Histos 14 (2020) 152–84
THE IMPLICATIONS OF ‘POLIORCETES’:
WAS DEMETRIUS THE BESIEGER’S
NICKNAME IRONIC?1
Abstract: According to Diodorus, Demetrius, the son of Antigonus Monophthalmus, earned
his famous sobriquet, ‘Poliorcetes’ during his spectacular siege of Rhodes in 305–304 BC.
The ancient implications of this unique epithet are unremarkable, but modern scholarship
has often taken the allocation of the surname, in retrospect, to be ironic. The thinking goes
that, in the context of Rhodes, Demetrius was certainly the besieger, but he was not the taker
of that city. This notion probably originates with Plutarch, whose Life of Demetrius is built
around the trope that his famous subject aspired to much, but accomplished little. However,
a systematic scrutiny of Demetrius’ lifelong siege enterprises demonstrates that his nickname was, in fact, well-deserved. This paper suggests that the image of Demetrius as a
‘Besieger’ but not a ‘Taker’ of cities is more a construct facilitated by Plutarch and peddled
by superficial modern analyses, than a reality.
Keywords: Demetrius Poliorcetes, Hellenistic historiography,
Diodorus Siculus, Plutarch, nicknames, ancient siegecraft
διόπερ τῇ πολυχειρίᾳ τάχιον τῆς προσδοκίας ἁπάντων ἐπιτελουµένων
φοβερὸς ἦν ὁ ∆ηµήτριος τοῖς Ῥοδίοις. οὐ µόνον γὰρ τὰ µεγέθη τῶν
µηχανῶν καὶ τὸ πλῆθος τῆς ἠθροισµένης δυνάµεως ἐξέπληττεν αὐτούς,
ἀλλὰ καὶ τὸ τοῦ βασιλέως βίαιον καὶ φιλότεχνον ἐν ταῖς πολιορκίαις.
εὐµήχανος γὰρ ὢν καθ᾿ ὑπερβολὴν ἐν ταῖς ἐπινοίαις καὶ πολλὰ παρὰ τὴν
τῶν ἀρχιτεκτόνων τέχνην παρευρίσκων ὠνοµάσθη µὲν πολιορκητής, τὴν δ᾿
ἐν ταῖς προσβολαῖς ὑπεροχὴν καὶ βίαν τοιαύτην εἶχεν ὥστε δόξαι µηδὲν
οὕτως ὀχυρὸν εἶναι τεῖχος ὃ δύναιτ᾿ ἂν τὴν ἀπ᾿ ἐκείνου τοῖς πολιορκουµένοις ἀσφάλειαν παρέχεσθαι.
Thanks to his large workforce, everything was completed sooner than
expected. Demetrius now posed a real threat to the Rhodians. It was
not only the size of his siege engines and the large number of troops he
had assembled that terrified them, but also the forcefulness and ingenuity that he brought to sieges. He had an extremely good technical mind
and it was because he invented many devices that went beyond the skill
of the professional engineers that he was called Poliorcetes ‘the besieger
I thank the journal’s anonymous referees, whose close reading and insightful comments
clarified my thinking on this topic considerably. I am also extremely grateful to the editors
for their excellent suggestions and guidance during the editorial process.
1
ISSN: 2046-5963
Copyright © 2020 Pat Wheatley
28 August 2020
The Implications of ‘Poliorcetes’: Was Demetrius the Besieger’s Nickname Ironic?
153
of cities’. And when it came to assaulting a city, he had such technical
superiority, and brought so much forceful energy to bear, that it seemed
that no wall was strong enough to afford the besieged protection from
him.2
D
iodorus Siculus provides us with this snapshot of Demetrius, ‘The
Besieger of Cities’ in early 304 BC as he embarks on the second stage
of his famous year-long siege of Rhodes. Diodorus’ sources for this
tableau are difficult to ascertain, as his Rhodian chapters (20.81–8, 91–100),
which provide such a vivid description of the great and grim spectacle, appear
to be drawn from several authors and genres, including Hieronymus of Cardia
and Zeno of Rhodes. It is even possible that Diodorus himself is responsible
for some of the comments embedded in his narrative, and his historiography
in Book 20 is far more complex than in other sections of his Bibliotheke.3 At the
precise point when Demetrius is designated ‘Poliorcetes’, the unfortunate
Rhodians had survived (barely!) the naval attacks on their harbour in the first
few months of the epic assault, but were now dismayed to see the next act
looming: an all-out offensive by land. The symbol and centrepiece of this
threat was taking place in full view: the construction of a gigantic helepolis, or
‘City-Taker’.4 This terrifying machine was to capture, if not the city of Rhodes,
the imagination of the entire ancient world, and made Demetrius a legendary
figure.5 While the construction was underway, Demetrius deployed other men
to fill the moat and clear a space four stades wide (782.4 m = 855.64 yards) as
a path for the helepolis up to the walls, and set sappers to work tunnelling under
the walls to undermine them. He also built eight penthouses to protect his men
while at their labours, and two more enormous ones, pushed by 1,000 men, to
bear gigantic battering rams,6 displaying a prodigious energy and
Diod. 20.92.1–2, trans. Waterfield. See also Amm. Marc. 23.4.10–13; 24.2.18: Poliorcetes
appellatus est; Plut. Demetr. 42.10–11; cf. 20.1–9; Aul. Gell. NA 15.31.1; Vitr. 10.16.4; Syncellus,
Chron. 320; Suda, s.v. ‘Πολιορκῆσαι’ (Π 1907 Adler).
3
For discussion of the multi-layered source tradition for the siege of Rhodes, see
Wheatley (2016) 45–9; and for an incisive new treatment of Diodorus’ historiography see
now Waterfield (2019) xxviii–xxxii, and 537–42.
4
Sources for the helepolis at Rhodes: Diod. 20.91; Plut. Demetr. 21.1–3; Ath. Mech. 27.2–
6; Vitr. 10.16.4; Amm. Marc. 23.4.10–13; Moschion, FGrHist 575 F 1 ap. Athen. 5.206d;
Suda, s.v. ‘Ἑλεπόλεις’ (Ε 799 Adler). The best discussion of the machine is now Whitehead
and Blyth (2004) 134–8 and 190, with Fig. 16; see also Wehrli (1968) 210–11; Marsden (1971)
84–5; Garlan (1974) 209, 229–34; Meiggs (1982) 165–8; Lendle (1983) 58–70; Schürmann
(1991) 82–5; Kern (1999) 243–7; Pimouguet-Pédarros (2003) 378–9; ead. (2011) 33–5, 161–5,
Fig. VIII, and passim; Campbell (2006) 83–7.
5
For the technical specifications of the helepolis, see Wheatley (2016) 56–8.
6
Diod. 20.95.1 (positing improbably dimensions of 120 cubits); Wehrli (1968) 209–10;
Meiggs (1982) 168–9; Berthold (1984) 72–3; Pimouguet-Pédarros (2011) 166–8; Murray (2012)
2
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Pat Wheatley
determination to assault the city by all means possible. It is likely that these
efforts took up much of the winter of 305/4 BC, and Diodorus states that 30,000
men were employed.
Curiously, our other main source for the period, Plutarch, sends a mixed
message. While corroborating Demetrius’ energy and genius at preparing and
designing war machines, the biographer suggests that he was better at planning than he was at executing his enterprises. In his Parallel Life of the Besieger,
he states:
ἀλλὰ καὶ παρασκευάσασθαι δύναµιν ἢ χρήσασθαι βελτίων ἐδόκει
στρατηγὸς εἶναι, πάντα µὲν ἐκ περιουσίας ὑπάρχειν βουλόµενος ἐπὶ τὰς
χρείας, τῆς δὲ περὶ τὰς ναῦς καὶ τὰ µηχανήµατα µεγαλουργίας καὶ καθ᾿
ἡδονήν τινα τοῦ θεωρεῖν ἀπλήστως ἔχων. εὐφυὴς γὰρ ὢν καὶ θεωρητικὸς
οὐκ εἰς παιδιὰς οὐδ᾿ εἰς διαγωγὰς ἀχρήστους ἔτρεψε τὸ φιλότεχνον, ὥσπερ
ἄλλοι βασιλεῖς αὐλοῦντες καὶ ζωγραφοῦντες καὶ τορεύοντες.
Indeed, as a general he had the reputation of being more effective in
preparing an army than in handling it. He insisted on being abundantly
supplied for every eventuality, he had an insatiable ambition to embark
on larger and larger projects, whether in shipbuilding or the construction of siege engines, and he took intense pleasure in watching the workings of these creations. For he had a good natural intelligence and a
speculative mind and he did not apply his talents to mere pastimes or
useless diversions, like some other kings, who played the flute or painted
or worked in metal.7
This divergent historiographical characterisation has been perpetuated by
modern scholarship, leaving a lingering impression that Demetrius’ nickname
was ironic, and that he accomplished very little, despite his dynamism and
charisma. And so it has gone for 1,900 years: the allocation of the surname has
often been taken, in retrospect, to be sarcastic. The thinking goes that, in the
context of Rhodes, Demetrius was certainly the besieger, but he was not the taker
of that city.8 Consequently, by the twenty-first century the image of ‘The
117–18. On the ram-carrying penthouses invented by Hegetor of Byzantium, see Ath.
Mech. 21.2–26.5; Vitr. 10.15.2–7, with Whitehead and Blyth (2004) 120–34; Campbell (2006)
87–92. Hegetor is sometimes cited as being associated with Demetrius; see, for instance,
Tarn (1930) 107 and 109–10; Winter (1971) 318–19, but this is unlikely: see the cautious and
definitive discussions of Whitehead and Blyth (2004) 120; and Campbell (2006) 87–8.
7
Plut. Demetr. 20.1–2, trans. Duff. The sinister undertones of the first sentence are notable.
8
Modern scholars have regularly asserted that his nickname was derisive; see, for
instance, Berthold (1984) 79; Huß (2001) 190; Campbell (2006) 81–2; Hauben (2010) 103;
Murray (2012) 118; Anson (2014) 168; and especially Heckel (1984); and Gomme (1945) 17
The Implications of ‘Poliorcetes’: Was Demetrius the Besieger’s Nickname Ironic?
155
Besieger’ is somewhat tarnished, and his mana diminished. In 1945 Arnold
Gomme, in the introduction to his magisterial Historical Commentary on
Thucydides, made this remark:
The name Poliorketes was surely first given to Demetrios in derision: he
besieged towns, for months, went on besieging them, but did not take
them. He was not Ἐκπολιορκητής.9
Forty years later Waldemar Heckel wrote:
There is no denying that the siege of Rhodes was an impressive undertaking, and that the Rhodians themselves could be justly proud of their
achievement. But, in the final analysis it rated, and was remembered, as
a failure. It is, at any rate, in keeping with the enigmatic career of
Demetrios that the nickname which was originally applied to him in
derision became the epithet by which he was known to posterity, one so
radiant that it blinds us to one curious fact about him: his fame as a
besieger of cities derives from one of the major setbacks of his career.
Besieger indeed!10
In this essay I argue that Demetrius’ nickname was, in fact, well-deserved.
This is demonstrated by the detailed evidence, which I shall present here, of
how intimidating and successful his forty-seven recorded siege operations
were. I will first examine the historiographic tradition and its reception, and
then explore the etymology of the epithet, before concluding that Demetrius
earned his nickname fair and square. It was anything but ironic.
The Historiographical Problem
The testimonies of our two major sources regarding this notorious nickname
are both enlightening, and puzzling. On the one hand in Diodorus we have
the description of a warlord in his full potency, and the alarm which he instils
in his opponents; on the other we have in Plutarch the admonition that with
n. 1 (below). For a more balanced view: Wheatley (2001) 141; Lo Presti (2010) 311–12, 318;
Pimouguet-Pédarros (2011) 307–10; Rose (2015) 232 and (2019) 173; and for the cultic
implications: O’Sullivan (2014) 84–5.
9
Gomme (1945) 17 n. 1, offering, for the nuance, a compound variation of the verb:
ἐκπολιορκέω, ‘to conquer, cause to capitulate’, e.g., Thuc. 1.94.2, 117.3, 131.1, 134.2; Xen.
Hell. 2.4.3; [Arist.] Ath. Pol. 19.3.
10
Heckel (1984) 440.
Pat Wheatley
156
great power comes great culpability, and that those who wield it should do so
with moral insight and restraint:
ἀλλὰ ∆ηµήτριος ἔχαιρε τῷ βασιλεῖ τῶν θεῶν ἀνοµοιοτάτην ἐπιγραφόµενος
προσωνυµίαν· ὁ µὲν γὰρ Πολιεὺς καὶ Πολιοῦχος, ὁ δὲ Πολιορκητὴς
ἐπίκλησιν ἔσχεν. οὕτως ἐπὶ τὴν τοῦ καλοῦ χώραν τὸ αἰσχρὸν ὑπὸ δυνάµεως
ἀµαθοῦς ἐπελθὸν συνῳκείωσε τῇ δόξῃ τὴν ἀδικίαν.
Demetrius, on the other hand, took pleasure in being given a nickname
which is the opposite of the one bestowed on the king of the gods, for
Zeus is known as the ‘Protector’ or ‘Defender’ of cities, but Demetrius
as ‘the Besieger’. It is through such an attitude that naked power, if it
lacks wisdom, allows evil actions to usurp the place of good, and glorious
achievements to be associated with injustice, and so it happened with
Demetrius.11
For Diodorus, Demetrius is irresistible. For Plutarch, Demetrius has failed the
important test. The negative implication of futility and failed ambition follow
readily, especially in the light of Demetrius’ less than glorious end (he eventually died in captivity years later in Syria). Thus, what can hardly have been an
insulting epithet in 304 BC has been turned during historiographic transmission into a mockery. This fact is astonishing, given that our main literary
sources state that he was dazzling, magnificent:
ἦν δὲ καὶ κατὰ τὸ µέγεθος τοῦ σώµατος καὶ κατὰ τὸ κάλλος ἡρωικὸν
ἀποφαίνων ἀξίωµα, ὥστε καὶ τοὺς ἀφικνουµένους τῶν ξένων θεωροῦντας
εὐπρέπειαν κεκοσµηµένην ὑπεροχῇ βασιλικῇ θαυµάζειν καὶ
παρακολουθεῖν ἐν ταῖς ἐξόδοις ἕνεκεν τῆς θέας. ἐπὶ δὲ τούτοις ὑπῆρχε καὶ
τῇ ψυχῇ µετέωρος καὶ µεγαλοπρεπὴς καὶ καταφρονῶν οὐ τῶν πολλῶν
µόνον, ἀλλὰ καὶ τῶν ἐν ταῖς δυναστείαις ὄντων, καὶ τὸ πάντων ἰδιώτατον.
Both in stature and in beauty he displayed the dignity of a hero, so that
even those strangers who had come from a distance, when they beheld
his comeliness arrayed in royal splendour, marvelled at him and
followed him as he went abroad in order to gaze at him. Furthermore,
he was haughty in spirit and proud and looked down not only upon
common men but also on those of royal estate.12
Plut. Demetr. 42.10–11, trans. Duff; cf. Demetr. 1.7; Arist. 6.2.
Diod. 20.92.3–4, trans. Geer; cf. Plut. Demetr. 2.2–3; 20.2; Diod. 19.81.4; Aelian, VH
12.14 (= 14.46c). Curiously, the compiler of the Suda Lexicon (s.v. ‘∆ηµήτριος, Φανοστράτου,
Φαληρεύς’ (∆ 429 Adler)) has reproduced Diodorus’ description of Demetrius just before
11
12
The Implications of ‘Poliorcetes’: Was Demetrius the Besieger’s Nickname Ironic?
157
Arguably, the trend of understating Demetrius’ achievements begins with
Plutarch, who surely had access to some of Diodorus’ sources, including
Hieronymus, but has a devious authorial agenda.13 Although he gives no hint
that ‘Poliorcetes’ was meant ironically, his Life of Demetrius is built around the
trope that his famous subject aspired to much, but accomplished little. He was
at best a showman, at worst a charlatan. This construct serves Plutarch’s modus
operandi well, as he presents Demetrius in tandem with Marc Antony as a pair
of negative examples in his exploration of virtue and vice.14 The biographer
builds Demetrius’ brilliance and genius up (Demetr. 17.1; 20.1–2, 5–9), but the
true tale is told in his sinister asides: ‘he returned [from the Nile] without
accomplishing anything’ (19.4); ‘although [at Rhodes] he was accomplishing
nothing worthy of mention’ (22.1); and ‘since he could accomplish nothing [in
a war against Athens]’.15 Plutarch therefore presents for his Roman readers a
perfect subject to yoke together with the much-reviled Antony, and in the
process mangles the historical narrative by transmitting a Demetrius whose
greatest accolade is a mockery. And because, as luck would have it, Plutarch’s
biography is the only complete treatment of Demetrius’ life to survive from
the wreck of Hellenistic historiography, modern scholars have followed his
cue.
the battle of Gaza in late 312 almost verbatim (19.81.3–4), but has inserted it in the entry for
his namesake, Demetrius of Phalerum. See also Billows (1990) 7; Hornblower (1981) 227–32.
13
On Plutarch and his sources see, succinctly, Duff (2012) xxiii–xxv. Plutarch’s appetite
for research is amply demonstrated by Alex. 46, and his authorial agendas are laid out at
the beginning of the Nicias, and the Alexander. It is also likely that he had access to Diodorus
himself, an interesting largely unexplored possibility.
14
Plut. Demetr. 1.5–8; cf. Alex. 1.2, with Andrei and Scuderi (1989) 39–40; Duff (1999) 45–
9 and 278–81. It is notable that Antony’s father, M. Antonius Creticus, bore a cognomen that
may have been regarded as ironic, given his abject performance against the Cretan pirates:
see Flor. 1.42.7; App. Sic. 6; cf. Plut. Ant. 1; Diod. 40.1, with de Souza (1999) 145–8. Perhaps
Plutarch represents him generously to resonate with Demetrius’ ideal family upbringing; cf.
Pelling (1988) 22, 117; Rose (2015) 22.
15
Plut. Demetr. 19.4: ἐπανῆλθεν ἄπρακτος; cf. 22.1: οὐδὲν ἄξιον λόγου πράττων; 33.3: ὡς δ᾿
οὐδὲν ἐπέραινε; and Ant. 34.7: πράττων µὲν οὐδέν, for a parallel comment on Antony’s
performance at the siege of Samosata in 38 BC (I thank Graham Gwozdecky at Trinity
College, Dublin, for drawing my attention to this reference on my visit in 2017). One is put
in mind of the famous ‘damning asides’ of Plutarch’s near-contemporary, Tacitus, on
Tiberius, e.g., Ann. 1.1, 62, 72; 2.42; cf. Hist. 1.49.4 on Galba. It may be that Plutarch is as
sententious as Tacitus.
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The Etymology of Demetrius’ Nickname
To gain some insight as to why Diodorus coined ‘Poliorcetes’ for Demetrius,
it may also be useful to review the etymology of the epithet. The epsiloncontracted verb πολιορκέω is formed from πόλις + ἕρκος,16 and carries several
nuances in meaning, but is mainly translated as ‘to besiege, blockade, tighten
a siege’.17 Figuratively the word may be rendered ‘to press closely, oppress,
harass’ (BDAG). In the passive voice the meanings may expand: ‘to be besieged,
in the grip of a siege, in a state of siege, blockaded (of a fleet), dammed (of a
river, in particular the Scamander: Pl. Prt. 340a)’; and figuratively ‘to be
tormented, clenched, oppressed’ (BDAG); also ‘to be blocked’ (medical), and
‘to be pestered’ (LSJ).18 Related is the compound adjective πτολίπορθος,
formed from πτόλις + πέρθω, ‘sacking cities’, and ‘destroyer of cities’, an epic
epithet, most examples of which are found in Homer, Hesiod, and Pindar.19
But the first declension masculine noun πολιορκητής is unique in that it
appears to have only ever been applied as a nickname to Demetrius, the son
of Antigonus Monophthalmus.20
What can be made of this singular, and very loaded, adaptation of an
epithet applied to gods and heroes, and first recorded in the context of the
most epic siege undertaken since Troy? The events of 305–304 captured the
imagination of the Greek world, and left resonances, usually connected to
specific details or cameos from the siege narrative, throughout the Graeco-
πόλις -εως, ‘citadel, city, city-state, community’; third declension, from Proto-Hellenic
πτόλις, derived from Proto-Indo-European *tpolH-. The early form πτόλις shows metathesis
tp > pt because Ancient Greek stop clusters always end in a coronal. Cognate with Sanskrit
(pūr, ‘city’) and Lithuanian pilìs. ἕρκος -εος or -ους, ‘fence, enclosure, wall for defence,
barrier, hedge’; third declension, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *serk-, like Latin
sarciō -īre, ‘mend, restore, twine’, from Hittite šar-nin-k, ‘restore damage, make amends’
(Beekes (2009) II.1219).
17
LSJ; BDAG s.v. πολιορκέω, e.g., Hdt. 1.17, 154; Ar. Lys. 281; Vesp. 685; Alciphr. 3.26.2;
4.16.1; Plut. Mar. 18.1; Brut. 30.6, etc.
18
Plut. Sull. 25.2. The latter meaning is ironic considering Demetrius’ legendary womanising; see Ogden (1999) 173–7.
19
πτολίπορθος -ον: third declension adjective with πέρθω, ‘to sack, ravage’, e.g., an
epithet of Ares: Hom. Il. 20.152; Hes. Theog. 936; of Odysseus: Hom. Il. 2.278; cf. Plut. Mor.
987c; of Oileus: Hom. Il. 2.728; of Achilles: Hom. Il. 15.77; cf. also Diod. 11.14.4; Pind. Ol.
8.35; Aesch. Ag. 472, 783 (BDAG; LSJ).
20
πολιορκητής -οῦ: formed on the model of ναύτης, στρατιώτης, etc. Ancient Greek
names were commonly formed from two ordinary Greek roots in this way.
16
The Implications of ‘Poliorcetes’: Was Demetrius the Besieger’s Nickname Ironic?
159
Roman source tradition, from the Parian Marble down to the Suda.21 Demetrius towered like a Homeric hero above Rhodes, and Hellenistic culture,
and his beloved hetaera, Lamia, was even likened by an unknown comic poet
to his helepolis, and thus to another ‘city-taker’: Helen.22
To further counter the case that the nickname was derisory, it is clear that
Demetrius himself revelled in his epiklesis. As we have seen, Plutarch explicitly
states this (Demetr. 42.10), and further evidence is provided by an anecdote from
Phylarchus, preserved by both the biographer and Athenaeus, which relates
the famous satirical toasts pledged at Demetrius’ symposia to himself and his
father as the only true kings. The other dynasts were dismissed with apparently
insulting epithets: Ptolemy as ‘Fleet-Commander’, Seleucus as ‘ElephantMaster’, Lysimachus as ‘Guardian of the Treasury’ (= eunuch!), and Agathocles as ‘Lord of the Isles’.23 Although Plutarch is disapproving, the fact remains that Demetrius enjoyed having the surname ‘Poliorcetes’. Perhaps he
‘owned’ it after weathering some initial negative connotations, but it seems
that he regarded the only really worthwhile title to be Basileus, and that he and
his father were the only true holders of that rank. Notably, Basileus is the only
title that appears on inscriptions and Antigonid coins, whereas Poliorcetes is a
strictly literary epithet. The distinction is important. A nickname, surname
(epiklesis), or sobriquet is generally attributed by popular acclaim or notoriety,
and is preserved in the literature, but officially sanctioned epithets were imposed, most often for propaganda reasons, and appear on coinage and epigraphy.24 For Demetrius, poliorcetics was the route to basileia. One was the method,
the other the goal; neither were reprehensible.
Narrative of the siege: Diod. 20.81–8, 91–100; cf. P. Berol. 11632 (= FGrHist 533 F 2 =
BNJ 533 F 2 (S. Ueno)). Other ancient sources for aspects of the siege: Plut. Demetr. 21–2;
Mor. 183A–B; Paus. 1.6.6–7; Polyaen. 4.6.16; Trogus, Prol. 15; App. B. Civ. 4.9.66–7; Aul.
Gell. NA 15.31; Vitr. 10.16.4–8; Amm. Marc. 23.4.10–13; Parian Marble, FGrHist 239 F B23
= BNJ 239 F B23 (J. P. Sickinger); Athen. 5.206d; Ath. Mech. 27.2–6; Plin. HN 7.38.126;
35.36.102–6; Str. 14.2.5, C652; Suda, s.v. ‘Πρωτογένης’ (Π 2963 Adler); s.v. ‘Ἑλεπόλεις’ (Ε
799 Adler); Cic. Ver. 2.4.60.135; Orat. 2.5; Fronto, Ep. 1.10.4; Frontin. Str. 1.7.3–4; Ael. VH
12.41; Chron. Lind. D 95–115 (Epiph. 3).
22
Plut. Demetr. 27.4; cf. Aesch. Ag. 689; Ogden (1999) 249–50. On Lamia, see Wheatley
(2003).
23
Plut. Demetr. 25; Mor. 823C–D; Athen. 6.261b = Phylarchus, FGrHist 81 F 31, with
Hauben (1974a); Gruen (1985); Bosworth (2002) 272–4; Rose (2015) 236–7; BNJ 81 F 31 (F.
Landucci Gattinoni); cf. F 12. The date of the anecdote must be 302 BC, before Seleucus
deployed his elephants with such devastating effect at Ipsus.
24
For discussion of these names, their origins, and definitions, see van Nuffelen (2009);
de Callataÿ and Lorber (2011); Muccioli (2013) 11–33, and esp. 68–81 on Antigonus and
Demetrius.
21
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The Evidence
One way to assess whether the appellation ‘Poliorcetes’ had negative connotations in Demetrius’ lifetime is to survey the execution of his poliorcetic
enterprises: it is arguable that the numbers cannot lie, and I present here a
catalogue of the Besieger’s sieges.
(1) Petra or Es-Sela, Nabataea, 311 BC
In July 311, Demetrius led a force of more than 8,000 selected soldiers, half
foot and half cavalry, into the desert to exact revenge on the Arabs for the
defeat of the Antigonid general, Athenaeus, some months earlier. Diodorus
does not record the starting point of this expedition, nor the specific route, but,
as the absence of roads is observed, they appear to have marched crosscountry for three full days.25 Scouts sighted Demetrius quickly, and by means
of fire signals already in place (further evidence that the Arabs had no faith in
Antigonus’ promises), warned the main body of Nabataeans, who sent their
property to an unspecified fortified ‘rock’ and scattered into the desert as was
their wont.26 Thus ensued Demetrius Poliorcetes’ first independent siege.
Arriving at the stronghold, and finding no unsecured booty, he made several
fruitless assaults, but retired by the first evening (Diod. 19.97.1–2). Clearly, he
had underestimated the strength of the position, perhaps misled by the ease
with which Athenaeus had executed his own siege (Diod. 19.95.2–3). Furthermore, there is little doubt Demetrius’ army was debilitated by the arduous
desert crossing, and lacked heavy machinery for siege work. There were few
options for supplying his men with food or water, as the Nabataeans pointed
out on the following day,27 and the risk of being attacked and cut off by a large
Arab force, as had befallen Athenaeus, was probably in his mind. Militarily,
his situation was vulnerable: the success of the enterprise depended solely on
Diod. 19.96.4–97.1; Plut. Demetr. 7.1. The distances in Diodorus’ account are confused.
Athenaeus’ march from Idumaea to Petra supposedly covered 2,200 stades (c. 430 km: Diod.
19.95.2; Hornblower (1981) 148; Bosworth (2002) 199–200), but the number must be corrupt.
26
This ‘rock’ is usually assumed to be Petra, and identified with the stronghold that fell
to Athenaeus, but Bosworth (2002) 202–3 doubts this on account of the restricted access
described by Diodorus 19.97.1, and proposes that the site was Es-Sela, another ancient
Edomite fastness (whose name also means ‘rock’) some 50 km north of Petra, near modern
Bouseirah (ancient Bosra). This theory is supported by Diodorus’ observation (19.98.1) that
Demetrius only needed to travel 300 stades (c. 58 km) to the Dead Sea on his return (Petra
is c. 104 km away).
27
Diod. 19.97.5. It must also be noted that this was July, one of the hottest times of the
year.
25
The Implications of ‘Poliorcetes’: Was Demetrius the Besieger’s Nickname Ironic?
161
the element of surprise, and without it the task was impossible. The combination of these factors caused Demetrius to negotiate with the defenders on
the second day, and a treaty was made, sweetened by gifts, hostages, and a
safe passage back through the desert. Plutarch diverges somewhat, stating that:
‘by his cool and resolute leadership he so overawed the barbarians that he
captured from them 700 camels and great quantities of booty, and returned in
safety’.28 Thus Demetrius’ first independent siege ended in negotiation, and
although the objective was not achieved, the outcome was positive, and the
diplomatic ties appear to have endured: much later in 306 the Antigonids
received considerable logistic support from the Arabs for their invasion of
Egypt (Diod. 20.73.3). His father, however, roundly rebuked him when he
returned, for sustaining what he evidently considered a diplomatic and
strategic defeat (Diod. 19.100.1).
(2) Babylon, 311 or 310 BC
Demetrius’ next poliorcetic commission has proved both chronographically
and historiographically controversial. Antigonus ordered his son to mount a
lightning expedition to Babylonia to recover that satrapy, which had fallen to
Seleucus during the summer of 311. He was specifically ordered to execute his
mission swiftly and return to the coast with all possible speed.29 If it is accepted
that the campaign took place during the winter of 311/10, rather than from
mid 310 into 309, and is not recorded by the Babylonian Chronicle, a feasible
reconstruction can be made. At some time in late November or early December, Demetrius left Damascus at the head of a large army comprising 5,000
Macedonian and 10,000 mercenary foot, and 4,000 horse. He found that
Seleucus was long gone, and Babylon evacuated, with only the two citadels (or
palaces) defended. He promptly captured, plundered, and garrisoned one of
them, but after trying for several days, realised that the second could not be
reduced by his deadline. Demetrius encountered no other concerted opposition in the largely deserted satrapy, but was covertly monitored by the
Seleucid general Patrocles, who supplied his master with detailed intelligence
regarding enemy activities. Finally, Plutarch asserts, with the deadline for his
Plut. Demetr. 7.1, with Abel (1937) 390; Wehrli (1968) 144–5; Lens Tuero (1994) 119–20;
Bosworth (1996) 147 and (2002) 204–8; Rose (2015) 143–5.
29
Diod. 19.100.4–7; Plut. Demetr. 7.3–4; cf. Diadochi Chronicle 10 (BM 34660 and 36313),
the famous Babylonian Chronicle of the Successors, now accessible through the online project
on the Livius site, BCHP 3: https://www.livius.org/sources/content/mesopotamianchronicles-content/bchp-3-diadochi-chronicle/, with description, text, and commentary
by Robartus van der Spek and Irving Finkel. The actual year of the invasion is a matter of
enormous controversy: see, for various theories, Billows (1990) 141–2; Geller (1990) 7; van
der Spek (2014) 331–4. Boiy (2007) 124–9, however, in a meticulous reconstruction and
analysis of all the chronological schemes (125), maintains November 311 (129 and 146–7).
28
Pat Wheatley
162
return approaching, Demetrius began a systematic devastation of the city and
countryside, carrying off much booty, and returned to his father, leaving a
large force of 6,000 (Diodorus) or 7,000 (Plutarch) under his friend Archelaus
to continue the siege and hold the city. Plutarch provides an insightful
evaluation of Demetrius’ campaign: he inflicted a great deal of damage on his
own cause, and, if anything, cemented Seleucus’ tenure in the region. Demetrius’ destructive behaviour remains a conundrum, and was clearly seen,
even by the ancient writers, to be counter-productive to the re-establishment
of Antigonid rule. His brutality may have been meant as a warning to the
hapless refugees of the region that they were regarded as rebels against their
legitimate ruler;30 but equally he may have been driven by the need to feed a
large army in a denuded land. Alternatively, it was possibly a miscalculation
on the part of the young man in an attempt to maintain his popularity with
the troops and console himself for his inability to take both citadels within the
time limit. Thus, though the Besieger’s second attempt at poliorcetics was only
a partial success, he was embarked on an ambiguous path that was to define
him for posterity. Moreover, it is worth noting that Alexander himself, though
highly successful in siegecraft, was never required to assail Babylon, and this
action may have been one of the triggers in the development of Demetrius’
unique reputation in the Hellenistic milieu.
(3) Halicarnassus, 309 or 308 BC
Diodorus next has Demetrius expelling the forces of Ptolemy from the cities of
Cilicia Trachea, a task he swiftly executed (Diod. 20.19.5). With Ptolemy commencing full-scale operations in the region, it is most likely Demetrius remained in Asia Minor to guard against further incursions on Antigonid territory, probably basing himself back in Celaenae, the old Phrygian capital
where he had spent his childhood. One small and enigmatic entry in Plutarch
supports this reconstruction:
However, [Demetrius] was able to relieve Halicarnassus, which
Ptolemy was besieging, by coming swiftly to its rescue.31
Similar drastic punitive action against ‘rebels’ was taken by Alexander in India: see
Bosworth (1996), esp. ch. 5.
31
Plut. Demetr. 7.3: Πτολεµαίου µέντοι πολιορκοῦντος Ἁλικαρνασὸν ὀξέως βοηθήσας
ἐξήρπασε τὴν πόλιν (trans. Duff). This excerpt should be placed in 309; see Seibert (1969)
186, ‘Jahr 309 oder 308’; Hauben (2014) 247–9, ‘its chronology remains uncertain’;
Worthington (2016) 148–9; but Bosworth (2000) 216 ‘undated’.
30
The Implications of ‘Poliorcetes’: Was Demetrius the Besieger’s Nickname Ironic?
163
This excerpt is abnormal, in that it is tacked on to the brief account of
Demetrius’ Babylonian adventure, and represents a hugely compressed bridging passage in the biography.32 Plutarch has essentially condensed four years
of history into one brief sentence, imposing an artificial and erroneous chronological proximity on two events. This has considerably perplexed succeeding
scholars, some of whom have attempted to conjoin the relief of Halicarnassus
with Demetrius’ return from Babylonia.33 From the historical context, however, it is clear that the events are at least eighteen months apart, if not more.
Patently, Plutarch’s biographical method had little regard for chronography,
and the entry under scrutiny must be regarded as a unique pointer confirming
Demetrius’ presence in Anatolia to neutralise Ptolemy’s incursions at this time.
Although these events were not, strictly speaking, siege operations, they represent a related category of siege relief, which is also of some interest in the
context of the present investigation.
(4) Athens, Munychia, and Megara, 307 BC
In early 307 at Ephesus, Antigonus commissioned Demetrius to free all the
cities of Greece, beginning with, and paying special attention to, Athens (Diod.
20.45.1). He was suitably equipped with a fleet of 250 ships, fully manned, and
significantly, an enormous treasury of 5,000 talents, as well as a competent staff
of senior advisers. Polyaenus supplies details of the tactics used to lull the
unsuspecting city: the bulk of the fleet was hove-to off Cape Sunium, while
Demetrius with twenty ships sailed swiftly up the coast as if enroute to Salamis.
At the last minute they darted into the unchained Piraeus.34 Demetrius was
initially received as a liberator as the Athenians dismantled the pro-Cassander
regime of Demetrius of Phalerum, but the garrison commander, Dionysius,
withdrew to hold the fort of Munychia. At this point the secondary sources
come into direct opposition: Diodorus records an immediate assault on the
fort; Plutarch, that Demetrius isolated the fort and sailed against Megara.35
While political uncertainty reigned in Athens and the vacuum left by the
For discussion and examples of Plutarch’s technique of chronological compression, see
Pelling (1980) 127–8. The present excerpt, although not mentioned by Pelling, is a classic
example of this device; cf. Bosworth (2002) 204–6, 224; Rose (2015) 149–50.
33
E.g., Billows (1990) 142; van der Spek (2014) 333–4.
34
Polyaen. 4.7.6 supplies most of the details, supplemented by Plut. Demetr. 8.5–7; see
Ferguson (1911) 63–5. Modern treatments of the coup and its aftermath abound: Billows
(1990) 147–51; Habicht (1997) 65–74; Mikalson (1998) 75–9; Paschidis (2008) 62–3, 78–83;
Oliver (2007) 52–3, 116; O’Sullivan (2009) 276–8; Bayliss (2011) 159–67; Murray (2012) 101–
5; Anson (2014) 153–5; Rose (2018) 265–70. It is possible that Demetrius initially penetrated
only the outer harbour.
35
Diod. 20.45.5–7; Plut. Demetr. 9.2; cf. D. Hal. Din. 2, 3; Parian Marble, FGrHist 239 =
BNJ 239 F B20–1; Suda, s.v. ‘∆ηµήτριος’ (∆ 431 Adler).
32
164
Pat Wheatley
Phalerean was being filled, he evidently decided to leave the strongly defended
fort under a close siege intended to sap the morale of the garrison, until the
political outcome of the diplomatic manoeuvring became known. In the
meantime, he decided to strike quickly at a nearby, softer target. Demetrius
took about a month to reduce Megara, which was evidently stoutly defended
by Cassander’s garrison. Few details remain, but despite the intercession of the
Athenians, the city was at least partially plundered by the ‘liberating’ forces.36
On his return to Athens, Demetrius’ first action was to assault Munychia in
earnest. This siege was prosecuted with brutal efficiency, the details being
supplied by Diodorus. In the face of stern resistance, a round-the-clock attack
was mounted by both land and sea, with all available engines of war, and
Demetrius’ troops fighting in relays. After two days the walls were stripped of
defenders by the incessant catapult barrage and breached, and the garrison
surrendered. Dionysius, the phrourarch, was taken alive, and, according to the
Suda, executed.37 In the space of a month Demetrius had successfully prosecuted two significant siege actions; he had well and truly embarked on the road
to earning his famous sobriquet. Munychia was demolished, its walls razed,
and the site given back to the Athenian government, a visible signal that an
Antigonid garrison would not be substituted. In his implementation of these
matters, Demetrius showed great political acumen. The siege was a public
exhibition of his military power and skill, the execution of Dionysius a warning
against resistance, and the destruction of the fort a token of good faith to the
demos that a new era had indeed dawned.
(5) Cyprus: Carpasia, Urania, Salamis, 306 BC
Demetrius’ next siege operations were undertaken a little under a year later
during the Cypriot campaign, when he successfully stormed Carpasia and
Urania, and then invested the city of Salamis.38 The blockade must have been
carried out by both land and sea, but was not effected quickly enough to
prevent Menelaus, Ptolemy’s brother and governor of the island, sending
messengers out for help, and Diodorus goes on to describe the first of Demetrius’ truly great siege initiatives. His earlier efforts at Petra, Babylon,
Megara, and Munychia clearly paled in comparison with the siege of Salamis,
which itself was only a precursor to the famous siege of Rhodes a year later.
Siege of Megara: Diod. 20.46.3; Diog. Laert. 2.115; Plut. Demetr. 9.8–10; Mor. 5F, 475C;
Philochorus ap. D. Hal. Din. 3 (= FGrHist 328 F 66); Sen. Constant. 2.5.6; Ep. 9.18–19.
37
Siege of Munychia: Diod. 20.45.5–7 (detailed); Suda, s.v. ‘∆ηµήτριος’ (∆ 431 Adler) (fate
of Dionysius); Plut. Demetr. 10.1 (abbreviated); D. Hal. Din. 2 and 3 (chronological pointers).
See further Marsden (1969) 105, and Billows (1990) 149.
38
Diod. 20.47.1–2 (Carpasia and Urania); 20.48 (Salamis), with Marsden (1969) 105.
Plutarch ignores the sieges and proceeds directly from the initial land engagement to the
main event: the naumachia.
36
The Implications of ‘Poliorcetes’: Was Demetrius the Besieger’s Nickname Ironic?
165
As with Munychia, Demetrius had a large store of catapults, stone-throwers,
and all types of siege machinery, and he also sent to the mainland for
technicians to construct the first of his legendary specialised siege towers: a
helepolis, and two penthoused battering rams. The procedures were not new.
Alexander’s siege of Halicarnassus in 334, and the seven-month siege of the
supposedly impregnable island of Tyre in 332, had hitherto been benchmarks
for innovation in siege technology, and had featured the use of siege towers.
Antigonus himself had successfully besieged Tyre for fifteen months in 315/14,
an event at which Demetrius was probably present.39 Demetrius equipped and
prosecuted the assault meticulously, with his nine-story helepolis being the
centrepiece of the onslaught.40 His preparations must have taken more than a
month, but in the initial engagement the Salaminians put up stout resistance.
The helepolis and the rams proved decisive, however, clearing the battlements
and shattering the defences. At nightfall, after some days, the assault reached
a climax with the fall of the city being imminent. During that night Menelaus
attempted a sortie, and succeeded in setting the helepolis and other machinery
alight. Despite Demetrius’ efforts, his main siege engines were destroyed, and
he was forced to persevere without them. A stalemate had been reached. At
this point the siege was broken off, as news had arrived that Ptolemy was
approaching Cyprus with an armada. This campaign was to be decided at sea,
and after Demetrius’ stunning victory, Menelaus surrendered Salamis and was
sent back to Egypt.41
(6) Rhodes, 305–304 BC
Rhodes was the pinnacle of Demetrius’ siege operations. It is described in the
greatest and most profuse detail by the sources, and, as we have seen, was
evidently the genesis of his famous surname. The epic struggle lasted a whole
year, and though the city was severely battered, Demetrius still remained
outside the walls by July 304, but was making plans to continue. After all, he
had not suffered great losses, still had vast resources, and must have wondered
just how long the Rhodians could sustain their desperate efforts. However, he
On the siege of Halicarnassus, see Bosworth (1988) 48–9; and on the siege of Tyre, 65–
7. For Antigonus’ Tyrian siege, Diod. 19.61.5: it would seem that on this occasion the city
had been starved into surrender by the naval blockade, rather than taken by direct action.
On the development of siege techniques with a survey of specific siege actions, see Marsden
(1971) ch. 4.
40
On the helepolis, which may have been the largest of its type to date, and which
Diodorus describes in some detail, see Marsden (1969) 105. For the construction of helepoleis
in general, see Biton, Mech. 52–6, conveniently consulted in Marsden (1971) 66–103;
Schürmann (1991) 82–5 (also on their weaknesses). The helepolis constructed at Rhodes just
over eighteen months later was only slightly larger.
41
Plut. Demetr. 16.7; Comp. 2.3 (= Ant. 89.3); Just. 15.2.7–9.
39
166
Pat Wheatley
received instructions to reach a settlement from Antigonus, who was becoming
alarmed at the propaganda fallout from the protracted engagement, and
realised that the other dynasts were capitalising on the respite afforded them
while Demetrius was embroiled at Rhodes. At this point, Demetrius realised
the game was up, and cast around for a pretext to end the campaign while
saving as much face as possible.42 Meanwhile, the Rhodians received a letter
from Ptolemy promising them grain and 3,000 more troops, but also advising
them to settle with Antigonus if they could in any way get reasonable terms.
At this critical juncture, another set of envoys arrived, this time from the
Aetolian League,43 urging a cessation of hostilities. In due course terms were
agreed by which the Rhodians retained political and economic autonomy, and
limited freedom in foreign policy, guaranteed by the provision of one hundred
citizen hostages.44
Thus the antagonists achieved desenrascanço. Demetrius gained the hostages
he had demanded over a year earlier, and a conditional alliance, but little else.
In the final analysis, his naval arm had failed him. The island and city were
never effectively blockaded, nor was the seamanship or command structure of
Demetrius’ fleet ever a match for the Rhodian navy. Local knowledge of the
seasons, weather, and navigation hazards, and luck also played a part. Possibly
the affinity between Demetrius and his navy had eroded in the years since
Salamis, and was compromised further during the initial assaults on the
harbours.45 Moreover, Diodorus (20.91.8) relates that thousands of crewmen
were drafted into performing the heavy labour necessary to ease the path of
the siege machinery, and this is likely to have left the fleet demoralised and
undermanned.
Diod. 20.99.1; Plut. Demetr. 22.8. Diodorus provides more details of the inner workings
of the Antigonid deliberations, whereas Plutarch simply states that Demetrius wanted a
pretext for abandoning the siege. Both use the same term: πρόφασις, probably from
Hieronymus of Cardia. Antigonus also summarily curtailed Demetrius’ campaign in
Thessaly two years later: Diod. 20.111.1–2.
43
Diod. 20.99.3. Plutarch (Demetr. 22.8) thinks the peace was negotiated by a deputation
of Athenians, but has likely conflated the Aetolian embassy with the combined delegation
sent by the Athenians and other Greek states a month or so earlier (Diod. 20.98.2); see
Mendels (1984) 178–9; Ager (1996) 60–1; Rose (2015) 215.
44
Diod. 20.99.3; cf. 82.3; Plut. Demetr. 22.8. For discussion, see Seibert (1969) 230;
Hauben (1977) 338–9; Berthold (1984) 77; Billows (1990) 168–9, 202–3, 207–8; Huß (2001)
189–90; Wiemer (2002) 91; (2011) 127–8; Caroli (2007) 64.
45
Berthold (1984) 78–9; Billows (1990) 168; Murray (2012) 118.
42
The Implications of ‘Poliorcetes’: Was Demetrius the Besieger’s Nickname Ironic?
167
Scholarly evaluations of the siege of Rhodes are often highly critical of
Demetrius,46 and there is no doubt that he failed to achieve his father’s objective of bringing the Rhodians exclusively under the Antigonid umbrella.
Nor in dispute is the fact that he failed to take the city of Rhodes; however,
the standard scholarly analysis—that the siege was a resounding defeat for the
Antigonids—is a step too far. It needs to be borne in mind that the Antigonids
were far from defeated at Rhodes—only temporarily repelled. Demetrius
withdrew in good order, and subsequently continued campaigning in Europe,
until by late 302 he was poised to take all of Greece and Macedonia. Hardly a
defeated power, one might observe. Meanwhile Antigonus raised massive
resources to hound Lysimachus and his allies early in the campaign of Ipsus.
The sources, for all their long-winded detail and later Roman resonances, do
contain the fundamental information that, at the close of the siege, Demetrius
had kept Rhodes in a qualified Antigonid alliance. The political status quo was
preserved. Moreover, the propaganda battle was also won—the sheer scale of
the siege cemented Demetrius’ reputation as the besieger par excellence, and
precipitated him to legendary status in the early Hellenistic period.
However, a more balanced perspective has emerged in some recent scholarship, and this should be heeded.47 Jeff Champion points out trenchantly that,
if Demetrius had not received new orders, the fall of the island was in reality
inevitable. He was not driven out—he left voluntarily. Note that the city was
wrecked, and many areas of the island devastated, as is to be expected for the
side that supplies the venue for conflict. William Murray is equally insightful
in observing that the siege enabled the Antigonids to showcase their military
might to the whole Mediterranean world, enhancing their reputation, and rendering their later campaigns easier. Murray’s analysis is especially compelling,
and welcome, breaking from the easy and facile line of condemnation for
Demetrius initiated by the wily Plutarch and followed into the 21st century,
particularly in the Anglophone scholarship.
The trend begins with Plutarch (Demetr. 22.1), and his choice of sources. It is taken up
in modern scholarship by Manni (1951) 32: ‘Anche l’impresa rodia era dunque sostanzialmente fallita. Un altro passo era compiuto verso la rovina finale dell’ambizioso
Monoftalmo’; and continued by, e.g., Hauben (1977) 338–9 and (2010) 103; Berthold (1984)
79; Billows (1990) 169, 186 (calling the siege a ‘debacle’); Campbell (2006) 81–2; Bresson
(2010) 124; Bayliss (2011) 169–70; Hammond (1988) 172 stops short of deeming Demetrius
defeated, but labels the siege ‘pointless and ineffectual’; cf. Anson (2014) 168 ‘a wasteful
interlude’; Worthington (2016) 167.
47
See, for instance, Pimouguet-Pédarros (2011) 364; Wiemer (2011) 127–9; Murray (2012)
118–19; Champion (2014) 140–1; O’Sullivan (2014) 84–5; Rose (2019) 173.
46
Pat Wheatley
168
(7) Phyle, Panactum, Cenchreae, Late 304 BC
Disentangling himself from Rhodes, and leaving the bones of his engines to
finance the Colossus (Plin. HN 34.18.41–2), Demetrius sailed with 330 ships
through the islands and landed at Aulis in Boeotia, probably by mid-August
of 304, and immediately set about attacking Cassander’s allies.48 Plutarch
supplies unique information on Demetrius, including detail about the first
weeks of his renewed campaigns in Greece. He began by taking Chalcis in
Euboea (Parian Marble, FGrHist 239 (= BNJ 239) F B24) and expelling the
Boeotian garrison. Demetrius then campaigned in Boeotia, and pursued the
fleeing Cassander out of Attica to Thermopylae, where an otherwiseunattested battle appears to have been fought in the vicinity of nearby
Heracleia.49 At this stage Demetrius’ precise movements become difficult to
reconstruct. He freed the strategic Attic border fortresses of Phyle and
Panactum from Cassander’s garrisons (whether by siege is not specified) and
undertook to restore them to Athenian control (Plut. Demetr. 23.3), and Plutarch adds that at this time he also took Cenchreae, the eastern port of
Corinth, placing this sally in the same context as his activities in Boeotia and
Attica. However, Diodorus has a completely different sequence, placing all of
the Peloponnesian activities in 303 (Diod. 20.102–3). Whether Demetrius
dashed across the isthmus and attacked the port in a final initiative before
entering Athens, or had sent his navy round Sunion to recapture Salamis from
Cassander, and used the island as a springboard, cannot be ascertained.50 One
solution is to suppose compression in Plutarch, and accept Diodorus’ version,
but the possibility that Demetrius did indeed establish a bridgehead to the
Peloponnese before retiring for winter in 304 should not be discounted. In fact,
a random excerpt from Polyaenus in which Demetrius uses Cenchreae as a
base from which to attack Sicyon may come from this period, and support
Plutarch’s order of events (Polyaen. 4.7.3, trans. Krentz and Wheeler):
Wishing to make a surprise attack on Sicyon, Demetrius withdrew to
Cenchreae and there spent many days devoted to pleasures and luxuries. When the Sicyonians were least suspicious, at night he ordered the
mercenaries with Diodorus to attack the gates facing the city of Pellene
Diod. 20.100.5; Plut. Demetr. 23.2.
Plut. Demetr. 23.2, with Rose (2015) 217–18. The exact order of events in autumn of 304
is unclear, but a reasonable sequence may be hypothesised by knitting Diodorus and
Plutarch (and cf. IG II2.492, with Hauben (1974b)). Recent useful treatments include Gullath
(1982) 179–83; Billows (1990) 169; Habicht (1997) 74–5; Oliver (2007) 116–19.
50
Cassander controlling Salamis: Polyaen. 4.11.1; Paus. 1.35.1, with Paschidis (2008) 90.
Cenchreae may have been taken by sea: so Wheatley (2004) 5; if so, could this have been
from Salamis?
48
49
The Implications of ‘Poliorcetes’: Was Demetrius the Besieger’s Nickname Ironic?
169
and the ships to appear at the harbour, and he led the hoplites against
the city. As a result, by attacking from all sides he captured the city.
Diodorus’ account is unhelpful: although he records that Sicyon was captured
before Corinth, he asserts that the latter city and its harbours (plural) were taken
together.51 But there is no compelling reason to disregard the testimony of both
Plutarch and Polyaenus, and it should probably be accepted that Cenchreae
fell into Demetrius’ hands late in 304. Indeed, the existence of a pre-prepared
base for the Peloponnesian campaign early the following year may help
explain his remarkably swift progress through that region, and the anecdote
demonstrates that he was open to alternatives when it came to capturing cities.
(8) The Peloponnese: Sicyon, Corinth,
Sisyphium, Bura, Scyrus, Orchomenus, 303 BC
The Besieger’s stunning campaign in southern Greece commenced early in
303, with his first stop being at Cenchreae. Diodorus asserts that his overall
strategy was to wage total war on his brother-in-law, Cassander, and wrest
Corinth, and ultimately Macedonia, from him by force (Diod. 20.102.1).
However, rather than target that city immediately, he fixed on the Ptolemaic
stronghold of Sicyon, about 16 km to the west on the Saronic gulf, perhaps
desiring to root out the last vestiges of the Lagid’s influence in Greece. On
Demetrius’ takeover of Sicyon, now under the command of a senior Ptolemaic
general named Philip, the sources diverge profoundly. Plutarch states that the
cities of Argos, Corinth, and Sicyon were taken simply by paying their garrisons one hundred talents to leave (Plut. Demetr. 25.1), but Diodorus, supplemented by Polyaenus, has much more. Demetrius ordered a mercenary
commander (also named Diodorus) to mount a surprise night attack on the
northwestern gates of Sicyon facing towards Pellene, while he co-ordinated his
troops against another section and his ships against the harbour, in a minireprise of the Rhodian siege. The walls were quickly breached, and the garrison driven into the acropolis. He then paused, considering whether he would
need to deploy his siege machinery, and perhaps at this point offered the bribe
mentioned by Plutarch. Ptolemy’s men, panicking, took the terms and
departed hastily for Egypt.52
Diod. 20.103.1: ἐκράτησε τῆς πόλεως καὶ τῶν λιµένων. Ferguson (1948) 120 accepts the
early acquisition of Cenchreae; as does Billows (1990) 169–70; cf. Dixon (2005) 138, (2007)
176, and (2014) 72 n. 77; Kralli (2017) 99. Rose (2015) 218–19 and 230 is much more cautious;
cf. Marasco (1983) 40. Notably, Cassander commenced his Peloponnesian campaign of 315
by taking Cenchreae: Diod. 19.63.4.
52
Diod. 20.102.2–4; Polyaen. 4.7.3, with Skalet (1928) 81; Champion (2014) 144–5; Rose
(2015) 230; Thonemann (2016) 61. On Diodorus, the mercenary commander, see Billows
51
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Demetrius immediately turned his attention to Corinth, where his agents
had been agitating on his behalf. For once, we have detailed source accounts.
Both Diodorus and Polyaenus supply particulars which can readily be dovetailed, and Demetrius’ reduction of Corinth emerges as an exemplary military
action to reduce an impregnable stronghold. Marching back to the city with
full force, he received information that his sympathisers would admit him by
night, through ‘a gate at the citadel’—either the Teneatic gate facing south or
possibly the Phliasian gate to the west.53 To cover the breach he ordered a
diversionary assault on a gate leading to Lechaeum, the northern harbour,
and before Prepelaus realised the danger, the Besieger’s forces were inside the
city from the southwestern side. The garrison, seeing the lower city was lost,
fled towards the formidable Acrocorinth, with some making a stand at an
adjacent fortified place Diodorus names Sisyphium.54 Demetrius now brought
up his siege train and, with some difficulty, stormed this strongpoint, compelling the defenders to retreat again, up to Acrocorinth proper. Whether
events mirrored those at Sicyon, and Demetrius offered a bribe at this stage as
Plutarch suggests, is hard to tell, but after some negotiations Prepelaus and his
men surrendered and were allowed to return to Cassander in shame. Thus in
short order Demetrius had taken perhaps the most unassailable citadel in
Greece, adding further to his legend and reputation as the doyen of siegecraft,
and Diodorus again takes the opportunity to re-emphasise Demetrius’ spectacular siege operations:
For this king was exceedingly irresistible in his assaults, being particularly skilled in the construction of siege equipment.55
(1990) 380; Heckel (2006) 112. On Philip, the Ptolemaic commander, see Tataki (1998) 447,
no. 29.
53
Diod. 20.103.1–4; Polyaen. 4.7.8. The details are speculative, but Polyaenus’
‘Lechaeum gate’ is probably the Sikyonian gate in the northwest; for sharp discussion, see
Dixon (2014) 61–4 and fig. 1.1; cf. Billows (1990) 171; Rose (2015) 231–2; Kralli (2017) 100.
The difficulties may be put in perspective by comparing Aratus’ capture of Corinth from
Gonatas some sixty years later: Plut. Arat. 18–23; Polyaen. 6.5; Paus. 2.8.4; 7.8.3; Trog. Prol.
26; Athen. 162d, with Walbank (1933) 45–9 and Dixon (2014) 98–101.
54
Diod. 20.103.2: τὸ καλούµενον Σισύφιον. The exact site of Sisyphium is unknown; for
the topography see Str. 8.6.21, perhaps transmitting Fragment 16 of Hieronymus (FGrHist
154): so Hornblower (1981) 49 and 251; cf. Paus. 2.5.1; and for analysis, Dixon (2014) 63 n.
84.
55
Diod. 20.103.3: σφόδρα γὰρ ἦν ἀνυπόστατος οὗτος ὁ βασιλὲυς ἐν ταῖς προσβολαῖς.
Plutarch, however, as with his account of Rhodes, minimises Demetrius’ work at Corinth,
though it is notable that in his biography of Aratus, that subject’s capture of the city in
243 BC is described in glowing terms: Plut. Arat. 24.2; cf. Rose (2015) 232.
The Implications of ‘Poliorcetes’: Was Demetrius the Besieger’s Nickname Ironic?
171
The Besieger continued his incursions into the Peloponnese, but his actual
itinerary after Corinth is unclear. Diodorus (20.103.4–7) has him first advancing westward into Achaea, and observes that he made a clean sweep of
all the strongpoints in the vicinity. Plutarch (Demetr. 25.1) supplies different
details, but no clear itinerary whatsoever. He lists the submission of Acte (the
eastern coastline of the Argolid), and Arcadia (except Mantineia), with the
liberation of Argos, Sicyon, and Corinth all at once,56 then jumbles this
together with key events at these three cities which actually stretched from
mid-303 into 302 BC. Diodorus, therefore, is in general better organised, and
here his sequence should probably be preferred, as his account includes
enough time for Demetrius to campaign in Achaea, possibly Elis, and Arcadia,
before returning to Athens for his irregular initiation into the Eleusinian
mysteries by mid-April of 303. Demetrius’ first stop in Achaea was Bura, which
he stormed and made autonomous;57 he then proceeded to an obscure place
named Scyrus and, within a few days, expelled its garrison.58
Diodorus next has Demetrius approaching Orchomenus, a heavily defended strategic hilltop fortress in northern Arcadia astride the main route
north from Tegea to Sicyon. Here the phrourarchos Strombichus, who had been
appointed by Polyperchon, not only refused to surrender the city, but also
reviled the king at length from the walls.59 The exchange evidently enraged
Demetrius: he swiftly battered the walls down and performed an uncharacteristic act of cruelty by crucifying Strombichus and about eighty of the
defenders, before enrolling some 2,000 mercenaries from the garrison into his
But he asserts erroneously that the garrisons of these cities were paid off. On Acte, see
Str. 8.8.5; Andrei (1989) 182–3 notes the historiographic problem; Billows (1990) 171–2 and
Wehrli (1968) 65 and 149 tend to follow Plutarch. Ferguson (1948) 120–1 unpicks the source
tangle incisively, rightly preferring Diodorus.
57
Diod. 20.103.4. On Bura, or Boura (possibly modern Kastro), some 78 km west along
the coast from Corinth, see Diod. 15.48.3; Str. 1.3.18; Hdt. 1.145; Lauffer (1989) 160.
58
The manuscript of Diodorus has Σκύρον; Petrus Wesseling suggested Σκίρον in his 1746
edition. The Teubner editor (Fischer) concurred in 1906, and the suggestion was noted by
R. M. Geer, the Loeb editor, in 1954. Wesseling based his amendment on Stephanus of
Byzantium, who records a settlement of this name in Arcadia: Σκίρος, Ἀρκαδίας κατοικία,
πλησίον Μαιναλείων καὶ Παρρασίων. Maenalus was an ancient city in the homonymous
region immediately to the west and southwest of Mantineia (Paus. 8.3.4, 27.2–3, 36.7–8;
Thuc. 5.64.3). Parrhasia was the name of the district some 30 km away, to the west of
Megalopolis (Paus. 6.8.2; 8.27.2, 4; 8.38.2–3; Thuc. 5.33.1), thus Stephanus’ assertion is
unhelpful in pinpointing the location of Scyrus/Scirus. However, this may indicate that
Demetrius campaigned further south into the Peloponnese at this time than is generally
thought (there was a river Scyrus between Megalopolis and Messene: Paus. 8.35.1).
59
Diod. 20.103.5. If truly appointed by Polyperchon, Strombichus must have been
entrenched in Orchomenus (mod. Kalpaki) for some years, as it is likely that the former was
long dead by now
56
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Pat Wheatley
own forces.60 The spectacle was highly effective in demonstrating the futility
of resistance. Diodorus notes that adjacent strongholds and the other cities
surrendered without a fight, as the inhabitants realised that Cassander and his
allies were unable or unwilling to resist the Besieger’s army and resolve (Diod.
20.103.7).
(9) Argos? Epidaurus? Troezen? 303 BC
From Orchomenus Demetrius bypassed Mantineia and headed east to the
Argolid, which was held by Cassander’s brother, Pleistarchus, who was in
Argos in spring of 303, and according to an inscription from that city, was
driven out in the night by a supernatural epiphany of Apollo.61 The inscription, from the Argive sanctuary of that god, reports that a thiasos (band of
revellers) dedicated statues of Apollo and Artemis to Leto in gratitude, but its
date is not precise. In the light of recent deductions, however, the context may
be clarified. Since Demetrius was certainly at Argos in late June for the Heraia,
after his initiation at Eleusis, it seems reasonable to infer that the flight of
Pleistarchus and the activities of the grateful thiasos preceded both of these
events, and that the Besieger probably visited Argos more than once during
303 BC.62 It is not clear whether the Argives divinised Demetrius, perhaps
assimilating him with Apollo, for their deliverance, or whether they attributed
it to a miraculous nocturnal theophany. But Demetrius’ overwhelming forces
and reputation from the siege of Rhodes, augmented perhaps by Plutarch’s
bribe, on top of his own celebrated royal and divine presence, were looming,
and it is probably historically safe to regard the nocturnal manifestation of
Apollo at Argos at the very least as a euphemism for Demetrius’ actual approach.63 Further epigraphic evidence confirms that Demetrius had by this
Diod. 20.103.5–6. On Strombichus, see Schoch (1931) 371; cf. Tataki (1998) 434, no.
48. Demetrius’ treatment of Strombichus makes a striking contrast with Ptolemy’s treatment of Andronicus under very similar circumstances at Tyre in 312: Diod. 19.86.2. Indeed,
it resonates more with Alexander’s treatment of the captive Tyrians in 332: Curt. 4.4.16–
17.
61
ISE 39.6–7: ἐξ οὗ Πλείσταρχον νύκ[τ]ωρ | ἐξήλασε Ἀπόλλων. Perhaps this hints at a
similar night attack to those mounted by Demetrius at Sicyon and Corinth; so Gregory
(1995) 18–19. Again, Plutarch’s assertion (Demetr. 25.1) that this garrison was bribed should
not be excluded. Another inscription from Argos confirms the presence of a Macedonian
garrison from 315–303: see Piérart (1987) 177, with SEG 54.433; Diod. 19.54.3. However,
Athenaeus’ otherwise unattested anecdote (10.415a) of a Demetrian siege of Argos where
the helepolis proves very difficult to shift is probably unhistorical, and more likely a doublet
for the second siege of Thebes in 291 BC; cf. Plut. Demetr. 40.2, and below, n. 78.
62
Most scholars assume that Demetrius remained in Argos for the Heraia in late June;
cf. Billows (1990) 172; Gregory (1995) 14; Champion (2014) 145; Anson (2014) 170.
63
Tondriau (1949); Moretti (1967) 90; Gregory (1995) 18–19; Platt (2011) 146–7; cf. Kralli
(2017) 100 for fresh insight.
60
The Implications of ‘Poliorcetes’: Was Demetrius the Besieger’s Nickname Ironic?
173
time secured the whole region of the Argolid. The major cities of Troezen and
Epidaurus on the Acte coastline were freed, and the Antigonid officers responsible were honoured.64
(10) Larisa Cremaste, Antrones, and
Pteleum in Phthiotis, Summer 302 BC
By 302, Demetrius’ main focus was Macedonia and the elimination of Cassander, so he ferried his whole army directly up the Euboean gulf from Chalcis
to Thessaly by sea. En route he landed at the port of Larisa Cremaste in
Phthiotis, stormed the city, restored its autonomy, and imprisoned its garrison,
then took the nearby towns of Antrones and Pteleum.65
(11) Pherae, Thessaly 302 BC
Demetrius created a forward base at New Halos, while Cassander had reinforced the cities of Pherae and Thebes as his own bases. The people of
Pherae appealed to Demetrius, and seizing this opportunity, the Besieger
circumvented Cassander’s army, apparently unnoticed, and sailed up the gulf
to Pagasai, the port of Pherae. He marched inland and took the citadel, no
doubt admitted by the sympathetic faction just as at Corinth a year earlier.
Cassander’s garrison at Pherae was dismissed, his supply lines cut, and Demetrius was poised to move south to Phthiotic Thebes and catch him in a pincer
movement (Diod. 20.110.3–6).
(12) Ephesus (Lampsacus? Parium? Others?) Late 302 BC
On his return to Asia in autumn of 302 at the beginning of the campaign of
Ipsus, Demetrius recovered Ephesus, Lampsacus, Parium, and other cities
(such as Sigeum?) that had been garrisoned by Lysimachus and Prepelaus.
Details of actual sieges are not specified, and it seems possible that the sight of
Demetrius’ vast armada and forces was enough to cause the cities of northwestern Asia Minor to capitulate.66
IG IV2.1.58 honours Alcaeus of Aenus as a benefactor to the Epidaurians. The
Athenians also honoured Alcaeus generously: IG II2.495 = ISE 6, with Osborne (1981–3) I,
no. D 60; Bayliss (2011) 181. RIG 452 records the activities of Zenodotus of Halicarnassus in
freeing Troezen; on these officers, see Billows (1990) 366 and 440. The Acte may have been
freed already by Demetrius’ lieutenants while he was campaigning in Achaea and Arcadia,
or even earlier; cf. Ferguson (1948) 121: no specific itinerary is discernable.
65
Diod. 20.110.2–3. For a comprehensive analysis of Demetrius’ campaign in Thessaly,
see Rose (2014).
66
See Diod. 20.107 for Lysimachus’ gains in Asia; Diod. 20.111.3 for Demetrius’ recovery
of them; cf the stratagem at Polyaen. 4.7.4, which may apply to this occasion; cf. Billows
(1990) 380; Lund (1992) 227 n. 14; Rose (2015) 245–6.
64
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(13) Samaria, 298–296 BC?
Something of a historiographic orphan, this siege is mentioned only once, by
Eusebius, who lists it under Olympiad 121.1 (296/5 BC). But the accuracy of
the dating is suspect, and the assault is probably better placed in the context
of the peace between Demetrius and Ptolemy brokered by Seleucus in 298 on
the occasion of his marriage alliance with the Besieger. The action against this
well-fortified site was evidently successful, as it is embedded in all versions of
the chronographic sources that the city was despoiled.67
(14) Soli, 298 BC?
Another historiographic orphan, this siege, mentioned once only as an anecdotal snippet, well out of historical context, by Plutarch, is probably best
placed in 298 BC. Demetrius had coasted down to Syria to celebrate his marriage alliance with Seleucus, and either on the way there, or on the way back,
he seized Cilicia from Cassander’s brother, Pleistarchus. It is usually thought
that Lysimachus attempted to support the latter, and confronted Demetrius at
Soli in time to witness the intimidating spectacle of his siege operations and
huge fleet in action, upon which he withdrew.68 His prestige, based solely on
military expertise, is all the more anomalous when taken in the context of his
recent defeat at Ipsus and lack of a specific territorial kingdom during these
years. If this incident can be believed, it provides further evidence for the
evolution of Demetrius’ unique reputation in the Diadoch period.
(15) Athens, 295 BC
On hearing that Athens had fallen under the tyranny of Lachares, Demetrius
decided that the time was right to re-establish control, and sailed to Attica with
another armada. His first attempt was derailed by shipwreck, and he diverted
to the Peloponnese, but soon he returned to Attica, seized Eleusis and Rhamnous, and blockaded Athens by sea.69 Although there is no evidence for siege
Euseb. Chron. 2.118 (199 Karst); Sync. Chron. 331; cf. Plut. Demetr. 32.6. See Corradi
(1929) 40; Ovadiah (1983) 185, 189–91; Grainger (1990) 133; Bosworth (2002) 264–5; Cohen
(2006) 274; Rose (2015) 264–5.
68
Plut. Demetr. 20.8 (the context is during the siege of Rhodes). For varying interpretations of the meagre evidence, see Landucci Gattinoni (1992) 166–7; Lund (1992) 89; Gregory (1995) 23–4; Bosworth (2002) 264–6; but for some balanced assessment see now Rose
(2015) 201–2.
69
Plut. Demetr. 33; cf. Paus. 1.25.7–8. Hammond and Walbank (1988) 211–12; Habicht
(1997) 86–8; Thonemann (2005) 64–74; Oliver (2007) 120; Paschidis (2008) 125–9; Bayliss
(2011) 64–5; Anson (2014) 176–7. Unlike at Rhodes, the blockade this time was effective:
Demetrius’ navy drove off a Ptolemaic fleet near Aegina: Plut. Demetr. 33.7–8.
67
The Implications of ‘Poliorcetes’: Was Demetrius the Besieger’s Nickname Ironic?
175
operations against the actual city walls, it is indisputable that Athens was under
siege, and the city fell in spring of 295.70 Demetrius accepted control of Piraeus
and Munychia, and also garrisoned the Museum in central Athens.71
(16) Aegina, Salamis, Piraeus, 296–295 BC
During the extended actions in Attica Demetrius also took Aegina and Salamis, and according to Polyaenus, besieged Piraeus after tricking the inhabitants into sending him 1,000 troops to aid against Lachares.72
(17) Messene, Twice? 296–295 BC
Plutarch records that, while waiting for naval reinforcements in Attica, Demetrius moved into the Peloponnese and laid siege to Messene. That this was
a standard siege operation is evident in that the Besieger received a serious
wound in the jaw from a catapult bolt. It would seem that, though he regained
the allegiance of some other cities, he was unsuccessful at Messene on this
occasion. However, he returned after capturing Athens in 295, and it seems
likely that he had somehow regained Messene before attacking the Spartans.73
(18) Sparta, 295–294 BC
After taking a grip once again on Athens, Demetrius returned to the Peloponnese and attacked the Spartans. He fought two battles with Archidamus
IV, one near Mantineia, and the second near the city itself, and was poised to
breach their vestigial walls by early 294, when news of the dynastic strife in
Macedonia drew him away.74 Whether this action, against quite flimsy physical defences, can be counted as a siege at all is debateable, but in overwhelming Laconia Demetrius had ticked off another item in his poliorcetic
cursus honorum by subjugating a city ‘which had never fallen in its history’ (Plut.
Plut. Demetr. 34.1; IG II2.644; Polyaen. 3.7.1–3; 4.7.5; Paus. 1.25.8, with Osborne (1982)
II.144–53; Habicht (1997) 87; Thonemann (2005) 65; Paschidis (2008) 128. Hammond and
Walbank (1988) 211–12, and Anson (2014) 177 think it fell in 294.
71
Paus. 1.25.8; Plut. Demetr. 33.7; cf. 43.4, with Habicht (1997) 87–9; Rose (2015) 273–4.
72
Polyaen. 4.7.5, with Ferguson (1929) 18–19.
73
Plut. Demetr. 33.3–5; cf. Dem. 13.4; SEG 41.322; IG V.1.1426, with Matthaiou (1990–1).
For SEG 51.457, a new edition of SEG 41.322, see Matthaiou (2001); cf. also Kralli (2017)
102–3; and now Dunn (2018), clarifying Demetrius’ dealings with Messene, and concluding
that this city, along with much of the Peloponnese, was under his control during the 290s.
74
Plut. Demetr. 35.1–3; Polyaen. 4.7.9–10. Ferguson (1929) 21; Hammond and Walbank
(1988) 212–17; Cartledge and Spawforth (2002) 30–1; Anson (2014) 177; Rose (2015) 274–6;
Kralli (2017) 103. On the defences of Sparta, see Just. 14.5.6–7, with Yardley–Wheatley–
Heckel (2011) 201–2.
70
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176
Demetr. 35.2). The region seems to have remained under his control for some
years (Demetr. 39.1).
(19) Thebes Twice, 293–291 BC
After becoming king of Macedonia, Demetrius moved to link his dominions
by taking control of Boeotia. Initially the relationship was amicable; however,
stirred up by Cleonymus of Sparta, Thebes revolted in 293, and the Besieger
advanced into central Greece. Cleonymus quickly deserted, and on this occasion the Thebans, faced with Demetrius’ machinery, surrendered without a
fight.75 His somewhat punitive measures, including the imposition of tribute,
a garrison, and a harmost (no less that Hieronymus of Cardia himself), apparently incensed the Thebans, and the city rebelled again in 291. This time
the repercussions were severe, and the famous helepolis was brought (slowly)
into play again:
He brought up his famous ‘city-taker’ for the assault but, because of its
huge size and weight, the machine was so slowly and laboriously propelled that in the space of two months it hardly advanced two stades.76
From this, we have the information that the action took at least two months,
and Plutarch adds that it was costly in casualties and logistics, and that Demetrius was again wounded by a catapult bolt. However, a fragment of Diodorus
confirms the result:
King Demetrius laid siege to Thebes when it revolted a second time,
demolished the walls with siege engines, and took the city by storm, but
put to death only the ten men who were responsible for the revolt.77
The Thebans—and the Hellenistic world—were left in no doubt that Demetrius was happy to negotiate with recalcitrant ‘allies’, but was also well able to
execute a siege with extreme prejudice when provoked. Moreover, there may
be clues to the historiographic evolution of the ‘Poliorcetes’ tradition in the
approaches of our two sources for the Theban sieges. Plutarch’s account
resonates with a snippet from Vitruvius in the context of the Rhodian siege,
Plut. Demetr. 39.3; cf. Polyaen. 4.7.11 for a variation on the story, asserting that the
Thebans surrendered as soon as Demetrius appeared at Chaeroneia. The two sieges of
Thebes are frequently conflated and confused in both the ancient and modern literature.
See, for instance, Wehrli (1968) 174–6; Gullath (1982) 189–91; Hammond and Walbank
(1988) 219–21; Huys (1996); Bosworth (2002) 171–3; Anson (2014) 179; Rose (2015) 285–92.
76
Plut. Demetr. 40.2, trans. Duff. Rose (2015) 291 calculates that at this rate, the behemoth
advanced six metres per day (one stade = 195.6 m).
77
Diod. 21.14.1–2; Plut. Demetr. 39.6–40.6.
75
The Implications of ‘Poliorcetes’: Was Demetrius the Besieger’s Nickname Ironic?
177
where the helepolis is bogged down in effluent poured from the city walls on the
advice of a certain Diognetus; the story is echoed later by Athenaeus in the
context of an unknown siege of Argos.78 Now, Vitruvius was writing some 140
years before Plutarch, and one might infer that here is the germ of a negative
tradition on Demetrius’ poliorcetic talents, which may have supplied Plutarch
with further grist to contrive a flawed Demetrius in his biography. But there is
none of this in Diodorus, who describes an efficient and timely Theban siege
with positive results, decanting in some form the primary Hieronymus of
Cardia. Plutarch must also have had Hieronymus (or Diodorus) to draw on,
but has transmitted instead a negative evaluation similar to the anecdote in
Vitruvius. It may not even be a bridge too far to suggest that the negativity is
residual from the hostile second century BC Rhodian source tradition, usually
attributed to Zeno and Antisthenes.79
(20) Athens, 287–286 BC
The final high-profile siege mounted by the Besieger was, again, Athens. After
losing his hold on Macedonia in autumn of 288 BC he returned to Greece
where, Plutarch reports:
The Athenians, on the other hand, revolted from him … but when they
saw that Demetrius was becoming more powerful than they had expected, they sent for Pyrrhus to come down from Macedonia and
protect them. This action angered Demetrius and he marched against
Athens and laid the city under close siege. However, the people sent
Crates the philosopher, a man of high reputation and authority, to
plead with him, and Demetrius raised the siege, partly because he was
persuaded by the ambassador’s appeal and partly because Crates was
able to suggest to him courses that were to his own advantage.80
For the third time in two decades Demetrius besieged Athens, but this time a
resolution was negotiated. The historiography is difficult to unravel, but by
some means the Besieger was persuaded to call off his operations, and embarked for Asia.
Vitr. 10.16.7; cf. Athen. 10.415a, with Campbell (2006) 87.
79
On the historiography of the siege of Rhodes, see Wheatley (2016) 45–9.
80
Plut. Demetr. 46.1–2; Pyrrh. 12.4–5, with Hammond and Walbank (1988) 230–1; Habicht
(1997) 95–7; Rose (2015) 317–21.
78
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178
(21) Cities of Caria and Lydia: Sardis, Caunus? Miletus?
Priene? Magnesia? Ephesus? 286–285 BC
Demetrius’ last campaign is difficult to reconstruct, but various sources indicate that a number of the coastal cities of Caria and Lydia, as well as Sardis,
either went over or were captured by the Besieger in what may have been a
final flurry of poliorcetics:
At Miletus, he was met by Eurydice, a sister of Phila, who brought with
her Ptolemaïs, one of the daughters of Ptolemy … Demetrius now
married her, and Eurydice gave the bride away. Immediately after the
wedding, Demetrius set himself to win over the cities of Ionia. Many
joined him of their own accord, while others were compelled to submit.
He also captured Sardis, and several of Lysimachus’ officers deserted to
him, bringing with them both money and troops.81
He evidently landed at Caunus, and proceeded to Miletus, probably via Tralleis. There is evidence for his activities at Priene, which resisted, and Magnesia
on the Maeander, which supported him, and also a slim possibility that he
made an attempt on Ephesus.82 Whether Sardis was captured after a siege we
are not told, but it seems the city was indeed taken by Demetrius—perhaps
his very last poliorcetic enterprise.
Conclusion
It is reasonable to hypothesise that the remarks of Gomme and Heckel asserting that Demetrius’ nickname was derisory owe something to an emphasis in
Plutarch, who, for the sake of his agenda, cannot risk transmitting a balanced
‘Demetrius’. He probably mined some existing hostile source narratives himself, emanating from the complex historiography of the Rhodian siege. Hence
we have a magnificent ‘Besieger’, but Plutarch’s coverage of the great sieges
(Rhodes, Babylon, Sicyon, Corinth) is abbreviated and critical, while others
are peppered through the narrative with little logical context or rationale (Soli,
Halicarnassus, Cenchreae), or are skipped over completely (Salamis, Samaria,
Ephesus, Priene). Moreover, Plutarch’s Life, as the only complete surviving
ancient biography of Demetrius, has become canonical, and his insidious
subtext has permeated modern scholarship. Some caution must be exercised
with this type of analysis, however, as Plutarch was of course more focused on
Plut. Demetr. 46.5–6, trans. Duff, with Marasco (1985) 153–5; Lund (1992) 102–3;
Murray (2012) 124–5; Rose (2015) 323–4.
82
Caunus: I Caunus 1; cf. Plut. Demetr. 49.5, with Marek (2006) 130–1. Priene and Magnesia: I. Priene 14, 15, with Sherwin-White (1985) 79–80. Ephesus: Polyaen. 5.19 (but possibly
referring to an earlier occasion); see Lund (1992) 125–7.
81
The Implications of ‘Poliorcetes’: Was Demetrius the Besieger’s Nickname Ironic?
179
Demetrius’ morality and excesses than his military prowess.83 But though the
response of modern scholars such as Gomme and Heckel may be put down to
a degree of exaggeration and misunderstanding, the viewpoint has gained
overmuch traction, and requires an antidote.
Statistics can lie, but this paper presents a catalogue of forty-seven cities
known to have been besieged and/or taken by Demetrius between 311 and 285
BC. True, Athens was invested three times; Thebes, and perhaps Ephesus,
twice, which still leaves forty-three. Some of the circumstances and outcomes
are obscure. Many cities negotiated, some were betrayed or in stasis, some
resisted before submitting, some, like Halicarnassus, were relieved of an
existing siege, but at least sixteen were actually stormed. Another five were
attacked, but the sieges were called off for various reasons: Es-Sela, Salamis,
Rhodes, Sparta, and Athens in 287–286. The remaining twenty-two were
either taken, or submitted to Demetrius, and by implication many more
unacknowledged towns must have been seized in regions where he was operating.84 The numbers are compelling, and it is unfortunate that the Rhodian
siege—in reality an outlier—captured the zeitgeist of the Antigonid floruit.
Even though the city was shattered, acceded to Demetrius’ original demands,
and never troubled the Antigonids again, while Demetrius went on to
accomplish outstanding feats in Greece, the fact that he never entered Rhodes
and sacked it has been promoted by modern scholarship as the benchmark of
failure. But no strongpoint after 304 BC successfully resisted Demetrius. Often
the mere rumour of his approach, or the sight of his siege equipment, resulted
in rapid negotiation or surrender.85
Demetrius’ nickname was not intrinsically tied to either victory or defeat.
It was awarded for his personal presence, meticulous preparations, and
ingenuity, and was undoubtedly promoted by an extremely effective Antigonid propaganda machine. Gomme’s observation is subtle, but not true; forty
years later Heckel’s throwaway line, ‘Besieger indeed!’, is not only untrue, but
unhelpful. Now, a further three-and-a-half decades on, after scrutinising the
actual evidence, I would riposte: ‘Besieger indeed’? Hell, yeah!
University of Otago
PAT WHEATLEY
pat.wheatley@otago.ac.nz
Plut. Demetr. 1.5–8; 42.10–11; 52.3–4; Synk. 4.3–5; 5.4; cf. Arist. 6.2, with Pelling (1988)
25; Duff (2004) 278–87. Despite this, it is evident from the Synkrisis (3.2–3; 4.1; 5.5) that
Demetrius did not let pleasure compromise business (cf. Demetr. 2.3; 19.10); see now Jacobs
(2018) 325–45.
84
Such as the Rhodian Peraea and the island of Rhodes itself (305–304), Cilicia (313–
312, 298–297), the Acte and Arcadia (303), the Thracian Chersonese (300–299), and the
Hellespont (302–301).
85
So Rose (2019) 173.
83
180
Pat Wheatley
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