Mythology The first
Greeks living in western Sicily related the phenomenon of the formation of hot waters to a mythological event, according to which the heat of the river waters had been emitted thanks to a fluvial god's will, Crimiso, to let heat the
nymph Egesta, escaped from
Troy, get warm as she was unconscious on the river bank, and that later became his wife. The historian
Diodorus Siculus tells about
Heracles’ trip: while he was going to
Erice he met the Egestee nymphs who, in order to help him to recover from fatigue, made Egestan (or Segestan) hot water springs appear on the surface.
Dionysius of Halicarnassus speaks about the Segestan
thermal baths and tells that
Eneas, after arriving in Sicily, left near Egesta his older mates who were tired for the trip, to repopulate it again and, by using these waters, have some benefits for their bodies. So this myth connects also to the foundation of Segesta made by Trojans who chose it for the beneficial properties of the hot water in its territory. As regards the river position, all the historical sources referring this myth agree on the fact that Crimiso is located in the Segestan area, and so it should be the present river San Bartolomeo (made up by the confluence of the river Caldo and the river Freddo), at whose mouth Segesta had its harbour.
Historical testimonies Besides legendas, different historical testimonies attest the importance of these thermal baths: Strabone speaks about them and even
Plinius the Elder praises their
therapeutic virtues:
Nec vero omnes quae sint calidae medicatas esse credendum, sicut in Segesta Siciliae. == Morphology ==