Online Encyclopedia

HIMERA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 476 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HIMERA  , a

city on the north coast of Sicily, on a hill above the east
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bank of the Himeras Septentrionalis . It was founded in 648 B.C. by the Chalcidian inhabitants of Zancle, in
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company with many Syracusan exiles . Early in the 5th century the tyrant Terillas, son-in-law of Anaxilas of Rhegium and Zancle; appealed to the Carthaginians, who came to his assistance, but were utterly defeated by Gelon of Syracuse in 48o B.c.—on the same day, it is said, as the
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battle of
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Salamis . Thrasydaeus, son of Theron of Agrigentum, seems to have ruled the city oppressively, but an
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appeal made to Hiero of Syracuse, Gelon's
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brother, was betrayed by him to Theron; the latter massacred all his enemies and in the following
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year resettled the
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town . In 415 it refused to admit the Athenian
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fleet and remained an ally of Syracuse . In 408 the Carthaginian invading army under Hannibal, after capturing Selinus, invested and took Himera and razed the city to the ground, founding a new town close to the hot springs (Thermae Himeraeae), 8 m. to the west . The only relic of the ancient town now visible above ground is a small portion (four columns,
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lower diameter 7 ft.) of a Doric temple, the date of which (whether before or after 480 B.C.) is uncertain .

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HIMERIUS (c. A.D. 315-386)

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