaded on the
land side by Hicetas and on the sea by the
Carthaginians. His first measure was to smuggle in by sea, in small
detachments, 400 of his own troops to take over the fortress and the munitions:
without this step he would of course have no security for the fidelity of the
surrendered mercenaries. But the great difficulty was to feed the large
garrison; provisions had to be brought in small fishing boats from Catana, which found it possible, especially in stormy
weather, to make their way through the wide gaps in the enemy’s line of ships.
All through the winter of 344—3 BC. Timoleon labored
at this task, which must have become still more formidable when (probably in
the spring) the Carthaginians greatly increased their fleet in the harbour. It is said that Hicetas induced Mago to bring up his whole fleet, to the number of 150 triremes, and at
the same time to disembark 50,000 or 60,000 troops in the city. These numbers
must be greatly exaggerated, but it is plain that Timoleon had to face heavy odds. Nevertheless, in spite of the despair with which the
Syracusans witnessed the spectacle of their city converted into a barbarian
camp, their deliverer in his camp at Catana, and
Neon, the Corinthian commander of the garrison in the Island, did not lose
heart. Before long the carelessness of their enemies supplied them with an
opportunity that they were prompt to seize. Mago and Hicetas rightly decided that they must capture Timoleon’s base at Catana; but, while their best troops were
withdrawn on this expedition, the vigilance of those left at Syracuse was
relaxed, and Neon in a successful sally captured Achradina,
the defences of which he forthwith strengthened and
united with those of the Island. The Corinthian garrison now had ample supplies
of grain, and no attempt was made to dislodge them by Mago and Hicetas, who had returned In hot haste, abandoning the
attack on Catana.
Meanwhile Timoleon was awaiting the reinforcement from Corinth. We
are not told how soon after Dionysius’ capitulation they were dispatched, but
it Is unlikely that they left before the spring of 343; and their journey was
beset with obstacles. On reaching Thurii they found
that their advance by sea was rendered unsafe by a Carthaginian squadron
patrolling the coast. They therefore proceeded by land, meeting with some
opposition from the Bruttians, a people previously
subject to the Lucanians whose yoke they had recently (356 BC) shaken off. So
they came to Rhegium; but they might have found it
hard to cross the Straits in safety had not the Carthaginian admiral been
inspired with a foolish conceit. Believing that the Corinthian troops would not
dare to attempt the passage—a storm was raging, but it seems to have had no
terror for the Carthaginians—he dashed off to Syracuse to display to the
garrison of Ortygia his ships decked with bunting and Greek shields, an
exhibition intended to persuade Neon that the Corinthian reinforcements had
been captured in the Straits, so that he might as well surrender the Island
without more ado. This puerile ruse had an effect very different from that
intended; for meanwhile the storm had suddenly subsided and the troops had
crossed at their ease in fishing-boats. Timoleon was
waiting them; he promptly united his forces and marched on Syracuse, encamping
by the Anapus. And now there ensued the most
extraordinary piece of good fortune in Timoleon’s fortunate career; suddenly the Carthaginians embarked their whole host and
sailed away. No adequate explanation is given for this remarkable action:
Diodorus ascribes it simply to fear of Timoleon’s army: Plutarch has a not Improbable story of fraternization between the Greek
mercenaries in the service of Timoleon and those of Hicetas, which came to the ears of Mago and caused him to
suspect Hicetas of treachery; a modern historian
suggests that Mago intended to have a hand in the revolutionary attempt of
Hanno at Carthage. The only point that is clear is that the withdrawal was not
ordered by the authorities at Carthage; it was a personal decision of Mago’s.
He killed himself to escape judgment and his fellow-countrymen crucified his
corpse. Hicetas, thus deserted, could offer no
directive resistance. Timoleon attacked the city from
three sides simultaneously —from Achradina and from
the north and south sides of Epipolae, and was
completely successful, though we can hardly believe Plutarch’s statement that
he lost not a single man killed or wounded. Hicetas,
however, escaped to Leontini, where for the time
being he continued to rule unmolested.
IV. TIMOLEON:
THE SETTLEMENT OF SICILY
It was now
late in the summer of 343; Timoleon’s first object,
the deliverance of Syracuse from tyranny, was achieved. There was formidable
work still before him in the extirpation of tyrants in other cities; there was
the possibility, if not the certainty, of a further Carthaginian menace; and
there was the resettlement of Syracuse. The last was perhaps the hardest task
of the three, and it was to this that he now addressed himself. Would he
succeed where Dion had failed ? That question was assuredly in the mind of
every citizen of Syracuse. Two things at least were in his favor: Dion’s
experience taught him what to avoid, and he had no past record as a tyrant’s
henchman to live down. Moreover the recent presence of a Carthaginian army in
the streets of Syracuse, and the likelihood of its return, might be expected to
revive a national spirit and to quench the passions of party hatred. The first
step was to repopulate the depleted city. Allowing for some exaggeration in
Plutarch’s description of streets and market-place overgrown with dense grass
where horses were pastured, we cannot doubt that during the recent period of
civil disorder the population of Syracuse had very considerably diminished:
some had met a violent end, some were in exile, thousands must have been forced
to seek other homes after the night when Nypsius had
sacked and burnt. It was but proper that the invitation to new settlers should
be issued from the city of Timoleon and of Archias, the first founder of Syracuse2; the Corinthians
gave the greatest possible publicity to Timoleon’s appeal, and from all quarters of the Greek world men came together to live as
free citizens of the restored Syracuse. Of 60,000 immigrants, excluding women
and children, it is said that 5000 came from Corinth itself, and as many as
50,000 from Italy and Sicily; Diodorus adds that 10,000 were also settled in
his own native town of Agyrium. The process of
resettlement must have been a gradual one, and Agyrium at least cannot have received its immigrants until, some five years later, Timoleon had expelled its tyrant Apollomades.
At Syracuse a redistribution of land took place amongst old and new citizens
alike, while the houses were sold so that the old inhabitants had a chance of
purchasing their dwellings; a thousand talents were thus realized for the
treasury, which was so depleted that it was found necessary to sell the public
statues by auction, that of Gelon alone being
excepted. Meanwhile Timoleon had lost no time in
obliterating the outward and visible signs of despotism: the palace of
Dionysius and his two strongholds on the Island were demolished, and courts of
justice were erected in their place.
Our
information as to the constitution established by Timoleon is meager. His advisers in the work were two Corinthians, Cephalus and
Dionysius. It is not likely that any Corinthian would contemplate an unlimited
democracy, and the statement that the old laws of the democrat Diocles were emended to suit the needs of the time
doubtless points to some form of restriction. All we can say is that Syracuse
remained a genuine democracy down to the time of Agathocles’ tyranny, although
the influence of the wealthy made itself increasingly felt. When we come to
resume the history of Sicily after the gap of about twenty years which follows
the retirement of Timoleon we shall find an
oligarchical club of 600 referred to in such terms as to suggest that organized
opposition to Timoleon’s constitution very soon made
its appearance. The chief executive power was vested in the priest or Amphipolos of Olympian Zeus, whose sacrosanct
person would be a check upon revolutionary plotters; he was to be chosen yearly
by a mixture of election and lot, and it would seem that he must be a member of
one of the three leading families. Military control remained in the hands of a
college of generals, but we hear of a resolution to the effect that in any war
against barbarians a generalissimo should be imported from Corinth. It is
probable that the same type of constitution was established in the other Sicilian
cities when Timoleon had freed them. A loose
federation or alliance bound them together, but Syracuse does not appear to
have been accorded any kind of hegemony: she would nevertheless be felt as the
predominant partner, for her population must have far outnumbered that of any
other city.
It was
probably in the summer of 342 that Timoleon undertook
a campaign against Hicetas, who after his escape from
Syracuse had resumed his rule of Leontini. But his
attack was unsuccessful, and he next marched against Leptines who controlled a number of Sicel towns in the north. Leptines surrendered and was sent to share the fate of
Dionysius at Corinth. Returning to Syracuse, Timoleon dispatched troops to the Carthaginian province, and succeeded in detaching Entella and some other towns from the Carthaginians:
considerable spoils accrued from this expedition, which was probably undertaken
after news had arrived that Carthage was preparing another attack on a large
scale.
Disgusted at
the failure of Mago and Hanno, the Carthaginians had determined to abandon
half-measures and to rely no more upon the co-operation of Greek tyrants; it is
said that they were resolved to drive the Greeks out of Sicily altogether, but
this perhaps does no more than reflect the exasperation which they felt at the
moment against Hicetas and such other rulers as had
supported or feigned to support them in the previous campaign. The force,
70,000 foot and 10,000 horse, with 200 warships, was not exceptionally large,
but it was notable as including 2500 Carthaginian citizens, belonging to the
so-called Sacred Band. It was seldom that Carthage allowed the blood of her own
sons to be spilt in her wars, and the presence of the Sacred Band attests the serious
view which was taken of this campaign; it was felt that the Carthaginian hold
on Sicily was gravely menaced. For the rest, the troops were recruited from
Libya, Spain, Gaul and Liguria: the commanders were Hasdrubal and Hamilcar. In
May or early June of the year 341 the troops were disembarked at Lilybaeum, where they heard of Timoleon’s raid; and the news determined their generals to attack with all speed. It is
not clear whether they resolved to march upon Syracuse, or first to chastise
the raiders, assuming that these were still in the west: in any case the site
of the battle was decided by Timoleon’s rapid march
into the enemy’s country. The total force of the Corinthians, as our
authorities call them, was no more than 12,000, and of these only 3000 were
Syracusans. Plutarch (or his source) ascribes this small figure to the terror
felt at Syracuse in face of the formidable enemy, but it is perhaps more
reasonable to believe that the resettlement of the city had not as yet gone far
enough to increase its population very considerably. Other cities no doubt
furnished some citizen troops—Diodorus says that all the Greek cities and many Sicel and Sican cities also
readily put themselves under Timoleon’s orders after
his capture of Entella—but the greater part of the
remainder were probably mercenaries. In the course of the march Timoleon was embarrassed by a mutiny of the mercenary
troops, one thousand of whom were suffered to return
to Syracuse, to be dealt with later. The battle was fought on the bank of the Crimisus, not far from Segesta. It resulted In a decisive
victory for the Greeks, which was due to several causes: the presence of a
heavy mist enabled Timoleon to surprise the enemy by
an attack from high ground; a violent thunderstorm came on, which drove rain
and hail straight in the face of the Carthaginians; and the heavily- armed
warriors of the Sacred Band, who bore the brunt of the fighting, found
themselves at a great disadvantage in face of the superior mobility of the
Greek infantry; the torrent of rain rendered their equipment still heavier, and
as the plain rapidly became a morass owing to the overflowing of the river and
to the swollen streams which swirled down from the hillside they found It
increasingly difficult to move. Large numbers were swept away downstream, the
rest were slain or put to flight. As many as 10,000 are said to have fallen,
including the whole of the Sacred Band; heaven, In a very literal sense, had
aided the Corinthian leader In this great battle, which was fought in mid-June,
341: the spoils of the enemy’s armor were very rich, and fine trophies were
sent to adorn the temples of Corinth and to add to her renown.
The remnants
of the defeated host took refuge within the walls of Lilybaeum.
The Punic fleet still rode the waters off the west coast, and it was therefore
out of the question for Timoleon to attempt the siege
of that stronghold, or of Heraclea or Panormus;
without a naval victory it was impossible to drive the Carthaginians out of
Sicily. Timoleon therefore left some troops to
plunder enemy territory, and himself returned to Syracuse, where his first act
was the expulsion from Sicily of the thousand mercenaries that had deserted
him; they are said to have crossed to Italy and been cut to pieces by the Bruttians.
It says much
for the tenacity and spirit of the Carthaginians that after this crushing
defeat they did not abandon the war. It says much moreover for their
adaptability that they returned at once to their former policy of co-operating
with Greek tyrants, Mamercus of Catana,
who had become an adherent of Timoleon after the
battle of Adranum, Hicetas who had supplied him with troops at the Crimisus, and
Hippo of Messana now reverted to their previous
allegiance; all were mere opportunists In their alliances, and whereas they had
recently thought their positions endangered by the Carthaginian Invasion they
had now more to fear from Timoleon.
The
Carthaginians now recalled Gescon, a son of the
revolutionary Hanno, from the exile to which he had been sentenced for
complicity in his father’s designs, and put him in command of a fleet of 70
ships which entered the harbour of Messana probably during the summer of 340 BC. Troops were
disembarked, consisting of Greek mercenaries, for Carthage had profited by the
experience of the Crimisus. At first they met with
some success, Timoleon’s troops suffering one defeat
near Messana and a second at Ietae in the west of the island; Hicetas even ventured on a
raid into Syracusan territory, but was routed by Timoleon at the river Damyrias, probably near Camarina; he fled to Leontini,
but was pursued by Timoleon, surrendered by his own
people, and executed as a traitor to the national cause. His wife and daughters
were condemned to death by a vote of the Syracusan assembly; this is the one
event in Timoleon’s career which Plutarch, his
biographer, deplores, but it is probable that he had no constitutional means of
preventing it. Soon after this Catana was surrendered
by Mamercus’ own comrades, and he fled for refuge to
Hippo of Messana. Timoleon laid siege to the town, and when Hippo tried to escape by sea he was captured
by the Messanians and executed in their theatre,
where even the school-children were admitted to witness the joyous spectacle. Mamercus then surrendered, and after a public trial at
Syracuse was crucified like a brigand. With the expulsion of the tyrants of Centuripa and Agyrium in 338—7
the emancipation of Sicily from despotism was now complete, though one monarch, Andromachus of Tauromenium,
still ruled his people as a constitutional king.
Carthage
meanwhile had not waited for the complete overthrow of the tyrants, but had
made overtures for peace in 339 after Timoleon’s victories at the Damyrias and at Catana.
It was agreed that the Halycus should remain the boundary
of the Punic province, that Carthage should recognize the Independence of all
Greek cities east of that river, and allow any Greeks in her own province to
migrate to Syracuse if they wished. Further, she gave an undertaking to refrain
in future from alliances with Sicilian tyrants. Thus Selinus and Himera remained subject to Carthage, who also
appears to have retained Heraclea Minoa, although this town stood on the east
bank of the Halycus. It is at first sight surprising
that terms so favorable to the defeated enemy should have been granted: the
explanation is partly that the peace was made while the tyrants, though
defeated, were still at large, and Timoleon was
willing to pay a considerable price to detach the Carthaginians from their
alliance; but it must also be recognized that the victory of the Crimisus, glorious as it was, had been due to favorable
circumstances, and hardly represented a real superiority of the Sicilian Greeks
over any strength that Carthage might put forth. It is possible too that the
defeat at Ietae was more serious than our Greek
authorities admit, and that it involved a reconquest of the whole Carthaginian
province.
About two
years after concluding this peace Timoleon withdrew
from public life. His principal work during these years was the resettlement of
Gela and Acragas, the famous cities which since their
destruction by Carthage in 406 BC had only revived on a very small scale; now
that Carthage had renounced all claim to south-west Sicily it was possible to
restore both to some degree of importance and prosperity. Camarina too, which had suffered under Punic dominion, received a fresh body of
settlers, but the population of Leontini—presumably
descendants of the mercenaries settled there by the elder Dionysius—were
transplanted to Syracuse. The Campanian mercenaries of Aetna were expelled,
and, as we may suppose, replaced by Greeks.
How long Timoleon lived after his retirement we do not know. His
last years were clouded by the loss of his eyesight, but he retained the
confidence and veneration of the people of Syracuse, and occasionally spoke in
the Assembly when specially important measures were under consideration. To his
funeral flocked many thousands from all parts of Sicily: the proclamation over
his pyre recorded by Plutarch, tells in words of simple dignity what he had
done: “The Syracusan people here gives burial to Timoleon,
son of Timodemus, of Corinth, at a cost of two
hundred minae, and honors him for all time with
musical, equestrian, and athletic contests, because he put down the tyrants,
conquered the barbarians in war, resettled the greatest of the devastated
cities, and restored to the Siceliotes their laws”.
There were few perhaps amongst those that came to do honor to their country’s saviour who guessed how soon his work was to be undone.
V. SOUTHERN
ITALY
The course of
events in southern Italy during these years offers a parallel to that in
Sicily. Just as in the Island the dissolution of the empire of the elder
Dionysius had ultimately involved the renewal of the struggle with Carthage, so
on the peninsula the Greek cities had to contend against the attack of native
Italian peoples. But there is this difference to be noted, that whereas in
Sicily Carthage had held her hand until the security of her own province in the
north-west was deemed to be endangered by the support proffered to Syracuse by
Corinth, in Italy the barbarians’ advance was definitely aggressive and
unprovoked. The most formidable of the aggressors were the Lucanians and the Bruttians. The Lucanians, as we have seen, had combined
with Dionysius I in an attack upon the people of Thurii and had decisively defeated them at Laus in 389 BC.
But although the Syracusan tyrant had been ready enough to use barbarian help
in his warfare against the Italiotes he was nevertheless alive to the danger of
allowing Greek civilization to be submerged by a barbarian flood. His project
of a wall across the isthmus of Scylletium in order
to meet this danger had never been carried out, but it would seem that so long
as the Syracusan Empire stood firm the Lucanians felt it unsafe to attack the
Greek cities. It was not until 356, after the expulsion of Dionysius II, that
the first attack came: and it came not from the Lucanians but from the Bruttians. It was probably a false etymology that
represented this people as consisting of the fugitive slaves of the Lucanians;
they seem rather to represent a number of tribes previously subject to the
Lucanians who now seized the opportunity presented by the weakening of the
Syracusan power to throw off the Lucanian yoke, uniting themselves under a
common name, perhaps that of the strongest tribe, with a federal capital which
they named Consentia. Terina, Hipponium,
the Sybarite settlement on the river Traeis and a
number of other Greek towns fell rapidly into their power. From the Siris to
the isthmus of Scylletium the Bruttians were for the next twenty years or more the dominant power: we have seen that in
343 BC they opposed the passage of Timoleon’s reinforcements from Thurii to Rhegium.
Farther
north, Tarentum had to resist the attacks of the Lucanians and Messapians, and, like Syracuse, she turned for help to her
mother-city, Sparta. It was probably in 342, two years after Timoleon had come to Sicily, that Archidamus,
king of Sparta, crossed to Tarentum with a force of mercenaries, mainly drawn,
like Timoleon’s, from the survivors of the Phocian army in the Sacred War. Just as his more famous
father Agesilaus had in his old age fought for the revolted subjects of the
Persian Empire in the hope of restoring Sparta’s prestige and replenishing her
treasury, so now Archidamus in the same adventurous
spirit responded to the offer of Tarentine gold. Nor was the son more
successful than the father: he seems to have struggled for some three years,
only to be decisively defeated and killed in 338 BC, on the very day, it was
said, of the battle of Chaeronea. The final battle was fought at a place called Mandonium in Lucania.
About five
years later the Tarentines were again constrained to seek help from old Greece.
From Sparta nothing more could be expected, for she had been brought under the
heel of Macedon, but a powerful champion was found in the person of Alexander,
king of Epirus, the brother of Olympias and uncle of Alexander the Great. It
was his ambition to emulate in the West the exploits of his nephew in the East,
and for a while that ambition seemed in a fair way to be realized. He first
attacked the Messapians and Iapygians,
carrying his victorious arms as far north as Arpi and Sipontum: then turning against the Lucanians, he advanced
to Paestum on the western sea, and defeated the united forces of the Lucanians
and Samnites. Farther south he captured the Bruttian capital at Consentia, and recovered Terina. In short,
he gained for a brief space the control of a great part of southern Italy, and
perhaps the most notable evidence of his power is the alliance into which he
entered with the Romans, who had by now been brought into conflict with the
Samnites. It is possible that his designs extended to Sicily also1. It soon
became plain to the men of Tarentum that instead of a protector they had in
fact called in a conqueror. Unable to recognize the plain fact that the
Lucanian advance could only be permanently stayed by the establishment of a
strong military power such as that formed by Alexander, they preferred to
defend their independence and turned against him. Supported by the lesser
Italian cities, such as Thurii and Metapontum,
Alexander coped successfully with the new enemy and captured the Tarentine
colony of Heraclea. But naturally the Lucanians and Bruttians seized the opportunity for attack, and in a battle at Pandosia,
in the valley of the Crathis, the Epirote king was
completely defeated and stabbed in the back by a Lucanian exile serving in his
own army; this was probably in the winter of 331-302.
Although
Alexander’s far-reaching designs had thus been shattered, yet the Italiote
cities were for the present relieved from further barbarian pressure. This was
mainly due to the outbreak of the great Samnite war (327-304), into which the
Lucanians were drawn as Rome’s allies. Tarentum was to make two more bids for
Independence, under the championship first of Cleonymus of Sparta, secondly of Pyrrhus, before she became subject to the great power
which as early as at the death of Alexander was fast advancing towards the
control of all Italy.
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