HISTORY OF ANCIENT GREECE |
A HISTORY OF GREECE TO THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER THE GREAT
CHAPTER XV.
THE SYRACUSAN EMPIRE AND THE STRUGGLE WITH CARTHAGE
We have seen how the war in Greece, in its last stage,
after the collapse of the Sicilian expedition, ceased to be a mere domestic
between Greek and barbarian. We have now to see how the strife of Greek and
barbarian was renewed at the same moment in the with west. It is indeed
remarkable how these two episodes in the great conflict between Asia and Europe
run parallel though separate courses in the fifth century. The victory of
Himera, which beat back the Carthaginian invader from the shores of Sicily, was
won in the same year which saw the repulsion of the Persian invader from the
shores of Attica. After these triumphs of Hellas, bothPersia and Carthage had long lain quiescent, and left the Greek cities of east and
west to live undisturbed at war or in peace among themselves. It was not till
the mightiest city of eastern and the mightiest city of western Hellas came to
blows and wore one another out in the conflict, that the barbarian foes,
discerning the propitious hour, once more made their voices heard in the
Grecian world. Sicily with an exhausted Syracuse, the Aegean with an exhausted
Athens, invited Carthage and Persia alike to make an attempt to enlarge their
borders at the expense of the Greek.
Sect 1. Carthaginian Destruction of Selinus and Himera
After she had achieved the repulse and utter confusion
of Athens, it might have seemed likely that Syracuse would succeed in founding
a Sicilian empire. Her first task would be to reduce Catane and Naxos; and, when this was done, the other cities, including luxurious
Acragas, would hardly be able to resist. This prospect was disappointed by the
intervention of a foreign enemy. But, though the victory of Syracuse over
Athens did not lead to a Syracusan empire, as the victory of Athens over Persia
had led to an Athenian empire, it was followed, as in the case of Athens, by a
further advance in the development of democracy. Had Hermocrates remained at
Syracuse, in possession of his old influence, a change in this direction would
hardly have come to pass. But he was appointed to command the auxiliary fleet
which Syracuse sent to Sparta’s help in the Aegean; and, when he had gone, the
democratic mood of the citizens, excited by their recent efforts, vented itself
in a decree pronouncing the deposition and banishment of Hermocrates. This was
the work of his political opponent Diocles, who was a thoroughgoing democrat.
Diocles bore the same name as a far earlier lawgiver—belonging to the same
class and age as Charondas and Zaleucus—who had drawn
up the laws on which the Syracusan constitution rested. The accidental identity
of name led in subsequent ages to a confusion, and we find later writers
ascribing to the democratic reformer, who rose into prominence now, the
legislation of his ancient namesake. In his popular innovations Diocles
borrowed ideas from the enemy whom his country had just overthrown. The
Athenian use of lot in the appointment of magistrates was adopted. Hitherto the
generals were also the presidents of the sovereign assembly, and had the
unrestricted power of dismissing it at discretion. Diocles seems to have taken
away this political function from the generals, and assigned the presidency of
the assembly to the new magistrates, but with much smaller powers. The
presidents, as we shall presently see, were able only to fine a speaker who was
out of order; they could not silence him or break up the assembly.
Such was the position of the greatest Sicilian city—a
full-blown democracy, but without her chief citizen to whom above all others
she owed the deliverance from her danger—when the island was exposed for the
second time to a Carthaginian invasion. The occasion of the war was the same
which had brought about the Athenian invasion—the feud between Selinus and
Segesta concerning some fields on their common frontier. In both cases, the
dispute of these towns was a pretext, not the deeper cause. As Athens thought
that the time had come for extending her commerce in the west, so Carthage
deemed that the day had dawned for asserting anew her power in Sicily; and
there were those who had not let fade the memory of the humiliation endured at
Himera seventy years before and longed to take a late revenge.
Segesta, with no Athens to protect her now, ceded the
disputed lands; but Selinus went on to exact further cessions, and the Elymian city appealed to Carthage. One of the two shophets or judges in that republic was Hannibal,
the grandson of Hamilcar, who had been slain at Himera. The desire of
vengeance, long deferred, dominated Hannibal, now almost an old man; and his
influence persuaded the Senate to accept Segesta’s offer to become a
Carthaginian dependency in return for Carthaginian help. A grand expedition was
fitted out, and Hannibal was named commander. Sixty warships were got ready,
1500 transports, 100,000 foot, 4000 horse. The fleet was not intended to take a
part in the offensive Second, warfare; it was stationed at Motya to be a
protection for Phoenician Sicily and a security in case of discomfiture. The
army landed at Lilybaeum and marched straight to Selinus. This city had never
been besieged before within the memory of its folk; immunity had made it
secure; the fortifications had been neglected. The Selinuntines were engaged in building a temple of vast proportions to Apollo, or perhaps
Olympian Zeus, when they were brought face to face with the sudden danger from
Carthage. The house of the god was never completed; of the “pillars of the
giants” which were to support the massive roof some stand in their places on
the eastern hill, but the great drums and the capitals of others must be looked
for, some miles away, in the quarries from which they were hewn, left there
when the Carthaginian destroyer came. There was no time to repair adequately
the walls of the acropolis, on the central hill. Hannibal surrounded it and a
breach was soon made; but the place was not in the foe’s hands for nine days,
owing to the stubborn resistance which the inhabitants were able to offer in
the narrow streets. The Siceliot sister cities were not prompt in aid; Syracuse
promised to come to the rescue, and sent a force under Diodes, which arrived too
late. Selinus was the first Siceliot city which was stormed and sacked by the
barbarian; she was not to be the last. The people were slaughtered without
mercy; only some women and children who took refuge in the temples were spared
(not from any respect of the holy places) and carried into bondage. Those who
escaped from the sack fled to Acragas. Thus Selinus fell, after a brief life of
two centuries and a half.
Hannibal had now done the work which Carthage had
given him to do; but he had still to do the work which he had imposed upon
himself. His real motive, in undertaking the public duty of the Selinuntine war, was to carry out the private duty of
ancestral vengeance. Against Selinus he had no personal grudge, and there he
did not carry the work of destruction further than military considerations
required. The buildings on the western hill, where he had pitched his camp,
suffered much ; but the injuries sustained by the temples on the acropolis and
on the eastern hill are due, not to Hannibal’s army, but to the earthquakes of
later ages. It was to be different in the case of the city which he now turned
to attack. At Selinus, Hannibal was merely the general of Carthage; at Himera,
he was the grandson of Hamilcar.
Hannibal designed to capture Himera by his land forces
alone; and in this absence of a Carthaginian fleet Hannibal’s siege of Himera
differs from Hamilcar’s. The Greeks of Sicily were now bestirring themselves;
the terrible fate of one of their chief cities had aroused them to a sense of
their peril. The naval power which was supporting Sparta in the Aegean had been
long ago recalled; and a force of 5000, including 3000 Syracusans, under
Diodes, came to the relief of Himera. This city had time to prepare for the
danger which she must have foreseen. But the besiegers, by means of mines,
opened a breach in the wall; and, although they were repelled and the defenders
made a successful sally, the prospects of Himera looked black, when the fleet
of 25 ships, which had returned from the Aegean, appeared in front of the city.
Hannibal saved the situation by a stratagem. He spread abroad a report that he
intended to march on Syracuse and take it unprepared. Diocles, thoroughly
deceived, decided to return home and carry off the citizens of Himera, leaving
the empty town to its fate. He induced half the population to embark in the
ships, which, as soon as they had set the passengers in safety at Messana, were
to return for the rest. Diocles and his army departed in haste, not even
waiting to ask Hannibal for the dead bodies of those who had fallen in fight
outside the walls; and for this neglect he was greatly blamed. When Hannibal
saw that half his prey had escaped him, he pressed the siege more vehemently,
determined to force an entry before the ships returned. The fate of thousands,
the vengeance of Hannibal, might turn on the event of a few minutes. On the
third day, the vessels of safety hove in sight of the straining eyes of the Himeraeans. It seemed that Hannibal was to be baulked of
his revenge. But the gods of Canaan prevailed in that hour of suspense. Before
the ships of rescue could reach the harbour, the Spanish troops of Hannibal
burst through the breach, and the town was in the hands of the avenger. On the
spot where Hamilcar, according to the story, had offered up his life to the
gods of his country, a solemn rite was held; 3000 men, who had survived the
first indiscriminate slaughter, were sacrificed with torture to appease his
shade. Himera, the offending city, was swept utterly out of the world and its
place knew it no more.
Having thus accomplished his duty to his country and
his gods, Hannibal returned triumphant to Africa. The position which Carthage
won in Sicily by this year’s work, and her new policy of activity there, are
reflected in the coinage of Segesta and Panormus. The transformation of Segesta
into a Carthaginian dependency was displayed by the fact that she ceased to
coin her own money. But Carthage also showed that she intended to keep a firmer
hand on her Phoenician dependencies. These cities had hitherto paid homage to
Hellenic influences by adopting a coinage of Hellenic character, with Hellenic
inscriptions. This coinage now comes to an end at Panormus, and is replaced by
a coinage, of Greek type indeed, but with a Phoenician legend—the word Ziz. The
change seems to have been made just before the invasion, and it was significant
of an anti-Greek movement. But the curious thing is that Himera—the city which
was to be one of the first victims of the new policy heralded in this
numismatic reform—abandoned her old coinage with the cock, and struck a new
coinage with a sea-horse, on the Punic model of Panormus. Are we to suppose
that Himera, aware of the peril which menaced her, thought to avert it by a
timely approach of friendship to her Phoenician neighbour, and that this
coinage was part of a policy of Punicism, intended to
be only temporary?
Syracuse, although she had sought to do something for
Selinus and had done something for Himera, felt no call to come forward as a
champion against the new aggressive policy of Carthage. It was reserved for one
of her citizens to attempt on his private responsibility the warfare which she
declined to undertake against the Phoenician foe. The exile Hermocrates
returned to Sicily, enriched by the gifts of the satrap Pharnabazus. His own
city refused to withdraw the sentence of banishment, for a man of his views and
abilities seemed dangerous to the democratic constitution. Hermocrates then
resolved to earn his recall by performing conspicuous services to the Hellenic
cause in Sicily,—by winning back the Greek territory which the Phoenician had
taken, by carrying Greek arms into Phoenician territory itself. He had built
five triremes, he had hired 1000 mercenaries, and he was joined by 1000 Himeraean fugitives. With these he marched to the spot
where Selinus had once been, and made the place a centre for a “crusade”
against the Phoenician. He repaired the fortifications of the acropolis on the
central hill; and the remains of the well-built wall betray, by the capitals of
columns used in the building, the circumstances of its erection. The adventure
prospered; the band of Hermocrates soon increased to 6000, and he was able to
devastate the lands of Motya and Panormus, and to drive back the forces which
came out to meet him. In the same way he ravaged the territory of Solus and the
now Carthaginian Segesta. These successes of Hermocrates were of greater
significance than the actual injury dealt to the enemy. He had done what had
not been done before (since the days of Dorieus); he had broken into the
precincts of Phoenician Sicily, and set an example to many subsequent leaders.
Hermocrates was bent, above all things, on regaining
his own country. Diocles and his political opponents were still powerful in the
city, and able to hinder the revulsion of feeling which his successes caused
from having any practical effect. Accordingly he made another attempt to soften
the hearts of his fellow-citizens. It was a well-calculated move. He marched to
the ruins of Himera, collected the unburied bones of the soldiers of Diocles
which Diocles had neglected, and sent them on waggons to Syracuse, himself
remaining as an exile outside the Syracusan borders. He hoped to awaken the
religious sentiment of the citizens in his own favour and at the same time to
turn it against his rival. The bones were received and Diocles was banished;
but Hermocrates was not recalled. Having failed to compass his restoration by
persuasion, the exile resolved to compass it by force; and he was encouraged by
his numerous partisans in Syracuse. He was admitted with a small band at the
gate of Achradina, and posted himself in the adjacent
agora waiting for the rest of his forces to arrive. But they tarried too long;
the people, learning that Hermocrates was in the city, rushed to the
market-place; the small band was soon overcome and Hermocrates was slain. The
Syracusans in these days were inspired with an instinctive rather than
well-founded dread of tyranny; and this dread was stronger than admiration for
Hermocrates. Their instinct was right; tyranny was approaching, but he was not
the man. They little guessed that their future master was an obscure follower
of Hermocrates, who was wounded that day in the agora and left for dead.
Sect. 2 . Carthaginian Conquest of Acragas
The private warfare of Hermocrates in western Sicily
had naturally provoked the wrath of the Carthaginians. Embassies passed between
Carthage and Syracuse, Carthage regarding Syracuse as answerable for the acts
of a Syracusan. But diplomacy was merely a matter of form; the African republic
had resolved to make all Greek Sicily subject to her sway. She made ready
another great expedition—as great as if not greater than that which had been
sent against Selinus; and at the same time she took the novel step of founding
a colony on Sicilian soil. If Hermocrates had lived, Himera might have been
partially restored like Selinus; but the destroyers of Himera now founded a
city in the neighbourhood which was to take Himera’s place. On the hill above
the “hot baths of the Nymphs”, whereof Pindar sings, the Carthaginian colonists
built their town. But it was not destined to retain its Phoenician character.
The Greek strangers who were admitted to dwell in it transformed it before long
into a Greek city; the Thermae of Himera preserved the memories of Himera, and
the people were known as Thermites or Himeraeans indifferently.
Acragas, the city which faces Carthage, was the first
object of attack to the invaders who now came to conquer and enslave all Greek
Sicily. Since the days of Theron, Acragas had held aloof from all struggles in
the island and was now at the height of her prosperity. But she was enervated
by peace and luxury, and, when the day of trial came, she was found wanting.
How far her citizens were prepared to endure the hardships of military life may
be inferred from the law—passed with a view to the present peril—that none of
the men in the watch-towers should have more than a mattress, two pillows, and
a quilt. Such were the austerities of the men of Acragas. But at least they
paid homage to the different discipline of Sparta. They invited Dexippus, a Spartan who was then at Gela, to undertake the
conduct of the defence. A body of Campanian mercenaries was hired; and they
could rely on the assistance of their old rivals the Syracusans, as well as of
the other Greek cities, who were fully conscious that the peril of Acragas was
their own. And Acragas herself behaved well. Notwithstanding her habits of
ease, and her old practice of holding aloof, she refused the tempting offer of
the invader that she should now purchase immunity by remaining neutral. She was
true to her own race; she might remain indifferent when it was a struggle
between Dorian and Ionian, but it was another case when the whole of Sicilian
Hellas was threatened by the Phoenician.
The army of Carthage was again under the command of
Hannibal, (406 B.C.) who felt that he was too old for the work, and was
assisted by his cousin Himilco. They pitched their main camp on the right bank
of the river Hypsas, south-west of the city, and
stationed some forces in another small camp on the eastern hill, beyond the
river Acragas, to act against Greek aids coming from the east. The point of
attack was the part of the western wall close to the chief western gate. But
the ground, though lower here, was still difficult for a besieger, and Hannibal
determined to raise an immense causeway from which the wall could be more
effectively attacked. The tombs of the neighbouring necropolis supplied stones
for the work; but, as the tomb of Theron was being broken down, it was shaken
by a thunderbolt, and the seers advised that it must be spared. Then a
pestilence broke out in the Carthaginian camp, and carried off Hannibal
himself. It seemed that the gods were wroth and demanded a victim; Himilco lit
the fires of Moloch and sacrificed a boy. The causeway was then completed, but
no further injury was done to the sepulchres.
An army was already on its way to the relief of
Acragas—30,000 foot and 5000 horse from Syracuse, Gela, and Camarina. When they
approached the city they were met by the forces which had been placed for this
purpose on the eastern hill; a battle was fought, a victory gained, and the
Greek army took possession, of the lesser Carthaginian camp. Meanwhile the
routed barbarians fled for refuge to the main camp, and their flight lay along
the road beneath the southern wall of the city. There was a general cry to sally
forth and cut them off; but the generals refused. The moment was lost; but
presently the people, yielding to an impulse which the generals could not
resist, went forth from the eastern gates to meet their victorious allies. A
strange scene followed. A tumultuous assembly was held outside the walls; the Acragantine commanders were accused of failing in their
duty; and, when they essayed to defend themselves, the fury of the people burst
out and four generals were stoned to death. The direction of the defence seems
now to have been shared by Dexippus within the city
and Daphnaeus, the commander of the Syracusan troops,
without. Though the hostile camp was too strong to be attacked, the prospect
looked favourable for Acragas. The Punic army, diminished though it had been by
the plague, was sore bestead for lack of supplies, and it seemed certain that
hunger and mutinous soldiers would soon force Himilco to raise the siege. But
he learned that provision-ships were coming from Syracuse to Acragas; he sent
in haste for the Carthaginian vessels at Panormus and Motya, put out to sea
with forty triremes, and intercepted the supplies. This not only saved his
leaguer, but even reversed the situation. The besieged city now began to suffer
from scarcity of food. And as soon as supplies began to run short, the weak
point in the position of the Acragantines was
displayed. They had found it needful to rely on mercenaries, and hirelings were
not likely to serve long when rations ran short. The Campanians were easily
induced to transfer their services from Acragas to Carthage. But this was not
all. It was commonly believed that Dexippus—like most
Spartans abroad, incapable of resisting a bribe—received fifteen talents from
Himilco and induced the Italiot and Siceliot allies
to desert Acragas as a sinking ship. But, whatever the conduct of Dexippus may have been, the discredit of this desertion
cannot rest entirely with him.
The defence, which had been maintained for eight
months with foreign aid, was now left to the men of Acragas alone. They showed
at once that they were shaped of different stuff from the men of Selinus.
Overcome with despair, they resolved to save their lives and abandon their city
and their gods. Such a resolution, taken by the people of a great city, is
unique in Greek history. It did not befit the men who had rejected the
overtures of Hannibal, but it was what we might expect from the men who
murdered their generals. They marched forth at night, men, women, and children,
without let or hindrance from the foe; “they were compelled to leave, for the
barbarians to pillage, those things which made their lives happy.”
The old and sick could not set out on the long journey
to Gela, the place of refuge, and were left behind; some too remained who chose
to perish at Acragas rather than live in another place. The army of Himilco
entered the city in the morning and sacked it, slaying all whom they found, and
despoiling and burning the temples. The great house of Olympian Zeus—the
largest Greek temple in Europe—was still unfinished, and the sack of Himilco
decided that it should never be completed. But Acragas was not to be destroyed
like Selinus; it was intended to be a Carthaginian city in a Carthaginian
Sicily. Himilco made the place his winter quarters ; Gela would be the next
object of his attack, when the spring came round.
Sect. 3. Rise of Dionysius
For the catastrophe of Acragas the chief blame was
laid upon the Syracusan generals, who deserted her in the critical hour. The Acragantines were not slow to make them responsible for
their own unheroic flight. At Syracuse itself there was a feeling that these
generals were hardly the men to meet the great jeopardy in which Sicily now
stood; and there was one man who saw in the jeopardy the opportunity of his own
ambition. It was Dionysius, a man of obscure birth, who had been a clerk in a
public office. He had been a partisan of Hermocrates, by whose side he had
stood in the last fatal fray, and had been wounded and left for dead. Recently
he had marked himself out by his energy and bravery before the walls of
Acragas. He saw the incompetence of the democratic government of his city; he
saw that in the present peril it might be overthrown, and he determined to
overthrow it. An assembly was held to consider the situation. Dionysius arose
and in a violent accused the generals of treachery. His language was intended
to stir up the hearers to fury; he called upon the people to rise up themselves
and destroy the traitors without trial. His violence transgressed the
constitutional rules of the assembly, but the presidents had no power to bridle
him; they imposed a fine—the only resource they had; but a wealthy friend,
Philistus the historian, came forward and Philistus paid the fine, bidding the
speaker go on, for as often as a fine was the imposed he would pay it.
Dionysius carried his point. The generals were deposed, and a new board was
appointed, of which Dionysius was one. This was only the first step on the road
which was to lead to the tyrannis. His next success was to procure the recall
of the partisans of Hermocrates who had been condemned to exile; these old
comrades might be useful to him in his designs. At the same time he sought to
discredit his colleagues; he kept entirely apart from them and spread reports
that they were disloyal to Syracuse. Presently he openly accused them, and the
people elected him sole general with sovereign powers to meet the instant
danger. This office, held before, as we have reason to think, by Gelon and
Hiero, did not set him above the laws; nor was the office illegal, though
extraordinary; it may be compared to the Roman dictatorship. But it was the
second step to the tyranny. The next step, as history taught him—the story of
Pisistratus, for instance—was to procure a bodyguard. The Assembly at Syracuse,
which had perhaps begun to repent already of having placed so much power in the
hands of one man, would certainly not have granted such an instrument of
tyranny. But Dionysius was ingenious; he saw that the thing might be done
elsewhere. He ordered the Syracusan army to march to Leontini, which, it will
be remembered, was now a Syracusan dependency. He encamped near the town, and
during the night a rumour was spread abroad that the general’s life had been
attempted and he had been compelled to seek refuge in the acropolis. An
assembly was held next day, nominally an assembly of Syracusan citizens, which,
when Dionysius laid bare the designs of his enemies, voted him a bodyguard of
600; this he soon increased to 1000; and he had won over the mercenaries to his
cause.
These were the three steps in the “despot’s progress”
which rendered Dionysius lord and master of Syracuse. His intrigues had won him
first a generalship, then sole generalship with unlimited military powers, and finally a bodyguard. Syracuse, unwilling
and embarrassed, submitted with evident chagrin, but was dominated by the
double dread of the mercenaries and the Carthaginians. The democracy of course
was not formally overthrown; Dionysius held no office that upset the
constitution. Things went on as at Athens under Pisistratus; the Assembly met
and passed decrees and elected magistrates.
The justification of the power of Dionysius lay in the
need of an able champion to oppose Carthage, and his partisans represented him
as a second Gelon. But, though Dionysius was in later years to prove himself
among the chief champions of Hellenic Sicily against the Punic power, his
conduct at this crisis did not fulfil the hopes of those who thought to compare
him with the hero of Himera. The Carthaginians were already encamped at Gela.
Their first act was to remove a colossal brazen statue of Apollo which stood,
looking over the sea, on the hill to the west of the city. The Geloans defended their walls with courage and zeal, and
when Dionysius arrived with an army of Italiots and
Siceliots, and a fleet of fifty ironclad ships to co-operate, it seemed as if
Gela would escape the doom of Acragas. An excellent plan was arranged for a
combined attack on the Carthaginian camp, which lay on the west side of the
town. The plan failed, because the concert was not accurately carried out. The
Siceliots who were to assault the eastern side of the camp arrived late on the
spot, and found the enemy, who had already repelled the attack of the Italiots and the fleet on the southern and western sides,
free to meet them in full force. This hitch in the execution of the plan was
hardly a mere blunder. Dionysius with his mercenaries had undertaken to issue
from the western gate of Gela and drive away the besiegers, while the rest of
his army were attacking the camp. It seems, however, that Dionysius took no
part in the fighting, and alleged that he was retarded by difficulties in
crossing the town from the eastern to the western gate. We shall probably do no
injustice to Dionysius if we conclude that it was through his dispositions that
the Siceliots failed to act in concert with the Italiots.
The action which he took after the defeat shows that he was half-hearted in the
work. He decided in a private council, as Diocles had decided at Himera, that
the defence must be abandoned and the whole people of Gela removed. At the
first watch of the night he Gela and sent the multitude forth from the city,
and followed himself at Camarina midnight. His way to Syracuse led by Camarina,
and here too dispeopled. Dionysius ruled that the
whole people must forsake their home. The road to Syracuse was full of the
crowds of helpless fugitives from the two cities.
It was generally thought that these strange
proceedings of Dionysius were carried out in collusion with the barbarians;
that he had deliberately betrayed to them Gela, which might have been defended,
Camarina, which had not yet been attacked. The Italiot allies showed not their disgust only, but their apprehension that the war was
practically over, by marching immediately home. The horsemen of Syracuse seized
the occasion for a desperate attempt to subvert the new tyrant. They rode
rapidly to the city, plundered the house of Dionysius, and maltreated his wife
although she was the daughter of Hermocrates. When Dionysius heard the news, he
hastened to Syracuse with a small force. He reached the gate of Achradina by night and, being refused admittance, burned it
down with a fire of reeds supplied by the neighbouring marsh. In the
market-place he easily overmastered a handful of opponents; the remnant fled to
Aetna, which now became, “in a better cause, what Eleusis was to Athens after
the overthrow of the Thirty”.
In what concerns the charge that the Syracusan tyrant
had a secret understanding with Carthage, there is a strong case against him;
the events are scarcely intelligible on any other view. But it was no more than
a temporary disloyalty to the cause of Hellas and Europe, for which he was
hereafter to do great feats. His first motive was the selfish motive of a
tyrant. He wanted time to lay stable foundations for his still precarious power
at Syracuse; and he judged that it would be a strong support to obtain a
recognition of his power from the Carthaginian republic. The Punicism of the lord of Syracuse was not more unscrupulous
than the Medism of the ephors of Sparta, to which it
is the western parallel.
The treaty, which was now agreed upon between Himilco
and Dionysius, was drawn up on the basis of uti possidetis. Each party retained what it actually
held at the time. Syracuse acknowledged Carthage as mistress of all the Greek
states on the northern and southern coasts, and also of the Sican communities.
Acragas, what left of Selinus, Gela, and Camarina, were all to be henceforward
under Punic sway; and, on the north coast, Carthage had advanced her frontier
to include the territory of Himera in which she had planted her first colony.
But all these cities were not to hold the same relation to their mistress. Acragas
and Selinus, like Thermae, were subjects in the full sense of the word; but
Gela and Camarina were to be only tributary and unwalled cities. The Elymian towns are not mentioned; but we have seen how
Segesta became a subject of Carthage by her own act, and we can hardly doubt
that Eryx was forced into the same condition.
The terms of the treaty provided for the independence
of the Sicel communities and of the city of Messana. But it provided also for
the independence of Leontini, and this was a point in which it departed from
the basis uti possidetis,
Leontini being a dependency of Syracuse. It was clearly a provision extorted
from Dionysius, and intended by Himilco to be a source of embarrassment to
Syracuse. On the other hand, as a counter-concession, nothing was said about
the dependence of Naxos or Catane, so that Syracuse
might have a free hand to deal with her old enemies, without fear of violating
the treaty. Such was the new arrangement of the map of Sicily at the end of the
second Carthaginian invasion. An accidental consequence of that invasion had
been to establish Dionysius as tyrant of Syracuse. This consequence enabled
Himilco to bring his work to a conclusion more easily and quickly than he had
hoped; he could not foresee that the undoing of his work would be the ultimate
result. The Carthaginians guaranteed to maintain the rule of Dionysius, who was
soon to prove one of their most powerful foes. For Dionysius this guaranty,
“the Syracusans shall be subject to Dionysius,” was the most important clause
in the treaty,—some suppose that it was a secret clause. It was for the sake of
this recognition and the implied promise of support that he stooped to betray
Sicilian Hellas. We shall see how he redeemed this unscrupulous act of
expediency by creating the most powerful Hellenic state in the Europe of his
day.
Sect. 4. First Years of Dionysius
For half a century after the fall of Athens it seemed
likely that the destinies of Europe would be decided by a Greek city in the
western Mediterranean. Under her new lord Dionysius, Syracuse had become a
great power, a greater power than any that had yet arisen in Europe. In
strength and dominion, in influence and promise, she outstripped all the cities
of the mother-country; and, in a general survey of the Mediterranean coasts,
she stands out clearly as the leading European power. The Greek states to which
the Persian King sent down his Peace were now flanked on either side by two
great powers, and a political prophet might have been tempted to foretell that
the communities of old Greece were doomed to perish between the monarchies of
Susa and Syracuse, which threatened their freedom on the east and on the west.
Those who were tempted to spy into the future might have conjectured that the
ultimate conflict with Persia was reserved for a Sicilian conqueror, who should
one day extend his dominion over eastern Greece and the Aegean and, as autocrat
of Europe, oppose the autocrat of Asia. Though this was not to be, though the
expansion of Sicily was arrested, and the power which was to subdue Asia arose
on the borders of Old Greece, yet we shall see that in many ways the monarchy
of Dionysius foreshadowed the monarchy of Philip and Alexander. It is in
Sicily, not in Old Greece, that we see the first signs of a new epoch, in which
large states are to take the place of small, and monarchy is to supersede free
institutions.
The tyranny of Dionysius lasted for thirty-eight
years, till the end of his life. All that time it was maintained by force; all
that time it was recognised as a violation of the constitution and an outrage
on the freedom of the people. The forms of the constitution were still
maintained; the folk still met and voted in the his long Assembly; and
Dionysius was either annually re-elected, or permanently appointed, general
with absolute powers. But all this was pure form; his position was a fact,
which had no constitutional name, and which made the constitution of none
effect. And it was by compulsion and not of their freewill that the mass of the
citizens continued to obey him; his bodyguard of foreign mercenaries was the
support of his power. More than one attempt was made to throw off the yoke, but
his craft and energy defeated the most determined efforts of his adversaries.
Yet the unusual ability of Dionysius would not have availed, more than the
spearmen who were ever within call, to extend his unlawful reign to a length
which a tyrant’s reign seldom reached, if he had not discovered and laid to
heart what may be called a secret of tyranny. While he did cruel and oppressive
deeds for political purposes, he never committed outrages to gratify personal
desires of his own. He scrupulously avoided all those acts of private insolence
which have brought the reigns of Greek tyrants into such ill repute. Many a
despot had fallen by the hand of fathers or lovers, whom the dishonour of their
nearest, and dearest had spurred to the pursuit of vengeance at the risk of
their own lives. Dionysius eschewed this mistake; his crimes and his enemies
were political. When his son seduced a married woman, the discreet tyrant
rebuked him. “It is well for you to chide me,” said the young man, “but you had
not a tyrant for your father.” “And if you go on doing this sort of thing,”
retorted Dionysius, “you will not have a tyrant for your son.” This notable
moderation of Dionysius in private life was perhaps the chief cause of the duration
of his tyranny; beyond the common motive of patriotism, men had no burning
personal wrongs to spur them to encounter the danger of driving a dagger to the
despot’s heart. But, besides this discretion which made his government
tolerable, his successes abroad counted for something, and it was more than
once borne in on Syracuse that his rule was necessary to protect her against
her enemies. And we shall see that Dionysius was fully conscious that it
conduced to his own safety that there should be enemies against whom she needed
a protector.
The first concern of the new tyrant was to establish
himself in a stronghold. As we have seen, the acropolis of Syracuse was not, as
in other cities, the hill, but the Island; and it was the Island which
Dionysius made his fortress. He built a turreted wall on the north side of the
isthmus so as to bar the Island off from the mainland, and he built two
castles, one close to, if not on, the isthmus, the other at the southern point
of the island. Whoever entered the Island from Achradina had to pass under five successive gates; and no one was allowed to dwell within
the island fortress except those whom Dionysius regarded as his own friends and
supporters. The scheme of fortifications took in the Lesser Harbour, which,
with its new docks, became under Dionysius the chief arsenal of the Syracusan
naval power. The mouth of this port was entirely closed by a mole, the galleys
passing in and out through a gate, which was only wide enough to allow one to
pass at a time.
Besides these defences of stone, Dionysius
strengthened his position by dealing rich rewards to confirm in their
allegiance his friends and hirelings, and by forming a class of New Citizens
out of enfranchised slaves. The forfeited estates of his enemies supplied him
with the means of carrying out both these acts of policy.
It was not long before he had an unwelcome occasion of
putting to the test both the walls of his fortress and the hearts of his
followers. The most favourable opportunity for any attempt to overthrow the
tyrant was when the Syracusan army was in the field. When the citizens had arms
in their hands and were formed in military ranks, the word of a patriot could
more easily kindle them to action than when they were engaged in their
peaceable occupations at home. Dionysius led out the army against Herbessus, one of the cities of the Sicels.
Mutinous talk passed from mouth to mouth, and the disaffected citizens slew one
of the tyrant’s officers who rebuked them. Then the mutiny broke out loud and
free. Dionysius hastened to Syracuse and shut himself up in his fastness; the
revolted citizens followed and laid siege to their own city. They sent messages
to Messana and Rhegium, asking these cities to help them to win back their
freedom; and a succour of eighty triremes came in answer to their help. By sea
and land they pressed Dionysius so hard in his island fortress that his case
seemed desperate, and some of his mercenary troops went over to the enemy.
Dionysius called a council of his most trusted friends. Some bade him flee on a
swift horse; others counselled him to stay till he was driven out. Heloris used a phrase which became famous: “Sovereign power
is a fair winding-sheet.” Dionysius followed the counsel of those who bade him
stay, but he resorted to a piece of craft which was more successful than he
could well have hoped. He entered into negotiation with his besiegers and asked
for permission to quit Syracuse with his own goods. They willingly agreed to
the proposal and allowed him five triremes, and they were so convinced of his
good faith that they dismissed a company of cavalry which had come to their aid
from Aetna. But, meanwhile, Dionysius had sent a secret message to the
Campanian mercenaries of Carthage, who had been left by Himilco in some part of
Sicily. Twelve hundred in number, they were permitted to come to the help of
the tyrant, whose lordship had been recognised and guaranteed by Carthage in
the recent treaty. The besiegers, thinking that the struggle was over, had half
broken up their leaguer, and were in complete disorder; the Campanians occupied
the hills of Epipolae without resistance; Dionysius
sallied forth, and decisively, though without much shedding of blood, defeated
the rebels in the neighbourhood of the theatre—a quarter of the city which we
now find for the first time called Neapolis. Dionysius used his victory mildly.
Many of the rebels fled to Aetna and refused to return to Syracuse, but those
who returned were received kindly and not punished. As for the Campanians, to
whom Dionysius owed his rescue, they did not return to the service of Carthage,
but made a new home in the west of Sicily, in the Sican town of Entella. They induced the inhabitants to admit them as new
citizens, and one night they arose and slew all the men and married the women.
Thus was formed the first Italian settlement on Sicilian soil.
When the revolt broke out, we saw Dionysius aiming an
attack at a Sicel city. The first step in the expansion of Syracusan power,
which was the object of the tyrant’s ambition, was the reduction of the Greek
cities of the eastern coast and the neighbouring Sicel towns. The Sicel towns
were putting on more and more of an Hellenic character, and the reign of
Dionysius marks a stage of progress in their Hellenization. We get a glimpse of
political parties striving in Sicel just as in Greek cities and we find Henna
ruled by a tyrant of Greek name. To attack the Sicels was indeed a breach of the treaty with Carthage; but for the present Dionysius
gained no success which obliged Carthage to intervene. He entered Henna indeed,
but only to overthrow the local tyrant and leave the inhabitants to enjoy their
freedom; he attacked Herbita, but his attack was
fruitless. With the Greek cities which stood in his way he was more successful.
First of all he captured Aetna, the refuge of Syracusan exiles and malcontents,
and these dangerous enemies dispersed we know not whither. Then he turned
against the two Ionian cities, Catane and Naxos. In
fear of such an attack Catane had taken the
precaution of allying herself with Syracuse’s former vassal, Leontini. The sole
record we have of this alliance is a beautiful little silver coin, with a
laurelled head of Apollo and the names of the two cities—one of an issue which
was struck in token of the treaty. But the support of Leontini did not avail.
Both Catane and Naxos were won by gold, not by the
sword; traitors opened the gates to the Dorian tyrant.
In his treatment of these cities Dionysius showed
himself in his worst light. All the inhabitants of Naxos and Catane alike were sold as slaves in the Syracusan
slave-market. Catane was given over to Campanian
mercenaries as a dwelling-place, and thus became the second Italian town in
Sicily. But the city of Naxos, the most ancient of all the Siceliot cities, was
not even given to a stranger to dwell in; the walls and the houses were
destroyed; the territory was bestowed upon the Sicels,
the descendants of the original possessors; and a small settlement near the old
site barely maintained the memory of the name. Dionysius was one of the ablest
champions of Greek Sicily against the Phoenician; yet here he appears in the
character Nea of a destroyer, dealing to Greek civilisation blows such as we
should expect only from the Phoenician foe. It is certain indeed that the
severity of the doom which he meted out to these cities was meant to serve a
purpose, for wanton severity was never practised by Dionysius. We may suspect
what that purpose was. The conquest of Naxos and Catane was of far less consequence to the lord of Syracuse than 0 the recovery of
Leontini. To win back this lost Syracusan possession was the first object of
all in the eyes of a Syracusan ruler. Dionysius had already called upon the Leontines to surrender, but in vain; and perhaps he thought
that the siege of the place would be long and tedious. When he pronounced the
doom of Naxos and Catane, he was in truth besieging
Leontini with most effectual engines; and when he approached with his army and
summoned the Leontines to migrate to Syracuse and
become his subjects under the name of Syracusan citizens, they did not hesitate
to prefer that unwelcome change to the risk of faring still worse than the
folks of Catane and Naxos.
If we glance over Sicily at this moment, it comes upon
us as a shock to discover that of all the cities of Greek Sicily which enjoyed
sovereign powers at the time of the Athenian invasion, there remained now not a
single independent community, outside Syracuse herself, with exception of
Messana, who still kept watch upon her strait. The Carthaginians and Dionysius
between them had swept all away.
The recovery of the Leontine territory was a success
which probably gratified the Syracusans as well as their master. It was indeed
a direct defiance of Carthage, for the treaty had guaranteed the independence
of Leontini. But Dionysius knew that a struggle with Carthage must come, and
was not unwilling that it should come soon. He determined to equip Syracuse
against all enemies who should come against her, and we next find him engaged
in fortifying the city on an enormous scale. The fortification of the Island
had been intended mainly for his own safety against domestic enemies; but the
works which he now undertook were for the city and not for the tyrant. The
Athenian siege of Syracuse taught him lessons which he had taken to heart. It
taught him that the commanding heights of Epipolae must not be left for an enemy to seize, and therefore that it must become part
of the Syracusan city, enclosed within the circuit of the Syracusan wall. It
taught too the decisive importance of the western corner at Euryalos, and the
necessity of constructing a strong fortress at that point, which has been
called “the key of Epipolae and of all Syracuse.” The
walls were built in an incredibly short space of time by 60,000 freemen, under
the supervision of Dionysius himself. He seems to have inspired the citizens
with the ambition of making their city the most strongly fortified place in the
whole Greek world. The northern wall, from Tycha to
Euryalos, a distance of more than three miles, was completed in twenty days.
The striking ruins of the massive castle of Euryalos, with its curious
underground chambers, are a memorial indeed of a tyrant’s rule; but they are
more than that; they are a monument of Greek Syracuse at the period of her
greatest might — when she became for a moment the greatest power in Europe.
It was no small thing to have carried out this
enormous system of fortifications which made Syracuse the vastest of all Greek
cities, but Dionysius showed his surpassing energy and resource in preparing
for offensive as well as for defensive warfare. In military innovations he is
the forerunner of the great Macedonians and the originator of the methods which
they employed. He first thought out and taught how the heterogeneous parts of a
military armament — the army and the navy, the cavalry and the infantry, the
heavy and the light troops — might be closely and systematically co-ordinated
so as to act as if they were a single organic body. He first introduced, his
engineers first invented, the catapult, which, if it did not revolutionise
warfare in general like the discovery of gunpowder, certainly revolutionised
siege warfare, and introduced a new element into military operations. An engine
which hurled a stone of two or three hundredweight for a distance of two or
three hundred yards was extremely formidable in close quarters. In naval
warfare he was also an innovator; he constructed ships of huger size than had
ever been built before, with five banks of oars. He largely increased the
fleet, which, counting vessels of both the larger and the smaller kind, seems
to have numbered about 300 galleys.
Sect. 5. First Punic War of Dionysius
When his preparations were complete, Dionysius went
forth to do what no Greek leader in Sicily had ever done before. He went forth
not merely to deliver Greek cities from Phoenician rule, but to conquer
Phoenician Sicily itself. Marching along the south coast he was hailed as a
deliverer by the Greek dependencies of Carthage, both by the tributary towns
Gela and Camarina, and the subject town of Acragas. Thermae on the northern
coast likewise joined him, and of the two Elymian towns, Eryx received his overtures, while Segesta remained faithful to her
Punic mistress. At the head of a host, which for a Greek army seems immense —
80,000 foot, it is said, and more than 3000 horse— Dionysius advanced to test
his new siege engines on the walls of Motya. This city, which now for the first
and for the last time becomes the centre of a memorable episode in history, was
like the original Syracuse, an island town; but, though it was joined to the
mainland by a causeway, the town did not like Syracuse spread to the mainland.
It was surrounded entirely by a wall, of which traces still remain; and the bay
in which it lay was protected on the sea side by a long spit of land.
The men of Motya were determined to withstand the
invader to the uttermost, and the first measure they took was to insulate
themselves completely by breaking down the causeway which bound them to the
mainland. Thus they hoped that Dionysius would have to trust entirely to his
ships to conduct the siege, and that he would be unable to make use of his
artillery. But they knew not the enterprise of Dionysius nor the excellence of
his engineer department. The tyrant was determined to assault the city from solid
ground, and to bring his terrible engines close to the walls. He set the crews
of his ships to the work of building a mole far greater than the causeway which
the Motyans had destroyed; the ships themselves,
which he did not destine to play any part in the business of the siege, he drew
up on the northern coast of the bay. The mole of Dionysius at Motya forestalls
a more famous mole which we shall hereafter see erected by a greater than
Dionysius at another Phoenician island town, older and more illustrious than
Motya.
While the mole was being built, Dionysius made
expeditions in the neighbourhood. He won over the Sicans from their
Carthaginian allegiance, and he laid siege to Elymian Segesta and Campanian Entella. Both these cities
repelled his attacks, and leaving them under blockade he returned to Motya when
the solid bridge was completed. In the meantime, Carthage was preparing an
effort to rescue the menaced city. She tried to cause a diversion by sending a
few galleys to Syracuse, and some damage was caused to ships that were lying in
the Great Harbour. But Dionysius was not to be diverted from his enterprise; he
had doubtless foreseen such an attempt to lure him away, and knew that there
was no real danger. Himilco, the Carthaginian admiral, seeing that Dionysius
was immovable, sailed with a large force to Motya and entered the bay, with the
purpose of destroying the Syracusan fleet, which was drawn up on the shore.
Dionysius seems to have been taken by surprise. For whatever reason, he made no
attempt to launch his galleys; he merely placed archers and slingers on those
ships which would be first attacked. But he brought his army round to the
peninsula which forms the western side of the bay, and on the shores of this
strip of land he placed his new engines. The catapults hurled deadly volleys of
stones upon Himilco’s ships, and the novelty of these
crushing missiles, which they were quite unprepared to meet, utterly
disconcerted the Punic sailors, and the Carthaginians retreated. Then
Dionysius, who was no less ready to treat earth as water than to turn sea into
land, laid wooden rollers across the neck of land which formed the northern
side of the bay, and hauled his whole fleet into the open sea. But Himilco did
not tarry to give him battle there; he went back to Carthage, and the men of
Motya were left unaided to abide their fate.
As the site of the island city required a special road
of approach, so its architecture demanded a special device of assault. Since
the space in the city was limited, its wealthy inhabitants had to seek
dwelling-room by raising high towers into the air; and to attack these towers
Dionysius constructed siege towers of corresponding height, with six storeys,
which he moved up near the walls on wheels. These wooden belfries, as they were
called in the Middle Ages, were not a new invention, but they had never perhaps
been built to such a height before, and it is not till the Macedonian age,
which Dionysius in so many ways foreshadows, that they came into common use. It
was a strange sight to see the battle waged in mid-air. The defenders of the
stone towers had one advantage; they were able to damage some of the wooden
towers of the enemy by lighted brands and pitch. But the arrangements of
Dionysius were so well ordered that this device wrought little effect; and the
Phoenicians could not stand on the wall which was swept by his catapults, while
the rams battered it below. Presently a breach was made, and the struggle began
in earnest. The Motyans had no thought of surrender;
dauntless to the end they defended their streets and houses inch by inch.
Missiles rained on the heads of the Greeks who thronged through, and each of
the lofty houses had to be besieged like a miniature town. The wooden towers
were wheeled within the walls; from their topmost storeys bridges were flung
across to the upper storeys of the houses, and in the face of the desperate
inhabitants the Greek soldiers rushed across these dizzy ways, often to be
flung down into the street below. At night the combat ceased; both besiegers
and besieged rested. The issue was indeed certain; for however bravely the Motyans might fight, they were far outnumbered. But day
after day the fighting went on in the same way, and Motya was not taken. The
losses on the Greek side were great, and Dionysius became impatient.
Accordingly he planned a night assault, which the Motyans did not look for, and this was successful. By means of ladders a small band
entered the part of the town which was still defended, and then admitted the
rest of the army through a gate. There was a short and sharp struggle, which
soon became a massacre. The Greeks had no thought of plunder, they thought only
of vengeance. Now for the first time a Phoenician town had fallen into their
hands, and they resolved to do to it as the Phoenicians had done to Greek
cities. They remembered how Hannibal had dealt with Himera. At length Dionysius
stayed the slaughter, which was not to his mind, since every corpse was a
captive less to be sold. Then the victors turned to spoil the city, and its
wealth was abandoned to them without any reserve. All the prisoners were sold
into slavery, except some Greek mercenaries, whose treachery to the Hellenic
cause was expiated by the death of crucifixion. A Sicel garrison was left in
the captured city.
After this achievement, the like of which had not been
wrought before in Sicilian history, Dionysius retired for the winter to
Syracuse. Next spring he marched forth again to press the siege which was still
under blockade. In the meantime the fall of Motya had awakened Carthage into
action; she saw that she must bestir herself, if she was not to let her whole
Sicilian dominion slip out of her hands. Himilco was appointed Shophet and entrusted with the work of saving Punic Sicily.
He collected a force, which seems to have been at least as large as that which
Dionysius had brought into the field, and set sail with sealed orders for
Panormus. A small portion of the armament was sunk by Leptines, brother of
Dionysius, who was in command of the Syracusan fleet; but the main part
disembarked in safety. And then events happened in rapid succession, which are
hard to explain. Himilco first gains possession of Eryx by treason; then he
marches to Motya and captures it; and when Motya is lost, Dionysius raises the
siege of Segesta and returns to Syracuse. The loss of Eryx and Motya could not
be provided against; but it is hard to discern why Dionysius should have made
no attempt to relieve Motya, whose capture had cost him so much the year
before, or why he should have allowed the Carthaginian army to march from
Panormus to Eryx and Motya without attempting to intercept it. He could not
have more effectually pressed the siege of Segesta than by dealing a decided
check to Himilco. Not knowing the exact circumstances, not knowing even the
number of the two armies, we can hardly judge his action; but it may be
suspected that Dionysius was by nature a man who did not care to risk a pitched
battle, unless the advantage were distinctly on his own side. It is to be
remembered that he won nearly all his successes by sieges and surprises, by
diplomacy and craft, and that the name of this great military innovator is not
associated with a single famous battle in the open field. When he had once
allowed Motya to be taken, his retreat is not surprising; for he had no base in
the western part of the island, and we are told that his supplies were failing.
He had now lost all that he had won in the first campaign. Motya, however, was
wiped out as a Phoenician city, though it was not to be a Greek or Sicel
stronghold. Himilco, instead of restoring the old colony, founded a new city
hard by to take its place. On the promontory of the mainland which forms the
south side of the Motyan bay arose the city of
Lilybaeum, which was henceforward to be the great stronghold of Carthaginian
power in the west of the island. The sea washed two sides of the town, and the
walls of the other two sides were protected by enormous ditches cut in the
rock. The history of Lilybaeum is the continuation of the history of Motya; but
it was not destined to be taken either by a Greek or a Roman besieger.
Having driven the invader from Phoenician Sicily, and
having laid the foundations of a new city, Himilco resolved to carry his arms
into the lands of the enemy and to attack Syracuse itself. But he did not go
directly against Syracuse. Before he attempted that mighty fortress, he would
try the easier task of capturing Messana. The fall of this city would be a
grievous blow to Hellas, and it would be no mean vengeance for the fall of
Motya. The walls of Messana had been allowed to fall into decay, and the place
was an easy prey for the Carthaginians; but the greater part of the inhabitants
escaped into fortresses in the neighbouring hills. The Carthaginian general had
to wreak his vengeance on the stones. He raised the walls and the edifices, and
the work was done so well that no man, we are told, would have recognised the
site.
If the triumphant demolition of the Sicilian city
which watched the strait was a sore blow to the Hellenic cause, Himilco sought
at the same moment to deal another blow to that cause by the foundation of a
new Sicilian city in another place. It was his policy to cultivate the
friendship of the Sicels and to foment the dislike
which they felt towards the lord of Syracuse. Dionysius too had sought to win
influence over the native race, and we saw how he gave them the territory of
Naxos. The Carthaginian general grasped at the idea of erecting a new town for
these very Sicels of Naxos, on the heights of Taurus
which rise above the old site. Such was the strange origin of the strong city
of Tauromenion, with its two rock citadels, one of
the fairest sites in Sicily. It was the second foundation of Himilco in the
same year ; and both his foundations were destined signally to prosper.
Lilybaeum became more famous than Motya, and Tauromenion has had a greater place in history than Naxos. As a founder of cities Himilco
has a high title to fame; he was, like Dionysius, a creator as well as a
destroyer. The creation of new cities and the destruction of old, by Greeks and
Phoenicians alike, was a characteristic feature of this epoch.
Dionysius was preparing in the meantime to protect
Syracuse. He committed the command of the fleet, which appears to have been now
about 200 strong, to his brother Leptines; and fleet and army together moved
northward to Catane. In the waters near the shore of Catane a naval battle was fought, and the Greek armament
was defeated with great loss. It was indeed far outnumbered by the fleet of the
Phoenicians, who also used their transport vessels as warships; but the cause
of the disaster was the bad generalship of Leptines,
who did not keep his ships together. The rout was witnessed by Dionysius from
the shore, and it might have been retrieved by a victory on the land. Himilco
and his army had not yet arrived on the scene, for an eruption of Aetna had
made the direct road impassable and forced them to make a long détour. Dionysius again shrank from risking a battle,
though the men of Sicily were eager to fight; he retreated to the walls of
Syracuse. This city was the last bulwark of Greek Sicily, and with it the cause
of Greek civilisation was in jeopardy. It was a moment at which the Siceliots
might well sue for help from their fellow-Greeks beyond the sea. Dionysius
dispatched messages to Italy, to Corinth, and to Sparta, imploring urgently for
succour.
It was not long before the victorious Carthaginian
fleet sailed into the Great Harbour, and the Carthaginian army encamped hard
by, along the banks of the Anapus. The mass of the
host encamped as well as it could in the swamp, but the general pitched his
tent on the high ground of Polichna, within the
precinct of the Olympian Zeus. This insult to the religion of Hellas was
followed up by a more awful sacrilege, when Himilco pillaged the temple of
Demeter and Kore on the southern slope of Epipolae.
When the barbarians began to perish in the plague-stricken marsh, the
pestilence was imputed to the divine vengeance for these acts of outrage. The
besiegers must have sat for no brief space before the walls of Syracuse. The
messengers of Dionysius had time to reach the Peloponnesus and return with
succour — thirty ships under a Lacedaemonian admiral. Himilco had time to build
three forts to protect his army and his fleet — one near his own quarters at Polichna, one at Dascon, on the
western shore of the harbour, and one at Plemmyrion.
After the arrival of the auxiliaries, the capture of a Punic cornship was the occasion of a small naval combat in the
harbour ; only a few of the Carthaginian ships were engaged, and the Syracusans
were victorious.
Within the town there was deep dissatisfaction with
Dionysius and his conduct of the war, and the citizens thought that they might
reckon on the sympathy of their Peloponnesian allies with an attempt to cast
off the tyrant’s yoke. At an assembly which the tyrant convened the feeling of
dissatisfaction broke openly forth, and the lord of Syracuse could not only
read in the faces but hear in the words of the citizens the depth of their
hatred. But the movement of revolution was checked by the Peloponnesians, who
said that their business was to help Dionysius against the Carthaginians, not
to help the Syracusans against Dionysius. So the danger passed over, but the
tyrant had a warning, and he put on winning manners and courted popularity.
The deadly airs of the swamp, in the burning heat of
summer, were doing their work. The army of Himilco was ravaged by pestilence;
soon the soldiers fell so fast that they could not be buried. The hour had now
come for the men of the city to complete the destruction which their fens had
begun. It was just such a case as called forth the energy and craft of the
ruler of Syracuse and showed him at his best. He devised his attack with great
skill. Eighty galleys, under Leptines and the Spartan captain, were to attack
the Carthaginian fleet, which was anchored off the shore of Dascon.
He himself led the land forces, marching by a roundabout road on a moonless
night, and suddenly appeared at dawn on the west side of the Punic camp. He
ordered his horsemen and a thousand mercenaries to attack the camp here ; but
the horsemen had secret commands to abandon the hired soldiers once they were
in the thick of the fight, and ride rapidly round to the east of the camp,
where the true attack was to be made. The attack on the west was only a feint,
to distract the attention of the enemy from the other side; and for this
purpose Dionysius sacrificed the lives of the hirelings whom he did not trust.
The real attack on the east was made on the forts of Dascon and Polichna. Dascon was
assailed by the horsemen along with a special force of triremes which had been
sent across the bay; Dionysius himself went round to lead the attack on Polichna. The plan was carried out with perfect success.
The thousand hirelings were cut to pieces, the forts were captured, and the
victory on the land was crowned by the destruction of the Carthaginian fleet.
The Syracusan galleys bore down upon the enemy, before they had time fully to
man their vessels, much less to row well out to sea, and the beaks of the
triremes crashed into defenceless timber. There was slaughter, but hardly a
fight; and then the land troops, fresh from their victory, rushed down to the
beach and set fire to the transports and all vessels which had not left the
shore. A wild scene followed. A high wind propagated the flames; the cables
were burnt asunder; and the bay of Dascon was filled
with drifting fireships, while amid the waters despairing swimmers were making
for the shore.
Fate had indeed delivered the barbarians into the
hands of the Greeks; and the Greeks were determined to wreak their vengeance to
the uttermost and extirpate the destroyers of Messana. Dionysius had approved
himself the successor of Gelon; the double victory of Dascon was worthy to be set beside the victory of Himera. But Dionysius was not
capable of absolute sincerity in the part he played as the champion of Hellas ;
he could not act to the end as a Syracusan patriot with singleness of heart.
This was the fatality of his position as a tyrant, conscious that his autocracy
rested on unstable foundations. He fought against Carthage, but it was always
with the resolve that the power of the Carthaginians should not be annihilated
in Sicily. The Punic peril was a security for his tyranny, by making him
necessary to Syracuse. The Syracusans must look to him as their protector
against the ever-present barbarian foe. This was another secret of tyranny
discovered by Dionysius. The Punic subtlety of Himilco, enlightened by passages
in the tyrant’s past career, formed no doubt a shrewd idea of this side of his
policy; the Carthaginian saw that his hope of safety lay in bargaining with
Dionysius. Secret messages passed; and Dionysius agreed to allow Himilco along
with all those who were Carthaginian citizens to sail away at night. In payment
for this collusion he received three Escape of hundred talents. Dionysius
recalled his reluctant army from their Himilco by assaults on the camp, and
left it in peace for three days. On the fourth night Himilco set sail with
forty triremes, leaving his allies and his mercenaries to their fate. It was an
act of desertion which was likely to repel mercenary soldiers from the
Carthaginian service in the future; and this was doubtless foreseen by the
crafty tyrant. But the squadron of fugitive triremes did not escape untouched.
The noise of the oars as they sailed out of the Harbour was detected by the
Corinthian allies, and they gave the alarm to Dionysius. But Dionysius was
purposely slow in his preparations to pursue, and the impatient Corinthians
sailed out without his orders and sank some of the hindmost of the Punic
vessels. Having connived at the escape of Himilco, the tyrant was energetic in
dealing with the remnant of Himilco’s host. The Sicel
allies had escaped to their own homes, and only the mercenaries were left.
These were slain or made slaves, with the exception of a band of strong and
valiant Iberians who were taken into the service of the tyrant.
Thus ended the first struggle of Dionysius with
Carthage, and it ended in a complete triumph for the Greek cause. The dominion
of the African city was now circumscribed within its old western corner; and
the greater part of the rest of Sicily was subject, directly or indirectly, to
the rule of the lord of Syracuse. Both from Greek and from barbarian Sicily, a
famous city had been blotted out; but Motya had been revived in Lilybaeum, and
Messana was soon to rise again upon her ruins.
Sect. 6. Second Punic War, and Sicel Conquests of
Dionysius
The equivocal policy of Dionysius in his hostilities
to Carthage was manifested clearly enough in the course which he pursued after
his great victory. It was the most favourable moment that had yet come in the
struggle of centuries, for driving the barbarians out and making Sicily a Greek
island from the eastern to the western shore. Carthage could not readily gather
together such another armament as that which had been destroyed. No patriot
leader who was devoted to the Greek cause heart and soul, with singleness of
aim, would have failed to follow up the great success by an invasion of western
Sicily. But the preservation of his own precarious despotism was the guiding
principle of Dionysius; and he saw in the barbarian corner of the island a
palladium of his power.
The next Punic War broke out five years later, and
part of the meantime had been occupied by Dionysius in extending his power over
the Sicels. He annexed to his dominion Morgantina, Cephaloedion, and
Henna itself ; he made treaties with the tyrants of Agyrion and Centuripa, and with other places. But among all
the Sicel towns, that which it was most important for him to win was the new
foundation of the Carthaginian on the heights of Taurus. He laid siege to
Tauromenium in the depth of winter. Operations of war in the winter season are
one of the features of the reign of Dionysius, which separate it from the
habits of older Greece and link it to the age of the Macedonian monarchy. The
tyrant himself led his men on a wild and moonless night up the steep ascent to
the town. One of the citadels was taken, and the assailants entered the place.
But the Syracusan band was outnumbered and surrounded, six hundred were killed,
and the rest were driven down the cliffs. Of these Dionysius was one; he
reached the bottom barely alive, after that precipitous descent.
In the course of the extension of his power on the
northern coast, Dionysius had advanced to the limits of the Phoenician corner,
and had won possession, through domestic treachery, of Solus, the most easterly
of the three Phoenician cities. Of the circumstances we know nothing, but the
conquest would seem to have been rather a piece of luck than part of any
deliberate plan of aggression on the part of the Greek tyrant. No treaty
appears to have been concluded between Carthage and Syracuse after the defeat of
Himilco, so that the capture of Solus was not a violation of peace, but only an
occasion for the reawakening of hostilities which had been permitted to sleep
by tacit consent. At all events, it must have had something to do with the
renewal of the war, — a renewal for which our records assign no causes.
At the opening of the second war we find a
Carthaginian general commanding the Phoenician forces of the island, but
without any troops, so far as we know, from Africa. The general was Mago, who
in the previous war had been commander of the fleet. His army was doubtless
considerably inferior to the forces which Dionysius could muster; certain it is
that on this occasion Dionysius did not hesitate to give him battle and did not
fail to defeat him. Carthage saw that she must make a more vigorous effort, and
she gave Mago a large army — 80,000 men, it is said, — to retrieve his ill
success. To meet the invader, Dionysius entered into a close league with the
strongest Sicel power in the land, his fellow-tyrant Agyris of Agyrium. This is the special feature of the second
Punic War : the cause of Europe is upheld by a federation of the two European
powers of the island, Sicel and Greek. The Carthaginian army advanced into
Sicel territory, seeking to win the Sicel towns. But Agyris and his men waged a most effectual manner of warfare, cutting off all the
foraging parties of the enemy and thus starving them by degrees. This they were
able to do from their knowledge of their native hills. But it seems that the
Syracusans were dissatisfied with this slow method, which was thoroughly to the
taste of Dionysius. What happened is not clear; but we learn that the
Syracusans marched away from the camp, and that Dionysius replaced them by
arming the slaves. Then the Greeks and the Sicels must have won some unrecorded success, or the Carthaginian host must have been
already terribly deplenished by the want of food; for
we next find Mago suing for peace.
This peace, although it is said to have been based on
the treaty which Dionysius had made twelve years before, was in truth
altogether different; for the parts of the two powers were reversed. All the
Greek communities of Sicily were now placed under the direct or indirect power
of Syracuse. The Carthaginian power was confined to the western corner. Nothing
is said of Solus; it must have been now handed over to Carthage, if Mago had
not already recovered it by arms. But the most striking provision of the treaty
is that which placed “the Sicels” under the rule of
Dionysius. Nothing is said of Agyrium, and we are
almost driven to wonder whether there was here any treachery to Agyris, of whom we hear nothing further. But there was a
special clause touching Tauromenium; and acting on this clause Dionysius
immediately took possession of the town, expelled the Sicels,
and established in the fortress one of those mercenary settlements which were
characteristic of his age. Such was the end of the two Punic wars, which were
in truth rather but a single war broken by an interval of quiescence.
Sect. 7. The Empire of Dionysius
Having made himself master of all Greek Sicily, the
lord of Syracuse began to extend the compass of his ambition beyond the bounds
of the island. He began to plan the conquest of Greek Italy. Hitherto the
Sicilian cities, though they had constant dealings with the colonies of the
Italian mainland, had never sought there, or anywhere out of their own island,
a field for conquest or aggression. The restriction of Siceliot ambition to
Sicilian territory was the other side of the doctrine preached by Hermocrates
that the Siceliots should not allow Greeks from beyond the sea to interfere in
the affairs of Sicily. We are reminded of the policy which has been followed on
a greater scale by the United States on the American continent. Here, as in
other things, Dionysius was an innovator; he set the example of enterprises of
conquest beyond the sea. Into the enterprise of Italian conquest he was
naturally led on by his dealings with the fellow-cities of the strait, Messana
and Rhegium.
For Messana was a city once more; it had been rebuilt
by Dionysius himself. He settled in it colonists from Locri and Medma in Italy, and 600 Messenians from old
Greece, who had been wandering about homeless since Sparta had driven them from
Naupactus. But this favour to the Messenians displeased the Spartans, and as
Dionysius clave to the friendship of Sparta he yielded their protests. He
removed the exiles from Messana, but he made for them a secure though less
illustrious home. He founded the city of Tyndaris on
a high hill to the west of Mylae, and fortified it strongly; the walls and
towers, which still remain, are a good specimen of the fortifications of
Dionysius.
The restoration of Messana and the foundation of Tyndaris were no pleasant sight to the Ionian city across
the strait ; these new cities seemed to Rhegium a Syracusan menace. The men of
Rhegium sought to make a counter-move by founding a city themselves between Tyndaris and Messana. They gathered together the
exiles from Catane and Naxos and settled them
on the peninsula of Mylae; but the settlement lasted only for a moment; almost
immediately the town of Mylae was captured by its neighbours of Messana, and
the exiles were driven out to resume their wanderings.
Apart from his political hostility to Rhegium,
Dionysius is said to have borne it a private grudge. He had asked the men of
Rhegium to give him one of their maidens to wife, and they had answered that
they would give him none but the hangman’s daughter. Locri,
Rhegium’s neighbour, then granted him the request which Rhegium refused; Locri was his faithful ally; and now, when the conclusion
of peace with Carthage left him free to pursue his Italian designs, it was Locri that he made his base of operations. The first object
was to capture Rhegium; its position on the strait dictated this, apart from
all motives of revenge or hatred. Accordingly starting from Locri with army and fleet, he laid siege to Rhegium by land and sea. But the
confederate cities of the Italian coast came to the assistance of a member of
their league; the Italiot armament worsted the fleet
of Dionysius in or near the strait, and Dionysius escaped with difficulty to
the opposite coast.
Rhegium was thus relieved, and Dionysius now directed
his hostilities against the Italiot federation. He
made an alliance with the Lucanians, to the intent that they and he should
carry on war in common against the Italiot cities,
they by land and he by sea. In accordance with this treaty, the Lucanians
invaded the land of Thurii. The men of Thurii retorted by invading Lucania in
considerable force; but they sustained a crushing defeat at the hands of the
barbarians. Most of the Thurians were slain, but some
escaped to the shore and swam out to ships which they descried coasting along.
By a curious chance, the ships were the fleet of Syracuse, and Leptines, the
tyrant’s brother, was once more the commander. He received the fugitives, and
did more; he landed and ransomed them from the Lucanians. He did even more than
this; he arranged an armistice between the Lucanians and the Italiots. In acting thus, he clearly went beyond his
powers; he had been sent to co-operate with the Lucanians against the Italiots, and he had no right to conclude an armistice in
such circumstances, without consulting his brother. It is not surprising that
Dionysius deposed him from the command.
In the following year Dionysius took the field
himself. He opened the campaign by laying siege to Caulonia, the northern
neighbour of Locri. The Italiots,
under the active lead of Croton, collected an army of 15,000 foot and 2000
horse, and entrusted the command to Heloris, a brave
exile of Syracuse, who burned with hatred against the tyrant who had banished
him. The federal army marched forth from Croton to relieve Caulonia, and when
Dionysius learned of its approach, he decided to go forth to meet it; for his
own forces, 20,000 foot and 3000 horse, were considerably superior. Luck
favoured him. Near the river Elleporus which flows
into the sea between Caulonia and Croton, the tyrant heard that the enemy were
encamped within a distance of five miles, and he drew up his men in battle
array. Heloris, less well-informed, rode forward in
front of his main army, with a company of 500 men, and suddenly found himself
in the presence of the Syracusan host. He did not quail or flee. Sending back a
message to hasten the rest of his army, he and his little band stood firm
against the onset of the invaders. Heloris fell
himself, and the main army, coming up company by company, in haste and
disorder, was easily routed by Dionysius. Ten thousand fugitives escaped to a
high hill, but it was a poor hill of refuge, for there was no spring of water
and they could not hold out. The next morning they besought Dionysius, who kept
watch around the hill throughout the night, to set them free for a ransom.
Dionysius refused; he would accept only unreserved surrender. But he was cruel
only to grant them a greater mercy than they could themselves have dared to
ask. When they came down the hill, Dionysius himself told their number with a
wand as they filed past him, and each man deemed that his doom would be bondage
if not death. But Dionysius let them all depart, without even exacting a
ransom. This act of mercy, which was notable as compared not only with other
acts of the tyrant, but with the ordinary practice of the age, produced a great
sensation. There is no reason for imputing it to a magnanimous impulse; it was
a deliberate act of policy. Dionysius did not wish to be generous, but he
wished to be regarded as generous and win over the Italiot cities. For this purpose he made up his mind to sacrifice 10,000 ransoms. His
wisdom was soon approved. The communities to which the captives belonged
gratefully voted him golden crowns, and made separate treaties with him. In
this way he accomplished his purpose; with Rhegium, Caulonia, and Hipponion he still remained at war, but these states were
now isolated and the league was broken up. Rhegium bought off his hostilities
for the time by surrendering its fleet. Caulonia was captured and abolished,
and its territory given to Locri; Hipponion was likewise taken and destroyed; but the peoples of both these cities were
transplanted to Syracuse and became Syracusan citizens.
But Dionysius had not yet finished with Rhegium. He
created a pretext for renewing hostilities and he laid siege to the city. The
men of Rhegium had now no friends to help them, but, under their general
Phyton, whom the tyrant vainly endeavoured to bribe, they held out for ten
months, and were reduced to surrender in the end by starvation. Dionysius
accepted ransoms for those who could find the money; the rest of the
inhabitants were sold. Phyton was selected for special vengeance. He was
scourged through the army, and then drowned with all his kin. Thus Dionysius
gained what hitherto had been one of his most pressing desires — possession of
the city which had so long hated and defied him. He was now master of both
sides of the strait, and held the fortress which was the bulwark of Greek
Italy. Eight years later he captured Croton, and his power in Italy reached its
greatest height.
But in the meanwhile the unresting lord of Syracuse had turned his eyes to a region of enterprise further afield.
The needs of his treasury, if nothing else, bent his attention to commerce. We
touch here upon that side of ancient enterprise which has been persistently and
provokingly withdrawn from our vision, because the writers of antiquity never
thought of lingering on the ordinary business transactions which were happening
every day before their eyes. Many things that are now dark would be cleared up
if we had more knowledge of the operations of Greek trade. Dionysius saw an
opening for Sicilian commerce along the eastern and western coasts of the Hadriatic sea, in whose waters the ships of Corcyra,
Athens, and Taras hitherto had chiefly plied. He set about making the Hadriatic a Syracusan lake, by means of settlements and
alliances. He founded settlements in Apulia, which he probably hoped ultimately
to incorporate in his dominion. He settled a colony and fixed a naval station
in the island of Issa, whose importance as a strategic post has been more than
once illustrated in subsequent history. He took part with the Parians in
colonising Pharos, on an island not far from Issa. A Syracusan colony was
planted at Ancon, and, even if the colonists were, as they are said to have
been, exiles and foes of Dionysius, we may be sure that the merchant ships of
Syracuse were welcome at the wharfs of Ancon. The northern goal of these
merchant ships was near the mouth of the Po, at a spot where there was already
a mart for diffusing Greek merchandise in Cis-Alpine Gaul, and beyond the Alps
into northern Europe. This was the Venetian Hadria, city of marshes and canals,
which was now colonised by Dionysius, to be in some sort—as has been aptly
observed—a forerunner of Venice itself. It was in one of these outlying posts
of the Hellenic world that the historian, to whom we owe our best knowledge of
the Sicilian history of this time, probably wrote his works. Philistus had held
posts of high trust under Dionysius, and had even been the commandant of the
Syracusan citadel; but in later years he incurred his master’s displeasure or
suspicion, and chose as his place of banishment some city on the Hadriatic, possibly Hadria. In connexion with these Hadriatic designs, touching which we have only the most
fragmentary records, Dionysius formed an alliance with Alcetas of Molossia, whose unstable position in his own
kingdom made him willing to be a dependent on the strong ruler of Syracuse.
Thus Dionysius made his influence predominant at the gates of the Hadriatic.
The Syracusan empire—we may survey it, when it reached
its widest extent—consisted, like most other empires, partly of immediate
dominion and partly of dependent communities. The immediate dominion was both
insular and continental; it included the greater portion of Sicily and the
southern peninsula of Italy, perhaps as far north as the river Crathis. But this dominion was not homogeneous, in the
relations of its various parts to the government at Syracuse. There was first
of all the old territory of the Syracusan republic. There were secondly, a
number of military settlements; an institution of Dionysius which has been
compared to the military colonies of Rome. Such, for example, was Croton on the
mainland; such in Sicily were Henna and Messana; such was Issa in the Hadriatic. Outside these direct subjects was the third
class of the allied cities, which, though absolutely subject to the power of
Dionysius, had still the management of their less important affairs in their
own hands. To this class belonged the old Greek cities of Sicily —like Gela and
Camarina; new colonies, like Tyndaris; some Sicel
states like Agyrium and Herbita.
Beyond the sphere of direct dominion stretched the
sphere of dependencies—the allies, whose bond of dependence was rather implied
than formally expressed. Here belonged the cities of the Italiot league, Thurii and the rest, north of the Crathis river; here belonged some of the Iapygian communities
in the heel of Italy; and here the kingdom of Molossia beyond the Ionian sea, and some Illyrian places on the Hadriatic coast. The Crathis may be regarded as the line
between the two, the outer and the inner, divisions of the empire of Dionysius.
But it is remarkable that at one time he planned a wall and ditch, which should
run across the isthmus from Scylletion to the nearest
point on the other sea—a distance of about twenty miles—and thus sever, as it
were, the toe of Italy from the mainland and make it a sort of second Sicily.
The acquisition and maintenance of this empire, the
building of ships and ship-sheds, the payment of mercenary soldiers, the vast
fortifications of Syracuse, both of the island and of the hill — all this,
along with the ordinary expenses of government and the state of a despot’s
court, demanded an enormous outlay. To meet this outlay Dionysius was forced to
resort to extraordinary expedients. In the first place, he oppressed the
Syracusans by a burdensome taxation. He imposed special taxes for war, special taxes
for building ships; and he introduced an onerous tax on cattle. It is said that
the citizens paid yearly into the treasury at the rate of twenty per cent of
their capital. In the second place, he had recourse to various expedients
affecting the coinage. Thus he issued debased four-drachm pieces of tin instead
of silver; and in one case of financial need he paid a debt by placing on each
coin an official mark which rendered it worth the double of its true value. But
such expedients were not enough. Dionysius was an unscrupulous rider of
temples. Thus, when he took Croton, he carried off the treasures of a temple of
Hera. In an earlier year he sailed like a pirate to Etruria, swooped down on a
rich temple at the port of Agylla, and bore off booty
which amounted to the value of 1500 talents. The plunder of a sanctuary on
distant barbarian shores might seem a small thing, but no awe of divine
displeasure restrained Dionysius from planning a raid upon the holiest place of
Hellenic worship. He formed the design of robbing the treasury of Delphi
itself, with Illyrian and Molossian help; but the plan miscarried. It is little
wonder that the tyrant had an evil repute in the mother-country.
Sect. 8. Death of Dionysius. Estimate of his Work
It was only for a moment that the dominion of the
Syracusan despot reached its extreme limits. He had hardly won the city and
lands of Croton, when his borders fell back in the west of his own island. A
new war with Carthage had broken out, and this time if Dionysius was not the
first to draw the sword, he at least provoked hostilities. He entered into
alliances with some of the cities dependent on Carthage—possibly Segesta or
Eryx. Of the campaigns we know almost nothing, except their result. First we find
Carthage helping the Italiots with whom the tyrant
was at war. Next we find a Carthaginian force in Sicily commanded by Mago. In a
battle fought at Cabala—a place unknown—the Syracusans won a great victory and
Mago was killed. While negotiations for peace were proceeding, another battle
was fought at Cronion near Panormus, and fate
reversed her award. Dionysius was defeated with terrible loss, and compelled to
make a disadvantageous peace. The boundary of Greek against Punic Sicily was
withdrawn from the river Mazarus to the river Halycus. This meant that the deliverer of Selinus and
Thermae gave back those cities to the mercies of the barbarian. At the mouth of
the Halycus, the old Greek foundation of Heraclea
Minoa now became, under the corresponding Punic name Ras Melkart,
one of the chief strongholds of Punic power.
Just ten years later, ten years in which the history
of Sicily is a blank, Dionysius essayed to retrieve the losses which the
disastrous battle of Cronion had brought upon him. He
made war once more upon Carthage, and for the second time he invaded Punic
Sicily. He delivered Greek Selinus; he won Campanian Entella;
and captured Elymian Eryx along with its haven Drepanon. He then attempted, we may almost say, to repeat
the great exploit of his first war. There was no more a Motya to capture, but
he laid siege to Lilybaeum, which had taken Motya’s place. But he was compelled
to abandon the attempt; the fortress was too strong; and his ill-success was
soon crowned by the loss of a large part of his fleet, which was carried out of
the harbour of Drepanon by an enterprising
Carthaginian admiral.
It was the last undertaking of the great “ruler of
Sicily.” He did not live to conclude the peace which probably confirmed the Halycus as the boundary between Greek and barbarian. His
death was connected with a side of his character which has not yet come before
us. The tyrant of Syracuse has a place, though it is a small place, in literary
history. He was a dramatic poet, and he frequently competed with his tragedies
in the Athenian theatre. He won third, he won even second, prizes; but his
dearest ambition was to be awarded a first place. That desire was at length
fulfilled; his failure at Lilybaeum and the loss of his ships at Drepanon were compensated by the tidings that the first
prize had been assigned to his Ransom of Hector at the Lenaean festival. He celebrated his joy by an unwonted carouse; his intemperance was
followed by a fever; and a soporific draught was administered to him which
induced the sleep of death.
Dionysius did not stand wholly aloof from the politics
of elder Greece. His alliance with Sparta, and the help which he received from
her at the siege of Syracuse, involved him in obligations to her which he
fulfilled on more than one occasion; and in the regions of Corcyra his empire
came into direct contact with the spheres of some of the states of the
mother-country. But these political relations are an unimportant part of his
reign. His reign, as a whole, lies apart from the contemporary politics of elder
Greece. Yet, from some points of view, it possesses more significance in
Grecian, and in European, history than the contemporary history of Sparta and
Athens.
In the first place, Dionysius stands out as one of the
most prominent champions of Europe in the long struggle between the Asiatic and
the European for the possession of Sicily. He did what no champion had done
before; he carried the war into the enemy’s precinct. He well-nigh achieved
what it was reserved for an Italian commonwealth to achieve actually, the
reclaiming of the whole island for Europe, the complete expulsion of the
Semitic intruder. In the second place, he stands out as the man who raised his
own city not only to dominion over all Greek Sicily but to a transmarine
dominion, which made her the most powerful city in the Greek world, the most
potent state in Europe. The purely Sicilian policy is flung aside, and Syracuse
becomes a continental power, laying one hand on that peninsula to which her own
island geographically belongs, and stretching out the other to the lands beyond
the Hadriatic. And, thirdly, this empire, though it
is thinly disguised like the later empire of Rome under constitutional forms,
is really a monarchical realm, which is a foreshadowing of the Macedonian
monarchies and an anticipation of a new period in European history. Again in
the art of war Dionysius inaugurated methods which did not come into general
use till more than half a century later; some of his military operations seem
to transport us to the age of Alexander the Great and his successors. In
another way too Dionysius anticipated the age of those monarchs; statues were
set up representing him in the guise of Dionysus, the god by whose name he was
called. Here indeed he did not stand alone among his contemporaries; the
Spartan Lysander also had been invested with attributes of divinity.
But in one respect Dionysius was far from being a
forerunner of the Macedonian monarchs: he was not an active or deliberate
diffuser of Hellenic civilisation. On the contrary he appears rather as an undoer of Hellenic civilisation. He destroys Hellenic
towns, and he replaces Hellenic by Italian communities; he cultivates the
friendship of Gauls and Lucanians, to use them against Greeks, not to make them
Greeks. This side of the policy of Dionysius, the establishment of Italian
settlements in Sicily, points in a different direction; it
points—unintentionally, indeed, so far as he was concerned—to the expansion of
Italy, it points to the Italian conquest of Sicily which was to be accomplished
more than a century after his death.
Dionysius then has the significance of a pioneer. But
there is something else to be said. Original and successful as he was, great
things as he did, we cannot help feeling that he ought to have done greater
things still. A master of political wisdom, an originator of daring ideas, a
man of endless energy, remarkably temperate in the habits of his life, he was
hampered throughout by his unconstitutional position. The nature of tyranny
imposed limitations on his work. He had always to consider first the security
of his own unchartered rule; he could never forget the fact that he was a hated
master. He could therefore never devote himself to the accomplishment of any
object or the solution of any problem with the undivided zeal which may animate
a constitutional prince who need never turn aside to examine the sure
foundations of his power. We saw how the tyrant’s warfare against Carthage was
affected by these personal calculations. The Syracusan tyranny accomplished
indeed far more than could have been accomplished by the Syracusan democracy;
Dionysius as a tyrant wrought what he could never have wrought as a mere
statesman governing by legitimate influence the counsels of a free assembly.
But he illustrates — and all the more strikingly, as the pioneer of the great
monarchies of the future — the truth to which attention has been called before,
that the tyrannies and democracies of Greek cities were in their nature not
adapted to create and maintain large empires.
Sect. 9. Dionysius the Younger
The empire of Dionysius, which he had made fast, to
use his own expression, “by chains of adamant” — a strong army, a strong navy,
and strong walls—descended to his son, Dionysius, a youth of feeble character,
not without amiable qualities, but of the nature that is easily swayed to good
or evil and is always dependent on advisers. At first he was under the
influence of Dion, who had been the most trusted minister of the elder
Dionysius in the latter part of his reign, holding the office of admiral, and
allied by a double marriage with the tyrant’s family. The tyrant had espoused
Dion’s sister Aristomache; and Dion married one of the daughters of this
marriage, Arete, his own niece. The other daughter was given to Dionysius, her
half-brother. Another man, possessing the pride, wealth, and ability of Dion,
might have sought to fling aside Dionysius, and if he did not seize the tyranny
himself, at all events to secure it for the sons of his sister, the brothers of
his wife, Hipparinus and Nysaeus.
But Dion was not like other men; his aspirations were loftier and less selfish.
His object was not to secure tyranny for any man, but to get rid of tyranny
altogether. But this was not to be done by a revolution; the democracy which
would have risen on the ruins of the despotism would have been in Dion’s eyes
as evil a thing for Syracuse as the despotism itself. For Dion had imbibed, and
thoroughly believed in, the political teaching of his friend, Plato the
philosopher. His darling project was to establish at Syracuse a constitution
which would so far as possible conform to the theoretical views of Plato, and
which would probably have taken the shape of a limited kingship, with some
resemblance to the constitution of Sparta. And this could never have been
brought about by a pure vote of the Syracusan people; the ideal constitution
must be imposed upon them for their own good. The sole chance lay in persuading
a tyrant to impose limitations on his own absolute power and introduce the
required constitution. “Give me,” says Plato himself, “a city governed by a
tyranny, and let the tyrant be young, with good brains, brave, and generous,
and let fortune bring in his way a good lawgiver”—then a state has a chance of
being well governed. Dion saw in young Dionysius a nature which might be
moulded as he wished,—a nature, perhaps, which he missed in his own nephews, Hipparinus and Nysaeus. He
devoted himself loyally to Dionysius, who looked up to his virtue and
experience, and he set himself to interest the young ruler in philosophy and
make him take a serious view of his duties. But his chief hope lay in bringing
the tyrant under the attraction of the same powerful personality which had
exercised a decisive and abiding influence over himself. Plato must come to
Syracuse and make the tyrant a philosopher. The treatment which Plato had
experienced on the occasion of a previous visit to Sicily, at the hands of the
elder Dionysius, was not indeed such as to encourage him to return. But he
yielded, reluctantly, to the pressing invitation of the young ruler and the
urgent solicitations of Dion, who represented that now at last the moment had
come to to call an ideal state into actual existence.
It was the vision of a “dreamer dreaming greatly”; and
that a statesman of Dion’s practical experience and knowledge of human nature
should have allowed himself to be guided by such a dream may seem strange to
us; to us to whom the history of hundreds of societies throughout a period of
more than two thousand years has brought disillusion. It has indeed seemed so
curious that some have concluded that Dion was throughout plotting to dethrone
Dionysius, that the philosophical scheme was part of the plot, and Plato an
unconscious tool of the conspiracy. But the good faith of Dion seems assured.
We must remember that a state founded on philosophical principles was a new
idea, which was not at all likely to seem foredoomed to failure to any one who
was enamoured of philosophy; for such a state had never been tried, and
consequently there was no example of a previous failure. On the contrary, there
was the example of Sparta as a success. The political speculators of those days
always turned with special predilection to Sparta, as a well-balanced state,
and it was believed that her constitution and discipline had been called into
being and established for all time by the will and fiat of a single
extraordinarily wise lawgiver. Why then should not Dionysius and Dion, under
the direction of Plato, do for Syracuse what Lycurgus had done for Lacedaemon?
And Dion doubtless thought that his own experience would enable him to adjust
the demands of speculation to the rude realities of existence.
No welcome could have been more honourable and
flattering than that which Plato received. He engaged the respect and
admiration of Dionysius, and the young tyrant was easily brought to regard
tyranny as a vile thing and to cherish the plan of building up a new
constitution. The experiment would probably have been tried, if Plato, in
dealing with his pupil, had acted otherwise than he did. The nature of
Dionysius was one of those natures which are susceptible of impressions and
capable of enthusiasm, but incapable of persevering application. If Plato had
contented himself with inculcating the general principles which he has
expounded with such charm in his Republic, Dionysius would in all likelihood
have attempted to create at Syracuse a dim adumbration of the ideal state. It
is hardly likely that it would have been long maintained: still, it would at
least have been essayed. But Plato insisted on imparting to his pupil a
systematic course of philosophical training, and began with the science of
geometry. The tyrant took up the study with eagerness; his court was absorbed
in geometry; but he presently wearied of it. And then influences which were
opposed to the scheme of Dion and Plato began to tell.
One of the first acts of the new reign had been to
recall from exile the historian Philistus. He was entirely adverse to the
proposed reforms, and wished that the tyranny should continue on its old lines.
He and his friends insinuated that the true object of Dion was to secure the
tyranny for one of his own nephews, as soon as Dionysius had laid it down. They
did everything to turn Dionysius against Dion, and at last an indiscreet letter
of Dion gave them the means of success. Syracuse and Carthage were negotiating
peace, and Dion wrote to the Carthaginian Judges not to act without first
consulting him. The letter was intercepted, and though its motive was doubtless
perfectly honest, it was interpreted as treason. Dion was banished from Sicily,
but was allowed to retain his property; and the party of Philistus won the
upper hand. Plato remained for a while in the island; Dionysius was jealous of
the esteem which he felt for Dion, and desired above all things to win the same
esteem for himself. But the philosopher’s visit had been a failure; he yearned
to get back to Athens, and at length Dionysius let him go.
So ended the notable scheme of founding an ideal
state, the realisation of which would have involved the disbandment of the
mercenary troops and thereby the collapse of the Syracusan empire. It is easy
to ridicule Plato for want of tact in his treatment of the young tyrant; it is
easy to flout him as a pedant for not distinguishing between an Academy and a
Court. But Plato was perfectly right. The only motive which had brought him to
Sicily was to prepare the way for founding a state fashioned more or less according
to his own ideal. Now the first condition of the life of such a state was that
a king should be a philosopher. Therefore, as Dionysius—not Plato—was to be
king in the new state, it was indispensable that Dionysius should become a
philosopher. Plato had not the smallest interest in imparting to the tyrant a
superficial smattering of philosophy, enough to beguile him into framing a
Platonic state. For that state would have been still-born, since it lacked the
first condition of life, a true philosopher at its head. If Dionysius had not
the stuff of a true, but only of a sham, philosopher, it was useless to make
the experiment. Plato adopted the only reasonable course; he was true to his
own ideal.
Sect. 10. Dion
Strange as it may appear, after such experiences,
Plato seems to have returned once more to Sicily, at the urgent invitation of
Dionysius. He can have had no more expectations of making a philosopher out of
the tyrant, and his chief motive must have been to bring about the recall of
Dion and reconcile him to Dionysius, who appears to have lured the philosopher
by the hope that this might be accomplished. Plato was received and entertained
with as great honour as before, but his visit was fruitless. Probably the
tyrant ascertained that Dion was in the meantime using his wealth to make
silent preparations for winning his way back to Syracuse and overthrowing the
tyranny. Dionysius therefore took the precaution of confiscating Dion’s
property; and then Plato returned to Athens as soon as he could. Dion also
betook himself to Greece and made Athens his headquarters. Presently the tyrant
committed a needless act of tyranny; he compelled Dion’s wife Arete to marry
another man. At length Dion deemed that the time for action had come. With a
very small force, packed into not more than five merchant ships, he set sail
from Zacynthus, to encounter the mighty armaments of
Dionysius. His coming was expected, and the admiral Philistus had a fleet in
Italian waters to waylay him. But Dion sailed straight across the open sea to Pachynus. His plan was to land in Western Sicily, collect
what reinforcements he could, and march on Syracuse. It was a bold enterprise,
but Dion knew that the character of the tyrant was feeble, and that the
Syracusans pined to be delivered from his tyranny. Driven by a storm to the
Libyan coast, the ships of the deliverer finally reached Heraclea Minoa, now a
Carthaginian port, in south-western Sicily. Here they learned that Dionysius
had departed for Italy with eighty ships, and they lost no time in marching to
Syracuse, picking up reinforcements, both Greek and Sicel, on their way. The
Campanian mercenaries who were guarding Epipolae were
lured away by a trick; and, making a night march from Acrae,
Dion and his party entered Syracuse amid general rejoicings. The Assembly
placed the government in the hands of twenty generals, Dion among them. The
fortress of Epipolae was secured; no part of Syracuse
remained in possession of Dionysius except the Island, and against this Dion
built a wall of defence from the Greater to the Lesser Harbour. Seven days
later Dionysius returned.
While Syracuse was rocking with the first enthusiasm
at her deliverance, the deliverer was the popular hero. But Dion was not a man
who could hold the affections of the people, for he repelled men by his
exceeding haughtiness. And it was seen too that he was determined masterfully
to direct the Syracusans how they were to use their freedom. Dionysius, shut up
in the Island, resorted to artifices to raise suspicion against him in the
minds of the citizens. And a rival appeared on the scene who possessed more
popular manners than Dion. This was a certain Heraclides, whom the tyrant had
banished, and who now returned with an armament of ships and soldiers. The
Assembly elected him admiral. Dion undid this act on the ground that his own
consent was necessary and then came forward himself to propose Heraclides. This
behaviour alienated the sympathies of the citizens; they did not want another
autocrat. Soon afterwards Heraclides won an important sea-fight, defeating
Philistus, who had returned from Italy with his squadron. The old historian
himself was taken and put to death with cruelty. Dionysius thus lost his best
support, and presently he escaped from the Island, taking his triremes with
him, but leaving a garrison of mercenaries and his young son Apollocrates in command.
Soon after this the influence of Dion waned so much
that the Syracusans deposed him from the post of general, and appointed
twenty-five new generals, among them Heraclides. They also refused to grant any
pay to the Peloponnesian deliverers who had come with Dion. The Peloponnesians
would have gladly turned against the Syracusans if Dion had given the signal;
but Dion, though self-willed, was too genuine a patriot to attack his own city,
and he retired to Leontini with 3000 devoted men.
The Syracusans then went on with the siege of the
island fortress, and so hard pressed was the garrison that it determined to
surrender. Heralds had been already sent to announce the decision to the
Syracusans, when in the early morning reinforcements arrived —soldiers and
provisions, brought by a Campanian of Naples, by name Nypsius,
who, eluding the notice of the enemy’s ships, sailed into the Great Harbour.
The situation was changed, and negotiations were immediately broken off. At
first fortune favoured the Syracusans. Heraclides put out to sea, and won a
second sea-fight, sinking or capturing whatever warships had been left behind
by Dionysius or were brought by Nypsius. At this
success the city went wild with joy and spent the night in carousing. Before
the dawn of day, when soldiers and generals were alike sunk in a drunken sleep, Nypsius and his troops issued from the gates of the
island, and surmounting the cross wall of Dion by scaling-ladders, slew the
guards and took possession of Lower Achradina and the
Agora. All this part of the city was sacked; full leave was given to the
mercenaries to do as they listed; they carried off women and children and all
the property they could lay hands on. Next day all the citizens who had taken
refuge in Epipolae and the Upper Achradina,
looking helplessly at what had been done, and seeing that the barbarians were
beginning their horrible work again, voted to call Dion to the rescue.
Messengers riding as swiftly as they could reached Leontini towards evening.
Dion led them to the theatre, and there before the gathered folk the envoys
told their tale and implored Dion and the Peloponnesians to forget the
ingratitude of Syracuse and come to her help. Dion made a moving speech; he
would in any case go, and, if he could not save his city, he would bury himself
in her ruins; but the Peloponnesians might well refuse to stir for a people
which had entreated them so ill. A shout went up that Syracuse must be rescued;
and for the second time Dion led the Peloponnesians to her deliverance. They
set out at once, and a night march brought them to Megara, five or six miles
from Syracuse, at the dawn of day. There dreadful tidings reached them. Nypsius, knowing that the rescue was on its way and deeming
that no time was to be lost, had let loose his barbarians again into the city
at midnight. They no longer thought of plunder, but only of slaying and
burning. At this news the army of rescue hurried on to save what might still be
saved. Entering by the Hexapylon on the north, Dion
cleared his way before him through Achiadina, and
reached the cross -wall which he had himself built as a defence against the
Island. It was now broken down, but behind its ruins Nypsius had posted a body of his mercenaries, and this was the scene of the decisive
struggle. Dion’s men carried the wall, and the foe was driven back into the
fortress of Ortygia.
The opponents of Dion, who had not fled, were humbled.
Heraclides besought his pardon, and Dion was blamed for not putting him to
death. It was at all events foolish magnanimity which consented to the
arrangement that Dion should be general with full power on land, and Heraclides
by sea. The old dissensions soon broke out, and presently we find a Spartan
named Gaesylus reconciling the rivals and
constraining Heraclides to swear solemnly to do nothing against Dion.
Nypsius seems to have disappeared from the scene, and it was not long before the son of
Dionysius, weary of the long siege, made up his mind to surrender the Island to
Dion. During all these dreadful events Dion’s sister Aristomache and his wife
Arete had been kept in the Island. Dion now took back his wife.
The time at last came for Dion to show what his
political aims really were. He professed to have come to give Syracuse freedom;
but the freedom which he would have given her was not such as she herself
desired. The Syracusan citizens wanted the restoration of their democracy; but
to Dion democracy seemed as bad a form of government as tyranny. If, taught by
experience, he no longer a modified dreamed of a Platonic state, he desired to
establish an aristocracy, with some democratic limitations, and with a king, or
kings, as in Sparta. With this purpose in view he sent to Corinth for helpers
and advisers; and he expressed his leanings to the Corinthian oligarchy by an
issue of coins, with a flying horse, modelled on the Pegasi of Corinth. But
though Dion hoped to establish a state in which the few should govern the many,
he made a grave mistake in not immediately placing himself above the suspicion
of being a selfish power-seeker—a possible tyrant. The Syracusans longed to see
the fortress of the tyrant demolished, and if Dion had complied with their wish
he might have secured for himself abiding influence. But though he did not live
in the fortress he allowed it to remain, and its existence seemed a standing
invitation to tyranny. Dion had no intention of allowing the Syracusans to
manage their own affairs, and the enjoyment of power corrupted him. His
authority was only limited by the joint command of Heraclides, and at last he
was brought to consent that his rival should be secretly assassinated. After
this he was to all purposes tyrant, though he might repudiate tyranny with his
lips.
Among those who had come with him from elder Greece to
liberate Syracuse was a pupil of Plato named Callippus; and this man plotted to
overthrow Dion, who trusted him implicitly. Aristomache and Arete suspected him
and taxed him with treachery; nor were they assured until he had taken the most
solemn oath that a mortal could take. He went to the precinct of the great
goddesses Demeter and Persephone; the priest wrapped him in the purple robe of
the queen of the underworld and gave him a lighted torch; in this guise he
swore that he plotted no evil design against Dion. But so little regard had
Callippus for religion that he chose the festival of the Maiden by whom he had
sworn for the execution of his plot. He employed some men of Zacynthus to murder Dion, and then seized the power
himself.
The tyranny of Callippus lasted for about a year.
Then, while he was engaged in an attack on Catane,
the two sons of the elder Dionysius by his second wife, Hipparinus and Nysaeus, came to Syracuse and won possession of
Ortygia. These brothers were a worthless pair, drunken and dissolute. Hipparinus held the island for about two years; then he was
murdered in a fit of drunkenness, and was succeeded by Nysaeus,
who ruled Ortygia five years longer. It is not certain how far these tyrants
were able to assert their authority over Syracuse outside the precincts of the
Island.
During all these changes Dionysius was living at Locri, the native city of his mother, and ruling it with a
tyrant’s rod. His cruelty and the outrages which he committed on the freeborn
maidens of the city provoked universal hatred. At length he saw the chance of
recovering Syracuse. Leaving his wife and daughters at Locri with a small garrison, he sailed to Ortygia and drove out Nysaeus.
As soon as he had gone the Locrians arose and easily overcame his mercenaries.
The enormities of which the tyrant had been guilty may best be measured by the
brutal thirst of vengeance which now consumed the citizens of Locri. No supplications, no intervention, no offers of
ransom could turn them away from wreaking their pent-up hatred on the wife and
daughters of Dionysius. The women were submitted to the most horrible tortures
and insults before they were strangled; the sea was sown with their ashes.
Sect. 11. Timoleon
At this moment tyrannies flourished in Sicily. Besides
Syracuse, the cities of Messana, Leontini, and Catane,
and many Sicel towns were under the yoke of tyrants. Syracuse was at least half
free; Dionysius held only the Island. But the Syracusans, for lack of another
leader, looked for help and guidance, in their struggle against their own
tyrant, to the man who had made himself lord of Leontini. This was a certain Hiketas, a man ill to deal with, who was a follower of
Dion, but after Dion’s death caused his wife and sister to be drowned while
they were sailing to the Peloponnesus. This Hiketas was aiming at becoming himself lord of Syracuse, and he hoped to accomplish his
purpose with the help of Carthage. But he veiled his designs, and he supported
an appeal which the Sicilian Greeks now addressed to Corinth. It was an appeal
for help both against the plague of tyranny which was rampant in Sicily and
against the Carthaginians, who were preparing a great armament to descend upon
the troubled island. The Syracusans selected Hiketas as their general.
Corinth, ever a solicitous mother to her colonies, was
ready to respond to the appeal; and the only difficulty was to find a suitable
response. Some one in the assembly, by a sudden inspiration, arose and named
Timoleon, the son of Timodemus. Belonging to a noble
family, and notable by his personal qualities, Timoleon was living under a
strange cloud, through a deed which some highly praised and others severely
blamed. He had saved his brother’s life in battle at the risk of his own; but,
when that brother afterwards plotted to make himself tyrant, Timoleon and some
friends put him to death. His mother and many others abhorred him as guilty of
a brother’s blood; while others admired him as the slayer of a tyrant. In the
light of his later deeds, we know that Timoleon was actuated by the highest
motives of duty when he consented to his brother’s death. Ever since that
terrible day he had lived in retirement, but when his name was mentioned in the
Assembly all approved, and Teleclides, a man of
influence, expressed the general thought by saying, “We shall decide that he
slew a tyrant, if he is successful; that he slew his brother, if he fails.” The
enterprise was to be Timoleon’s ordeal.
With ten ships of war, a few fellow-citizens, and
about 1000 mercenaries, Timoleon crossed the Ionian sea, guided, it was said,
by the track of a flaming torch, the emblem of the Sicilian goddesses Demeter
and Persephone. At Rhegium, now free from the rule of tyrants, he met with a
warm welcome. But he found a Carthaginian fleet awaiting him there, and
likewise ambassadors from Hiketas, who demanded that
the ships and soldiers should be sent back to Corinth, since the Carthaginians
would not permit them to cruise in Sicilian waters. As for Timoleon himself, Hiketas would be pleased to have his help and counsel.
Timoleon had no thought of heeding such a message. It was not to set up the
rule of Hiketas at Syracuse that he had come, or to
submit to the dictation of the foes of Hellas. But the difficulty was to leave
the roadstead of Rhegium in face of the Punic fleet. Here Timoleon showed
caution and craft. He pretended to agree to the proposals, but he asked that
the whole matter and the intentions of Hiketas should
be clearly stated in the presence of the Rhegine people. With the connivance of the Rhegines, time was
wasted, and the Carthaginians and the ambassadors of Hiketas were detained in the Assembly, until the Corinthian ships had put out to sea,
Timoleon himself slipping away just in time to embark in the last of them. He
made straight for Tauromenium.
It will be remembered that Tauromenium, planted by
Himilco to be a Sicel city, had been taken by Dionysius to be an abode for his
mercenaries. Amid the troubles after the tyrant’s death it had gained its
independence, and a citizen named Andromachus had become the foremost man in
its public affairs. Andromachus induced his fellow-citizens to offer a home to
the homeless Naxians whose parents Dionysius had so
cruelly dispossessed. The Naxians came back to the
hill which looked down on the place of their old city; Naxos revived in
Tauromenium. And the Naxians were the first Sicilians
to welcome the deliverer of Sicily to her shores. Timoleon’s first success was at Hadranum, the Sicel town where the great Sicilian fire-god Hadranus had his chief abode. The men of Hadranum
were at discord among themselves; some would summon Hiketas,
others invited Timoleon; and both Hiketas and
Timoleon came. It was a race between them to get to Hadranum first. Timoleon,
the later to arrive, surprised the enemy as they were resting outside the town,
and defeated them, although in numbers they were five to one. The gates of the
city were then thrown open and Hadranum became the headquarters of Timoleon’s army. Soon afterwards Hiketas suborned two men to assassinate the Corinthian leader, but the plot was
frustrated at the last moment; and henceforth the belief gained ground that
Timoleon was hedged about by some divine protection. The fire-god of Hadranum
too had shown by miraculous signs that he approved of the stranger’s enterprise.
Other cities now allied themselves with Timoleon; and presently Dionysius sent
a message to him, proposing to surrender the Island, and asking only to be
allowed to retire in safety to Corinth, with his private property. The offer
was at once accepted; the fortress, and the mercenaries who guarded it, and all
the war gear were transferred to Timoleon. Dionysius lived the rest of his life
at Corinth in harmless obscurity. Many anecdotes were told of the trivial
doings of the fallen lord of Sicily and his smart sayings. When some one
contrasted his fortune with that of his father, he remarked, “My father came
into power when democracy was hated, but I when tyranny was envied.”
Having won Ortygia sooner and more easily than could
have been hoped, it remained for Timoleon to liberate the rest of Syracuse,
which was in the hands of Hiketas. But Hiketas had powerful allies. A hundred and fifty
Carthaginian ships, under the command of Mago, sailed into the Great Harbour,
and a Carthaginian force was admitted into Syracuse. The Corinthian commander
in the Island—Timoleon himself still abode at Hadranum—was hard pressed; but
presently Mago and Hiketas went off to besiege Catane, and Neon making a successful sally occupied Achradina. At the same time reinforcements from Corinth,
which had been for some time delayed in Italy by the Carthaginian fleet,
arrived in Sicily. It was now time for Timoleon himself to appear at Syracuse.
He pitched his camp on the south side, on the banks of the Anapus.
Then another piece of luck befell him. The Greek mercenaries, both his own and
those of Hiketas, used to amuse their idle hours by
fishing for eels at the mouth of the river; and as they had no cause of
quarrel, though they were ready to kill each other for pay, they used to
converse amicably on such occasions. One of Timoleon’s soldiers observed that the Greeks ought to combine against the barbarians, and
the words coming to the ears of Mago caused him to conceive suspicions of Hiketas; he suddenly sailed off with all his fleet; but
when he reached Carthage he slew himself and his countrymen crucified his
corpse. This story, however, can hardly be the whole explanation of Mago’s
strange behaviour.
Thus freed from his most formidable foe, Timoleon soon
drove Hiketas from Epipolae,
and Syracuse was at length completely free. The Syracusans had found a
deliverer who did not, like Dion, seek to be their master; and the fortress of
Dionysius was pulled down. This act of demolition seemed the seal and assurance
of their deliverance. But the city was dispeopled and
desolate, grass grew in the market -place; and the first task of the deliverer
was to repopulate it with new citizens. The Corinthians made proclamations at
the festivals of elder Greece, inviting emigrants to resettle Syracuse; men
whom the tyrants had banished flocked back; and 60,000 men in all gathered both
from west and east, with women and children, and restored the strength of the
city. The laws of Diocles were issued anew, and the democratic constitution was
revived and in some respects remodelled. The most important innovation was the
investing of the amphipolos or priest of Olympian
Zeus with the chief magistracy. The priest was annually elected and gave his
name to the year; but, as he was chosen by lot out of three clans, his
promotion to be the first magistrate of the republic was a limitation of the
democracy. Such was the renovation of Syracuse; and her new freedom was
expressed, on some coins which were now issued, by the symbol of an unbridled
steed.
Timoleon then went on to do for other towns in Sicily
what he had done for Syracuse. Many tyrants submitted; even Hiketas,
who had withdrawn to Leontini. There was also work to be done against the
Carthaginians, who were intent upon recovering lost ground and were preparing
for another great effort to drive the Greeks out of Sicily. Five years after
Timoleon had landed in the island, a large armament sailed from Carthage and
put in at Lilybaeum. It consisted of 200 galleys find 1000 transports; there
were 10,000 horses—some for war chariots; and the total number of the infantry
was said to be 70,000. The flower of the host was the “Sacred Band” of 2500
Carthaginian citizens, men of birth and wealth. Hamilcar and Hasdrubal, the
commanders, decided to march right across Sicily against Syracuse. But Timoleon
did not await them there; he would try to encounter them west of the Halycus, in Punic not in Grecian territory. Collecting such
an army as he could—it amounted to no more than 10,000—he set out. On the march
he was deserted by 1000 mercenaries who clamoured for arrears of pay and
murmured at being led against such overwhelming odds and with difficulty
could he persuade the rest to go on. The Carthaginians were encamped on the
west bank of the Crimisus, a branch of the river Hypsas, not that which washes Acragas, but that which flows
through the territory of Selinus. The city of Entella,
now held by Campanians, was situated on the Crimisus,
and it may be that the Punic army had halted with the hope of taking it.
The field of the battle which was now fought between
the Greeks and Phoenicians on the banks of the Crimisu is unknown. In the the morning the Greeks ascended a
hill which divided them from the river, and on their way they met mules laden
with wild celery, a herb which was used to wreathe sepulchral slabs. The
soldiers were depressed by an incident which seemed ominous of evil; but of the
same herb were wrought the crowns of victors in the Isthmian games, and
Timoleon hastened to interpret the chance as an augury of victory. He wreathed
his head with the celery, and the whole host followed his example. Then two
eagles appeared in the sky, one bearing a serpent—another fortunate omen. The
Greeks halted on the hilltop, striving to pierce the mist which enveloped the
ground below them; and when it melted away they saw the enemy crossing the
stream. The war-chariots crossed first, and behind came the Sacred Band.
Timoleon saw that his chance lay in attacking before the whole army had
crossed. He sent down his cavalry to lead the attack and himself followed with
the foot. The war-chariots prevented the horses from approaching the Sacred
Band; so Timoleon ordered the cavalry to move aside and assail the flank of the
foe, leaving the way clear for the infantry. It is not recorded how the
infantry swept away the war-chariots, but they succeeded in reaching the Sacred
Band. The Carthaginians, firm and immovable, withstood the onset of the spears;
and the Greeks, finding that all their thrusting could not drive back or pierce
the shield wall, flung down their spears and drew their swords. In the sword
fight it was no longer a matter of weight and courage; skill and lithesome
movements told; and the Greeks, superior in these qualities, utterly smote the
Sacred Band. Meanwhile the rest of the Punic army had crossed the river, and
although the flower of it was destroyed, there were still enormous numbers to
deal with. But fortune followed Timoleon. Clouds had gathered and were hanging
over the hills, and suddenly there burst forth a tempest of lightning and
wind-driven rain and hail. The Greeks had their backs to the wind; the rain and
hail drove into the faces of the enemy, who in the noise could not hear the
commands of their officers. When the ground became muddy, the lighter armour of
the Greeks gave them a great advantage over their foes, who floundered about,
weighed down by their heavy mail. At length the Carthaginians could no longer
stand their ground, and when they turned to fly they found death in the Crimisus. Rapidly swollen by the rain, the river was now
rushing along in a furious torrent, which swept men and horses to destruction.
It is said that 15,000 prisoners were secured; that 10,000 men had been killed
in the fight, not counting those who perished in the river; rich spoils of gold
and silver were taken in the camp. The choicest of the arms were sent to the
Isthmus to be dedicated in the temple of Poseidon.
The battle had fallen out clean contrary to what was
like to have been. Timoleon had gained a victory which may be set beside
Gelon’s victory at Himera. But he did not follow it up; he made no attempt to
cut short the Phoenician dominion in Sicily. Perhaps his inaction was due less
to unwillingness than to embarrassments which threatened Syracuse. The tyrant
of Catane, who had gone over to Timoleon, declared
against him. Hiketas seems to have seized again the
tyranny at Leontini; and Timoleon found himself engaged in a war with these two
tyrants, Mamercus and Hiketas, who were aided by
Carthaginian mercenaries. At last both the tyrants were captured. The
Syracusans put them both to death, and slew the wife and daughter of Hiketas, in retaliation for the murder of the wife and
sister of Dion. The Messanians also put to death
their oppressor, Hippon, with torture, and the
school-boys were taken to the theatre to witness a tyrant’s death. Other cities
under the yoke of tyranny were likewise liberated, and some dispeopled towns, like Acragas and Gela, were colonised. After twenty years of troubles
Sicily was to have a respite now. Carthage made peace, the Halycus being again fixed as the frontier, and she undertook to do nothing to uphold
tyrants in Greek cities.
Timoleon had now delivered Sicily both from domestic
despots and from foreign foes, and having achieved his task he laid down the
powers which had been granted to him for its performance. Among the great men
in Greek history he holds a unique place; for the work which he accomplished
was inspired neither by selfish ambition nor by patriotism. He sought no power
for himself; he laboured in a strange land for cities which might adopt him,
but were not his own. Patriotism, indeed, in the widest sense, might stimulate
his ardour, when he fought for Hellas against the Phoenician. But of Greek
leaders who achieved as much as he, there is none whose conduct was, like Timoleon’s, wholly guided by simple devotion to duty. The
Syracusans gave him a property near Syracuse, and there he dwelt till his
death, two years after his crowning victory. Occasionally he visited the city
when the folk wished to ask for his counsel, but he had become blind and these
visits were rare. He was lamented by all Greek Sicily, and at Syracuse his
memory was preserved by a group of public buildings called after him.
The land had rest for twenty years after Timoleon’s death; the direct results of his work did not
amount to more than that. A tyrant arose then of a worse type than the elder
Dionysius, and his hand was heavy upon Sicily. But the career of Agathocles
lies outside the limits of this history.
Sect. 12. Events in Great Greece
In these days, troubles and dangers beset the Greeks
of Italy no less than their brethren of Sicily. On the mainland, as in the
island, the Hellenic name seemed like to have been blotted out,—there by the
Phoenicians and the Italian mercenaries, here by the native races. The power of
the elder Dionysius had kept at bay the Lucanians, the Messapians,
the Iapygians, and other neighbours who pressed on
Great Greece; but when his son was attacked by Dion, the Syracusan empire
dissolved of itself, and the barbarians of Italy, having no great power to
fear, began anew to descend from the mountains on the Greek settlements of the
coast. A number of tribes in the toe of the peninsula banded themselves
together in a league with their federal tian league capital at Consentia; and this Brettian league, as it was called, aimed at subduing all the Greek cities of the
promontory. Terina, Hipponion, New Sybaris on the Traeis, and other places were captured. Men were not blind
to the danger which menaced Western Hellas, of being sunk under a tide of
barbarism; one of the objects of Plato and Dion had been to drive all the
barbarian mercenaries out of Greek Sicily. But in Italy the peril was greatest,
and there was sore need of help from without. The appeal of Syracuse to her
mother Corinth and the coming of Timoleon put it into the mind of Taras, hard
bestead by the neighbouring peoples, to ask succour of her mother Sparta. The
appeal came at a favourable moment. Sparta was not King in a position to
undertake any political scheme at home, and king Archidamus eagerly embraced
the chance of going forth to fight for Hellas against the barbarians of the
West, even as his father Agesilaus, sixty years ago, had fought against the
barbarians of the East. He got together a band of mercenaries, chiefly from the
Phocian survivors of the Sacred War, and sailed to Italy. For four or five
years seemingly he strove against the barbarians, but without winning any
decisive success, and was finally killed at Mandonia in a battle with the Lucanians. The ineffectual expedition of Archidamus was a
striking contrast to the brilliant achievements of Timoleon. But Taras was not
ungrateful for his efforts. She had commemorated her appeal to Sparta by
minting beautiful gold pieces, on which the infant Taras was shown supplicating
Poseidon of Cape Taenarus. The tragic issue of that
appeal suggested a motive for another series of coins, and called forth one of
those pathetic allusions which Greek art could achieve with matchless grace.
Taras is represented riding on his dolphin and sadly contemplating a helmet; it
is the helmet of the Spartan king who had fallen in his service.
Taras was soon forced to seek a new champion. She
invited Alexander of Molossia, the uncle of Alexander
the Great, and this king saw and seized the chance of founding an empire in the
West — of doing there on a small scale what his nephew was accomplishing on a
mighty scale in Asia. He was an able man and success attended his arms. On the
east coast of Italy he subdued the Messapians, and
pushed as far north as Sipontum, which he captured.
In the west he smote the Brettian league, seizing Consentia and liberating Terina. His power was so great in
the south that Rome made a treaty with him; and it is possible that his designs
reached to Sicily. The welcome given to this ally and deliverer was also
reflected in the money of Taras; coins were struck with the seated eagle of
Dodona and the thunderbolt of Zeus beside it. But Taras presently felt her own
freedom menaced by the conqueror, and she renounced her alliance. War ensued,
Thurii upholding Alexander. The barbarians profited by these struggles to rise
against their conqueror, and a battle was fought at Pandosia.
During the engagement, a Lucanian exile in the Tarentine army stabbed the king
in the back, and the design of an Epirote empire bestriding the Hadriatic perished with him. This befell not long after the
overthrow of the Persian monarchy on the field of Gaugamela. But Alexander’s
work had not been futile; henceforward Taras was able to keep the upper hand
over her Italian neighbours.
CHAPTER XVI.
THE RISE OF MACEDONIA
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