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By Jeremy Dummett | |
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Euryalus means "broad nail" in Greek, being roughly the shape of this part of the hillside and use of the term preceded building of the castle. It was not fortified during the Athenian war and was a weak point in the city's defences. Dionysius I built the fortifications during a lull in fighting the Carthaginians and the north wall, as far as the Hexaplon Gate to the east, and the basis of the Euryalus Castle, were constructed in the six years 402-397 BC. The Sicilian Greek historian Diodorus, writing around 50 BC, tells us that 60,000 men were brought in from the countryside to carry out the work. |
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Dionysius
was a military innovator and the design of the Castle revolutionised methods of
defence. He introduced the concept of an active and mobile defence system that
allowed the garrison to hit back at a besieging army. This was achieved by building
watchtowers with permanent platforms to hold catapults capable of firing missiles
a hundred metres, underground passages for moving troops safely from one sector
to another and by constructing a pincer-style gate below the castle from which
to make sorties to harass the enemy. In front of the walls and the five towers
of the Castle, deep ditches were dug to make the area inaccessible to siege towers
and rams. The Castle's high position meant it also acted as a look out point for
enemy ships and as a base from which to send cavalry down to prevent a landing.
While the Euryalus Castle was put to some use in later periods, its heyday was in the Greek era when it played a central role in the defence of the city. From when the work under Dionysius was finished in 397 until Syracuse fell to the Romans in 212, a period of 185 years, despite major attempts, it was never taken. When the Roman general Marcellus eventually entered the city, we know from Livy that at first he saw no possibility of the Euryalus Castle being either surrendered or captured. Only when all the other quarters of Syracuse had capitulated, did the captain of the garrison, Philodemus, finally surrender and with a guarantee of safe passage, lead his garrison out of the Castle. | |
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