HISTORY OF ANCIENT GREECE |
A HISTORY OF GREECE TO THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER THE GREAT
CHAPTER XI.THE DECLINE AND DOWNFALL OF THE ATHENIAN EMPIRE
Sect.
1. New Political Combinations with Argos
Sparta had good reasons for desiring peace; the
prospect in the Peloponnesus gave her no little concern. Mantinea had been
gradually enlarging her boundaries southwards; and that could not be permitted.
Elis was sulky and hostile, because, in a quarrel with Lepreon,
Sparta had supported her rival. Far more serious than these minor vexations was
the circumstance that the treaty of peace with Argos was about to expire. It
had been a consideration of supreme importance for Sparta, when she entered
upon the war with Athens, that for the next ten years she was secure on the
side of her old Peloponnesian rival. But there was now the chance that Athens
and Argos might combine, and, as Argos had not agreed to renew the treaty,
there was urgent need to come to terms with Athens. These reasons which
recommended the peace to Sparta ought to have prevented Athens from consenting
to it. The settlement was a complete failure. Not only did the Corinthians and
the other chief allies refuse to accede to it, but the signatories found
themselves unable to carry out the terms they had agreed upon. The Chalcidians
refused to surrender Amphipolis, and the Spartans could not compel them. Athens
therefore justly declined to carry out her part of the bargain. As a way out of
this deadlock, the Spartans, impatient at all costs to recover the Sphacterian prisoners, conceived the device of entering
into a defensive alliance with their old enemy. This proposal, warmly supported
by Nicias, was accepted, and the captives were at length restored,—Athens still
retaining Pylos and Cythera.
This approximation between Sparta and Athens led
directly to the dissolution of the Peloponnesian league. Corinth, Mantinea,
Elis, and the Chalcidians of Thrace, considering themselves deserted by their
leader, openly broke with her, and formed an alliance with Argos, who now
enters upon the scene. There was, however, little reason to fear or hope that
the intimacy between Sparta and Athens could be long or strong, seeing that
Athens insisted on keeping Cythera and Pylos until Amphipolis should be restored
to her and the other states should accede to the Peace.
In the following year these unstable political
combinations were upset, and a new situation created, by a change in the
balance of parties at Athens. The opposition to Nicias was led by Hyperbolus, a
man of the same class and same kind of ability as Cleon; a comic poet—and no
statesman was such a favourite butt of comedy as
Hyperbolus—described him as a Cleon in hyperbole. But the party was now
strengthened by the accession of a young man of high birth, brilliant
intellect, and no morality, Alcibiades, son of Cleinias.
Educated by his kinsman Pericles in democratic traditions, he was endowed by
nature with extraordinary beauty and talents, by fortune with the inheritance
of wealth which enabled him to indulge an inordinate taste for ostentation. He
had shocked his kinsfolk and outraged the city, not by his dissoluteness, but
by the incredible insolence which accompanied it. The numerous anecdotes of his
petulance, which no one dared to punish, need not all be true; but they
illustrate the fact that undue respect for persons of birth and wealth had not
disappeared in the Athenian democracy. Alcibiades was feared and courted, and
pursued by lovers of both sexes. He fought with bravery at Delium,
where his life was saved by his friend Socrates the philosopher. It was a
celebrated friendship. Intellectual power and physical courage were the only
points of likeness between them; socially and morally, as well as in favour and fortune, they were as contrasted as two men well
could be. Though Socrates took no interest in politics, he was an unequalled
dialectician, and an aspiring statesman found his society a good training for
the business of political debate. Alcibiades indeed had not in him the stuff of
which true statesmen are made; he had not the purpose, the perseverance, or the
self-control. An extremely able and dexterous politician he certainly was; but
he wanted that balance which a politician, whether scrupulous or unscrupulous,
must have in order to be a great statesman. Nor had Alcibiades any sincere belief
in the democratic institutions of his country, still less any genuine sympathy
with the advanced democratic party whose cause he espoused. When he said—as
Thucydides makes him say—at Sparta, at a later stage of his career, that
democracy is “acknowledged folly,” he assuredly expressed what he felt in his
heart. Yet at this time his ultimate aim may have been to win such a place as
that which Pericles had held, and rule his country without being formally her
ruler. At all events he saw his way to power through war and conquest.
The accession of Alcibiades was particularly welcome
to the radical party, not so much on account of his family connexions,
his diplomatic and rhetorical talents, but because he had a military training
and could perform the functions of strategos. Unfitness for the post of
strategos was, as we have seen, the weak point in the position of men like
Hyperbolus and Cleon. When Alcibiades was elected a strategos and Nicias was
not re-elected, the prospects of the radical party looked brighter. The change
was immediately felt. Athens entered into an alliance with Argos, and her
allies Elis an Mantinea, for a hundred years; and the treaty was sealed by a
join expedition against Epidaurus. Sparta assisted Epidaurus, and then the
Athenians declared that the Lacedaemonians had broken the Peace.
The new policy of Athens received a check by the
return of Nicias to power and the refusal of the people to re-elect the
adventurous Alcibiades; but the alliance with Argos was not broken off. Sparta,
alarmed by the activity of Argos against Epidaurus, resolved to strike a blow,
and sent forth in summer an army under king Agis t0 invade the Argive land. The
allies gathered at Phlius, and Corinth, which had no
longer any reason to hold aloof, sent a contingent. The Argive troops under
Thrasyllus, with their Mantinean and Elean allies, were in every way inferior
to the enemy; yet concentrating close to Nemea, they could easily defend the
chief pass from the north into the plain of Argos. But Agis outmanoeuvred them. Sending the Boeotians along the main road by Nemea, he led his own troops
by a difficult mountain path, from the west, and descended into the plain by
the valley of the Inachus; the Corinthians and Phliasians he sent over by another pass. Thus the Argives were hemmed in between two
armies and cut off from their city. They left their position near Nemea and
came down into the plain; the Boeotians appear not to have followed. The
soldiers of both Thrasyllus and Agis were confident of victory, but the
generals were of another mind. Agis, as well as his antagonist, considered his
position precarious, and consequently they came to terms, concluding a truce
for four months. On both sides there was a loud outcry against the generals,
and Thrasyllus was nearly stoned to death by his disappointed soldiers.
Athenian forces now arrived at Argos, under Laches and
Nicostratus, accompanied by Alcibiades as an ambassador. Stepping beyond his
instructions, Alcibiades induced the allies to disregard the truce, on the
technical ground that, not having been accepted by the Athenians, it was not
valid. The allied troops accordingly crossed the mountains into Arcadia and won
Orchomenus. The men of Elis then proposed to march against their own particular
foes, the people of Lepreon; and being outvoted they
deserted their allies and marched home. The army, thus weakened by the loss of
3000 hoplites, was obliged to hasten southward to protect Mantinea, against
which the Lacedaemonians under Agis, along with the men of Tegea, had come
forth.
And now, at length, a great battle was fought. The
exact numbers are not known, but must have approached 10,000 on each side.
Coming round the hill of Scope, the spur of Mount Maenalus,
which projects into the plain between Tegea and Mantinea, at the point where
the territories of the two cities met, the Lacedaemonians found the enemy drawn
up for fight and proved their excellent discipline by a rapid formation in the
face of the hostile line. They won the battle; but their success was
endangered, and its completeness diminished, by a hitch which occurred at the
outset. There was a tendency in all Greek armies, when engaging, to push
towards the right, each man fearing for his own exposed right side and trying
to edge under the screen of his neighbour’s shield.
Consequently, an army was always inclined to outflank the left wing of the
enemy by its own right. On this occasion, Agis observed that the Mantineans,
who were on the right wing of the foe, stretched far beyond his own left wing,
and fearing it would be disastrously outflanked and surrounded, gave a signal
to the troops of his extreme left to make a lateral movement further towards
the left; and at the same time he commanded two captains on his right to move
their divisions round to fill up the gap thus created. The first order was
executed, but the two captains refused to move. The result was that the extreme
left was isolated, and utterly routed, while a band of 1000 chosen Argives
dashed through the gap. On the right, however, the Lacedaemonians were
completely victorious over the Athenians and other allies. The Athenians would
have been surrounded and utterly at the mercy of their foes, if Agis had not
recalled his troops to assist his discomfited left wing. Both Laches and
Nicostratus fell.
The Lacedaemonians returned home and celebrated the
feast of the Carnean Apollo in joy. The victory did
much to restore the prestige of Sparta, which had dwindled since the disaster
of Sphacteria. The public opinion of Greece had
pronounced Sparta to be stupid and inert; it now began to reconsider its
judgment. But the victory had direct political results; it transformed the
situation in the Peloponnesus. One of those double changes which usually went
together, a change in the constitution and a change in foreign policy, was
brought about at Argos. The democracy was replaced by an oligarchy, and the
alliance with Athens was abandoned for an alliance with Sparta. Mantinea, Elis,
and the Achaean towns also went over to the victor. Athens was again isolated.
It was probably at this juncture that the advanced
democrats in Athens made an attempt to remove from their way the influential
man who was their chief opponent, Nicias. It had been due to his counsels that
Argos had not been more effectively supported; there was probably a good deal
of dissatisfaction at Athens; and, when Hyperbolus proposed that a vote of
ostracism should be held, he had good grounds to hope that there would be a
decision against Nicias, and no apparent reason to fear for himself. He might
calculate that most of the supporters of Nicias would vote against the more
dangerous Alcibiades. The calculation was so well grounded that it missed its
mark; for Alcibiades, seeing the risk which threatened him, deserted Hyperbolus
and the democratic party, and allied himself with Nicias. So it came about that
Hyperbolus was ruined by his own machination; all the followers of Nicias and
Alcibiades wrote his name on their sherds, and he was banished for ten years.
His political career had ended. This was the last case of ostracism at Athens;
the institution was not abolished, but it became a dead letter. Henceforward it
was deemed a sufficient safeguard for the constitution that any man who
proposed a measure involving a change in any of the established laws was liable
to be prosecuted under the law known as the Graphe Paranomon, which it was death to transgress.
The new alliance of the pious and punctilious Nicias,
champion of peace, with the profane and unstable Alcibiades, bent on
enterprises of war, was more unnatural than that between the high-born noble
and the lamp-maker. But Nicias seems to have been to some small extent aroused
from his policy of inactivity. We find him undertaking an expedition against
Chalcidice, where nothing had been done since the Peace, except the capture of Scione and the execution of all the male inhabitants.
Nicias failed in an attempt on Amphipolis; but in the
following year an enterprise in the southern Aegean was attended with success.
The island of Melos had hitherto remained outside the sea-lordship of the
Athenians, and Athens, under the influence of Alcibiades, now attacked her. The
town of Melos was invested in the summer by land and sea, and surrendered at
discretion in the following winter. All the men of military age were put to
death, the other inhabitants were enslaved, and the island was colonised by Athenians.
The conquest of Melos is remarkable, not for the
rigorous treatment of the Melians, which is merely another example of the
inhumanity which we have already met in the cases of Plataea, Mytilene, Scione, but for the unprovoked aggression of Athens,
without any passable pretext. By the curious device of an imaginary colloquy
between Athenian envoys and the Melian government, Thucydides has brought the
episode into dramatic relief. In this scene the Athenians assert in frank and
shameless words the “law of nature” that the stronger should rule over the
weaker. This was a doctrine which it was Hellenic to follow, but barbarous to
enunciate in all its nakedness; and in the negotiations which preceded the
blockade no Athenian spokesmen would have uttered the undiplomatic crudities
which Thucydides ascribes to them. The historian has merely used the dialogue
to emphasise the overbearing spirit of the Athenians,
flown with insolence, on the eve of an enterprise which was destined to bring
signal retribution and humble their city in the dust. Different as Thucydides
and Herodotus were in their minds and methods, they had both the same,
characteristically Hellenic, feeling for a situation like this. The check of
Athens rounded the theme of the younger, as the check of Persia had rounded the
theme of the elder, historian; and, although Nemesis, who moves openly in the
pages of Herodotus, is kept carefully in the background by Thucydides, we are
conscious of her influence.
During the years immediately succeeding the Peace
there are some signs that the Athenians turned their attention to matters of
religion, which had perhaps been too much neglected during the war. It may have
been in these years that they set about the building of a new temple for Athena
and Erechtheus, concerning which we shall hear again at a later stage. It may
have been at this time that Asclepius, the god of healing, came over with his
snake from Epidaurus, and established himself in a sanctuary under the south
slope of the Acropolis. And it was probably soon after the Peace that a
resolution was carried imposing a new tax upon the fruits of the earth for the
maintenance of the worship of Eleusis. The farmers of Attica were required to
pay 1/600 of every medimnus of barley and 1/1200 of
every medimnus of wheat. The same burden was imposed
upon the allies; and the Council was directed to invite “all Hellenic cities
whom it seemed possible to approach on the matter to send first-fruits
likewise.
Sect.
2. The Western Policy of Athens
During the fifth century the eyes of Athenian
statesmen often wandered to western Greece beyond the seas. We can surprise
some oblique glances, as early as the days of Themistocles; and we have seen
how under Pericles a western policy definitely began. An Alliances alliance was
formed with the Elymian town of Segesta, and
subsequently treaties of alliance (the stone records are still partly
preserved) were concluded (as has been already mentioned) with Leontini and
Rhegium. One general object of Athens was to support the Ionian cities against
the Dorian, which were predominant in number and power, and especially against
Syracuse, the daughter and friend of Corinth. The same purpose of counteracting
the Dorian predominance may be detected in the foundation of Thurii. But Thurii
did not effect this purpose. The colonists were a mixed body; other than
Athenian elements gained the upper hand; and, in the end, Thurii became rather
a Dorian centre and was no support to Athens. It is
to be observed that at the time of the foundation of Thurii, and for nigh
thirty years more, Athens is seeking merely influence in the west, she has no
thought of dominion. The growth of her connexion with
Italian and Sicilian affairs was forced upon her by the conditions of commerce
and the rivalry of Corinth.
The treaties with Leontini and Rhegium had led to no immediate
interference in Sicily on the
part of the Athenians. The first action came six years later, Leontini was struggling to preserve her dependence against
Syracuse, her southern neighbour. All the Dorian cities, with the exception of Acragas and Camarina,
were on the side
of Syracuse, while Leontini had the support of Rhegium, Catane,
Naxos, and Camarina. The continued independenc of the Ionian
element in western Greece might seem to be seriously at stake. The embassy of the Leontines was accompanied by the
greatest of their citizens, Gorgias the professor of eloquence, whose fair and influence
were Panhellenic. We may well believe that when
the embassy arrived the Athenians were far more interested in the great man than in his mission; that they thronged in excitement to the Assembly, caring little what he said,
but much how he said it. His eloquence indeed was hardly needed to win a favourable answer. Athens was convinced of the expediency
of bringing Sicily within the range of her politics. It was important to hinder
corn and other help being conveyed from thence to her Peloponnesian enemies; it
was important to prevent Syracuse, the friend of Corinth, from raising her head
too high; and already adventurous imaginations may have gone beyond the thought
of Athenian influence, and dreamed of Athenian dominion, in the west.
Hyperbolus seems to have especially interested himself in the development of a
policy in the western Mediterranean. Aristophanes ridicules him for
contemplating an enterprise against Carthage herself.
An expedition was sent out, under the command of Laches. It achieved
little, but, if it had been followed up, might have led to much. Messana was
induced to join Athens, who thus obtained free navigation of the Straits. The
old alliance with Segesta was renewed, but a severe check was experienced in an
attempt to take Inessa. The poor success of this expedition must partly at
least be set down to the dishonesty of the general Laches and his treasurer.
Cleon seems to have called Laches to account for his defalcations, on his
return; and a comic poet jested how Laches ate up the Sicilian cheese—Sicily
was famous for her cheeses—with the help of his treasurer, the cheese-grater.
The episode of Pylos and the operations at Corcyra may
fairly be regarded as causes which ruined Athenian prospects in Sicily. For
these affairs detained the fleet which was under the command of Eurymedon and
Sophocles, and the delay led to the loss of the one thing which the expedition
of Laches had gained, the adhesion of Messana. This city, cleft by adverse
political parties, revolted; and the fleet, when at last it came, accomplished
nothing worthy of record. Its coming seems rather to have been the occasion for
the definite shaping of a movement among almost all the Sicilian states towards
peace,—a movement unfavourable to the Athenian
designs. When the Athenian generals invited the cities to join in the war
against Syracuse, they were answered by the gathering of a congress at Gela,
where delegates from all the Siceliot cities met to discuss the situation and
consider the possibility of peace. The man who took the most prominent part at
this remarkable congress was Hermocrates of Syracuse. He developed what has
been justly described as a Siceliot policy. Sicily is a world by itself, with
its own interests and politics, and the Greeks outside Sicily should be
considered as strangers and not permitted to make or meddle in the affairs of
the island. Let the Sicilian cities settle their own differences among
themselves, but combine to withstand intervention from Athens or any other
external power. Thus the policy of Hermocrates was neither local nor
Panhellenic, but Siceliot. It has been compared to the “Monroe doctrine” of the
United States. The policy, indeed, was never realised,
and we shall see that Hermocrates himself was driven by circumstances to become
eminently untrue to the doctrine which he preached. But the Congress of Gela
was not a failure; the policy of peace prevented at the time any serious
Athenian intervention. Soon afterwards (423 B.C.) a sedition was disastrous to
Leontini. Its oligarchs became Syracusan citizens; Leontini ceased to exist as
a city and became a Syracusan fortress. Such an incident, following so hard
upon the pacification which Syracusan diplomacy had helped to bring about, must
have produced a strange impression on the Siceliots. It seemed clear that
Syracuse wanted to get rid of the Athenians only for the purpose of tyrannising over her neighbours. Athens was again invited
to intervene, and she did intervene, but not seriously or effectually; and it
was not till the year of the conquest of Melos that she resumed her active
interest in the politics of western Hellas.
Sect.
3. The Sailing of the Sicilian Expedition.First Operations in Sicily
In that year there arrived at Athens an appeal for
help from Segesta, (416 B.C.) who was at war with her stronger southern
neighbour: Selinus. The appeal was supported by the Leontine democrat, who had
no longer a city of their own. Athens sent envoy to Sicily, for the purpose of
reporting on the situation and spying out the resources of Segesta, which had
undertaken, if the Athenians would
send an armament, to provide the expenses of the war. The ambassadors returned
with sixty talents of uncoined silver and glowing stories of the untold wealth
of the people of Segesta. They described the sacred vessels of gold and the
rich plate of the private citizens. Alcibiades and all the younger generation
were in favour of responding to the appeal; of
vigorously espousing the causes of Segesta against Selinus, of the Leontines against Syracuse. Nicias wisely opposed the
notion, and set forth the enormous cost of an expedition which should be really
effective. The people, however, elated by their recent triumph over Melos, were
fascinated by the idea of making new conquests in a distant, unfamiliar world;
the triremes instead of the sixty which were asked for.
But having committed the imprudence of not listening
to Nicias when his caution was, from the highest point of view, wisdom, the
people went on to commit the graver blunder of electing him as a commander of
the expedition which he disapproved. He was appointed as General along with
Alcibiades and Lamachus. This shows how great was the
consideration of his military capacity, and he was doubtless regarded as a safe
makeweight against the adventurous spirit of his colleagues. But though Nicias
had shown himself capable of carrying out that Periclean strategy which Athens
had hitherto adopted, his ability and temperament were wholly unsuited for the
conduct of an enterprise of conquest demanding bolder and greater operations.
When the expedition was ready to sail in the early
summer, a mysterious event delayed it. One morning in May it was found that the
square stone figures which stood at the entrance of temples and private houses
in Athens, and were known as Hermae, had their faces mutilated. The pious
Athenians were painfully excited. Such an unheard-of sacrilege seemed an evil
omen for the Sicilian enterprise, and it was illogically argued that the act
betokened a conspiracy against the state. The enemies of Alcibiades seized the
occasion and tried to implicate him in the outrage. It was said that a profane
mockery of the Eleusinian Mysteries had been enacted in his house,—a charge
which may well have been true; and it was argued that he was the author of the
present sacrilege and prime mover in a conspiracy against the democracy. It did
not appear why a conspirator should thus advertise his plot. But though the
theory hardly hung together, it might be good enough for an excited populace.
Alcibiades demanded the right of clearing himself from the charge, before the
fleet started. In this case, his acquittal was certain, as he was deemed
necessary to the enterprise; and his enemies, aware of this, procured the
postponement of his trial till his return. The fleet then set sail, and in the
excitement of its starting, the sacrilege was almost forgotten. Thucydides says
that no armament so magnificent had ever before been sent out by a single Greek
state. There were 134 triremes, and an immense number of smaller attendant
vessels; there were 5100 hoplites; and the total number of combatants was well
over 30,000. For cavalry they relied on their Sicilian allies; only thirty
horse went with the fleet.
A halt was made at Rhegium, where disappointments
awaited them. Rhegium adopted a reserved attitude which the Athenians did not
expect. The government said that their conduct must be regulated by that of the
other Italiot states. This looks as if the Italiots were aiming at a policy of joint interests, such
as that which the Siceliots had discussed at the Congress of Gela. In the next
place, the Athenians had relied on the wealth of Segesta for supporting their
expedition, and they now learned that their spies had been deceived by simple
tricks. Gilt vessels of silver had been displayed to them as solid gold; and
the Segestaeans, collecting all the plate they could
get from their own and other cities, had passed the same service from house to
house and led the envoys to believe that each of the hosts who sumptuously
entertained them possessed a magnificent service of his own.
This discovery came as an unwelcome surprise to
soldiers and commanders alike. It was a serious blow to the enterprise, but no
one, not even Nicias, seems to have thought of giving the enterprise up. What
then was to be done? A council of war was held at Rhegium. Nicias advocated a
course which involved risking and doing as little as possible,—to sail about,
make some demonstrations, secure anything that could be secured without
trouble, give any help to the Leontines that could be
given without danger. Alcibiades proposed that active attempts should be made
to win over the Sicilian cities by diplomacy, and that then, having so
strengthened their position, they should take steps to force Selinus and
Syracuse to do right by Segesta and Leontini. Both Nicias and Alcibiades kept
in the forefront the ostensible object of the expedition, to right the wrongs
of Leontini and Segesta. But Lamachus, who was no
statesman or diplomatist but a plain soldier, regarded the situation from a
soldier’s point of view. Grasping the fact that Syracuse was the real enemy,
the ultimate mark at which the whole enterprise was aimed, he advised that
Syracuse should be attacked at once, while her citizens were still unprepared.
Fortunately for Syracuse, the bold strategy of Lamachus did not prevail; he had no influence or authority except on the field; and,
failing to convince his colleagues, who perhaps contemned him as a mere
soldier, he gave his vote to the plan of Alcibiades.
Naxos and Catane were won
over the Athenian fleet made a demonstration in the Great Harbour of Syracuse and captured a ship. But nothing more had been done, when a mandate
arrived from Athens recalling Alcibiades, to stand his trial for impiety. The
people of Athens had reverted to their state of religious agony over the
mutilation of the Hermae, and the mystery which encompassed it increased their
terrors. A commission of inquiry was appointed; false informations were lodged; numbers of arrests were made. Andocides,
a young man of good family, was one of the prisoners, and he at length resolved
to confess the crime and give the names of his accomplices. His information was
readily believed; the public agitation was tranquillised;
and all the prisoners whom he accused were tried and put to death. He was
himself pardoned, and soon afterwards left Athens. But it is not certain, after
all, whether the information of Andocides was true;
Thucydides declares that the truth of the mystery was never explained.
It was, indeed, never known for certain who the actual
perpetrators Meaning of were; so far the affair remained a mystery. But the
purpose of the deed and the source of its inspiration can hardly be doubtful.
It was wrought on the eve of the Sicilian expedition, and can have had no other
intention than to hinder the expedition from sailing, by working on the
superstitions of the people. If we ask then, who above all others were vitally
concerned in preventing the sailing of the fleet, the answer is obvious,
Corinth and Syracuse. We are justified in concluding that the authors of the
outrage—to us their names would be of only subordinate interest—were men
suborned by Corinth, in receipt of Corinthian silver. In the main point, the
mutilation of the Hermae is assuredly no mystery.
The investigations in connexion with the Hermae led to the exposure of other profanations, especially of
travesties of the Eleusinian mysteries, in which Alcibiades was involved. His
enemies of both parties deemed that it was the time to strike. Thessalus, the son of Cimon, preferred the impeachment,
which began thus : “Thessalus, son of Cimon, of the
deme Laciadae, impeached Alcibiades, son of Cleinias, of the deme Scambonidae,
of wrong-doing in respect to the two goddesses, Demeter and Core, by mimicking the
mysteries and displaying them to his comrades in his own house, wearing a dress
like that which a hierophant with the mysteries wears, and calling himself
hierophant.” The trireme “Salaminia” was sent to
summon Alcibiades to return, but with instructions to use no violence.
Alcibiades might have refused, but he did not do so. He went with the Salaminia as far as Thurii, where he made his escape and
went into voluntary exile. The Athenians condemned him to death, along with
some of his kinsfolk, and confiscated his property.
In Sicily, when Alcibiades had gone, the rest of the
year passed away in a number of small enterprises, which led to nothing. At
length, when winter came, Nicias aroused himself to a far more serious
undertaking. By a cunning stratagem he lured the Syracusan army to Catane for the purpose of making an attack on the Athenian
camp, which they were led to believe they would take unawares, while in the
meantime the Athenian host had gone on board the fleet and sailed off to the
Great Harbour of Syracuse. Nicias landed and
fortified his camp on the south-west side of the harbour,
near the point of Dascon, just south of the temple of
the Olympian Zeus, which he was scrupulous to treat with profound respect. When
the Syracusans returned, a battle was fought, the first battle of the war. The
Athenians had the disadvantage of having no cavalry whatever; but the woeful
want of discipline which prevailed in the ranks of the enemy outbalanced the
advantage they had from 1200 horse. A Athenian storm of rain and lightning aided
the Athenians to discomfit their untrained antagonists; but the cavalry stood
the Syracusans in good stead by protecting their retreat.
A success had now been gained, but the temper of
Nicias forbade it to be improved. On the day ensuing, he ordered the whole army
to embark and sail back to Catane. He had numbers of
excellent reasons,—the winter season, the want of cavalry, of money, of allies;
and in the meantime Syracuse was left to make her preparations. “The Athenian
fleet and army was to go on falling away from its freshness and vigour. All Sicily was to get more and more accustomed to
the sight of the great armada sailing to and fro, its
energies frittered away on small and mostly unsuccessful enterprises, and, when
it did strike something like a vigorous blow, not daring to follow it up.”
The winter was employed by both parties in seeking
allies. The Sicels of the island for the most part
joined Athens. Camarina, wooed by both Athens and Syracuse, remained neutral.
It is in the Assembly of Camarina that Thucydides makes Hermocrates reassert
the doctrine of a purely Siceliot policy, which he had formulated ten years
before at Gela, while an Athenian envoy develops in its most naked form the
theory of pure self-interest, reminding us of the tone which the Thucydidean
Athenians adopted in the Melian dialogue. A train had been laid for the capture
of Messana before Alcibiades had been recalled, but when the time came for
making the attempt, it failed. Alcibiades began the terrible vengeance which he
proposed to wreak upon his country by informing the Syracusan party in Messana
of the plot.
It seemed, indeed, as if a fatality dogged Athens in
her conduct of the expedition which she had so lightly undertaken. If she had
committed the command to Alcibiades and Lamachus,
without Nicias, it would probably have been a success, resulting in the capture
of Syracuse. But, not content with the unhappy appointment of Nicias, she must
go on to pluck the whole soul out of the enterprise by depriving it of
Alcibiades. That active diplomatist now threw as much energy into the work of
ruining the expedition as he had given Alcibiades to the work of organising it. He went to Sparta, and was present at
Sparta; at the Assembly which received a Syracusan embassy, begging for Spartan
help. He made a vigorous and effective speech. He exposed the boundless plans
of Athenian ambition, aiming at conquests in the west (including Carthage),
which should enable them to return and conquer the Peloponnesus. These had
perhaps been the dreams of Alcibiades himself; but they had certainly never
taken a definite shape in the mind of any sober Athenian statesman. Alcibiades
urged the Spartans especially to take two measures: to send at once a Spartan
general to Sicily to organise the defence,—a
general was far more important than an army; and to fortify Decelea in Attica,
a calamity which the Athenians were always dreading. “I know,” said the
renegade, “the secrets of the Athenians.” Thucydides shows what defence Alcibiades might have made for his own
vindictive—it can hardly be called treacherous—conduct. The description of the
Athenian democracy as “acknowledged folly” may well have been a phrase actually
used by Alcibiades. Intense hostility animated the exile, but, one asks, Did he
act merely to gratify this feeling, or had he not further projects for his own
career? If we might trust the speech which Thucydides ascribes to him, his
ultimate aim was to win back his country. With Spartan help, presumably, he was
to rise on the calamity of Athens, and, we may read between the lines, the
“acknowledged folly” was to be abolished. One can hardly see a place for
Alcibiades except as a second Pisistratus.
The speech of this powerful advocate turned the
balance at a most critical point in the history of Hellas. The Lacedaemonians,
who were wavering between the policies of neutrality and intervention, were
decided by his advice, and appointed an officer named Gylippus to take command of the Syracusan forces. Corinth too sent ships to the aid of
her daughter city.
Since the sailing of the expedition, Athens was in a
mood of adventurous speculation and sanguine expectancy, dreaming of some great
and wonderful change for the better in her fortunes. Aristophanes made this
mood of his countrymen the motive of a fanciful comedy, entitled The Birds, which he brought out at the
Great Dionysia. Some have sought to detect definite political allusions in the
story of the foundation of Cloudcuckootown by the
birds of the air, under the direction of two Athenian adventurers, Persuasive
and his follower Hopeful; but this is to misapprehend the point of the drama
and to do wrong to the poet’s art. The significance of the Birds for the
historian is that it exhibits with good-humoured banter the temporary mood of the Athenian folk.
Sect.
4. Siege of Syracuse, 414 B.C.
The Island of Syracuse, the original settlement of Archias, always remained the heart and centre of the city. However the city might extend over the hill above it, the island
was always what the Acropolis was to Athens, what Larisa was to Argos; it was
even called the acropolis, a name which was never given to the hill. But the
military importance of the Epipolae, the long hill which shut in the north side of the
Great Harbour, could not be ignored, although it was
only gradually that the Syracusans came fully to recognise its significance. The water between the Island and the mainland had been filled
up; this was an inducement to the settlement to creep up the height; and
finally the eastern part of the hill, known as Achradina,
was fortified by a wall running from north to south. At a later period, during
the domestic troubles which followed the expulsion of Thrasybulus, the suburb
of Tycha,
north-west of Achradina, was added to the enclosed
city. Henceforward the name Epipolae was restricted to the rest of the heights, westward
from the wall of Tycha and Achradina.
It formed a sort of triangle, with this wall as the base and the high point of
Euryalus as the vertex.
The Syracusans did something, though not perhaps as
much as they might, to prepare for a siege. They reformed their system of
military command and elected Hermocrates a general. They fortified the precinct
of Apollo Temenites, which was just outside the wall
of Achradina, and also strengthened Polichna, the fort south of the hill, near the shrine of
Olympian Zeus.
The first brief operation of the Athenians against
Syracuse had been made on the table-land west of the Great Harbour.
With the second act, which began in the ensuing spring, the scene changes to
the north, and the hostilities are enacted on the heights of Epipolae. Hermocrates had realised the necessity of guarding these heights. It was accordingly fixed that a great
review should be held of all the fighting population, and a force of 600 was to
be chosen for the guard of Epipolae. But the hour had
almost passed. At the very moment when the muster was being held below in the
meadows on the banks of the Anapus, the Athenians
were close at hand. The fleet had left Catane the
night before, steered for the bay on the north side of the Epipolae,
and set down the army at a landing-place within less than a mile from the
height of Euryalus. The soldiers hastened up the ascent, and were masters of Epipolae before the Syracusan host knew what was happening.
The six hundred made an attempt to dislodge them, and were repulsed with great
loss. The Athenians then fortified a place called Labdalon,
near the north cliffs; they have been criticised for
not rather fortifying Euryalus.
The plan of the siege was to run a wall right across
the hill, from the cliffs on the north to the harbour on the south. This would cut off communications by land, while the fleet which
was stationed at Thapsus, ready to enter the Great Harbour,
would cut off communications by sea. For this purpose, a point was chosen in
the centre of the intended line of wall, and a round
fort, “the Circle” (kyklos)
was built there, from which the wall was to be constructed northward and
southward. The Syracusans having made a vain attempt to stop the building of
the wall, set themselves to build a counter-wall, beginning at the Temenites and running westward, with a view to intercept
the southern wall of the Athenians and prevent its reaching the harbour. The Athenians did not try to hinder them, and
devoted themselves entirely to the building of their own wall north of the
Round Fort; this seemed at first of greater consequence than the southern
section, since they had to consider the maintenance of communications with their
fleet at Thapsus. But though they were apparently not concerning themselves
with the Syracusan builders, they were really watching for a good opportunity.
The carelessness of the Syracusans soon gave the looked-for chance. An attack
was made on the counter-wall and it was utterly destroyed. The generals then
began to look to the southern section of their own wall, and, without waiting
to build it on the side of the Round Fort, they began to fortify the southern
cliff, near the temple of Heracles, above the marshy ground on the north-west
side of the great harbour.
The Syracusans then began a second counter-work, not
on the hill, but over this low swampy ground, to hinder the Athenians from
bringing their wall down from the cliff to the harbour.
This work was not a wall, which would not have been suited to the swampy
ground, but a trench with a palisade. At the break of day, the Athenians led by Lamachus descended into the swamp and destroyed the
Syracusan works. But what was gained was more than undone by what followed.
Troops sallied out of Syracuse; a battle was fought; and Lamachus—the
hero Lamachus, as comic poets called him in derision
while he lived, in admiration when he died—exposed himself rashly and was
slain. This was the third great blow to the prospect of Athenian success.
Nicias had been appointed; Alcibiades had been recalled; now Lamachus was gone. To make things worse, Nicias himself was
ill.
The southern Athenian wall advanced southward in a
double line, and the fleet had now taken up its station in the Great Harbour. The Syracusans, not realising how much they had gained in the death of Lamachus,
were prematurely in despair; they changed their generals, and were prepared to
make terms. Nicias, strangely swerving from his wonted sobriety, was
prematurely elated; he thought that Syracuse was in his hands, and made the
fatal mistake of neglecting the completion of the wall on the north side. His neglect
was the more culpable as he had received information of the help that was
coming for Syracuse from the mother-country’. But alike in his normal mood of
caution and in his abnormal moment of confidence, Nicias was doomed to do the
wrong thing.
All thought of capitulation was abandoned when a
Corinthian captain named Gongylus reached Syracuse with the news that
Corinthian ships and a Spartan general were on their way. That general had
indeed given up the hope of being able to relieve Syracuse, which, from the
reports of Athenian success that had reached him, was thought to be past
helping; but he had sailed on to the coast of Italy with the aim of saving the Italiot cities. At Locri, Gylippus learned that Syracuse might still be saved, since
the northern wall was not yet completed. He immediately sailed to Himera and
collected a land force, supplied by Gela, Selinus, and Himera itself, and
marched overland to Syracuse. He ascended the hill of Epipolae by the same path on the north side which had been climbed by the Athenian army
when they seized the heights; and without meeting any opposition advanced along
the north bend of the hill to Tycha and entered the
city. Such was the result of the gross neglect of Nicias. If the wall had been
finished, the attempt of Gylippus would never have
been made; if Euryalus had been fortified, the attempt would probably have
failed.
Gylippus immediately undertook the command of the Syracusan army, and inspired
the inhabitants with new confidence. He was as unlike the typical Spartan as
Nicias was unlike the typical Athenian. He had all the energy and
resourcefulness of Brasidas, without that unique soldier’s attractive
personality. He set himself instantly to the work of the defence,
and his first exploit was the capture of the fort Labdalon.
But the great object was to prevent the Athenians from hemming in the city by
completing the northern section of their wall, and this could be done only by
building a new counter-wall. The Athenians themselves began to build
vigorously, and there was a race in wall-building between the two armies. As
the work went on, attacks were made on both sides with varying success. In the
end, the Syracusan builders prevailed; the Athenian wall was turned, and never
reached the northern coast. This was not enough for Gylippus.
His wall was continued to reach Euryalus, and four forts were erected on the
western part of the hill, so that Syracuse could now hinder help from reaching
the Athenians by the path by which Gylippus had
himself ascended. In the meantime Nicias had occupied Plemmyrion,
the headland which, facing the Island, forms the lower lip of the mouth of the
Great Harbour. Here he built three forts and
established a station for his ships; some of which were now dispatched to lie
in wait for the expected fleet from Corinth. The Syracusans made a sort of
answer to the occupation of Plemmyrion by sending a
force of cavalry to the fort of Polichna to guard the
southern coast of the Harbour. But, though the
Athenians commanded the south part of Epipolae and
the entrance to the Harbour, the Syracusan wall from Tycha to Euryalus had completely changed the aspect of the
situation for Syracuse from despair to reasonable hope.
The winter had now come and was occupied with
embassies and preparations. Gylippus spent it in
raising fresh forces in Sicily. Camarina, so long neutral, at length joined
Syracuse, who had in fact all Greek Sicily on her side, except her rival
Acragas, who persistently held aloof, and the towns of Naxos and Catane. Appeals of help were again sent to the
Peloponnesus. Corinth was still unremitting in her zeal; and Sparta had sent a
force of 600 hoplites—Neodamodes and Helots. Thebes and Thespiae also sent contingents.
We must go back for a moment to Old Greece. The
general war is being rekindled there, and the war in Sicily begins to lose the
character of a collateral episode and becomes merged in the larger conflict, in
which greater interests than those of Syracuse and Sicily are at stake. The
Spartans had come to the conclusion that they had been themselves the
wrong-doers in the earlier war, and the Athenian successes, especially the
capture of Pylos, had been a retribution which they deserved. But now the
Athenians had clearly committed a wrong in their aggression on Sicily, and
Sparta might with a good conscience go to war against her. The advice of
Alcibiades to fortify Decelea was adopted: a fort was built and provided with a
garrison under the command of king Agis. From Mt. Lycabettus at Athens one can see the height of Decelea through the gap between Pentelicus on the right and Parnes, of which Decelea is an
outlying hill, on the left. It was a good position for reaching all parts of
Attica, which could no longer be cultivated, and at the same time maintaining
easy communications with Boeotia.
But while the Peloponnesians were carrying the war
once more to the very gates of Athens, that city was called upon to send forth
a new expedition to the west on a scale similar to the first Nicias wrote home
a plain and unvarnished account of the situation. We are expressly told that he
adopted the unusual method of sending a written despatch instead of a verbal message; it was all-important that the Athenian Assembly
should learn the exact state of the case. He explained that, since the coming
of Gylippus and the increase of the numbers of the
garrison, and the building of the counter-wall, the besiegers had become
themselves besieged. They even feared an attack on their own element the sea,
and their ships had become leaky and the crews fallen out of practice. Further
successes of the enemy might cut off their supplies, now derived from the
cities of Italy. One of two things must be done: the enterprise must be
abandoned or a new armament, as strong as the first, must be sent out at once.
Nicias also begged for his own recall, on the ground of the disease from which
he suffered. The Athenian people repeated its previous recklessness by voting
a second expedition, and by refusing to supersede Nicias, in whom they had a
blind and touching trust. They appointed Eurymedon and Demosthenes as
commanders of the new armament.
Sect.
5. The Second Expedition , 413 B.C.
“The original interference of Athens in the local
affairs of Sicily, her appearance to defend Segesta against Selinus and the Leontines against Syracuse, has grown into a gigantic
struggle in which the greater part of the Hellenic nation is engaged. The elder
stage of the Peloponnesian War has begun again with the addition of a Sicilian
war on such a scale as had never been seen before. In that elder stage Sicilian
warfare had been a mere appendage to warfare in Old Greece. Now Sicily has
become the centre of the struggle, the headquarters
of both sides.”
For Sicily itself, the struggle was now becoming a
question of life and death, such as the Persian invasion had been for Greece.
Syracuse, under the guidance of Hermocrates and, Gylippus,
put forth all her energy to the organisation of a
fleet, and in the spring she had a navy numbering eighty triremes. The crews
were inexperienced, but they could remember that it was under the pressure of
the Persian danger that Athens herself had learned her sea skill. Gylippus determined to attack the Athenian station at Plemmyrion by land and sea. By sea the Syracusans were
defeated, but while the naval battle was being fought in the harbour, a land force under Gylippus had marched round to Plemmyrion and captured the
forts on the headland. The Athenian ships were thus forced back to their
station close to their double wall on the north of the Harbour,
of which the entrance was now commanded by the Syracusans. The Athenians were
thus besieged both by land and sea, and could not venture to send ships out of
the Harbour except in a number sufficient to resist
an attack. Presently the new Syracusan sea-power achieved the important success
of capturing off the Italian coast a treasure-fleet which was on its way from
Athens.
At length the news came that the great fleet under
Eurymedon and Demosthenes was on its way. It consisted of seventy-three
triremes; there were 5000 hoplites and immense numbers of lightarmed troops. The chance of Syracuse lay in attacking the dispirited forces of Nicias
before the help arrived, and it was obviously the game of Nicias—a congenial
game—to remain inactive. The Syracusans made a simultaneous assault on the
walls by land and on the naval station below the walls by sea. The land attack
was beaten off, but two days’ fighting by sea resulted in a distinct victory
for Syracuse. The Great Harbour was too small for the
Athenians to win the advantage of their superiority in seamanship, and their
ships were not adapted for the kind of sea-warfare which was possible in a
narrow space. The effective use of the long light beaks depended on the possibility
of manoeuvring. The Syracusans had shaped the beaks
of their vessels with a view to the narrow space, by making them short and
heavy. On the day after the victory, the fleet of Eurymedon and Demosthenes
sailed into the Great Harbour.
Demosthenes saw at once that all was over, unless the
Syracusan cross-wall were captured. An attempt to carry it from the south was
defeated, and the only alternative was to march round the west end of the hill
and ascend by the old path near Euryalus. It was a difficult enterprise,
guarded as the west part of Epipolae was by the
forts, as well as the wall, and by a picked body of 600 men who were constantly
keeping watch. A moonlight night was chosen for the t attempt The Athenians
were at first successful. One fort was taken and the six hundred under
Hermocrates himself were repelled. But when one part of their force received a
decisive check from the Thespians, the disorder spread to the rest, and they
fell back everywhere, driven down the hill on the top of their comrades who had
not yet reached the summit. Some, throwing away their shields, leapt from the
cliffs. About 2000 were slain.
These failures damped the spirits of the army, and
Demosthenes saw that no profit could be won by remaining any longer where they
were. The only wise course was to leave the unhealthy marsh, while they had
still command of the sea, and before the winter came. At Syracuse they were
merely wasting strength and money. But though Demosthenes had the sense of the
army and the sense of the other commanders with him, he could not persuade
Nicias to adopt this course. The same quality of nature which had made Nicias
oppose the counsel of Lamachus to attack Syracuse now
made him oppose the counsel of Demosthenes to leave Syracuse. Fear of
responsibility was the dominant note in the character of Nicias. He was afraid
of “Pulydamas and the Trojan women,” he was afraid of
the censure, perhaps the condemnation, of the Athenian Assembly. Nor would he
even accept the compromise of retiring to Catane and
carrying on the war on a new plan. Demosthenes and Eurymedon, being two to one,
should have insisted on instant departure, but they foolishly yielded to the
obstinacy of their senior colleague. In a few days, however, events overbore
the resolution of Nicias himself. Gylippus arrived at
Syracuse with new contingents he had collected in the islands; and
Peloponnesian and Boeotian succours, after a long
roundabout journey by way of Cyrene, at length reached the Great Harbour. Nicias gave way and everything was ready for
departure. But on the night on which they were to start, the enemy suspecting
nothing, the full moon suffered an eclipse. The superstitious army regarded the
phenomenon as a heavenly warning, and cried out for delay. Nicias was not less
superstitious than the sailors. Unluckily his best prophet, Stilbides,
was dead, and the other diviners ruled that he must wait either three days or
for the next full moon. There was perhaps a difference of opinion among the
seers, and Nicias decided to be on the safe side by waiting the longer period.
Never was a celestial phenomenon more truly disastrous than that lunar eclipse.
With the aid of Nicias, it sealed the doom of the Athenian army.
Religious rites occupied the next few days. But
meanwhile the Syracusans had learned of the Athenian intention to abandon the
siege; their confidence was raised by the implied confession of defeat; and
they resolved not to be content with having saved their city, but to destroy
the host of the enemy before it could escape. So they drew up their fleet,
seventy-six ships, in the Great Harbour for battle;
and eighty-six Athenian ships moved out to meet them. The Athenians were at a
disadvantage as before, having no room for manoeuvring;
and, centre, right, and left, they were defeated. The
general Eurymedon was slain. The left wing was driven back on the marshy
north-west shore of the harbour, between their own
wall and Dascon. A force under Gylippus endeavoured to advance along the swamp of Lysimelea and prevent the crews of their ships from
landing, but he was driven off by the Etruscan allies of Athens who had been
sent to guard the shore here. Then there was a battle for the ships, and the
Syracusans succeeded in dragging away eighteen.
The defeat completed the dejection of the Athenian
army; the victory crowned the confidence of their enemies. The one thought of
the Athenians was to escape,—the eclipse was totally forgotten; but Syracuse
was determined that escape should be made impossible. The mouth of the Great Harbour was barricaded by a line of ships and boats of all
kinds and sizes bound together by chains and connected by bridges. The fate of
the Athenians depended on their success in breaking through that barrier. They
abandoned their posts on the hill and went on board their ships. At this
critical moment Nicias revealed the best side of his character. He left nothing
undone that could hearten his troops. We are told that, after the usual speech,
still thinking, “as men do in the hour of great struggles, that he had not
done, that he had not said half enough,” he went round the fleet in a boat,
making a personal appeal to the trierarch of each ship. “He spoke to them, as
men will at such times, of their wives and children and the gods of their
country; for men do not care whether their word sound commonplace, but only
think that they may have some effect in the terrible moment.” The paean
sounded, and the Athenian lines sailed forth together across the bay to attack
the barrier. When they reached it, Syracusan vessels came out against them on
all sides. The Athenians were driven back into the middle of the harbour, and the battle resolved itself into an endless
number of separate conflicts. The battle was long and wavered. The walls of the
Island, the slopes of Achradina above, were crowded
with women and old men, the shores below with warriors, watching the course of
the struggle. Thucydides gives a famous description of the scene; one would
think that he had been an eyewitness. “The fortune of the battle varied, and it
was not possible that the spectators on the shore should all receive the same
impression of it. Being quite close and having different points of view, they
would some of them see their own ships victorious; their courage would then
revive, and they would earnestly call upon the gods not to take from them their
hope of deliverance. But others, who saw their ships worsted, cried and
shrieked aloud, and were by the sight alone more utterly unnerved than the
defeated combatants themselves. Others again who had fixed their gaze on some
part of the struggle which was undecided were in a state of excitement still
more terrible; they kept swaying their bodies to and fro in an agony of hope and fear, as the stubborn conflict went on and on; for at
every instant they were all but saved or all but lost And while the strife hung
in the balance, you might hear in the Athenian army at once lamentation,
shouting, cries of victory or defeat, and all the various sounds which are
wrung from a great host in extremity of danger.”3 Those motions of human
passion, suspense, agony, triumph, despair, which swayed to and fro, in the breasts of thousands, round and over the waters
of the Great Harbour on that September day, have been
lifted out of the tide of time and preserved for ever by the genius of
Thucydides.
In the end the Athenians gave way. They were driven
back to the shelter of their own wall, chased by the foe. The crews of the
remnant of the navy—which amounted to sixty ships—rushed on shore as best they
could. The land forces were in a panic; no such panic had ever been experienced
in an Athenian army. Thucydides compares the situation to that of the Spartans
at Sphacteria. The generals did not even think of
asking for the customary truce to bury the corpses which were strewn over the
waters of the bay. Demosthenes proposed that they should make another attempt
to pass the barrier at daybreak; their ships were even now rather more numerous
than those of the enemy; but the men positively refused to embark. Nothing
remained but to escape by land. If they had started at once, they would
probably have succeeded in reaching shelter at Catane or inland among the friendly Sicels. But Hermocrates
contrived a stratagem to delay their departure, so as to give him time to
block the roads. Taking advantage of the known fact that there were persons in
Syracuse who intrigued with the besiegers, he sent some horsemen who rode up
within earshot of the Athenian camp, and feigning to be friends stated that the
roads were guarded and that it would be well to wait and set out better
prepared. The message was believed. The Athenians remained the next day, and
the Syracusans blocked the roads.
In his picture of the sad start of the Athenians on
their forlorn retreat, Thucydides outdoes his wonderful powers of description.
They had to tear themselves away from the prayers of their sick and wounded
comrades, who were left to the mercy of the enemy. They could hardly make up
their minds to go. The bit of hostile soil under the shelter of their walls had
come to seem to them like their home. Nicias, notwithstanding his illness, rose
to this supreme occasion as he had never risen to another. He tried to cheer
and animate the miserable host—whose wretched plight was indeed of his own
making—by words of hope. They set forth, Nicias leading the van, Demosthenes
the rear, along the western road which crosses the Anapus and passes the modern village of Floridia. The aim was to reach Sicel territory
first, and then get to Catane as they could; for it
would have been madness to attempt the straight road to Catane round the west of Epipolae under the Syracusan forts.
The chief difficulty in their way was a high point called the Acraean cliff, approached by a rugged pass, which begins
near Floridia. It was not till the fourth day that, having toiled along the
pass under constant annoyance from darters and horsemen, they came in sight of
the cliff, and found that the way was barred by a wall, with a garrison of
Syracusan hoplites behind it. To attempt to pass was impossible; they retreated
on Floridia in a heavy thunderstorm. They now moved southwards, and abandoning
the idea of reaching the Sicel hill-land from this point, marched to the Helorine road, which would take them in the direction of
Gela. During the sixth day’s march a sort of panic seems to have fallen on the
rear of the army under Demosthenes; the men lagged far behind and the army was
parted in two. Nicias advanced with his division as speedily as he could. There
were several streams to cross, and it was all-important to press on before the
Syracusans had time to block the passages by walls and palisades. The Helorine road approaches the shore near the point where the
river Kakyparis flows into the sea. When they reached
the ford, the Athenians found a Syracusan band on the other side raising a
fortification. They drove the enemy away without much difficulty and marched as
far as the river Erineos, where they encamped for the
night. On the next morning a Syracusan herald drew near. He had news to tell.
The rear of the army had been surrounded the day before, in the olive garden of Polyzalus, through which the Helorine road passed, and had been forced to surrender. The lives of the 6000 men were
to be spared. Demosthenes did not condescend to make terms for himself, and
when the capitulation had been arranged he sought death by his own hand, but
the enemy, who desired to secure a captive general, intercepted the stroke.
Having sent a messenger, under a truce, to assure himself of the truth of the
tale, Nicias offered terms to the Syracusans—that the rest of the army should
be allowed to go free on condition that Athens should repay the costs of the
war, the security being a hostage for every talent. The terms were at once
rejected. The Syracusans were bent on achieving the glory of leadering the whole army captive. For that day the
miserable army remained where it was, worn out with want of food. Next morning
they resumed the march and, harassed by the darts of the enemy, made their way
to the stream of the Assinaros. Here they found a
hostile force on the opposite steep bank. But they cared little for the foe,
for they were consumed with intolerable thirst. They rushed down into the bed
of the river, struggling with one another to reach the water. The Syracusans
who were pursuing came down the banks and slaughtered them unresisting as they
drank. The water was soon foul, but muddy and dyed with blood as it was, they
drank notwithstanding and fought for it.
At last Nicias surrendered. He surrendered to Gylippus, for he had more trust in him than in the
Syracusans. The slaughter, which was as great as any that had been wrought in
the war, was then stayed and the survivors were made prisoners. It seems that a
great many of the captives were appropriated for their own use by the into the
stone-quarries of Achradina—deep, unroofed dungeons,
open t0 the chills of night and the burning heat of the day—on a miserable
allowance of food and water. The allies of the Athenians were kept in this
misery for seventy days; the Athenians themselves were doomed to endure the
torture for six months longer, throughout the whole winter. Such was the
vengeance which Syracuse wreaked upon her invaders. The prisoners who survived
the ordeal were put to work in the public prison or sold. Some were rescued by
young men who were attracted by their manners. Others owed mitigation of their
lot, even freedom, to the power which an Athenian poet exercised over the
hearts of men, in Sicily as well as in his own city. Slaves who knew speeches
and choruses of the plays of Euripides by heart, and could recite them well,
found favour in the sight of their masters; and we
hear of those who, after many days, returned to their Athenian homes and
thanked the poet for their deliverance.
Some mystery has hung round the fate of the two
generals, Demosthenes and Nicias, but there is no doubt that they were put to
death without mercy, and some reason to suppose that they were not spared the
pain of torture. Hermocrates and Gylippus would have
wished to save them, but were powerless in face of the intense feeling of fury
against Athens which animated Syracuse in the hour of her triumph. If a man’s
punishment should be proportionate not to his intentions but to the positive
sum of mischief which his conduct has caused, no measure of punishment would
have been too great for the deserts of Nicias. His incompetence, his incredible
bungling, mined the expedition and led to the downfall of Athens. But the
blunders of Nicias were merely the revelation of his own nature, and for his
own nature he could hardly be held accountable. The whole blame rests with the
Athenian people, who insisted on his playing a part for which he was utterly
unsuited. It has already been observed that one dominant note of the character
of Nicias was fear of responsibility. Throughout the whole war there was no
post which so absolutely demanded the power of undertaking full responsibility
as that of chief commander in this great and distant expedition. And yet Nicias
was chosen. The selection shows that he was popular as well as respected. He
was popular with his army, and he seems to have been hardly a sufficiently
strict disciplinarian. It has been well said that in the camp he never forgot
that the soldiers whom he commanded had votes in the Ecclesia which they might
use against himself when they returned to Athens. Timid as a general, timid as
a statesman, hampered by superstition, the decorous Nicias was a brave soldier
and an amiable man, whose honourable qualities were
the means of leading him into a false position. If he had been less scrupulous
and devout, and had been endowed with better brains, he would not have mined
his country. “Given the men a people chooses,” it has been said, “the people
itself, in its exact worth and worthlessness, is given.” In estimating the
character of the Athenian people, we must not forget their choice of this hero
of conscientious indecision.
So deep is the pity which the tragic fate of the
Athenians excites in us that we almost forget to sympathise with the sons of Syracuse in the joy of their deliverance. Yet they deserve our
sympathy; they had passed through a sore trial, and they had destroyed the
powerful invader who had come to rob them of their freedom. To celebrate the
anniversaries of their terrible victory they instituted games which they called Assinarian, after the river which had witnessed the
last scene. In connexion with these games, some
beautiful coins were struck. Perhaps there is nothing which enlists our
affections for Syracuse so much as her coins. And it was at this very period
that she brought the art of engraving coin-dies to perfection. Never in any
country, in any age of the world, was the art of engraving on metal practised with such high inspiration and such consummate
skill as in Sicily. No holy place in Hellas possessed diviner faces in bronze
or marble than the faces which the Sicilian cities circulated on their silver
money. The greatest of the Sicilian artists were Syracusan, and among the
greatest of the Syracusan were Evaenetus and Cimon.
The die-engraver’s achievements may seem small, compared with the life-size or
colossal works of a sculptor, yet, as creators of the beautiful, Evaenetus and his fellows may claim to stand in the same
rank as Phidias. Their heads of Persephone and of the water-nymph Arethusa
encircled by dolphins, their wonderful four-horsed chariots, seem to invest
Syracuse with a glory issues to which she hardly attained. In the years after
the defeat of Athens there were several issues of large ten-drachm medallions
modelled on those “Damaratean” coins which had
commemorated Gelon’s victory at Himera. The engraving of these was committed to
Cimon and Evaenetus and a nameless artist—perhaps a
greater than either—of whom a single medallion, an exquisite Persephone crowned
with barley, has been found on the slopes of Aetna.
Sect.
6. Consequences of the Sicilian Catastrophe
The Sicilian expedition was part of the general
aggressive policy of Athens which made her unpopular in Greece. Unjust that
policy was; but this enterprise was not more flagrantly unrighteous than some
of her other undertakings, and it had the plausible enough pretext of
protecting the weaker cities in the west against the stronger. More fruitful is
the question whether the expedition was expedient from a purely political point
of view. It is often said that it was a wild venture, an instance of a whole
people going mad, like the English people in the matter of the Crimean War. It
is hard to see how this view can be maintained. If there were ever an
enterprise of which the wisdom cannot be judged by the result, it is the
enterprise against Syracuse. All the chances were in its favour.
If the advice of Lamachus had been taken and Syracuse
attacked at once, there cannot be much doubt that Syracuse would have fallen at
the outset. If Nicias had not let precious time pass and delayed the completion
of the wall to the northern cliff of Epipolae, the
doom of the city was sealed, Gylippus could never
have entered. The failure was due to nothing in the character of the enterprise
itself, but entirely to the initial mistake in the appointment of the general.
And it was quite in the nature of things that the Athenian sea-power,
predominant in the east, should seek further expansion in the west. An
energetic establishment of Athenian influence in that region was recommended by
the political situation. It must be remembered that the most serious and
abiding hostility with which Athens had to reckon was the commercial rivalry of
Corinth; and the close alliance of Corinth with her Dorian daughters and
friends in the west was a strong and adequate motive for Athenian intervention.
The necessity of a counterweight to Corinthian influence in Sicily and Italy
had long ago been recognised; some attempts had been
made to meet it; and when peace with Sparta set Athenian forces free from
service outside Greece and the Aegean, it was natural that the opportunity
should be taken to act effectively in the west.
The infatuation of the Athenian people was show not in
willing Cause of the expedition, but in committing it to Nicias—instead of
Demosthenes, who was clearly marked out for the task—and then in recalling
Alcibiades. These blunders seemed to point to something wrong in the
constitution or its working. They did in fact show that an expedition of that
kind was liable to be mismanaged when any of the arrangements connected with
its execution depended on a popular assembly, or might be interfered with for party
purposes.
And after the disaster of the Assinaros there was a feeling that some change must be made in the administration. Athens
was hard pressed by the Lacedaemonian post at Decelea, which stopped
cultivation and became a refuge for deserting slaves. Of these slaves, who
numbered about 2000, we can hardly doubt that many belonged to the gangs which
worked in the mines of Laurion. In any case, one of the most disastrous effect
of the seizure of Decelea was the closing of the mines; since even southern
Attica was at the mercy of the Lacedaemonians. Thus one of the chief sources of
Athenian revenue was cut off; she was robbed of her supply of “Laureot owls”; and in a few years we find her melting gold
dedicatory offerings to make gold coins, and even coining in copper. The mines
of Laurion were not to be opened again till three-quarters of a century had
passed.
Thus the treasury was at a low ebb, and there were no
men to replace those who were lost in Sicily. It was felt that the committees
of the Council of Five Hundred were hardly competent to conduct the city
through such a crisis; a smaller and more permanent body was required; and the
chief direction of affairs was entrusted to a board of Ten, named Probuli, which practically superseded
the Council for the time being.
A very important change in the system of taxation was
made at the same time. The tribute, already as high as it could be put with
impunity, was abolished; and was replaced by a tax of 5 per cent on all imports
and exports carried by sea to or from the harbours of
the Confederacy. It was calculated that this duty would produce a larger income
than the tribute, and it would save the friction which generally occurred in
the business of collecting the tribute and caused more than anything else the
unpopularity of Athens. But further, the change had a great political
significance. The duty was collected in the Piraeus as well as elsewhere, and
thus fell on Athens herself. This might prove a step towards equalising Athens with her allies, and converting the
Confederacy or dominion into a national state.
The financial pressure was shown by the dismissal of a
body of Thracian mercenaries who had arrived too late to sail to Sicily. They
returned home under the conduct of Diitrephes, who
was instructed to employ them, on the road, in any way he could against the
enemy. Sailing northward between Euboea and the mainland, they disembarked on
the coast of Boeotia, and reaching the small town of Mycalessus at daybreak, captured it. “Nothing was ever so unexpected and terrible.” The
Thracians showed their barbarity in massacring all the inhabitants,—nay, every
living thing they saw. They broke into a boys’ school and killed all the
children.
Reforms did not avert the dangers which threatened
Athens. The tidings of the great calamity which had befallen the flower of her
youth in Sicily moved Hellas from end to end. The one thought of enemies,
neutrals and subjects alike, was to seize the opportunity of shattering the
power of Athens irretrievably. Messages came from some of the chief allies,
from Euboea, from Lesbos, from Chios, to Agis at Decelea, to the ephors at
Sparta, declaring that they were ready to revolt, if a Peloponnesian fleet appeared
off their coasts. A fleet was clearly necessary to do the work that was to be
done; a naval policy was forced upon Sparta by the case. It was decided that a
hundred ships should be equipped, of which half, in equal shares, were to be
supplied by Sparta and Boeotia. Athens also spent the winter in building
triremes, and fortified Cape Sunium to protect the
arrival of her corn-ships.
King Agis while he was at Decelea possessed the right
of sending troops wherever he chose. He received the overtures from Euboea and
Lesbos and promised assistance. But Spartan interference in these islands was
deferred owing to the more pressing demands of Chios, which were addressed
directly to Sparta and were backed by the support of a great power, whose voice
for many years had not been heard in the sphere of the politics of Hellas.
Persia now enters once more upon the stage of Greek history, aiming at the
recovery of the coast cities of Asia Minor, and for this purpose playing off
one Greek power against another. The Sicilian disaster suggested to
Tissaphernes, the satrap of Sardis, and to Pharnabazus, the satrap of
Hellespontine Phrygia, that it was the moment to wrest from Athens her Asiatic
dominions. This must be done by stirring up revolt and by a close alliance with
Sparta. Each satrap was anxious to secure for himself the credit of having
brought about such a profitable alliance, and each independently sent envoys to
Lacedaemon, Pharnabazus urging action in the Hellespont, Tissaphernes
supporting the appeal of Chios. The Chian demand, which had the powerful
advocacy of Alcibiades, carried the day.
In the following summer the rebellion against Athens
actively began. The appearance of a few Spartan ships was the signal for the
formal revolt of Chios, and then in conjunction with the Chian fleet they
excited Miletus, Teos, Lebedus to follow in the same
path. Methymna and Mytilene lost little time in joining the movement and were
followed by Cyme and Phocaea. The Athenian historian has words of commendation
for the city which played the chief part in this rebellion. “No people,” says
Thucydides, “as far as I know, except the Chians and Lacedaemonians (but the
Chians not equally with the Lacedaemonians), have preserved moderation in
prosperity, and in proportion as their city has gained in power have gained
also in the stability of their government. In this revolt they may seem to have
shown a want of prudence, yet they did not venture upon it until many brave
allies were ready to share the peril with them, and until the Athenians
themselves seemed to confess that after their calamity in Sicily the state of
their affairs was hopelessly bad. And, if they were deceived through the
uncertainty of human things, the error of judgment was common to many who, like
them, believed that the Athenian power would speedily be overthrown.”
This successful beginning led to the Treaty of Miletus
between Sparta and Persia. In the hope of humbling to the dust her detested
rival, the city of Leonidas now sold to the barbarian the freedom of her
fellow-Greeks of Asia. The Persian claim was that Athens had usurped the rights
of the Great King for well-nigh seventy years over the Asiatic cities, and that
arrears of tribute were owing to him for all that time. Sparta recognised the right of the Great King to all the dominion
which belonged to him and his forefathers, and he undertook to supply the pay
for the seamen of the Peloponnesian fleet operating on the Asiatic coast, while
the war with Athens lasted. It may be said for Sparta that she merely wanted to
get the money at the time, and had no intention of honourably carrying out her dishonourable undertaking, but hoped
to rescues in the end. But the treaty of Miletus opened up a new path in Greek
politics, which was to lead the Persian king to the position of arbiter of
Hellas.
Meanwhile Athens had not been idle. Straitened by want
of money, she had been forced to pass a measure to touch the reserve fund of
1000 talents. She blockaded a Corinthian fleet, destined for Chios, on the Argolic coast; she laid Chios itself waste, and blockaded
the town; she won back Lesbos, and gained some successes. But Cnidus rebelled;
the Peloponnesians gained an advantage in a naval engagement at the small
island of Syme, and this was followed by the revolt of Rhodes. Thus by the
spring of the next year the situation was that Athens had her northern and
Hellespontine confederacy intact, but that on the western coast of Asia little
of importance remained to her but Lesbos, Samos, Cos, and Halicarnassus. She
was confronted by a formidable Peloponnesian fleet, supported by Persia and by
a considerable reinforcement from Sicily—twenty-two vessels under Hermocrates,
the return of Syracuse for her deliverance.
It could not be said indeed that all things had gone
smoothly between Persia and Lacedaemon. Differences had arisen as to the amount
of the subsidies, and a new treaty was concluded in which the rights of the
king were less distinctly formulated. In the meantime Alcibiades had been
cultivating the friendship of Tissaphernes at Miletus, and had on that account
become an object of suspicion at Sparta. He had a bitter enemy in king Agis,
whose wife he had seduced. Seeing that his life was in danger, he had left
Miletus and gone to the court of the satrap, where he began a new series of
machinations with a view to his own return to Athens. Indeed his work at Sparta
had now been done, and political changes which were in the air at Athens
invited the formation of new schemes. The man who had done much to bring about
the alliance of Tissaphernes with Sparta now set himself to dissolve that union
and bring about an understanding between the satrap and Athens. It was a matter
of supreme moment to Athens to break the formidable union of Persia with her
enemies, and the accomplishment of this service would go far to restore
Alcibiades to his country.
Sect.
7. The Oligarchic Revolution
At Athens in these months there was distress, fear,
and discontent. How deeply the people felt the pressure of the long war is
uttered in the comedy of Lysistrate or “Dame Disbander” which the poet Aristophanes
brought out at this crisis. The heroine unites all the women of the belligerent
cities of Greece into a league to force the men to make peace. Under the
ribald humour there pierces here and there a note of
pathos not to be found in the poet’s earlier peace plays, the Acharnians and
the Peace. War is not a time for
marrying and giving in marriage. “Never mind us married women,” says
Lysistrate; “it is the thought of the maidens growing old at home that goes to
my heart.” “Do not men grow old too?” asks a Probulos who argues with her. “Ah, but it is not the same thing. A man, though his hair
be gray, can soon pick up a young girl; but a woman’s season is short, and, if
she miss her chance then, no one will marry her.”
But the fear of Persia was the shadow which brooded
darkest over Athens at this time, and there was also a lurking suspicion of
treachery, a dread that the oligarchical party were planning a revolution or
even intriguing with the enemy at Decelea. Two months after the Lysistrate, at
the great feast of Dionysus, Aristophanes brought out a play whose plot had
nothing to do with politics—the “Celebrants of the Thesmophoria.” But the fears
that were in the hearts of many were echoed by the poet, when his chorus called
upon Athena, “the sole keeper of our city,” to as the hater of tyrants.
Lovers of the democracy might well pray to the
guardian lady of the city. The opportunity for which the oligarchs had waited
so long had come at last. For outside their own ranks there was a large section
of influential men who were dissatisfied with the existing forms of government
and, though opposed to oligarchy, desired a modification of the constitution.
There was a fair show of reason for arguing that the foreign policy had been
mismanaged by the democracy, and that men of education and knowledge had not a
sufficient influence on the conduct of affairs. The chief of those who desired
to see the establishment of a moderate polity—neither an extreme democracy nor
an oligarchy, but partaking of both—was Theramenes, whose father Hagnon was one
of the Probuli. The watchword of Theramenes and his party was “the old
constitution of our fathers.” By this they meant not the constitution of Solon,
but the constitution before Solon. They interpreted the whole history of Athens
in accordance with their political views. They condemned Solon as the author of
democracy, the first of a long line of mischievous demagogues; they made out
that the Areopagus, and not Themistocles, was the hero of Salamis; they branded
Aristides, founder of the Delian confederacy, for organising a system which fed 20,000 idlers on the allied cities; they represented
Pericles as a man of no ideas of his own, but depending upon others to prompt
him. After two centuries of evil government, the Athenians must go back to the
times before Solon and revive in some new form the constitution of Dracon. This
“constitution of Dracon,” of which the chief feature was a Council of Four
Hundred, had never existed; it was fathered upon Dracon by Theramenes and his
friends.
The extreme oligarchs, though the ideal of Theramenes
was not theirs, were ready in the first instance to act in concert with the
moderate party for the purpose of upsetting the democracy. The soul of the plot
was Antiphon of Rhamnus, an eloquent orator and advocate, who had made his mark
in the days of Cleon. He was unpopular, on account of his undisguised
oligarchical views; the historian Thucydides describes him as “a man who in
virtue fell short of none of his contemporaries”; and by virtue is meant disinterested
and able devotion to his party. Other active conspirators were Pisander, who had been in old days a partisan of Cleon, and
Phrynichus, who was one of the commanders of the fleet stationed at Samos. The
prospects of the movement were good; it was favoured by the Probuli and by most of the officers of the fleet. Moreover, the
Athenians—as they had shown already by the appointment of the Probuli—were in a
temper, with the fear of Persia before their eyes, to sacrifice their
constitution if such a sacrifice would save the city. Alcibiadcs had entered into negotiations with the officers at Samos, promising to secure
an alliance with Tissaphernes, but representing the abolition of democracy as a
necessary condition. Most of the oligarchical conspirators were pleased with
the scheme, and even the army was seduced by the idea of receiving pay from the
Great King. Some indeed of the more sagacious thought they saw through the
designs of Alcibiades; and Phrynichus, who aspired himself to be the leader of
the revolution, detected a rival and tried by various intrigues to thwart him.
Alcibiades was certainly no friend of oligarchy; but it was his policy in any
case to upset the existing democracy, which would never recall him. If an
oligarchy were established, he might intervene to restore the democracy, and in
return for such a service all would be forgiven. But he would have to be guided
by events.
Pisander was sent to Athens to prepare the way for the return of Alcibiades and
a modification of the democracy. The people were at first indignant at the
proposals to change the constitution, and recall the renegade; the Eumolpidae
denounced the notion of having any dealings with the profaner of the Mysteries.
But the cogent argument that the safety of Athens depended on separating Persia
from the Peloponnesians, and that this could be managed only by Alcibiades, and
that the Great King would not trust Athens so long as she was governed by a
popular constitution, had its effect; and there was moreover powerful but
secret influence at work through the Hetaeriae or political clubs. It was voted
that Pisander and other envoys should be sent to
negotiate a treaty with Tissaphernes and arrange matters with Alcibiades.
It appeared at once that Alcibiades had promised more
than he could perform. There had indeed been a serious rupture between
Tissaphernes and Sparta. Lichas, a Spartan
commissioner who conferred with the satrap, denounced the terms of the
treaties. He pointed out the monstrous consequences of the clause which
assigned to the king power over all the countries which his ancestors had held;
for this would involve Persian dominion over Thessaly and other lands of
northern Greece. On such terms, he said, we will not have our fleet paid, and
he asked for a new treaty. Tissaphernes departed in anger. But when it came to
a question of union with Athens, Tissaphernes showed that he did not wish to
break with the Peloponnesians. He proposed impossible conditions to the
Athenian envoys, and then made a new treaty with the Spartans, modifying the
clause to which Lichas objected. The territory which
the Spartans recognised as Persian was now expressly
confined to Asia.
But though the reasons for a revolution, so far as
they concerned Tissaphernes and Alcibiades, seemed thus to be removed, the
preparations had advanced so far that the result of the mission of Pisander produced no effect on the course of events. The
conspirators did not scruple to use menaces and even violence; Androcles, a
strong democrat, who had been prominent in procuring the condemnation of
Alcibiades, was murdered. Some others of less note were made away with in like
manner; and there was a general feeling of fear and mistrust in the city. But
there was a widespread conviction that the existence of Athens was at stake and
that some change in the constitution was inevitable. The news that Abydus and Lampsacus had revolted may have hastened the
final act. The revolution was peaceably effected through the co-operation of
the Ten Probuli. A decree was passed that the Probuli and twenty others chosen
by the people should form a commission of thirty who should jointly devise
proposals for the safety of the state and lay them before the Assembly on a
fixed day. When the day came, the Assembly met at the temple of Poseidon at
Colonus, about a mile from the town. After preliminary measures to secure
impunity for a proposal involving a subversion of existing laws, a radical
change was brought forward and carried. The sovereign Assembly was to consist
in future not of the whole people, but of a body of about Five Thousand, those
who were strongest physically and financially. A hundred men were to be chosen,
ten by each tribe, for the purpose of electing and enrolling the Five Thousand.
Pay for almost all public offices was to be abolished. To these revolutionary
measures a saving clause was attached; they were to remain in force “as long as
the war lasts”; and thus the people was more easily induced to pass them.
But this was only preliminary; a constitution had
still to be framed. When the Five Thousand were elected, they chose a
commission of one hundred men to draw up a constitution. The scheme which they
framed is highly remarkable as a criticism on certain defects in the
constitution which was now to be overthrown. The body of Five Thousand were not
to act as an Assembly; there was in fact to be no Assembly. The Five Thousand
were to be divided into four parts, and each part was to act as Council for a
year in turn. The Council would elect the higher magistrates from its own
number. Thus the difficulties of administration which arose in the double
system, where the Council’s action was hampered by the Assembly, would be done
away with; and the inclusion of the generals and magistrates in the Council was
a necessary consequence. Under the democracy, the holders of office could
influence the Assembly against the Council; under the new scheme there would be
no room for such collisions.
One fatal defect in this scheme was the size of the
administrative body, and if it had been tried we may be sure that it would not
have worked. But it was never tried. It passed the Assembly as a scheme to come
into force in the future; but in the meantime a further proposal of the Hundred
commissioners enacted that the state should be administered by a Council of
Four Hundred, in which each of the ten tribes was to be represented by forty
members. It would seem, but it is not quite certain, that the election of the
Council was managed in the following way. The Assembly which created it chose
five men under the title of presidents, who were empowered to nominate one
hundred councillors, and each of these councillors co-opted three others; but both the presidents
in their nomination and the one hundred councillors in their co-option were limited to a number of candidates who were previously
chosen by the tribes. The Four Hundred were instituted as merely a provisional
government, but the entire administration was placed in their hands, the
management of the finances, and the appointment of the magistrates. The Five
Thousand were to meet only when summoned by the Four Hundred, so that the
Assembly ceased to have any significance, and the provisional constitution was
an unadulterated oligarchy. The Council of Four Hundred was proclaimed to be a
revival of the imaginary constitution of Dracon, under which Athens flourished
before demagogues led her into evil paths; but the whole fabric of Cleisthenes,
the ten tribes and the demes, was retained. The existing Council of Five
Hundred went out of office before the end of the civil year, and seven days
later the administration of the Four Hundred began. Throughout these
transactions intimidation was freely used by the conspirators, and we are told
that they went with hidden daggers into the council-chamber Thargelion and forced the Five Hundred to retire. Thucydides admires the ability of the
men who carried out this revolution. “An easy thing it certainly was not, one
hundred years after the fall of the tyrants, to destroy the liberties of the
Athenian people, who were not only a enter on free, but during more than
one-half of this time had been an imperial people.”
It may be asked why a provisional government was
introduced, instead of proceeding at once to the establishment of the permanent
constitution which the Hundred commissioners had framed. Here we touch upon the
inwardness of the political situation: the two constitutions betray the double
influence at work in the revolution. The establishment of the Four Hundred was
a concession made to Antiphon and the oligarchs by Theramenes and the
moderates, who regarded it as only preliminary; while the oligarchs hoped to
render it permanent.
Sect.
8. Fall of the Four Hundred. The Polity. The Democracy Restored
For more than three months the Four Hundred governed
the city with a high hand, and then they were overthrown. Their success had
been largely due to the absence of so many of the most democratic citizens in
the fleet at Samos; and it was through the attitude of the fleet that their
fall was brought about. The sailors rose against the oligarchic officers and
the oligarchs of Samos, who were conspiring against the popular party and had
murdered the exile Hyperbolus. The chief leaders of this reaction were Thrasybulus
and Thrasyllus, who persuaded the soldiers and sailors to proclaim formally
their adhesion to the democracy and their hostility to the Four Hundred. The
Assembly, which had been abolished at Athens, was called into being at Samos,
and the army, representing the Athenian people, deposed the Generals and
elected others. The Athenians at Samos felt that they were in as good a
position as the Athenians at Athens, and they hoped still to obtain the
alliance of Persia, through the good offices of Alcibiades, whose recall and
pardon were formally voted. Thrasybulus fetched Alcibiades to Samos, and he was
elected a General. The hoped-for alliance with Persia was not effected, but it
was at least something that Tissaphernes did not use the large Phoenician fleet
which he had at Aspendus against the Athenians, and
that his relations with the Peloponnesians were becoming daily worse. He went
to Aspendus, but he never brought the ships, and it
was a matter of speculation what the object of his journey was. Thucydides
records his own belief that Tissaphernes “wanted to wear out and to neutralise the Hellenic forces; his object was to damage
them both, while he was losing time in going to Aspendus,
and to paralyse their action and not strengthen
either of them by his alliance. For if he had chosen to finish the war,
finished it might have been once for all, as any one may see.” The Athenians at
Samos now proposed to sail straight to Athens and destroy the Four Hundred. The
proposal shows how much the fleet despised the Peloponnesian navy, which, under
its incompetent admiral Astyochus, had been spending the summer in doing
nothing. But to leave Samos would have been madness, and Alcibiades saved them
from the blunder of sacrificing Ionia and the Hellespont. Negotiations were
begun with the oligarchs at Athens, and Alcibiades expressed himself satisfied
with the Assembly of Five Thousand, but insisted that the Four Hundred should
be abolished.
As a matter of fact the overtures from Samos were
welcome to the majority of the Four Hundred, who were dissatisfied with their
colleagues and their own position. The nature of an oligarchy which supplants a
democracy was beginning to show itself. “The instant an oligarchy is
established,” says Thucydides, “the promoters of it disdain mere equality, and
everybody thinks that he ought to be far above everybody else. Whereas in a
democracy, when an election is made, a man is less disappointed at a failure
because he has not been competing with his equals.” Moreover, the Four Hundred
were at first professedly established as merely a temporary government,
preliminary to the establishment of a polity which would be less an oligarchy
than a qualified democracy. Such a polity was the ideal of Theramenes, and he
was impatient to constitute it. Thus there was a cleavage in the Four Hundred,
the extreme oligarchs on one side, led by Antiphon and Phrynichus, the moderate
reformers on the other, led by Theramenes. While the moderates had the support
of the army at Samos behind them, the extreme party looked to the enemy for
support and sent envoys to Sparta for the purpose of concluding a peace. In the
meantime they fortified Eetionea, the mole which
formed the northern side of the entrance to the Great Harbour of Piraeus. The object was to command the entrance so as to be able either to
admit the Lacedaemonians or to exclude the fleet of Samos.
When the envoys returned from Sparta without having
made Movement terms, and when a Peloponnesian squadron was seen in the Saronic
against the gulf, the movement against the oligarchs took shape. Phrynichus was
slain by foreign assassins in the market-place. The soldiers who were employed
in building the fort at Eetionea were instigated by
Theramenes to declare against the oligarchy, and, after a great tumult at the
Piraeus, the walls of the fort were pulled down, to the cry of “Whoever wishes
the Five Thousand, and not the Four Hundred, to rule, let him come and help.”
Nobody in the crowd really knew whether the Five Thousand existed as an
actually constituted body or not. When the fort was demolished, an Assembly was
held in the theatre on the slope of Munychia; the
agitation subsided, and peaceable negotiations with the Four Hundred ensued. A
day was fixed for an Assembly in the theatre of Dionysus, to discuss a
settlement on the basis of the constitution of the Five Thousand. But on the
very day, just as the Assembly was about to meet, the appearance of a
Lacedaemonian squadron, which had been hovering about, off the coast of
Salamis, produced a temporary panic and a general rush to the Piraeus. It was
only a fright, so far as the Piraeus was concerned, but there were other
serious dangers ahead, as everyone saw. The safety of Euboea was threatened,
and the Athenians depended entirely on Euboea, now that they had lost Attica.
The Lacedaemonian fleet—forty-two ships under Agesandridas—doubled Sunium and sailed to Oropus. The Athenians sent thirty-six
ships under Thymochares to Eretria, where they were forced to fight at once and
were utterly defeated. All Euboea then revolted, except Oreus in the north, of which was a settlement of Athenian cleruchs.
At no moment perhaps—since the Persian War—was the
situation at Athens so alarming. She had no reserve of ships, the army at Samos
was hostile, Euboea, from which she derived her supplies, was lost, and there
was feud and sedition in the city. It was a moment which might have inspired
the Lacedaemonians to operate with a little vigour both by land and sea. Athens could not have resisted a combined attack of Agis
from Decelea and Agesandridas at the Piraeus. But the Lacedaemonians were, as
Thucydides observes, very convenient enemies, and they let the opportunity
slip. The battle of Eretria struck, however, the hour of doom for the
oligarchs. An Assembly in the Pnyx deposed the Four Hundred, and voted that the
government should be placed in the hands of a body consisting of all who could
furnish themselves with arms, which body established should be called the Five
Thousand. Legislators (nomothetae)
were appointed to draw up the details of the constitution, and all pay for
offices was abolished. Most of the oligarchs escaped to Decelea, and one of
them betrayed the fort of Oenoe on the frontier of Boeotia to the enemy.
Two—Antiphon and Archeptolemus—were executed.
The chief promoter of the new constitution was
Theramenes. It was a constitution such as he had conceived from the beginning,
though apparently not actually the same as that which had been proposed by the
Hundred commissioners. Thucydides praises it as a constitution in which the
rule of the many and the rule of the few were fairly tempered. It was the realisation of the ultimate intentions of most of those who
had promoted the original resolution. It is certain that Theramenes, from the
very beginning, desired to organise a polity, with
democracy and oligarchy duly mixed; his acquiescence in a temporary oligarchy
was a mere matter of necessity; and the nickname of Cothurnus—the loose buskin that fits either foot—given to him by
the oligarchs was not deserved.
In the meantime the supine Spartan admiral Astyochus
had been superseded by Mindarus, and the
Peloponnesian fleet, invited by Battle of Pharnabazus, sailed for the
Hellespont. The Athenian fleet under Thrasybulus and Thrasyllus followed, and
forced them to fight in the straits. The Athenians, with seventy-six
ships, were extended along the shore of the Chersonese, and the object of the
Peloponnesians, who had ten more ships, was to outflank and so prevent the
enemy from sailing out of the straits, and at the same time to press their centre in upon the land. The Athenians, to thwart this
intention, extended their own right wing, and in doing so weakened the whole
line. The Peloponnesians were victorious on the centre,
but Thrasybulus, who was on the right wing, took advantage of their disorder in
the moment of victory and threw them into panic. The engagement on the Athenian
left was round the Cape of Cynossema, out of sight of
the rest of the battle, and resulted after hard fighting in the repulse of the
Peloponnesians. This victory heartened the Athenians; it was followed
immediately by the recovery of Cyzicus, which had revolted. Mindarus had to send for the squadron which lay in the waters of Euboea; but only a
remnant reached him : the rest of the ships were lost in a storm off Mt. Athos.
Another Athenian success at Abydus closed the
military operations of the year. Tissaphernes was ill satisfied with the
success of Athens, and when Alcibiades paid him a visit at Sardis during the
winter, he arrested him. But Alcibiades made his escape.
The Peloponnesians were now vigorously supported by
Pharnabazus, who was a far more valuable and trustworthy ally than
Tissaphernes. In the spring Mindarus laid siege to
Cyzicus, and B the satrap supported him with an army. The Athenian fleet of
eighty-six ships succeeded in passing the Hellespont unseen, and in three
divisions, under Alcibiades, Theramenes, and Thrasybulus, took Mindarus by surprise. After a hard-fought battle both by
land and sea, the Athenians were entirely victorious, Mindarus was slain, and about sixty triremes were taken or sunk. This annihilated the
Peloponnesian navy. A laconic despatch, announcing
the defeat to the Spartan ephors, was intercepted by the Athenians: “Our
success is over; Mindarus is slain; the men are
starving; we know not what to do.” Sparta immediately made proposals of peace
to Athens on the basis of the status quo. It would have been wise of Athens to
accept the offer, and obtain relief from the pressure of the garrison at Decelea.
But there is no doubt that the feeling in the navy was entirely against a peace
which did not include the restoration of the power of Athens in the Aegean and
Asia Minor; and the victory of Cyzicus seemed to assure the promise of its
speedy recovery, notwithstanding the purse of Pharnabazus. The Spartan
overtures were rejected.
The victory of Cyzicus led to a restoration of the
unity of the Athenian state, which for a year had been divided into two parts, centred in Athens and Samos. The democratic party at
Athens, encouraged by the success of the thoroughly democratic navy, were able
to upset the polity of Theramenes and restore the democracy with the unlimited
franchise and the Cleisthenic Council of Five
Hundred. The most prominent of the leaders of this movement was Cleophon the lyremaker, a man of
the same class as Hyperbolus and Cleon, and endowed with the same order of
talent. Like Cleon he was a strong imperialist, and he was now the mouthpiece
of the prevailing sentiment for war. His financial ability seems to have been
no. less remarkable than that of Cleon. The remuneration of offices, which was
an essential part of the Athenian democracy, was revived as a matter of course;
but Cleophon instituted a new payment, for which his
name was best remembered by posterity. This was the “Two-obol payment.” Though
we know that it was introduced by Cleophon, it is not
recorded for what purpose it was paid or who received it. Some have supposed
that it was simply the wage of the judges,—that the old fee of three obols was
revived in the reduced form of two obols. But this can hardly be the case. The
two-obol payment is mentioned in a manner which implies that it was something
completely novel. The probability is that it was a disbursement intended to
relieve the terrible pressure of the protracted war upon the poor citizens
whose means of livelihood was reduced or cut off by the presence of the enemy
in Attica; and we may guess that the pension of two obols a day was paid to all
who were not in the receipt of other public money for their sendees in the field, on shipboard, or in the law courts. To give employment to the
indigent by public works was another part of the policy of Cleophon,
who herein followed the example of Pericles. In the first years of this
statesman’s influence the building of a new temple of Athena on the Acropolis
was brought to a completion. It rose close to the north cliff, on the place of
the oldest of all the temples on her hill, the house which from the beginning
she shared with Erechtheus. He shared the new temple too,—or the old temple, as
it might well be called, since, though younger than the Parthenon, it stood on
the elder site and held the ancient wooden statue of the goddess and sheltered
those two significant emblems, her own olive and her rival’s salt-spring.
Athena Polias had now two noble mansions. But the
newer building on the older site was burned down by chance about two years
after its completion, and was not rebuilt for some time, so that the ruins of
the temple which still stand are not, stone for stone, a memorial of the days
of Cleophon. But it was to remember that it was in
years of the graceful Ionic temple with the Porch of the Maidens was built in
its first shape.
The years following the rejection of the Spartan
overtures were marked by operations in the Propontis and its neighbourhood. The Athenians, under the able and strenuous
leadership of Alcibiades, slowly gained ground. Thasos and Selymbria were won back. At Chrysopolis a toll station was established at which ships
coming from the Euxine had to pay one-tenth of the value of their freight. Then
Chalcedon was besieged and made tributary; and finally Byzantium was starved
into capitulation, so that Athens once more completely commanded the Bosphorus.
Meanwhile Pharnabazus had made an arrangement to conduct Athenian envoys to
Susa for the purpose of coming to terms with the Great King. Nearer home,
Athens lost Nisaea to the Megarians; and Pylus was at length recovered by Sparta.
As the distinctive feature of the last eight years of
the Peloponnesian War was the combination between Persia and Sparta, we may
divide this period into three parts, according to the nature of the Persian
co-operation. During the first two years it is the satrap Tissaphernes who
supports the Peloponnesian operations, and Athens loses nearly all Ionia. Then
the satrap Pharnabazus takes the place of Tissaphernes as the active ally of
the Peloponnesians; the military operations are chiefly in the Hellespont; and
Athens gradually recovers many of her losses. But the affairs of the west had
begun to engage the attention of the Great King, Darius, who, aware that the
jealousy of the two satraps hinders an effective policy, sends down his younger
son Cyrus to take the place of Tissaphernes at Sardis, with jurisdiction over
Cappadocia, Phrygia, and Lydia. The government of Tissaphernes is confined to
Caria. The arrival of Cyrus on the scene marks a new turning-point in the
progress of the war.
It was a strange sight to see the common enemy of
Hellas ranged along with the victors of Plataea against the victors of Salamis.
It was a shock to men of Panhellenic feeling, and it was fitting that at the
great Panhellenic gathering at Olympia a voice of protest should be raised. Men
of western Hellas beyond the sea could look with a calmer view on the politics
of the east, and it was a man of western Hellas, the Leontine Gorgias himself,
who lifted up an eloquent voice against the wooing of Persian favour by Greek states. “Rather,” he said, “go to war
against Persia.”
Sect.
9. Downfall of the Athenian Empire
Prince Cyrus was zealous; but his zeal to intervene
actively and furnish pay to the Peloponnesian seamen might have been of but
small avail, were it not for the simultaneous appointment of a new Spartan
admiral, who possessed distinguished ability and inordinate ambition. This was
Lysander, who was destined to bring the long war to its close. He gained the
confidence of his seamen by his care for their interests, and he won much
influence over Cyrus by being absolutely proof against the temptation of bribes,—a
quality at which an oriental greatly marvelled. In
prosecuting the aims of his ambition Lysander was perfectly unscrupulous, and
he was a skilful diplomatist as well as an able
general.
While Cyrus and Lysander were negotiating, Alcibiades,
after an exile of eight years, had returned to his native city. He had been
elected strategos, and had received an enthusiastic welcome. Time had, in some
measure, dulled the sense of the terrible injuries which he had inflicted on
his country, and his share in the recent recovery of the Hellespontine cities
had partly at least atoned. But it was rather hope for future benefits than
forgiveness for past wrongs that moved the Athenians to let bygones be bygones.
They trusted in his capacity as a general, and they thought that by his
diplomatic skill they might still be able to come to terms with Persia. So a
decree was passed, giving him full powers for the conduct of the war, and he
was solemnly freed from the curse which rested upon him as profaner of the
Eleusinian rites. He had an opportunity of making his peace with the divinities
of Eleusis. Ever since the occupation of Decelea, which he had done so much to
bring about, the annual procession from Athens along the Sacred Way to the
Eleusinian shrine had been suspended, and the mystic Iacchus had been conveyed
by sea. Under the auspices of Alcibiades, who protected the procession by an
escort of troops, the solemnity was once more celebrated in the usual way. It
is possible that, if he had been bold enough to seize the opportunity of this
tide of popularity, he might have established a tyranny at Athens; but he
probably thought that such a venture would hardly be safe until he achieved
further military or diplomatic successes. The opportunity was lost and did not
recur. A very slight incident completely changed the current of feeling in
Athens. An Athenian fleet was at Notion, keeping guard on Ephesus, and Lysander
succeeded in defeating it and capturing fifteen ships. Though Alcibiades was
not present at the action, he was responsible, and lost his prestige at Athens,
where the tidings of a decisive victory was confidently expected. New generals
were appointed immediately, and Alcibiades withdrew to a castle on the
Hellespont which he had provided for himself as a refuge in case of need. Conon
succeeded him in the chief command of the navy.
The Peloponnesians during the following winter organised a fleet of greater strength than they had had for
many years—140 ships; but Lysander had to make place for a new admiral, Callicratidas. The Peloponnesians at first carried all
before them. The fort of Delphinion in Chios, and the
town of Methymna in Lesbos were taken; Conon, who had only seventy ships, was
forced into a battle outside Mytilene and lost thirty triremes in the action.
The remainder were blockaded in the harbour of
Mytilene. The situation was critical, and Athens did not underrate the danger.
The gold and silver dedications in the temples of the Acropolis were melted to
defray the costs of a new armament; freedom was promised to slaves, citizenship
to resident aliens, for their services in the emergency; and at the end of a
month Athens and her allies sent a fleet of 1 50 triremes to relieve Mytilene. Callicratidas, who had now 170 ships, left 50 to maintain
the blockade and sailed with the rest to meet the foe. A great battle was
fought near the islets of the Arginusae, south of Lesbos, and the Athenians
were victorious. (406 B.C.) Seventy Spartan ships were sunk or taken, and Callicratidas was slain. An untimely north wind hindered
the victors from rescuing the crews of their wrecked ships, as well as from
sailing to Mytilene to destroy the rest of the hostile fleet.
The success had not been won without a certain
sacrifice; twenty-five ships had been lost with their crews. It was believed
that many of the men, floating about on the wreckage, might have been saved if
the officers had taken proper measures. The commanders were blamed; the matter
was taken up by politicians at Athens; the generals were suspended from their
office and summoned to render an account of their conduct. They shifted the
blame on the trierarchs; and the trierarchs,
one of whom was Theramenes, in order to shield themselves, accused the generals
of not having issued the orders for rescue until the high wind made the
execution impossible. We are not in a position to judge the question; for the
decision must entirely depend on the details of the situation, and as to the
details we have no certainty. It is not clear, for instance, whether the storm
was sufficiently violent to prevent any attempt at a rescue. The presumption
is, however, that the Athenian people were right in the conviction that there
had been criminal negligence somewhere, and the natural emotion of indignation
which they felt betrayed them into committing a crime themselves. The question
was judged by the Assembly, and not by the ordinary courts. Two sittings were
held, and the eight generals who had been present at Arginusae were condemned
to death and confiscation of property. Six, including Thrasyllus and Pericles,
son of the great statesman, were executed; the other two had prudently kept out
of the way. Whatever were the rights of the case, the penalty was unduly
severe; but the worst feature of the proceedings was that the Assembly violated
a recognised usage of the city by pronouncing
sentence on all the accused together, instead of judging the case of each
separately. Formally illegal indeed it was not; for the supporters of the
generals had not the courage to apply the Graphe Paranomon. Protests had no effect on the excited multitude,
thirsty for vengeance. It was an interesting incident that the philosopher
Socrates, who happened on the fatal day to be one of the prytaneis,
objected to putting the motion. All constitutions, democracy like oligarchy and
monarchy, have their own dangers and injustices; this episode illustrates the
gravest kind of injustice which a primary Assembly, swayed by a sudden current
of violent feeling and unchecked by any responsibility, sometimes commits,—and
repents.
The victory of Arginusae restored to the Athenians the
command of the eastern Aegean, and induced the Lacedaemonians to repeat the
same propositions of peace which they had made four years ago after the battle
of Cyzicus: namely, that Decelea should be evacuated and that otherwise each
party should remain just as it was. Through the influence of the demagogue Cleophon, who is said to have come into the Assembly drunk,
the offer was rejected. Nothing was left for the Spartans but to reorganise their fleet. Eteonicus had gathered together the remnants of the ships and gone to Chios, but he was
bear unable to pay the seamen, who were forced to work as labourers on the fields of Chian farmers. In the winter this means of support failed, and
threatened by starvation, they formed a conspiracy to pillage the town of
Chios. The conspirators agreed to wear a straw in order to recognise one another. Eteonicus discovered the plot, but there
were so many straw-bearers that he shrank from an open conflict, and devised a
stratagem. Walking through the streets of Chios, attended by fifteen armed men,
he met a man who suffered from ophthalmia, coming out of a surgeon’s house, and
seeing that he wore a straw, ordered him to be put to death. A crowd gathered
and demanded why the man was put to death; the reply was, “Because he wore a
straw.” When the news spread, every straw-bearer was so frightened that he
threw his straw away. The Chians then consented to supply a month’s pay for the
men, who were immediately embarked.
This incident shows that money had ceased to flow in
from Persia. It was generally felt that if further Persian co-operation was to
be secured and the Peloponnesian cause to be restored, the command of the fleet
must again be entrusted to Lysander. But there was a law at Sparta that no man
could be navarch a second time. On this occasion the
law was evaded by sending Lysander out as secretary, but on the understanding
that the actual command lay with him and not with the nominal admiral. Lysander
visited Cyrus at Sardis, asserted his old influence over him, and obtained the
money required. With the help of organised parties in
the various cities, he soon fitted out a fleet. An unlooked-for event gave him
still greater power and prestige. King Darius was very ill, his death was
expected, and Cyrus was called to his bedside. During his absence, Cyrus
entrusted to his friend Lysander the administration of his satrapy, and the
tribute. He knew that money was no temptation to this exceptional Spartan, and
he feared to trust such lower to a Persian noble.
With these resources behind him, Lysander speedily
proved his ability. Attacked at Ephesus by the Athenian fleet under Conon, he
declined battle; then, when the enemy had dispersed, he sailed forth, first to
Rhodes, and then across the Aegean to the coast of Utica, where he had a
consultation with Agis. Recrossing the Aegean, he made for the Hellespont and
laid siege to Lampsacus. The Athenian fleet of 180 ships reunited and followed
him thither, Lampsacus had been taken before they reached Sestos, but they
determined now to force him to accept the battle which he had refused at
Ephesus, and with this view proceeded along the coast till they reached
Aegospotami, “Goat’s rivers,” an open beach without harbourage,
over against Lampsacus. It was a bad position, as all the provisions had to be
fetched from Sestos at a distance about two miles, while the Peloponnesian
fleet was in an excellent harbour with a
well-supplied town behind. Sailing across the strait, the Athenians found the
enemy drawn up for battle but under orders not to move until they were
attacked, and in such a strong position that an attack would have been unwise.
They were obliged to return to Aegospotami. For four days the same thing
befell. Each day the Athenian fleet sailed across the strait and endeavoured to lure Lysander into an engagement; each day
its efforts were fruitless. From his castle in the neighbourhood Alcibiades descried the dangerous position of the Athenians, and riding over to
Aegospotami earnestly counselled the generals to move to Sestos. His sound
advice was received with coldness, perhaps with insult. When the fleet returned
from its daily cruise to Lampsacus, the seamen used to disembark and scatter on
the shore. On the fifth day Lysander sent scout ships which, as soon as the
Athenian crews had gone ashore for their meal, were to flash a bright shield as
a signal. When the signal was given, the whole Peloponnesian squadron,
consisting of about 200 galleys, rowed rapidly across the strait and found the
Athenian fleet defenceless. There was no battle, no
resistance. Twenty ships, which were in a condition to fight, escaped; the
remaining 160 were captured at once. It was generally believed that there was
treachery among the generals, and it is possible that Adeimantus, who was taken
prisoner and spared, had been bribed by Lysander. All the Athenians who were
taken, to the number of three or four thousand, were put to death. The chief
commander Conon, who was not among the unready, succeeded in getting away.
Greek ships usually unshipped their sails when they prepared for a naval
battle, and the sails of the Peloponnesian triremes had been deposited at Cape Abarnis, near Lampsacus. Informed of this, Conon boldly
shot across to Abarnis, seized the sails, and so
deprived Lysander of the power of an effective pursuit. It would have been
madness for the responsible commander to return to Athens with the tidings of
such a terrible disaster; and Conon, sending home twelve of the twenty triremes
which had escaped, sailed himself with the rest to the protection of Evagoras,
the king of Salamis in Cyprus. Never was a decisive victory gained with such
small sacrifice as that which Lysander gained at Aegospotami.
The tidings of ruin reached the Piraeus at night, and
“on that night not a man slept.” The city remembered the cruel measure which it
had once and again meted out to others, as to Melos and Scione,
and shuddered at the thought that even such measure might now be meted out to
itself. It was hard for the Athenians to realise that
at one blow their sea-power was annihilated, and they had now to make
preparations for sustaining a siege. But the blockade was deferred by the
policy of Lysander. He did not intend to attack Athens but to starve it into
surrender, and with this view he drove all the Athenian cleruchs whom he found in the islands to Athens, in order to swell the starving
population. Having completed the subjugation of the Athenian empire in the
Hellespont and Thrace, and ordered affairs in those regions, Lysander sailed at
length into the Saronic gulf with 150 ships, occupied Aegina, and blockaded the
Piraeus. At the same time the Spartan king Pausanias entered Attica, and,
joining forces with Agis, encamped in the Academe, west of the city. But the
walls were too strong to attack, and at the beginning of winter the army
withdrew, while the fleet remained near the Piraeus. As provisions began to
fail, the Athenians made a proposal of peace, offering to resign their empire
and become allies of Lacedaemon. The envoys were turned back at Sellasia; they would not be received by the ephors unless
they brought more acceptable terms; and it was intimated that the demolition of
the Long Walls for a length of ten stades was an
indispensable condition of peace. It was folly to resist, yet the Athenians
resisted. The demagogue Cleophon, who had twice
hindered the conclusion of peace when it might have been made with honour, first after Cyzicus, then after Arginusae, now
hindered it again when it could be made only with humiliation. An absurd decree
was passed that no one should ever propose to accept such terms. But the danger
was that such obstinacy would drive the enemy into insisting on an
unconditional surrender; for the situation was hopeless. Theramenes undertook
to visit Lysander and endeavour to obtain more favourable conditions, or at all events to discover how
matters lay. His real object was to gain time and let the people come to their
senses. He remained three months with Lysander, and when he returned to Athens,
he found the citizens prepared to submit on any terms whatever. People were
dying of famine, and the reaction of feeling had been marked by the execution
of Cleophon, who was condemned on the charge of
evading military service. Theramenes was sent to Sparta with full powers. It is
interesting to find that during these anxious months a decree was passed
recalling to Athens an illustrious citizen, who had been found wanting as a
general, but whose genius was to make immortal the war now drawing to its
close—the historian Thucydides.
An assembly of the Peloponnesian allies was called
together at Sparta to determine how they should deal with the fallen foe. The
general sentiment was that no mercy should be shown; that Athens should be
utterly destroyed and the whole people sold into slavery. But Sparta never felt
the same bitterness towards Athens as that which animated Corinth and Thebes;
she was neither a neighbour nor a commercial rival. The destruction of Athens
might have been politically profitable, but Sparta, with all her faults, could
on occasion rise to nobler views. She resolutely rejected the barbarous
proposal of the Confederacy; she would not blot out a Greek city which had done
such noble services to Greece against the Persian invader. That was more than
two generations ago, but it was not to be forgotten; Athens was saved by her
past. The terms of the Peace were: the Long Walls and fortifications of the
Piraeus were to be destroyed; the Athenians lost all their foreign possessions,
but remained independent, confined to Attica and Salamis; their whole
fleet was forfeited; all exiles were allowed to return; Athens became the ally
of Sparta, pledged to follow her leadership. When the terms were ratified,
Lysander sailed into the Piraeus. The demolition of the Long Walls immediately
began. The Athenians and their conquerors together pulled them down to the
music of fluteplayers; and the jubilant allies thought that freedom had at
length dawned for the Greeks. Lysander permitted Athens to retain twelve
triremes, and, having inaugurated the destruction of the fortifications, sailed
off to reduce Samos.
It is not to be supposed that all Athenians were
dejected and wretched at the terrible humiliation which had befallen their
native city. There were numerous exiles who owed their return to her calamity;
and the extreme oligarchic party rejoiced in the foreign occupation, regarding
it as an opportunity for the subversion of the democracy and the
re-establishment of a constitution like that which had been tried after the
Sicilian expedition. Theramenes looked forward to making a new attempt to
introduce his favourite polity. Of the exiles, the
most prominent and determined was Critias, son of Callaeschrus, and a member of the same family as the
lawgiver Solon. He was a man of many parts, a pupil of Gorgias and a companion
of Socrates, an orator, a poet, and a philosopher. A combination was formed
between the exiles and the home oligarchs; a common plan of action was organised; and the chief democratic leaders were presently
seized and imprisoned. The intervention of Lysander was then invoked for the
carrying of a new constitution, and awed by his presence, the Assembly passed a
measure proposed by Dracontides, that a body of
Thirty should be nominated, for the purpose of drawing up laws and managing
public affairs until the code should be completed. The oligarchs did not take
the trouble of repealing the Graphe Paranomon before the introduction of the measure; they felt sure of their power. Critias, Theramenes, and Dracontides were among the Thirty who were appointed.
The ruin of the power of Athens had fallen out to the
advantage of the oligarchical party, and it has even been suspected that the
oligarchs had for many years past deliberately planned to place the city at the
mercy of the enemy, for the ulterior purpose of destroying the democracy. The
part played by Theramenes in the condemnation of the generals who had the
indiscretion to win Arginusae, the parts he subsequently played in negotiating
the Peace and in establishing the oligarchy, the serious suspicions of
treachery in connexion with the disaster of
Aegospotami, have especially suggested this conjecture. The attempt of the Four
Hundred on a previous occasion to come to terms with Sparta may be taken into
account, and the comparatively lenient terms imposed on Athens might seem to
point in the same direction. One thing seems certain. The oligarchic party had
been distinctly aiming at peace, and the repeated opposition of Cleophon (impolitic, as we have seen) indicates that he
suspected oligarchical designs. It must also be admitted that the conduct of
the Athenians in fixing their station at Aegospotami, and delivering themselves
to the foe like sheep led to the altar, argues a measure of folly which seems
almost incredible, if there were not treachery behind; and the suspicion is
confirmed by the clemency shown to Adeimantus. It must, however, be
acknowledged that it is hard to understand how the treason could have been
effectually carried out without the connivance of Conon, the
commander-in-chief; yet no suspicion seems to have been attached to him. The
whole problem of the oligarchic intrigues of the last eight years of the war
remains wrapped in far greater mystery than the mutilation of the Hermae.
Sect.
10. Rule of the Thirty and Restoration of the Democracy
The purpose for which the Thirty had been appointed
was to frame a new constitution; their powers, as a governing body, were only
to last until they had completed their legislative work. The more part of them,
however, with Critias, who was the master spirit, had
no serious thoughts of constructing a constitution; they regarded this as
merely a pretext for getting into power; and their only object was to retain
the power in their own hands, establishing a simple oligarchy. In this,
however, they were not absolutely unanimous. One of them at least, Theramenes,
had no taste for pure oligarchy, but was still genuinely intent on framing a
polity, tempered of both oligarchic and democratic elements. This dissension in
the views of the two ablest men, Critias and
Theramenes, soon led to fatal disunion.
The first measures of the Thirty were, however,
carried out with First cordial unanimity. A Council of Five Hundred, consisting
of strong supporters of oligarchy, was appointed, and invested with the
judicial functions which had before belonged to the people. A body of Eleven,
under the command of Satyrus, a violent, unscrupulous
man, was appointed for police duties; and the guard of the Piraeus was
committed to a body of Ten. The chief democrats, who on the fall of Athens had
opposed the establishment of an oligarchy, were then seized, tried by the
Council, and condemned to death for conspiracy. So far there was unanimity; but
at this point Theramenes would Disunion. have stopped. At such times, moderate
counsels have small chance of winning, ranged beside the extreme policies of
resolute men like Critias, who had come back in a
bitter and revengeful spirit against democracy, relentlessly resolved to
exercise an absolute despotism and expunge all elements of popular opposition.
A polity on the broad basis which Theramenes desired was as obnoxious to Critias as the old democracy; into which, he was convinced,
it would soon deviate. He and his colleagues were therefore afraid of all
prominent citizens of moderate views, whether democratic or oligarchic, who
were awaiting with impatience the constitution which the Thirty had been
appointed to prepare,—the men on whom the polity of Theramenes, if it came into
existence, would mainly rest.
The Thirty had announced as part of their programme
that they would purge the city of wrong-doers. They put to death a number of
men of bad character, including some notorious informers; but they presently
proceeded to execute, with or without trial, not only prominent democrats, but
also men of oligarchical views who. though unfriendly to democracy, were also
unfriendly to injustice and illegality. Among the latter victims was Niceratus, the son of Nicias. To the motives of fear and
revenge was soon added the appetite for plunder; and some men were executed
because they were rich, while many fled, happy to escape with their lives. Even metics, who had little to do with politics, were
despoiled; thus the speechwriter Lysias and his brother Polemarchus, who kept
a lucrative manufactory of shields, were arrested, and while Lysias succeeded
in making his escape, Polemarchus was put to death. And while many Athenians
were removed by hemlock or driven into banishment, others were required to
assist in the revolting service of arresting fellow-citizens, in order that
they might thereby become accomplices in the guilt of the government. Thus the
philosopher Socrates and four others were commanded with severe threats to
arrest an honest citizen, Leon of Salamis. Socrates refused without hesitation
to do the bidding of the tyrants; the others were not so brave. Yet Socrates
was not punished for his defiance; and this immunity was perhaps due to some
feeling of piety in the heart of Critias, who had
been one of his pupil-companions; a feeling which might be safely indulged, as
the philosopher was neither wealthy nor popular.
To these judicial murders and this organised system of plundering, Theramenes was unreservedly opposed. The majority of the
Council shared his disapprobation; and he would have been able to establish a
moderate constitution, but for the ability and strength of Critias.
His representations, indeed, induced the Thirty to broaden the basis on which
their power rested by creating a body of 3000 citizens, who had the privilege
of bearing arms and the right of being tried by the Council. All outside that
body were liable to be condemned to death by sentence of the Thirty, without a
trial. The body of 3000 had practically no political rights, and were chosen so
far as possible from known partisans of the government, the staunchest of whom
were the thousand knights. This measure naturally did not satisfy Theramenes;
his suggestions had, in fact, been used with a purpose very different from
his,—to secure, not to alter, the government.
In the meantime the exiles whom the oligarchy had
driven from Athens were not idle. They had found refuge in those neighbouring states—Corinth, Megara, and Thebes—which had
been bitter foes of Athens, but were now undergoing a considerable change of
feeling. Dissatisfaction with the high-handed proceedings of Sparta, who would
not give them a share in the spoils of the war, had disposed them to look with
more favour on their fallen enemy, and to feel
disgust at the proceedings of the Thirty, who were under the aegis of Lysander.
They were therefore not only ready to grant hospitality to Athenian exiles, but
to lend some help towards delivering their city from the oppression of the
tyrants. The first step was made from Thebes. Thrasybulus and Anytus, with a
band of seventy exiles, seized the Attic fortress of Phyle, in the Parnes
range, close to the Boeotian frontier, and put into a state of defence the strong stone walls, whose ruins are still
there. The Thirty led out their forces—their faithful knights and Three
Thousand hoplites—and expedition sat down to blockade the stronghold. But a
providential snowstorm of the broke up the blockade; the army retired to
Athens; and for the next three months or more nothing further was done against
Thrasybulus and the men of Phyle.
The oligarchs were now in a dangerous position,
menaced without by an enemy against whom their attack had failed, menaced
within by a strong opposition. They saw that the influence of Theramenes, who
was thoroughly dissatisfied with their policy, would be thrown into the scale
against them, and they resolved to get rid of him. Having posted a number of
devoted creatures, armed with hidden daggers, near the railing of the
council-house, Critias arose in the assembled Council
and denounced Theramenes as a traitor and conspirator against the state,—a man
who could not be trusted an inch, in view of those repeated tergiversations
which had won him the nickname of the “Buskin.” The reply of Theramenes,
denouncing the impolicy of Critias and his
colleagues, is said to have been received with applause by most of the Council,
who really sympathised with him. Critias,
seeing that he would be acquitted by the Council, resorted to an extreme
measure. He struck the name of Theramenes out of the list of the Three Thousand
and then along with his colleagues condemned him to death, since those who were
not included in the list could not claim the right of trial. Theramenes leapt
on the sacred Hearth and appealed for protection to the Council; but the
Council was stupefied with terror, and at the command of Critias the Eleven entered and dragged the suppliant from the altar. He was borne away
to prison; the hemlock was immediately administered; and when he had drunk, he
tossed out a drop that remained at the bottom of the cup, as banqueters used to
do in the game of kottabos, exclaiming, “This drop for the gentle Critias!” There had perhaps been a dose of truth in the
reproaches which the gentle Critias had hurled at him
across the floor of the council-chamber. Theramenes may have been shifty and
unscrupulous where means and methods were concerned. But in his main object he
was perfectly sincere. He was sincere in desiring to establish a moderate polity
which should unite the merits of both oligarchy and democracy, and avoid their
defects. There can be no question that he was honestly interested in trying
this political experiment. And the very nature of this policy involved an
appearance of insincerity and gave rise to suspicion. It led him to oscillate
between the democratic and oligarchical parties, seeking to gain influence and
support in both, with a view to the ultimate realisation of his middle plan. And thus the democrats suspected him as an oligarch, the
oligarchs distrusted him as a democrat. In judging Theramenes, it seems fair to
remember that a politician who in unsettled times desires to direct the state
into a middle course between two opposite extremes can hardly avoid oscillation
more or less, can rarely escape the imputation of the Buskin.
After the death of Theramenes, the Thirty succeeded in
disarming, by means of a stratagem, all the citizens who were not enrolled in
the list of the Three Thousand, and expelled them from the city. But with a foe
on Attic ground, growing in numbers every day, Critias and his fellows felt themselves so insecure, that they took the step of sending
an embassy to Sparta, to ask for a Lacedaemonian garrison. The request was
granted, and 700 men, under Callibius, were
introduced into the acropolis. The Thirty would never have resorted to this
measure except under the dire pressure of necessity; for not only was it
unpopular, but they had to pay the strangers out of their own chest.
It was perhaps in the first days of the month of May
that it was resolved to make a second attempt to dislodge the democrats from
Phyle. A band of the knights and the Spartan garrison sallied forth; but near Acharnae they were surprised at night and routed with great
loss by Thrasybulus. This incident produced considerable alarm at Athens, and
the Thirty had reason to fear that many of their partisans were wavering.
Deciding to secure an eventual place of refuge in case Athens should become
untenable, they seized Eleusis and put about 300 Eleusinians to death. This measure had hardly been carried out when Thrasybulus descended
from Phyle and seized the Piraeus. He had now about 1000 men, but the Piraeus,
without fortifications, was not an easy place to defend. He drew up his forces
on the hill of Munychia, occupying the temples of
Artemis and the Thracian goddess Bendis, which stood at the summit of a steep
street; highest of all stood the darters and slingers, ready to shoot over the
heads of the hoplites. Thus posted, with his prophet by his side, Thrasybulus
awaited the attack of the Thirty, who had led down all their forces to the
Piraeus. A shower of darts descended on their Battle of heads as they mounted
the hill, and, while they wavered for a Munychia.
moment under the missile’s, the hoplites rushed down on them, led by the
prophet, who had foretold his own death in the battle and was the first to
perish. Seventy of the enemy were slain; among Death of them Critias himself. During the truce which was then granted
for Critias. taking up the dead, the citizens on
either side held some converse with one another, and Cleocritus,
the herald of the Eleusinian Mystae, impressive both
by his loud voice and by his sacred calling, addressed the adherents of the
Thirty: “Fellow-citizens, why seek ye to slay us? why do ye force us into
exile? us who never did you wrong. We have shared in the same religious rites
and festivals; we have been your schoolfellows and choir-fellows; we have
fought with you by land and sea for freedom. We adjure you, by our common gods,
abandon the cause of the Thirty, monsters of impiety, who for their own gains
have slain in eight months more Athenians than the Peloponnesians slew in a war
of ten years. Believe that we have shed as many tears as you for those who have
now fallen.” This general appeal, and individual appeals in the same tone, at
such an affecting moment, must have produced an effect upon the halfhearted
soldiers of the Thirty, who had now lost their able and violent leader. There
was dissension and discord not only among the Three Thousand and the Council,
but among the Thirty themselves. It was felt that the government of the Thirty
could no longer be maintained, and that if the oligarchy was to be rescued a
new government must be installed. A general meeting of the Three Thousand
deposed the Thirty and instituted in their stead a body of Ten, one from each
tribe. One member of the Thirty was re-elected as a member of the new
government, but the rest withdrew to the refuge which they had provided for
themselves at Eleusis. The new body of Ten represented the views of those who
were genuinely devoted to oligarchy, but disapproved of the extreme policy of Critias and his fellows. They failed to come to terms with
Thrasybulus, who was every day receiving reinforcements both in men and arms;
the civil war continued; and it soon appeared that it would be impossible for
Athens to hold out against the democrats in the Piraeus without foreign aid.
An embassy was accordingly dispatched by the Ten to
Sparta; and about the same time the remnant of the Thirty at Eleusis sent a
message on their own account for the same purpose. Both embassies represented
the democrats at Piraeus as rebels against the power of Sparta. The
Lacedaemonian government, through the influence of Lysander, was induced to
intervene in support of the Ten. Lysander assembled an army at Eleusis, and
forty ships were sent under Libys to cut off the supplies which the democrats
received by sea. The outlook was now gloomy for Thrasybulus and his company;
but they were rescued by a disunion within the Lacedaemonian state. The
influence of Lysander, which had been for the last years supreme, was
perceptibly declining; the king Pausanias was his declared opponent; and many
others of the governing class were jealous of his power, vexed at his
arrogance, perhaps suspicious of his designs. The oligarchies which he had
created at Athens and in the other cities of the Athenian empire had disgraced
themselves by misgovernment and bloodshed; and the disgrace was reflected upon
the fame of their creator. Lysander had hardly begun his work when Pausanias
persuaded the ephors to entrust to himself the commission of restoring tranquillity at Athens; and Lysander had the humiliation of
handing over to his rival the army which he had mustered., A defeat convinced
Thrasybulus that it would be wise to negotiate; and on the other hand Pausanias
deposed the irreconcilable Ten, and caused it to be replaced by another Ten of
more moderate views. Both parties then, the city and the Piraeus alike,
submitted themselves to Spartan intervention, and Sparta, under the auspices of
king Pausanias, acquitted herself uncommonly well. A commission of fifteen was
sent from Lacedaemon to assist the king, and a reconciliation was brought
about. The terms were a general and mutual pardon for all past acts; from which
were excepted only the Thirty, the Ten who had held the Piraeus under the
Thirty, the Eleven who had carried out the judicial murders perpetrated by the
Thirty, and the Ten who had followed the Thirty. All these excepted persons
were required to give an account of their acts if they wished to remain at
Athens. Eleusis was to form an independent state, and any Athenian who chose
might migrate to Eleusis within a specified time.
The evil dream of Athens was at last over: a year and
half of September, oligarchical tyranny, and foreign soldiery on the Acropolis.
She owed her deliverance to the energy of Thrasybulus and the discretion of
Pausanias. Pausanias displayed his discretion further by not meddling with the
reconciled parties in their settlement of the constitution. It was decreed, on
the motion of Tisamenus, that “lawgivers” should be appointed to revise the
constitution, and that in the meantime the state should be administered
according to “the laws of Solon and the institutions of Dracon.” The union of
the two names is significant of the conciliation. Provisionally, then, the
franchise was limited to those who belonged to the first three Solonian
classes—those who could at least serve as hoplites. It is noteworthy that there
was an idea afloat of making the possession of landed property a qualification
for political rights. But it was a totally unpractical idea. Such a test would
have excluded rich men; it would have included many of the fourth class. In the
end, no new experiment was tried. The lawgivers restored the old democracy with
its unlimited franchise, and Athens entered upon a new stage of her career. The
amnesty was faithfully kept; the democrats did not revenge themselves on the
supporters of the oligarchical tyranny. But it was easier to forgive than forge
; and for many years after the reconciliation a distinction was drawn, though
not officially, yet in the ordinary intercourse of life, between the “men of the
city” and the “men of the Piraeus”—the men who had fought for freedom and those
who had fought against it. That was almost inevitable; and so long as the
oligarchs held Eleusis, there might even be some ground for suspecting the
loyalty of their old supporters. After about two years of independent
existence, Eleusis was attacked by Athens; the Eleusinian generals were
captured and put to death, and the town resumed its old place as part of
Attica. Henceforward, for well-nigh three generations, the Athenian democracy
was perfectly secure from the danger or fear of an oligarchical revolution.
That hideous nightmare of the Thirty had established it on a firmer base than
ever.
CHAPTER XII.
THE SPARTAN SUPREMACY AND THE PERSIAN WAR
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