Battle of Mylae (36 BC)

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Date11 August 36 BC
Location
Offshore Mylae, northern Sicily
Result Second Triumvirate victory
Battle of Mylae
Part of the Sicilian revolt

Location of Mylae (Milazzo) on the coast of northern Sicily
Date11 August 36 BC
Location
Offshore Mylae, northern Sicily
Result Second Triumvirate victory
Belligerents
Second Triumvirate Pompeians
Commanders and leaders
Agrippa Papias
Casualties and losses
5 ships 30 ships

The Battle of Mylae took place in 36 BC during the War between Sextus Pompey and the Second Triumvirate, between the Second Triumvirate under the command of Agrippa and the Pompeians under the command of Sextus Pompey led by Papias, which occurred in the city of Mylae (present-day Milazzo), off the north coast of Sicily. The battle resulted in a victory for the Second Triumvirate.

Sextus Pompey in the Treaty of Misenum agreed with the Second Triumvirate on a distribution of power. He ruled the islands of Sardinia, Corsica and Sicily, with a powerful navy with which he controlled a large part of the Mediterranean Sea. At the beginning of the following year, however, his admiral Menodoros defected with three legions and 60 ships to Octavian, giving him control of Corsica and Sardinia and receiving equestrian rank as a reward. He fought for Octavian under Calvisius Sabinus in the naval battle off Cumae. In 36 BC he returned to Sextus Pompey, but Sextus had him closely watched and Menodoros, unhappy with being treated with suspicion, again changed sides.[1]

Pompey responded with a blockade of the sea routes, which cut Rome off from important sources of grain, and repulsed one of Octavian's first attempted invasions. After this failure, Octavian's friend and lieutenant Agrippa designed a large-scale invasion plan for Octavian to conquer Sicily. Three different armies under the leadership of Octavian, Statilius Taurus and Lepidus were to land in Sicily from Puteoli, Taranto, and Africa.[2]

Battle

Aftermath

References

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