in this first campaign of the Romans out of Italy
may not quite have corresponded to the expectations
at home, for the consul had no triumph; nevertheless,
the energy which the Romans displayed in Sicily could
not fail to make a great impression on the Sicilian
Greeks. In the following year both consuls and
an army twice as large entered the island unopposed.
One of them, Marcus Valerius Maximus, afterwards
called from this campaign the “hero of Messana”
(-Messalla-), achieved a brilliant victory over the
allied Carthaginians and Syracusans. After this
battle the Phoenician army no longer ventured to keep
the field against the Romans; Alaesa, Centuripa, and
the smaller Greek towns generally fell to the victors,
and Hiero himself abandoned the Carthaginian side and
made peace and alliance with the Romans (491).
He pursued a judicious policy in joining the Romans
as soon as it appeared that their interference in
Sicily was in earnest, and while there was still time
to purchase peace without cessions and sacrifices.
The intermediate states in Sicily, Syracuse and Messana,
which were unable to follow out a policy of their
own and had only the choice between Roman and Carthaginian
hegemony, could not but at any rate prefer the former;
because the Romans had very probably not as yet formed
the design of conquering the island for themselves,
but sought merely to prevent its being acquired by
Carthage, and at all events Rome might be expected
to substitute a more tolerable treatment and a due
protection of commercial freedom for the tyrannizing
and monopolizing system that Carthage pursued.
Henceforth Hiero continued to be the most important,
the steadiest, and the most esteemed ally of the Romans
in the island.
Capture of Agrigentum
The Romans had thus gained their immediate object.
By their double alliance with Messana and Syracuse,
and the firm hold which they had on the whole east
coast, they secured the means of landing on the island
and of maintaining—which hitherto had been
a very difficult matter—their armies there;
and the war, which had previously been doubtful and
hazardous, lost in a great measure its character of
risk. Accordingly, no greater exertions were
made for it than for the wars in Samnium and Etruria;
the two legions which were sent over to the island
for the next year (492) sufficed, in concert with the
Sicilian Greeks, to drive the Carthaginians everywhere
into their fortresses. The commander-in-chief
of the Carthaginians, Hannibal son of Gisgo, threw
himself with the flower of his troops into Agrigentum,
to defend to the last that most important of the Carthaginian
inland cities. Unable to storm a city so strong,
the Romans blockaded it with entrenched lines and
a double camp; the besieged, who numbered 50,000 soon
suffered from want of provisions. To raise the
siege the Carthaginian admiral Hanno landed at Heraclea,
and cut off in turn the supplies from the Roman besieging
force. On both sides the distress was great.