Siege of Segesta (397 BC)

Siege of Segesta (398 BC)
Part of The Sicilian Wars
DateSummer, 398 BC – spring 397 BC
Location
Segesta, Sicily
Result Carthaginian victory
Belligerents
Syracuse
Sicilian Greeks
Segesta,
Carthage
Commanders and leaders
Dionysius I of Syracuse Unknown, Himilco II
Strength
80,000 foot and 3,000 horse 50,000 from Carthage
Casualties and losses
Unknown Unknown

The siege of Segesta took place either in the summer of 398 BC or the spring of 397 BC. Dionysius the Elder, tyrant of Syracuse, after securing peace with Carthage in 405 BC, had steadily increased his military power and tightened his grip on Syracuse. He had fortified Syracuse against sieges and had created a large army of mercenaries and a large fleet, in addition to employing catapults and quinqueremes for the first time in history. In 398 BC he attacked and sacked the Phoenician city of Motya despite a Carthaginian relief effort led by Himilco II of Carthage. While Motya was under siege, Dionysius besieged and assaulted Segesta unsuccessfully. Following the sack of Motya, Segesta again came under siege by Greek forces, but the Elymian forces based in Segesta managed to inflict damage on the Greek camp in a daring night assault. When Himilco of Carthage arrived in Sicily with the Carthaginian army in the spring of 397 BC, Dionysius withdrew to Syracuse. The failure of Dionysius to secure a base in western Sicily meant the main events of the Second Sicilian war would be acted out mostly in eastern Sicily, sparing the Elymian and Phoenician cities the ravages of war until 368 BC.


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