- Phalaris
Phalaris was the
tyrant of Acragas (Agrigentum ) inSicily , from approximately 570 to 554 BC.History
He was entrusted with the building of the
temple ofZeus Atabyrius in thecitadel , and took advantage of his position to make himself despot (Aristotle , "Politics", v. 10). Under his rule Agrigentum seems to have attained considerable prosperity. He supplied the city withwater , adorned it with finebuilding s, and strengthened it withwall s. On the northerncoast of the island the people ofHimera elected himgeneral with absolute power, in spite of the warnings of thepoet Stesichorus (Aristotle, "Rhetoric", ii. 20). According to the "Suda " he succeeded in making himself master of the whole of the island. He was at last overthrown in a general uprising headed by Telemachus, the ancestor ofTheron (tyrant c. 488-472 BC), and burned in hisbrazen bull .Phalaris was renowned for his excessive cruelty. Among his alleged atrocities is cannibalism: he was said to have eaten suckling babies. [Tatian. "Tatian's Address to the Greeks", Chapter XXXIV.]
In his brazen bull, invented, it is said, by Perillus of
Athens , the tyrant's victims were shut up and, afire being kindled beneath, were roasted alive while their shrieks represented the bellowing of the bull. Perillus himself is said to have been the first victim. Somescholar s of the early 20th century proposed a connection between Phalaris's bull and the bull-images ofPhoenicia ncult s (cf. the Biblicalgolden calf ), and hypothesized a continuation of Easternhuman sacrifice practices. This idea has subsequently fallen out of favor, however, although the original arguments have not been refuted.The story of the bull cannot be dismissed as pure invention.
Pindar , who lived less than a century afterwards, expressly associates this instrument oftorture with the name of the tyrant. There was certainly a brazen bull at Agrigentum that was carried off by the Carthaginians toCarthage , when it was again taken by Scipio a.k.a. Scipio - the Elder, and restored to Agrigentum (c. 200 BCE). However, it is more likely thatScipio Aemilianus Africanus , a.k.a. Scipio - the Younger, returned this bull and other stolen works of art to the original Sicilian cities, after his total destruction of Carthage (c. 146 BCE), which ended the Third Punic War.Some four centuries later, however, a new tradition prevailed that Phalaris was a naturally humane man and a patron of
philosophy andliterature . He is so described in the declamations ascribed toLucian (who was himself of Phoenician or Syrian heritage), and in the letters which bear his own name (but whichRichard Bentley proved to have been written centuries later, around this time of Phalaris' rehabilitation, possibly byAdrianus of Tyre who was secretary to the infamousCommodus around 190 CE).Plutarch , writing around 100 CE amidst this change of tradition, though he takes the unfavourable view, yet mentions that the Sicilians referred to Phalaris' severity as "justice " and "hatred ofcrime ".References
ources
*1911
External links
* [http://www.livius.org Livius] , [http://www.livius.org/pha-phd/phalaris/phalaris.html Phalaris of Acragas] by Jona Lendering
* [http://www.ancientlibrary.com/smith-bio/2567.html Phalaris] in the Dictionary of Greek & Roman Biography & Mythology, ed. Wm. Smith
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.