Fully illustrated story of the army of the Greek king who fought both
Rome and Carthage in the 280s--270s BC, and gave the world the phrase a
Pyrrhic victory for a success so costly that it counts as a defeat.
Fully illustrated with detailed color plates, this is the story of one
of the most renowned warrior-kings of the post-Alexandrian age, whose
costly encounters with Republican Rome have become a byword for victory
won at unsustainable cost.
Pyrrhus was one of the most tireless and famous warriors of the
Hellenistic Age that followed the dispersal of Alexander the Great's
brief empire. After inheriting the throne as a boy, and a period of
exile, he began a career of alliances and expansion, in particular
against the region's rising power: Rome. Gathering both Greek and
Italian allies into a very large army (which included war-elephants), he
crossed to Italy in 280 BC, but lost most of his force in a series of
costly victories at Heraclea and Asculum, as well as a storm at sea.
After a campaign in Sicily against the Carthaginians, he was defeated by
the Romans at Beneventum and was forced to withdraw. Undeterred, he
fought wars in Macedonia and Greece, the last of which cost him his
life.