fbpx
Wikipedia

Pyrrhus of Epirus

Pyrrhus (/ˈpɪrəs/; Greek: Πύρρος Pýrrhos; 319/318–272 BC) was a Greek king and statesman of the Hellenistic period.[2][3][4][5][6] He was king of the Molossians,[5][7] of the royal Aeacid house,[8] and later he became king (Malalas also called him toparch)[9] of Epirus. He was one of the strongest opponents of early Rome, and had been regarded as one of the greatest generals of antiquity.[10] Several of his victorious battles caused him unacceptably heavy losses, from which the term "Pyrrhic victory" was coined.

Pyrrhus
A marble bust of Pyrrhus from the Villa of the Papyri at the Roman site of Herculaneum, now in the National Archaeological Museum of Naples, Italy
King of Epirus
Reign297–272 BC[1] (second reign)
PredecessorNeoptolemus II
SuccessorAlexander II
Reign307–302 BC[1] (first reign)
PredecessorAlcetas II
SuccessorNeoptolemus II
King of Macedonia
Reign274–272 BC
PredecessorAntigonus II
SuccessorAntigonus II
Reign288–285 BC
PredecessorDemetrius I
SuccessorAntigonus II
Tyrant of Syracuse
Reign278–276 BC
PredecessorThinion & Sosistratus
SuccessorHiero II
Bornc. 319 BC
Epirus, Greece
Died272 BC (aged about 46)
Argos, Peloponnese, Greece
Spouse
Issue
DynastyAeacidae
FatherAeacides
MotherPhthia
ReligionHellenism
Military career
Battles/wars

Pyrrhus became king of Epirus in 306 BC at the age of 13, but was dethroned by Cassander four years later. He saw action during the Wars of the Diadochi and regained his throne in 297 BC with the support of Ptolemy I Soter. During what came to be known as the Pyrrhic War, Pyrrhus fought Rome at the behest of Tarentum, scoring costly victories at Heraclea and Asculum. He proceeded to take over Sicily from Carthage but was soon driven out, and lost all his gains in Italy after the Battle of Beneventum in 275 BC.

Pyrrhus seized the Macedonian throne from Antigonus II Gonatas in 274 BC and invaded the Peloponnese in 272 BC. The Epirote assault on Sparta was thwarted, however, and Pyrrhus was killed during a street battle at Argos.

Etymology

The Latinized Pyrrhus derives from the Greek Pyrrhos (/ˈpɪrəs/; Greek: Πύρρος), meaning flame-like or flammable, derived from the word Pyr (/ˈpɪr/; Greek: Πύρ) meaning fire and the suffix -ros (/ˈrəs/; Greek: ρος) meaning -able or "pertaining to".[11] According to others, the name's actual meaning is "fiery, red-coloured", and was especially used to denote red hair.[12] Pyrrhos was also used as an alternate name for Neoptolemus, son of Achilles and the princess Deidamia in Homeric Greek mythology.[11]

Early life

In c. 319 BC, Pyrrhus was born to prince Aeacides of Epirus,[13] and Phthia, a Thessalian noblewoman, the daughter of the Thessalian general Menon. Aeacides was a cousin of Olympias, making Pyrrhus a second cousin to Alexander the Great. He had two sisters: Deidamia and Troias. In 319/318 BC, Arrybas, Aeacides' father and the regent of Epirus, died leaving Epirus to the joint kings Aeacides and Neoptolemus.

Aeacides supported Olympias in her fight against Cassander and marched on Macedon. In 317 BC, when Pyrrhus was only two, Olympias requested Aeacides' support yet again and he marched on Macedon a second time. Many of his soldiers did not like their service and mutinied. Aeacides released these soldiers from his army, but as a result his army was too small to achieve anything. When the mutineers arrived in Epirus they caused a rebellion against their absent king and Aeacides was dethroned. Cassander sent one of his generals, Lyciscus, to act as regent to the still underaged Neoptolemus. Epirus in effect became a puppet kingdom of Cassander. Pyrrhus' family fled north and took refuge with Glaukias of the Taulantians, one of the largest Illyrian tribes.[6] Pyrrhus was raised by Beroea, Glaukias' wife, a Molossian of the Aeacidae dynasty.[4][14] Cassander marched against Glaukias, defeated his army and captured Apollonia. Glaukias had to promise not to act against Cassander, but he refused to give up Pyrrhus and his family.[15]

By 313 BC, Cassander was distracted by his war against Antigonus Monophthalmus, one of the most powerful of the Diadochi. Fearing an invasion from Asia Minor, where Antigonus was building up his forces, he shifted his attention from west to the east. Aeacides took advantage of the situation and returned to Epirus. He appears to have regained popularity and raised a large army. Cassander sent an army under his brother Philip who defeated Aeacides in two battles. Aeacides was wounded in the last battle and died soon after.[15]

First reign

In 307 BC, Glaukias invaded Epirus and put Pyrrhus on the throne. Pyrrhus was only eleven years old, so his guardians ruled in his stead until he came of age.[16] When he was seventeen he travelled to the court of Glaukias in Illyria to attend the wedding of one of Glaukias' sons. While he was in Illyria the Molossians rose in rebellion, drove out Pyrrhus' supporters, and returned Neoptolemus to the throne. This time Glaukias was unable to help him.[17]

Exile

Pyrrhus travelled to the Peloponnese and served his brother-in-law Demetrius Poliorcetes who had married his sister Deidamia, and who was campaigning against Cassander in southern Greece.

The Battle of Ipsus

In 302 BC, Demetrius took his army to Asia Minor to support his father Antigonus Monophthalmus. Pyrrhus impressed Antigonus for he is reputed to have said that Pyrrhus would become the greatest general of his time, if he lived long enough.[18]

Antigonus had grown too powerful and the other successors, Seleucus, Lysimachus, Ptolemy and Cassander, had united against him. Lysimachus and Seleucus, reinforced by two of Cassander's armies, had concentrated their forces in Asia Minor and marched on Antigonus. Both armies met at Ipsus in Phrygia. The Battle of Ipsus was the largest and most important battle of the Wars of the Successors. Pyrrhus probably fought with Demetrius on the right wing, a place of honour, and made a brilliant display of valour among the combatants. Despite these brave efforts, Antigonus lost both the battle and his life. Demetrius, victorious on his wing, managed to escape with 9,000 men, and Pyrrhus continued to serve his brother-in-law as he started rebuilding Antigonus' empire.[19]

Ptolemy

In 298 BC, Pyrrhus was taken hostage to Alexandria, under the terms of a peace treaty made between Demetrius and Ptolemy I Soter. There, he married Ptolemy I's stepdaughter Antigone (a daughter of Berenice I of Egypt from her first husband Philip—respectively, Ptolemy I's wife and a Macedonian noble). In 297 BC, Cassander died and Ptolemy, always looking for allies, decided to help restore Pyrrhus to his kingdom. He provided Pyrrhus with men and funds and sent him back to Epirus.[20]

Second reign

Pyrrhus returned to Epirus at the head of an army, but not willing to fight a civil war he agreed to rule Epirus together with Neoptolemus. Soon both kings started to plot against one another. Pyrrhus was informed of a plot against his life and decided to strike first. He invited his fellow king to a dinner and had him murdered. The act does not appear to have been unpopular as Epirus' nobility seem to have been devoted to him.[21]

In 295 BC, Pyrrhus transferred the capital of his kingdom to Ambracia. In 292 BC, he went to war against his former ally and brother-in-law Demetrius by invading Thessaly while Demetrius was besieging Thebes. Demetrius responded immediately; he left the siege to his son Antigonus Gonatas and marched back north at the head of a large army.[22] Pyrrhus, outnumbered, withdrew to Epirus.[23]

While he was back in Epirus, Pyrrhus suffered another setback. His second wife, Lannasa, daughter of Agathocles of Syracuse the self-proclaimed king of Sicily, deserted him. She claimed that she, a daughter of a Greek king, could no longer bear to share her home with barbarian women. She fled to Corcyra with her dowry, offering it and herself to Demetrius. He accepted, sailed to the island and took possession of both Corcyra and Lannasa. After returning to his army in mainland Greece, Demetrius planned to invade Epirus. In 289 BC, he invaded Pyrrhus' allies, the Aetolian League, hoping to neutralize them before he invaded Epirus. The Aetolians refused battle and retreated into the hills. After ransacking the Aetolians' countryside, Demetrius left a strong force under his best general Pantauchus in Aetolia and marched on Epirus. Meanwhile, Pyrrhus had raised his army and was marching to the rescue of his Aetolian allies. The two armies, on different roads, passed one another and Demetrius started plundering Epirus while Pyrrhus met Pantauchus in battle.

Pyrrhus had the bulk of the army of Epirus with him, probably 20,000–25,000 men, while Pantauchus commanded but a detachment of Demetrius' army consisting of around 11,000 men. The fighting was heavy, and according to the sources Pantauchus and Pyrrhus sought out one another. Pantauchus challenged Pyrrhus to individual combat, and Pyrrhus accepted. After hurling spears at each other they fought it out with swords. Pyrrhus was wounded, but in return wounded his opponent twice, in the thigh and in the neck. Pantauchus' bodyguards had to carry him away. Emboldened by their king's victory, the Epirotes resumed their attack and broke Pantauchus' army, and took 5,000 prisoners. The army then honoured Pyrrhus by bestowing the surname of 'Eagle' upon him. Demetrius, upon hearing of Pyrrhus's victory, marched back to Macedon. Pyrrhus released his prisoners and marched back to Epirus.[24]

In 289 BC, Pyrrhus, learning that Demetrius was dangerously ill, invaded Macedonia. His original intention was merely to raid and pillage, but with Demetrius unable to lead his forces he met almost no opposition. Pyrrhus penetrated as far as the old Macedonian capital of Aegae before Demetrius was well enough to take the field. Since Demetrius commanded a superior force, Pyrrhus had no choice but to retreat.[25]

Demetrius, just as restless as Pyrrhus, planned to invade Asia and reclaim his father's old domains. He first made peace with Pyrrhus granting him his holdings in Macedonia while holding on to Corcyra and Leucas, then he started to raise a vast army and a huge fleet.[26] Faced with this threat, the other Diadochi Lysimachus, Ptolemy, and Seleucus allied against him. The three kings sent embassies to Pyrrhus trying to win him over to their side or at least get him to remain neutral. If the allies won and Pyrrhus remained neutral he would gain nothing. If on the other hand Demetrius would be victorious he could overwhelm Pyrrhus at any time in the future. Pyrrhus's personal enmity against Demetrius might have played an additional role in his decision to join the allies.[27]

In 288 BC, the allied kings began their campaigns against Demetrius. Ptolemy sailed against Demetrius's Greek allies with a large fleet. Lysimachus invaded upper Macedonia from Thrace. Pyrrhus waited until Demetrius had marched against Lysimachus and then invaded southern Macedonia. Demetrius must have thought that Pyrrhus would not renege on his treaty, because western and southern Macedonia fell without opposition. Meanwhile, Demetrius had won a victory over Lysimachus near Amphipolis. When the Macedonian army heard that their homeland was being overrun by Pyrrhus, they turned on Demetrius. They were fed up with his autocratic rule and grandiose plans and refused to advance any further. Demetrius then led his army against Pyrrhus, probably hoping that his Macedonians would be more willing to fight a foreign invader rather than Lysimachus, a veteran of Alexander. Unfortunately for Demetrius, his troops were so fed up with him that they deserted to Pyrrhus and he had to flee. Lysimachus was soon joined by Pyrrhus and they decided to share rulership over Macedonia.[28]

Demetrius gathered a new army in Greece and besieged Athens, which had rebelled against the puppet government he had installed. The Athenians called on Pyrrhus for assistance and he marched against Demetrius once more. This caused Demetrius to raise the siege. The Athenians thanked Pyrrhus by erecting a bust to him and allowing him into the city for the celebrations. However, they did not allow his army to enter the city, probably fearing Pyrrhus would install a garrison and make himself overlord of Athens. Pyrrhus made the most of the situation and advised the Athenians never to let a king enter their city again.[29]

Pyrrhus and Demetrius made peace once more but, like all previous agreements, it did not last. When Demetrius, in 286 BC, invaded Asia in order to attack Lysimachus's Asian domains, Lysimachus requested that Pyrrhus invade Thessaly and from there attack Demetrius' garrisons in Greece. Pyrrhus agreed, probably in order to keep his fractious Macedonian troops busy and less likely to rebel and also to gain an easy victory over the weakened Antigonids.[30] He quickly defeated Antigonus Gonatas, Demetrius's son, who ceded Thessaly to him in order to make peace. Pyrrhus's Greek Empire was now at its zenith: he ruled an enlarged Epirus, half of Macedonia, and Thessaly.[29]

In 285 BC, Demetrius was defeated by Seleucus. This freed the hands of Lysimachus who decided to get rid of his co-ruler in Macedonia. He first isolated Pyrrhus from his traditional ally the Ptolemies, by marrying Arsinoe II, the sister of Ptolemy II Philadelphus. He also made a large donation to the Aetolians, Pyrrhus's main allies in Greece. Pyrrhus felt threatened enough to make an alliance with Antigonus Gonatas. In 284 BC, Lysimachus invaded Pyrrhus's half of Macedonia with a huge army.[31] Unable to stand against Lysimachus's superior army Pyrrhus retreated and linked up with Antigonus Gonatas. Lysimachus started a propaganda campaign in which he appealed to the patriotism of the Macedonians serving Pyrrhus. He reminded them that Pyrrhus was in fact a foreign king while he himself was a true Macedonian. The campaign was successful. With his Macedonian troops turning against him Pyrrhus had no other choice but to withdraw to Epirus. Lysimachus invaded and plundered Epirus the following year. Pyrrhus did not oppose Lysimachus for he was probably fighting a war in Illyria to the north. According to Pausanius, "Pyrrhus was roaming around as usual".[32]

Struggle with Rome

 
Routes taken against Rome in the Pyrrhic War (280–275 BC).

The Greek city of Tarentum, in southern Italy, fell out with Rome due to a violation of an old treaty that specified Rome was not to send warships into the Tarentine Gulf.[33] In 282 BC, the Romans installed garrisons in the Greek cities of Thurii (on the western end of the Tarentine Gulf), Locri, and Rhegium, and sent warships to Thurii. Although this was designed as a measure against the Italian peoples of Lucania, the Tarentines grew nervous and attacked the Romans in Thurii, driving the Roman garrison from the city and sinking several Roman warships. Tarentum was now faced with a Roman attack and certain defeat, unless they could enlist the aid of greater powers. Rome had already made itself into a major power, and was poised to subdue all the Greek cities in Magna Graecia. The Tarentines asked Pyrrhus to lead their war against the Romans.[6][34] Pyrrhus was encouraged to aid the Tarentines by the Oracle of Delphi. He recognized the possibility of carving out an empire for himself in Italy. He made an alliance with Ptolemy Keraunos, King of Macedon and his most powerful neighbor, and arrived in Italy in 280 BC.

 
Pyrrhus and his elephants.

Pyrrhus entered Italy with an army consisting of 20,000 infantry, 3,000 cavalry, 2,000 archers, 500 slingers, and 20 war elephants in a bid to subdue the Romans.[6] The elephants had been loaned to him by Ptolemy II Philadelphus, who had also promised 9,000 soldiers and a further 50 elephants to defend Epirus while Pyrrhus and his army were away.

Due to his superior cavalry, his elephants and his deadly phalanx infantry, he defeated the Romans, led by Consul Publius Valerius Laevinus, in the Battle of Heraclea in 280 BC,[35] in the Roman province of Lucania. There are conflicting sources about casualties. Hieronymus of Cardia reports the Romans lost about 7,000 while Pyrrhus lost 3,000 soldiers, including many of his best; Dionysius gives a bloodier view of 15,000 Roman dead and 13,000 Epirot.[36] Several tribes, including the Lucanians, Bruttii, Messapians, and the Greek cities of Croton and Locri, joined Pyrrhus. He then offered the Romans a peace treaty which was eventually rejected. Pyrrhus tried to wrest Campania from the Romans, but was thwarted in this by the reinforced army of Laevinus. He then boldly marched on Rome itself, but found its defences too formidable. Meanwhile, the Romans had made peace with the Etruscans and had recalled Tiberius Coruncanius, the other consul, who was marching his army southwards from Etruria towards Rome. Pyrrhus now faced three armies; the garrison of Rome, Laevinus from the south and Curuncanius from the north. Not wanting to be caught between three armies Pyrrhus withdrew to Tarentum, where he wintered his troops.[37]

When Pyrrhus invaded Apulia (279 BC), the two armies met in the Battle of Asculum, where Pyrrhus won a costly victory.[34] The consul Publius Decius Mus was the Roman commander, and while his able force was ultimately defeated, they almost managed to break the back of Pyrrhus' Epirot army, guaranteeing the security of Rome itself. In the end, the Romans lost 6,000 men and Pyrrhus 3,500 including many officers.[6] Pyrrhus later famously commented on his victory at Asculum, stating, "If we are victorious in one more battle with the Romans, we shall be utterly ruined".[38] It is from reports of this semi-legendary event that the term Pyrrhic victory originates.

Ruler of Sicily

In 278 BC, Pyrrhus received two offers simultaneously. The Greek cities in Sicily asked him to come and drive out Carthage, which along with Rome was one of the two great powers of the Western Mediterranean. At the same time, the Macedonians, whose King Ptolemy Keraunos had been killed by invading Gauls, asked Pyrrhus to ascend the throne of Macedon. Pyrrhus decided that Sicily offered him a greater opportunity, and sailed his army there.[6]

In 278 BC, soon after disembarking his army in Sicily, he lifted the Carthaginian Siege of Syracuse. Pyrrhus was proclaimed king of Sicily. He was already making plans for his son Helenus, a grandson of Agathocles of Syracuse through his mother, to inherit the kingdom of Sicily and his other son Alexander to be given Italy. In 277 BC, Pyrrhus captured Eryx, the strongest Carthaginian fortress in Sicily. This prompted the rest of the Carthaginian-controlled cities to defect to Pyrrhus.

In 276 BC, Pyrrhus negotiated with the Carthaginians. Although they were inclined to come to terms with Pyrrhus, supply him money and send him ships once friendly relations were established, he demanded that Carthage abandon all of Sicily and make the Libyan Sea a boundary between themselves and the Greeks. The Greek cities of Sicily opposed making peace with Carthage because the Carthaginians still controlled the powerful fortress of Lilybaeum, on the western end of the island. Pyrrhus eventually gave in to their proposals and broke off the peace negotiations. Pyrrhus' army then began besieging Lilybaeum. For two months he launched unsuccessful assaults on the city, until finally he realized he could not mount an effective siege without blockading it from the sea as well. Pyrrhus then requested manpower and money from the Sicilians in order to construct a powerful fleet. When the Sicilians became unhappy about these contributions he had to resort to compulsory contributions and force to keep them in line. These measures culminated in him proclaiming a military dictatorship of Sicily and installing military garrisons in Sicilian cities.[39]

These actions were deeply unpopular and soon Sicilian opinion became inflamed against him. Pyrrhus had so alienated the Sicilian Greeks that they were willing to make common cause with the Carthaginians. The Carthaginians took heart from this and sent another army against him. This army was promptly defeated. In spite of this victory, Sicily continued to grow increasingly hostile to Pyrrhus, who began to consider abandoning Sicily. At this point, Samnite and Tarentine envoys reached Pyrrhus and informed him that of all the Greek cities in Italy, only Tarentum had not been conquered by Rome. Pyrrhus made his decision and departed from Sicily. As his ship left the island, he turned and, foreshadowing the Punic Wars, said to his companions: "What a wrestling ground we are leaving, my friends, for the Carthaginians and the Romans."[40][41] While his army was being transported by ship to mainland Italy, Pyrrhus' navy was destroyed by the Carthaginians at the Battle of the Strait of Messina, with 98 warships sunk or disabled out of 110.

Retreat from Italy

While Pyrrhus had been campaigning against the Carthaginians, the Romans had rebuilt their army by calling up thousands of fresh recruits. When Pyrrhus returned from Sicily, he found himself vastly outnumbered against a superior Roman army under Manius Curius Dentatus. After the inconclusive Battle of Beneventum in 275 BC, Pyrrhus decided to end his campaign in Italy and return to Epirus which resulted in the loss of essentially all the gains he had made in Italy. The city of Tarentum remained under the dominion of the Epirotes.

Last wars and death

 
The Siege of Sparta, by François Topino-Lebrun

His western campaign had taken a heavy toll on his army as well as his treasury. Despite (or perhaps because of) this, Pyrrhus went to war yet again.[42] The realm of his rival king Antigonus Gonatas of Macedon was the most obvious target. Pyrrhus raised an army from his Epirote garrisons, Gallic mercenaries and the troops he had brought back from Italy and marched east into Macedon. He won an easy victory at the Battle of the Aous and took most of Macedon.[43]

Antigonus managed to hold on to a number of coastal cities.[44] He then waited for an opportunity to reclaim his kingdom while Pyrrhus was already looking for another war to fight. Furthermore, Pyrrhus made himself very unpopular in Macedon by allowing his Gauls to plunder the tombs of the Macedonian kings at Aegae.[45]

In 272 BC, Cleonymus, a Spartan of royal blood who was hated among fellow Spartans, asked Pyrrhus to attack Sparta and place him in power. Pyrrhus agreed to the plan, intending to win control of the Peloponnese for himself, but unexpected strong resistance thwarted his assault on Sparta. On the retreat he lost his firstborn son Ptolemy, who had been in command of the rearguard.

Pyrrhus had little time to mourn, as he was immediately offered an opportunity to intervene in a civic dispute in Argos. Since Antigonus Gonatas was approaching too, he hastened to enter the city with his army by stealth, only to find the place crowded with hostile troops. During the confused Battle of Argos in the narrow city streets, Pyrrhus was trapped. While he was fighting an Argive soldier, the soldier's old mother, who was watching from a rooftop, threw a tile which knocked him from his horse and broke part of his spine, paralyzing him. Whether he was alive or not after the blow is unknown, but his death was assured when a Macedonian soldier named Zopyrus, though frightened by the look on the face of the unconscious king, hesitantly and ineptly beheaded his motionless body. This story is later recounted by Plutarch in his Life of Pyrrhus.[46]

Antigonus had him cremated with all honours and sent his surviving son Helenus back to Epirus. That same year, upon hearing the news of Pyrrhus's death, the Tarentinians surrendered to Rome.

Legacy

 
A statue of Pyrrhus in Ioannina, Greece.

In his Life of Pyrrhus, Plutarch records that Hannibal ranked him as the greatest commander the world had ever seen,[4] though in the Life of Titus Quinctius Flamininus, Plutarch writes that Hannibal placed him second after Alexander the Great. This latter account is also given by Appian.[47] While he was a mercurial and often restless leader, and not always a wise king, he was considered one of the greatest military commanders of his time.

Pyrrhus was known for his benevolence. As a general, Pyrrhus's greatest political weaknesses were his failures to maintain focus and to maintain a strong treasury at home (many of his soldiers were costly mercenaries).

The concept of a monarch having a touch that could heal all wounds may have originated with Pyrrhus. As Pliny the Elder states, Pyrrhus' great toe on his right foot cured diseases of the spleen by merely touching the patient. His toe could also not be burned so when his body was cremated, his toe was put in a coffer, and kept at an unknown temple.[48]

Pyrrhus lends his name to the term "Pyrrhic victory", which stems from a statement he is alleged to have made following the Battle of Asculum. In response to congratulations for winning a costly victory over the Romans, he is reported to have said: "If we are victorious in one more battle with the Romans, we shall be utterly ruined".[38] The term Pyrrhic Victory has therefore come to signify a victory that was won at such cost that it loses all worth.

Pyrrhus and his campaign in Italy provided the Greek world with an opportunity to check the advance of Rome further into the Mediterranean. The failure to fully exploit this opportunity while Rome was still only an Italian regional power had immense consequences. The conquest of Magna Graecia by the Romans brought them into direct competition with Carthage, ultimately leading to the First Punic War. Rome's victory in this conflict arguably transformed it from a regional power to one of the most powerful states in the Mediterranean. Over the next century the failure of the various Kingdoms and city states of the Hellenistic world to put on a united front against Rome resulted in their absorption into the Roman Empire or, in the case of some, the reduction to the status of a Roman client state. By 197 BC, Macedonia and many southern Greek city-states became Roman client states; in 188 BC, the Seleucid Empire was forced to cede most of Asia Minor to Rome's ally Pergamon (Pergamum). In 133 BC Attalus III, the last King of Pergamon (excluding the pretender Eumenes III), bequeathed the Kingdom and its considerable territories in Asia Minor to Rome in his will. At the destruction of Corinth in 146 BC Rome defeated the city-state of Corinth and its allies in the Achaean League. The league was dissolved and Rome took formal possession of the territoires which constitute modern day Greece, re-organising these territories into province of Macedonia.[49] Finally, in 63 BC, Pompey Magnus delivered the final coup de grace to the already much reduced Seleucid Empire, deposing its last ruler and absorbing its territories into the new Roman province of Syria.

Pyrrhus wrote memoirs and several books on the art of war. These have since been lost, although, according to Plutarch, Hannibal was influenced by them,[4] and they received praise from Cicero.[50]

Pyrrhus was married five times: his first wife Antigone bore him a daughter called Olympias and a son named Ptolemy in honour of her stepfather. She died in 295 BC, possibly in childbirth, since that was the same year her son was born.[51] His second wife was Lanassa, daughter of King Agathocles of Syracuse (r. 317–289 BC), whom he married in about 295 BC; the couple had two sons, Alexander[51] and Helenus; Lanassa left Pyrrhus. His third wife was the daughter of Audoleon, King of Paeonia; his fourth wife was the Illyrian princess Bircenna, who was the daughter of King Bardylis II (r. c. 295–290 BC); and his fifth wife was the daughter of Ptolemy Keraunos, whom he married in 281/280 BC.

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b Sampson, Gareth C. (2020-08-05). Rome & Parthia: Empires at War: Ventidius, Antony and the Second Romano-Parthian War, 40–20 BC. Pen and Sword Military. ISBN 978-1-5267-1015-4.
  2. ^ Hackens 1992, p. 239; Grant 2010, p. 17; Anglin & Hamblin 1993, p. 121; Richard 2003, p. 139; Sekunda, Northwood & Hook 1995, p. 6; Daly 2003, p. 4; Greene 2008, p. 98; Kishlansky, Geary & O'Brien 2005, p. 113; Saylor 2007, p. 332.
  3. ^ Hammond 1967, pp. 340–345; Hammond has argued convincingly that the Epirotes were a Greek-speaking people.
  4. ^ a b c d Plutarch. Parallel Lives, "Pyrrhus".
  5. ^ a b Encyclopædia Britannica ("Epirus") 2013.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Encyclopædia Britannica ("Pyrrhus") 2013.
  7. ^ Borza 1992, p. 62.
  8. ^ Jones 1999, p. 45; Chamoux 2003, p. 62; American Numismatic Society 1960, p. 196.
  9. ^ Malalas, Chronography, § 8.208
  10. ^ Milton, John and W. Bell. 1890. Milton's L'allegro, Il Penseroso, Arcades, Lycidas, Sonnets Etc. London and New York: Macmillan and Co, p. 168; Smith, William. 1860. A New Classical Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography, Mythology and Geography. New York: Harper & Brothers Publishers, p. 729; Tytler, Alexander Fraser. 1823. Elements of General History. Concord, NH: Isaac Hill, p. 102.
  11. ^ a b O'Hara 2017, p. 106.
  12. ^ Beekes 2010, s.v. πυρρός.
  13. ^ At Pyrrhus' birth in 319 BC, Aeacides was only a prince and his father, Arrybas, ruled Epirus as a regent to the underaged King Neoptolemus.
  14. ^ Wilkes 1992, p. 124.
  15. ^ a b Champion 2009, p. 12.
  16. ^ Justin, Epitome, 17.3.
  17. ^ Champion 2009, p. 14; Glaukias' kingdom was being attacked by pirates.
  18. ^ Champion 2009, p. 15.
  19. ^ Champion 2009, pp. 14–17.
  20. ^ Champion 2009, p. 18.
  21. ^ Plutarch. Life of Pyrrhus, 5.
  22. ^ Champion 2009, p. 32; Demetrius commanded the full might of the Macedonian army which at that particular time was much larger than the army of Epirus.
  23. ^ Champion 2009, p. 32.
  24. ^ Champion 2009, pp. 33–34.
  25. ^ Champion 2009, p. 34.
  26. ^ Reputedly raising 110,000 soldiers and 500 ships.
  27. ^ Champion 2009, pp. 34–35.
  28. ^ Champion 2009, pp. 35–36.
  29. ^ a b Champion 2009, p. 37.
  30. ^ Plutarch. Pyrrhus, 12; Plutarch. Demetrius, 41.
  31. ^ In 301 BC, at the Battle of Ipsus, Lysimachus had fielded 40,000 troops. Since then he had acquired half of Macedonia and western Asia Minor. With these combined assets his army could have numbered over 70,000 troops. Pyrrhus commanded 40,000 troops at best.
  32. ^ Champion 2009, pp. 37–39; Greenwalt 2010, p. 298: "From 288 until 284, Pyrrhus and Lysimachus shared the rule of Macedonia until the latter drove the former back to Epirus (Plut., Pyrrhus 7–12)."; Pausanius. Guide to Greece, 1.7.
  33. ^ Hackens 1992, pp. 20-21: "When, however, a Roman fleet sailed into the Tarentine Gulf (perhaps in order to place a garrison in Thurii) and thereby violated the terms of a treaty probably made at the time of Cleonymus, Tarentum responded swiftly … "
  34. ^ a b "Pyrrhus". Encarta. Microsoft Corporation. 2008.
  35. ^ "History of Liberty: The Ancient Romans" (1853), p. 6.
  36. ^ Plutarch. Parallel Lives: Pyrrhus, 17.4.
  37. ^ Champion 2009, pp. 75–76.
  38. ^ a b Plutarch. Parallel Lives: Pyrrhus, 21.9.
  39. ^ Garouphalias 1979, pp. 97–108.
  40. ^ Garouphalias 1979, pp. 109–112.
  41. ^ Plutarch. Parallel Lives: Pyrrhus, 23.6.
  42. ^ The easiest way for a king to raise funds was to invade his neighbours.
  43. ^ Champion 2009, pp. 125–128; Plutarch. Life of Pyrrhus, 26.
  44. ^ He had inherited a powerful navy from his father, Demetrius.
  45. ^ Champion 2009, p. 128.
  46. ^ "Plutarch • Life of Pyrrhus".
  47. ^ Appian. History of the Syrian Wars, §10 and §11.
  48. ^ Pliny, Naturalis Historia, 2.111
  49. ^ Pausanias, 7.16
  50. ^ Tinsley 2006, p. 211.
  51. ^ a b Bennett 2010.

Sources

  • American Numismatic Society (1960). Numismatic Literature, Issues 50-57. American Numismatic Society.
  • Anglin, Jay Pascal; Hamblin, William James (1993). HarperCollins College Outline World History to 1648. New York, NY: HarperCollins. ISBN 0-06-467123-2.
  • Bennett, Chris (2010). "Antigone (Egyptian Royal Genealogy - The Ptolemaic Dynasty)". Tyndale House.
  • Borza, Eugene N. (1992). In the Shadow of Olympus: The Emergence of Macedon (Revised ed.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-00880-9.
  • Champion, Jeff (2009). Pyrrhus of Epirus. Barnsley, South Yorkshire: Pen & Sword Books Limited. ISBN 978-1-84468-282-9.
  • Chamoux, François (2003). Hellenistic Civilization. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 0-631-22242-1.
  • Daly, Gregory (2003). Cannae: The Experience of Battle in the Second Punic War. New York, NY and London, UK: Routledge (Taylor & Francis). ISBN 0-203-98750-0.
  • Encyclopædia Britannica ("Epirus") (2013). "Epirus". Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved 1 July 2013.
  • Encyclopædia Britannica ("Pyrrhus") (2013). "Pyrrhus". Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved 1 July 2013.
  • Garouphalias, Petros (1979). Pyrrhus: King of Epirus. London, UK: Stacey International. ISBN 0-905743-13-X.
  • Grant, R. G. (2010). Commanders: History's Greatest Military Leaders. New York, NY: DK Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7566-7341-3.
  • Greene, Robert (2008). The 33 Strategies of War. London, UK: Penguin Books Limited. ISBN 978-0-14-311278-5.
  • Greenwalt, William S. (2010). "Macedonia, Illyria, and Epirus". In Roisman, Joseph; Worthington, Ian (eds.). A Companion to Ancient Macedonia. Oxford, Chichester, & Malden: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 279–305. ISBN 978-1-4051-7936-2.
  • Hackens, Tony, ed. (1992). The Age of Pyrrhus: Papers Delivered at the International Conference, Brown University, 8–10 April, 1988 (Archaeologia Transatlantica XI). Providence, RI: Center for Old World Archaeology and Art, Brown University.
  • Hammond, Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière (1967). Epirus: The Geography, the Ancient Remains, the History and the Topography of Epirus and Adjacent Areas. Oxford: The Clarendon Press.
  • Jones, Christopher Prestige (1999). Kinship Diplomacy in the Ancient World. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-50527-1.
  • Kishlansky, Mark A.; Geary, Patrick; O'Brien, Patricia (2005). Civilization in the West (Volume 1, Parts 1-12). London, UK: Pearson Longman. ISBN 0-321-23621-1.
  • O'Hara, J. J. (2017). True Names: Vergil and the Alexandrian Tradition of Etymological Wordplay. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0472036875.
  • Pausanias, Description of Greece, Book 7 7
  • Richard, Carl J. (2003). Twelve Greeks and Romans who Changed the World. Oxford, UK: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Incorporated. ISBN 0-7425-2791-3.
  • Saylor, Steven (2007). Roma: The Novel of Ancient Rome. New York, NY: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-32831-3.
  • Sekunda, Nick; Northwood, Simon; Hook, Richard (1995). Early Roman Armies. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-85532-513-6.
  • Tinsley, Barbara Sher (2006). Reconstructing Western Civilization: Irreverent Essays on Antiquity. Selingsgrove, PA: Susquehanna University Press. ISBN 1-57591-095-0.
  • Winkes, John (1995) [1992]. The Illyrians. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishers Limited. ISBN 0-631-19807-5.
  • Wilkes, Rolf (1992). "The Pyrrhus Portrait". In Hackens, Tony (ed.). The Age of Pyrrhus, Proceedings of an International Conference held at Brown University April 8–10, 1988 (Archaeologia Transatlantica XI). Providence, RI: Center for Old World Archaeology and Art, Brown University. pp. 175–188.

Further reading

  • Abbott, Jacob (1901). Makers of History: Pyrrhus. New York and London: Harper & Brothers Publishers.
  • Cowan, Ross (2009). Roman Conquests: Italy. Barnsley: Pen & Sword Books Limited. pp. 103–147. ISBN 978-1-84-415937-6.
  • Cowan, Ross (2007). For the Glory of Rome: A History of Warriors and Warfare. London: Greenhill Books. pp. 15–77. ISBN 978-1-85-367733-5.
  • Franke, P. R. (1989). "CHAPTER 10 PYRRHUS". In Astin, A. E.; Walbank, F. W.; Frederiksen, M. W.; Ogilvie, R. M.; Drummond, A. (eds.). The Cambridge Ancient History: The Rise of Rome to 220 BC. Vol. VII, Part 2. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 456–485. ISBN 0-521-23446-8.
  • Leveque, Pierre (1957). Pyrrhos. Paris: E. de Boccard.

External links

Preceded by King of Epirus
307–302 BC
Succeeded by
Preceded by King of Epirus
297–272 BC
Succeeded by
Preceded by King of Macedon
288–285 BC
With: Lysimachus
Succeeded by
Preceded by King of Macedon
274–272 BC

pyrrhus, epirus, this, article, about, epirote, king, other, uses, pyrrhus, pyrrhus, greek, Πύρρος, pýrrhos, greek, king, statesman, hellenistic, period, king, molossians, royal, aeacid, house, later, became, king, malalas, also, called, toparch, epirus, stron. This article is about the Epirote king For other uses see Pyrrhus Pyrrhus ˈ p ɪr e s Greek Pyrros Pyrrhos 319 318 272 BC was a Greek king and statesman of the Hellenistic period 2 3 4 5 6 He was king of the Molossians 5 7 of the royal Aeacid house 8 and later he became king Malalas also called him toparch 9 of Epirus He was one of the strongest opponents of early Rome and had been regarded as one of the greatest generals of antiquity 10 Several of his victorious battles caused him unacceptably heavy losses from which the term Pyrrhic victory was coined PyrrhusA marble bust of Pyrrhus from the Villa of the Papyri at the Roman site of Herculaneum now in the National Archaeological Museum of Naples ItalyKing of EpirusReign297 272 BC 1 second reign PredecessorNeoptolemus IISuccessorAlexander IIReign307 302 BC 1 first reign PredecessorAlcetas IISuccessorNeoptolemus IIKing of MacedoniaReign274 272 BCPredecessorAntigonus IISuccessorAntigonus IIReign288 285 BCPredecessorDemetrius ISuccessorAntigonus IITyrant of SyracuseReign278 276 BCPredecessorThinion amp SosistratusSuccessorHiero IIBornc 319 BCEpirus GreeceDied272 BC aged about 46 Argos Peloponnese GreeceSpouseAntigone Lanassa BircennaIssueOlympias Ptolemy Alexander II HelenusDynastyAeacidaeFatherAeacidesMotherPhthiaReligionHellenismMilitary careerBattles warsWars of the Diadochi Battle of Ipsus Pyrrhic War Battle of Heraclea Battle of Asculum Siege of Syracuse Siege of Lilybaeum Battle of the Strait of Messina Battle of Beneventum Pyrrhus invasion of the Peloponnese Siege of Sparta Battle of ArgosPyrrhus became king of Epirus in 306 BC at the age of 13 but was dethroned by Cassander four years later He saw action during the Wars of the Diadochi and regained his throne in 297 BC with the support of Ptolemy I Soter During what came to be known as the Pyrrhic War Pyrrhus fought Rome at the behest of Tarentum scoring costly victories at Heraclea and Asculum He proceeded to take over Sicily from Carthage but was soon driven out and lost all his gains in Italy after the Battle of Beneventum in 275 BC Pyrrhus seized the Macedonian throne from Antigonus II Gonatas in 274 BC and invaded the Peloponnese in 272 BC The Epirote assault on Sparta was thwarted however and Pyrrhus was killed during a street battle at Argos Contents 1 Etymology 2 Early life 3 First reign 4 Exile 4 1 The Battle of Ipsus 4 2 Ptolemy 5 Second reign 6 Struggle with Rome 7 Ruler of Sicily 8 Retreat from Italy 9 Last wars and death 10 Legacy 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksEtymologyThe Latinized Pyrrhus derives from the Greek Pyrrhos ˈ p ɪr e s Greek Pyrros meaning flame like or flammable derived from the word Pyr ˈ p ɪr Greek Pyr meaning fire and the suffix ros ˈ r e s Greek ros meaning able or pertaining to 11 According to others the name s actual meaning is fiery red coloured and was especially used to denote red hair 12 Pyrrhos was also used as an alternate name for Neoptolemus son of Achilles and the princess Deidamia in Homeric Greek mythology 11 Early lifeIn c 319 BC Pyrrhus was born to prince Aeacides of Epirus 13 and Phthia a Thessalian noblewoman the daughter of the Thessalian general Menon Aeacides was a cousin of Olympias making Pyrrhus a second cousin to Alexander the Great He had two sisters Deidamia and Troias In 319 318 BC Arrybas Aeacides father and the regent of Epirus died leaving Epirus to the joint kings Aeacides and Neoptolemus Aeacides supported Olympias in her fight against Cassander and marched on Macedon In 317 BC when Pyrrhus was only two Olympias requested Aeacides support yet again and he marched on Macedon a second time Many of his soldiers did not like their service and mutinied Aeacides released these soldiers from his army but as a result his army was too small to achieve anything When the mutineers arrived in Epirus they caused a rebellion against their absent king and Aeacides was dethroned Cassander sent one of his generals Lyciscus to act as regent to the still underaged Neoptolemus Epirus in effect became a puppet kingdom of Cassander Pyrrhus family fled north and took refuge with Glaukias of the Taulantians one of the largest Illyrian tribes 6 Pyrrhus was raised by Beroea Glaukias wife a Molossian of the Aeacidae dynasty 4 14 Cassander marched against Glaukias defeated his army and captured Apollonia Glaukias had to promise not to act against Cassander but he refused to give up Pyrrhus and his family 15 By 313 BC Cassander was distracted by his war against Antigonus Monophthalmus one of the most powerful of the Diadochi Fearing an invasion from Asia Minor where Antigonus was building up his forces he shifted his attention from west to the east Aeacides took advantage of the situation and returned to Epirus He appears to have regained popularity and raised a large army Cassander sent an army under his brother Philip who defeated Aeacides in two battles Aeacides was wounded in the last battle and died soon after 15 First reignIn 307 BC Glaukias invaded Epirus and put Pyrrhus on the throne Pyrrhus was only eleven years old so his guardians ruled in his stead until he came of age 16 When he was seventeen he travelled to the court of Glaukias in Illyria to attend the wedding of one of Glaukias sons While he was in Illyria the Molossians rose in rebellion drove out Pyrrhus supporters and returned Neoptolemus to the throne This time Glaukias was unable to help him 17 ExilePyrrhus travelled to the Peloponnese and served his brother in law Demetrius Poliorcetes who had married his sister Deidamia and who was campaigning against Cassander in southern Greece The Battle of Ipsus Main article Battle of Ipsus In 302 BC Demetrius took his army to Asia Minor to support his father Antigonus Monophthalmus Pyrrhus impressed Antigonus for he is reputed to have said that Pyrrhus would become the greatest general of his time if he lived long enough 18 Antigonus had grown too powerful and the other successors Seleucus Lysimachus Ptolemy and Cassander had united against him Lysimachus and Seleucus reinforced by two of Cassander s armies had concentrated their forces in Asia Minor and marched on Antigonus Both armies met at Ipsus in Phrygia The Battle of Ipsus was the largest and most important battle of the Wars of the Successors Pyrrhus probably fought with Demetrius on the right wing a place of honour and made a brilliant display of valour among the combatants Despite these brave efforts Antigonus lost both the battle and his life Demetrius victorious on his wing managed to escape with 9 000 men and Pyrrhus continued to serve his brother in law as he started rebuilding Antigonus empire 19 Ptolemy In 298 BC Pyrrhus was taken hostage to Alexandria under the terms of a peace treaty made between Demetrius and Ptolemy I Soter There he married Ptolemy I s stepdaughter Antigone a daughter of Berenice I of Egypt from her first husband Philip respectively Ptolemy I s wife and a Macedonian noble In 297 BC Cassander died and Ptolemy always looking for allies decided to help restore Pyrrhus to his kingdom He provided Pyrrhus with men and funds and sent him back to Epirus 20 Second reignPyrrhus returned to Epirus at the head of an army but not willing to fight a civil war he agreed to rule Epirus together with Neoptolemus Soon both kings started to plot against one another Pyrrhus was informed of a plot against his life and decided to strike first He invited his fellow king to a dinner and had him murdered The act does not appear to have been unpopular as Epirus nobility seem to have been devoted to him 21 In 295 BC Pyrrhus transferred the capital of his kingdom to Ambracia In 292 BC he went to war against his former ally and brother in law Demetrius by invading Thessaly while Demetrius was besieging Thebes Demetrius responded immediately he left the siege to his son Antigonus Gonatas and marched back north at the head of a large army 22 Pyrrhus outnumbered withdrew to Epirus 23 While he was back in Epirus Pyrrhus suffered another setback His second wife Lannasa daughter of Agathocles of Syracuse the self proclaimed king of Sicily deserted him She claimed that she a daughter of a Greek king could no longer bear to share her home with barbarian women She fled to Corcyra with her dowry offering it and herself to Demetrius He accepted sailed to the island and took possession of both Corcyra and Lannasa After returning to his army in mainland Greece Demetrius planned to invade Epirus In 289 BC he invaded Pyrrhus allies the Aetolian League hoping to neutralize them before he invaded Epirus The Aetolians refused battle and retreated into the hills After ransacking the Aetolians countryside Demetrius left a strong force under his best general Pantauchus in Aetolia and marched on Epirus Meanwhile Pyrrhus had raised his army and was marching to the rescue of his Aetolian allies The two armies on different roads passed one another and Demetrius started plundering Epirus while Pyrrhus met Pantauchus in battle Pyrrhus had the bulk of the army of Epirus with him probably 20 000 25 000 men while Pantauchus commanded but a detachment of Demetrius army consisting of around 11 000 men The fighting was heavy and according to the sources Pantauchus and Pyrrhus sought out one another Pantauchus challenged Pyrrhus to individual combat and Pyrrhus accepted After hurling spears at each other they fought it out with swords Pyrrhus was wounded but in return wounded his opponent twice in the thigh and in the neck Pantauchus bodyguards had to carry him away Emboldened by their king s victory the Epirotes resumed their attack and broke Pantauchus army and took 5 000 prisoners The army then honoured Pyrrhus by bestowing the surname of Eagle upon him Demetrius upon hearing of Pyrrhus s victory marched back to Macedon Pyrrhus released his prisoners and marched back to Epirus 24 In 289 BC Pyrrhus learning that Demetrius was dangerously ill invaded Macedonia His original intention was merely to raid and pillage but with Demetrius unable to lead his forces he met almost no opposition Pyrrhus penetrated as far as the old Macedonian capital of Aegae before Demetrius was well enough to take the field Since Demetrius commanded a superior force Pyrrhus had no choice but to retreat 25 Demetrius just as restless as Pyrrhus planned to invade Asia and reclaim his father s old domains He first made peace with Pyrrhus granting him his holdings in Macedonia while holding on to Corcyra and Leucas then he started to raise a vast army and a huge fleet 26 Faced with this threat the other Diadochi Lysimachus Ptolemy and Seleucus allied against him The three kings sent embassies to Pyrrhus trying to win him over to their side or at least get him to remain neutral If the allies won and Pyrrhus remained neutral he would gain nothing If on the other hand Demetrius would be victorious he could overwhelm Pyrrhus at any time in the future Pyrrhus s personal enmity against Demetrius might have played an additional role in his decision to join the allies 27 In 288 BC the allied kings began their campaigns against Demetrius Ptolemy sailed against Demetrius s Greek allies with a large fleet Lysimachus invaded upper Macedonia from Thrace Pyrrhus waited until Demetrius had marched against Lysimachus and then invaded southern Macedonia Demetrius must have thought that Pyrrhus would not renege on his treaty because western and southern Macedonia fell without opposition Meanwhile Demetrius had won a victory over Lysimachus near Amphipolis When the Macedonian army heard that their homeland was being overrun by Pyrrhus they turned on Demetrius They were fed up with his autocratic rule and grandiose plans and refused to advance any further Demetrius then led his army against Pyrrhus probably hoping that his Macedonians would be more willing to fight a foreign invader rather than Lysimachus a veteran of Alexander Unfortunately for Demetrius his troops were so fed up with him that they deserted to Pyrrhus and he had to flee Lysimachus was soon joined by Pyrrhus and they decided to share rulership over Macedonia 28 Demetrius gathered a new army in Greece and besieged Athens which had rebelled against the puppet government he had installed The Athenians called on Pyrrhus for assistance and he marched against Demetrius once more This caused Demetrius to raise the siege The Athenians thanked Pyrrhus by erecting a bust to him and allowing him into the city for the celebrations However they did not allow his army to enter the city probably fearing Pyrrhus would install a garrison and make himself overlord of Athens Pyrrhus made the most of the situation and advised the Athenians never to let a king enter their city again 29 Pyrrhus and Demetrius made peace once more but like all previous agreements it did not last When Demetrius in 286 BC invaded Asia in order to attack Lysimachus s Asian domains Lysimachus requested that Pyrrhus invade Thessaly and from there attack Demetrius garrisons in Greece Pyrrhus agreed probably in order to keep his fractious Macedonian troops busy and less likely to rebel and also to gain an easy victory over the weakened Antigonids 30 He quickly defeated Antigonus Gonatas Demetrius s son who ceded Thessaly to him in order to make peace Pyrrhus s Greek Empire was now at its zenith he ruled an enlarged Epirus half of Macedonia and Thessaly 29 In 285 BC Demetrius was defeated by Seleucus This freed the hands of Lysimachus who decided to get rid of his co ruler in Macedonia He first isolated Pyrrhus from his traditional ally the Ptolemies by marrying Arsinoe II the sister of Ptolemy II Philadelphus He also made a large donation to the Aetolians Pyrrhus s main allies in Greece Pyrrhus felt threatened enough to make an alliance with Antigonus Gonatas In 284 BC Lysimachus invaded Pyrrhus s half of Macedonia with a huge army 31 Unable to stand against Lysimachus s superior army Pyrrhus retreated and linked up with Antigonus Gonatas Lysimachus started a propaganda campaign in which he appealed to the patriotism of the Macedonians serving Pyrrhus He reminded them that Pyrrhus was in fact a foreign king while he himself was a true Macedonian The campaign was successful With his Macedonian troops turning against him Pyrrhus had no other choice but to withdraw to Epirus Lysimachus invaded and plundered Epirus the following year Pyrrhus did not oppose Lysimachus for he was probably fighting a war in Illyria to the north According to Pausanius Pyrrhus was roaming around as usual 32 Struggle with RomeMain article Pyrrhic War nbsp Routes taken against Rome in the Pyrrhic War 280 275 BC The Greek city of Tarentum in southern Italy fell out with Rome due to a violation of an old treaty that specified Rome was not to send warships into the Tarentine Gulf 33 In 282 BC the Romans installed garrisons in the Greek cities of Thurii on the western end of the Tarentine Gulf Locri and Rhegium and sent warships to Thurii Although this was designed as a measure against the Italian peoples of Lucania the Tarentines grew nervous and attacked the Romans in Thurii driving the Roman garrison from the city and sinking several Roman warships Tarentum was now faced with a Roman attack and certain defeat unless they could enlist the aid of greater powers Rome had already made itself into a major power and was poised to subdue all the Greek cities in Magna Graecia The Tarentines asked Pyrrhus to lead their war against the Romans 6 34 Pyrrhus was encouraged to aid the Tarentines by the Oracle of Delphi He recognized the possibility of carving out an empire for himself in Italy He made an alliance with Ptolemy Keraunos King of Macedon and his most powerful neighbor and arrived in Italy in 280 BC nbsp Pyrrhus and his elephants Pyrrhus entered Italy with an army consisting of 20 000 infantry 3 000 cavalry 2 000 archers 500 slingers and 20 war elephants in a bid to subdue the Romans 6 The elephants had been loaned to him by Ptolemy II Philadelphus who had also promised 9 000 soldiers and a further 50 elephants to defend Epirus while Pyrrhus and his army were away Due to his superior cavalry his elephants and his deadly phalanx infantry he defeated the Romans led by Consul Publius Valerius Laevinus in the Battle of Heraclea in 280 BC 35 in the Roman province of Lucania There are conflicting sources about casualties Hieronymus of Cardia reports the Romans lost about 7 000 while Pyrrhus lost 3 000 soldiers including many of his best Dionysius gives a bloodier view of 15 000 Roman dead and 13 000 Epirot 36 Several tribes including the Lucanians Bruttii Messapians and the Greek cities of Croton and Locri joined Pyrrhus He then offered the Romans a peace treaty which was eventually rejected Pyrrhus tried to wrest Campania from the Romans but was thwarted in this by the reinforced army of Laevinus He then boldly marched on Rome itself but found its defences too formidable Meanwhile the Romans had made peace with the Etruscans and had recalled Tiberius Coruncanius the other consul who was marching his army southwards from Etruria towards Rome Pyrrhus now faced three armies the garrison of Rome Laevinus from the south and Curuncanius from the north Not wanting to be caught between three armies Pyrrhus withdrew to Tarentum where he wintered his troops 37 When Pyrrhus invaded Apulia 279 BC the two armies met in the Battle of Asculum where Pyrrhus won a costly victory 34 The consul Publius Decius Mus was the Roman commander and while his able force was ultimately defeated they almost managed to break the back of Pyrrhus Epirot army guaranteeing the security of Rome itself In the end the Romans lost 6 000 men and Pyrrhus 3 500 including many officers 6 Pyrrhus later famously commented on his victory at Asculum stating If we are victorious in one more battle with the Romans we shall be utterly ruined 38 It is from reports of this semi legendary event that the term Pyrrhic victory originates Ruler of SicilyIn 278 BC Pyrrhus received two offers simultaneously The Greek cities in Sicily asked him to come and drive out Carthage which along with Rome was one of the two great powers of the Western Mediterranean At the same time the Macedonians whose King Ptolemy Keraunos had been killed by invading Gauls asked Pyrrhus to ascend the throne of Macedon Pyrrhus decided that Sicily offered him a greater opportunity and sailed his army there 6 In 278 BC soon after disembarking his army in Sicily he lifted the Carthaginian Siege of Syracuse Pyrrhus was proclaimed king of Sicily He was already making plans for his son Helenus a grandson of Agathocles of Syracuse through his mother to inherit the kingdom of Sicily and his other son Alexander to be given Italy In 277 BC Pyrrhus captured Eryx the strongest Carthaginian fortress in Sicily This prompted the rest of the Carthaginian controlled cities to defect to Pyrrhus In 276 BC Pyrrhus negotiated with the Carthaginians Although they were inclined to come to terms with Pyrrhus supply him money and send him ships once friendly relations were established he demanded that Carthage abandon all of Sicily and make the Libyan Sea a boundary between themselves and the Greeks The Greek cities of Sicily opposed making peace with Carthage because the Carthaginians still controlled the powerful fortress of Lilybaeum on the western end of the island Pyrrhus eventually gave in to their proposals and broke off the peace negotiations Pyrrhus army then began besieging Lilybaeum For two months he launched unsuccessful assaults on the city until finally he realized he could not mount an effective siege without blockading it from the sea as well Pyrrhus then requested manpower and money from the Sicilians in order to construct a powerful fleet When the Sicilians became unhappy about these contributions he had to resort to compulsory contributions and force to keep them in line These measures culminated in him proclaiming a military dictatorship of Sicily and installing military garrisons in Sicilian cities 39 These actions were deeply unpopular and soon Sicilian opinion became inflamed against him Pyrrhus had so alienated the Sicilian Greeks that they were willing to make common cause with the Carthaginians The Carthaginians took heart from this and sent another army against him This army was promptly defeated In spite of this victory Sicily continued to grow increasingly hostile to Pyrrhus who began to consider abandoning Sicily At this point Samnite and Tarentine envoys reached Pyrrhus and informed him that of all the Greek cities in Italy only Tarentum had not been conquered by Rome Pyrrhus made his decision and departed from Sicily As his ship left the island he turned and foreshadowing the Punic Wars said to his companions What a wrestling ground we are leaving my friends for the Carthaginians and the Romans 40 41 While his army was being transported by ship to mainland Italy Pyrrhus navy was destroyed by the Carthaginians at the Battle of the Strait of Messina with 98 warships sunk or disabled out of 110 nbsp Coin of Pyrrhus minted at Syracuse 278 BC Obverse Veiled head of Phtia with oak wreath caption F8IAS of Phtia Reverse Thunderbolt BASILEWS PYRROY of King Pyrrhus nbsp Pyrrhos King of Epeiros 297 272 BC Head of Zeus in wreath of oak Demeter seated holding long sceptre and her veil caption BASILEWS PYRROY of king Pyrrhus nbsp Coin of Pyrrhus Kingdom of Epirus Head of Kore left wreathed with grain long torch behind Athena Alkis advancing left brandishing spear in right hand amp holding shield on left arm star before face thunderbolt in left field E in right field inscription BASILEWS PYRROY of King Pyrrhus Retreat from ItalyWhile Pyrrhus had been campaigning against the Carthaginians the Romans had rebuilt their army by calling up thousands of fresh recruits When Pyrrhus returned from Sicily he found himself vastly outnumbered against a superior Roman army under Manius Curius Dentatus After the inconclusive Battle of Beneventum in 275 BC Pyrrhus decided to end his campaign in Italy and return to Epirus which resulted in the loss of essentially all the gains he had made in Italy The city of Tarentum remained under the dominion of the Epirotes Last wars and deathMain article Siege of Sparta nbsp The Siege of Sparta by Francois Topino LebrunHis western campaign had taken a heavy toll on his army as well as his treasury Despite or perhaps because of this Pyrrhus went to war yet again 42 The realm of his rival king Antigonus Gonatas of Macedon was the most obvious target Pyrrhus raised an army from his Epirote garrisons Gallic mercenaries and the troops he had brought back from Italy and marched east into Macedon He won an easy victory at the Battle of the Aous and took most of Macedon 43 Antigonus managed to hold on to a number of coastal cities 44 He then waited for an opportunity to reclaim his kingdom while Pyrrhus was already looking for another war to fight Furthermore Pyrrhus made himself very unpopular in Macedon by allowing his Gauls to plunder the tombs of the Macedonian kings at Aegae 45 In 272 BC Cleonymus a Spartan of royal blood who was hated among fellow Spartans asked Pyrrhus to attack Sparta and place him in power Pyrrhus agreed to the plan intending to win control of the Peloponnese for himself but unexpected strong resistance thwarted his assault on Sparta On the retreat he lost his firstborn son Ptolemy who had been in command of the rearguard Pyrrhus had little time to mourn as he was immediately offered an opportunity to intervene in a civic dispute in Argos Since Antigonus Gonatas was approaching too he hastened to enter the city with his army by stealth only to find the place crowded with hostile troops During the confused Battle of Argos in the narrow city streets Pyrrhus was trapped While he was fighting an Argive soldier the soldier s old mother who was watching from a rooftop threw a tile which knocked him from his horse and broke part of his spine paralyzing him Whether he was alive or not after the blow is unknown but his death was assured when a Macedonian soldier named Zopyrus though frightened by the look on the face of the unconscious king hesitantly and ineptly beheaded his motionless body This story is later recounted by Plutarch in his Life of Pyrrhus 46 Antigonus had him cremated with all honours and sent his surviving son Helenus back to Epirus That same year upon hearing the news of Pyrrhus s death the Tarentinians surrendered to Rome Legacy nbsp A statue of Pyrrhus in Ioannina Greece In his Life of Pyrrhus Plutarch records that Hannibal ranked him as the greatest commander the world had ever seen 4 though in the Life of Titus Quinctius Flamininus Plutarch writes that Hannibal placed him second after Alexander the Great This latter account is also given by Appian 47 While he was a mercurial and often restless leader and not always a wise king he was considered one of the greatest military commanders of his time Pyrrhus was known for his benevolence As a general Pyrrhus s greatest political weaknesses were his failures to maintain focus and to maintain a strong treasury at home many of his soldiers were costly mercenaries The concept of a monarch having a touch that could heal all wounds may have originated with Pyrrhus As Pliny the Elder states Pyrrhus great toe on his right foot cured diseases of the spleen by merely touching the patient His toe could also not be burned so when his body was cremated his toe was put in a coffer and kept at an unknown temple 48 Pyrrhus lends his name to the term Pyrrhic victory which stems from a statement he is alleged to have made following the Battle of Asculum In response to congratulations for winning a costly victory over the Romans he is reported to have said If we are victorious in one more battle with the Romans we shall be utterly ruined 38 The term Pyrrhic Victory has therefore come to signify a victory that was won at such cost that it loses all worth Pyrrhus and his campaign in Italy provided the Greek world with an opportunity to check the advance of Rome further into the Mediterranean The failure to fully exploit this opportunity while Rome was still only an Italian regional power had immense consequences The conquest of Magna Graecia by the Romans brought them into direct competition with Carthage ultimately leading to the First Punic War Rome s victory in this conflict arguably transformed it from a regional power to one of the most powerful states in the Mediterranean Over the next century the failure of the various Kingdoms and city states of the Hellenistic world to put on a united front against Rome resulted in their absorption into the Roman Empire or in the case of some the reduction to the status of a Roman client state By 197 BC Macedonia and many southern Greek city states became Roman client states in 188 BC the Seleucid Empire was forced to cede most of Asia Minor to Rome s ally Pergamon Pergamum In 133 BC Attalus III the last King of Pergamon excluding the pretender Eumenes III bequeathed the Kingdom and its considerable territories in Asia Minor to Rome in his will At the destruction of Corinth in 146 BC Rome defeated the city state of Corinth and its allies in the Achaean League The league was dissolved and Rome took formal possession of the territoires which constitute modern day Greece re organising these territories into province of Macedonia 49 Finally in 63 BC Pompey Magnus delivered the final coup de grace to the already much reduced Seleucid Empire deposing its last ruler and absorbing its territories into the new Roman province of Syria Pyrrhus wrote memoirs and several books on the art of war These have since been lost although according to Plutarch Hannibal was influenced by them 4 and they received praise from Cicero 50 Pyrrhus was married five times his first wife Antigone bore him a daughter called Olympias and a son named Ptolemy in honour of her stepfather She died in 295 BC possibly in childbirth since that was the same year her son was born 51 His second wife was Lanassa daughter of King Agathocles of Syracuse r 317 289 BC whom he married in about 295 BC the couple had two sons Alexander 51 and Helenus Lanassa left Pyrrhus His third wife was the daughter of Audoleon King of Paeonia his fourth wife was the Illyrian princess Bircenna who was the daughter of King Bardylis II r c 295 290 BC and his fifth wife was the daughter of Ptolemy Keraunos whom he married in 281 280 BC ReferencesCitations a b Sampson Gareth C 2020 08 05 Rome amp Parthia Empires at War Ventidius Antony and the Second Romano Parthian War 40 20 BC Pen and Sword Military ISBN 978 1 5267 1015 4 Hackens 1992 p 239 Grant 2010 p 17 Anglin amp Hamblin 1993 p 121 Richard 2003 p 139 Sekunda Northwood amp Hook 1995 p 6 Daly 2003 p 4 Greene 2008 p 98 Kishlansky Geary amp O Brien 2005 p 113 Saylor 2007 p 332 Hammond 1967 pp 340 345 Hammond has argued convincingly that the Epirotes were a Greek speaking people a b c d Plutarch Parallel Lives Pyrrhus a b Encyclopaedia Britannica Epirus 2013 a b c d e f Encyclopaedia Britannica Pyrrhus 2013 Borza 1992 p 62 Jones 1999 p 45 Chamoux 2003 p 62 American Numismatic Society 1960 p 196 Malalas Chronography 8 208 Milton John and W Bell 1890 Milton s L allegro Il Penseroso Arcades Lycidas Sonnets Etc London and New York Macmillan and Co p 168 Smith William 1860 A New Classical Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography Mythology and Geography New York Harper amp Brothers Publishers p 729 Tytler Alexander Fraser 1823 Elements of General History Concord NH Isaac Hill p 102 a b O Hara 2017 p 106 Beekes 2010 s v pyrros sfn error no target CITEREFBeekes2010 help At Pyrrhus birth in 319 BC Aeacides was only a prince and his father Arrybas ruled Epirus as a regent to the underaged King Neoptolemus Wilkes 1992 p 124 a b Champion 2009 p 12 Justin Epitome 17 3 Champion 2009 p 14 Glaukias kingdom was being attacked by pirates Champion 2009 p 15 Champion 2009 pp 14 17 Champion 2009 p 18 Plutarch Life of Pyrrhus 5 Champion 2009 p 32 Demetrius commanded the full might of the Macedonian army which at that particular time was much larger than the army of Epirus Champion 2009 p 32 Champion 2009 pp 33 34 Champion 2009 p 34 Reputedly raising 110 000 soldiers and 500 ships Champion 2009 pp 34 35 Champion 2009 pp 35 36 a b Champion 2009 p 37 Plutarch Pyrrhus 12 Plutarch Demetrius 41 In 301 BC at the Battle of Ipsus Lysimachus had fielded 40 000 troops Since then he had acquired half of Macedonia and western Asia Minor With these combined assets his army could have numbered over 70 000 troops Pyrrhus commanded 40 000 troops at best Champion 2009 pp 37 39 Greenwalt 2010 p 298 From 288 until 284 Pyrrhus and Lysimachus shared the rule of Macedonia until the latter drove the former back to Epirus Plut Pyrrhus 7 12 Pausanius Guide to Greece 1 7 Hackens 1992 pp 20 21 When however a Roman fleet sailed into the Tarentine Gulf perhaps in order to place a garrison in Thurii and thereby violated the terms of a treaty probably made at the time of Cleonymus Tarentum responded swiftly a b Pyrrhus Encarta Microsoft Corporation 2008 History of Liberty The Ancient Romans 1853 p 6 Plutarch Parallel Lives Pyrrhus 17 4 Champion 2009 pp 75 76 a b Plutarch Parallel Lives Pyrrhus 21 9 Garouphalias 1979 pp 97 108 Garouphalias 1979 pp 109 112 Plutarch Parallel Lives Pyrrhus 23 6 The easiest way for a king to raise funds was to invade his neighbours Champion 2009 pp 125 128 Plutarch Life of Pyrrhus 26 He had inherited a powerful navy from his father Demetrius Champion 2009 p 128 Plutarch Life of Pyrrhus Appian History of the Syrian Wars 10 and 11 Pliny Naturalis Historia 2 111 Pausanias 7 16 Tinsley 2006 p 211 a b Bennett 2010 Sources American Numismatic Society 1960 Numismatic Literature Issues 50 57 American Numismatic Society Anglin Jay Pascal Hamblin William James 1993 HarperCollins College Outline World History to 1648 New York NY HarperCollins ISBN 0 06 467123 2 Bennett Chris 2010 Antigone Egyptian Royal Genealogy The Ptolemaic Dynasty Tyndale House Borza Eugene N 1992 In the Shadow of Olympus The Emergence of Macedon Revised ed Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 00880 9 Champion Jeff 2009 Pyrrhus of Epirus Barnsley South Yorkshire Pen amp Sword Books Limited ISBN 978 1 84468 282 9 Chamoux Francois 2003 Hellenistic Civilization Oxford UK Blackwell Publishing ISBN 0 631 22242 1 Daly Gregory 2003 Cannae The Experience of Battle in the Second Punic War New York NY and London UK Routledge Taylor amp Francis ISBN 0 203 98750 0 Encyclopaedia Britannica Epirus 2013 Epirus Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 1 July 2013 Encyclopaedia Britannica Pyrrhus 2013 Pyrrhus Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 1 July 2013 Garouphalias Petros 1979 Pyrrhus King of Epirus London UK Stacey International ISBN 0 905743 13 X Grant R G 2010 Commanders History s Greatest Military Leaders New York NY DK Publishing ISBN 978 0 7566 7341 3 Greene Robert 2008 The 33 Strategies of War London UK Penguin Books Limited ISBN 978 0 14 311278 5 Greenwalt William S 2010 Macedonia Illyria and Epirus In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 279 305 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Hackens Tony ed 1992 The Age of Pyrrhus Papers Delivered at the International Conference Brown University 8 10 April 1988 Archaeologia Transatlantica XI Providence RI Center for Old World Archaeology and Art Brown University Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere 1967 Epirus The Geography the Ancient Remains the History and the Topography of Epirus and Adjacent Areas Oxford The Clarendon Press Jones Christopher Prestige 1999 Kinship Diplomacy in the Ancient World Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 50527 1 Kishlansky Mark A Geary Patrick O Brien Patricia 2005 Civilization in the West Volume 1 Parts 1 12 London UK Pearson Longman ISBN 0 321 23621 1 O Hara J J 2017 True Names Vergil and the Alexandrian Tradition of Etymological Wordplay University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0472036875 Pausanias Description of Greece Book 7 7 Richard Carl J 2003 Twelve Greeks and Romans who Changed the World Oxford UK Rowman and Littlefield Publishers Incorporated ISBN 0 7425 2791 3 Saylor Steven 2007 Roma The Novel of Ancient Rome New York NY St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 32831 3 Sekunda Nick Northwood Simon Hook Richard 1995 Early Roman Armies Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 85532 513 6 Tinsley Barbara Sher 2006 Reconstructing Western Civilization Irreverent Essays on Antiquity Selingsgrove PA Susquehanna University Press ISBN 1 57591 095 0 Winkes John 1995 1992 The Illyrians Oxford UK Blackwell Publishers Limited ISBN 0 631 19807 5 Wilkes Rolf 1992 The Pyrrhus Portrait In Hackens Tony ed The Age of Pyrrhus Proceedings of an International Conference held at Brown University April 8 10 1988 Archaeologia Transatlantica XI Providence RI Center for Old World Archaeology and Art Brown University pp 175 188 Further readingAbbott Jacob 1901 Makers of History Pyrrhus New York and London Harper amp Brothers Publishers Cowan Ross 2009 Roman Conquests Italy Barnsley Pen amp Sword Books Limited pp 103 147 ISBN 978 1 84 415937 6 Cowan Ross 2007 For the Glory of Rome A History of Warriors and Warfare London Greenhill Books pp 15 77 ISBN 978 1 85 367733 5 Franke P R 1989 CHAPTER 10 PYRRHUS In Astin A E Walbank F W Frederiksen M W Ogilvie R M Drummond A eds The Cambridge Ancient History The Rise of Rome to 220 BC Vol VII Part 2 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 456 485 ISBN 0 521 23446 8 Leveque Pierre 1957 Pyrrhos Paris E de Boccard External linksPyrrhus of Epirus on Livius org Pyrrhus Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Preceded byAlcetas II King of Epirus307 302 BC Succeeded byNeoptolemus IIPreceded byNeoptolemus II King of Epirus297 272 BC Succeeded byAlexander IIPreceded byDemetrius I Poliorcetes King of Macedon288 285 BC With Lysimachus Succeeded byAntigonus II GonatasPreceded byAntigonus II Gonatas King of Macedon274 272 BC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pyrrhus of Epirus amp oldid 1178422123, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.