READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
ATHENS . 478—401 B.C.
CHAPTER XI THE OLIGARCHICAL MOVEMENT IN ATHENS I
THE
REVOLT OF CHIOS
WHEN the completeness of
the disaster in Sicily became known it was generally thought that Athens was
done for. The first idea men had was that the fleet which had triumphed in the
Great Harbour would appear off the Piraeus; and there
was a disposition on all sides to lend it a helping hand. Neutrals bestirred
themselves, islanders planned insurrection, the Lacedaemonians were jubilant,
Persia was interested, and the Athenians depressed. But the Syracusans were
neither willing nor able to bear longer the chief burden of the war against
Athens. They had paid dearly for their victory in men, money, and ships; and
now that they need not fear Athenian intervention again, they had their own
policy in Sicily to prosecute. Hermocrates, however,
was insistent on carrying the war into the Aegean, and since his influence had
become paramount during the course of the siege, he succeeded in having a
Sicilian fleet sent to help the Peloponnesians. It consisted of twenty
Syracusan and two Selinuntian ships, but the summer
of 412 b.c. was well advanced before it arrived. The other western states that took a hand
in the eastern war, Thurii, Locri,
and Tarentum, intervened still later.
Events in Greece did not
await their coming. During the winter both Sparta and Athens were hard at work
on new fleets—Sparta on a programme which called for
the building of 100 triremes; Athens, under the direction of a new board of ten
Advisers (probouloi) in equipping the triremes
it already had and in collecting timber and money for additions. But these
preparations took time, and the naval war began long before they were
completed. It was precipitated by a serious revolt which broke out in the
Athenian Empire. This contained a deadly menace to the war-revenues of which
Athens had now such need. For the Sicilian expedition had eaten up all the
reserves (with the exception of the 1000 talents held for a naval crisis); and
already in 413 b.c. the city had been so short of funds that it had dismissed 1300 Thracians who
had reached Athens too late to sail with Demosthenes. Strict measures of
economy were therefore taken, among them the withdrawal of the garrison from
Laconia ; and it was the necessity of augmenting its revenues which led
Athens about this time to supplant the tribute by a 5 per cent, toll on
maritime commerce—a change not unconciliatory in
itself, but invidious because of the exemption undoubtedly granted to Athenians
if not to Athenian metics. Upon communities agitated
by this innovation fell the terrible blood-tax levied in Sicily. Hence ‘the
allies judged the situation under the influence of passion and were ready even
beyond their power to revolt from the Athenians.’
The secession movement
manifested itself spontaneously in several centres.
Euboea and Lesbos communicated with Agis, now installed at Decelea almost as an independent ruler, Chios and Erythrae with Lacedaemon direct, all with the same purpose—to join Sparta the moment
the Peloponnesian fleet arrived. In view of the number of ships the Chians possessed (no less than 60) there could not be much
doubt as to the point at which the Spartans should intervene.
Their intervention was
also solicited by Persia. King Darius II thought the moment opportune to regain
the cities in Asia of which the Athenians had had the undisputed possession
since 448 b.c. His decision reached Tissaphernes, the new governor
of the maritime provinces (Lydia, Caria, Ionia), and Pharnabazus,
satrap of Dascylium (Phrygia, Bithynia), in the form
of a request for the tribute due by the ‘rebels’. These officials got in touch
with Sparta, each aiming to secure assistance in his own territory. Tissaphernes accordingly supported the petition of Chios
and Erythrae. He had a particular reason for
resentment at Athens in that Amorges, the son of the
rebel Pissuthnes, from whom he had had to wrest
Lydia, found support in Attic Caria. In order to satisfy everybody, a programme was agreed upon according to which the
Peloponnesian fleet was to go to Ionia first, thence to Lesbos, and then to the
Hellespont.
The fleet consisted of
some sixty ships, thirty-nine at Lechaeum, five in
Laconia, and sixteen on their way back from Syracuse. It would have suited
Sparta to wait till the Sicilian squadron arrived; but the Chians pressed for speedier action. The Athenians were naturally suspicious of them,
and the Chian aristocrats, who were conducting both
the government and the negotiations, were afraid lest their dealings with
Sparta should become prematurely known either to their own people or to Athens.
Accordingly 21 of the ships at Lechaeum were carried
across the Isthmus and started for Chios (July 412 b.c.). But the Athenians, who had learned of the enterprise,
forced the squadron ashore at Peiraeus, a deserted harbour near the border of Epidauria, and blockaded it there;
and a little later they routed the ships that were returning from Syracuse. But
one torch sufficed to set the heather on fire. Undeterred by the misadventure
of the main fleet, the Laconian squadron continued on its way to Chios. The
Athenians tried to intercept it. But the Spartans pushed straight across the
open sea and reached their destination safely. The mainspring of this bold
action was Alcibiades, who, keen to strike Athens in its most vulnerable point
and glad to quit Sparta because of the enmity of Agis, whose wife he had
seduced, accompanied the expedition as unofficial chief-of-staff to Chalcideus, its commander; and it was by announcing the despatch of the Lacedaemonian fleet while concealing its
mishap that they precipitated the revolt. Erythrae followed the lead of Chios; so did Clazomenae. The Chians went by sea, the Erythraeans and Clazomenians by land, and won Teos.
Ephesus too seceded. And so the movement spread. The adhesion of Miletus was
especially desirable. To it Alcibiades and Chalcideus sailed and they were admitted at once.
Tissaphernes joined them there and
arranged with Chalcideus the draft of a treaty of
alliance against Athens. Its larger significance consisted in the admission by
Sparta of Persia’s right to all the land and cities held by the King or his
ancestors—a definition so wide as to make subsequent interpretation inevitable,
yet incontrovertibly surrendering to Darius the Greek communities in Asia
Minor. The agreement called, further, for common action to prevent Athens from
drawing money or supplies of any sort from the places recognized as belonging
to the King. It seems to have been assumed that the resources thus denied to
Athens would be used for the maintenance of the Peloponnesian fleets; but as
Sparta had received a promise from Tissaphernes that
he would attend to this himself, the home government declined to ratify the
draft. The states thus bargained away can hardly have known of this
transaction. For their part the Chians had already
implicated themselves so deeply that they had everything to gain—not least
relative independence of Sparta and Persia—by enlarging as quickly as possible
the scope of the revolt. So they manned another squadron which won Lebedus and Aerae; and they sent
still another to Lesbos, on the arrival of which both Mitylene and Methymna on the island and Phocaea and Cyme on
the mainland revolted. The energy of Chios was thus richly rewarded. Between
the Iasic Gulf and the Gulf of Adramyttium practically all that was left of the empire of Athens was Samos; and as a centre of commerce in this area Chios bade fair to replace
Athens.
II.
THE
NAVAL WAR IN IONIA
But the counter-attack of
the Athenians had already begun. They did not underestimate the defection of
Chios. They knew what it meant for a fleet other than their own to be at large
in the Aegean in view of the pains they had taken to keep their subject cities
without sea-defences. Hence they concluded that the
crisis had arrived for which the special reserve of 1000 talents had been
created, and they made this sum available to speed up their naval preparations.
Squadron after squadron was sent to the scene of action as quickly as they
could be got ready. Chalcideus was followed to
Miletus and blockaded there. As their base in Asiatic waters the Athenians
chose Samos, which accordingly they felt that they must secure against
defection at any cost. They therefore aided the Samian proletariat in
destroying the local aristocracy root and branch; and a new state was
organized in which the nobles who escaped massacre or exile were denied the
right of intermarriage with citizens, and the population subdivided with a
singularly un-Hellenic disregard for inherited gentile groupings. Then the
Athenians restored to Samos its autonomy. Meanwhile sufficient forces had
arrived to enable them to regain Teos and to send an
expedition for the recovery of Lesbos. Its approach was altogether unexpected. Mitylene and Methymna fell into
its hands and ten of thirteen Chian ships found there
were destroyed or captured.
But Athens could not send
46 ships to Asia Minor without weakening the fleet that was blockading
Peiraeus. The Peloponnesian ships there were able to force their way back to Cenchreae, and Astyochus, Spartan nauarch (admiral) for 412—1 b.c., escorted by four of them, came to Chios and made an
effort to retrieve the position in Lesbos; but even when reinforced he was no
match for the Athenians. They held the island, recovered Clazomenae,
and then attacked Chios itself. After having driven the land forces of the
defenders back within the walls, they plundered the rich country at pleasure.
Since 21 Chian triremes had already been seized or
destroyed and 25 others were shut up at Miletus, the people of Chios began to
make trouble for the government which had got them into such a pass.
It was now well on toward
autumn and the new vessels put on the stocks after the disaster in Sicily were
coming into commission. Athens was the more forehanded on this occasion. It
got off a fleet of 48 ships, including 25 transports, with an army of hoplites
on board (1500 Argives, 1000 Athenians, and 1000 allies), the object being to
invest and reduce Miletus. The landingforce succeeded in the first part of its mission. The Milesians, aided by
Peloponnesian hoplites, and troops led by Tissaphernes,
unwisely offered battle, and though they routed the Argives, killing one-fifth
of their number, they were themselves defeated by the Athenians. The victors
had already begun to throw a wall across the base of the peninsula on which
Miletus lay when the approach of a powerful enemy fleet was reported. It proved
to be the chief Lacedaemonian naval effort of the year, and was based on the 22
ships brought from Sicily by Hermocrates, to which
the Peloponnesians had added 33 others. A Spartan, Therimenes,
was its commander.
Had he come straight on
from Leros he might have forced the Athenians to
fight with a fair risk of losing their army. He went instead to Teichiussa on the north coast of the Iasic gulf and only sailed round to Miletus on the following day. By that time the
Athenians had departed. They had been sorely tempted to risk a naval engagement
rather than forfeit the advantage they had gained. But Phrynichus happened to be one of their generals, and he refused positively to give his
consent to a battle where the consequences of defeat, in loss of forces and
prestige, would be so great and the strength of the enemy was unknown, when by
withdrawing to Samos they could concentrate their entire fleet for later
action. The evacuation was effected during the night and Samos was reached
safely; but the retreat was a costly one. The Argives went home angry because
of their misfortune, and thenceforth Argos took no part in the war.
For the moment the
initiative was left with the enemy, and they used it first to storm lasus, the headquarters of Amorges,
who was taken prisoner and handed over to Tissaphernes,
and then to relieve Chios. This the massing of a Lacedaemonian fleet of 80
ships in Milesian waters had accomplished of itself; for it had led the
Athenians to withdraw to Samos their entire forces. The way was thus open for
the Chian fleet to return home and for Pedaritus, a Spartan, to come with some troops to Chios to
take charge of its defence. Astyochus tried again to dislodge the Athenians from the places they had recently
re-occupied in the north; but it was with the squadron concentrated at Chios
that he made the effort, and when he failed to capture Clazomenae,
he was prevented from going on to Lesbos by the baulking of the Chians. So he left in high dudgeon, taking his
Peloponnesian ships with him, and went to Miletus to assume command of the main
fleet.
The Athenian inferiority
proved only momentary. In the autumn a further squadron of 35 ships reached
Samos; so that the generals there felt strong enough to divide their fleet
again and dispatch 30 triremes with a landing army on board to resume the
investment of Chios, while masking Miletus, where the main Peloponnesian fleet
lay, with 74 others. The ships going to Chios crossed those with which Astyochus was departing. They brought along only 1000
hoplites; but Chios, being a country of great landed proprietors, merchants,
and industrialists, with a slave population several times greater than the
free, had few heavyarmed troops; so that, despite
the presence of Pedaritus with more than 500
Peloponnesians, the small Athenian army was able to occupy Delphinium, a strong
place with a harbour about nine miles north of the
city, and from it deny the citizens the use of their land and entice their
slaves to run away en masse. Since the sea was closed
to the Chians also and Astyochus left them to their own devices, Pedaritus soon had
serious disaffection on his hands. But he crushed it with vigour.
All through the winter (412—1 b.c.) the siege continued. Their slaves were so numerous that
the Chians had made it their policy to cow them by
severity: now they were paid back with interest; and they suffered more
discriminatingly at the hands of servants turned guides, ruffians, and bandits,
than at the hands of the invaders. Finally, since no help came, Pedaritus made a bold effort to relieve the city by
storming Delphinium. But he lost his life in the attempt and the Chians were beaten off with great losses. By spring famine
had become unendurable. Hence Leon, appointed harmost in Pedaritus’
place, after having managed to slip through the blockade with twelve ships from
Miletus, sallied out with these and 24 Chian triremes
and attacked the Athenian fleet, which consisted at that moment of 32 vessels.
But though the besieged gave a good account of themselves in the fighting,
night intervened before a decision was reached. At this point events elsewhere
compelled the Athenians to give up the blockade. Delphinium, however, they held
till 406 b.c.
III.
THE
POLICY OF TISSAPHERNES
Before Astyochus arrived at Miletus Therimenes had reopened
negotiations with Tissaphernes. With a fleet of 70
triremes on his hands and a large proportion of his crews mercenaries, his
need of money was met only temporarily by the plunder of Iasus and the bounty of the Milesians. Tissaphernes, too,
was now disposed to reconsider his earlier agreement. He had come to appreciate
the danger of allowing the King’s cities to form the habit of making
contributions to Sparta. So these were forbidden in the new draft, and Tissaphernes himself undertook to shoulder the expense of
the Peloponnesian fleet while it was in the King’s service. But the wages
allowed by him for the future were only a trifle over half (3 obols per day)
those paid for the month just past—a reduction which lessened alacrity among
seamen to take or continue service with the Spartans. Yet, if paid regularly,
the new wage, by which, after all, Athens was overbid, far outvalued the right
of requisition which Therimenes covenanted away.
This financial transaction
opened the way for the inauguration by Tissaphernes of a new general policy. By paying or withholding subsidies he acquired control
over the size, efficiency and movements of the Spartan fleet; and he studied
how to use it to serve his own ends. To help the Peloponnesians to an immediate
and complete victory might very well mean to drive out Satan with Beelzebub.
Not to help them further would doubtless permit the Athenians again to sweep
the seas; for the fleet of Athens that now made cruises across from Samos was
obviously superior in fighting strength to the one which lay inactive in
Miletus. The wise course for Persia to follow was, he concluded, to preserve
the naval equipoise in the Aegean, and let both parties wear themselves out in
finances and man-power until the Persian fleet was strong enough to impose its
will upon an exhausted Hellas.
In this conclusion was
manifested the fine hand of Alcibiadcs, whom Sparta,
suspecting treachery, had ordered Astyochus to
assassinate, and the Persian Satrap, badly in need of an expert in Hellenic
politics, had taken into his service (November, 412). Alcibiades’ dominant
impulse was to do Sparta an injury, but the most effective way of accomplishing
this—instilling into Tissaphernes’ mind sound motives
for underrationing the Spartan fleet—was at the same
time the most effective way of doing Athens a service. But his patriotism was
not disinterested. He calculated by trafficking on Tissaphernes’ favour ultimately to secure for himself recall from
exile with so strong an asset, in his supposed or real influence over Persian
policy, that political ascendancy in Athens would be assured to him. Unless Tissaphernes should become his dupe there was, of course,
bound to be a parting of their ways; but not immediately. And the more
ostentatiously Alcibiades identified himself with Tissaphernes’ purposes—supplying for Hellenic understanding respectable arguments for Tissaphernes’ illiberality and irregularity in giving
money; supplying to Tissaphernes as a guiding
principle the policy of preventing land-power and sea-power in Greece from
falling into the hands of the same people—the more certainly he advanced
towards his own goal.
Astyochus was not unduly moved by
the plight of Chios. To reach it from Miletus he would have to run the gauntlet
of the Athenians at Samos and this he rightly regarded as too risky. But the
way to the south was open, both to him and to Sparta. It was thither
accordingly that reinforcements from home were sent. A squadron of twelve
ships, including those from Thurii, commanded by the
international athlete Dorieus, crossed over to
Cnidus, which had recently seceded to Tissaphernes;
and half of them stayed there to defend the city and half cruised off the Tri- opian promontory intercepting the grain-ships from Egypt.
This promptly brought an Athenian fleet from Samos, which captured the
commerce-destroyers and almost captured the city. Then a Spartan fleet of 27
ships, equipped for the account of Pharnabazus, having clashed with an Athenian patrol off Melos
while en route to Ionia, and
apprehending danger if it kept on its course, turned south and reached Caunus (December, 412). It had on board a commission of
eleven Spartans authorized to supersede the nauarch if it saw fit, and instructed to assume general direction of Lacedaemonian
affairs in Asia. The commission ordered Astyochus to
come to meet them. So he left a detachment behind to guard Miletus (from which
subsequently Leon took twelve ships to Chios) and slipped away unobserved. Off
Syme he came upon an Athenian squadron which, rashly assuming that his left
wing, when it hove in sight on a rainy foggy morning, was the fleet from Caunus, attacked it vigorously, and, being itself surrounded,
was lucky to escape to Halicarnassus with a loss of one-third of its strength.
The two Lacedaemonian fleets then united at Cnidus; but they declined battle,
though the Athenians, coming down from Samos, gave them the opportunity. They
were superior in numbers (94 ships to 75), but in nothing else. For of late Tissaphernes had ceased to pay the crews regularly, and
since Astyochus was suspected of having been bribed
to acquiesce, discipline had fallen off, and ships showed slackness and empty
benches.
The Lacedaemonian
commissioners resolved to have a definite settlement with Persia. So Tissaphernes came to Cnidus for a conference with them. Lichas, the head of the mission, a blunt man but a trusted
negotiator, spoke the mind of the Spartans not to honour agreements which, strictly construed, ceded to the King all Greece outside the
Peloponnese, even if they had to do without Persian money altogether. Between
this and the version of Alcibiades that the Spartans had come to Asia to
liberate all the Greeks there was a wide discrepancy; but Tissaphernes,
whose suspicions had been thoroughly aroused, read the one into the other, and
broke off the negotiations abruptly.
So the fleet of Astyochus had to shift for itself. The Spartans, too, had
now maritime allies and the rudiments of a tribute system. And at the moment
they had a windfall. With the aid of its aristocrats they won Rhodes, where the
lack of coast defences again proved the undoing of
Athens. Thus Astyochus secured a large seafaring
population from which to replenish his crews and a contribution of cash
sufficient to tide him over the immediate crisis. The Athenians arrived too
late to stop the revolt, but with their main base at Samos and advanced
stations at Cos and Chalce they carried on war
against the island. Astyochus did not use this
revitalizing of his forces for a definite trial of strength with them. His
primary object was to keep his fleet in being, and, as occasion offered, to
make inroads into the Athenian Empire. But he could not support his fleet long with the resources of Rhodes; and except by
risking a naval battle he could neither levy on his northern allies nor relieve
Chios. So long before the winter was over his position became little short of
desperate.
Though the Athenians still
possessed the advantage on the sea, they felt that they could retain it and
exploit it only if Persia continued to stand aside. They were so anxious to
insure the complete separation of their two enemies that they let themselves be
made the victims of a cruel hoax, and in the process (to use language replete
with modern meaning) their front began to give way; and their home front did
give way completely; but their war front, rallying splendidly, held fast and
saved the whole situation.
IV.
ALCIBIADES
AND THE ATHENIAN REVOLUTION
Fear entered the hearts of
the Athenians when they realized that in Sicily they had gambled away their
safety. They naturally withdrew their favour from the
men who had advised the expedition. Androcles and Peisander had to yield to others the primacy in the public meetings of citizens and went
separate ways, the former to remain in touch with the urban masses whom the
imminence of danger overawed, the latter to form new contacts with people, now
much more numerous and aggressive, who thought the rule of a majority manifest
folly. The Athenians were at this time critical not only of their leaders but
also of their institutions. They concluded that the regime of irresponsible
advisers, each one of whom tried to outbid the other for their favour had ceased to furnish the Council and Assembly with
the choice of well-thoughtout measures that the gravity of the situation
demanded. They therefore proceeded to shift this important function to a
responsible commission of ten elderly men (among them Sophocles, the tragic
poet, and Hagnon, Theramenes’
father, both associates of Pericles), selected by general vote on the ground of
their special fitness for the task. Whether it was fear or the probouloi that had more to do with the efficiency of
Athens in recreating a fleet of 150 triremes within a twelvemonth it is
difficult to say. The office was probably important mainly because it
facilitated a much more fundamental recasting of Athenian government.
The revolution that
occurred in April—May 411 b.c. had been brewing for some time. It was first conceived as a war measure, designed to facilitate the recall of
Alcibiades and with his aid to detach Tissaphernes and the King from Sparta and win them and their money for Athens. Alcibiades himself
it was who suggested this idea. Unable to count on being ever restored by the
‘rascality’ which had outlawed him, he alleged that the King would not become
a friend of Athens so long as Athens was ruled by the people. It is likely that Tissaphernes foresaw gain for Persia in having a man
all-powerful in Athens who was under strong obligations to himself (thinking,
no doubt, to use Alcibiades as Alcibiades thought to use him). Certainly he
lent himself so far to Alcibiades’ design as to give him a powerful lever for
upsetting democracy in Athens; but to be effective the lever had to have a base
on which to rest within the Athenian community.
This was found, at the
beginning of the intrigue (December, 412), at Samos, among the men of wealth
and position serving with the fleet—the trierarchs in
particular. The Athenian propertied classes were terribly shortened in their
incomes by the Decelean War, through the ruin of
their estates in Attica; the running away of their slaves (to the number
eventually of over 20,000), with the consequent closing of mines and factories;
the increased risks and diminishing returns of maritime trade; and the
impossibility of attending to their business whatever it was. At the same time
they were staggering under the fiscal burdens put upon them by the state—the
liturgies first and foremost, by the quick repetition of which even the largest
fortunes were being impaired, and the almost yearly levies that were made on
income. Athens was rapidly becoming poor. The silver and gold amassed by the
city and its inhabitants from the tribute and the mines and the profits of
trade were being dissipated, in considerable part abroad, in payment for
war-services and materials; and the profiteers were as often as not beyond the
reach of the Athenian fiscus. Property-owners had no monopoly of military
service; for while they furnished the cavalry patrols which wore out the stock
of Athenian horses on the stony roads of Attica and the hoplites who guarded
the immense circuit of the walls night and day, the lower classes now furnished
most of the marines and expeditionary forces, besides manning the triremes so
far as this was not done by allies and mercenaries; and thus they bore the
brunt of the fighting and of the casualties. But the former had to find much of
the money with which the latter were paid; and the services for which pay was
received were not military alone, but also civilian. The more decisively
finance came to dominate the conduct of the war, the more the classes
financially important came to demand a larger voice in its decisions than they
possessed under the existing democracy.
It was on soil thus
prepared that the suggestion of Alcibiades fell. And a group of outstanding men
at Samos took it up; and, after suitable persons had been sounded and a
definite undertaking had been received from Alcibiadcs,
and the rank and file of the crews—to whom the news was conveyed that they
could have the support of Persia if they restored Alcibiades and ceased to be a
democracy—appeared to acquiesce, the conspirators held a meeting at which it
was decided to proceed with the undertaking; but not without opposition. For Phrynichus opposed it resolutely with arguments which, as
reported by Thucydides, ought to have prevailed: that Alcibiades cared for an
oligarchy no more than a democracy provided he returned home; that Persia was
in no position to abandon Sparta and join them; that their subject-allies were
deserting them not because they were democrats but because they were masters,
and would desert them all the quicker if, on becoming aristocrats themselves,
the Athenians, as was proposed, established aristocracies elsewhere, thus
adding domestic masters to foreign; that above all else they should avoid
civil dissension.
This was the position of a
statesman; and had Phrynichus disassociated himself
from the whole movement when the conspirators decided to send Peisander to Athens to win the enemies of democracy there
for their design, he might have done Athens great service later. But he was
rendered clear-sighted not by patriotism but by distrust of Alcibiades, whose
vindictiveness he feared now that he had declared his opposition. And so unscrupulous
was he, this herdsman turned advocate and general, this man of the people turned
secretly club-man and oligarch, that when he could not get rid of Alcibiades by
fair means he tried foul and betrayed to Astyochus the plan to win Persia for Athens. Astyochus betrayed
him in turn to Alcibiades, and it was only by a scheme of almost unbelievable
subtlety that Phrynichus escaped with his life from
the difficult position into which he had got (December, 412 b.c.). As it was, he and another general were replaced at Samos
by two of their colleagues, less unfriendly to Alcibiades.
This was the work of Peisander; who, masquerading as a democrat, laid before the
Athenians the plan on which the committee in Samos was working, taking pains
to characterize the new form of government required as a modified democracy
that could be discarded when it had served its purpose. The protests were numerous and emphatic and
concerned both the recall of Alcibiades and the abridgement of popular power.
But they were overborne by the tactics of Peisander,
who forced from each protestant the admission that he had no alternative by
means of which, now that all their money was gone, they could hope to avoid
defeat. The people with its usual intelligence recognized that safety was
better than the constitution of its choice, and voted to send Peisander and ten others to arrange matters with Alcibiades
and Tissaphernes.
Thus far the revolutionary
movement was a response to the war situation; and men at home and men at the
front had responded similarly. The price to be paid for Persian aid was to be
paid to Athenians, with whom Athens could have an accounting later. But when Peisander and his colleagues came to deal with Tissaphernes they found that they had a price to pay to
Persia also. For Tissaphernes, adhering to the policy
of aiding the Greeks to destroy one another, concluded that it was still Sparta
that needed assistance. So he made it clear that his Greek friend enjoyed his
confidence yet avoided pledging help to Athens, by having Alcibiades speak for
him in his interviews with the Athenian envoys and demand conditions for the
King’s friendship which they could not possibly accept: the cession of all
Ionia and the adjacent islands, and (on this being agreed to) the right,
abandoned by the convention of Callias, of navigating
with a fleet of any size everywhere in Athenian waters. No Athenian dared thus
bargain away the results of Salamis, Mycale, and Eurymedon. So the envoys
returned to Samos, incensed at Alcibiades, who, it seemed, had inveigled them
into a dangerous movement either under false pretensions or to make sport of
them. And the Samian conspirators decided to drop Alcibiades alto
V.
THE
FOUR HUNDRED
But it was too late to
drop the conspiracy also. Clubs for mutual assistance in dealing with courts
and officials had been a characteristic of upper-class life in Athens for some
time. Their members were sworn to secrecy, and a good deal of doubt was
permissible as to their loyalty to the Constitution and the propriety of their
undertakings. So far as they made their political opinions vocal, they
condemned democracy; and, appreciating its interdependence with empire, they
condemned this also. They made Sparta their ideal, but they were quite
un-Spartan in their mode and view of life. Unable to overthrow democracy they
existed to circumvent it. But this was an exasperating business; and as the war
lengthened out, their methods became more and more violent. It was upon an
association of this sort, consisting of 22 young men, that responsibility for
the mutilation of the Hermae had finally been saddled, The populace had been
reassured on that occasion to ascertain that an individual club and not an
aggregate of clubs was involved; but an aggregate had been conceivable, and
before leaving for Asia Peisander had bestirred
himself effectively to make it a reality and to enlist all the coordinated
clubs for the revolutionary movement. Thereby a collection of groups of
‘workers’ was won for the cause, and men of different tendencies and purposes
were brought into contact with it, given a semblance of union, and implicated
in whatever was undertaken.
When there was so much
plotting on foot Aristophanes did not miss the occasion to utilize it for comic
purposes. In the Lysistrata, presented in February 411 b.c., he too unfolded a conspiracy—a general
strike of all the women of Greece, who refused restitution of conjugal rights
to their husbands until they had agreed to end the war. The burlesquing of Peisander’s ‘swindle’ loses nothing by the more than
Rabelaisian exploitation of the sexual situation to which the plot of the play
invites. But the ribaldry is Dionysiac fretwork that runs riot round a central
design. The poet’s own suggestion, for which pleaded, he urged, ancient
memories, wasted girlhood, disconsolate homes and devastated cities, was for
the Athenians to make friends of the Spartans and not of the Persians; to
amnesty political offenders, enfranchise alien residents, and take into
partnership with themselves their far-flung colonies and subjects, so as thus
to enlarge the bounds of their nationalism instead of contracting them. It was
the voice of a statesmanlike jester insinuating into the ear of his master the
gain of enthroning intelligence and fair-dealing as the governing forces in
Athenian policy in place of suspicion, rancour,
pride, and—democracy. But which conflicted more with Hellenic nature, a revolt
on the part of Hellenic women, or peace without victory between Athens and
Sparta and a common citizenship throughout the Athenian Empire, it would be
hard to say. At the Great Dionysia next following (March, 411) Aristophanes
produced the Thesmophoriazusae, notable for
its parody of the dramatic makeshifts of Euripides. The situation had by then
become too tense for politics.
The man who more than
anyone else arranged the plot of the revolution was Antiphon, a sinister figure
that moved in the background like an American ‘boss,’ fertile with helpful
suggestions, shrinking from no act of ruthlessness. He had been denied the
ordinary outlets for great ambition, energy, and forensic talent by his avowed
contempt for democratic radicalism, and had built up for himself a large
practice (in aristocratic circles naturally) as a logographos or speech-writer. He preferred to square his acts with legality when possible,
but would stick at nothing likely to help establish in Athens a political
regime in which he could himself find scope.
The first mot d'ordre given to the ‘workers’ was to put a wholesome
terror into the democrats. A gang of young ‘bloods’ assassinated Androcles, who
was hateful to Alcibiades as the prime mover of his exile and to the
conspirators as the most vehement champion of popular government. Whoever
raised his voice in protest against the methods or objects of the ‘reformers’
was quickly put out of the way; and since the reform was supported by the probouloi themselves, by demagogues like Peisander, moderates like Aristocrates and Theramenes, and others whose faithfulness to
democracy seemed assured, as well as by generals, ex-generals, trierarchs, and men of distinction in art and letters, like Melanthius, Andron, Critias, and Aristoteles, it was easy for the forces of law
and order to think that all was for the best. Since, too, there was no knowing
who was in the plot and who was not, the number of the participants was thought
to be much larger than it really was, determination of its magnitude was impeded
by the cessation of mutual confidence and discussion, and a mood of uneasy
acquiescence seized hold of the uninitiated masses.
This situation the
revolutionists in Samos and Athens determined to exploit for oligarchic
purposes notwithstanding that they had lost the leverage primarily instrumental
in creating it. They had to count on defections from within their ranks. But in Phrynichus they made a gain of first-rate importance;
for now that the movement was divorced from Alcibiades he put all his
resoluteness and practical ability at its disposal. Nor did a proposal for
restricting the franchise lack a war justification by any means. There was no
escape from the problem of finance. Rather, it pressed all the more urgently
for a radical solution precisely because it was not they, but Sparta, that had
got Persian money.
For after breaking off
negotiations with Peisander, Tissaphernes had effected a reconciliation with the Spartans. Astyochus was now in such straits from lack of funds that there was danger lest he should
risk his fleet in battle and lose it altogether, or take to plundering the
King’s country. Since either of these contingencies would have ruined the
Satrap’s schemes, both he and the Spartans were ready for a compromise. So a
definite treaty was concluded ‘on the plain of the Maeander’ to which on behalf
of Persia Pharnabazus affixed his signature as well
as Tissaphernes (April, 411 b.c.). No mention of the Greek cities was made, but the King’s
land was acknowledged as Persian. Tissaphernes agreed
to give pay for the Lacedaemonian ships at the stipulated rate, but only for
those then in service and only till the arrival of the King’s fleet from
Phoenicia. The old idea was here unmistakeable of
keeping the Spartan fleet down to a fixed maximum and of postponing the day of
definite action; and not to make Sparta over-impatient for the mentioned (but
not pledged) Phoenician ships, the Spartan government was to pay its own naval
bills from the date of their appearance,—if not immediately, at the end of the
war. The important thing at the moment was the receipt of regular pay for the
crews at Camirus. With this in hand Astyochus was able to restore the morale and complements of
his ships and to sail for the relief of Chios. But the Athenians put themselves
in his way, ready to fight if he persisted; so he veered off to Miletus, while they again concentrated their main fleet at Samos. At this
time (April-May, 411) the oligarchic upheaval occurred.
Plans for a comprehensive
reorganization of the Athenian state and Empire on aristocratic lines had been
matured on Samos after the rupture with Tissaphernes.
The avowed design was, by limiting the active franchise to the class which
could serve the state at its own expense (specifically, ‘all the Athenians best
able to render personal and financial service to the number of not
less—Thucydides says not more,—than 5000’), to remove from the public pay roll
the multitude of civilians whose indemnities for service in Council, courts,
offices, and religious festivals were exhausting the domestic revenues of
Athens, which, now that the imperial revenues had fallen off and the private
fortunes available for levies on income and liturgies could stand the strain no
longer, were imperatively needed for building, equipping, and maintaining
triremes and otherwise waging the war. This programme commended itself widely to moderate men; but to put it into effect meant to
overcome a large and deeply interested opposition. Hence, for both the
inauguration and the subsequent safety and efficiency of the regime, the presence
of a small body of officers (a Council of Four Hundred) was contemplated.
As concerned the Empire
the reformers accepted the idea, which Phrynichus had
already refuted, of putting the local ‘oligarchs’ in control of their
respective cities in the belief that these malcontents, having got what they
wanted from Athens, would lack a motive for plotting secession to Sparta. So
five of the men in Peisander’s embassy went round
among the subject cities giving power to elements whose enmity to Athens, being
grounded in love of liberty quite as much as in love of authority, endured,
while their capacity for harm was increased. And to this mistaken policy Athens
owed the secession of Thasos, where Diitrephes, sent
on from Samos to act as commandant in Thrace, overturned the democracy; and of
other places as well. The other envoys accompanied Peisander to Athens, stopping on the way at various cities setting up oligarchies, and
recruiting hoplites from Tenos, Andros, Carystus, and Aegina for their mission
in the capital.
On their arrival they
found their general programme already well advertised
and the population thoroughly silenced and intimidated. Thus they had no need
to proceed unconstitutionally. The Assembly voted to add to the probouloi twenty citizens over forty years of age elected
by the people, so as to form a commission of thirty (syngrapheis),
which, after taking account of suggestions made by volunteers and scrutinizing
the ancient constitution enacted by Cleisthenes, should have full authority to
lay before the people on a fixed day whatever proposals it thought requisite
for public safety. This was a well established method
of initiating measures for the drafting of which special competence was required;
and this commission differed from others only in the latitude of its powers. On
the appointed day (14th of Thargelion, April—May, 411 b.c.) a meeting was called, not, as was
usual, within the fortifications, but in the sanctuary of Poseidon at Colonus,
one and a quarter miles outside the walls, where it would naturally be attended
by the hoplites and cavalry—so far as they could be spared from duty—and not by
the unorganized urban population whom fear of the Lacedaemonians would prevent
from straggling so far afield. Thus made doubly sure against untoward
incidents, the commission (after having had it made compulsory for the chairmen
(prytaneis) to submit all proposals relevant
to the business on hand) exhausted its mandate in requesting the abrogation of
the constitutional safeguards of democracy, and the imposition of the
death-penalty upon any one who should attempt to revive them. This was carried.
When the way was thus cleared proposals followed realizing the essential
objects of the reform: the reservation of all revenues for the needs of the
war; the abolition of indemnities for all civil offices and services, an
exception being made in the case of the nine archons and the prytaneis in charge, who were to continue on the pay
roll; the limitation, for the duration of the war, of active citizenship to
‘the Five Thousand,’ upon whom was conferred notably the power to make
treaties; the election of a committee of 100 cataloguers, ten by each tribe, to
enroll the Five Thousand; and the constitution of a body of Four Hundred men
who should act as a Council.
Since a ‘slate’ had, of
course, been prepared beforehand, the cataloguers were chosen at once, the taxeis, or tribal regiments, present acting for the
tribes. On the motion of Peisander the Four Hundred
were constituted then and there by the nomination of five ‘chairmen’ (proedroi), who chose 100 of the number, each of whom
in turn selected three additional members, possibly from his own tribe. By
pre-arrangement (with the proedroi doubtless)
the 100 cataloguers were included, probably as the first hundred, the oath of
their special office being administered by the Four Hundred a week later. A
further part of Peisander’s motion, that the Four
Hundred should convene the Five Thousand when they saw fit, completed his
design of making the inner circle master of the situation. The limitation of
the franchise and the abolition of indemnities naturally wrought havoc in the
ranks of office-holders. Hence the offices were all declared vacant with the
exception of the Council of the Five Hundred and the archonships; and to tide
over the crisis a new board of generals was at once chosen.
At the time these measures
were taken the reformers seem to have thought it possible for the Four Hundred
to rule without reigning till regularly constituted and inducted, possibly at
the end of the year (14th Scirophorion), the routine
domestic services being left for the remaining month to the Archons and prytaneis, the all-important military tasks being attended
to for them by their generals. But at Samos things did not go at all according
to programme. Three hundred of the democrats
recently installed in the government of the island were found ready to set
themselves up as a new ‘aristocracy’ and dispense with the services of their
humbler comrades. So they formed a conspiracy, set upon and slew Hyperbolus, who had been living among them since his
ostracism, and by this and other acts of violence, in which they had the aid of Charminus, one of the Athenian generals, they sought
to pave the way by intimidation for a coup d’état. But the people prepared for
resistance, and enlisted the support of Leon and Diomedon,
two other of the Athenian generals, and of an energetic trierarch named
Thrasybulus and a hoplite named Thrasyllus, who being
all four out of sympathy with the revolutionary campaign and distressed at the
lot in store for their loyal Samian friends, saw to it, the former pair that
Athenian triremes should be at hand in case of violence, the latter that among
their crews and the soldiers stationed in the city there should be found
democratic stalwarts primed to take a hand against the oligarchs should
fighting ensue. In these circumstances the Three Hundred came to grief
completely. Their rising was crushed and thirty of their leaders were put to
death. From this time on the Four Hundred had a sword of Damocles suspended
over their head.
The crew of the despatch-boat Paralus had had a
prominent part in defeating this despicable project, but on their arrival in
Athens with news of the incident they found to their surprise and discomfiture
the reformers already in power. But not in office. The first step of the Four
Hundred, for whom an entirely new situation was created by the fiasco in Samos,
was to assume office immediately—an open act of violence carried through with
careful premeditation. On the day fixed (22nd of Thargelion,
April—May) the citizens (all of whom were in military service) piled arms and
fell out as usual, but instead of going home those among them who were
partisans of the Four Hundred, acting on secret instructions, waited
inconspicuously in the neighbourhood, ready to seize
their weapons and strike if any opposition developed. The soldiers, too, that
had been brought by Peisander were standing under
orders; and a band of 120 young ‘bloods’ accompanied the Four Hundred as, each
with a dagger concealed on his person, they broke into the Council Hall and
bade the Councillors begone. They sugar-coated this
brusque dismissal by paying the allowances for the balance of the session.
Their own session they opened with the usual solemnities, and they divided
themselves into prytanies and used the lot to
determine their sequences and daily chairman. Thus, after having been first
subjected legally to the probouloi and then actually
to the Four Hundred, the body was set aside completely, without a hand being
raised in its defence, which, reproducing in
miniature with a constantly changing personnel the entire commonwealth of
Athens, was the strongest fashioner and expression of Athenian democracy. The
‘best citizens’ supplanted the ‘fair sample’ in the direction of all the
administrative committees, so far as these too, like the general assembly and
the popular courts of justice, were not dispensed with.
What were the powers of
the new governing body? They were defined by Thucydides summarily as
autocratic, and such they were in fact; but in a constitution issued as of the
date Thargclion 14th and alleged to be the work of
100 men chosen at that time by the Five Thousand, thev were described as provisional, as duly derived from
the Five Thousand, as exercisable only through due process of law, and as
transmissible to the Five Thousand, when the crisis was past—a matter of a
couple of years at least—by the allocation of the Four Hundred to their
respective cadres in the larger body. This constitution represents a concession
made by the extremists among the reformers to the legal sense of their more
moderate associates, the fair-sounding programme with
which the movement was launched, and, especially, the opposition that had
declared itself in Samos. The body from which it issued, on the motion of a
certain Aristomachus, was perhaps the 100 cataloguers;
and it may have been intended to govern the validation of the revolutionary
regime due on Thargelion 22nd or at the first of the
new year (June, 411). Simultaneously an elaborate organization was drawn up
for the Five Thousand—for future use and present propaganda. The constitution
of the Four Hundred was retrospectively justificatory—notably in the electoral
norms set down and in its assumption that the assembly at Colonus constituted
a legal meeting of the Five Thousand—and deceptively conciliatory. It did not
give away the substance for the shadow. The Four Hundred reserved the right
(subject to the new constitution) to make laws and enact decrees with full
discretion; to appoint all officials and hold them to an accounting; notably,
in replacement of the generals just appointed, to designate for the year 411—10 b.c., in the presence of the soldiers
assembled for inspection, a board of ten men vested with unlimited executive
authority in civil and military matters. Had the constitution been allowed to
work itself out, its most important consequence would probably have been the
transformation of an oligarchy of four hundred into an oligarchy of ten.
The organization drawn up
for the Five Thousand constituted the active citizens as ‘councillors,’
thus elevating the privileged and leaving the rest, professedly, as they were.
It was calculated to satisfy the large section of public opinion at home and at
Samos which favoured only a moderate abatement of
democracy, and this as a necessary condition to financing and winning the war.
But to it the leaders of the Four Hundred did lip-service only. They had the
cataloguers in their power, and if a list of the Five Thousand was ever drawn
up while the oligarchy lasted it was not divulged. The uncertainty that
existed as to whether one’s neighbour was or was not
a councillor kept all quiet. Nor did the Four Hundred
hesitate to make an example when they thought it needed. But those whom they
put to death or exiled were few. Terror did the rest.
VI.
THE
FAILURE OF THE FOUR HUNDRED
The work of the Four
Hundred was simply a catalogue of failures. It failed to win the adhesion of
the sailors and soldiers at Samos; it failed to negotiate an honourable peace with Sparta; it failed to stem the
defection of the subject allies; it failed in the prosecution of the war; it
failed to reconcile the conflict of ideas and persons in its own body. A bad
record for the intelligentsia of Athens! But these failures were not isolated
or disconnected: they were simply consequences of the cardinal failure at
Samos—developments inseparable from the fact that, as soon as the fleet
discovered that it had been deceived, the Four Hundred lost control of the
military weapon.
News of the situation in
Athens reached Samos through unfriendly channels coloured by fear and exaggerated for political effect. The troops, driven to fury by the
misrepresentation that the Four Hundred were abusing their wives and children
and holding them as hostages for their good behaviour,
were only prevented from stoning the adherents of the oligarchy in their midst
by the proximity of the enemy’s fleet and the influence of Thrasybulus and Thrasyllus, who bound them all, oligarchs and democrats,
Athenians and Samians, by solemn oaths to stand together, uphold democracy,
fight the Peloponnesians vigorously, treat the Four Hundred as enemies, and
have no traffic with them. Setting themselves up as the People of Athens, they
deposed their generals and replaced them with others, among them Thrasybulus
and Thrasyllus. They took the view that Athens had
seceded; that with Samos to fall back upon they could conduct the war with
virtually undiminished resources; that, if the worst came to the worst, they
could settle down elsewhere than at Athens and found a new state. In the
conduct of the ‘sailor rabble’ throughout this terrible crisis—their ready response
to prudent and patriotic leadership, capacity for quick self-reorganization,
determination to live up to their most heroic traditions—Athenian democracy was
commended by its works. Nor was their energy confined to resolutions.
They had to count on the
Spartans attacking during their trouble. This was all the more certain because
on the outbreak of the revolution, in order not to lose the Hellespont, where
the Spartan Dercyllidas, marching overland from
Miletus, had started a revolt, they had been forced to raise the blockade of
Chios, thus permitting the 35 ships bottled up there to join Astyochus. By the prompt arrival in the straits of the
Athenian squadron from Chios Lampsacus was regained
and the secession movement confined to Abydos; but in the meanwhile the
Spartans were strong enough to threaten Samos. So the Athenians recalled their
squadron from the Hellespont, and pending its arrival remained in the port on Astyochus’ approach. The Spartan admiral had adopted the
policy of fighting only on a certainty—a line of action that was approved at
home; but not on shipboard, where it seemed like playing the game of Tissaphernes. But Astyochus was
resolutely Fabian. He offered battle while the Athenians were divided and
returned to his base the moment the Athenian reinforcements arrived.
Thrasybulus and Thrasyllus followed him to Miletus.
But he declined action though he had 112 ships to their 108. Since Tissaphernes was again at his old trick of withholding
wages, Astyochus sought to reduce his mass of clamouring seamen by sending one-third of his fleet to the
Hellespont to enter Pharnabazus’ service and win
Byzantium, from which proposals of revolt had come. Most of the ships were
driven back by a storm, but eight proceeded on their way, reached Byzantium,
and took from Athens this, the key to its Black Sea trade. Eighteen Athenian
ships followed them up from Samos and shut them in the port.
The remissness of Tissaphernes in supporting the fleet at Miletus was
notorious. The democrats at Samos were encouraged by it to try once again to
drive a wedge between the Spartans and him. With this in view, at the
instigation of Thrasybulus, they recalled Alcibiades, and by electing him
General they virtually gave him conduct of their affairs. It was a
master-stroke both for themselves and for Athens. Alcibiades doubtless knew
that Tissaphernes would not turn against the
Spartans, but he thought it possible that the Spartan fleet might be goaded
into attacking him. So he proclaimed in the most extravagant tones the satrap’s
readiness to subsidize the fleet of the Athenians if only he could be made sure
of them:—how he had promised, if Alcibiades were restored to go surety for
them, to raise funds for them even if he had to sell his own bed. In
furtherance of this design of making Tissaphernes seem faithless Alcibiades, refusing, despite much urging, to turn his back on
the Spartan fleet and sail forthwith to the Piraeus to put an end to the
oligarchy, made it his first business, now that he was General and could speak
for Athens with authority, to have an interview with the satrap. Had he not
taught Tissaphernes so well, he might have succeeded
in his difficult role. For the disaffection among the Spartan seamen, which
rose to open mutiny among the free men serving on the
Syracusan and Thurian ships, had now got beyond the
power of Astyochus (whose term was approaching its
close) to check it: they angrily demanded their pay; and when he tried to
browbeat them and raised his stick against Dorieus,
they came at him with a shout and he escaped stoning only by fleeing to an
altar. The seamen, now thoroughly out of hand, also aided and abetted the
Milesians in getting rid forcibly of the garrison which Tissaphernes had planted in their territory—an act of rebellion disavowed by Lichas but imitated not long after by Cnidus and Antandrus. But Tissaphernes was
not to be moved to reply to this violence in kind. He thought it possible that
if he starved the Spartan fleet into helplessness and let the Athenians destroy
one another by civil war he could impose his will on all Greece. So he limited
his response to the Milesian provocation to a diplomatic demarche at Sparta—in
connection with which he took the opportunity to defend his conduct generally
against Hermocrates of Syracuse, who went there as
chief complainant on behalf of the crews (midsummer, 411). And then he made a
gesture which arrested universal attention. He brought a Phoenician fleet of
147 ships up to Aspendus and went himself to that
point to meet it.
And there he stayed, and
the fleet came no farther; and the Spartans in Miletus went on suffering from
want of funds. But the Athenians did not engage in civil war. From this
calamity they were saved by Alcibiades. On his return to Samos he found emissaries
of the Four Hundred there, newly arrived with the model constitutions in hand,
to which they could refer for their contention that the government they represented
was a government of the Five Thousand and not of the Four Hundred alone. The
crews were not for hearing them at all and were not in the least appeased when
they did hear them. It was little satisfaction to them to be told that 5000 was
a larger number than attended even the most important Assemblies if they
themselves were not included. Despite reassurances, they feared for their
friends and relatives at home and suspected, not unjustly, that the oligarchs
would betray the city to the Spartans. Their strong bent was to be off at once
to the Piraeus, and had not Alcibiades been there with words of wisdom and
super-eminent authority they would have gone, leaving all Ionia and the
Hellespont to the enemy. Of the two domestic dangers imminent he had thus
mastered one. Against the other—betrayal of Athens by the oligarchs—his only
resource was a strong bid to the moderates among the Four Hundred to assert
themselves; he had (he told them) no objection to the Five Thousand, but the
Four Hundred must go and the Council of Five Hundred return; he strongly
approved of any economies that would admit of more money being available for
the fleet; above all they should not surrender to Sparta. As for himself he
concluded that Aspendus was the right place for him
to be in; for the fate of Greece was in Tissaphernes’
hands. So he set out for Aspendus with thirteen ships
and the news that civil war was not going to eliminate Athens from the
struggle. The Spartans too found a way of maintaining their fleet on a war footing
despite the non-payment of Tissaphernes’ subsidies.
So in the end the Persian fleet was sent back home as being too weak for its
purpose. In a very real sense Alcibiades had arrested its advance.
Immediately after seizing
power, the Four Hundred had addressed themselves to the task of making peace
with the Lacedaemonians. But what they counted on chiefly for success—the
sympathy of Sparta with oligarchy—was more than offset by the hope the Spartans
formed of profiting by Athenian dissensions. Agis, to whom they turned first,
met their overtures by assembling a League army and advancing to the walls of
the city; but he found no signs of weakness or confusion. So he let diplomacy
follow its course. The first envoys sent to Sparta (Laispodias, Aristophon, and Melesias)
started on board a trireme manned by the crew of the Paralus,
who took them to Argos instead, where
they were detained. But either they or others reached their destination and
offered peace on the basis of the status quo. The offer was rejected. Sparta
demanded the total surrender of the Athenian Empire. Such terms even a
democracy could have had, and for them the Four Hundred were at this time
unready. But the message sent from Samos by Alcibiades proved to be a wedge
inserted at the line of an old fissure that split the Four Hundred into two sections.
The one, less compromised and more compromising, with Theramenes as its leader and Aristocrates as his first
lieutenant, adopted the programme of establishing in
fact the government of the Five Thousand. Theramenes’
motives were mixed. We may admit that he saw the writing on the wall and manoeuvred so as to safeguard a political career for
himself when the restoration came. But we need not on that account deny to him
credit for honestly believing that the reunion of the city and the fleet on the
basis of a limited democracy was in the best interests of Athens, and that the
course pursued by his colleagues—Antiphon, Phrynichus, Archeptolemus, Onomacles,
Aristarchus, Peisander, Alexicles,
to mention only the leading extremists— meant utter ruin. Nor did the latter
give him any chance to save them along with himself.
They too saw the rising
tide of opposition; but, expecting no mercy in the event of overthrow and
despairing of being able unaided to retain the safety of power if they let the
Empire go and bargained with Sparta simply for autonomy, they sent Antiphon, Phrynichus, and ten others to Sparta ostensibly to make one
last effort to secure an honourable peace, really to
arrange secretly to admit the Spartans into Athens.
VII.
THE
END OF THE FOUR HUNDRED
The Spartans had now a
home fleet in readiness at Las in South Laconia to take a hand in the long
projected revolt of Euboea. The design of depriving Athens of this, its
substitute Attica, had been furthered by the capture of Oropus earlier in the year, and the oligarchic upheaval in Athens and on the island
brought the plans of the secessionists to a head. The outbreak simply waited on
the arrival of the Spartan squadron. The Athenian oligarchs had taken
precautions, of course; among others, the appointment of Polystratus,
one of their own number, eight days after they assumed office, to the command
at Eretria. But their partisans in the Euboic cities
played them false; and when the ground began to give way under their feet in
Athens, it was themselves, and not Euboea, that they thought of first.
Their plan was to fortify Eetionea—the western lip of the Piraeus,—ostensibly against
the ‘rebels’ in Samos, really to give them the means of starving Athens and
admitting the enemy when the occasion arose. It was over the building of this
fort that the storm broke. Theramenes divined the
treason contemplated, and connected with the work the fleet at Las and the
negotiations of Phrynichus and Antiphon in Sparta. At
first his counter-measures were secret. But Phrynichus,
the right arm of the government, was struck down in the open market-place, and
all the investigation disclosed was that the assassin had many accomplices.
When then the Spartan fleet came to Epidaurus and overran Aegina, Theramenes and Aristocrates and
their supporters within and without the Four Hundred could keep quiet no
longer. They openly denounced the plot. What was more important, they carried
with them the soldiers in the Piraeus. These seized their general Alexicles and with the aid of the harbour population proceeded to tear down the fort they had been building, proclaiming
at the same time the government of the Five Thousand. On the following day they
marched to Athens. The oligarchy weakened. The Five Thousand, they agreed,
should be made known and given discretion as to how Councils of 400 should be
drafted in succession from their number; and a dav was fixed for a meeting in the Theatre of Dionysus to arrange the terms of a reconciliation.
For a time the two
factions had been on the verge of war. Agesandridas,
the Spartan admiral, tried not to miss the occasion for a ‘knock
out blow.’ He brought his fleet to Megara, waiting for a signal perhaps.
Then on the day fixed for the meeting he was observed off Salamis. The whole
population of Athens took this as confirmation of their worst suspicions and
hurried to the Piraeus to man the ships and coast defences. Agesandridas rowed past and went on to Oropus, and in hot haste the Athenians got off
reinforcements for their squadron at Eretria. Their crews were untrained, they
had only 36 ships to the enemy’s 42, they had to fight before they were ready,
and Eretria rose against them in their rear. The defeat which they sustained
was complete. Twenty-two ships were lost, crews and all; and had the Spartans
followed up their victory by a prompt attack on the Piraeus, the Athenian
fleets abroad must have come to its defence and the
whole Empire been lost. ‘But on this occasion, as on many others, the
Lacedaemonians proved the most convenient of all peoples for the Athenians to
have as enemies, especially in a naval war.’ So the opportunity passed; and a
little later Agesandridas lost most of his fleet in a
storm off Athos. But Euboea, excepting only Oreus-Histiaea, revolted, and with it Athens lost its chief
nearby source of money, grain, and supplies.
The effect on the city was
catastrophic. The people gathered once more in general assembly on the Pnyx and set aside the Four Hundred (early in Boedromion, August-September, 411). They had ruled for only
four months. Peisander, Alexicles,
and Aristarchus escaped to Decelea and were condemned
as traitors in absentia. Antiphon and Archeptolemus stood their trial, and, despite the brilliancy of Antiphon’s defence, they were found guilty of high treason and
executed. Phrynichus was attainted though dead and
his bones cast beyond the frontier. Theramenes, Andron, and Critias were
particularly active in prosecuting their former associates and they took pains
that the charges brought against them were on counts for which the Four Hundred
generally were not answerable.
VIII.
THE
GOVERNMENT OF THE FIVE THOUSAND
The moderates had now the
upper hand. The government they established was, Thucydides thought and
Aristotle agreed with him, the best Athens had ever had. It was based on the programme already issued. The changes in the
‘laws of Solon’ there called for, and the other adjustments necessary, were
made in the regular way by the aid of a constituent assembly (Nomothetaff The whole freeborn male population remained
citizens, but of them only those capable of bearing arms—to the number it
proved of 9000—had active rights, which they exercised, on reaching their
thirtieth year, as ‘councillors’—without pay. To
enable so large a body to transact business (it had to act as Council and
Assembly in one), it was divided into four Councils, each of which, constituted
of a fair sample on the old idea that this was the best kind of representation,
was to serve with plenary power for a year at a time in an order determined by
lot. This was roughly how things were managed in the Boeotian cities, which
were used as a model. The officiating Council was too large to be asked to sit
daily as the Five Hundred had done: it, accordingly, met only once in five days
and its members were constrained to be regular in attendance by being fined it
absent without leave. In the interim it was represented by committees, still
called prytanies, but constituted, not as theretofore
of the members of each tribe in turn, but of fair samples of its entire
membership designated by sortitions conducted by the nine archons. These quasi-prytanies were organized as usual with a tenth of the year
as their term, and a succession and a chairman determined by lot, the latter
anew each day. When a meeting of the Council occurred, the five chairmen thus
designated since the previous session served as its presidents, of whom one was
drawn, again by lot, to put the motions and announce the count of votes. The
educative and equalizing features of the democratic regime were thus retained,
their benefits being, of course, denied to the lower classes.
The distinction between
magistrates chosen by election and those chosen by lot was upheld, but the
former category, which had consisted essentially of military officials, was
enlarged by the inclusion in it of the nine archons as before 487 b.c.; of two
committees of ten each (hieropoioi and epimeletai) who had charge of the great religious
festivals; and of the chief exchequer officials, who were consolidated in two
boards, one of ten men entitled Treasurers of Athena, with charge of all sacred
monies and properties, and another of twenty men entitled Hellenic Treasurers
to whom were entrusted the secular funds domestic and imperial alike. The
difference between these important officers, who were approximately 100 in
number, and the minor magistracies, who were elected by lot, was further
accentuated in that they alone were chosen, by a double process of voting, from
the members of the Council in office, in the work of which they all, with the
inexplicable exception of the Hellenic Treasurers, participated. The net effect
of these administrative changes was closer contact between the various branches
of the government, more responsible organization of the civil services that
handled and spent money, and an all-round strengthening of the executive. The
moderate oligarchs, it should be noted, had no quarrel on principle with
election by lot, rotation in office, proportional representation, or majority
rule. The essence of their programme was to secure
for high civil offices men of special competence, to reserve the privileges of
the commonwealth to Athenians who could afford them, and deny a voice in
political decisions to such as lacked an appreciable property-stake in the
community.
As in the case of the
minor magistracies, so in the case of the jury-courts (dikasteria)
no change was needed. The alteration of personnel that followed the exclusion
of the plebs from active citizenship sufficed. And it was some compensation for
the cession of political power to the officiating Council that men from the
other three Councils manned the dikasteria for
it was to the judiciary that the governing bodies were responsible, and the
jurisdiction of the courts in high political cases, already paramount, was
increased through the suppression of the Assembly.
The constitution effected
‘a judicious blending of the “few” (magistrates, Council) and the “many”
(dicasts, councillors: elves sine suffragio) that raised the state from the evil plight
into which it had fallen.’ Such is the judgment of the Athenian historian who
has analyzed so appreciatively the greatness of Periclean democracy. He did not
complete the story that despite its success in making Athens once again
mistress of the sea, this much praised polity lasted only eight months. There
is no disguising the fact that, with all its rectifications of current abuses
and its clever fusion of Boeotia and Cleisthenes with political theory masquerading
as ancestral wisdom, it was but a makeshift. It was not a serious weakness that
three-quarters of the active citizens normally looked on while the other
quarter handled current business; for there was a provision of the constitution
by which each member of the officiating Council might ask in another councillor on important occasions, and this probably
ensured the participation in government of most of those who really cared about
it. The Councils, too, were so constituted that one could be replaced by
another without anything like the loss of continuity in policy that arises
when one party succeeds another in the government of a modern country. Under
this constitution a Themistocles or a Pericles or an Alcibiades could have been
General only once in four years; and from the purely military point of view
this was disadvantageous. But immediate reelection to the highest command was
forbidden, in the interest of republicanism, in many Greek constitutions—those
of Sparta and the Achaean League for example,—and in the case of Rome the
interval of private life was as much as ten years. What denied permanency to
the constitution of Theramenes was its disfranchisement
of the element (in itself a majority of all Athenians) upon which the
government organized under it was dependent for protection, prosperity, and
empire. The very men who were to save Athens by crushing the fleet that was strangling
it to death enjoyed, to be sure, the protection of the Athenian laws and the
proud status of Athenians, but otherwise they were without rights in their own
country. They would acquiesce in this outrage to their every instinct so long
as service abroad made the franchise of no practical value to them and the
economies attendant on its loss highly remunerative; so long, too, as they had
to give their entire attention to the enemy. But no longer. Besides,
Alcibiades, whom the Five Thousand confirmed in his military command, had
already declared for the restoration of the Council of the Five Hundred.
IX.
THE
STRUGGLE FOR THE HELLESPONT
Mindarus, the Spartan admiral for
411—10 b.c., shifted the scene of major naval operations from Ionia to the Hellespont. The
fleet of Chios had yielded its maximum of results. The worst blow that could
now be dealt Athens was to close the passage from the Black Sea. The aid paid
for in advance by Pharnabazus could be withheld no
longer. The farce at Aspendus and the misery at
Miletus had brought complete, if tardy, illumination as to the motives of Tissaphernes. Hence, giving Samos a wide berth, Mindarus started for the Hellespont (Sept. 411), where an
advance squadron of 16 ships awaited him, face to face with 18 Athenian
vessels, now at Sestos. Storm-stayed for five or six days at Icaros, he found, on coming to Chios, that the Athenians
were already at Lesbos, set on heading him off. An opportune revolt of Eresus drew them to the seaward side of the island, thus
permitting him, by a combination of good luck, audacity, and speed, to pass
through the channel of Mitylene and reach Rhoeteum. It was dead of night when he arrived. So the
lights of his ships betrayed him to the Athenian squadron at Sestos, which
saved itself by promptly slipping down the straits, losing four ships, however,
in the run for I cm nos and Imbros. The Athenians
from Eresus intervened in time, captured two ships of
the pursuers, and then concentrated their forces at Elaeus. Thrasyllus and Thrasybulus were in command. Their
ships numbered 76.
They must force a passage
into the Propontis if they would regain or retain
Athens’ empire along its shores; for Cyzicus had already revolted and probabl) also Chalcedon and Selymbria.
The attempt to do this brought on a battle at Cynossema in the Narrows—the first trial of strength of the main fleets since the naval
war in the Aegean began. The details disclose only the superiority of the
Athenians in speed and tactics, and the completeness of the defeat of the
Lacedaemonians (September, 411). The proximity of the shore and Abydos enabled
them to save their fleet, so that the losses on either side were comparable (21
ships to 15); but the moral ascendancy of the Athenians on the sea, which had
been shattered by their misfortunes at Eretria and Syracuse, was restored, and
the government of the Five Thousand entered on its career with an energy born
of great encouragement.
The Athenians were now free
to enter the Propontis. At Priapus they captured
eight enemy ships from Byzantium, and since Cyzicus was unwalled it had to
submit on their arrival. But though beaten, the Lacedaemonians were by no means
out of the fighting. They took advantage of the absence of Thrasybulus and Thrasyllus to raid Elaeus. So the
Athenians came back to the Hellespont, whither both they and their adversaries
had summoned all the ships they possessed, and here, at Abydos, a second
general engagement ensued (October—November, 411). Its issue was still in
suspense when the arrival of Alcibiades, the only squadroncommander on either side absent at its beginning, inclined the balance in favour of the Athenians. The Lacedaemonians tried to save
their fleet by running it ashore, and Pharnabazus came down into the water with foot and cavalry to aid in its defence; but, though they rescued the crews, they could not
prevent the Athenians from towing off* over thirty of their vessels. The latter
were now numerically as well as tactically superior; but it was near the end of
the season, and the possibility did not exist of provisioning the entire fleet
with the money on hand or procurable at Sestos. So the force there was reduced
to forty ships and the rest scattered for the winter. Twenty went with Thrasybulus
to Thrace, others elsewhere. Thrasyllus returned to
Athens to report on the situation and secure further ships and troops for a
decisive effort in the spring. Alcibiades paid a visit to Tissaphernes who had come to the Hellespont to try to get the
Spartans back into his service. And therewith his
relation with the Satrap ended. Taken to Sardes, for
thirty days he was held prisoner and then he owed his escape to his own
exertions. Thenceforth he would have to compete for power in Athens without the
advantage of being thought able to influence Persian policy—unless he could
reach an understanding with Pharnabazus.
As soon as the sea was
navigable Theramenes himself took the ships that were
ready at Athens and sailed to Chaicis to try to prevent
the Boeotians and Euboeans from connecting their countries by filling in and
bridging the Euripus; but when it proved that he could do nothing there, he
went collecting money among the islands, to Paros notably, where he overthrew
the oligarchy set up by the hour Hundred. 'Phen he
lent a hand to Archelaus, since 413 b.c. king of Macedon, who was having trouble with Pydna, and whose services throughout this critical time in
facilitating the export to Athens of shipbuilding materials entitled him to
assistance. Before the place was reduced, however, he got a message from
Thrasybulus, then operating at Thasos, that they both were needed in the
Hellespont, where a crisis had supervened. So he left part of his force behind
and hastened on. On his arrival at Sestos the entire Athenian fleet was
reunited under the command of Alcibiades and the final operation of this fierce
struggle for the mastery of the Hellespont was begun. With the aid of Pharnabazus Mindarus had just
recaptured Cyzicus and it was thither that Alcibiades sailed to encounter him.
He had 86 ships to Mindarus’ 60. So he feared the nauarch would decline to fight; but he masked his movements
well and had a stroke of good luck. A rainstorm hid his approach. Suddenly it
cleared, and he found the whole Spartan fleet practising manoeuvres well away from the harbour of Cyzicus. Unable to reach port and badly outnumbered, Mindarus beached his ships and tried to defend them. But without success. While
Thrasybulus, Thymochares, and Theramenes engaged the Spartans in front, Alcibiades landed the crews of twenty triremes
and made a flank attack. Mindarus fell while trying
to repel it. Only the Syracusans waited long enough to burn their vessels; the
rest ran away, and the Athenians captured their ships. Once again Athens was
undisputed mistress of the sea (April, 410 b.c.).
X.
THE
POLICY OF CLEOPHON
The effects of Sparta’s
naval collapse were at once felt at home and abroad, in Athens and Sparta,
Syracuse and Susa. In Athens the citizen crews of the victorious fleet and the
rest of the class to which they belonged regained their lost rights, and the
Council was reduced to 500, reorganized as of old, and separated from the
Assembly. The magistrates then in office seem to have been undisturbed till the
end of the year. And even then some of the administrative improvements made,
notably the consolidation of financial boards, were retained. Theramenes was abroad when the Five Thousand gave way and
he chose to remain abroad for a time. Cleophon, a
lyre-manufacturer, the man who ousted him in the confidence of the majority,
sympathized with the class that had been dispossessed. He represented the
Cleon-Hyperbolus tradition. Finance was his forte, and for year after year he
looked after this all-important branch of the administration with skill and
integrity. With the restoration of the poor to citizenship, their claim to
indemnities for time spent in civilian service had to be recognized—the more
readily, doubtless, because of overconfidence in the speedy rehabilitation of
their revenues. Cleophon’s peculiar invention was
the diobeli a, a payment of two obols per day
to the people, but to whom precisely and for what we are nowhere told. It is
best interpreted as a dole distributed to needy citizens not otherwise on the
public pay-roll; and it may have been financed by a reduction of indemnities to
a two obol level all round. Under the regime of Cleophon and his associates the right of the masses to live was further recognized by
the resumption of state building-operations, notably on the Erechtheum (409 b.c.). By the diobelia impoverished gentlefolk were primarily affected. The construction of the
Erechtheum gave employment to labourers and
artisans, whether they were slaves or freemen, aliens or citizens.
These expedients were
directed to enabling Athens to continue the war; and for the decision so to do Cleophon bears (together with Alcibiades) the heavy
responsibility. If the report of the battle of Cyzicus that reached Sparta was
like the one the Athenians intercepted (‘The ships are lost. Mindarus is dead. The men starve. We know not what to do.’)
the reaction of the Spartans needs no comment. They sent the head of the phil-Athenian faction, Alcibiades’ friend, Endius, to
Athens with an offer of peace on the basis of the status quo—Decelea to be given up in exchange for Pylos. This meant
for Athens the loss of Euboea, Andros, Rhodes, Chios, Thasos, Abdera, Perinthus, Selymbria, Byzantium,
and, with the exception of two or three places, all the towns on the Asiatic
coast from Pamphylia to the Pontus. Yet there were many Athenians who, judging
the struggle hopeless against such great odds, wished for peace even on these
terms. And the future proved their wisdom. But the rejection of the offer was
almost inevitable. Its acceptance would have stopped Athens from trying to
regain its lost dependencies at the very moment when, with sea-power
re-established and again self-supporting, it could turn unopposed to their
recovery. Nor did acceptance give complete certainty that the war would not be renewed
when Sparta had got upon its feet again. Over-confidence in themselves and
inveterate lack of faith in Sparta clouded the judgment of the Athenians and
incapacitated them from seeing that, even if the respite were brief, it would
suffice to end the coalition of west Greeks, east Greeks and Persians which the
impression of their weakness (now proved false) had brought into being, and
also to disclose to their renegade allies that the choice between them and their
adversaries was the choice of two masters, not, as fondly imagined, the choice of liberty or oppression.
XI.
THE ATTEMPTED RESTORATION
OF THE ATHENIAN EMPIRE
So the war continued.
Alcibiades reoccupied Cyzicus, and spent the balance of the summer partly there
and partly in reestablishing Athens’ authority in Perinthus, Selymbria, and the Bosporus. He had not enough
soldiers to lay siege to either Chalcedon or Byzantium. So he built a fortress
at Chrysopolis just north of Chalcedon and left Theramenes there with a strong squadron to keep the exit
from the Pontus open and collect a 10 per cent, toll on all cargoes passing
out. In general his first care was to restore to Athens its revenues; for upon
these all else depended. Nine ships now sufficed to guard the Hellespont. The
rest had to be scattered for this winter as for the one preceding—a fact of
which Sparta took advantage. As King Agis watched from his post at Dccelea the Pontic grain-ships sailing into the Piraeus he
realized as never before the importance of blocking the Bosporus. And with this
in view he had a Spartan officer, Clearchus, sent with troopships to organize
the defence of Chalcedon and Byzantium. Three of
these the Athenian patrol destroyed in the Hellespont, but twelve reached their
destination and increased enormously the military difficulties of the
Athenians.
By the spring of 409 b.c. the
Athenians were ready to make a strong effort to recover their lost allies.
During the preceding season they had had their minds set at rest as regards
Agis. The king had invited battle by leading his men from Decelea down to the city’s walls, but when Thrasyllus mustered out the Athenian army and accepted the challenge, he had beaten a
hasty retreat. Athens concluded that it could spare an expeditionary force and
that Thrasyllus was the man to command it. After
spending the winter in preparations, this popular general set out for Ionia
with 1000 hoplites and a fleet of 50 ships, among the rowers of which were 5000
peltasts. He landed at Phygela south of Ephesus, where he met and defeated the
Milesians; he won Colophon north of Ephesus and despoiled Lydia; but his main
objective was Ephesus itself, and here he failed signally. For he encountered
not merely the Ephesians, but horse and foot in large numbers which Tissaphernes (now at length compelled to do his own
fighting) had assembled from all over his satrapy, and also the crews of the
entire Sicilian squadron. So Thrasyllus sailed to the
Hellespont where he joined forces with Alcibiades (whose summer had been
singularly uneventful), and they devoted the winter to fortifying Lampsacus and to an unsuccessful attempt on Abydos.
The elimination of the
Spartan fleet had brought the Persians face to face with the Athenians. Pharnabazus had stepped manfully into the breach. He had
taken some of the shipless crews into his service and equipped them for the defence of his coast. Others he had assembled at Antandrus and set to work with timber from Mt. Ida
rebuilding a fleet. Money he provided to the extent of his ability. Those who
took most advantage of his assistance were the Sicilians, who worked to such
purpose, notwithstanding that Syracuse, chagrined at the total loss of its
fleet at Cyzicus, superseded and exiled their tried generals (autumn, 410 b.c.)— Hermocrates among them—that by the spring they had replaced all their ships and were thus
able to join in the defence of Ionia. Thereafter they
tried unsuccessfully to reach the Hellespont. It was in Sicily fighting against
the Carthaginians that they next saw service.
Their departure took the centre out of the new Lacedaemonian fleet, and permitted
Alcibiades to concentrate his forces for the great object set for the 408 b.c. campaign—the winning of the Bosporus. Chalcedon was invested first. A determined
effort on the part of Pharnabazus from without and
the Spartan harmost from within to break the Athenian cordon failed. And to
save the city from a worse fate than resumption of its old tributary relation
to Athens Pharnabazus undertook to forward to Susa
ambassadors to discuss peace with the King—an opportunity which the Athenians
(supported by Argos) eagerly embraced. Could they obtain the neutrality of
Persia they might yet win the war. Besides they were freed to proceed with the
siege of Byzantium, round which too they threw a cordon. But their assaults
proved fruitless. Clearchus, however, made the mistake of reserving the
supplies for the garrison, whereupon certain citizens, solicitous for the
civilian population, took advantage of his absence on a visit to Pharnabazus to betray the city. So Athens regained
Byzantium and was relieved from anxiety for its food supply (autumn, 408 b.c.). Alcibiades had scored another
striking success. And in the following May (Thargelion),
after having collected 100 talents to fetch home as a sort of peace-offering,
he returned to Athens, where he was received like a conquering hero, given back
his property, relieved of the religious penalties imposed upon him in 415 b.c., and put in sole charge of the war for the
following year. Since Thrasvbulus regained Abdera and
Thasos at this same time, and the enemy did not venture to show himself
anywhere on the sea, Athens, far from regretting that it had refused to make
peace with Sparta three years before, rejected the proffered hand yet again,
even though in the interval only a fraction of its hopes had been realized,
Corcyra had fallen after a bitter struggle into the hands of its oligarchs and
reverted to its pre-war policy of neutrality, and the Spartans had regained
Pylos and the Megarians Nisaea.
But beyond Athens’ vision,
at the King’s court at Susa, a decision had been reached which made its
jubilation during the four months of Alcibiades’ stay at home seem like tragic
irony. The house of Hydarnes, to which Tissaphernes belonged, had been overwhelmed by disaster. He
had made the mistake of looking beyond victory to the settlement with Sparta
that was bound to follow, and had lost victory itself. A Spartan embassy sent
to Susa to complain of his duplicity had no difficulty in making out a case
against him. Without waiting to hear from the Athenians and Argives, the King
decided to put the financial resources of the empire squarely behind the one of
the Greek contenders for power which lacked the means of maintaining a fleet
without Persian assistance. And to give this idea effect and at the same time
to humour his strong-minded wife, who desired, from
ulterior motives, to enable Cyrus, her second son, whom she favoured,
to build up for himself an independent position in the state, Darius appointed
Cyrus ‘to be lord (karanos) of all those whose
mustering place is Castolus,’ i,e. governorgeneral of Asia Minor. Over and above the
revenues of this area he gave him 500 talents with which to recreate the
Spartan fleet. In the spring of 407 b.c. Cyrus met at Gordium the envoys for whose journey to Susa Pharnabazus had
arranged. They naturally went no farther; but they were not allowed to return
to spread the news that thenceforth Athens had to contend not with the uncertain,
unsupported, and unrelated efforts of jealous satraps, but with the set purpose
of the whole Persian Empire. The Peloponnesian War had entered upon its final
phase.
CHAPTER XIITHE FALL OF THE ATHENIAN EMPIRE
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