The brutal killing of King Troy by Troy is both the beginning of the story of Enide and the end of the story of the Trojan War contained in Iliad. Some of the most devastating things that can be achieved in war are the morale of other soldiers and the embarrassment of their gods. Trojan horses are highly respected for their gods and are portrayed as extremely pious people. This can be seen from the statue of Aeneas who refused to contact the god of his family until he could clear up the fight he just came.
When Perez entered the town of Taras, he did not impress the people he came to defend. The people of Tara are lazy, they are overeating and participating in the competition and they expect Piros to fight for them. Pyrrhus closed the amphitheater and stopped playing. Pyros then forced the people of Taras to join the army and shape them. Pyrrhus never fights for lazy people who do not care about self defense. The Romans first fought against Pyros in Battle of Hercules and in 280 BC. The Romans were afraid of the elephants, and Perez won the fight, but he praised the power and courage of the Roman army. "If you like people like Romans, I can conquer the world," Pyrrus quoted the Roman army after the battle. Pyros praised the organization of the Roman army and the fact that all the dead Romans had been wounded in front of their body.
In 275 BC, Piros battled with the third Roman in Benevento. This is the victory of the Romans. The Romans occupied some elephant and pilus riders and roamed around Rome streets. Piros left Italy and few of his former troops. In 272 BC, Rome lost Taras and added southern Italy to its growing empire. In the same year, Pils was murdered in the city of Argos and tried to add South Greece to his territory.
Pyros was disappointed in the war with the Romans. The Romans turned their attention to nearby Sicily, where he wanted to conquer. Pyrros left the sanctuary of Taras, crossed the Strait of Messina in 279 BC, and entered Sicily. Syracuse city in Sicily asked Pirfus to exile the Carthaginians. Carthage is an ancient Phoenician settlement in Africa, right next to Sicily. Mercenary warrior Mammeltines, hired by King Syracuse, occupied the entire northeastern corner of Sicily and threatened Syracuse again. After he arrived, Piros was declared king of Sicily.