In the fine tradition of Mithridates VI Eupator and Oudysseos ;D, rather than add to the 60 pages of the New Factions guessing thread, I'd like to present a case for Syrakousai, with a proposed starting position of Syrakousai and perhaps Messana, who had been under control of Syrakousai for some years, under faction leader Hieron II.
Syrakousai
A short history (I hope):
Syrakousai was founded by Doric settlers from Korinthos and Tenea in either 735 or 734 BCE. Remarkebly enough, Syrakousai can trace its origins back to Tenedos of Troezen, after which Tenea was named. According to the legend, the founder of Syrakousai was a man named Archias, who went into self-imposed exile after a terrible plague that had tormented the city of Korinthos.
Quickly, Syrakousai grew into a great Polis. It became one of the most important Greek cities west of Hellas self, next to cities as Taras, Kroton and Massalia. The comparison with Massalia is perhaps somewhat unfounded, as there had been a great foreign population in Massalia, mostly Celtic, and Syrakousai had managed to stay Hellenic throughout the ages. The first true display of power came when Dionysios the First named himself strategos autokrator.
Coin of Dionysios I
Dionysios ascended the throne (though a slightly unfounded term) in the year of 405 BCE. The years before his accension had been marked primarily by continued Carthaginian expansion on the island of Sikilia. The Carthaginian general Hannibal (not to be confused with Hannibal, the scourge of Rome ) had conquered numerous cities on the island of Sicily. Some very important cities, including Akragas or Agrigentum, Himera and Selinus had fallen, and now a Carthaginian commander by the name Himilco besieged Gela (which was an important ally of Syrakousai). At that point, Dionysios marched towards the west, only to be defeated and forced to retreat to Syrakousai. Now only Syrakousai and its surrounding cities as well as the most northeastern tip of Sicily were still free from Carthaginian rule. The Greeks were miraculeously saved from conquest when a great plague struck and ravaged the Carthaginian army. Now both parties agreed to a ceasefire. Carthage retreated from the east of Sicily and contended with the previously independent cities on the west of Sicily, while Dionysios held onto Syrakousai.
The people of Syrakousai, however, despised Dionysios for what they saw as surrender. As early as 404 BCE they revolted en masse. Dionysos struck back hard; he liberated slaves, redistributed the lands, and helping the poor of the city. Fully aware that to win the hearts of the citizens, he had to attack Carthage once again, and he started to make preparations for his attack. Through ruthless diplomacy and hard-pressing "persuasion" he managed to gain control of Messana and some of the Greek cities on the east of the island. He also sent a shipment of grain to the Romans for some goodwill on Great Greece (Megále Hellas) herself.
In 398 he decided to attack. He immediately pushed far to the west and conquered the island of Motya. This victory swayed all of Syrakousai to his side and is renowned as one of the first sieges that relied on artillery. The next year Himilco returned to Sicily with a new army. Dionysios once again was forced to retreat to Syrakousai, which was then besieged in the year of 398 BCE. Once again the Greeks were saved when a second plague came over the Carthaginian forces, and once again the Carthaginians accepted to a ceasefire; this time Carthage would restore independence to the Greek cities in the west of Sicily. With a filled pouch and some cunning diplomacy he managed to convince the Greeks that he liberated them and he could soon add them to his empire.
At this point Dionysios started to grow arrogant. He captured Rhegion which allowed him full control of the strait of Messana and he attacked Carthage yet again in the year of 383. This war only left him with a large indemnity and the loss of his allies in the west. However, at the end of this war he did control the city of Croton, which had previously been a Carthaginian ally.
Dionysios finally died in the year of 367 after he attacked Carthage one last time.
Dionysios II, his son and successor then came to power. It soon became clear that Dionysios II was more interested in philosophy and the arts than his father had been, and he also realised that fortunes could as easily go as they came. Dion, Dionysios' uncle and advisor, had invited the Athenian philosopher to his court to advise Dionysios. However, the courtiers feared Dion's influence and managed to exile him.
Over the next years Plato came and went and eventually Dion himself returned, at the head of an army. He was greeted in Syracuse as a liberator, though he could not enjoy his victory for long. He was assassinated soon thereafter by agents of Kallipos, a philosopher. Subsequently Nylaeos and Hipparinos were named tyrants. In 347 Dionysios returned.
Embittered, he turned into a cruel despot, and the Syracusan citizens employed the help of a man named Hicetas, who liberated the city and exiled Dionysios.
With the problems in Sicily contuining, a man called Timoleon came to Sicily at the head of an army. Timophanes, Timoleon's brother had risen to power in Korinthos, and as Sicily had been plagued by constant civil strife and revoltuions, Timoleon had been sent from Korinthos to pacify Sicily.
When Timoleon landed in Sicily, he then attacked the same man which had invited him, Hicetas. He then opened negotiations with Dionysios II and offered his assistance in the war against Carthage. Dionysios agreed and allowed Timoleon's forces to enter his capital at Ortygia. Timoleon beat off the Carthaginian invaders, and Dionysios, who found himself outsmarted by the Korinthian, agreed to settle into Korinthos. Thus did the Dionysian influence ended in Sicily.
Timoleon then started with the process of pacifying Sicily. A total of 60,000 of Greeks accepted his offer to settle in Sicily (in a time that Megás Alexandros had conquered all of Greece), accepted grants of land and repopulated the cities. Timoleon also continued the war against Carthage, who kept encroaching on Greek Sicilian holdings. Timoleon managed to defeat the Carthaginian foe and the river Halycus in the middle in Sicily was chosen to be the border between Carthaginians and Greeks.
Timoleon then celebrated his victories by minting coins which showed ΔΙΟΣ ΕΛΕΥΘΕΡΙΟΣ.
Sicily prospered, and Timoleon retreated from public life. Fear for Alexandros kept people together that mistrusted eachother in the past. However, as the news of Alexandros' death reached Sicily, citizens that had previously worked together started to mistrust one another once again. And as such, civil war erupted once again. Timoleon himself had died many years before, in 337 BCE, and the man who took advantage of the problems was known as Agathokles.
Agathokles
Agathokles soon turned out to be one of the most ruthless tyrants Syrakousai had ever known. He abolished the oligarchy and made himself sole ruler of this city.He (as many tyrants before him) declared war on Carthage.In 311, Syracuse herself was besieged again. As there was no divine plague to rain disaster upon the Carthaginians, Agathokles did the most daring thing, something no other tyrant had done before. He boarded a fleet and sailed for Africa. There he laid siege to Carthago herself.
The Carthaginian commander immediately retreated from Sicily, and after several victories, Agathokles was finally defeated in 307 BCE and he was forced to retreat to Sicily. He did manage to gain a ceasefire with the Carthaginians in 306, which left him in control of the eastern part of the island. As several of Alexandros' successors in the east had named themselves King (Antigonos Monophtalmos, Demetrios Poliorketos and Ptolemaios I Soter) Agathokles did the same, in the year 304.
In his last days, Agathokles abolished the autocracy and reinstated the democracy. Agathokles finally died in 289.
With his death ended the last man that led Syrakousai to military greatness.
663 - Founding of Akragas
643 - Founding of Casmanae
6th century
598 - Founding of Camarina
c. 560 - Founding of Morgantina
5th century
491 - Gelon comes to power
478 - Death of Gelon, succession by Hieron I
467 - Death of Hieron, succession by Thrasbylos
465 - Thrasbylos overthrown, democracy instituted
410 - First Carthaginian War [410 - 405]
405 - Dionysios I overthrows the democracy, declares himself tyrant. End of the First Carthaginian War
404 - Syracusan revolt, repercussions by Dionysios
4th century
398 - Second Carthaginian War [398 - 392]
392 - End of Second Carthaginian War
387 - Conquest of Rhegion
383 - Third Carthaginian War [383 - 378]
378 - End of Third Carthaginian War
367 - Death of Dionysios I, Dionysios II comes to power
366 - End of the Second Carthaginian War
361 - Plato visits Syracuse
356 - Dionysios exiled, Dion returns, death of Dion, Nylaeos and Hipparinus tyrants.
354 - Revolts all across Sicily
347 - Return of Dionysios II
345 - Dionysios II overthrown, Hicetas comes to power. Hicetas defeated by Timoleon. On and off wars with Carthage [continued to 339]
339 - Peace treaty signed between Syracuse and Carthage
337 - Death of Timoleon. Oligarchy instituted
323 - Death of Megás Alexandros. Civil strife
316 - Agathokles comes to power
311 - Siege of Syracuse by the Carthaginians
310 - Invasion of Africa by Agathokles, Carthaginian retreat from Syracuse
307 - Agathokles defeated; retreated to Syracuse
304 - Agathokles names himself Basileos, or King
3rd century
288 - Death of Agathokles; democracy reinstituted
278 - Pyrrhos arrives in Sicily
276 - Pyrrhos retreats to Epiros, leaving Sicily sandwiched between Roma and Carthage. Hieron tyrant
264 - Appius Claudius Caudex conquers Messana; start of the first Punic War
261 - Fall of Akragas to the Romans
241 - Last Carthaginian presence removed from Sicily by the Romans, Sicily is now a Roman province
218 - Start of the Second Punic War
215 - Death of Hieron, Hieronymos seizes power and sides with Carthage.
212 - Surrender of Syracuse to the Romans.
Okay, history was not so short as previously thought V_V
As we have seen, Syrakousai played a very special role in the affairs of Sicily, Italy and even North Africa during the fifth and fourth centuries BCE. We have seen that they swung constantly between oligarchy, autocracy and democracy.
I do not know to what an extent traits can have influence on the engine itself (if any), though I think that allowing certain traits, not unlike the ethnicity traits for Syrakousian family members. This would (naturally be) Oligarchist, Autocrator and Democrat.
Furthermore, from what I have found, I have several ideas concerning ethnicities available to the Syrakousioi:
Korinthian, Helleno-Sikilian, Spartan, Tarentine, and Epirote. Epiros had a special relation with Syracuse, especially after Pyrrhos had been tyrant of Syracuse.
Sikilian cities: One of the greatest arguments against the inclusion of Syrakousai was the lack of settlements on Sicily. In this case I think that Permanent Stone Forst could be made to represent minor cities. In this case, I would advocate the inclusion of Akragas or Agrigenton and Himera. This would make the fight for Sicily more accurate and rewarding (Sicily was very important location for trade)
In the interest of historical accuracy, Agathokles, who gave a daughter to Pyrrhos as a bride, did manage to invade Carthage. Syrakousai in their greatest extent controlled all of Sicily, but for some Qarthadastim holdouts, a big part of Magna Grecia had a lot of colonies in both Illyria, North Italy and even on Napoleons' island (Syrakosion limen).
That to me sounds like a lot of land property. Problem is that most people just don't know about it.
I do not know what sources he used, but as he is a trusted EB Member, I trust him in this. I have at least found that Syrakousai had connections with the cities of Kamarina and Lissus in Epirus.
HamilcarBarca:
The tyrannoi of Syracuse had an influence outside of Sicily at their peak! Dionysius I of Syracuse held sway over most of Sicily, and ports in Magna Graecia - southern Italy - such as Kroton and Locri. In addition, Dionysius recruited Gallic mercenaries from the northern Adriatic (Senones), supported Greek enclaves in northern Italy (Spina) and the Adriatic Sea (Lissus & Pharos), and was an ally of Sparta.
King Agaothcles of Sparta also sought to dominate southern Italy, and made alliance with the Bruttians so as to dominate Kroton and Locri. And he famously sought to overrun Carthage and Libya in alliance with Ophellas - the ptolemaic governor of Kyrene...
So at its peak, the tyrants of Sicily were super-powers of the central Mediterranean.
Of course, this information is very interesting. Combined with what I found on Wikipedia:
A treaty in 392 BC allowed Syracuse to enlarge further its possessions, founding the cities of Adrano, Ancona, Adria, Tindari and Tauromenos, and conquering Reggio Calabria on the continent.
With all this information together, I made a map of what would seem historically accurate to me;
All of this together would them have conditions somewhat similar to a western Koinon Hellenon.
From what I've gathered on the internets, it seems that the best way to start would to have the Syrakousioi at war with the Carthaginians and allied with Epiros Possibly also an alliance with the Koinon Hellenon (?).
This is evidently stuff for a tabletop game, and I like to see it as re-enactment on a smaller scale:
3Cav Greek cavalry
2LH Greek light cavalry
4Sp Syracusan or mercenary hoplites
4Aux Can be depicted as follows:
* Mercenary Greek Peltasts who may have first appeared in this army when Thracian peltasts were first hired in 390 BC;
* Theureophroi appeared during the third century BC, after 275 BC according to DBM list. These replaced Peltasts; or
* Campanian or Samnites from southern Italy
3Aux Can be depicted as:
* Ligurians from Northern Italy;
* Sikels who were natives from the interior of Sicily; or
* Spanish mercenaries. Spanish troops at first may have been Celtiberians. So during Dionysios reign you may wish to replace Spanish Ax with Celtiberian 1x3Wb. Whether they were Celtiberians or not the first Spanish Mercenaries appeared in Syracuse army about 396 BC.
3Wb Mercenary Gauls
Art Bolt shooters
2Ps Archers, slingers or javelinmen
Why the Hippeis Xystophoroi as a General's unit? If we can believe what Thukydides (and VT Martin ;D) wrote:
As far as military is concerned, I believe that cavalry shall not be omitted: Thukydides account surprisingly strong cavalry contingents in Syracusan and her allies´ armies during Peloponnesian war. Of course, this is far from EB tie-frame, but one can assume that if there once was a rather strong cavalry tradition, it would not be abandoned completely 150 later.
As such I think it only fair to have the best Greek cavalry available as the bodyguard of the Syracusan general. However, according to the EB descriptions the Xystophoroi were mainly invented to counter the Macedonian heavy cavalry. Syrakousai never had any direct conflict with Makedonia, so they wouldn't have been invented there. However, the Xystophoroi could also just act as another type of heavy Greek cavalry.
Overall, I guess that wherever Syrakousai would expand, they'd make an extensive use of mercenaries, and seeing their special relation with the colonies in northern Italy, they'd probably get a lot of native units as well!
I could compose this information out of one link alone, sadly. If anyone else can get more information on the Syrakousan military, we could really take this proposal far.
Hierokles: I've found very little concerning him, and he would most likely already be dead or very old in 272 BC, so I will not really go into detail about him. If there's anything to find about him anyways.
Leptines: An interesting fellow. He was the father of Hieron's wife, Philistis. He was the son of Leptines I, who was Dionysios I's brother. This made him Dionysios' nephew, and thus a very influential character in Syrakousai. To represent this, Hieron might be given an "Influential wife"-like trait or start with a natural 1/2 influence. Family connections, eh. Leptines was exiled in 342 BCE and died in Corinth (it is unknown whether Philistis had already been born by then)
Hieron: The King. He was born around 306 BC. In 275BC, after Pyrrhos had left and the city was left in turmoil, he executed a military coup and got into power. In 265 he defeated the Mamertines and was named Basileos by his subjects:
"This action put an end to the Mamertines’ aggressive conduct, and when Hiero returned to Syracuse he was saluted by all the allies as king [c. 265 BC]. " -Polybios.
This victory upset the delicate balance between the Carthaginians, Syracusans and Romans who all had a shared interest in Sicilia. Roma reacted by helping the Mamertines and Hieron and the Carthaginians were initially allied to eachother. When his forces were defeated multiple times, Hieron reconsidered and allied himself to the Romans:
"When the Romans went to war with Carthage for the possession of Sicily [the First Punic War], the Carthaginians held more than half the island, and Hiero sided with them at the beginning of the war. Shortly after, however, he changed over to the Romans, thinking that they were stronger, and firmer and more reliable friends." - Pausanias
Hieron was known as a wise and able ruler and his rule was characterized by prosperity. He eventually died in 215, his son Gelon dying in 216. He was extremely long-lived, for he had been about 90 at the time of his death.
Gelon II: Son of Hieron II. From what I've gathered, he died in 216, one year before his father who would have been 90 in 215 BC. According to the site I have found Gelon was "in his fifties" when he died, which would make Hieron 40 when he was born. In 272 he would be 3 years of age.
Zoippos and Heraclia: Zoippos was the husband of Heraclia, Hieron's eldest daughter. Her birth date is unknown sadly. Logically, there would be a two to three year distance per child, so that would make Heraclia 9 or 10 in 272 BC. Too young to be married, I'm afraid. The character of Zoippos would have to be scrapped. Oh well, she'll find another one in-game.
Adranodoros and Damarata: The same problem goes for Adranodoros and Damarata. If we make Damarata 3 years younger than Heraclia [Herakleia] she would be around six. That would mean no Adranodoros either!
If you do choose not to include Syrakousai, I hope this can at least be a nice read for people which then might feel to make a mod of their own when EB II comes out.
Disclaimer: I am merely a beta-tester for the EB team. I have no access to the EBH, and as thus I do not know what factions have been confirmed. The EB team cannot be held accountable for all the stuff I've written here.
Bookmarks