The city was of
Siculian origin; in 403 BC the tyrant
Archonides of
Herbita (a Siculian city), having concluded peace with
Dionysius I of Syracuse, gave the northern part of his territory to the Sicilians as well as to mercenaries and others who had helped him during the war. He named it Halaesa, to which the epithet Archonidea was frequently added for the purpose of distinction. Others attributed the foundation of the city erroneously to the
Carthaginians. It quickly rose to prosperity through maritime commerce. At the start of the
First Punic War it was one of the first of the Sicilian cities to submit to the
Romans to whose alliance it was always faithful. It was doubtless to this conduct and to the services that it was able to render to the Romans during their wars in Sicily that it was awarded the status of
civitas libera ac immunis which gave it the privilege of retaining its own laws and independence, exempt from all taxation, an advantage enjoyed by only five cities of Sicily. In consequence of this advantageous position it rose rapidly in wealth and prosperity and became one of the most flourishing cities of Sicily. On one occasion its citizens, having been involved in disputes among themselves concerning the choice of their senate, C. Claudius Pulcher was sent by Rome at their own request in 95 BC to regulate the matter by a law, which he did to the satisfaction of all parties. Halaesa is the only place in
Sicily where an inscription to a
Roman governor of the
Roman Republic period (perhaps in 93 BC) has come to light. But their privileges did not protect them from the exactions of Verres, who imposed on them an enormous contribution both in corn and money.
Cicero and his cousin visited the city in 70 BC and attended its senate during their collection of evidence for his prosecution of Verres later that year. Also evidence from inscriptions implies the city safely navigated its way through the
Sicilian revolt, as the family Lapiron flourished both before and after the period. The city appears to have subsequently declined, and had sunk in the time of
Augustus to the condition of an ordinary
municipal town, but was still one of the few places on the north coast of Sicily which
Strabo deemed worthy of mention.
Pliny also enumerates it among the
stipendiariae civitates of Sicily. ==The site==