Calippus of Syracuse

Calippus of Syracuse

Calippus was a tyrant of Syracuse who ruled briefly for thirteen months [Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, p. 574] from 354 to 352 BC. He was a native Athenian, who traveled with Dion to Sicily to capture Syracuse, where Dion became the tyrant. Calippus then gained power by assassinating Dion, but ruled briefly before being ousted from power himself. Afterwards he commanded a band of mercenaries, who later killed him with the same sword that he used to kill Dion.

Dion's lieutenant

Calippus was an Athenian who became a student of Plato. [Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, p. 574] As the future tyrant of Syracuse, Dion, who was also a student of Plato, recruited Calippus as a member of his army which successfully invaded Syracuse. The army marched into Syracuse with 800 mercenaries and took control of the city, disposing of the previous tyrant, Dion’s nephew Dionysius II.

Assassination and rise to power

In exile, Dionysius bribed Calippus to kill Dion. [Plut. Dion. 28-58] , and Calippus accepted the offer. He was in a prime position to assassinate Dion, since most of Dion’s closest friends had been killed by Dionysius the Younger, and Calippus was his closest friend remaining.

Calippus used the money from Dionysius to bribe some of Dion’s troops to defect to him. [Plut. Dion. 28-58] He then won Dion’s trust by betraying some of the soldiers to Dion, who then enlisted Calippus’s as a secret agent to discover further plotters. In addition, whenever men told Dion that Calippus was maligning him, Dion simply thought that Calippus was acting as a spy.

Shortly afterwards, Dion’s only son fell from a window and died. [Plut. Dion. 28-58] Calippus spread a rumor saying that Dion had invited Dionysius’s son, Apollocrates to come to Syracuse as Dion’s successor. Dion’s wife, Arete, and sister, Aristomache, discovered the Calippus’s plot against Dion, but Dion was still paralyzed with remorse from his son’s death, and refused to take action.

Arete and Aristomache further inquired about the plot against Dion, and when Calippus discovered their inquisitiveness, he approached them and told them that he was loyal, and that he would prove his loyalty. They told him to take the Great Oath, involving a ceremony in Persephone’s temple, which he took. Following the ceremony, Calippus broke his vow and stabbed Dion to death, whereupon Calippus took control of Syracuse.

Rule

Following Dion’s assassination, Calippus sent a message to Athens bragging of his deeds, [Plut. Dion. 28-58] but despite his bluster, Calippus’s hold on Syracuse was tenuous. Friends of Dion attempted a revolt against him, but were unsuccessful. [Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, p. 574] Calippus also had Arete and Aristomache thrown in prison, where Arete gave birth to Dion’s son. But due to his rising unpopularity, Calippus did not have Dion's son killed, despite the danger he posed.

Fall

Several different accounts are given of how Calippus fell from power in Syracuse. According to Diodorus Siculus [Diod. xvi. 36] , Hipparinus, a son of Dionysius the Elder, a previous tyrant of Syracuse, attacked Syracuse with a fleet and army, after which Calippus fled from the city. According to Polyaenus [Poly v. 4] , Hipparinus was staying in Leontini when Calippus had sent out his army. Hipparinus attacked while most of the army was gone and secured control of the city.

And according to Plutarch [Plut. Dion. 28-58] , Calippus does lose control of the city while he is absent, on an expedition to conquer Catana. But in Plutarch’s version Hipparinus is not mentioned, and instead Syracuse revolted against Calippus.

Mercenary leadership and death

Calippus then attempted to conquer Messina instead, but his army was defeated. With his remaining troops he wandered around Sicily, but finding himself unable to support himself he traveled to Italy [Poly v. 4] . There he conquered Rhegium, which had previously been controlled by Dionysius the Younger. But because mistreated his mercenaries, his comrades Leptines II and Polyperchon stabbed him to death with a sword, reputed to be the same sword that killed Dion. [Plut. Dion. 28-58]

Citations

References

* cite web | title=Polyaenus: Stratagems -Book 5, Chapters 1-15 | work=Polyaenus: Stratagems | url=http://www.attalus.org/translate/polyaenus5A.html
accessdate=January 26 | accessyear=2007

* cite web | title=Diodorus Siculus, Library| work=Contents of the Sixteenth Book of Diodorus| url=http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Diod.+16.36.1
accessdate=January 26 | accessyear=2007

* cite web | title=The Ancient Library | work=Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology| url=http://www.ancientlibrary.com/smith-bio/0583.html
accessdate=January 26 | accessyear=2007

* cite web | title=15 Ancient Greek Heroesfrom Plutarch's Lives| work=Plutarch's Lives| url=http://www.e-classics.com/
accessdate=January 26 | accessyear=2007


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