Dionisio I, i Celti e il sacco di Roma. Alcune riflessioni sulla cronologia e sulla strategia delle operazioni militari siracusane tra l’Elleporo e Pyrgi

The exact chronology of Dionysius I’s campaigns in the ’80s of the IVth century B.C. is still in question. The sources relate Dionysius’ capture of Rhegion (Diodorus, Polybius, Dionysius of Halicarnassus) and the treaty with the Gauls (Justin) to the sack of Rome by the Senones: to make all these ac...

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Main Author: Andrea Pierozzi
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: LED Edizioni Universitarie 2019-12-01
Series:Erga-Logoi
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Erga-Logoi/article/view/1720
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spelling doaj-0991ad68334941f18d0397e3e1a679f72020-11-25T01:43:52ZdeuLED Edizioni Universitarie Erga-Logoi2280-96782282-32122019-12-0172458210.7358/erga-2019-002-pier1240Dionisio I, i Celti e il sacco di Roma. Alcune riflessioni sulla cronologia e sulla strategia delle operazioni militari siracusane tra l’Elleporo e PyrgiAndrea PierozziThe exact chronology of Dionysius I’s campaigns in the ’80s of the IVth century B.C. is still in question. The sources relate Dionysius’ capture of Rhegion (Diodorus, Polybius, Dionysius of Halicarnassus) and the treaty with the Gauls (Justin) to the sack of Rome by the Senones: to make all these accounts converge, we should date the fall of the Urbs in late July 387 B.C. The coincidence of the Gallic invasion and the siege of Rhegion suggests us that there may have been a remote planning of the Syracusan approach with the Celts; according to the deeds of Dionysius I’s in the Adriatic and Tyrrhenian seas and the chronology of Philistus’ mythological narrative, Syracuse’s interest with the Gauls may have been developed in the ’90s. Such a scenario would allow us to suppose that the Syracusan court played a role in the Celtic migratory phaenomenon before the sack of Rome with an anti-Etrurian and anti-Roman aim. By the end of the ’80s, the absence of Philistus from the courthttps://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Erga-Logoi/article/view/1720celtidiodoro siculodionisio ifilosseno di citeragalligiustinomercenariatoreggioromatimeo di tauromenio – celtsdiodorus siculusdionysius igaulsjustinmercenariesphiloxenus of cytherarhegionrometimaeus of tauromenium.
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrea Pierozzi
spellingShingle Andrea Pierozzi
Dionisio I, i Celti e il sacco di Roma. Alcune riflessioni sulla cronologia e sulla strategia delle operazioni militari siracusane tra l’Elleporo e Pyrgi
Erga-Logoi
celti
diodoro siculo
dionisio i
filosseno di citera
galli
giustino
mercenariato
reggio
roma
timeo di tauromenio – celts
diodorus siculus
dionysius i
gauls
justin
mercenaries
philoxenus of cythera
rhegion
rome
timaeus of tauromenium.
author_facet Andrea Pierozzi
author_sort Andrea Pierozzi
title Dionisio I, i Celti e il sacco di Roma. Alcune riflessioni sulla cronologia e sulla strategia delle operazioni militari siracusane tra l’Elleporo e Pyrgi
title_short Dionisio I, i Celti e il sacco di Roma. Alcune riflessioni sulla cronologia e sulla strategia delle operazioni militari siracusane tra l’Elleporo e Pyrgi
title_full Dionisio I, i Celti e il sacco di Roma. Alcune riflessioni sulla cronologia e sulla strategia delle operazioni militari siracusane tra l’Elleporo e Pyrgi
title_fullStr Dionisio I, i Celti e il sacco di Roma. Alcune riflessioni sulla cronologia e sulla strategia delle operazioni militari siracusane tra l’Elleporo e Pyrgi
title_full_unstemmed Dionisio I, i Celti e il sacco di Roma. Alcune riflessioni sulla cronologia e sulla strategia delle operazioni militari siracusane tra l’Elleporo e Pyrgi
title_sort dionisio i, i celti e il sacco di roma. alcune riflessioni sulla cronologia e sulla strategia delle operazioni militari siracusane tra l’elleporo e pyrgi
publisher LED Edizioni Universitarie
series Erga-Logoi
issn 2280-9678
2282-3212
publishDate 2019-12-01
description The exact chronology of Dionysius I’s campaigns in the ’80s of the IVth century B.C. is still in question. The sources relate Dionysius’ capture of Rhegion (Diodorus, Polybius, Dionysius of Halicarnassus) and the treaty with the Gauls (Justin) to the sack of Rome by the Senones: to make all these accounts converge, we should date the fall of the Urbs in late July 387 B.C. The coincidence of the Gallic invasion and the siege of Rhegion suggests us that there may have been a remote planning of the Syracusan approach with the Celts; according to the deeds of Dionysius I’s in the Adriatic and Tyrrhenian seas and the chronology of Philistus’ mythological narrative, Syracuse’s interest with the Gauls may have been developed in the ’90s. Such a scenario would allow us to suppose that the Syracusan court played a role in the Celtic migratory phaenomenon before the sack of Rome with an anti-Etrurian and anti-Roman aim. By the end of the ’80s, the absence of Philistus from the court
topic celti
diodoro siculo
dionisio i
filosseno di citera
galli
giustino
mercenariato
reggio
roma
timeo di tauromenio – celts
diodorus siculus
dionysius i
gauls
justin
mercenaries
philoxenus of cythera
rhegion
rome
timaeus of tauromenium.
url https://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Erga-Logoi/article/view/1720
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