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SEGESTA (Gr. "Eyeara)

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 582 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SEGESTA (Gr. "Eyeara)  , an ancient city of Sicily, 8 m . W.S.W. of the
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modern
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Alcamo and about 15 M . E.S.E. of Eryx . It was a city of the Elymi, but, though the Elymi were regarded as barbari, Segesta, in its relations with its neighbours, was almost like a Greek city . Disputes with Selinus over questions of boundary seem to have been frequent from 58o B.c. onwards . In 454 B.C. we hear of dealings—possibly even an affiance—with Athens (the authority is a fragmentary inscription, see E . A . Freeman,
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History of Sicily, ii . 554), and in 426 an
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alliance was concluded by Laches . One of the ostensible
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objects of the Athenian expedition to Sicily in 415 was to aid Segesta against Selinus in a dispute, not only as to questions of boundary, but as to rights of
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marriage . After the Athenian debacle, the Segestans turned to Carthage; but when Hannibal in 409 B.C. firmly established the Carthaginian power in western Sicily, Segesta sank to the position of a dependent ally, and was indeed besieged by Dionysius in 397, being at last relieved by Himilco . In 307 Agathocles marched on the city, massacred 10,000 men, sold the rest of the inhabitants into
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slavery and changed its name to Dicaeopolis; but it soon recovered its old name and returned to the Carthaginians .

Early in the First Punic War, however, the inhabitants, having massacred the Carthaginian garrison and allied themselves with Rome, had to stand a severe siege from the Carthaginians . Segesta was treated with favour by the Romans, retaining its freedom and immunity from tithe; indeed it seems probable that the municipal constitution of Eryx was suppressed and its territory assigned to Segesta . It received Latin rights before Caesar's concession of them to the rest of Sicily . The site is now absolutely deserted . The
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town
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lay upon the
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Monte Varvaro (1345 ft.) ; considerable remains of its
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external walls, of houses and of a temple of
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Demeter are to be seen . The theatre is well preserved: its diameter is 205 ft . It is partly hewn in the rock, the rest (especially the back wall of the stage) being of very roughly hewn, long, thin blocks of hard
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limestone, approximately rectangular, with smaller pieces filling up the interstices . To the W.N.W., 35o ft. below the theatre, is a temple, 200; ft. long and 861 wide, including the steps: it is a hexastyle peripteros, and has 36 columns, 29 ft. in height, 61 ft. in
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lower diameter . The
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building was, however, not completed; the
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cella was never built, and the columns, not having been fluted, have a heavy appearance . It is, however, extremely well preserved . Its style places the date of its construction between 43o and 420, so that the interruption of the
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work must be due to the events of 416 or of 409 B.C . The Thermae Segestanae were situated about 5 m. to the north on the road to Castellammare: the hot springs are still in use .

(T .

End of Article: SEGESTA (Gr. "Eyeara)
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