calls Archimedes to fortify the city'' by
Sebastiano Ricci (1720s) Sicily, which was wrested from
Carthaginian control during the
First Punic War (264–241 BC), was the first province of the Roman Republic not directly part of Italy. The
Kingdom of Syracuse was an allied independent region in the south east of the island and a close ally of Rome during the long reign of
King Hiero II. In 215 BC, Hiero's grandson,
Hieronymus, came to the throne on his grandfather's death and Syracuse fell under the influence of an anti-Roman faction, including two of his uncles, amongst the Syracusan elite. Despite the assassination of Hieronymus and the removal of the pro-Carthaginian leaders, Rome's threatening reaction to the danger of a Syracusan alliance with Carthage would force the new republican leaders of Syracuse to prepare for war. Despite diplomatic attempts, war broke out between the
Roman Republic and the
Kingdom of Syracuse in 214 BC, while the Romans were still busy battling with
Carthage at the height of the
Second Punic War (218–201 BC). The city had been retaken by the pro-Carthaginian faction, led by the Greco-Carthaginian
Epicydes, who had served under
Hannibal Barca in Italy, and his brother Hippocrates, both of whom had named themselves
tyrant. A Roman force led by the
proconsul Marcus Claudius Marcellus supported by the
propraetor Appius Claudius Pulcher consequently laid siege to the port city by sea and land in 213 BC. The city of Syracuse, located on the eastern coast of
Sicily was renowned for its significant fortifications, great walls that protected the city from attack. Among the Syracuse defenders was the mathematician and scientist
Archimedes. == Siege ==