-
short periods of
democracy and oligarchy.
While Pindar addressed the
Deinomenids as
kings (basileus) in his odes, it is not
clear that this (or any other...
- Rule
under the
Deinomenids (485-465 BC)...
-
tyrant of the
Sicilian cities Gela and Syracuse, Sicily, and
first of the
Deinomenid rulers.
Gelon was the son of Deinomenes.
According to Herodotus, Gelon's...
-
Sicily under the
Deinomenids (485-465 BC)...
- Graecia, for
eleven months during 466 and 465 BC. He was a
member of the
Deinomenid family and the
brother of the
previous tyrant Hiero, who
seized power...
-
Sicily under the
Deinomenids (485-465 BC)...
-
Sicily under the
Deinomenids (485-465 BC)...
-
methods specifically for the law court, not the ****embly.
Under the
Deinomenids, the land and
property of many
common citizens had been seized; these...
- from Syracuse, the
former garrison of Gela, who
after the fall of the
Deinomenids retreated to
Omphace to
continue waging a
campaign against Gela. Archaeologically...
-
success was made
possible thanks to the
decline of the
tyranny of the
Deinomenids in
Syracuse (466 BC) and the
abandonment of
Pithecusae (Ischia) by the...