Battle of Himera (480 BC)

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Battle of Himera
Part of The Sicilian Wars
Date 480 BC
Location Himera
Result Syracuse remains the dominant power in Sicily
Casus
belli
Carthaginian expansion into Sicily
Combatants
Syracuse
Agrigentum
Carthage
Commanders
Gelo
Theron
Hamilcar†
Strength
Probably less than the Carthaginian forces Claimed to be 300,000,
though modern estimates put the numbers at no more than 50,000
Sicilian Wars
1st Himera  – Crimissus  – 2nd Himera

The Battle of Himera (480 BC), supposedly fought on the same day as the more famous Battle of Salamis,[1] or on the same day as the Battle of Thermopylae,[2] saw the Greek forces of Gelo, King of Syracuse, and Theron, the sole ruler of Agrigentum, defeating the Carthaginian force of Hamilcar, ending the Carthaginian threat to the Greek colonies on the island.

Hamilcar had led a large army from Carthage, Libya, Iberia, Liguria, Helisycia, Sardinia, and Corsica against the Sicilians.

After winning the battle, Gelon could not find Hamilcar despite exhaustive searching. Herodotus maintains that Hamilcar, unable to obtain a favorable omen during his many sacrifices that day and having heard that his army was on the brink of defeat, leaped into the flames. His body was supposedly completely incinerated.

For years afterwards, the Carthaginians offered sacrifices to him and erected monuments of him in their various colonies and a splendid monument in Carthage.

It is likely the army was substantial and strong, but probably at the very most 50,000 strong. There is no evidence to support anything like a 300,000-strong army, which would have been seen as an army of mythical size. Such an army could not be mustered, and more so, beaten by any ancient army, let along the armies of claimants to small city-states in Greek Sicily. If Hamilcar killed himself prior to the battle's climax, as implied, the Greeks not only won, they anhihilated the gargantuan force.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Herodotus, 7.166
  2. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 11.24.1

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[edit] External links