GELO
:''Gelo is also another spelling for the Gelao people, a Nationality of China. For the Scythian city, see Gelon. For the Gelo Racing team, see Georg Loos''
'Gelo' (or 'Gelon', d. 478 BC, Greek: ''ΓÎλων''), son of Deinomenes, was a 5th century BC ruler of Gela and Syracuse and first of the Deinomenid rulers. On the death of Hippocrates, tyrant of Gela (491 BC), Gelo, who had been his commander of cavalry, succeeded him; was aligned with Theron of Acragas and married his daughter Damarete; and in 485 BC, his aid having been invoked by the ''Gamoroi'' (the oligarchical landed proprietors) of Syracuse who had been driven out by the populace, he seized the opportunity of making himself tyrant. Herodotus writes that this was done to strengthen Syracuse though criticizes Gelo as antidemocratic. From this time, Gelo paid little attention to Gela, and devoted himself to the aggrandizement of Syracuse, which attained extraordinary wealth and influence. He moved his seat of power there, along with half the population of Gela. When the Greeks solicited his aid against Xerxes, he refused it, since they would not give him command of the allied forces (Herodotus vii. 171). In the same year the Carthaginians invaded Sicily, but were totally defeated in the Battle of Himera, the result of the victory being that Gelo became effectively lord of all Sicily. After he had thus established his power, he made a show of resigning it, but his proposal was rejected by the multitude, and he reigned without opposition until his death in 478/7 BC. He was honoured as a hero, and his memory was held in such respect that when all the brazen statues of tyrants were condemned to be sold in the time of Timoleon (150 years later) an exemption was made in favour of the statue of Gelo (Herodotus vii.; Diod. Sic. xi. 20-38).
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|width=25% align=center|'Preceded by:'
'Hippocrates'
|width=25% align=center|'Tyrant of Gela'
491 BC– 485 BC
|width=25% align=center|'Succeeded by:'
'Hieron I'
|-
|width=25% align=center|'Preceded by:'
'-'
|width=25% align=center|'Tyrant of Syracuse'
485 BC– 478 BC
|width=25% align=center|'Succeeded by:'
'Hieron I'
|-
'Gelo' (or 'Gelon', d. 478 BC, Greek: ''ΓÎλων''), son of Deinomenes, was a 5th century BC ruler of Gela and Syracuse and first of the Deinomenid rulers. On the death of Hippocrates, tyrant of Gela (491 BC), Gelo, who had been his commander of cavalry, succeeded him; was aligned with Theron of Acragas and married his daughter Damarete; and in 485 BC, his aid having been invoked by the ''Gamoroi'' (the oligarchical landed proprietors) of Syracuse who had been driven out by the populace, he seized the opportunity of making himself tyrant. Herodotus writes that this was done to strengthen Syracuse though criticizes Gelo as antidemocratic. From this time, Gelo paid little attention to Gela, and devoted himself to the aggrandizement of Syracuse, which attained extraordinary wealth and influence. He moved his seat of power there, along with half the population of Gela. When the Greeks solicited his aid against Xerxes, he refused it, since they would not give him command of the allied forces (Herodotus vii. 171). In the same year the Carthaginians invaded Sicily, but were totally defeated in the Battle of Himera, the result of the victory being that Gelo became effectively lord of all Sicily. After he had thus established his power, he made a show of resigning it, but his proposal was rejected by the multitude, and he reigned without opposition until his death in 478/7 BC. He was honoured as a hero, and his memory was held in such respect that when all the brazen statues of tyrants were condemned to be sold in the time of Timoleon (150 years later) an exemption was made in favour of the statue of Gelo (Herodotus vii.; Diod. Sic. xi. 20-38).
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★
|width=25% align=center|'Preceded by:'
'Hippocrates'
|width=25% align=center|'Tyrant of Gela'
491 BC– 485 BC
|width=25% align=center|'Succeeded by:'
'Hieron I'
|-
|width=25% align=center|'Preceded by:'
'-'
|width=25% align=center|'Tyrant of Syracuse'
485 BC– 478 BC
|width=25% align=center|'Succeeded by:'
'Hieron I'
|-
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