in the island—Selinus, Himera, Agrigentum,
Gela, and Messana—were utterly destroyed
by the Carthaginians in the course of these unhappy
conflicts: and Dionysius was not displeased to
see Hellenism destroyed or suppressed there, so that,
leaning for support on foreign mercenaries enlisted
from Italy, Gaul and Spain, he might rule in greater
security over provinces which lay desolate or which
were occupied by military colonies. The peace,
which was concluded after the victory of the Carthaginian
general Mago at Kronion (371), and which subjected
to the Carthaginians the Greek cities of Thermae (the
ancient Himera), Segesta, Heraclea Minoa, Selinus,
and a part of the territory of Agrigentum as far as
the Halycus, was regarded by the two powers contending
for the possession of the island as only a temporary
accommodation; on both sides the rivals were ever renewing
their attempts to dispossess each other. Four
several times—in 360 in the time of Dionysius
the elder; in 410 in that of Timoleon; in 445 in that
of Agathocles; in 476 in that of Pyrrhus—the
Carthaginians were masters of all Sicily excepting
Syracuse, and were baffled by its solid walls; almost
as often the Syracusans, under able leaders, such
as were the elder Dionysius, Agathocles, and Pyrrhus,
seemed equally on the eve of dislodging the Africans
from the island. But more and more the balance
inclined to the side of the Carthaginians, who were,
as a rule, the aggressors, and who, although they did
not follow out their object with Roman steadfastness,
yet conducted their attack with far greater method
and energy than the Greek city, rent and worn out
by factions, conducted its defence. The Phoenicians
might with reason expect that a pestilence or a foreign
-condottiere- would not always snatch the prey from
their hands; and for the time being, at least at sea,
the struggle was already decided:(5) the attempt of
Pyrrhus to re-establish the Syracusan fleet was the
last. After the failure of that attempt, the
Carthaginian fleet commanded without a rival the whole
western Mediterranean; and their endeavours to occupy
Syracuse, Rhegium, and Tarentum, showed the extent
of their power and the objects at which they aimed.
Hand in hand with these attempts went the endeavour
to monopolize more and more the maritime commerce of
this region, at the expense alike of foreigners and
of their own subjects; and it was not the wont of
the Carthaginians to recoil from any violence that
might help forward their purpose. A contemporary
of the Punic wars, Eratosthenes, the father of geography
(479-560), affirms that every foreign mariner sailing
towards Sardinia or towards the Straits of Gades,
who fell into the hands of the Carthaginians, was
thrown by them into the sea; and with this statement
the fact completely accords, that Carthage by the
treaty of 406 (6) declared the Spanish, Sardinian,
and Libyan ports open to Roman trading vessels, whereas
by that of 448,(7) it totally closed them, with the
exception of the port of Carthage itself, against the
same.