It was quite a surprise to stand face-to-face with Pyrrhus in Albania. It
happened at the entrance to the Skanderberg Museum in Kruje, where his
life-sized bust stood right next to the imposing relief figure of Skanderbeg,
Albania’s hero.
Pyrrhus of Epirus was a great-nephew of
Olympias and cousin of
Alexander the Great – not a
small introduction.
He was born
in c.319 BC – not the right time to be the heir to the Molossian throne of
Epirus. He got
caught up in the fiery dispute between the sons of
Cassander and
Thessalonica, and reigning briefly as a minor he had to flee his homeland. He joined the court of
Demetrios I (Poliorketes) as an exile, and in
301 BC, aged 18, he fought at the
Battle of Ipsus.
As a pawn in the War of the Diadochi, Demetrios, to befriend Ptolemy gave him Pyrrhus as a hostage. That’s
how Pyrrhus arrived
in Alexandria. Well,
it was not the worst place to grow up, and Pyrrhus most certainly took advantage of the
situation, not unlike what Philip II had done at the court of Thebes. He made his way in Egypt and eventually married one of Ptolemy’s daughters,
Antigone.
Four years later, in 297 BC, with Ptolemy’s support, Pyrrhus returned to Epirus and
began taking control of his own life. He started expanding his kingdom by annexing Illyria. His ambitions were not small,
for when Antigone
died, Pyrrhus made
three diplomatic marriages to live peacefully with his neighbors. His first
wife was Lanassa,
the daughter of Agathocles,
tyrant of Syracuse.
Her dowry was the islands of
Leucas and Corcyra (modern Corfu). The next bride was the daughter of King Audoleon of the
Paeonians living north of Macedonia.
His third marriage was to Bircenna,
daughter of the Illyrian King Bardylis II.
Demetrios Poliorcetes
as king of Macedonia,
it should be said, had married Pyrrhus’
sister.
By 288 BC, Pyrrhus turned against Demetrios and succeeded in getting the Macedonian army on his side. With Lysimachos as his new ally,
they jointly ruled over Macedonia.
Only for a while, though, since Lysimachos still had his mind set on all of Macedonia
and expelled Pyrrhus.
Once more, Demetrios and Pyrrhus made peace, which was again short-lived. When in 286 BC, Demetrios invaded Asia
Minor, ruled by Lysimachos;
the latter asked Pyrrhus to invade
Thessaly to attack Demetrios from Greece. Pyrrhus soon defeated Antigonus Gonatas, Demetrios’ son, who
surrendered Thessaly to him to make peace.
Pyrrhus’
empire now included half of Macedonia, larger Epirus,
and Thessaly. Yet, he still wanted more and eyed
Magna Graecia,
including the wealth of Sicily.
His opportunity arose when Taras
(modern Taranto)
called for his help to repel an imminent Roman attack. Pyrrhus led his army across the Adriatic Sea,
including 20 war elephants. He was victorious at Heraclea (modern Policoro southwest of Metaponto) in 280 BC
and a year later at Ausculum (modern Ascoli Satriano south
of Foggia).
At this point, Pyrrhus decided to stay in Italy,
offering his help to Syracuse.
He successfully lifted the
Carthaginians’ siege in 278 BC and, in return, was proclaimed King of Sicily. The Medagliere, the strongbox room at Syracuse’s
Museum proudly exhibits coins of King Pyrrhus.
His moment of glory would not last
either because of the renewed threat from Carthage,
ending Pyrrhus’ siege
of Lilybaeum (modern
Marsala) in a disaster.
The people of Syracuse then decided not to continue the war. The Carthaginians defeated Pyrrhus in 275 BC on his
return to Syracuse.
At the end of that same year, Pyrrhus sailed back to Epirus, which, in his mind, offered
new opportunities as his son, Ptolemy,
tried to expand the kingdom. The next campaign took Pyrrhus to Argos in the Peloponnesus,
where caught in a narrow street, he was killed by a woman who threw a tile from
the housetop.
This was not the death a man like Pyrrhus would have planned. He had fought in so many battles, always leading his men. He had been schooled by Demetrios Poliorketes, who had walked
in the footsteps of Alexander
and his father, Philip.
He was not meant to die such an inglorious death.
In the 2nd century AD, Pausanias witnessed a memorial to King Pyrrhus at Argos,
integrating a panorama ‘carved in relief.’ The king was buried in his capital Ambracia (a colony of Corinth
in Epirus).
Pyrrhus may have led a glorious life,
but the Macedonians resented him because he let his Gauls plunder the tombs of
the Macedonian kings at Aegae
– an unforgivable crime!
If only they had supported it, he would have smashed Rome,becoming Basileus of Greater Greece and Sicily. The story would change and a couple of generation after the Romans wouldn't have crashed like a bull in a glassware on the Hellenistic States (and on the rising Hellenistic science and tecnology).
ReplyDeleteYes, indeed. If Alexander had lived long enough to conquer the western Mediterranean, history would have looked quite different too.
DeleteAs to Pyrrhus, remains the question whether he could have won against the Carthaginians.