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Hereupon this is what ensued. The Samians on their voyage reached
the country of the Epizephyrian Locrians, at a time when the
Zanclaeans and their king Scythas were engaged in the siege of a
Sicilian town which they hoped to take. Anaxilaus, tyrant of
Rhegium, who was on ill terms with the Zanclaeans knowing how matters
stood, made application to the Samians, and persuaded them to give up
the thought of Kale-Acte the place to which they were bound, and to
seize Zancle itself, which was left without men. The Samians
followed this counsel and possessed themselves of the town; which the
Zanclaeans no sooner heard than they hurried to the rescue, calling to
their aid Hippocrates, tyrant of Gela, who was one of their allies.
Hippocrates came with his army to their assistance; but on his arrival
he seized Scythas, the Zanclaean king, who had just lost his city,
and sent him away in chains, together with his brother Pythogenes, to
the town of Inycus; after which he came to an understanding with the
Samians, exchanged oaths with them, and agreed to betray the people
of Zancle. The reward of his treachery was to be one-half of the
goods and chattels, including slaves, which the town contained, and
all that he could find in the open country. Upon this Hippocrates
seized and bound the greater number of the Zanclaeans as slaves;
delivering, however, into the hands of the Samians three hundred of
the principal citizens, to be slaughtered; but the Samians spared the
lives of these persons.
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