Page:Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology (1870) - Volume 2.djvu/468

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loc cit.
loc cit.

454 IIIERON. of his life, except that he is supposed to have been a lawyer by profession, and not a veterinary sur- geon, and to have lived in the tenth century after Christ, as he dedicated his work to Cassianus Bassus. He is perhaps the same writer who is quoted in the Geoponica. An analysis of his opinions, so far as they can be gathered from the fragments that remain, is given by Haller in his BiUioth. Medic. Prod. vol. i. p. 290 ; see also Fabric. Bihl. Gr. vol. vi. p. 497, ed. vet. [W.A.G.] HIERON I. ('lepwi/), tyrant of Syracuse, was son of Deinomenes and brother of Gelon, whom ho succeeded in the sovereignty, B. c. 478. We know scarcely any thing of his personal history previous to his accession, except that he supported his brother in his various wars, and appears to have taken an active part in the great victory of Ilimera, as his share in the glory of that day was commemorated by Gelon himself in the inscription at Delphi which recorded his triumph. (Schol. ad rind. Fyih. i. 155, ii. 115.) It is stated by Dio- dorus (xi. 38) that Hieron was appointed by Gelon as his successor, though it appears from other authorities that that prince left an infant son; hence it may well be suspected that he assumed the government in the first instance only in his nephew's name, and subsequently took possession of it for himself. In either case it is clear that he was virtually sovereign of Syracuse from the time of Gelon's death, but his rule was soon distin- guished from that of his brother by its greater severity and more tyrannical character. Its tran- quillity was early disturbed by his jealousy of his brother Polyzelus, to whom Gelon had left the command of the army and the hand of his widow Deraarete. This connection secured to Polyzelus the powerful support of Theron of Agrigentum (the father of Demarete), and, united with his great popularity, sufficed to render liim an object of sus- picion to Hieron. The latter is said to have em- ployed him in a military expedition against the Sybarites in Italy, or, according to another account, in Sicily itself, in hopes that he might perish in the war. The failure of this design led to an open rupture between the two brothers, and Polyzelus took refuge with Theron, who is said to have been preparing to support him by arms, when a reconcili- ation was effected, and a treaty of peace concluded between him and Hieron, which is attributed by some accounts to the intervention of the poet Simonides. (Schol. ad Find. 01. ii. 29, 37.) Ac- cording to Diodonis (xi. 48), on the contrary, it was owing to the conduct of Hieron himself, who, instead of listening to the overtures of the citizens of Himera, and espousing their cause against The- ron, gave him information of their designs ; in gratitude for which, Theron abandoned his hostile intentions. By the treaty thus concluded, Poly- zelus was restored to his former position at Syra- cuse, while Hieron himself married a sister of the Agrigentine ruler. (Schol. ad Find. I. c.) Our information concerning the events of the reign of Hieron is very imperfect, but the detached and fragmentary notices which alone remain to us attest the great power and influence that he must have possessed. In Sicily he made himself master of the powerful cities of Naxos and Catana, the inhabitants of which, according to a favourite policy of the Sicilian tyrants, he removed from their native seats, and established them at Leon- tini, while he repeopled Catana with Syracusans, HIERON. and other colonists of Dorian origin ; and having changed its name to Aetna, caused himself to be proclaimed the founder of the new city. (Diod. xi. 49; Schol. ad Find. 01. i. 35, Fyth. i. 1, 120.) At a very early period of his reign also we find him interposing in the affairs of the Greek cities in the south of Italy, and preventing the destruction of Locri by Anaxilas of Rhegium, which he appears to have effected by the mere apprehension of his power, without having actually recourse to arms. (Schol. ad Find. Fyih. i. 98, ii. 34.) Some years later he again interfered on behalf of the sons of the same Anaxilas, and by urging them to put for- ward their claim to the sovereign power, succeeded in effecting the expulsion of Micythus from Rhe- gium. (Diod. xi. 66.) The death of Theron in B. c. 472, and the violence of his son Thrasydaeus, involved Hieron in hostilities with Agrigentum, but he defeated Thrasydaeus in a great battle, Avhich contributed essentially to the downfal of that tyrant ; and after his expulsion Hieron was readily induced to grant peace to the Agrigentines. (Diod. xi. 53.) But by far the most important event of his reign was the great victory which he obtained over the Etruscan fleet near Cumae (b. c. 474), and which appears to have effectually broken the naval power of that nation. The Etruscans had attacked Cumae and the neighbouring Greek settle- ments in Campania with a powerful fleet, and the Cumaeans invoked the assistance of Hieron, who, though suffering at the time from illness, appears to have commanded in person the fleet which he destined to their support. (Pind, Fyth. i. 137 ; and Schol. ad loc; Diod. xi. 51.) Of the victory he there obtained, and which was celebrated by Pindar, an interesting memorial has been preserved to our OAvn days, in a bronze helmet found at Olympia in 1817, and now in the British Museum, which appears from the inscription it bears to have formed part of the spoils consecrated by Hieron on this occasion to the Olympian Zeus. (Rose, Imcr. Graec. Vetust. p. 66 ; Boeckh's Pindar, vol. iii. p. 225.) It was probably after this victory that he sent the colony to Pithecusa or Ischia, mentioned by Strabo (v. p. 248.) How far the internal prosperity of Syracuse, under the rule of Hieron, corresponded with this external show of power we have no means of judging, but all accounts agree in representing his government as much more despotic than that of Gelon. He fortified his power by the maintenance of a large guard of mercenary troops, and evinced tne suspicious character of a tyrant by the employ- ment of numerous spies and informers. (Arist. Fol. V. 1 1 ; Diod. xi. 48, 67 ; but conip. Plut. de Ser. Num. Vind. p. 551.) In one respect, how- ever, he was superior to his brother — in the liberal and enlightened patronage that he extended to men of letters, which has contributed very much to cast a lustre over his name. His court became the resort of the most distinguished poets and philoso- phers of the day. Aeschylus, Pindar, and IBacchy- lides are recorded as having taken up their abode with him, and we find him associating in friendly intercourse with Xenophanes, Epicharmus, and Simonides. (Aelian. V. H. iv. 15; Pans. i. 2, § 3 ; Schol. ad Find. Fyth. ii. 131, 167; Athen. iii. p. 121, xiv. p. 656 ; Plut. .'ipophth. p. 175.) His intimacy with the latter was particularly cele- brated (Pseud. Plat. Epist. 2), and has been made the subject by Xenophon of an imaginary dialogue