Battle of Mylae

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Battle of Mylae
Part of the First Punic War
Date 260 BC
Location Offshore Mylae, Sicily
Result Roman victory
Combatants
Roman Republic Carthage
Commanders
Gaius Duilius Hannibal Gisco
Strength
About 120 ships About 130 ships
Punic Wars
FirstMercenarySecondThird
First Punic War
Messina - AgrigentumLipari IslandsMylaeSulciTyndarisCape EcnomusAdysTunisPanormusDrepana – Lillybaeum - Drepana - Mt Ercte - 1st Mt Eryx - Tarentum - 2nd Mt Eryx - Aegates Islands

The Battle of Mylae took place in 260 BC, during the First Punic War, off the coast of Mylae, Sicily, and was the first real naval battle between the fleets of Carthage and the Roman Republic. The result was a decisive Roman victory.

After the conquest of Agrigentum, the Roman Republic felt confident to pursue war with Carthage on sea. With this purpose, Rome built and equipped a fleet of about 150 ships, quinqueremes and triremes, in a record two months. The first episode of Roman naval warfare, the battle of the Lipari Islands, was not brilliant: consul Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Asina managed to lose his whole squadron of 17 ships to Carthage without a fight.

Shortly afterwards this small incident, the junior consul, Gaius Duilius, sailed with the rest of the fleet to meet the Carthaginians. In possession of a long and glorious naval tradition, Carthage had the experience and naval skills, but the Romans had introduced the corvus in the prow of their ships, a boarding mechanism that would nullify this advantage by making clever use of Rome's superior infantry. The fleets met offshore Mylae and right at the beginning of the confrontation, 30 Punic ships were conquered by Roman soldiers, boarded with the corvi, including the Carthaginian flagship. Hannibal Gisco, the Punic admiral, was forced to escape in extremis in a small boat and boarded another of his vessels. He tried to outmanuever the Romans and attack by astern (safe from the corvi), but was utterly defeated.

In the aftermath of the battle, the first naval success for Rome, Gaius Duilius was revered as a hero. The consul celebrated a triumph featuring the prows of the apprehended Carthaginian ships. Afterwards, these were used to decorate the speakers platform in the Forum, known from that day onwards as the rostra (prows, in Latin). Duilius retired soon from political life, in the height of his career. Hannibal Gisco was crucified for incompetence shortly afterwards.

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