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Antigonus was famously once asked, “who is the greatest General of our day?” to which he replied, “Pyrrhus, if he lives to be old.”
This is the third and final installment of The Life of Pyrrhus, King of Epirus.
[Original music score based on Epirot and other Greek folk traditions, by Ilias Markantonis.
See Ilias' work on Facebook, or Instagram (@ilias_markantonis)]
Pyrrhus takes opportunity after opportunity, always imagining this will further his cause. It begins with a Sicilian expedition. After this, Pyrrhus returns to Italy to fight the Battle of Beneventum. Then he goes to Macedonia to try and claw back an opportunity he didn’t pursue earlier.
It’s a predictable pattern, according to Plutarch:
“Pyrrhus was always entertaining one hope after another, and since he made one success but the starting point for a new one, while he was determined to make good each disaster by a fresh undertaking, he allowed neither defeat nor victory to put a limit to his causing trouble for himself and for others.”
Pyrrhus made his mark by cultivating an almost maniacal focus on winning in battle - he had a lust for combat. In doing so he won for himself long lasting glory. But we should perhaps ask, together with Plutarch - what was the cost? And was it worth it?
On today’s podcast:
Links:
Some Places Mentioned
Akragas (Agrigento)
Leontini (Lentini)
Tauromenium (Taormina)
Eryx (Erice, Trapani)
Lilybaeum (Marsala)
Tarentum (Taranto)
Beneventum (Benevento)
Syracuse
Calabria
Aegae
Sparta
Crete
Corinth
Argos
Nafplio
By Alex Petkas4.8
358358 ratings
Antigonus was famously once asked, “who is the greatest General of our day?” to which he replied, “Pyrrhus, if he lives to be old.”
This is the third and final installment of The Life of Pyrrhus, King of Epirus.
[Original music score based on Epirot and other Greek folk traditions, by Ilias Markantonis.
See Ilias' work on Facebook, or Instagram (@ilias_markantonis)]
Pyrrhus takes opportunity after opportunity, always imagining this will further his cause. It begins with a Sicilian expedition. After this, Pyrrhus returns to Italy to fight the Battle of Beneventum. Then he goes to Macedonia to try and claw back an opportunity he didn’t pursue earlier.
It’s a predictable pattern, according to Plutarch:
“Pyrrhus was always entertaining one hope after another, and since he made one success but the starting point for a new one, while he was determined to make good each disaster by a fresh undertaking, he allowed neither defeat nor victory to put a limit to his causing trouble for himself and for others.”
Pyrrhus made his mark by cultivating an almost maniacal focus on winning in battle - he had a lust for combat. In doing so he won for himself long lasting glory. But we should perhaps ask, together with Plutarch - what was the cost? And was it worth it?
On today’s podcast:
Links:
Some Places Mentioned
Akragas (Agrigento)
Leontini (Lentini)
Tauromenium (Taormina)
Eryx (Erice, Trapani)
Lilybaeum (Marsala)
Tarentum (Taranto)
Beneventum (Benevento)
Syracuse
Calabria
Aegae
Sparta
Crete
Corinth
Argos
Nafplio

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