Siege of Syracuse (397 BC)

Siege of Syracuse (397 BC)
Part of The Sicilian Wars

Punic siege of Syracuse 397 BC. Political boundaries and path of troop movement are inexact because of lack of primary source data.
DateSummer of 397 BC to summer of 396 BC
Location
Result Greek victory
Belligerents
Syracuse
Sicilian Greeks
Carthage
Commanders and leaders
Dionysius
Leptines
Himilco
Mago
Strength
30,000 troops
80 quinqueremes
30 triremes
50,000 troops
40 quinqueremes
200 triremes
2,000 transports
Casualties and losses
Unknown, less than the Carthaginians Unknown, plague killed majority of troops

The siege of Syracuse in 397 BC was the first of four unsuccessful sieges Carthaginian forces would undertake against Syracuse from 397 to 278 BC. In retaliation for the siege of Motya by Dionysius of Syracuse, Himilco of the Magonid family of Carthage led a substantial force to Sicily. After retaking Motya and founding Lilybaeum, Himilco sacked Messana, then laid siege to Syracuse in the autumn of 397 BC after the Greek navy was crushed at Catana.

The Carthaginians followed a strategy which the Athenians had used in 415 BC and were successful in isolating Syracuse. A pestilence broke out in the Carthaginian camp in the summer of 396 BC, which killed the majority of the troops. Dionysius launched a combined land and sea attack on the Carthaginian forces, and Himilco escaped with the Carthaginian citizens after an underhanded deal with Dionysius. The surviving Libyans were enslaved, the Sicels melted away while the Iberians joined Dionysius. Dionysius began expanding his domain, while Carthage, weakened by the plague, took no action against Syracusan activities until 393 BC.


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