In 2019, seven
mass graves were discovered in Himera, exposing thousands of skeletons of
soldiers who fought in the city’s fierce battles of 480 and 409 BC against the
Carthaginians (see: The Battle of Himera, a major confrontation). Their bodies had been
neatly arranged with great respect in an orderly fashion. Another thirty burial
sites were reserved for the horses, which the experts related to the severe
clash of 480 BC (see: Mass
Thanks to modern geochemical evidence, specialists were able to analyze the tooth enamel of 62 soldiers who fought in both battles. The tooth’s chemistry varies based on the region of origin of the men. In the battle of 480 BC, it turned out that only one-third of Himera’s soldiers were locals. In the confrontation of 409 BC, three-quarters of them were locals. This confirms Diodorus’ account that the Himerans received more outside help in their first battle than in the second.
However, it appears that this account is incomplete because the present geochemical analysis reveals that the outside help was not Greek but came instead from mercenaries hired for the occasion from territories outside the Greek realm.
This discovery
sheds new light on history, as told by Diodorus and Herodotus. They apparently ignored the role of
foreign mercenaries in Himera to portray a more appealing true Greek intervention. We should remember that
Greeks generally considered it distasteful to hire foreign mercenaries, which
may be a good reason for our historians to bend their story to accommodate
their pride. Building the
Another argument
for taking this decision may be the attempt to align the victory at Himera with other
Greek victories across the
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