HISTORY OF ANCIENT GREECE |
A HISTORY OF GREECE TO THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER THE GREAT
CHAPTER XVI.
THE RISE OF MACEDONIA
After the battle of Mantinea, when Thebes retired from
her aggressive policy, Athens stood forth the most important state in Old
Greece. She would have been free to devote all her energies to re-establishing
her power on the coasts of the northern Aegean and by the gates of the Pontic
waters, and would doubtless have successfully achieved this main object of her
policy, if two outlying powers had not suddenly stepped upon the scene to
thwart her and cut short her empire. These powers, Caria and Macedon, lay in
opposite quarters of the Greek world. Both were monarchies, both were
semi-Hellenic. Macedon was a land-power; Caria was both a land-power and a
sea-power, but it was as a sea-power that she was formidable to Athens. Of the
two, it was Caria which seemed to Greece the country with a future and to
Athens the dangerous rival. Of Macedonia little account was taken by the
civilised world, and Athens expected that she could always manage it. No
prophet in his happiest hour of clairvoyance could have predicted that within
thirty years Caria would have sunk back into insignificance, leaving nothing to
posterity save the sepulchre of her prince, while Macedon would bear the arts
and wisdom of Hellas to the ends of the earth.
Sect. 1. Athens regains the Chersonese and Euboea
The death of Epaminondas delivered Athens from her
most dangerous and active enemy; but the intrigues which he had spun against
her in the north bore results after his death. Alexander of Pherae, who had
become the ally of the Thebans, seized the island of Peparethus with his pirate
ships and defeated an Athenian armament under Leosthenes. He then repeated the
daring enterprise of the Spartan Teleutias, sailing rapidly into the Piraeus,
plundering the shops, and disappearing as rapidly with ample spoil. The
Athenians replied by making a close defensive and offensive alliance with the
federal state of the Thessalians. The stone of the treaty is preserved. The
allies of both parties are included. The Thessalians bind themselves not to
conclude the war against Alexander without the Athenians, and the Athenians in
like wise “without the president (archon) and league of the Thessalians”; and
the treasurers of Athens are directed to pull down the stele on which the
former alliance with Alexander had been inscribed.
But the Athenians vented their indignation within
their own walls. Since the capture of Oropus there had been signs of
smouldering discontent at the conduct of affairs. Callistratus had been
indicted and acquitted in the matter of Oropus; but his credit had been roughly
shaken, and Alexander’s insult to the city at her very doors excited the
popular wrath to such a pitch that the statesman as well as the defeated
admiral was condemned to death, and escaped only by a timely flight. Thus the
ablest Athenian statesman of the fourth century passed from the stage, and no
sympathy followed him. Some years later he ventured to return from his
Macedonian exile, hoping that the wrath of his countrymen would have passed
away. Their wrath had passed, but it had not been replaced by regret. On
reaching Athens he sought the refuge of suppliants at the altar of the Twelve
Gods; but no voice was raised to save him, and the executioner carried out the
doom of the people. The Athenians were always austere masters of their statesmen,
and it sometimes appears to us—though in truth we seldom have sufficient
knowledge of the circumstances to justify a confident judgment—that they
unreasonably expected an ingathering where no seed had been sown.
The public indignation which had been aroused by the
daring stroke of the tyrant of Pherae was enhanced by the bad tidings which
came from Thrace. King Cotys, the reviver of the Odrysian power, had succeeded
in laying hold of Sestos and almost the whole peninsula which guards the
entrance to the Propontis, in spite of the Athenian fleet. Soon afterwards the
old king was murdered and his realm was divided among his three sons. This
change was advantageous to Athens, as she could play off one Thracian prince against
another. The territory on the Propontis fell to Cersobleptes, who was supported
by the Euboean Charidemus, a mercenary captain who had frequently been employed
in the service of Athens, and had married, like Iphicrates, a daughter of the
Thracian king. Cersobleptes engaged to hand over to Athens the entire
Chersonese, except Cardia, “the enemy of Athens,” which was to remain
independent. But there was no fleet on the spot to enforce the immediate
fulfilment of the promise; and, when an admiral was presently sent out, he was
defeated by Charidemus. At length a capable man was sent, Chares, a daring,
dissolute, and experienced son of Ares, who speedily captured Sestos and
punished the inhabitants for their unfaithfulness by an unmerciful slaughter. Cersobleptes
was forced to change his attitude, and the peninsula was recovered. The
Athenians, adopting the same policy which they had followed in Samos, sent
outsettlers to the Chersonese. In the same year Euboea was won back to the
Athenian league, and there even seemed a fair prospect of accomplishing what of
all things would have rejoiced them most, the recovery of long-lost Amphipolis.
But their new scheme against Amphipolis may be said to open, in a certain way,
a new chapter in the history of Greece.
Sect. 2. Philip II of Macedonia
The man for whom Macedonia had waited long came at
last. We have met once and again in the course of our history kings of that
ambiguous country—Hellenic, and yet not Hellenic: Alexander playing a double
part at Plataea; Perdiccas playing, with consummate skill, a double part in the
war of Sparta and Athens. But now the hour of Macedonia has come, and we must
look more closely at the cradle of the power which was destined to change the
face not only of the Greek but of the oriental world.
In their fortress of Aegae the Macedonian kings had
ruled for ages with absolute sway over the lands on the northern and north-
western coasts of the Thermaic Gulf, which formed Macedonia in the strictest
sense. The Macedonian people and their kings were of Greek stock, as their
traditions and the scanty remains of their language combine to testify. They
were a military people, and they extended their power westward and northward
over the peoples of the hills, so that Macedonia in a wider sense reached to the
borders of the Illyrians in the west and of the Paeonians in the north. These
hill tribes, the Orestians, Lyncestians, and others, belonged to the Illyrian
race, and they were ever seeking to cast off the bond of subjection which
attached them to the kings of Aegae. In Illyria and Paeonia they had allies who
were generally ready to support them in rebellion; and the dangers which
Macedonia had constantly to encounter and always to dread from half-subjugated
vassals and warlike enemies had effectually hindered her hitherto from playing
any conspicuous part in the Greek world.
Thus the Macedonian kingdom consisted of two
heterogeneous parts, and the Macedonian kings had two different characters.
Over the Greek Macedonians of the coast the king ruled immediately; they were
his own people, his own “Companions.” Over the Illyric folks of the hills he
was only overlord; they were each subject to its own chieftain, and the
chieftains were his unruly vassals. It is clear that Macedonia could never
become a great power until these vassal peoples had been completely tamed and
brought under the direct rule of the kings, and until the Illyrian and Paeonian
neighbours had been taught a severe lesson. These were the tasks which awaited
the man who should make Macedonia. The kings had made some efforts to introduce
Greek civilisation into their land. Archelaus, who succeeded Perdiccas, had
been a builder and a roadmaker, and, following the example of Greek tyrants, he
had succeeded m making his court at Pella a centre for famous artists and
poets. Euripides, the tragic poet, Timotheus, the most eminent leader of a new
school of music, Zeuxis the painter, and many another, may have found pleasure
and relief in a change from the highly civilised cities of the south to a new
and fresher atmosphere, where there were no politicians. It is sometimes said
that Macedonia was still in the Homeric stage of development. There is truth in
this; but the position of the monarch was different from that of the Homeric
king. No law bound the Macedonian monarch; his will was binding on his
subjects; and against him they had only one solitary right. In the case of a
capital charge, the king could not put a Macedonian to death without the
authority of a general Assembly. This was the charter of Macedonian liberty.
Fighting and hunting were the chief occupations of this vigorous people. A
Macedonian who had not killed his man wore a cord round his waist; and until he
had slain a wild boar he could not sit at table with the men. Like the
Thracians, they drank deep; Bacchic mysteries had been introduced; it was in Macedonian
air, on the banks of Lake Ludias, that Euripides drew inspiration for his
Bacchae.
We have seen how Perdiccas slew his guardian and
stepfather Ptolemy and reigned alone. Six years later the Illyrians swooped
down upon Macedonia, and the king was slain in battle. It was a critical moment
for the kingdom; the land was surrounded by enemies, for the Paeonians at the
same time menaced it in the north, and from the east a Thracian army was
advancing to set a pretender on the throne. The rightful heir, Amyntas, the son
of the slain king, was a child. But there was one man in the land who was equal
to the situation—this child’s uncle, Philip; and he took the government and the
guardianship of the boy into his own hands. We have already met Philip as one
of the hostages who were carried off to Thebes. He had lived there for a few
years, and drunk in the military and political wisdom of Epaminondas and
Pelopidas. We know not why he was allowed to return to his home soon after the
death of Ptolemy; perhaps it was thought that his affections had been firmly
won by Thebes and that he would be more useful to her in Macedonia.
Philip was twenty-four years old when he was called
upon to rescue his country and the dynasty of his own house. The danger
consisted in the number of his enemies,—foreign invaders, and domestic
pretenders, and pretenders supported by foreign powers. Philip’s first step was
to buy off the Paeonians by a large sum of money, his next to get rid of the
pretenders. One of these, Argaeus, was assisted by Athens with a strong fleet.
Philip defeated him, and did all in his power to come to terms with Athens. He
released without ransom the Athenians whom he had made prisoners in the battle;
and he renounced all claim to the possession of Amphipolis, which his brother
king Perdiccas had occupied with a garrison. Gold easily induced the Thracians
to desert the pretender whom they had come forth to support.
But the Paeonians were quieted only for the moment,
and the Illyrians were still in the land, besetting Macedonian towns. It was
necessary to deal with these enemies once for all, and to assert decisively the
military power of Macedon. Philip had new ideas on the art of war, and he spent
the winter in remodelling and training his army. When the springtide came round
he had 10,000 foot- soldiers and 600 horsemen, thoroughly disciplined and of
great physical strength. With this force he marched against the Paeonians and
quelled them in a single battle. He then turned against the Illyrians, who
refused to evacuate the towns they held in the Lyncestian territory. A great
battle was fought, in which Philip tested his new military ideas; the Illyrians
left 7000 on the field; and the vassals of the highlands, who had supported the
invaders, were reduced to abject submission.
When he had thus established his power over his
dependencies and cleared the land of foes, Philip lost little time in pushing
eastward, on the side of Thrace. The motive for this rapid advance was the
imperative necessity of obtaining gold. Without gold Philip could not develop
his country or carry out his military schemes; the Macedonians were not a
commercial folk; and therefore his prospects depended on possessing land which
produced the precious ore. In Mount Pangaeus on his eastern frontier there were
rich sources of gold; and, incited by him, a number of people from the opposite
island of Thasos, where the art of mining was well understood, had crossed over
to Crenides on that mountain and formed a settlement. But in order to control
the new mines it was indispensable to become master of the great fortress on
the Strymon, the much-coveted Amphipolis. The interests of Philip thus came
into direct collision with the interests of Athens. Here Philip revealed his
skill in diplomacy. When he released the Athenian prisoners, he professed to
resign all claim to Amphipolis ; and on this basis negotiated a peace with
Athens. When the treaty was concluded, a secret article was agreed upon, by
which Philip undertook to conquer Amphipolis for Athens, and Athens undertook
to surrender to him the free town of Pydna. It is probable that this secret
engagement was not made until Philip had actually attacked Amphipolis, and the
Amphipolitans—preferring Athens to Macedon —had sent a request for Athenian
succour. The moment was inconvenient, as the forces of Athens could not be
spared from the Chersonese; and the Athenians, failing to grasp the situation,
trusted the promises of Philip. Of course Philip deceived them, and they
deserve no sympathy; for their own part of the agreement was a shameful act of
treachery to Pydna, their ally. Their orators might cry out against the perfidy
of the Macedonian; but the truth is that they thought to make Philip a tool of
their own designs and he showed them that in diplomacy he was not their dupe
but their master.
When Philip had taken Amphipolis, he converted the
Thasian settlement of Crenides into a great fortress, which he called after his
own name, Philippi. He had thus two strong stations to secure Mount Pangaeus;
and the yield of the gold mines, which were soon actively worked, amounted to
at least 1000 talents a year. No Greek state was so rich. The old capital,
Aegae or Edessa, was now definitely abandoned, and the seat of government was
established at Pella, the favourite residence of Archelaus. This coming down
from Aegae to Pella is significant of the opening of a new epoch in Macedonian
history.
Not long afterwards Philip captured Pydna. If the
seizure of Amphipolis was an injury to Athens, the capture of Pydna was an
insult. He then took Potidaea, but instead of keeping it for himself, handed it
over to the Olynthians, to whom he also ceded Anthemus. The Olynthians, alarmed
by his operations on the Strymon, had made proposals to Athens for common
action against Macedon. The Athenians, trusting Philip, had rejected the
overtures. But when they found that they had been duped, they would have been
ready and glad to co-operate with Olynthus; and it was to prevent such a
combination that Philip dexterously propitiated the Olynthians—intending to
devour them on some future day. With the exception of Methone, the Athenians
had no foothold now on the coasts of the Thermaic Gulf.
They formed alliances with the Thracians of the west,
who were indignant at the Macedonian occupation of Crenides, and with the
Paeonian and Illyrian kings, who were smarting under their recent
discomfitures. But Philip prevented the common action of the allies. He forced
the Paeonians to become his vassals; his ablest general— his only general, he
used to say himself—Parmenion inflicted another overwhelming defeat on the
Illyrians; and the Thracians, again bought off, renounced their rights to Mount
Pangaeus.
But the successes cost Philip little. Having
established his mining town, he assumed the royal title, setting his nephew
aside, and devoted himself during the next few years to the consolidation of
his kingdom, and the creation of a national army. It was in these years that he
made Macedonia. His task, as has been already indicated, was to unite the hill
tribes, along with his own Macedonians of the coast, into one nation. The means
by which he accomplished this was military organisation. He made the highlanders
into professional soldiers and kept them always under arms. Caught by the
infection of the military spirit, seduced by the motives of emulation and
ambition, they were to forget that they were Orestians or Lyncestians, and
blend into a single homogeneous Macedonian people. To complete this
consummation would be a work of years, but Philip conceived the project clearly
and set about it at once. “A professional army with a national spirit—that was
the new idea.” Both infantry and cavalry were indeed organised in territorial
regiments; perhaps Philip could not have ventured at first on any other system.
But common pride and common desire of promotion, common hope of victory, tended
to obliterate these distinctions, and they were done away with under Philip’s
son. The heavy cavalry were called “Companions” of the king and “Royal”
soldiers, and they were more honourable than the infantry. Among the infantry
there was one body of “Royal” guards, the silver-shielded Hypaspistae.
The famous Macedonian phalanx, which Philip drilled,
was merely a modified form of the usual battle-line of Greek spearmen. The men
in the phalanx stood freer, in a more open array, and used a longer spear; so
that the whole line, though still cumbrous enough, was more easily wielded, and
the effect was produced not merely by the sheer pressure of a heavy mass of men
but by the skilful manipulation of weapons. Nor was the phalanx intended to
decide a battle, like the deep columns of Epaminondas; its function was to keep
the front of the foe in play, while the cavalry, in wedge-like squadrons, rode
into the flanks. It was by these tactics that Philip had won his victory over
the Illyrians.
But Greece paid little heed to the things which Philip
was doing. The Athenians might indeed encourage his Illyrian and Paeonian
enemies, and urge the Thracians to drive him from Mount Pangaeus, but though he
had outwitted them, they could not yet see that he was an enemy of a different
stamp from a Cotys or a Cersobleptes; having managed Macedonia for a hundred
years, they had little fear that as soon as they had the time to spare they
would easily manage it again. When Philip married Olympias, the daughter of an
Epirot prince, the event could cause no sensation; the birth of a son a year
later stirred no man’s heart in Greece; for who, in his wildest dreams, could
have foreseen in the Macedonian infant the greatest conqueror who had yet been
born into the world? If it had been revealed to men in that autumn that a power
had started up which was to guide history into new paths, they would have
turned their eyes not to Pella but to Halicarnassus.
Sect. 3. Mausolus of Caria
Caria, like Macedonia, was peopled by a double race,
the native Carians and the Greek settlers on the coast. But the native Carians
were further removed than the Illyrians from the Greeks : the Illyrians spoke a
tongue of the same Indo-Germanic stock as the Greeks; the Carians belonged to
an older race which held the region of the Aegean before Greeks and Illyrians
came. Yet the Carians were in closer touch with Greece than the Greeks of
Macedonia. The Greeks of Caria were always abreast of Greek civilisation, and
they had assimilated and tutored the natives of the land. Tralles and Mylasa
were to all appearance Greek towns; Greek was the dominant language of the
country. A province of the Persian empire, Caria had yet a certain independent
bond of union among her cities in an Amphictionic League which met in the
temple of Zeus at Lagina. It was a religious union, though it might be used for
purposes of common political action. But political unity was given to Caria not
by federation but by monarchy. A citizen of Mylasa named Hecatomnus succeeded
in establishing his rule over the whole land, soon after the death of
Tissaphernes, and the Great King esteemed it his most prudent policy to
acknowledge the “dynast of Caria” as his official satrap. Both Hecatomnus and
his son Mausolus, who succeeded to his power, never failed to pay their tribute
to the treasury of Susa or to display the becoming submission to the Persian
king; only once— as we have seen—when all the western satraps rebelled, did
Mausolus fall short in his loyalty. The Carian Dynasts—they never assumed the
royal title—thus secured for themselves a free hand. With the constitutions of
the Carian cities their sovereignty did not interfere. Thus even in their own
city, Mylasa, the popular Assembly still passes decrees, and these decrees are
ratified not by Mausolus but by the “Three Tribes” perhaps a sort of
aristocratic council. In fact Hecatomnus and Mausolus held in relation to the
Carian states an analogous position to that which Pisistratus and his sons held
in the Athenian hate; they were the actual rulers but officially they did not
exist. The differences were that the Carian dynast held the official position
of Persian satrap, and was “tyrant” of a number of states which were
independent of each other.
These native satraps brought the Greek towns of the
coast, Halicarnassus, Iasus, Cnidus, perhaps Miletus itself, gradually under
their power; and Mausolus annexed the neighbouring land of Lycia.
Thus at the time of Philip’s accession to the throne
of Macedonia, a rich and ambitious monarchy had arisen on the south-eastern
shores of the Aegean. To develop his power, it was desirable for Mausolus to
win the lordship of the islands adjacent to his coasts, and it was clearly
necessary to form a strong navy. The change of the satrap’s residence from
inland Mylasa to Halicarnassus on the sea is thus politically significant;
Caria was to become a sea-power. Mausolus built himself a strong castle on the
little island of Zephyrion in front of the city, and constructed two harbours,
one for ships of war, the other for ships of trade.
The great islands of Rhodes, Cos, and Chios, which
Mausolus especially coveted, belonged to the Athenian alliance. But recently
there was much discontent at the Athenian supremacy, and there were good
grounds for this feeling. The reversion to the policy of cleruchies in
neighbouring Samos, as well as in distant Potidaea excited apprehensions for
the future; and the exactions of the rapacious and irresponsible mercenaries
whom Athens regularly employed, but did not regularly pay, caused many
complaints. There were moreover strong oligarchical parties in these states
which would be glad to sever connexion with Athens. The scheme of the Carian
prince was first to induce these islands to detach themselves from Athens and
then to bring them under his own sway. He fanned the flame of discontent, and
the three islands jointly revolted from the Athenian alliance and were
supported by Byzantium.
Athens immediately sent naval forces to Chios under
Chabrias and Chares, two of the generals of the year, and the town was attacked
by land and sea. But in trying to enter the harbour, Chabrias, who led the way,
was assailed on all sides and fell fighting, Thus the Athenians lost the most
gallant of their soldiers—a commander of whom it was said that he never spared
himself and always spared his men. The attack on Chios was abandoned, and the
Chians, much elated, and commanding a fleet of 100 ships, proceeded to
aggressive warfare against the outsettlers of Athens, and blockaded Samos. With
only sixty ships Chares could do nothing and as many more were hastily sent
under the command of Timotheus and Iphicrates. Under three such generals much
migh be expected from such a fleet; but more would probably have been
accomplished under any one of them alone. They relieved Samos and made an
unsuccessful diversion to the Propontis, hoping to take Byzantium. Then they
sailed to Chios, and concerted a plan of attack in the strait between the
island and the mainland. But the day proved stormy, and the two veteran
admirals, Iphicrates and Timotheus, deemed that it would be rash to fight.
Chares, however, against their judgment, attacked the enemy, and being
unsupported was repulsed with loss.
The ineffectual operations of two such tried and
famous generals were a cruel disappointment to the Athenians, who had given
them an adequate fleet. Chares, furious at the behaviour of his colleagues,
formally accused them of deliberate treachery, and was supported by the orator
Aristophon. The charge was that they had received bribes from the Chians and
the Rhodians. Counter-charges were brought against Chares by Timotheus and
Iphicrates, but the sympathies of Athens were altogether given to the commander
who erred on the side of boldness. Iphicrates, however, had less political
influence and therefore fewer enemies than Timotheus, and he knew how to
conciliate the people; he was accordingly acquitted. Timotheus, always haughty
and unpopular, probably assumed a posture as haughty and unbending as ever,
Aristophon probably pressed him hard, and he was fined 100 talents. Rich as he
was, he was unable to pay this enormous sum, and he withdrew to Chalcis where
he died soon afterwards. Thus within twelve months the Athenians lost the two
men, Chabrias and Timotheus, who had built up their second empire. They
afterwards recognised that the measure which they had dealt out to Timotheus
was hard, and they permitted his son—who had himself been tried and acquitted on
the same charge to settle the fine by a payment of ten talents.
Chares now went forth as sole commander to sustain the
war against the recreant allies; but he went unfurnished with money to pay his
troops. He found the means of supplying this deficiency in the disturbed state
of Asia Minor. The satrap of Hellespontine Phrygia, Artabazus, had rebelled,
but was not strong enough to hold his own against the king’s troops. Chares
came to his rescue, gained a brilliant victory over the satraps who were
arrayed against him, and received from the grateful Artabazus money which
enabled him to pay and maintain the army. The victory and the money pleased the
Athenians, but Artaxerxes was deeply incensed. The news presently reached
Athens that the Great King was equipping a vast armament in Syria and Cilicia
to avenge the audacity of Chares. How much truth there was in this report it is
impossible to say; but it evoked an outburst of patriotism and supplied the
Athenian orators with material for invectives and declamations. Men began to
talk in earnest of realising the dream of Isocrates, of convoking a
pan-Hellenic congress and arming Hellas against the barbarian. Demo-
Demosthenes, who was now beginning to rise into public notice, delivered in
these days a speech which was more to the point than many of his later more
famous orations. He showed that the alarm was premature; and that the notion of
sending round appeals to the cities of Greece was foolish; “your envoys will do
nothing more than rhapsodise in their round of visits.” The truth was that
Athens could in no case think of embarking at this juncture in a big war; she
had not the means. Isocrates himself raised his voice for peace in a remarkable
pamphlet, distinguished by the nobility of tone and the width of view which
always mark his writings. It was a scathing condemnation of Imperialism.
Passing from the momentary state of affairs, he looked out into the future and
boldly declared that the only salvation for Athens lay in giving up her naval
empire. “It is that,” he said, “which brought us to this pass; it is that which
caused the fall of our democracy.” He showed the calamities which the empires
of Athens and Sparta had drawn upon themselves and Greece. But it is to be
observed that, when a moment had come at which his favourite plan of a common
attack on Persia seemed at length feasible, he was wise enough not to advise
it. He looks to Thrace, not to Persia, to find lands for endowing those needy
Greeks who were roving about for subsistence.
In the end prudent counsels prevailed; Chares was
recalled negotiations were opened with the revolted allies, and a peace was
made. Athens recognised the independence of the three islands, Chios, Cos, and
Rhodes, and of the city of Byzantium. It was not long before Lesbos also
severed itself from the Athenian alliance which thus lost all its important
members in the eastern Aegean and in the west Corcyra fell away about the same
time.
All happened as Mausolus foresaw. He helped the
oligarchies to overthrow the popular governments, and then gave them the
protection of Carian garrisons. But the prince did not live to develop his
empire. Soon after the success of his policy against Athens, he died, leaving
his power to his widow Artemisia. The opportunity was seized by the democrats
of Rhodes to regain their freedom, and they appealed to Athens. After what had
passed they had little right to expect a hearing; and under the influence of the
wise and pacific statesmen who now controlled the Assembly, their appeal was
refused—in spite of the hot and somewhat sentimental pleadings of Demosthenes,
who upheld the extraordinary doctrine that Athens was bound, whenever she was
called upon, to intervene to support democracy against oligarchy. Artemisia
soon recovered her grip on Rhodes.
Caria remained for another twenty years under dynasts
of the house of Hecatomnus, until it submitted to Alexander the Great. The
expansion of the Carian power, which seemed probable under the active
administration of Mausolus, was never fulfilled. Though we know nothing of his
personal character, the outward appearance of Mausolus is familiar to us, the
islanders of the north, who possess in our capital his genuine portrait, and
the headless figure of his queen. The colossal statue, made, at latest, soon after
his death, represents a man of a noble cast of face, of a type presumably
Carian, certainly not Greek, and with the hair curiously brushed back from the
brow. This statue stood, along with that of Artemisia, within the sepulchral
tomb which he probably began and which she certainly completed. Such a royal
tomb seems to take us back to the days of prehistoric Greece; it strikes one
almost like a glorified resurrection of one of the old chamber sepulchres of
the Leleges which are strewed about the Halicarnassian peninsula. It rose above
the harbour at Halicarnassus, conspicuous from the sea, crowned with a chariot
on its apex. The building was adorned with friezes, wrought by four of the most
illustrious sculptors of the day, of whom Scopas himself was one. The precious
fragments of these works of art are the legacy which the Carian realm has
bequeathed to mankind—these and a new word which the tomb of Mausolus added to
the vocabularies of Europe.
Sect. 4. Phocis and the Sacred War
In the meantime, another of the states of northern
Greece seemed likely to will the position of supremacy which Thessaly had
seemed on the eve of winning, and which Boeotia had actually held for a few
years. Phocis now came forward in her turn and enjoyed a brief moment of
expansion and conquest—a flashlight which vanished almost as soon as it
appeared. In succession to the national leaders, Jason of Pherae and
Epaminondas of Thebes, we now meet Onomarchus of Elatea.
Into this career of aggrandisement Phocis was thrust
by the aggression of her neighbours rather than lured by the lust of conquest.
The Phocians had never been zealous adherents of the Boeotian alliance, which
they were forced to join after the battle of Leuctra, and they cut themselves
loose from it after the death of Epaminondas. But though Thebes could no longer
maintain hejr wider supremacy in Greece, an independent Phocis was a source of
constant danger to her in her narrower supremacy in Boeotia, as the western
cities of the land could always find in Phocis a stay and support for their own
independence. It was therefore deemed necessary by the politicians of Thebes to
strike a blow at their western neighbours. One of the instruments of which
Epaminondas had made use to promote his city’s influence in the north was the
old Amphictionic League, which for a hundred years had never appeared on the
scene of history. At an assembly of this body, soon after Leuctra, the Thebans
accused the Spartans of having seized the Cadmea in time of peace. The Spartans
were sentenced to pay a fine of 500 talents; the fine could not indeed be
exacted, but they were doubtless excluded from the temple of Delphi. The
Thebans resolved to wield against Phocis the same engine which they had wielded
against Sparta. The nature of the pretext is uncertain, but it was not
difficult to find a misdemeanour which would seem grave enough to the
Thessalians and Locrians, inveterate enemies of Phocis, to justify a sentence
of condemnation. A number of rich and prominent Phocians were condemned to pay
large fines for sacrilege, and when these sums were not paid within the
prescribed time, the Ampliations decreed that the lands of the defaulters
should be taken from them and consecrated to the Delphian god, and a tablet
with the inscribed decree was set up at Delphi.
The men who were implicated in the alleged sacrilege
determined to resist, and they appealed to their fellow-countrymen, in whatever
form of federal assembly the Phocian cities used to discuss their common
interests, to protect themselves and their property against the threatened
danger. The man who took the lead in organising the resistance was Philomelus,
a weathy citizen of Ledon. He discerned clearly that mercenaries would be
required to defend Phocis against her enemies—Boeotians, Locrians, and Thessalians—and
made the bold and practical proposal that Delphi should be seized, since the
treasures of Delphi would supply at need the sinews of war. It is hardly likely
that he openly avowed the true reason of the importance of seizing Delphi; it
was enough to assert the old rights of the Phocians over rocky Pytho—rights for
which he could appeal to the highest authority, the sacred text of Homer—and to
point out that the Delphians were implicated in the unjust decrees of the
Amphictions. The proposals of Philomelus were adopted, and he was appointed
general of the Phocian forces, with full powers. His first step was to visit
Sparta, not only as the enemy of Thebes, but as being in the same case as
Phocis, lying under an Amphictionic sentence which had recently been renewed
and confirmed. King Archidamus welcomed the proposals of the Phocian
plenipotentiary, but Sparta stood in a rather awkward position. Hitherto she
had always supported the Delphians in maintaining their independence against
Phocian claims, as, for instance, when in the days of Pericles she restored
them to their shrine after the Phocians with Athenian aid had dispossessed
them. It would consequently have been a flagrant inconsistency in Spartan
policy to turn against the Delphians now; so that Archidamus did not openly
avow his sympathy with the Phocian cause, but privately he supported it by
placing fifteen talents in the hands of Philomelus. With this sum and fifteen
talents from his own purse, Philomelus was able to hire some mercenaries, and
with their help to seize Delphi. The Locrians of neighbouring Amphissa, whom
the Delphians had summoned to their aid, arrived too late and were repulsed.
Philomelus did no hurt to the people of Delphi, excepting only the clan of the
Thracidae, bitter anti-Phocians, whom he put to death.
The first object of Philomelus was to enlist Hellenic
opinion in his favour. He had the secret sympathy of Sparta, and he might count
on the friendship of Athens, who had always been an ally of Phocis and was now
an enemy of Thebes. He sent envoys to Sparta, to Athens, to Thebes itself, to
explain the Phocian position. These envoys were instructed to say that in
seizing Delphi the Phocians were simply resuming their rights over the temple,
which belonged to them and had been usurped by others, and to declare that they
would act merely as administrators of the Panhellenic Sanctuary, and were ready
to allow all the treasures to be weighed and numbered, and to be responsible to
Greece for their safety. In consequence of these embassies Sparta came forward
from her reserve and openly allied herself with Phocis, while Athens and some
smaller states promised their support. The Thebans and their Amphictionic
friends resolved to make war.
In the meantime, Philomelus had fortified the Delphic
sanctuary by a wall, and had collected an army of 5000 men, with which he could
easily hold the position. It was his wish that the oracular responses from the
mystic tripod should continue to be given as usual to those who came to consult
Apollo, and he was anxious above all to receive some voice of approval or
encouragement from the god. But the Delphian priestess was stubborn to the
Phocian intruder, and refused to prophesy. He tried to seat her by force upon
the tripod, and in her alarm she bade him do as he would. He eagerly seized
these words as an oracular sanction of his acts. It soon became necessary to
raise more money for paying the mercenaries, and for this purpose Philomelus,
refraining as long as he could from touching the treasures of the shrine,
levied a contribution from the rich Delphians. At first he had to deal only
with the Locrians, whom he finally defeated in a hot battle near the Phaedriad
cliffs which rise sheer above Delphi. The loss of the Locrians was heavy; some
of them, driven to the edge, hurled themselves down the cliffs.
This victory forced the Thebans to prepare actively to
intervene. The Amphictionic assembly met at Thermopylae, and it was decided
that an Amphictionic army should enforce the decree of the league against the
Phocians, and rescue Delphi from their power. Philomelus, with the forces which
he had, might hold his own against the Locrians, but not against the host which
would now be arrayed against him. There were only two means of saving Phocis.
One was the active support of Athens or Sparta, or both; the other was the
organisation of a large army of mercenaries. As neither Athens nor Sparta
showed willingness to give any immediate assistance, nothing remained but the
other alternative. And that alternative, as Philomelus must have foreseen from
the beginning, would not be possible without the control of far larger sums of
money than could either be contributed by the Phocian cities or extorted from
the Delphian proprietors. No resource remained but to make use of the treasures
of the temple. At first Philomelus was scrupulous. He only borrowed from the
god enough to meet the demand of the moment; but, as habitude blunted the first
feelings of scrupulousness, and as needs grew more pressing, the Phocians dealt
as freely with the sacred vessels and the precious dedications as if they were
their own. By offering large pay Philomelus assembled an army of 10,000 men,
who cared little whence the money came. An indecisive war with the Thebans and
Locrians was waged for some time, till at length the Phocians underwent a severe
defeat near Neon on the north side of Mount Parnassus. The general fought
desperately, and, covered with wounds, he was driven to the verge of a
precipice where he had to choose between capture and self-destruction. He
hurled himself from the cliff and perished.
The Thebans imagined that the death of Philomelus
meant the doom of the Phocian cause, and they retired after the battle. But it
was not so. In Onomarchus of Elatea, who had been associated with him in the
command of the army, he had a successor as able as himself. The retreat of the
enemy gave Onomarchus time to re-organise the troops and collect
reinforcements; and he not only coined the gold and silver ornaments of the
temple, but beat the bronze and iron donatives into arms for the soldiers. He
then entered upon a short career of signal successes. Westward, he forced
Locrian Amphissa to submit; to northward he reduced Doris, and crossing the
passes of Mount Oeta he made himself master of Thermopylae, and captured the
Locrian Thronion near the eastern gate of the pass. Eastward, he took
possession of Orchomenus and restored those of the inhabitants who had escaped
the sword of the Thebans ten years before.
The Thebans meanwhile were hampered by want of money,
and, having neither mines like Philip nor a rich temple like Phocis, they
decided to replenish their treasury by sending out a body of troops on foreign
service. We have already seen Sparta and Athens raising money by the same
means, and the Theban soldiers who now went forth under Pammenes hired
themselves out to the same Persian satrap Artabazus, for whom the Athenian
Chares had won a victory over the army of the king. Pammenes was equally
successful, but it does not seem that his expedition profited the Boeotian
treasury; for he presently became suspected by Artabazus, who threw him into
prison.
Among the most important uses to which Onomarchus
applied the gold of Delphi was the purchase of the alliance of the tyrants of
Pherae. By this policy Thessaly was divided; and the Thessalian league, beset
by the hostility of Pherae, was unable to co-operate with the Thebans against
Phocis. But the Thessalians, being hard pressed, turned for help to their
northern neighbour, Philip of Macedon, and his intervention south of Mount
Olympus marks a new stage in the course of the Sacred War.
Philip had lately deprived Athens of her last ally on
the Thermaic Gulf by the capture of Methone, the Athenian expedition of relief
coming too late to save it. He readily acceded to the request of the
Thessalians to act as their general; it was a convenient occasion to begin the
push southward, and lay the foundation of Macedonian supremacy in Greece, plans
which were now coming within the range of practical effort. Against the forces
which Philip led to the support of the Thessalian league, it was hopeless for
Lycophron of Pherae to stand alone; the tyrant was lost unless he were
succoured by the arm of those who had already furnished him with gold. Nor did
the Phocians leave him unsupported. The strength of Onomarchus was now so great
that he could spare a force of 7000 men for a campaign in the north. But his
brother Phayllus, to whom he entrusted the command, was beaten out of Thessaly
by Philip. Then Onomarchus went forth himself, at the head of the whole Phocian
host (about 20,000), to rescue his ally. Far superior in numbers, he defeated
the Macedonian army in two battles with serious loss; Philip was compelled to
withdraw into Macedonia; and Onomarchus delivered Thessaly into the hands of
Lycophron.
At this moment, the power of the Phocians was at its
height. Their supremacy reached from the shores of the Corinthian Gulf to the
slopes of Olympus. They were masters of the pass of Thermopylae, and they had
two important posts in western Boeotia, in addition to Orchomenus, they won
Coronea immediately after the Thessalian expedition. If all these things had
befallen at some other epoch, the Phocian power might have endured for a time,
and the name of their able leader might have been more familiar to posterity.
But Onomarchus had fallen on evil days. He and his petty people were swept away
in the onward course of a greater nation and a greater chief.
Philip of Macedon speedily retrieved the humiliation
which he had suffered at the hands of his Phocian foes. In the following year
he descended again into Thessaly, and Onomarchus went forth again to succour
his ally or dependent. In the preceding campaign Philip had captured the port
of Pagasae, and placed in it a Macedonian garrison. It was important not only
for Pherae, but for Athens, that this post should not remain in his hands, and
Chares was sent with an Athenian fleet to assist the Phocians in recovering it.
The decisive battle was fought at a place unknown, near the Pagasaean Gulf. The
numbers of the infantry were nearly equal, but Philip’s cavalry and his tactics
were far superior. More than a third of the Phocian army was slain or made
prisoners, and Onomarchus was killed. Pherae was then captured and Lycophron
driven from the land; and Philip, having thus become master of Thessaly,
prepared to march southward for the purpose of delivering the shrine of Apollo
from the possession of the Phocians, whom he professed to regard as
sacrilegious usurpers.
Phocis was now in great need, and her allies—Sparta,
Achaea, and Athens—at length determined to give her active help. The Macedonian
must not be permitted to pass Thermopylae. The statesman Eubulus, whose
influence was now predominant at Athens, and was chiefly directed to the
maintenance of peace, acted promptly on this occasion, and sent a large force
under Nausicles to defend the pass. Philip at once recognised that it would be
extremely hazardous to attempt to force the position, and he retired. He was a
prince who knew when to wait and when to strike. Thus Phocis was rescued for
the time; she was indebted both to Sparta and Achaea who had sent her aid, but
most of all to Athens.
In supporting Phocis, the Spartans had objects of
their own in view.
They had not abandoned their hopes of winning back
Messenia and destroying Megalopolis. It was therefore their policy to sustain
Phocis, in order that Phocis might keep Thebes so fully occupied that they
would have a free hand in the Peloponnesus without fear of Theban interference.
The successes of Onomarchus in his first Thessalian campaign encouraged Sparta
to prepare for action, and Megalopolis, made aware of the danger, applied to
Athens for help. It was a request which no practical statesman could have
entertained, and it had no chance of being granted under the regime of as wise
a head as Eubulus. Orators like Demosthenes, who constituted themselves the
opponents of Eubulus, might invoke the old principle that it was the policy of
Athens to keep Sparta weak. But this was an obsolete maxim, for there was now
no serious prospect of Sparta becoming formidably strong. It was no concern of
Athens to meddle in the Peloponnesus now. Her true policy was to keep on
friendly terms with Sparta, and, in conjunction with her, to support the
Phocian state against Thebes, Thessaly, and Macedon. This was the policy which
Eubulus followed.
The war broke out in the Peloponnesus soon after the
check of Philip at Thermopylae. While Athens held aloof, Achaea and Elis,
Phlius and Mantinea, supported Sparta, and the Phocians sent 3000 men to her
help. But all these forces were outnumbered by the Messenians, Arcadians, and
Argives, to whom the Thebans had sent a considerable aid. A series of
engagements were fought; they were almost all indecisive; but they rescued
Messenia and the Arcadian capital, and frustrated the plans of Lacedaemon.
The death of Onomarchus devolved the leadership of the
Phocian league upon his brother Phayllus. At first the Phocians barely
maintained their posts in western Boeotia; but presently—after the return of
the auxiliaries whom they had sent to the Peloponnesus—they conquered
Epicnemidian Locris and laid siege to Naryx, which they ultimately captured.
Thus Phayllus maintained the power of Phocis for about two years; then he was
carried off by disease, and was succeeded by his nephew, Phalaecus, son of
Onomarchus. Under Phalaecus the war dragged on for a few more years, without
any notable achievement, the Thebans winning battles of no importance and
ravaging Phocis, the Phocians retaining their grip on western Boeotia.
The rise of Phocis to its momentary position as one of
the leading powers in Greece depended on two conditions—the possession of
Delphi and the possibility of hiring mercenaries. It is therefore clear that
Phocis could not easily have come to the front before the fourth century, when
mercenary service had come widely into vogue. But these two essential features
of the Phocian power, the occupation of Delphi and the employment of mercenary
troops, gave it a bad name. Historians echo the invectives of the enemies of
Phocis, and give the impression that during the Sacred War the sanctuary of
Apollo was in the hands of sacrilegious and unscrupulous barbarians. Tales were
told how the dedicatory offerings were bestowed upon the loose favourites of
the generals—how Philomelus gave a golden wreath to a dancing girl, or Phayllus
a silver beaker to a flute-player. It matters little whether such scandals are
true or false; if true, they would only show that the generals were not above
petty peculations. But the Phocians were not alien desecrators of the shrine of
Apollo. They could establish as good a claim to Delphi as many claims founded
on remote events in the past; and they certainly desired to maintain the
Panhellenic dignity and sanctity of the shrine and the oracle as high as ever
under their own administration. But they regarded Delphi not only as a
Panhellenic sanctuary, but as a national sanctuary of Phocis; somewhat in the
same way as Athens employed the treasures of her temples for national purposes
of defence in the Peloponnesian war, so Phocis felt justified in employing the
treasures of Apollo for the national interest of Phocis. Throughout all, the
Phocian statesmen could have maintained that they were only borrowing from the
god loans which would be gradually paid back after the restoration of peace.
Recently there has come to light, among the original
documents inscribed on the stones of Delphi, a striking disproof of the old
view which conceived the Phocians of Onomarchus and Phayllus as a band of
robbers holding their orgies in a holy place. The temple of the god which had
been built by the Alcmaeonids was destroyed by an earthquake nearly twenty
years before the Phocian usurpation. The work of rebuilding had been begun,
perhaps soon after, but had advanced slowly, and when Philomelus seized Delphi
the completion of the temple was still far off. The work was carried out under
a commission of “Temple-builders,” in which all the Amphictionic states were
represented; and this body administered a fund set apart for the building.
During the Phocian usurpation the council of Temple-builders still held their
meetings the work still went on; the skilful artisans in Corinth and
elsewhere wrought the stone material and transferred it to Delphi, as if
nothing had befallen; the payments were made, as usual, from the fund; and the
accounts were kept—we have some of them still. Those Amphictionic states which
were at war with Phocis, like Thebes and Thessaly, were naturally not
represented at the meetings of the board of the Temple-builders, but Delphian
members were always present; and after Locris had been conquered by Phayllus we
find Locrians also attending the meetings. Thus the completion of the temple of
Apollo was not suspended while the Phocians held the sanctuary; and the Dorian
and Ionian states continued to take their part in the Panhellenic work of
supervising the structure, as if nothing had happened to alter the centre of
the Greek world.
Sect. 5. The Advance of Macedonia
The Macedonian monarch was now master not only of the
Thermaic Gulf and the mouth of the Strymon, but of the basin of Pagasae, and he
was beginning to create a fleet. His marauding vessels, let loose in the
northern Aegean, captured the cornships of Athens, descended on her possessions
and dependencies—Lemnos, Imbros, and Euboea—and once even insulted the coast of
Attica itself. The most important interests of Athens centred round the
Hellespont and Propontis; and it was obviously her policy to form a close
combination with the Thracian king Cersobleptes, with a view to offering common
resistance to the advance of the new northern power on the Thracian side. It
was an effort in this direction when Aristocrates proposed a resolution in
honour of Charidemus, the adventurer who had become the brother-in-law and the
chief minister of the Thracian king. The resolution was impeached as illegal,
and the accuser was supplied with a speech by the young politician Demosthenes.
The legal objections were probably cogent, but the opponents of the proposal
might wisely have confined themselves to this aspect of the question. They went
on to impugn the expediency of the measure; and the speech of Demosthenes
against Aristocrates was calculated, so far as a single speech could have a
political effect, to alienate a power which it was distinctly the interest of
Athens to conciliate.
But it mattered little. No sooner had Philip returned
from Thessaly than he moved against Thrace. Supported by a rival Thracian
prince and by the cities of Byzantium and Perinthus, he advanced to the
Propontis, besieged Heraeon-Teichos the capital of Cersobleptes, and forced
that potentate to submit to the overlordship of Macedon. The movements of
Philip had been so rapid that Athens had no time to come to the rescue of
Thrace. When the news arrived there was a panic, and an armament was voted to
save the Chersonese. But a new message came that Philip had fallen ill; then he
was reported dead; and the sending of the armament was postponed. Philip’s
illness was a fact; it compelled him to desist from further operations, and the
Chersonesus was saved.
Eight years had not elapsed since Philip had mounted
the throne of Macedon; and he had shifted the balance of power in Greece, and
altered the whole prospect of the Greek world, for those who had eyes to see.
He had created an army, and a thoroughly adequate revenue; he had made himself
lord of almost the whole sea-board of the northern Aegean from the defile of
Thermopylae to the shores of the Propontis. The only lands which were still
excepted from his direct or indirect sway were the Chersonesus and the territory
of the Chalcidian league. He was ambitious to secure a recognised hegemony in
Greece; to hold such a position as had been held by Athens, by Sparta, and by
Thebes in the days of their greatness; to form, in fact, a confederation of
allies, which should hold some such dependent relation towards him as the
confederates of Delos had held towards Athens. Rumours were already floating
about that his ultimate design was to lead a Panhellenic expedition against the
Persian king—the same design which was ascribed to Jason of Pherae. Though the
Greek states regarded Philip as in a certain sense an outsider, both because
Macedonia had hitherto lain aloof from their politics and because absolute
monarchy was repugnant to their political ideas, it must never be forgotten
that Philip desired to identify Macedonia with Greece, and to bring his own
country up to the level of the kindred peoples which had so far outstripped it
in civilisation. Throughout his whole career he regarded Athens with respect;
he would have given much for her friendship, and he showed that he deemed it
one of his misfortunes that she compelled him to be her foe. He was himself
imbued with Greek culture; and if the robust Macedonian enjoyed the society of
the somewhat rude boon companions of his own land with whom he could drink
deep, he knew how to make himself agreeable to Attic philosophers or men of
letters whom he always delighted to honour. He chose an accomplished man of
letters, Aristotle of Stagira, who had been educated at Athens, to be the
instructor of his son Alexander. This fact alone sets Philip in the true light,
as a conscious and deliberate promoter of Greek civilisation.
Greece saw with alarm the increase of the Macedonian
power, though men were yet far from apprehending what it really meant. No state
had been directly hit except Athens—though the day of Chalcidice was at hand;
and it was now too late for Athens to retrieve her lost position, either alone
or with any combination she could form, against a state which possessed an
ample revenue and a well- drilled national army, under the sovereign command of
the greatest general and diplomatist of the day. The only event which could now
have availed to stay the course of Macedon would have been the death of Philip.
But the Athenians did not apprehend this; they still dreamed of recovering
Amphipolis. Their best policy would have been peace and alliance with
Macedonia. There can be little question that Philip would have gladly secured
them the Chersonese and their cornships; for the possession of the Chersonese
had not the same vital importance for him as Amphipolis, or as the towns around
the Thermaic Gulf.
In these years, Athens was under the guidance of a
cautious statesman, Eubulus, who was a marvellously able minister of finance.
He was appointed chancellor of the Theoric Fund for four years, and this
office, while it was specially concerned with the administration of the surplus
of revenue which was devoted to theoric purposes, involved a general control
over the finances of the state. He pursued a peace policy; yet it was he who
struck the one effective blow that Athens ever struck at Philip, when she hindered
him from passing Thermopylae. But Eubulus wisely refused to allow Athens to be
misled into embarking in unnecessary wars in the Peloponnesus or Asia Minor;
and frankly accepted the peace which had concluded the war of Athens with her
allies. The mass of the Athenians were well contented to follow the counsel of
a dexterous financier, who, while he met fully all the expenses of
administration, distributed large dividends of festival-money. The news of
Philip’s campaign in Thrace may have temporarily weakened his influence: it was
felt that there had been slackness in watching Athenian interests in the
Hellespontine regions; and his opponents had a fair opportunity to inveigh
against an inactive policy.
The most prominent among these opponents was
Demosthenes, who had recently made a reputation as a speaker in the Assembly.
The father of Demosthenes was an Athenian manufacturer, who died when his son
was still a child; his mother had Scythian blood in her veins. His guardians
dealt fraudulently with the considerable fortune which his father had left him;
and when he came of age he resolved to recover it. For this purpose he sat at
the feet of the orator Isaeus, and was trained in law and rhetoric. Though he
received but a small portion of his patrimony, the oratory of Demosthenes owed
to this training with a practical purpose many qualities which it would never
have acquired under the academic instruction of Isocrates. He used himself to
tell how he struggled to overcome his natural defects of speech and manner, how
he practised gesticulation before a mirror and declaimed verses with pebbles in
his mouth. In the end he became as brilliant an orator as the Pnyx had ever
cheered; perhaps his only fault was a too theatrical manner. His earlier
political speeches are not monuments of wisdom. He came forward as an opponent
of the policy of Eubulus, and so we have already met him supporting the appeals
of Rhodes and Megalopolis. The advance of Philip to the Propontis gave him a
more promising occasion to urge the Athenians to act, since their own interests
were directly involved. And the effort of Demosthenes was more than adequate.
The harangue, which is known as the First Philippic, one of his most brilliant
and effective speeches, calls upon the Athenians to brace themselves vigorously
to oppose Philip “our enemy.” He draws a lively picture of the indifference of
his country-men and contrasts it with the energy of Philip “who is not the man
to rest content with that he has subdued, but is always adding to his
conquests, and casts his snare around us while we sit at home postponing.”
Again: “Is Philip dead? Nay, but he is ill. What does it matter to you? For, if
this Philip die, you will soon raise up a second Philip by your apathy.”
Demosthenes proposed a scheme for increasing the military forces of the city;
and the most essential part of the scheme was that a force should be sent to
Thrace of which a quarter should consist of citizens, and the officers should
be citizens. At present the numerous officers whom they elected were kept for
services at home: “You choose your captains, not to fight but to be displayed
like dolls in the market-place.”
Demosthenes was applauded, but nothing was done. His
ideal was the Athens of Pericles; but he lived in the Athens of Eubulus. In the
fourth century the Athenians were quite capable of holding their own among
their old friends and enemies, the Spartans and Thebans and the islanders of
the Aegean; with paid soldiers and generals like Iphicrates and Chares they
could maintain their position as a first-rate power. But against a large,
vigorous land-power with a formidable army their chances were hopeless; for, since
the fall of their empire, the whole spirit of the people had tended to peace
and not to war; they were no longer animated by the idea of empire; and the
memories of the past, which Demosthenes might invoke, were powerless to stir
them to action. The orations of Demosthenes, however carefully studied, however
imbued with passion, could not change the character of his country-men; their
spirit did not respond to his, and, not being under the imperious dominion of
an idea, they saw no reason for great undertakings. Nor was the condition of
Athens as ill as the opponent of Eubulus painted it. Under the administration
of Eubulus the fleet was increased, the building of a new arsenal was begun,
new ship-sheds were made, and the military establishment of Athens was in
various ways improved. She was still the great sea-power of the Aegean, and
strong enough to protect her commercial interests.
The next stage in the development of Macedonia was the
incorporation of Chalcidice, and as soon as Philip recovered from his illness
he turned his attention to this quarter. If the Olynthians had treated Philip
honourably, they would probably have been left a self-governing community, with
their territory intact, dependent on Macedonia. But they treated both Athens
and Philip badly. They first made a close alliance with Philip to rob Athens;
and then, when they had received from Philip Anthemus and Potidaea, they turned
round and made peace with Athens, a power with which Philip was at war, and
recognised the right of Athens to Amphipolis. At the time Philip was otherwise
engaged; but three years later he sent a requisition to Olynthus, demanding the
surrender of his half-brother, a pretender to the Macedonian throne, to whom
they had given shelter. The demand was refused and Philip marched against
Chalcidice. One after another the cities of the Olynthian confederacy opened
their gates to him; or if they refused, like Stagira, they were captured.
In her jeopardy Olynthus sought an alliance with
Athens, and on this occasion both the leaders of the Athenian Assembly and the
advocates of a war policy found themselves in harmony. It was during the
debates on the question of alliance that Demosthenes pronounced his Olynthiac
orations, which were animated by the same spirit as his Philippic, and were in
fact Philippics. At this juncture the Athenians seem to have been awakened to
the necessity of action sufficiently to embolden Demosthenes to throw out the
unpopular suggestion that the Theoric Fund should be devoted to military
purposes; and he repeats his old plea for citizen-soldiers. An alliance was
concluded and mercenaries were dispatched to the Chalcidian peninsula under
Chares and Charidemus (who had left the service of Cersobleptes). More troops
would certainly have followed, and Philip might have been placed in some
embarrassment, especially as Cersobleptes had rebelled. But he diverted the
concern of Athens in another direction, and so divided her forces. He had long
been engaged in intrigues in Euboea, and now Eretria revolted and drove out
Plutarch, the tyrant who held the city for Athens. Neighbouring Chalcis, and
Oreos in the north, followed the example; Euboea was in a state of revolt. It
is just possible that, if Athens had left Euboea alone, and concentrated all
her military power in Chalcidice, she might have saved Olynthus for the time.
The division of her forces was certainly fatal; and Demosthenes deserves great
credit for opposing any interference in Euboea. But the Athenians would have
been strong-minded indeed if they had done nothing to regain the neighbouring
island, while they dispatched all their troops to succour an ally. The
expedition to Euboea, which was now entrusted to the general Phocion, might
better never have been sent; but beforehand there seemed no reason why it
should not succeed. Phocion’s only exploit was to extricate himself from a
dangerous position at Tamynae, by winning a battle, but he returned to Athens
without having recovered any of the rebellious cities. The enemy had taken a
number of prisoners, for whose ransom Athens had to pay fifty talents; and it
was decided that there was nothing for it but to acknowledge the independence
of Euboea, with the exception of Carystus, which remained loyal.
Meanwhile Philip was pressing Olynthus hard, and
urgent appeals were sent to Athens. This time Demosthenes had his way, and 2000
citizen-soldiers sailed for the north. But it was too late. Olynthus was
captured before they reached it; and Philip showed no mercy to the city which
had played him false. The place was destroyed and the inhabitants scattered in
various parts of Macedonia, some set to work as slaves in the royal domains.
The other cities of the confederacy were practically incorporated in Macedonia;
but they still continued to exist as cities and manage their local affairs.
There was no question of their extermination.
Demosthenes had opposed the expedition to Euboea, and
thereby hangs a story. He had a bitter foe in a rich man, named Meidias, who
was a supporter of Eubulus. Their personal hostility was reawakened in the
debates over the Euboean question, and Meidias seized the occasion of the great
Dionysiac feast to put a public affront on his enemy. Demosthenes had
undertaken the duty of supplying a chorus for his tribe, and on the day of the
performance, when he appeared in the sacred robe of a choregus, Meidias struck
him in the face. The outrage involved contempt of a religious festival, and
Demosthenes instituted proceedings against his insulter. The speech which he
composed for the occasion contains fine scathing invective. The description of
Meidias vulgarly displaying his wealth may be quoted to illustrate contemporary
manners. “Where,” Demosthenes asks, “are his splendid outlays? For myself, I
cannot see unless it be in this—that he has built a mansion at Eleusis large
enough to darken all the neighbourhood— that he keeps a pair of white horses
from Sicyon, with which he conducts his wife to the mysteries or anywhere else
he fancies—that he sweeps through the market-place with three or four lackeys
all to himself, and talks about his bowls and drinking-horns and saucers, loud
enough to be heard by the passers-by.” But Demosthenes consented to compromise
the matter for a small sum before it was brought to an issue, and there can be
little question that his consent was given from political motives. On the
capture of Olynthus the different parties drew together and agreed to
co-operate; and this new political combination rendered it necessary for
Demosthenes, however reluctant, to patch up the feud with Meidias.
Sect. 6. The Peace of Philocrates
Her recent military efforts had exhausted the revenue
of Athens; there was not enough money in the treasury to pay the judges their
daily wage. Peace was clearly a necessity, and this must have been fully
recognised by Eubulus. But there was great indignation at the fall of Olynthus,
and the feeling that a disaster had been sustained was augmented by the fact
that there were a considerable number of Athenians among the captives.
Accordingly the pressure of popular opinion, which was for the moment strongly aroused
against Philip, induced Eubulus to countenance the dispatch of envoys to the
cities of the Peloponnesus, for the purpose of organising a national resistance
in Hellas against the man who had destroyed Olynthus. It is probable that this
measure was advocated by Demosthenes; in later years, a national resistance to
Philip was his favourite idea. It was an effort foredoomed to failure, as
Eubulus knew perfectly well; yet it served his purpose, for it protected him
against suspicions of being secretly friendly to Philip. On this occasion the
orator Aeschines, famous as the antagonist of Demosthenes, first came
prominently forward. He had begun life as an usher in a school kept by his
father, he had then been a tragic actor, and finally a public clerk. He was now
sent to rouse the Greeks of the Peloponnesus against Macedonia, and he used
such strong language in disparagement of Philip, especially at Megalopolis,
that no one could accuse him of “philippizing.” The mere fact that envoys were
sent to Megalopolis—whose application for help had so recently been rejected by
Athens—is enough to cast suspicion on the whole round of embassies as a farce,
got up to satisfy public opinion at home. Demosthenes, like other politicians,
saw the necessity of peace and worked towards it.
Philip desired two things, to conclude peace with
Athens and to become a member of the Amphictionic Council. Towards this second
end a path was prepared by the Thebans, who along with the Thessalians
addressed an appeal to Philip that he would undertake the championship of the
Amphictionic League and crush the Phocians. In Phocis itself there had recently
been domestic strife; Phalaecus had been deposed from the generalship, but he
had a party of his own and he held Thermopylae with the strong places in its
neighbourhood. When it was noised abroad that Philip was about to march
southward in answer to the Theban prayer, the Phocians invited Athens and
Sparta to help them once again to hold the gates of Greece. Both Athens and
Sparta again responded to the call; but the call had come from the political
opponents of Phalaecus, and he refused to admit either Spartan or Athenian into
the pass. Phalaecus seems to have previously assisted the enemies of
Athens in Euboea; and statesmen at Athens might now feel some uneasiness,
whether he would not turn traitor and surrender the pass to Philip. It was
another reason for acquiescing in the necessity of making peace.
The first overtures came from Athens. Ten Athenian
envoys, and one representative of the Synedrion of Athenian allies, were sent
to Pella to negotiate terms of peace with the Macedonian king. Among the envoys
were Philocrates, who had proposed the embassy, Aeschines, and Demosthenes. The
terms to which Philip agreed were that Athens and Macedon should each retain
the territories of which they were actually in possession at the time the peace
was concluded; the peace would be concluded when both sides had sworn to it.
Both the allies of Macedonia and those of Athens were to be included, with two
exceptions: Philip refused to treat with Halus in Thessaly—a place which he had
recently attacked—or with the Phocians, whom he was determined to crush.
By these terms, which were perfectly explicit, Athens
would surrender her old claim to Amphipolis, and on the other hand Philip would
recognise Athens as mistress of the Chersonese. The two exceptions which Philip
made were inevitable. Halus indeed was a trifle which no one heeded; but it was
an essential part of the Macedonian policy to proceed against Phocis. To the
envoys, whom the king charmed by his courteous hospitality at Pella, he
privately intimated that he was far from being ill-disposed to the Phocians;
and perhaps a few of them hoped that there was something in the assurance. But
in truth the Athenian statesmen troubled themselves little about Phocis; some
of them, like the Theban proxenos Demosthenes, were more disposed to lean
towards Thebes. It would be necessary to keep up the appearance of protecting
an ally,— though relations with that ally had recently grown somewhat strained;
but neither Eubulus nor Demosthenes would for a moment have dreamed of forgoing
the peace for the sake of supporting Phocis against her enemies.
There were a few Thracian forts, belonging to
Cersobleptes, which Philip was anxious to capture before the peace was
made and, when the envoys left Pella, he set out for Thrace, having given
them an undertaking to respect the Chersonese. The envoys returned home bearing
with them a friendly letter from Philip to the Athenian people, and they were
followed in a few days by three Macedonian delegates, appointed to receive the
oaths from the Athenians and their allies. How important this negotiation was
for Philip is proved by the fact that two of these deputies were the two
greatest of his subjects, Parmenio and Antipater. On the motion of Philocrates,
the Peace was accepted by Athens on the terms which Philip offered, though
there were dissentient voices against the exclusion of Phocis and Halus; but
the murmurs of the opposition were silenced by the plain speaking of Eubulus,
who showed that if the terms were rejected the war must be continued. And some
of the ambassadors disseminated the unofficial utterances of Philip, that he
would not ruin the Phocians and that he would help Athens to win back Euboea
and Oropus. The upshot was that Phocis was not mentioned in the treaty; she was
tacitly, not expressly, excluded.
The Peace was now concluded on one side, and it
remained for the envoys of Athens to administer the oath to Philip and his
allies. It was to the interest of Athens that this act should be accomplished
as speedily as possible, for Philip was entitled to make new conquests until he
swore to the Peace, and he was actually engaged in making new conquests in
Thrace. The same ambassadors who had visited Macedonia to arrange the terms of
a treaty now set forth a second time to administer the oaths.
Meanwhile Philip had taken the Thracian fortresses
which he had gone to take, and had reduced Cersobleptes to be a vassal of
Macedonia. When he returned to Pella, he found not only the embassy from
Athens, but envoys from many other Greek states also awaiting his arrival with
various hopes and fears. He was beginning to be recognised as the arbiter of
northern Hellas.
So far as the formal conclusion of the Peace went,
there was no difficulty. But the Athenian ambassadors had received general
powers to negotiate further with Philip, with a view to some common decision on
the settlement of the Phocian question and northern Greece. The treaty was a
treaty of “peace and alliance,” and, if Philip could have had his way, the
alliance would have become a bond of close friendship and co-operation. And it
was in this direction that Eubulus and his party were inclined cautiously to
move. Athens might have now taken her position as joint arbitrator with Philip
in the settlement of the Amphictionic states. Both Philip and Athens had a
common interest in reducing the power of Thebes; and, if it was the interest of
Athens that Phocis should not be utterly destroyed, Philip had no special
enmity against Phocis, whose strength was now exhausted; the Phocian
“sacrilege” was a convenient pretext to interfere and step into the place of
Phocis in the Delphian Amphictiony. A common programme was discussed, and might
easily have been concerted between Philip and the ambassadors. To treat the
Phocians with clemency and to force Thebes to acknowledge the independence of
the Boeotian cities would have been the basis of common action; the restoration
of Plataea was mentioned; and while Philip promised to secure the restitution
to Athens of Euboea and Oropus, Athens would have supported the admission of
Macedonia into the Amphictionic Council. Aeschines was the chief mouthpiece of
the counsels of Eubulus. But the project of an active alliance was opposed
strenuously by Demosthenes, and as Demosthenes had great and daily increasing
influence with the Athenian Assembly, it would have been unsafe for Philip to
conclude any definite agreement with the majority of the embassy. The policy of
Demosthenes was to abandon the Phocians to their fate and to draw closer to
Thebes; so that, when his city had recovered from her financial exhaustion,
Thebes and Athens together might form a joint resistance to the aggrandisement
of Macedonia. In consequence of this irreconcilable division, which broke out
in most unseemly quarrels among the ambassadors, nothing more was done than the
administration of the oath. The envoys accompanied the king into Thessaly, and
at Pherae the oath was administered to the Thessalians, his allies. A peace was
then arranged with Halonnesus, and the envoys returned to Athens, leaving
Philip to proceed on his own way.
It now remained to be seen whether Eubulus would carry
the Assembly with him in favour of a rational policy of co-operation with
Macedon, or would be defeated by the brilliant oratory of his younger rival.
Philip’s course of action would depend on the decision of the Assembly.
It was a calamity for Athens that at this critical
moment there was no strong man at the helm of the state. The Assembly was
swayed between the opposite counsels of Demosthenes, whose oratory was
irresistible, and of Eubulus, whose influence had been paramount for the past
eight years. When the ambassadors returned, Demosthenes lost no time in
denouncing his colleagues, as having treacherously intrigued with Philip
against the interests of the city. His denunciation was successful for a
moment, and the usual vote of thanks to the embassy was withheld. But the
success was only for a moment; Aeschines and his colleagues defended their
policy triumphantly before the Assembly; and it was clear that the programme
which they had discussed with Philip would have been satisfactory to the
people. The Assembly decreed that the treaty of peace and alliance should be
extended to the posterity of Philip.
It further decreed that Athens should formally call
upon the Phocians to surrender Delphi to the Amphictions, and should threaten
them with armed intervention if they declined. Demosthenes appears to have made
no opposition to this measure against the Phocians; and it seemed that the
policy of co-operation with Philip was about to be realised.
Philip in the meantime advanced southward. The pass of
Thermopylae was held by Phalaecus, who had been reinforced by some
Lacedaemonian troops; but Phalaecus had opened secret negotiations with Pella
some months before; and the hostile vote of the Athenians decided him to
capitulate on condition of departing unhindered where he would. Before he
reached Thermopylae, Philip had addressed two friendly letters to Athens,
inviting her to send an army to arrange the affairs of Phocis and Boeotia.
Indisposed as the Athenian citizens were to leave Athens on military service,
they lent ready ears to the absurd terrors which Demosthenes conjured up,
suggesting that Philip would detain their army as hostages. Accordingly they
contented themselves with sending an embassy (on which Demosthenes declined to
serve) to convey to Philip an announcement of the decree which they had passed
against the Phocians. Thus swayed between Eubulus and Demosthenes, the
Athenians had done too much or too little. They had abandoned the Phocians, and
at the same time they resigned the voice which they should, and could, have had
in the political settlement of northern Greece.
As it was clear that Philip could not trust Athens,
owing to the attitude of Demosthenes, he was constrained to act in conjunction
with her enemy, Thebes. The cities of western Boeotia, which had been held by
the Phocians, were restored to the Boeotian confederacy. The doom of the
Phocians was decided by the Amphictionic Council which was now convoked. If
some of the members had had their way, all the men of military age would have
been cast down a precipice; but Philip would not have permitted this, and the
sentence was as mild as could have been expected. The Phocians were deprived of
their place in the Amphictionic body; and all their cities (with the exception
of Abae) were broken up into villages, so that they might not again be a danger
to Delphi. They were obliged to undertake to pay back, by instalments of sixty
talents a year, the value of the treasures which they had taken from the
sanctuary. The Lacedaemonians were also punished for the support which they had
given to Phocis, by being disqualified to return either of the members who
represented the Dorian vote. The place which Phocis vacated in the Council was
transferred to Macedonia, in recognition of Philip’s services in expelling the
desecrators of the temple.
The Athenian declaration against Phocis exempted
Athens from the penalty which was inflicted on Sparta at this Amphictionic
meeting. But this was small comfort, and when the Athenians realised that they
had gained nothing and that Thebes had gained all she wanted, they felt with
indignation that the statesmanship of their city had been unskilful. The
futility of their policy had been mainly due to Demosthenes, who had done all
in his power to thwart Eubulus; and he now seized the occasion to discredit that
statesman and his party. He encouraged his fellow-countrymen in the
unreasonable fear that Philip would invade Attica, and the panic was so great
that they brought their families and movable property from the country into the
city. The fear was soon dispelled by a letter from Philip himself; but
Demosthenes had succeeded in creating a profound distrust of Philip, and there
was soon an opportunity of expressing this feeling.
An occasion offered itself to Philip almost
immediately to display publicly to the assembled Greek world the position of
leadership which he had thus won. It so happened that the celebration of the
Pythian games fell in the year of the Peace. It will be remembered how the
despot of Pherae, when he had made himself ruler of Thessaly, was about to come
down to Delphi and assume the presidency of the Pythian feast, when he was cut
down by assassins. The ambitions and plans of Pherae had passed to Pella, and
Greece, which had dreaded the claims of the Thessalian tyrant, had now to bend
the knee before the Macedonian king. Athens sulked; she sent no deputy to the
Amphictionic meeting which elected Philip president for the festival, no
delegates to the festival itself. This marked omission was a protest against
the admission of Macedonia to the Amphictionic League, and Philip understood it
as such. But he did not wish to quarrel with Athens; he hoped ultimately to
gain her good-will; and instead of marching into Attica, whither his Thessalian
and Theban friends would have only too gladly followed him, he contented
himself with sending an embassy to notify to the Athenian people the vote which
made him a member of the Amphictiony and to invite them to concur. The invitation
was in fact an ultimatum. Eubulus and his party had lost their influence in the
outburst of anti-Macedonian feeling which Demosthenes had succeeded in stirring
up. But the current had gone too far, and Demosthenes had some difficulty in
allaying the spirits which he had conjured up. The Assembly was ready, on the
slightest encouragement, to refuse its concurrence to the Amphictionic decree,
and Demosthenes was forced to save the city from the results of his own
agitation by showing that it would be foolish and absurd “to go to war now for
the shadow at Delphi”. Rarely had Athens been placed in such an undignified
posture—a plight for which she had to thank the brilliant orator whom a
malignant fate had sent to guide her on a futile path. From this time forward
Demosthenes was the most influential of her counsellors.
Neither Demosthenes, the eloquent speaker, nor
Eubulus, the able financier, saw far into the future. The only man of the day
perhaps who grasped the situation in its ecumenical aspect, who descried, as it
were from without, the place of Macedonia in Greece and the place of Greece in
the world, was the nonagenarian Isocrates. He had never ventured to raise his
voice in the din of party politics; he had kept his garments unspotted from the
defilement of public life; and when he condescended to give political advice to
Greece, it was easy for the second-rate statesman as well as the party hack to
laugh at a mere man of study stepping into a field where he had no practical
experience. But Isocrates discerned the drift of events, where the orators who
madly declaimed in the Pnyx were at fault; and the view which he took of the
situation after the conclusion of the Peace of Philocrates simply anticipated
the decrees of history. He explained his view in an open letter to king Philip.
He had, long since, seen the endless futility of perpetuating that
international system of Greece which existed within the memory of men : a
number of small sovereign states, which ought by virtue of all they had in
common to form a single nation, divided and constantly at feud. The time had
come, he thought, to unite Greece, now that there had arisen a man who had the
brains, the power, and the gold to become the central pivot of the union.
Sovereign and independent the city states would of course remain; but they
might be drawn together into one fold by a common hope and allegiance to a
common leader. And under such a leader as Philip there was a great programme
for Greece; and not a mere programme of ambition, undertaken for the sake of
something to do, but an enterprise which was urgently needed to meet a pressing
social danger. We have already seen how Greece was flooded for many years past
with a superfluous population who went about as armed rovers, attached to no
city, hiring themselves out to any state that needed fighting men, a constant
menace to society. A new country to colonise was the only remedy for this
overflow of Greece, as Isocrates recognised. And the new country must be won
from the barbarian. The time had come for Hellas to take the offensive against
Persia, and the task appointed for Philip was to lead forth the hosts of Hellas
on this splendid enterprise. If he did not destroy the whole empire of the
Great King, he might at least annex Asia Minor “from Cilicia to Sinope” to the
Hellenic world and appropriate it to the needs of the Hellenic folk.
Ten years later the fulfilment of this task which
Isocrates laid upon Philip was begun, not indeed by Philip himself, but by his
successor. We shall see in due time how the fulfilment surpassed the utmost
hopes of the Athenian speculator. But it is fair to note how justly Isocrates
had discerned the signs of the times and the tendency of history. He saw that
the inveterate quarrel between Europe and Asia, which had existed since the
“Trojan war,” was the great abiding fact; he foresaw that it must soon come to
an issue; and throughout the later part of his long life he was always watching
for the inevitable day. The expedition of Cyrus and the campaign of Agesilaus
were foreshadowings of that day; and it had seemed for a moment that Jason of
Pherae was chosen to be the successor of Agamemnon and Cimon. Now the day had
come at last; the choice of destiny had fallen upon the man of Macedonia. And
Isocrates knew that this expansion of Greece would meet Greece’s chief
practical need. It is instructive to contrast his sane and practical view of
the situation of Greece with the chimerical conservatism of some of his
contemporaries. This conservatism, to which the orator Demosthenes gave a most
noble expression, was founded on the delusion that the Athens of his day could
be converted by his own eloquence and influence into the form and feature of
the Periclean city. That was a delusion which took no account of the change
which events had wrought in the Athenian character; it was a noble delusion
which could have misled no great statesman or hard-headed thinker. It did not
mislead Isocrates; he appreciated the trend of history, and saw the expansion
of Greece, to which the world was moving.
Sect. 7. Interval of Peace and Preparations for War
(346-1 B.C.)
Having gained for Macedonia the coveted place in the
religious league of Greece, Philip spent the next year or two in improving his
small navy, in settling the administration of Thessaly, and in acquiring
influence in the Peloponnesus. It may fairly be said that Thessaly was now
joined to Macedonia by a personal union. The Thessalian cities elected the
Macedonian king as their archon—the old name of tagus with its Pheraean
associations was avoided,—and he set four governors over the four great
divisions of the country. South of the Corinthian Isthmus, Philip adopted the
old policy of Thebes, offering friendship to those states which needed a friend
to stand by them against Sparta. His negotiations gained him the adhesion of
Messenia and Megalopolis, Elis and Argos. In Megalopolis they set up a bronze
statue of Philip, while Argos had a special tie with Macedon, since she claimed
to be the original home of the Macedonian kings.
Nor did Philip yet despair of achieving his chief aim,
the conciliation of Athens. No one knew how to bribe better than he, and we may
be sure that he gave gold without stint to his Athenian supporters. The
Athenians naturally preferred peace to war; and the political party which was
favourable to friendly relations with Philip was still strong and might at any
moment regain its power. The influence of the veteran Eubulus, who seems to
have withdrawn somewhat from public affairs, was on that side; there were
Aeschines and Philocrates who had been active in the negotiation of the Peace;
and there was the incorruptible soldier Phocion, who was a remarkable figure at
Athens, although he had no pretensions to eminence either as a soldier or as a
statesman. He was marked among his contemporaries as an honest man, superior to
all temptations of money; and, as the Athenians always prized this superhuman
integrity which few of them attempted to practise, they elected him forty-five
times as strategos, though in military capacity he was no more than a
respectable sergeant. But his strong common sense, which was impervious to
oratory, and his exceptional probity made him an useful member of his party.
There was one man in Athens who was firmly resolved
that the peace should be no abiding peace, but a mere interval preparatory to
war. Demosthenes, supported by Hypereides, Lycurgus, and others, spent the time
in inflaming the wrath of his countrymen against Philip and in seeking to ruin
his political antagonists. These years are therefore marked by a great struggle
between the parties of war and peace; the influence of Demosthenes being most
often in the ascendency and ultimately emerging victorious.
After Philip’s installation in the Amphictionic
Council, Demosthenes lost no time in striking a blow at his opponents. He
brought an impeachment against Aeschines for receiving bribes from the
Macedonian king and betraying the interests of Athens in the negotiations which
preceded the Peace. Men’s minds were irritated by the triumph of Thebes, and
Demosthenes might have succeeded in inducing them to make Aeschines a
scapegoat, if he had not committed a fatal mistake. He associated with himself
in the prosecution a certain Timarchus, whose early life had been devoted to
vices which disqualified him from the rights of a citizen; and thus Aeschines
easily parried the stroke by bringing an action against Timarchus and
submitting his private life to an annihilating exposure. The case of
Demosthenes was thereby discredited, and he was obliged to let it drop for the
time.
A year or so later we find Demosthenes going forth on
a mission to the cities of the Peloponnesus, to counteract by his oratory the
influence of Philip. But his oratory roused no echoes, and Philip had good
reason to complain of invectives which could hardly be justified from the lips
of the representative of a power which was at peace and in alliance with
Macedonia. An embassy came from Pella to remonstrate with the Athenians on
their obstinate misconstruction of Macedonian motives, and Demosthenes seized the
occasion to deliver one of his uncompromising anti-Macedonian harangues. The
basis of his reasoning in this Philippic, and in the political speeches which
followed it during the next few years, is the proposition that Philip desired
and purposed to destroy Athens. It was a proposition of which he had no valid
proof; and it was actually untrue, as the sequel showed.
We are not told what answer Athens sent to Pella, but
it would seem that she complained of the terms of the recent Peace as unfair,
and specially mentioned her right to Halus. This island off the coast of
Thessaly, a place of no value whatever, had belonged to the Athenian
Confederacy, but it had been seized by pirates, and the pirates had been
expelled by Philip’s soldiers. Philip sent an embassy with a courteous message,
requesting Athens to propose emendations in the terms of the Peace, and
offering to give her Halonnesus. But the place was of so little consequence to
Athens or any one, that it served as an excellent pretext for diplomatic
wrangling, and Demosthenes could persuade the people to refuse Halonnesus as it
was offered, and demand that it should not be “given” but “given back.” Besides
the “restoration” of this worthless island, Athens made the proposal that the
basis of the Peace should be altered, and that each party should retain, not
the territories which were actually in its possession when the treaty was
concluded, but the territories which lawfully belonged to it. This proposal was
preposterous; no peace can be made on a basis that leaves open all the debated
questions which it is the object of the treaty to settle. Athens also complained
of the Thracian fortresses which Philip captured and retained after the
negotiation had begun.
On this question Philip was legally in the right, but
he offered to submit the matter to arbitration. Athens refused the offer on the
plea that suitable arbiters could not be found. She thus showed that she was
not in earnest; her objection was as frivolous as her proposal. Demosthenes was
responsible for the attitude of the city, and his intention was to keep up the
friction with Macedonia and prevent any conciliation.
The ascendency which Demosthenes and his fellows had
now won emboldened them to make a grand attack upon their political opponents,
and thereby deal Philip a sensible blow. Hypereides brought an accusation of
treachery against Philocrates, whose name was especially associated with the
Peace, and so formidable did the prospect of the trial seem, in the present
state of popular opinion, that Philocrates fled, and he was condemned to death
for contempt of court. Encouraged by this success, Demosthenes again took up
his indictment against Aeschines, but Aeschines stood his ground; and one of
the most famous political trials of antiquity was witnessed by the Athenian
public. We can still hear the two rivals scurrilously reviling each other and
vying to deceive the judges; for they published their speeches after the trial,
to instruct and perplex posterity. It is in these documents, burning with the
passions of political hatred, that the modern historian, picking his doubtful
way through lies and distortions of fact, has to discover the course of the
negotiations which led to the Peace of Philocrates. The speech of Demosthenes,
in particular, is a triumph in the art of sophistry. No politician ever knew
better than he how short is the memory of ordinary men for the political events
which they have themselves watched and even helped to shape by their votes and
opinions; and none ever traded more audaciously on this weakness of human
nature. Hardly four brief years had passed since the Peace was made, and
Demosthenes, confident that his audience will remember nothing accurately,
ventures lightly to falsify facts which had so lately been notorious in the
streets of Athens. Disclaiming all responsibility for a peace which he had
himself worked hard to bring about but now seeks to discredit, he discovers
that the Phocians were basely abandoned and imputes their fate to Aeschines.
Against Aeschines there was in fact no case; the charge of receiving bribes
from Philip was not supported by any actual evidence. The reply of Aeschines,
which as an oratorical achievement is not inferior to that of his accuser,
rings less falsely. Eubulus and Phocion, men of the highest character,
supported Aeschines, but the public feeling was so hostile to Philip at this
juncture, that the defendant barely escaped.
That Aeschines and many others of his party received
money from Philip we may well believe—though the reiterations of Demosthenes
are no evidence. But to receive money from Philip was one thing and to betray
the interests of Athens was another. It must be proved that a politician had
sacrificed the manifest good of his country, or deserted his own political
convictions, for a sackful of silver or gold, before he could be considered
unconditionally a traitor. Public opinion in Greece thought no worse of a man
for accepting a few talents from foreigners who were pleased with his policy;
although those few public men—Demosthenes was not among them—who made it a rule
never to accept an obol in connexion with any political transaction were
respected as beings of superhuman virtue. Philip, who unlocked many a city by
golden keys, was doubtless generous to the party whose programme was identical
with his own interests ; and it may be that Aeschines and others, who were not
in affluent circumstances, would have been unable to devote themselves to
public affairs if the king had not lined their wallets with gold.
Meanwhile Philip was seeking influence and intriguing
in the countries which lay on either side of Attica,—in Megara on the west, and
Euboea on the north-east. An attempt at a revolution in Megara was defeated,
and the city allied itself with its neighbour and old enemy Athens. But in
Euboea the movements supported by Macedonia were more successful. Both in
Eretria and in Oreus oligarchies were established, really dependent on Philip.
But in Chalcis, which from its strategic position was of greater importance,
the democracy held its ground, and sought an equal alliance with Athens, to
which Athens gladly consented.
Events in another quarter of Greece now caused a
number of lesser Greek states to rally round Athens, and so bring within the
field of near possibilities a league such as it was the dream of Demosthenes to
form against Macedonia. By his marriage with an Epirot princess, it naturally
devolved upon Philip to intervene in the struggles for the Epirot throne which
followed her father’s death. He espoused the cause of her brother Alexander
against her uncle Arybbas, marched into the country, and established Alexander
in the sovereignty. Epirus would now become dependent on Macedonia, and Philip
saw in it a road to the Corinthian Gulf and a means of reaching Greece on the
western side. His first step was to annex the region of Cassopia (between the
rivers Acheron and Oropus) to the Epirote league of which his brother-in-law
was head; and his eyes were then cast upon Ambracia, which stood as a barrier
to the southward expansion of Epirus. But the place which he desired above all
was doubtless Naupactus, the key to the Corinthian Gulf, now in the hands of
the Achaeans. For compassing his schemes in this quarter his natural allies
were the Aetolians. They too coveted Naupactus and would have held it for him;
and they were the enemies of the Ambraciots and Acarnanians, whom he hoped to
render dependent on Epirus. The evident designs of Philip alarmed all these
peoples, and not only Ambracia, Acarnania, and Achaea, but Corcyra also, sought
the alliance of Athens.
Philip, however, judged that the time had not come for
further advances on this side, and some recent movements of Cersobleptes
decided him to turn now to one of the greatest tasks which were imposed upon
the expander of Macedonia—the subjugation of Thrace. Since the Persians had
been beaten out of Europe, Thrace had been subject to native princes, some of
whom—Teres, Sitalces, Cotys—we have seen ruling the whole land from the
Strymon’s to the Danube’s mouth. It was now to pass again under the rule of a
foreigner, but its new lords were Europeans who would lead Thracian soldiers to
avenge upon Asia the oriental yoke which had been laid upon their ancestors. Of
the Thracian expedition of Philip we know as little as of the Thracian
expedition of Darius. Unlike Darius, he did not cross the rivers of the north
or penetrate into any part of Scythia, but his campaign lasted ten months, and
he spent a winter in the field in that wintry land, suffering from sickness as
well as from the cold. In war Philip never spared himself either hardship or
danger. Demosthenes in later years described his reckless energy, ruthless to
himself, in a famous passage : “To gain empire and power he had an eye knocked
out, his collar-bone broken, his arm and his leg maimed; he abandoned to
fortune any part of his body she cared to take, so that honour and glory might
be the portion of the rest.”
The Thracian king was dethroned, and his kingdom
became a tributary province of Macedon. There is still in the land a city which
bears Philip’s name, and is the most conspicuous memorial of that great and
obscure campaign. Philippopolis on the Hebrus was the chief of the cities which
the conqueror built to maintain Macedonian influence in Thrace.
This conquest was not an infringement of the Peace,
for Cersobleptes had not been admitted to the treaty as an ally of Athens. But
it affected nearly and seriously the position of Athens at the gates of the
Black Sea. The Macedonian frontier was now advanced to the immediate
neighbourhood of the Chersonese, and Athens had no longer Thracian princes to
wield against Philip. The prospect did not escape Demosthenes, and he resolved
to force on a war,—though both his own country and Philip were averse to hostilities.
Accordingly he induced Athens to send a few ships and mercenaries under a
swashbuckler named Diopeithes, to protect her interests in the Chersonese.
There had been some disputes with Cardia touching the lands of the Athenian
outsettlers, and Diopeithes lost no time in attacking Cardia. Now Cardia had
been expressly recognised as an ally of Philip in the Peace, and thus the
action of Diopeithes was a violation of the Peace. The admiral followed up this
aggression by invading some of Philip’s Thracian possessions, and Philip then
remonstrated at Athens. Their admiral was so manifestly in the wrong that the
Athenians were prepared to disown his conduct, but Demosthenes saved his tool
and persuaded the people to sustain Diopeithes. He followed up his speech on
the Chersonese question, which scored this success, by a loud call to war (341
b.c.)—the harangue known as the Third Philippic. The orator’s thesis is that
Philip, inveterately hostile to Athens and aiming at her destruction, is
talking peace but acting war; and, when all the king’s acts have been construed
in this light, the perfectly sound conclusion is drawn that Athens should act
at once. The proposals of Demosthenes are to make military preparations, to
send forces to the Chersonese, and to organise an Hellenic league against “the
Macedonian wretch.”
Envoys were sent here and there to raise the alarm.
Demo- Demosthenes himself proceeded to the Propontis and succeeded in detaching
Byzantium and Perinthus from the Macedonian alliance. At the same time Athenian
troops were sent into Euboe; the governments in Oreus and Eretria were
overthrown, and these cities joined an independent Euboeic league, of which the
Synod met at Chalcis. The island was thus liberated from Macedon without
becoming dependent on Athens.
All these acts of hostility were committed without an
overt breach of the Peace between Athens and Philip. But the secession of
Perinthus and Byzantium was a blow which Philip was not prepared to take with
equanimity. When he had settled his Thracian province, he began the siege of
Perinthus by land and sea. There was an Athenian squadron in the Hellespont
which barred the passage of the Macedonian fleet, but Philip caused a diversion
by sending land troops into the Chersonese, and by this stratagem got his ships
successfully through. The siege of Perinthus, marks, for eastern Greece, the
beginning of those new developments of the art of besieging, which in Sicily
had long since been practised with success. But all the engines and rams, the
towers and the mines of Philip failed to take Perinthus on its steep peninsular
cliff. His blockade on the seaside was inefficient, and the besieged were
furnished with stores and men from Byzantium. The Athenians were still holding
aloof. They had addressed a remonstrance to Philip for violating the Chersonese
and capturing some of their cruisers. Philip replied by a letter in which he
rehearsed numerous acts of Athenian hostility to himself. But the decisive
moment came when the king suddenly raised the siege of Perinthus and marched
against Byzantium, hoping to capture it by the unexpectedness of his attack.
Athens could no longer hold aloof when the key of the Bosphorus was in peril.
The marble tablet on which the Peace was inscribed was pulled down; it was
openly war at last. A squadron under Chares was sent to help Byzantium, and
Phocion presently followed with a second fleet. Other help had come from Rhodes
and Chios, and Philip was compelled to withdraw into Thrace, baffled in both
his undertakings. It was the first triumph of Demosthenes over the arch-foe,
and he received a public vote of thanks from the Athenian people.
But one wonders that the naval power of Athens had not
made itself more immediately and effectively felt. The Macedonian fleet was
insignificant; it could inflict damage on merchant-vessels or raid a coast, but
it had no hold on the sea. The Athenian navy was 300 strong and controlled the
northern Aegean; and yet it seems that in these critical years there was no
permanent squadron of any strength stationed in the Hellespont. Naval affairs
had been by no means neglected. Eubulus had seen to the building of new
ship-sheds and had begun the construction of a magnificent arsenal, close to
the harbour of Zea, for the storage of the sails and rigging and tackle of the
ships of war. But these luxuries were vain, if the ships themselves were not
efficient, and the group-system on which the ships were furnished worked badly.
Demosthenes had long ago desired to reform this system, which had been in force
for seventeen years. The 1200 richest citizens were liable to the
trierarchy—each trireme being charged on a small group, of which each member
contributed the same proportion of the expense. If a large number of ships were
required, the group might consist of five persons; if a small, of fifteen. This
system bore hardly on the poorer members of the partnership, who had to pay the
same amount as the richer, and some were ruined by the burden. But the great
mischief was that these poorer members were often unable to pay their quota in
time and consequently the completion of the triremes was delayed. The influence
of Demosthenes was now so enormous that he was able, in the face of bitter
opposition from the wealthy class, to introduce a new law, by which the cost of
furnishing the ships should fall on each citizen in proportion to his property.
Thus a citizen whose property was rated as exceeding thirty talents, would
henceforward, instead of having to pay one-fifth or perhaps one-fifteenth of
the cost of a single trireme, be obliged to furnish three triremes and a boat.
So popular was Demosthenes, by the successes of Euboea
and Byzantium, that he was able to accomplish a still greater feat. Years
before he had cautiously hinted at the expediency of devoting the Festival Fund
to military purposes; he now persuaded the Athenians to adopt this highly
disagreeable measure. The building of the arsenal and ship-sheds was
interrupted also, in order to save the expenses.
Philip in the meantime had again withdrawn into the
wilds of Thrace. The Scythians near the mouth of the Danube had rebelled, and
he crossed the Balkan range to crush them. In returning to Macedon through the
land of the Triballi, in the centre of the peninsula, he had some sore mountain
warfare and was severely wounded in the leg. But Thrace was now safe, and he
was free to deal with Greece.
Sect. 8. Battle of Chaeronea
Philip had no longer the slightest prospect of
realising the hope, which he had cherished both before and after the Peace of
Philocrates, of establishing friendly relations with Athens. The influence of
the irreconcilable orator was now triumphant; through the persistent agitation
of Demosthenes, coldness and quarrelling had issued in war; and Macedonia had
received a distinct check. There was nothing for it now but to accept the war
and bring the Macedonian cavalry into play. There were two points where Athens
could be attacked effectively, at the gates of her own city, and at the gates
of her granary in the Euxine. But a land-power like Macedonia could not operate
effectively in the Propontis, unless aided by allies which possessed an
effective navy; and Philip had experienced the truth of this when he laid siege
to Perinthus and Byzantium. And in that quarter he had now to reckon not only
with the Athenian sea-power but with the small navies of the Asiatic islands,
Rhodes, Cos, and Chios, which had recently come to the rescue of the menaced
cities. For these island states calculated that, if Philip won control of the
passage between the two continents, he would not only tax their trade, but
would soon cross over to the conquest of Asia Minor, and their fleets would
then be appropriated to form the nucleus of a Macedonian navy. Now that Athens
had been awakened from her slumbers, it was abundantly evident that the only
place where Macedonia could inflict upon her a decisive blow was Attica.
On her side Athens had lightly engaged in a war, for
which she had not either fully counted the cost or meditated an adequate
programme. In truth the Athenians had no craving for the war; and they were not
driven to it by an imperious necessity, or urged by an irresistible instinct,
or persuaded by a rational conviction of its expediency. The persistent and
crafty agitation of Demosthenes and his party had drawn them on step by step;
their natural feeling of irritation at the rise of a new great power in the
north had been sedulously fed and fostered by that eloquent orator and his
friends, till it had grown into an unreasoning hatred of the Macedonian king, whose
character, aims, and resources were totally misrepresented. But now that war
was declared, what was to be the plan of action? Athens had not even an able
general who could make an effective combination. She controlled the sea, and it
was something that Euboea had shaken off the Macedonian influence. In Chalcis,
Athens had a point of vantage against Boeotia, and from Oreus she could raid
the Thessalian coast and operate in the bay of Pagasae. But when Philip
advanced southward, and passed Thermopylae, which was in his hands, the
Athenian superiority at sea was of no use, for his communications were
independent of the sea. There was no means of offering serious opposition if he
marched on Attica; and the citizens were hardly likely at the bidding of Demosthenes
to ascend their ships as they had done at the bidding of Themistocles. If
events fell out according to the only probable forecast which could be made—on
the assumption of Demosthenes that the invasion of Attica and ruin of Athens
were the supreme objects of Philip—the Athenians had to look forward to the
devastation of their country and the siege of their city. How was this peril to
be met? They were practically isolated; for they had no strong continental
power to support them; what could Megarians or Corinthians, Ambraciots or
Achaeans, do for them against the host of Philip and his allies? “Ah, if we
were only islanders!” many an Athenian must have murmured in these critical
years. It was the calamity of Athens, as it has been the calamity of Holland,
that she was solidly attached to the continent. Now that the crisis approaches
nearer, it is borne in upon us more and more how improvident the policy of
Athens had been. If she had accepted Macedonian friendship and kept a strong
naval force permanently in the Propontis, assuring herself of undisputed
control of her own element, she would have been perfectly safe. The constant
presence of a powerful fleet belonging to a predominant naval state may be in
itself a strategic success equivalent to a series of victories. But, though we
have almost no notices of the movements of the Athenian galleys at this time,
we cannot help suspecting that the naval power of Athens was inefficiently
handled.
Demosthenes had never had a free hand until the siege
of Byzantium; till then, he could do little more than agitate. When at length
he became in the full sense of the word the director of Athenian policy, his
energy and skill were amazing. But we cannot help asking with what hopes he was
prepared to undertake the responsibility of bringing an invader into his
country and a besieger to the walls of his city. The answer is that he rested
his hope on a single chance. From the beginning of his public career Demosthenes
had a strong leaning to Thebes; it has been already mentioned that he was
Theban proxenos at Athens. This was a predilection which it behoved him to be
very careful of airing; for the general feeling in his city was unfriendly to
Thebes. The rhetorical tears which Demosthenes shed over the fate of the
Phocians were not inconsistent with his attachment to the enemies of Phocis;
for he never raised his voice for the victims of Theban hatred until their doom
was accomplished. The aim of his policy was to unite Athens in alliance with
Thebes. It was a difficult and doubtful game. Could Thebes be induced to turn
against her Macedonian ally, who had recently secured for her the full
supremacy of Boeotia, and who, she might reasonably reckon, would continue to
support her as an useful neighbour to Attica? On this chance, and a poor chance
it seemed, rested the desperate policy of Demosthenes. If Thebes joined Philip,
or even gave him a free passage through Boeotia, the fate of Attica was sealed.
But if she could be brought to desert him, her well-trained troops, joined with
those of Athens, might successfully oppose his invasion.
The invasion was not long delayed; and it came about
in a curious way. During the recent Sacred War, the Athenians had burnished
anew and set up again in the sanctuary of Delphi the donative which they had
dedicated after the victory of Plataea, being gold shields with the
inscription, “From the spoils of Persians and Thebans, who fought together
against the Greeks.” Such a re-dedication, while Delphi was in the hands of the
Phocians, who had been condemned as sacrilegious robbers, might be regarded as an
offence against religion; at all events, the Thebans and their friends had an
excellent pretext to revenge themselves on Athens for that most offensive
inscription, which had perpetuated the shame of Thebes for a century and a
half. The Thebans themselves did not come forward, but their friends of the
Locrian Amphissa arranged to accuse the Athenians at the autumn session of the
Amphictionic Council and propose a fine of fifty talents. At this session
Aeschines was one of the Athenian deputies and he discovered the movement which
was afoot against his city. He was an able man and he forestalled the blow by
dealing another. The men who had been incited to charge Athens with sacrilege
had been themselves guilty of a sacrilege far more enormous. They had cultivated
part of the accursed field which had once been the land of Crisa. Aeschines
arose in the assembly and, in an impressive and convincing speech which carried
his audience with him, called upon the Amphictions to punish the men who had
wrought this impious act. On the morrow at break of day the Amphictions and the
Delphians, armed with pickaxes, marched down the hill to lay waste the places
which had been unlawfully cultivated, and, as they did so, were assaulted by
the Amphissians, whose city is visible from the plain. The Council then
resolved to hold a special meeting at Thermopylae, in order to consult on
measures for the punishment of the Locrians, who, to their former crime, had
added the offence of violating the persons of the Amphictionic deputies.
By his promptness and eloquence the Athenian orator
had secured a great triumph. He had completely turned the tables on the
enemies, Amphissa and Thebes, who must have been prepared to declare an
Amphictionic war against Athens, in case she declined, as she certainly would
have done, to pay the fine. They calculated of course on the support of Philip
of Macedon. But it was now for Athens to take the lead in a sacred war against
Amphissa; and it was a favourable opportunity for her to make peace with Philip—so
that the combination should be Philip and Athens against Thebes, instead of
Philip and Thebes against Athens. It was not to be expected that this advantage
which Aeschines had gained would be welcome to Demosthenes; for it was the
object of Demosthenes to avoid an embroilment with Thebes. Accordingly he
persuaded the people to send no deputies to the special Amphictionic meeting
and take no part in the proceedings against Amphissa. He upbraided Aeschines
with trying to “bring an Amphictionic war into Attica”: a strange taunt to the
man who had prevented the declaration of an Amphictionic war against Athens.
Thus, although the attack upon Athens must have been
prepared at Theban instigation, the incident was converted, through the policy
of Demosthenes, into a means of bringing Athens and Thebes closer together.
Athens and Thebes alike abstained from attending the special meeting. The
Amphictions, in accordance with the decisions of that meeting, marched against
the Amphissians, but were not strong enough to impose the penalties which had
been decreed. Accordingly, at the next autumn session, they determined to
invite Philip to come down once more to be leader in a sacred war.
Philip did not delay a moment. An Amphictionic war,
from which both Athens and Thebes held aloof, was a matter which needed prompt
attention. When he reached Thermopylae, he probably sent on, by the mountain
road which passes through Doris to Amphissa, a small force to occupy Cytinion,
the chief town on that road. Advancing himself through the defile of
Thermopylae into northern Phocis, he seized and refortified the dismantled city
of Elatea. The purpose of this action was to protect himself in the rear against
Boeotia, and preserve his communications with Thermopylae, while he was
operating against Amphissa. But while he halted at Elatea, he sent ambassadors
to explore the intentions of Thebes. He declared that he intended to invade
Attica, and called upon the Thebans to join him in the invasion, or, if they
would not do this, to give his army a free passage through Boeotia. This was a
diplomatic method of forcing Thebes to declare herself; it does not prove that
Philip had any serious intention of marching against Attica, and his later
conduct seems to show that he did not contemplate such a step.
But in Athens, when the news came that the Macedonian
army was at Elatea, the folk fell into extreme panic and alarm. It would seem
that Philip’s rapid movements had brought him into central Greece far sooner
than was expected; and the news of his arrival, which must have been transmitted
by way of Thebes, was accompanied by the rumour that he was about to march on
Athens. And thus the Athenians in their fright connected the seizure of Elatea
with the supposed design against themselves, although Elatea had no closer
connexion than the pass of Thermopylae with an attack on Athens. For a night
and a day the city was filled with consternation, and these anxious hours have
become famous in history through the genius of the orator Demosthenes, who in
later years recalled to the people the scene and their own emotions by a
picturesque description which no orator has surpassed.
On the advice of Demosthenes, the Athenians dispatched
ten envoys to Thebes; everything depended on detaching Thebes from the
Macedonian alliance. And it seemed at least possible that this emight be
effected. For, though there were probably few in Thebes who were inclined to be
friendly to Athens, there was a party of some weight which was distinctly
hostile to Macedonia. Moreover, there was a feeling of soreness against Philip
for having seized Nicaea, close to Thermopylae, and replaced its Theban garrison
by Thessalians. The envoys, of whom Demosthenes was one, were instructed to
make concessions and exact none.
The ambassadors of Athens and Macedon met in the
Boeotian capital, and their messages were heard in turn by the Theban assembly.
It would be too much to say that the fate of Greece depended on the
deliberations of this assembly, but it is the mere truth that the Theban vote
not only decided the doom of Thebes itself, but determined the shape of the
great event to which Greece had been irresistibly moving.
In considering the situation which the rise of Macedon
had created we have hitherto stood in Pella or in Athens; we must now for
Situation a moment take our point of view at Thebes. The inveterate rivalry and
ever-smouldering hate which existed between Thebes and Athens was a strong
motive inducing Thebes to embrace an opportunity for rendering Athens harmless.
But it would require no great foresight to see that, by weakening her old
rival, Thebes would gravely endanger her own position. So long as Philip had a
strong Athens to reckon with, it behoved him to treat Thebes with respect, but,
if Athens were reduced to nothingness, Thebes would be absolutely in his power,
and probably his first step would be to free the cities of Boeotia from her
domination. To put it shortly, the independent attitude which Thebes had
hitherto been able to maintain towards her friend Macedonia depended on the
integrity of Athens. Thus the positions of Thebes and Athens were remarkably
different. While Athens could with impunity stand alone as Philip’s enemy, when
Thebes was Philip’s friend, Thebes could not safely be Philip’s friend unless
Athens were his enemy. The reason of this difference was that Athens was a
sea-power.
To a Theban statesman then, possessing any foresight,
the subjugation of Athens would have been feared as the prelude to the
depression of Thebes; and it would have seemed wiser to join in a common
resistance to Philip. This sound reasoning was quickened by the eloquence of
Demosthenes and the offers of Athens. The Athenians were ready to pay
two-thirds of the expenses of the war; they abandoned their claim to Oropus,
and they recognised the Boeotian dominion of Thebes—a dominion which they had
always condemned before as an outrage on the rights of free communities. But
professing now, through the mouth of Demosthenes, to be the champion of
Hellenic liberty, Athens scrupled little to sacrifice the liberties of a few
Boeotian cities. By these concessions she secured the alliance of Thebes, and
Demosthenes won the greatest diplomatic success that he had yet achieved — the
consummation to which his policy had been directed for many years.
The first concern of Philip was to do the work which
the Amphictions had summoned him to perform; but he is completely lost to our
sight in this campaign. We only know that the allies followed him into Phocis
and gained some advantages in two engagements, but that he ultimately captured
not only Amphissa, cutting up a force of mercenaries that Athens had sent
thither, but also Naupactus, thus gaining a point of vantage against the
Peloponnesus. He then turned back to carry the war into Boeotia, and when he entered
the great western gate of that country close to Chaeronea, he found the army of
the allies guarding the way to Thebes, and prepared to give him battle. He had
30,000 foot soldiers and 2000 horse, perhaps slightly outnumbering his foes.
Their line extended over about three and a half miles,
the left wing resting on Chaeronea and the right on the river Cephisus. The
Theban hoplites, with the Sacred Band in front, under the command of Theagenes,
did not occupy the left wing, as when Epaminondas led them to victory at
Leuctra and at Mantinea, but were assigned the right, which was esteemed the
post of honour. In the centre were ranged the troops of the lesser allies,
Achaeans, Corinthians, Phocians, and others, whom Demosthenes boasted of having
rallied to the cause of Hellenic liberty. On the left stood the Athenians under
three generals, Chares, Lysicles, and Stratocles, of whom Chares was a
respectable soldier with considerable experience and no talent, while the other
two were incompetent. Demosthenes himself was serving as a hoplite in the
ranks.
Of the battle we know less perhaps than of any other
equally important engagement in the history of Greece. But we can form a
general notion of the tactics of Philip. The most formidable part of the
adverse array was the Theban infantry; and accordingly he posted on his own
left wing the phalanx, with its more open order and long pikes, to try its
strength against the most efficient of the old-fashioned hoplites of Greece. On
the flank of this wing he placed his heavy cavalry, to ride down upon the Thebans
when the phalanx had worn them out. The cavalry was commanded by Alexander, now
a lad of eighteen, and, many hundred years after, “the oak of Alexander” was
shown on the bank of the river. The right wing was comparatively weak, and
Philip planned that it should gradually give way before the attack of the
Athenians, and draw them on, so as to divide them from their allies. This plan
of holding back the right wing reminds us of the tactics of Epaminondas; but
the use of cavalry to decide the combat is the characteristic feature of
Philip’s battles.
The Athenians pressed forward, fondly fancying that
they were pressing to victory, and Stratocles in the flush of success cried,
“On to Macedonia!” But in the meantime the Thebans had been broken by
Alexander’s horsemen : their leader had fallen, and the comrades of the Sacred
Lochos were making a last hopeless stand. Philip could now spare some of his
Macedonian footmen, and he moved them so as to take the Athenians in flank and
rear. Against the assault of these trained troops the Athenians were helpless.
One thousand were slain, two thousand captured, and the rest ran, Demosthenes
running with the fleetest. But the Sacred Band did not flee. They fought till
they fell, and it is their heroism which has won for the battle of Chaeronea
its glory as a struggle for liberty. When the traveller, journeying on the
highway from Phocis to Thebes, has passed the town of Chaeronea, he sees at the
roadside the tomb where those heroes were laid, and the fragments of the lion
which was set up to keep a long ward over their bones.
An epitaph which was composed in honour of the
Athenian dead suggested the consolation that God alone is sure of success, men
must be prepared to fail. It is true, but in this case the failure cannot be
imputed to the chances of war. When the allies opened the campaign the outlook
was not hopeless; if they had been led by a competent general they might have
reduced the Macedonian army to serious straits amid the valleys of Phocis and
the hills of Locris. But to oppose to a Philip, the best they had was a Chares.
The war was really decided in Locris by the strategical inferiority of the
Athenian and Theban generals; and the inevitable sequel of the blunders there
was the catastrophe in Boeotia. The advantage in numerical strength with which
the allies started had been lost, and when they stood face to face with the
advancing foe at Chaeronea, all the chances were adverse to any issue save
defeat, in a battle in the open against a general of such pre-eminent ability.
Men must be prepared to fail when they have no competent leader.
If the chances of another issue to the battle of
Chaeronea have been exaggerated, the significance of that event has been often
misrepresented. The battle of Chaeronea belongs to the same historical series
as the battles of Aegospotami and Leuctra. As the hegemony or first place among
Greek states had passed successively from Athens to Sparta, and to Thebes, so
now it passed to Macedon. The statement that Greek liberty perished on the
plain of Chaeronea is as true or as false as that it perished on the field of
Leuctra or the strand of the Goat’s River. Whenever a Greek state became
supreme, that supremacy entailed the depression of some states and the
dependency or subjection of others. Athens was reduced to a secondary place by
Macedon, and Thebes fared still worse; but we must not forget what Sparta, in
the day of her triumph, did to Athens, or the more evil things which Thebes
proposed. There were, however, in the case of Macedonia, special circumstances
which seemed to give her victory a more fatal character than those previous
victories which had initiated new supremacies.
For Macedon was regarded in Hellas as an outsider.
This was a feeling which the southern Greeks entertained even in regard to
Thessaly when Jason threatened them with a Thessalian hegemony; and Macedonia,
politically and historically as well as geographically, was some steps further
away than Thessaly. If Thessaly was hardly inside the inner circle of Hellenic
politics, Macedonia was distinctly outside it. To Athens and Sparta, to Corinth
and Argos and Thebes, the old powers, who, as we might say, had known each
other all their lives as foes or friends, and had a common international
history, the supremacy of Macedonia seemed the intrusion of an upstart. And, in
the second place, this supremacy was the triumph of an absolute monarchy over
free commonwealths, so that the submission of the Greek states to Macedon’s
king might be rhetorically branded as an enslavement to a tyrant in a sense in
which subjection to a sovereign Athens or a sovereign Sparta could not be so
described. For these reasons the tidings of Chaeronea sent a new kind of thrill
through Greece. And the impression that there was something unique in Philip’s
victory might be said to have been confirmed by subsequent history, which
showed that the old Greek commonwealths had had their day and might never again
rise to be first-rate powers.
Sect. 9. The Synedrion of the Greeks. Philip’s Death
Isocrates just lived to hear the tidings of Chaeronea,
and died consoled for the fate of his fallen fellow-citizens by the thought
that the unity of Hellas was now assured. But a Greek unity, such as he dreamed
of, was by no means assured. The hegemony of Macedonia did as little to unite
the Greek states or abolish the separatist tendency as the hegemony of Athens
or of Sparta. But we must see how Philip used his victory.
He treated Thebes just as Sparta had treated it when
Phoebidas surprised the citadel. He punished by death or confiscation his
leading opponents; he established a Macedonian garrison in the Cadmea, and
broke up the Boeotian league, giving all the cities their independence, and
restoring the dismantled towns of Orchomenus and Plataea. But if his dealing
with Thebes did not go beyond the usual dealing of one Greek state with its
vanquished rival, his dealing with Athens was unusually lenient. The truth was
that Athens did not lie defenceless at his feet. He might invade and ravage
Attica, but when he came to invest Athens and Piraeus, he might find himself
confronted by a task more arduous than that which had thwarted him at Perinthus
and Byzantium. The sea-power of Athens saved her, and not less, perhaps, the
respect which Philip always felt for her intellectual eminence. Now, at last,
by unexpected leniency, he might win what he had always striven for, the moral
and material support of Athens. And in Athens men were now ready to listen to
the voices which were raised for peace. The policy of Demosthenes had failed,
and all desired to recover the 2000 captives and avert an invasion of Attic
soil. There was little disposition to hearken to the advice of Hyperides, who
proposed to enfranchise and arm 150,00o slaves. Among the captives was an
orator of consummate talent named Demades, who belonged to the peace party and
saw that the supremacy of Macedon was inevitable. An anecdote was noised abroad
that Philip, who spent the night after the battle in wild revelry came reeling
drunk to the place where his prisoners were and jeered at their misfortune,
making merry, too, over the flight of the great Demosthenes. But Demades stood
forth and ventured to rebuke him: “O king, fortune has given you the role of
Agamemnon, and you play the part of Thersites!” The words stung and sobered the
drunken victor; he flung away his garlands and all the gear of his revel, and
set the bold speaker free. But whether this story be true or not, Demades was
politically sympathetic with Philip and was sent by him to negotiate peace at
Athens.
Philip offered to restore all the prisoners without
ransom and not march into Attica. The Athenians on their side were to dissolve
what remained of their confederacy, and join the new Hellenic union which
Philip proposed to organise. In regard to territory, Oropus was to be given to
Athens, but the Chersonesus was to be surrendered to Macedonia. On these terms
peace was concluded, and the Athenian people thought that they had come off
well. Philip sent his son and two of his chief officers to Athens, with the
bodies of the Athenians who had been slain. They were received with great
honour, and a statue of the Macedonian king was set up in the market-place, a
token of gratitude which was probably genuine, Demosthenes himself afterwards
confessed with a snarl that Philip had been kind.
It was now necessary for Macedonia to win the
recognition of her supremacy from the Peloponnesian states. Philip marched
himself to Peloponnesus, and met with no resistance. Sparta alone refused to submit,
and the conqueror bore down upon her, with the purpose of forcing on her a
reform of the constitution and the abolition of her peculiar kingship, which
seemed to him like a relic of the dark ages. But something mysterious happened
which induced him to desist from his purpose, and a poet of Epidaurus, who was
at that time a boy, told in later years how the god Asklepios had intervened to
save the Spartan state —
What time king Philip unto Sparta came,
Bent on abolishing the royal name.
But Sparta, though her kings were saved, had to suffer
at the hands of Philip what she had before suffered at the hands of
Epaminondas, the devastation of Laconia and the diminution of her territory.
The frontier districts on three sides were given to her neighbours, Argos,
Aeegea, Megalopolis, and Messenia. Having thus displayed his arms and power in
the south, the Macedonian king invited all the Greek states within Thermopylae
to send delegates to a congress at Corinth, (338 B.C.), and, with the sole
exception of Sparta, all the states obeyed.
It was a Federal congress: the first assembly of an
Hellenic Confederacy, of which the place of meeting was to be Corinth, and
Macedonia the head. The aim of the Confederacy was understood from the first;
but it would seem that it was not till the second meeting, a year later, that
Philip announced his resolve to make war upon Persia, in behalf of Greece and
her gods, to liberate the Greek cities of Asia, and to punish the barbarians
for the acts of sacrilege which their forefathers had wrought in the days of
Xerxes. It was the formal announcement that a new act in the eternal struggle
between Europe and Asia was about to begin, and Europe, having found a leader,
might now have her revenge for many a deed of insolence. The federal gathering
voted for the war and elected Philip general with supreme powers. It was
arranged what contingents in men or ships each city should contribute to the
Panhellenic army; the Athenians undertook to send a considerable fleet.
The league which was thus organised under the hegemony
of Macedon had the advantage of placing before its members a definite object to
be accomplished, and, it might be thought, a common interest. But if
Themistocles found it hard to unite the Greek states by a common fear, it was
harder still for Philip to unite them by common hope; and the idea which
Macedon promulgated produced no Panhellenic effort, and awakened but small
enthusiasm. Yet the Congress of Corinth has its significance; it is the counterpart
of that earlier congress which met at the Isthmus, when Greece was trembling at
the thought of the barbarian host which was rolling towards her from the east.
She had so long since ceased to tremble that she had almost forgotten to
remember before the day of vengeance came; but with the revolution of fortune’s
wheel, that day came duly round, and Greece met once more on the Isthmus to
concert how her ancient tremors might be amply avenged. The new league did not
unite the Greeks in the sense in which Isocrates hoped for their union. There
was a common dependency on Macedon, but there was no zeal for the aims of the
northern power, no faith in her as the guide and leader of Greece. Each state
went its own private way; and the interests of the Greek communities remained
as isolated and particular as ever. A league of such members could not be held
together, the peace which the league stipulated could not be maintained,
without some military stations in the midst of the country; and Philip
established three Macedonian garrisons at important points : at Ambracia to
watch the west, at Corinth to hold the Peloponnesus in check, and at Chalcis to
control north-eastern Greece.
The designs of Philip probably did not extend beyond
the conquest of western Asia Minor, but it was not fated that he should achieve
this himself. In the spring after the congress, his preparations for war were
nearly complete, and he sent forward an advance force under Parmenio and other
generals to secure the passage of the Hellespont and win a footing in the Troad
and Bithynia. The rest of the army was soon to follow under his own command.
But Philip, as a frank Corinthian friend told him, had
filled his own house with division and bitterness. A Macedonian king was not
expected to be faithful to his wife; but the proud and stormy princess whom he
had wedded was impatient of his open infidelities. Nor was her own virtue
deemed above suspicion, and it was even whispered that Alexander was not
Philip’s son. The crisis came when Philip fell in love with a Macedonian maiden
of too high a station to become his concubine—Cleopatra, the niece of his general
Attalus. Yielding to his passion, he put Olympias away and celebrated his
second marriage. At the wedding feast, Attalus, bold with wine, invited the
nobles to pray the gods for a legitimate heir to the throne. Alexander flung
his drinking-cup in the face of the man who had insulted his mother, and Philip
started up, drawing his sword to transpierce his son. But he reeled and fell,
and Alexander jeered, “Behold the man who would pass from Europe to Asia, and
trips in passing from couch to couch!” Pella was no longer the place for
Alexander. He took the divorced queen to Epirus, and withdrew himself to the
hills of Lyncestis, until Philip invited him to return.
But the restless intrigues of the injured mother soon
created new debates, and when a son was born to Cleopatra, it was easy to
arouse the fears of Alexander that his own succession to the throne was
imperilled. Philip’s most urgent desire was to avoid a breach with the powerful
king of Epirus, the brother of the injured woman. To this end he offered him
his daughter in wedlock, and the marriage was to be celebrated with great pomp
in Pella, on the eve of Philip’s departure for Asia. But it was decreed that he
should not depart. Olympias was made of the stuff which does not hesitate at
crime, and a tool was easily found to avenge the wrongs of the wife and assure
the succession of the son. A certain Pausanias, an obscure man of no merit, had
been grossly wronged by Attalus, and was madly incensed against the king, who
refused to do him justice. On the wedding day, as Philip, in solemn procession,
entered the theatre a little in advance of his guards, Pausanias rushed forward
with a Celtic dagger and laid him a corpse at the gate. The assassin was caught
and killed, but the true assassin was Olympias; and it was Alexander who reaped
the fruits of the crime. Willingly would we believe that he knew nothing of the
plot, and that a man of such a generous nature never stooped to thoughts of
parricide. Beyond dark whispers, there is no evidence against him; yet it would
be rash to say that his innocence is certain.
To none of the world’s great rulers has history done
less justice than to Philip. This failure in appreciation has been due to two
or perhaps to three causes. The overwhelming greatness of a son greater than
himself has overshadowed him and drawn men’s eyes to achievements which could
never have been wrought but for Philip’s lifetime of toil. In the second place,
we depend for our knowledge of Philip’s work almost entirely on the Athenian
orators, and especially on Demosthenes, whose main object was to misrepresent
the king. And we may add, thirdly, that we possess no account of one of the
greatest and most difficult of his exploits, the conquest of Thrace.
Thus through chance, through the malignant eloquence
of his opponent, who has held the ears of posterity, and through the very
results of his own deeds, the maker and expander of Macedonia, the conqueror of
Thrace and Greece, has hardly held his due place in the history of the world.
The importance of his work cannot be fully understood until the consequences
which it devolved upon his son to carry out have been studied. The work of
Alexander is the most authentic testimony to the work of Philip
But there was one notable man of the day whose
imagination grasped the ecumenical importance of the king of Macedon. A pupil
of Isocrates, Theopompus of Chios—who played some part in the politics of his
own island—was inspired by the deeds of Philip to write a history of his own
time, with Philip as its central figure. In that elaborate work, the loss of
which is irreparable, Theopompus exposed candidly and impartially the king’s
weaknesses and misdeeds; but he declared his judgment that Europe had never produced
so great a man as the son of Amyntas.
It is part of the injustice to Philip that the history
of Greece during his reign has so often been treated as little more than a
biography of Demosthenes. Only his political opponents would deny that
Demosthenes was the most eloquent of orators and the most patriotic of
citizens. But that oratory in which he excelled was one of the curses of Greek
politics. The art of persuasive speech is indispensable in a free commonwealth,
and, when it is wielded by a statesman or a general,—a Pericles, a Cleon, or a
Xenophon,—is a noble as well as useful instrument. But once it ceases to be a
merely auxiliary art, it becomes dangerous and hurtful. This is what had
happened at Athens. Rhetoric had been carried to such perfection that the best
years of a man’s youth were absorbed in learning it, and when he entered upon
public life he was a finished speaker, but a poor politician. Briefly, orators
took the place of statesmen, and Demosthenes was the most eminent of the class.
They could all formulate striking phrases of profound political wisdom; but
their school-taught lore did not carry them far against the craft of the Macedonian
statesman. The men of mighty words were as children in the hands of the man of
mighty deeds. The Athenians took pleasure in hearing and criticising the
elaborate speeches of their orators; and the eloquence of Demosthenes, though
it was thoroughly appreciated, imposed far less on such connoisseurs than it
has imposed upon posterity. The common sense of a plain man could easily expose
his sophistries; he said himself that the blunt Phocion was the “chopper” of
his periods.
Demosthenes used his brilliant gift of speech in the
service of his country; he used it unscrupulously according to his light—the
light of a purblind patriotism. He could take a lofty tone; he professed to
regard Philip as a barbarian threatening Hellas and her gods. There is no need
to show that, judged from the point of view of the history of the world, his
policy was retrograde and retarding. We cannot fairly criticise him either for
not having seen, even as fully as Isocrates, that the day for the expansion of
Greece had come, and that no existing Greek commonwealth was competent to
conduct that expansion; or if he did vaguely see it, for having looked the
other way. All he saw, or at least all he cared, was that the increase of
Macedonia meant the curtailment of Athens; and his political life was one long
agitation against Macedonia’s resistless advance. But it was nothing more than
a busy and often brilliant agitation, carried on from day to day and from month
to month, without any comprehensive plan. A fervent patriot does not make a
great statesman. Demosthenes could devise reforms in special departments of the
administration; he could admonish his fellow-citizens to be up and doing; but
he did not grapple seriously with any of the new problems of the day; he did
not originate one fertile political idea. A statesman of genius might
conceivably have infused fresh life into Athens by effecting some radical
change in her constitution and finding for her a new part to play. The fact
that no such statesman arose is perhaps merely another side of the fact that
her part as a chief actor was over. It has often been said that the Demosthenic
Athenians were irreclaimable. They certainly could not have been reclaimed by
Demosthenes ; for Demosthenes, when all is said, was a typical Demosthenic
Athenian.
CHAPTER XVII.
THE CONQUEST OF PERSIA
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