The walls of Athens, which had been …

Years: 267 - 267

The walls of Athens, which had been neglected since Sulla's capture of the city in 86 BCE and have fallen into ruin, had been rebuilt under Valerian, and the circuit had been extended to include the new suburb northeast of the Olympieion (Temple of Hadrian Olympios).

This has been done because of the threat of a barbarian invasion, but the walls are of no avail in 267 when that invasion comes.

The Heruli easily capture Athens, and, though the historian Publius Herennius Dexippus rallies two thousand men on the city outskirts, they can only resort to guerrilla tactics.

The lower town is sacked, and all the buildings of the Agora are burned and destroyed.

The Acropolis, however, may have held out; at least there is no evidence of extensive damage at this time. (The Bibliotheca, a ninth-century encyclopedia by Photius, patriarch of Constantinople, credits Dexippus with three major works: a four-book history of the diadochoi (successors) of Alexander the Great, a history of the struggle of Rome against the Goths after CE 238, and a twelve-book annalistic chronicle from legendary times to CE 270. Although none of these survive, numerous fragments have been recognized in the compilations of later historians. Several Athenian inscriptions attest to the high public offices held by Dexippus, his father, and his children.)

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