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Battle of Drepana

The battle of Drepana or Drepanum (offshore modern Trapani, western coast of Sicily, 249 BC) was the a naval battle between the fleets of Carthage and the Roman Republic, fought during the First Punic War. The result was the only naval battle of Carthage in the conflict.

Battle of Drepana
Date of battle 249 BC
ConflictFirst Punic War
Battle beforeBattle of Panormus
Battle afterBattle of the Aegates Islands
Site of battleoffshore Drepana, in Sicily
Combatant 1Roman Republic
Commanders Publius Claudius Pulcher (consul)
Strengthcirca 120 ships
Combatant 2Carthage
Commanders Admiral Adherbal
Strengthcirca 120 ships
Result Carthaginian victory
Casualties(1): 93 ships captured or sunk
(2): 0 ships captured or sunk

Prelude

The string of Roman naval victories, such as Mylae and Ecnomus, gave confidence to make a direct attack to the Carthaginian stronghold of Lilybaeum governed by Himilco. The city was blocked by a fleet commanded by the year's consuls Publius Claudius Pulcher and Lucius Junius Pullus. But despite the acquired Roman naval experience, the Carthaginians were still superior in open sea manoeuvring. A small squadron led by Hannibal the Rhodian managed to break the siege in broad daylight and deliver supplies to the garrison of Lilybaeum. In the night, Hannibal left the city carrying the useless cavalry horses and ran to the harbour of Drepana, before the Romans knew what was happening.

The success of the enterprise was so stunning that the Carthaginians repeated it several times. For the Romans this was more than an humiliation: it was annulling the whole effect of the siege, since the garrison was being fed and kept in contact with Carthage. Something had to be done.

Not listening to chicken and its consequences

Pulcher, the senior consul then decides to launch a surprise attack to the harbour of Drepana, where the defiant ships were garrisoned. The fleet sailed North from Lilybaeum in a moonless night. They were not spotted by Carthaginian scouts but the low visibility conditions compromised the battle formation. When they reached Drepana at sunrise, the fleet was scattered in a long, disorganised line with Pulcher's ship in the rear. The clumsy approach was seen by the Punic scouts and the surprise effect lost.

Meanwhile in the flagship, Pulcher preformed the inspection of the omens for the battle, according to Roman religious tradition. The method ascribed for the situation was investigating the feeding behaviour of the sacred chicken, on board for that purpose. If the chicken accepted the offered grain, then the Gods would be favourable to the battle. However, in that particular morning of 249 BC, the chicken refused to eat – a terrible omen. Confronted with the unexpected and having to deal with the superstitious crews, now terrified, Pulcher quickly figured an alternative interpretation. He threw the sacred chicken overboard, directly onto the Mediterranean, proclaiming: They don't eat, so let them drink!

Drepana.png

In the harbour, the Carthaginians did not wait to see what were the Roman intentions. Admiral Adherbal had similar, though less controversial, quick thinking and ordered the evacuation of Drepana before block was unavoidable. Carthage's ships thus sailed out of Drepana, passing south of the city and contoured two small islands in the coast to open ocean. Seeing the plan of a surprise attack fail, Pulcher ordered a regroup for battle formation. But by then, everything was against his side, with the coast of Sicily in the back and a Punic fleet ready for battle at his front.

Adherbal saw chance for victory and ordered the attack, specially from his right flank against the Roman rear ships. The results were an utter Roman defeat, with almost all boats commanded by Pulcher sunk.

Aftermath

Publius Claudius Pulcher managed to escape and returned to Rome in shame, where he faced charges of treason. Unlike the Carthaginians, Romans did not execute generals for incompetence (cf. Hannibal Gisco), what brought Pulcher to the court was an accusation of sacrilege due to the chicken incident. He was convicted and sentenced to exile, with his political career finished.

In the same year, Hamilcar Barca (general Hannibal's father) had a successful campaign in Sicily and a storm destroyed the other half of the Roman fleet, commanded by consul Junius Pullus. Situation was so desperate that Aulus Atilius Caiatinus was appointed dictator and sent to the island to control the land warfare. The Drepana defeat was so demoralizing that Rome waited seven years to build another fleet.

References

The Fall of Carthage, by Adrian Goldsworthy, Cassel


Ancient Rome directory -- Military History of Rome -- List of Roman battles -- First Punic War -- Battle of Drepana

Referenced By

249 BC | Battle of the Aegates Islands | List of Roman battles | List of battle 1400 BC-600 AD | List of battles 1400 BC-1400 | List of battles 1400 BC-600 AD | List of naval battles

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Battle of Drepana".

 

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