Phillidas and the Aetolian Troops Arrive
Philip, then, was acquiring a great reputation, not only
among those actually in his army, but among
the other Peloponnesians also, for his behaviour
to the allies serving with him, as well as for his
ability and courage in the field. Indeed it would not be easy
to find a king endowed with more natural qualities requisite
for the acquisition of power. He had in an eminent degree
a quick understanding, a retentive memory, and a winning
grace of manner, joined to a look of royal dignity and
authority; and most important of all, ability and courage as
a general. What neutralised all these excellent qualities,
and made a cruel tyrant of a naturally well-disposed king, it is
not easy to say in a few words: and therefore that inquiry
must be reserved for a more suitable time than the present.
Starting from Olympia by the road leading to Pharae,
Philip continues his campaign. |
Philip came first to Telphusa, and thence to
Heraea. There he had the booty sold by
auction, and repaired the bridge over the
Alpheus, with the view of passing over it to the invasion of
Triphylia.
Just at that time the Aetolian Strategus, Dorimachus, in answer
to a request of the Eleans for protection against the devastation they were enduring, despatched six hundred
Aetolians, under the command of Phillidas, to
their aid.
Arrival of Aetolian troops under Phillidas, B. C. 218. |
Having arrived in
Elis, and taken over
the Elean mercenaries, who were five hundred
in number, as well as a thousand citizen soldiers and the Tarentine cavalry,
1 he marched to the relief of Triphylia.
This
district is so called from Triphylus, one of the
sons of Arcas, and lies on the coast of the
Peloponnese between
Elis and
Messenia, facing the Libyan
Sea, and touching the south-west frontier of
Arcadia. It
contains the following towns, Samicum, Lepreum, Hypana,
Typaneae,
Pyrgos, Aepium, Bolax, Stylangium,
Phrixa; all of
which, shortly before this, the Eleans had conquered and annexed, as well as the city of
Alipheira, which had originally been
subject to
Arcadia and
Megalopolis, but had been exchanged
with the Eleans, for some private object of his own, by
Lydiadas when tyrant of
Megalopolis.