and made his escape to Agrigentum. Syracuse
would gladly have surrendered to the Romans; negotiations
had already begun. But for the second time they
were thwarted by the deserters: in another mutiny
of the soldiers the chief magistrates and a number
of respectable citizens were slain, and the government
and the defence of the city were entrusted by the
foreign troops to their captains. Marcellus now
entered into a negotiation with one of these, which
gave into his hands one of the two portions of the
city that were still free, the “island”;
upon which the citizens voluntarily opened to him
the gates of Achradina also (in the autumn of 542).
If mercy was to be shown in any case, it might, even
according to the far from laudable principles of Roman
public law as to the treatment of perfidious communities,
have been extended to this city, which manifestly
had not been at liberty to act for itself, and which
had repeatedly made the most earnest attempts to get
rid of the tyranny of the foreign soldiers.
Nevertheless, not only did Marcellus stain his military
honour by permitting a general pillage of the wealthy
mercantile city, in the course of which Archimedes
and many other citizens were put to death, but the
Roman senate lent a deaf ear to the complaints which
the Syracusans afterwards presented regarding the
celebrated general, and neither returned to individuals
their pillaged property nor restored to the city its
freedom. Syracuse and the towns that had been
previously dependent on it were classed among the
communities tributary to Rome—Tauromenium
and Neetum alone obtained the same privileges as Messana,
while the territory of Leontini became Roman domain
and its former proprietors Roman lessees—and
no Syracusan citizen was henceforth allowed to reside
in the “island,” the portion of the city
that commanded the harbour.
Guerilla War in Sicily
Agrigentum Occupied by the Romans
Sicily Tranquillized
Sicily thus appeared lost to the Carthaginians; but
the genius of Hannibal exercised even from a distance
its influence there. He despatched to the Carthaginian
army, which remained at. Agrigentum in perplexity
and inaction under Hanno and Epicydes, a Libyan cavalry
officer Muttines, who took the command of the Numidian
cavalry, and with his flying squadrons, fanning into
an open flame the bitter hatred which the despotic
rule of the Romans had excited over all the island,
commenced a guerilla warfare on the most extensive
scale and with the happiest results; so that he even,
when the Carthaginian and Roman armies met on the
river Himera, sustained some conflicts with Marcellus
himself successfully. The relations, however,
which prevailed between Hannibal and the Carthaginian
council, were here repeated on a small scale.
The general appointed by the council pursued with
jealous envy the officer sent by Hannibal, and insisted
upon giving battle to the proconsul without Muttines
and the Numidians. The wish of Hanno was carried