Hieron's reign is marked by the creation …

Years: 467BCE - 467BCE

Hieron's reign is marked by the creation of the first secret police in Greek history, but he is a liberal patron of literature and culture.

The poets Simonides, Pindar, Bacchylides, Aeschylus, and Epicharmus are active at his court, as well the philosopher Xenophanes.

He is an active participant in panhellenic athletic contests, winning several victories in the single horse race and also in the chariot race.

He won the chariot race at Delphi in 470 (a victory celebrated in Pindar's first Pythian ode) and at Olympia in 468 (this, his greatest victory, was commemorated in Bacchylides' third victory ode).

Other odes dedicated to him include Pindar's first Olympian Ode, his second and third Pythian odes, and Bacchylides' fourth and fifth victory odes.

He dies at Catana/Aetna in 467 and is buried there, but his grave will later be destroyed when the former inhabitants of Catana returned to the city.

Hiero is succeeded by his surviving brother, Thrasybulus, but the tyranny at Syracuse lasts only a year or so after his death.

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