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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Polybius, Histories. Search the whole document.
Found 6 total hits in 2 results.
Lilybaeum (Italy) (search for this): book 1, chapter 61
Drepana (search for this): book 1, chapter 61
The Battle of Aegusa
When the Carthaginians saw that the Romans were
The battle of Aegusa.
intercepting their passage across, they lowered
their masts, and after some words of mutual
exhortation had been uttered in the several
ships, closed with their opponents. But the respective
state of equipment of the two sides was exactly the converse of what it had been in the battle of Drepana; and
the result of the battle was, therefore, naturally reversed also.
The Romans had reformed their mode of shipbuilding, and
had eased their vessels of all freight, except the provisions
necessary for the battle: while their rowers having been
thoroughly trained and got well together, performed their
office in an altogether superior manner, and were backed up by
marines who, being picked men from the legions, were all but
invincible. The case with the Carthaginians was exactly the
reverse. Their ships were heavily laden and therefore unmanageable in the engagement; while their rowers were entirely
unt