HISTORY OF ANCIENT GREECE |
A HISTORY OF GREECE TO THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER THE GREAT
CHAPTER VII.
THE PERILS OF GREECE. THE PERSIAN AND PUNIC INVASIONS
We have now reached the threshold of the second and
the greater Persian invasion—the second and the greater triumph of Hellas. The
significance of this passage in their history was not lost upon the Greeks.
Their defence of Europe against the barbarians of
Asia, the discomfiture of a mighty oriental despot by a league of their free
states, the defeat of a vast army and a large fleet by their far smaller
forces,—these surprises made an enduring impression upon the Greek mind, and
were shaped by Greek imagination into a wonderful dramatic story at a time when
the critical instinct had not yet developed. No tale is more delightful than
this tale as Herodotus tells it, when we take it simply as a tale; and none
illustrates better the story-shaping genius of the Greeks. The historical
criticism of it is another matter: we have to seek to extract what actually
happened out of the bewildering succession of daring exaggerations, naive
anecdotes, fictitious motives, oracles, not to speak of miracles; in most of which
the reflected light of later events is visibly altering the truth, while much
is coloured by the prejudices and leanings of the
Athenians, from whom Herodotus seems to have derived a great part of his
record.
Sect.
1. The Preparations and March of Xerxes (490-480 B.C.)
The chief event in Persia during the ten years which
elapsed between the first and second invasions of Greece was the death of king
Darius. After the unexpected repulse of his forces at Marathon, he had
determined to repeat the experiment and begun to make some preparations. Four
years passed and then a revolt broke out in the province of Egypt which
demanded immediate attention. But its suppression was delayed in consequence of
the king’s death, and was only accomplished under Xerxes, son of Atossa, who succeeded
to the throne (485 B.C.). The question then arose whether the design of an
expedition against Greece, to avenge those who fell at Marathon and redeem the
fame of Persian arms, should be carried out. It is related that Xerxes was
himself undecided, but was over-persuaded by the impetuous counsels of his
cousin Mardonius. On the other hand, his uncle Artabanus appears in the pages
of Herodotus as the prudent and experienced adviser who weighs all the
obstacles and foresees failure. Xerxes, swayed hither and thither between these
opposing counsels, is finally determined to yield to the wishes of Mardonius by
the peremptory command of a dream, which overcomes even the scruples of
Artabanus. In this manner does Herodotus pretend to take us behind the curtain
of the council chamber at Susa, representing—in the light of later events—the
advice of Mardonius as youthful and foolish, although that advice merely
amounted to the execution of the design which, according to Herodotus himself,
the old and experienced Darius had initiated and prepared. Nevertheless the
contrast of Mardonius and Artabanus, and the dreams divinely sent with evil
purpose, are, though not historical, a most effective dramatic introduction to
the episode of the invasion. Further pressure was brought to bear on the king
by Greeks who visited his court—envoys from the Aleuad princes of Thessaly and members of the Pisistratid family who brought with them the seer Onomacritus to impress Xerxes by favourable oracles.
It was clear that the expedition must consist of a
joint attack by sea and land. Preparations were begun by the difficult
enterprise of digging a canal (about a mile and a half long) across the isthmus
of Mount Athos. On the occasion of the expedition of Mardonius to Thrace and
Macedonia, it will be remembered that a large part of the fleet had been
wrecked in rounding that dangerous headland. But was it necessary for the fleet
to venture on this occasion within the proximity of Cape Athos? Might it not
sail straight across the Aegean to Greece? On these grounds Herodotus suggested
that the cutting of Athos was undertaken for display rather than from
necessity. This is an unsound criticism. It was a fundamental principle of
Persian strategy in these expeditions that the army and navy should co-operate
and never lose touch. The Thracian expedition of Darius, the Macedonian
expedition of Mardonius, the Greek expedition of Xerxes illustrate this
principle. The canal of Athos was intended to ensure that the ships should
safely accompany the land forces along the coasts of Thrace. It seems to be
established that the work was completed and used, although later writers threw
doubts on the “velification” of Athos. When it was
finished, the workmen proceeded to lay a bridge over the Strymon for the
passage of the army, and preparations were made all along the line of route for
the feeding of a vast host.
Xerxes came down from Susa to Sardis in the autumn 481
B.C. He met the oriental contingents of his army at Critalla in Cappadocia. At Celaenae it is recorded that Pythius,
the richest man in the empire, entertained at his own cost the king and the
whole army. His wealth amounted to four million gold darics, all but seven
thousand, and Xerxes bestowed upon him seven thousand to make up the full sum.
Xerxes spent the winter at Sardis. Pythius was so
pleased with the king’s graciousness that when the army was about to start for
the Hellespont in the following spring he ventured to prefer the request that
the eldest of his five sons who were serving in the army might be permitted to
remain behind. Great was the king’s wrath at what he regarded as the insolent demand
of a “slave.” The body of the eldest son was cut in two; one half was placed at
each side of the gate of Sardis, through which the army was about to march
forth. The anecdote illustrates the severity with which personal military
service was enforced.
It is impossible to suppose that the whole army
wintered in Sardis with the king; it is probable that the place of mustering
was at the Hellespont across which two bridges had been constructed,
in the neighbourhood of Sestos and Abydos, by
Phoenician and Egyptian engineers. But the strength of these bridges was not
sufficient, and a tempest destroyed them. The wrath of Xerxes at this
catastrophe was violent. He not only beheaded the engineers, but commanded that
300 lashes should be inflicted on the waters of the Hellespont. Those who
carried out this strange order addressed the sea as they scourged it in these
words: “O bitter water, our lord lays this punishment upon thee, for having
done him wrong, who never did wrong to thee. King Xerxes will cross thee,
whether thou wilt or not. Just is it that no man sacrifices to thee, for thou
art a treacherous and briny river.” These words are blamed by Herodotus as
“un-Greek and impious.” The reconstruction of the bridges was entrusted to new
engineers. Two lines of ships were moored across the strait by anchors at prow
and stern. The line nearer to the Propontis consisted of 360, the other of 314,
triremes and penteconters mixed. Over each of these
lines of ships six huge cables—two of flax, four of papyrus—were stretched; and
in three places gaps were left between the ships and under the cables for small
trading craft to pass between the Euxine and the Aegean. Planks were laid
across the cables and kept in their places by a second layer of cables above.
On this foundation a road was made with wood and earth, and at each side
palisades were set, high enough to prevent the animals which passed over from
seeing the water. On a marble throne erected on the shore Xerxes is said to
have witnessed the passage of his army, which began at the first moment of
sunrise. The troops crossed under the lash, and the crossing was accomplished
in two days. But when the size of the Persian host was magnified, in later
years, to the impossible figure of five millions, the story was that the
crossing of the Hellespont required seven days and seven nights—the favourite number of fiction—without a moment’s pause.
The army was joined by the fleet at Doriscus in Thrace. Fleet army were henceforward to act
together. In the plain of Doriscus Xerxes reviewed
and numbered his forces. “What nation of Asia,” asks Herodotus, “did not Xerxes
lead against Hellas?” He enumerates forty-six peoples, with a picturesque
description of their array. The Persians themselves, who were under the command
of Otanes, wore coats of mail and trowsers; they had
wicker shields, large bows, and short spears. The Medes, Cissians,
and Hyrcanians were attired in the same way. Then
there were Assyrians with brazen helmets, linen cuirasses, clubs, lances, and
short swords; Bactrians with cane bows; trowsered Sacae with pointed hats, and carrying axes; Indians clad in cotton, Caspians in
goatskin; Sarangians wearing dyed garments and high
boots; Ethiopians clad in lion skins or leopard skins and armed with arrows
whose stone points transport us to a primitive age; Sagartians with dagger and lasso; Thracians with foxskin caps;
Colchians with cowskin shields. The fleet was furnished by the Phoenicians,
Egyptians, Cypriotes, Cilicians, Pamphylians,
Lycians, Carians, and subject Greeks. It is said to have consisted of 1207
warships, with 3000 smaller vessels. A curious story was told of the numbering
of the army. Ten thousand men were packed together in a close space; a line was
drawn round them, and a wall built. All the infantry passed successively into
this enclosure. It was filled 170 times, so that the whole number of fighting
men was 1,700,000. The number of the cavalry was 80,000, and there were some
additional troops not included. Adding to these the crews of the ships—counting
200 to each larger and 80 to each smaller vessel—the total was obtained of
2,317,000 men. This enormous number was further increased by fresh contingents
which joined during the march through Thrace and Macedonia. Besides the
fighting men were a vast number of servants, sutlers, camp-followers, whom
Herodotus considered to be quite as numerous as the soldiers. The whole host
would consequently have reached to upwards of 5,000,000, not including eunuchs
and concubines.
It is needless to say that these numbers are wholly
fabulous. The facts which Herodotus states as to the number of the fighting men
are false, and the principle of his conjecture that the total number of the
host was double that of the fighting men is also fallacious. The picked body of
10,000 troops, called the Immortals, had the privilege of travelling
comfortably with their wives and baggage; but this was an exceptional
privilege, and it cannot be supposed that the mass of the troops were
accompanied by servants. There is reason for supposing that the land forces may
have amounted to 300,000—hardly more. A larger force than that would have been
unmanageable in a small mountainous country, and the difficulties of
provisioning even this were formidable. The number of the fleet must also be
considerably reduced—perhaps to 800 triremes.
From Doriscus, Xerxes
proceeded to Therma with his fabulous host, in three divisions, drinking rivers
dry in their march. At the crossing of the Strymon, near the place called the
Nine Roads, he sacrificed nine native youths and virgins. At Therma he was
rejoined by his fleet, which had been separated from him while it sailed round Sithonia and Pallene.
Most of the incidents which Herodotus recounts
concerning this march of Xerxes are pleasing stories, designed to illustrate
the historian’s general view as to the great struggle of Greek and barbarian.
The cruelty of Xerxes to Pythius, his barbarity and
impiety in scourging the Hellespont, serve to characterise the barbarian and the despot. The enormity of the host which rolled over the
straits to deluge Europe enhances the danger and the glory of Hellas. And to
signify by a solemn portent the destined discomfiture of the Persian host, it
is stated that as Xerxes was setting forth from Sardis the sun was darkened.
This eclipse actually took place two years later; the tradition which Herodotus
follows transposed its date to a more impressive and significant occasion.
Sect.
2. Preparations of Greece
In the meantime Greece was aware of the preparations
of the Great King for her enslavement, and was making her counterpreparations.
The digging at Athos had warned her betimes, and the coming down of the king to
Sardis showed that the danger was imminent. Xerxes is said to have dispatched
from Sardis heralds to all the Greek states, except Athens and Sparta, to
demand earth and water. These two cities now joined hands to resist the
invasion. They were naturally marked out as the leaders of Greece in Greece’s
greatest crisis; Sparta by virtue of that generally acknowledged headship which
we have already seen, Athens by the prestige which she had won in resisting the
Mede at Marathon. They jointly convened an Hellenic congress at the Isthmus to
consult on the measures to be taken for common resistance to the threatened
invasion. We have already observed certain indications of the growth of a
Panhellenic feeling; but this is the first instance of anything that can be
called a deliberate Panhellenic policy. It is an “attempt to combine all the
scattered cities of the Greek world to withstand the power of Persia: It is a
new fact in Grecian history, opening scenes and ideas unlike to anything which
has gone before—enlarging prodigiously the functions and duties connected with
that headship of Greece which had hitherto been in the hands of Sparta, but
which is about to become too comprehensive for her to manage.” A large
number of cities sent delegates to the congress, which was called the Synedrion
of Probuloi or Congress of Representatives. It met at the Isthmus—a meeting-place marked
out by its central position—under the presidency of Sparta. There the states
which were represented, thirty-one in number, bound themselves together in a
formal confederation by taking a solemn oath that they would “tithe those who
uncompelled submitted ” to the barbarian, for the benefit of the Delphic god.
This was a way of vowing that they would utterly destroy such traitors. A
great many states, the Thessalians, most of the Boeotian cities, besides the
smaller peoples of northern Greece—Locrians, Malians, Achaeans, Dolopians, and others—took no part in this congress. Their
inaction by no means meant that they had made up their minds to “ medize.” They
were only waiting to see how things would turn out, and, considering their
geographical position, their policy might be justified by the natural instinct
of self-preservation. These northern states would be first invaded by the
Persian, and it was hopeless for them to think of withstanding him alone.
Unless they could absolutely rely on Sparta and her confederates to support
them in defending the northern frontier of Thessaly, nothing would be left for
them but to submit. And with this prospect, it would have been imprudent for
them to compromise themselves by openly joining the confederacy. Events proved
that if they had seriously relied on that confederacy throwing all its strength
into the defence of northern Greece, they would have
been cruelly deceived. And, as we shall see, they were ready to resist so long
as there were hopes of support from the stronger states. In some cases there
were parties or classes who were favourable to the
Persian cause, for example, the oligarchs of Thebes and the Aleuadae of Thessaly.
One of the great hindrances to joint action was the
existence of domestic disputes. There were feuds of old standing between
Thessaly and Phocis, Argos and Lacedaemon, Athens and Aegina. The Congress
attempted to reconcile such feuds, and Athens and Aegina laid aside their
enmity to fight together for Grecian freedom. Another important question
concerned the command of the confederate forces. The claim of Sparta to the
leadership of the army of was at once admitted. The question as to the fleet
was not so clear. Sparta was not a naval power, and Athens, which would furnish
more ships than any other state, had a fair claim. But the other cities were
jealous of Athens; they declared that they would submit only to a Spartan
leader. The Athenian representatives, when they saw the feeling of the allies,
at once yielded the point.
The Congress made some other provisions. While spies
were sent to observe the preparations of Xerxes in Asia Minor, envoys went
forth to various Greek states to enlist new confederates—to win over Argos,
which had sent no delegates to the Isthmus; and to obtain promises of
assistance from Crete, Corcyra, and Syracuse. None of these embassies led to
anything. Gelon, the great tyrant of Syracuse, was himself absorbed by the
prospect of an attack of the Carthaginians, and, even if he had wished, could
have sent no aid to the mother-country.
When the military preparations for the defence of Greece were made, and the generals appointed,
the Congress of Representatives seems to have dissolved itself and consigned
the future conduct of affairs to the military congresses of the commanders who
used to meet together and decide on each movement under the presidency of the
Spartan leaders. King Leonidas was leader of the confederate army, and
Eurybiadas, a Spartan who did not belong to either of the royal families, was
commander of the confederate fleet.
The Greeks had abundance of time for their
preparations—for strengthening their defences and
building new ships. Athens probably threw herself with more energy into the
work than any other city. One wise measure shows that she had risen to a full
apprehension of the truth that a solemn hour in her history had arrived. She
recalled those distinguished citizens whom the vote of ostracism had driven
into banishment during the last ten years. Aristides and Xanthippus returned
home; their feuds with Themistocles were buried in the presence of the great
danger; and the city seems to have soon shown its confidence in their
patriotism by choosing them as Generals. These leaders will each play his part
in the coming struggle.
Sect.
3. Battles of Thermopylae and Artemisium
About the time when Xerxes reached the Hellespont, the
Thessalians sent a message to the confederacy, suggesting that the pass of
Tempe should be defended against the invading army. Accordingly 10,000 hoplites
were sent. But when they arrived at the spot they found that there were other
passes from Macedonia into Thessaly, by which the Persians would be more likely
to come. There were the passes of Volustana and Petra
which descended into the valley of the river Titaresius,
and it was by one of these that Xerxes actually marched. Ten thousand hoplites
were not enough to defend the three passes, and it seemed useless and dangerous
to occupy this advanced post. Hence the defence of
Tempe was abandoned, and the troops left Thessaly. This desertion necessarily
drove all the northern Greeks—between Tempe and Thermopylae— to signify their
submission to Xerxes by the offering of earth and water.
The next feasible point of defence was Thermopylae, a narrow pass between the sea and mountain, separating Trachis from Locris. It was the gate to all eastern Greece
south of Mount Oeta. At the eastern and at the
western end the pass, in those days, was extremely narrow, and in the centre the Phocians had constructed a wall as a barrier
against Thessalian incursions. Near the western end was Anthela,
the meeting-place of the amphictionic council, while
on the Locrian side one emerged from the defile near the village of Alpenoi. The retreat of the sea, and consequent enlargement
of the Malian plain, have so altered the appearance of this memorable pass that
it is hard to recognise its ancient description; the
hot sulphur springs from which it derived its name
and the sheer mountain are the two permanent features. It was possible for an
active band of men, if they were debarred from proceeding by Thermopylae, to
take a rough and steep way over the mountains and so reach the Locrian road at
a point east of Alpenoi. It was therefore needful for
a general who undertook the defence of Thermopylae to
secure this path, lest a detachment should be sent round to surprise him in the
rear.
The Greeks determined to defend Thermopylae, and
Leonidas marched thither at the head of his army. He had about 7000 men,
including 4000 from Peloponnesus, 1000 Phocians, 400 Thebans, 700 Thespians,
and the Locrians in full force. It is possible that there may have been some
other Boeotians who are not mentioned. Of the Peloponnesians more than half
were Arcadians. Mycenae, free at this moment from Argive control, sent 80 men.
There were Corinthians and Phliasians; 1000
Laconians, and 300 Spartans. So far as the Peloponnesians were concerned, this
was only a small portion of their forces, and we may suspect that but for
Athens they would have abandoned northern Greece entirely and concentrated
themselves at once on the defence of the Isthmus. But
they were dependent on Athens because her fleet was so strong, and they were
therefore obliged to consider her interests. To surrender Thermopylae and
retire to the Isthmus meant the surrender of Attica. But the hearts of the
Spartans were really set on the ultimate defence of
the Isthmus, and not on the protection of the northern states; their policy was
narrow and Peloponnesian. They attempted to cover this selfish and
short-sighted policy by the plea that they were hindered from marching forth in
full force by the celebration of the Camean festival, and that the
Peloponnesians were delayed by the Olympic games; they alleged that the
soldiers of Leonidas were only an advance guard, the rest would soon follow.
Yet the feasts did not interfere with the movement of the confederate fleet.
As the land arm and the sea arm of the Persian force
always operated together, it was necessary that while the Greek hoplites held
the pass under Mount Oeta, the Greek triremes should
oppose the Persian fleet in the straits between Euboea and the mainland. The
Persians would naturally attempt to sail between Euboea and Magnesia into the
Malian gulf, and thence, accompanying the advance of the army, along the
western shore of the long island, to the Euripus. The object of the Greeks was
to prevent this, and support the garrison of Thermopylae by controlling the
Malian gulf.
The Greek fleet, which numbered 324 triremes and 9 penteconters—the Athenians contributing 200—chose its
station near Artemisium on the north coast of Euboea. Three ships were sent
forward to reconnoitre in the Thermaic gulf, and two of them were destroyed by the Persians. This was the first
collision in the war. The incident is said to have so depressed the Greeks that
the whole squadron sailed back to the Euripus; but this is highly unlikely, for
it was bound to remain at the mouth of the Malian gulf, so long as Leonidas
held Thermopylae. It was however necessary that the Euripus should be guarded.
For there was the possibility that the Persians might send round a detachment
by the south of Euboea and so cut off their retreat. As fifty-three Athenian
ships were absent during the first conflicts at Artemisium, it may be supposed
that they were deputed to the service of keeping watch at the Euripus.
Towards the end of August the Persian army arrived at
Thermopylae, and the Persian navy at the Magnesian coast between Casthanaea and Cape Sepias. Their ships were so many that
they could not all be moored at the shore, and had to range themselves in eight
lines parallel to the coast. While they were in this unsafe position a great
storm rose and destroyed, at the lowest computation, 400 ships. Thus the gods
intervened, to lessen the inequality between the Persian and the Greek forces.
Encouraged by this disaster, the Greek fleet returned to its station at
Artemisium. In this account of Herodotus, the main fact is that the Persians
suffered serious loss by a storm off the Magnesian coast. But the loss is
exaggerated in proportion to the exaggeration of the original size of the
fleet, and the movements of the Greeks are probably misrepresented. The story
goes on that cowed by the numerical superiority of the Persians, even after
their losses, the Greek commanders wished to retreat again and were restrained
from doing so by Themistocles. The Euboeans were naturally anxious that the
fleet should remain where it was, as a protection to themselves, and to secure
this they gave Themistocles thirty talents. Of this sum Themistocles
distributed eight in bribes to his colleagues and kept the rest. The facts of
the case throw doubt on this story, which was perhaps suggested by what
happened some weeks later at Salamis. For Eurybiadas and the Peloponnesians
were bound to stay at Artemisium so long as the land army was at Thermopylae.
After the storm the Persians took up their station at Aphetae. They determined to cut off the Greek retreat, and
secretly sent a squadron of 200 vessels to sail round Euboea. The news of this
movement was brought to the Greek camp by Scyllias of Scione, the most remarkable diver of his time, who
plunged into the sea at Aphetae and did not emerge
above water till he reached Artemisium at a distance of ten miles. Herodotus,
indeed, hesitates to accept this tale, and records his private belief that Scyllias arrived at Artemisium in a boat. The Greeks
decided that when midnight had passed they would sail to meet the ships which
were sailing to the Euripus, but in the afternoon they attacked the enemy, just
to see how they fought, and they succeeded in capturing thirty Persian ships.
The night was very stormy; the gods had again intervened to aid Greece. The 200
ships, having rounded the southern cape of Euboea, were wrecked off the
dangerous coast known as the Hollows. Immediately afterwards the fifty-three Attic
ships which had not yet appeared at Artemisium arrived there, and at the same
time came the news of the disaster. The Greeks consequently gave up the
intention of retreating. There was some further fighting, with loss on both
sides; with no decisive advantage, according to the Greek account, but we may
suspect that the Persians had the best of it.
Meanwhile Leonidas had taken up his post at
Thermopylae, and the Phocians, who knew the ground, had undertaken the defence of the bye-road over the mountains. The old Phocian
wall in the centre of the pass was repaired. It was a
serious matter for even such a large army as that which was now encamped in the
Malian plain to carry the narrow way of Thermopylae against 6000 determined
men. For four days Xerxes waited, expecting that they would retreat, awed by
the vision of his mighty host. On the fifth he attacked; and in the engagements
which took place at the west end of the pass the Hellenic spearmen affirmed
their distinct superiority to the Asiatic archers. On the following day the
result was the same; the Immortals themselves made no impression on the defenders.
Herodotus says that Xerxes “sprang thrice from his throne in agony for his
army.” It was then decided to send round the Immortals—hardly the whole
10,000—under their commander Hydarnes, by the mountain road to take the Greeks
in the rear. A Malian Greek named Ephialtes guided the band and so won the name
of having betrayed Greece. At dawn they reached the highest point of the path,
where the Phocians were posted. The Phocians fled to the heights, and the
Persians went on paying no attention to them. Meanwhile deserters informed
Leonidas of the Persian stratagem. He hastily called a council of war. The
exact plan of action which was decided on is unknown. We only know that the
Spartans, Thebans, and Thespians remained in the pass, while the rest of the
Greeks retired southward. It was afterwards represented that they had deserted
the defence of the position and returned home. But in
that case, it was foolish, if splendid, of Leonidas to hold the pass between
foes on both sides. The rational courses were either for the whole garrison to
abandon the pass, or else, just as the Persians aimed at enclosing the Greeks,
so to enclose the band of Hydarnes. We may suspect that this second plan was
actually adopted. While part of the force, including Leonidas and the Spartans,
remained in the pass, the rest (we may suppose) placed themselves at some
distance east of the point where the mountain path descended to the road, so as
to take Hydarnes in the rear. Of the 1400 who stood in the pass, some had to
guard the eastern entrance against Hydarnes, others the western against the
main army. Leonidas and his 300 undertook the western side. But they were no
longer content with merely repelling assaults; they now rushed out upon the
enemy. Their charge was effective, but Leonidas himself was slain, and a
Homeric battle raged over his body. Two brothers of Xerxes fell. Many Persians
were driven into the sea. But at length the defenders were forced back behind
the wall. They drew together on a hillock where they made a last stand, to be
surrounded and slain by overwhelming numbers. For the Immortals, having in the
meantime routed the Greeks in their rear, had now forced their way into the
pass. It was said that 4000 Greeks fell.
The valiant defence of
Thermopylae made a deep impression upon Greece, and increased the fame of the
Spartans for bravery. It was represented as a forlorn defence—Leonidas
and his band system from early youth. The brave Thespians would not desert the
Spartans; while the Thebans are represented as detained by devoting themselves
to certain death, and clinging to their posts from that sense of military duty
which was inculcated by the Spartan Leonidas against their will, because they
were suspected of secret medism. The malicious tale
adds that, having taken only a perfunctory part in the defence,
the Thebans advanced to the enemy and asked for quarter, declaring that they
were friends of the Great King and had come to Thermopylae against their will.
Their lives were spared, but all, including the commander, were forced to
suffer the shame of being branded as bad slaves. It is certain that this
contrast between the Thespians and Thebans was invented in the light of the
subsequent medism of Thebes. Nor is it clear that the defence of Thermopylae, although eminently heroic,
was, until the very end, desperate. If, as we suspected, an effort was made to
meet the Immortals, then, if that effort had been more effectual, it might have
been possible to hold the pass; and in that case a naval battle must have
decided whether the Persians or the Greeks would be forced to retreat.
A column was afterwards erected at Sparta with the
names of Leonidas and his 300. Among them was to be read the name of Dienekes, reputed as the author of a famous mot, which displayed the
lightheartedness of a Spartan soldier in the hour of peril. When it was
observed to him that the Persian host was so enormous that their arrows hid the
sun, he replied, “So much the better, we shall fight in the shade.”
The news of Thermopylae speedily reached the fleet at
Artemisium. The Greeks forthwith weighed anchor and sailed through the Euripus
to the shores of Attica.
Sect.
4. Battle of Salamis
Having thus succeeded in breaking through the inner
gate of Hellas, and slain the king of the leading state, Xerxes continued his
way and passed from Locris into Phocis and thence into Boeotia, meeting with no
resistance. The Thebans and most of the other Boeotians now, unable to do
otherwise, submitted to the Persians. The loss of Thermopylae forced them to
this course, as the abandonment of Tempe had forced the Thessalians.
In later days a story was told at Delphi that a
Persian band detached itself from the main host in Phocis, in order to proceed
to Pytho and plunder the shrine of the god. “I
think,” says Herodotus, “that Xerxes knew its treasures better than his own.”
The Delphians fled up into the heights of Parnassus, leaving only sixty men and
the prophet Aceratus in the temple. They did not
remove the treasures, for the god said that he would protect his own. As soon
as the barbarians approached, marvels began to happen. The prophet saw the
sacred arms, which no man might touch, lying in front of the temple, carried
out by some mysterious means. And when the Persians came to the shrine of
Athena Pronaea, which stood not far from the
Castalian fountain, lightning flashed; two crags rent from Parnassus fell with
a loud crash, crushing many of them; and a war-whoop was heard from Athena’s
temple. The barbarians fled in terror, and told how two hoplites of superhuman
size pursued them. These were Phylacus and Autonous, the native heroes of Delphi. Such was the legend
told at Delphi of the Persian invasion.
When the Athenians returned from Artemisium they found
that the main body of the Peloponnesian army was gathered at the Isthmus and
engaged in building a wall from sea to sea, instead of advancing to the defence of Boeotia as had been previously arranged. Thus
Boeotia and Attica were unprotected. Themistocles and his Athenian colleagues
decided to evacuate Athens. They made a proclamation that all the citizens
should embark in the triremes, and that all who could should convey their
families and belongings to places of safety. This was done. The women and
children were transported to Troezen, Aegina, and
Salamis. The council of Areopagus helped at this crisis by distributing from
the treasury of Athena eight drachmae to each citizen who embarked. At the same
time the great natural strength of the Acropolis, though its walls had been
demolished after the expulsion of the tyrants, encouraged the hope that it
might be held against the Persians, and a small garrison was left to defend it.
This bold and wise policy of embarkation was dictated by the circumstances, but
it was supposed to have been based on an oracle, which foretold the utter
destruction of Attica with the sole exception of a “wooden wall.” The wooden
wall was interpreted to mean the ships. And to suit this view it was
represented that the garrison left on the Acropolis was merely a handful of
poor citizens who remained behind and barricaded themselves there, because they
adopted the more literal interpretation of a wooden barricade. This exegesis of
the oracle was perhaps suggested by subsequent events.
While the Athenians were thus showing that they were
not bound to their soil, the allied fleet had stationed itself in the bay of
Salamis, and it was reinforced by new contingents, so that it reached the total
strength of 378 triremes and seven penteconters. The
army at the Isthmus was now placed under the command of Cleombrotus,
brother of Leonidas and guardian of his son Pleistarchus,
who was still a child.
Xerxes arrived at Athens about the same time that his
fleet sailed into the roadstead of Phaleron. He found
the town empty, but for the small band which had entrenched itself on the
Acropolis. Persian troops occupied the lower height of the Areopagus, which is
severed from the Acropolis by a broad saddle, and succeeded in setting the
wooden barricade on fire by means of burning arrows. The garrison rolled stones
down on them, and such is the natural strength of the Acropolis that the siege
lasted two weeks. Then the Persians managed to ascend on the precipitous north
side by the secret path which emerged close to the shrine of Aglaurus. The
Greeks were slain, the temples plundered and burnt.
After the fall of the Acropolis the Greek generals
held a council of war, and was carried by the votes of the majority that they
should retreat to the Isthmus and await there the attack of the Persian fleet.
The advantage of this seemed to be that they would there be in close touch with
the land forces and have the Peloponnesus as a retreat in case of defeat;
whereas at Salamis they would be entirely cut off. This decision meant the
abandonment of Aegina, Salamis, and Megara; and it was strenuously opposed by
the Aeginetans, Athenians, and Megarians. Themistocles determined to thwart it.
He went privately to Eurybiadas and convinced him that it would be much more
advantageous to fight in the narrow waters of the Salaminian channel than in
the open bay of the Isthmus, where the superior speed and number of the hostile
ships would tell. A new council was summoned at which, it is said, hot words
passed between the Athenian and the Corinthian general. When Themistocles
opened the debate without waiting for the formal introduction of Eurybiadas,
the Corinthian Adeimantus said, “O Themistocles, those who stand up too soon in
the games are whipped.” “Yes,” was the reply, “but those who start late are not
crowned.” It is recorded that Themistocles, in order to carry his point, had to
threaten that the Athenians, who were half the fleet, would cease to co-operate
with their allies and seek new homes in some western land, if the retreat to
the Isthmus were decided. Themistocles won his way; and when it was resolved to
fight in Salaminian waters, the heroes of the island, Ajax and Telamon, were
invoked, and a ship was sent to Aegina to fetch the other Aeacid heroes.
Of all the tales of signs and marvels which befell in
these memorable days none perhaps was more attractive to the Athenians than the
experience of two Greek exiles as they walked in the Thriasian plain. One was an Athenian named Dicaeus, and his
companion was none other than Demaratus, the Spartan king, who had sought
refuge at the Persian court. As they went, they saw a great dust afar off near
Eleusis, such a dust as they thought might be raised by a host of thirty
thousand men; and then they heard a voice suddenly from the midst of the dust,
and it sounded like the cry of the mystic Iacchus which is cried at the
Eleusinian festival. Demaratus asked his companion what it might be. “It is a
token,” said Dicaeus, “of some great disaster to the
King’s host. For since the plain is desolate of men, it is clear that the thing
which uttereth the cry is divine,—and it is a thing
coming from Eleusis to help the Athenians. If it turn to the Peloponnese, the
peril menaces the army of the land, but if it wend toward the ships, then are
the King’s ships endangered.” “Peace,” said Demaratus, “for if these words of
thine come to the King’s ears, thou shalt lose thy head.” Then the dust,
wherein the voice was, turned to a cloud, and rising aloft moved towards the
Greek fleet at Salamis; and so they knew that the fleet of Xerxes was doomed.
Meanwhile the Persians too had deliberated and
determined to fight. According to a Halicarnassian story told by Herodotus, the
Carian queen Artemisia alone gave sound advice—not to risk a sea fight but
either to wait for the Greek fleet to disperse from want of provisions, or to
advance by land into the Peloponnesus.
The southern entrance to the narrow sound between
Salamis and Attica is blocked by the islet of Psyttalea and the long promontory which runs out from Salamis to meet the mainland. The
Greek fleet was anchored close to the town of Salamis, north of this
promontory. Xerxes moved his armament so as to enclose the ingress of the
straits, and at the same time occupied Psyttalea.
This movement, carried out in the afternoon, alarmed the Greeks; the
Peloponnesian commanders brought pressure to bear on Eurybiadas; another
council was called, and Themistocles saw that the hard-won result of his
previous exertions would now be overthrown. He therefore determined on a bold
stroke. Leaving the council, he dispatched a slave named Sicinnus to the Persian camp bearing a message from himself, as a well-wisher to Xerxes,
that the Greeks purposed to sail away in the night. If they were prevented from
doing so, a Persian victory was certain, owing to the disunion which existed in
the Hellenic camp. This message was believed, and Xerxes took his measures at
nightfall to hinder the Greek fleet from escaping by the western straits
between Salamis and the Megarid. He sent his 200 Egyptian ships to round the
southern promontory of Salamis and place themselves so that they could bar the
straits if necessary.
The Greek generals meanwhile were engaged in hot
discussion. Suddenly Themistocles was called out from the council. It was his
rival Aristides who had sailed across from Aegina and brought the news that the
fleet was surrounded by the enemy. Themistocles made Aristides inform the
generals of what had happened, and the tidings was presently confirmed by a
Tenian ship which deserted from the Persians. There is no reason to question
the sensational incident that Aristides brought the news; but we need not suppose
that this was his first return from ostracism. It seems probable that he had
been sent with the ship which fetched the Aeacids from Aegina and that he was
one of the ten strategoi.
Thus Themistocles and the Persians forced the Greeks
to fight at Salamis. The position of the two armaments and the details of the
action are uncertain. The poet Aeschylus, who was an eyewitness of the battle,
describes the Persian ships as drawn up in three divisions outside the entrance
into the sound. The division on the extreme left, probably composed of the
Ionian Greeks, was set to guard the passage between Psyttalea and the shore of Salamis. The second division probably extended from Psyttalea eastward towards the Piraeus, to guard the main
ingress. The third, forming the right wing of the armament, was probably
stationed somewhat in advance of the second, close to the narrow passage
between Psyttalea and the mainland. The right wing
was the Phoenician squadron, upon which Xerxes chiefly relied. The Greeks had
drawn their fleet up across the passage between the town of Salamis and the
temple of Heracles on the Attic shore. The Athenians formed the left wing of
their array, and the Aeginetans and Lacedaemonians were on the right. A high
throne was erected, under Mount Aegaleos, from which
Xerxes could survey the battle and watch the conduct of his men.
At break of day, the Greeks began to advance. The
Phoenician galleys moved to meet them, in column formation; while the other two
divisions of the Persian fleet probably remained as they were. The fighting
began on the Greek left, and it was here, upon the Athenians and Phoenicians,
that the main stress of the battle fell. The want of space hindered the
Persians from overwhelming their foes with superior numbers; the attempts they
made to crowd ships into the strait were disastrous to themselves. Meanwhile the
object of the Greek right was to force a way out of the sound through the
enemy’s line, in order to attack in the rear. It was the task of the Aeginetans
to round the point of the jutting promontory of Salamis, and assail the left
wing of the enemy stationed about Psyttalea. They
succeeded in breaking through, and at a later stage we find them cutting off
the retreat of fugitive Persian ships. It is probable that, having discomfited
the Ionians, they delivered a flank attack on the Phoenician column; but in any
case their success rendered the position of the Phoenicians untenable and
decided the battle. Their success against the Persian left enabled Aristides,
who with a force of Athenian hoplites was watching events on the shore of
Salamis, to cross over to Psyttalea and kill the
barbarians who had been posted there by Xerxes. The battle lasted from morning
till nightfall.
The Persians, under the eyes of their king, fought
with great bravery, but they were badly generalled and the place of the combat was unfavourable to them.
Their numbers were only an encumbrance, and when the ships in front retreated
they hindered the rear from advancing, partly owing to the crowded space and
partly to lack of practice in acting together. The want of concert led speedily
to confusion and the commanders could not manage the fleet.
Among the anecdotes told about this battle the most
famous is that which was current at Halicarnassus, of the signal bravery and no
less signal good fortune of the Carian queen Artemisia. She saved herself by
the stratagem of attacking and sinking another Carian vessel. Those who stood
round Xerxes observed the incident, but supposed the destroyed trireme to be
Greek. “Sire,” they said, “seest thou how Artemisia
has sunk an enemy’s ship.” And Xerxes exclaimed, “My men have become women, my
women men.”
Sect.
5. Consequences of Salamis
The Greek victory of Salamis was a heavy, perhaps a
decisive blow to the naval arm of the Persian power. The wrath of Xerxes
against the Phoenicians was boundless. On them he had relied, and to their
infidelity he ascribed the loss of the battle; his threats so frightened the
remnant of the Phoenician contingent that they deserted. But the prospects of
the ultimate success of the invasion were still favourable.
The land army had met with no reverse, and was overwhelmingly superior in
numbers. The only difficulty was to keep it supplied with provisions, and in
this respect the loss of the command of the sea was a serious misfortune. The
Greeks represented Xerxes as smitten with wild terror, fleeing back overland to
the Hellespont and hardly drawing breath till he reached Susa. This dramatic
glorification of the victory misrepresents the situation. Xerxes personally was
in no jeopardy. The real danger lay not in Attica but in Ionia. The Persians
had good reason to fear the effect which the news of the crushing defeat of
their navy might have upon the Greeks of Asia, and if Xerxes dreaded anything,
he dreaded the revolt which actually came to pass in the following year. It was
all-important for him to secure his line of retreat, while he had no intention
of relinquishing his enterprise of conquering Greece. These considerations
explain what happened. The Persian fleet was immediately dispatched to the
Hellespont to guard the bridge and the line of retreat. The land forces were
placed under the command of Mardonius, who, as the season was now advanced,
determined to postpone further operations till the spring and to winter in
Thessaly. A force of 60,000 men was detached to accompany Xerxes to the
Hellespont.
When he arrived there he found that the bridge had
been destroyed by storms—the same storms which had wrecked his ships off
Magnesia. The fleet took him across to Abydos, and he proceeded to Sardis which
he made his headquarters. The convoy of 60,000 soldiers returned to the main
army in Thessaly, and on their way they laid siege to two towns, which
afterwards became famous, on the Pallene isthmus, Olynthus and Potidaea.
Olynthus, then a Bottiaean town, was taken and handed
over to the Chalcidians who had remained faithful to Persia. Potidaea
successfully withstood a siege of three months.
Meanwhile the Greeks had failed to follow up their
victory. Cleombrotus was about to advance from the
Isthmus with the purpose of aiming a blow at the retreating columns of the
Persian forces before they reached Boeotia. But as he was sacrificing, before
setting out, two hours after noon on the second of October, the sun was totally
eclipsed, and this ill-omen made him desist from his plan and march back to the
Peloponnesus. Themistocles tried to induce the naval commanders to follow up
their advantage by sailing after the Persian fleet to the Hellespont, that they
might deal it another blow and break down the bridge. It might be expected
that, if this were done, the Greeks of Ionia would revolt. But the
Peloponnesians would not consent to sail to a distant part of the world, while
the Isthmus was still threatened by the presence of the Persian army. The story
goes that, having failed to get his advice adopted, Themistocles, with that
characteristic adroitness which won the admiration of his contemporaries, determined
to utilise his failure. The faithful Sicinnus was sent to Xerxes to assure the monarch of the
goodwill of Themistocles, who had dissuaded the Greeks from pursuing the
Persian fleet. Themistocles might expect that Xerxes, having been deceived
before, would now disbelieve his announcement and therefore hasten back with
all speed to reach the Hellespont, if possible, before the Greeks. But on a
later day of his life, when he was an exile, he claimed Persian gratitude for
this service. It was even represented that, with extraordinary long-sightedness
or treachery, he had in his view the contingency of being driven to seek
Persian help or protection against his countrymen. But the tale need not be
seriously criticised; it has all the appearance of an
invention suggested by subsequent adventures of the subtle Athenian.
The island of Andros and the Euboean city Carystus had
furnished contingents to the Persian fleet. Just as the Athenians, after the
battle of Marathon, had sailed against Paros and demanded a war contribution,
so now the Greeks acted against Andros and Carystus. They failed at Andros,
just as Miltiades had failed at Paros; they devastated the territory of
Carystus.
Great was the rejoicing in Greece over the brilliant
victory which was so little hoped for. The generals met at Isthmus to
distribute the booty, and adjudge rewards. The Aeginetans received the choice
lot of the spoil on account of their pre-eminent bravery, and dedicated in the
temple of Delphi, on Apollo’s express demand, three golden stars set on a mast
of bronze. For bravery the Athenians were adjudged the second place. Prizes
were also proposed for individuals who had distinguished themselves for valour, or for wisdom. In adjudging the prizes for wisdom,
each captain wrote down two names in order of merit and placed his tablet on
the altar of Poseidon at Isthmus. The story is that each wrote his own name
first and that of Themistocles second, and that consequently there was no
prize, for a second could not be given, unless a first were also awarded. This
ingenious anecdote reflects the reputation for cleverness which had been won by
Themistocles.
The Corinthians who fell in the battle were buried in
Salamis, and their sepulchral stele was inscribed with a simple distich telling
the stranger that “Salamis the isle of Ajax holds us now, who once dwelled in
the city of Corinth between her waters.” The stone has been recently found.
This is only one of many epitaphs composed by nameless authors in those days of
joy and sorrow in various parts of Greece, all marked by the simplicity of a
great age, whose reserve, as has been said truly, is the pride of strong men
under the semblance of modesty. In later days, insensible to such reserve, it
became the fashion to improve these epitaphs by the addition of boastful
verses, which have imposed, till recently, upon posterity; and the epitaphs
thus disfigured were all said to be the workmanship of the poet Simonides. The
exposure of these two deceptions increases our admiration for Hellas at the
time of the invasion. There were men everywhere capable of writing a simple
appropriate inscription for a grave, and the tombstones of the fallen were not
used for superfluous boasts.
But the triumph of Hellas had nobler memorials than
the unassuming verses of the tombs. The barbarian invasion affected art and
literature, and inspired the creation of some of the great works of the world.
Men seemed to rise at once to the sense of the high historical importance of
their experience. The great poets of the day wrought it into their song; the
great plastic artists alluded to it in their sculptures. Phrynichus had now a
theme which he could treat without any dread of another fine. Aeschylus, who
had himself fought against the Mede, made the tragedy of Xerxes the argument of
a drama, which still abides the one great historical play, dealing with a
contemporary event, that exists in literature. But the Persian war produced,
though not so soon, another and a greater work than the Persians; it inspired
the “father of history” with the theme of, his book—the contest of Europe with
Asia. The idea was afloat in B c the air that the Trojan war was an earlier act
in the same drama,—that the warriors of Salamis and Plataea were fighting in
the same cause as the heroes who had striven with Hector on the plain of
Troy. Men might see, if they cared, this suggestion in the scenes from the
two Trojan wars, which were wrought by the master sculptors of Aegina to deck
the pediments of the temple of Athena, whose Doric columns still stand to
remind us that Aegina once upon a time was one of the great states of Greece.
And in other temples, friezes and pediments spoke in the conventional language
of sculptured legend—by the symbols of Lapiths and
Centaurs, Gods and Titans—of the struggle of Greek and barbarian.
Sect.
6. Preparations for another Campaign
The words of the poet Aeschylus, that the defeat of
the Persian sea-host was the defeat of the land-host too, were perfectly true
for the hour. But only for the hour. The army, compelled after Salamis to
retreat to the north, spent the winter in the plains of Thessaly, and was ready
for action, though unsupported by a fleet, in the following spring. The liberty
of Greece was in greater jeopardy than ever, and the chances were that the
success of Salamis would be utterly undone. For in the first place the Greeks,
especially the Lacedaemonians and Athenians, found it hard to act together.
This had been shown clearly the year before, eminently on the eve of the
Salaminian battle. The Peloponnesian interests of the Lacedaemonians rendered
them unwilling to meet the enemy in northern Greece; while the northern Greeks,
unless they were supported from the Peloponnesus, could not attempt a serious
resistance, and were therefore driven to come to terms with the barbarians.
And, in the second place, if these difficulties were overcome and a Panhellenic
force were opposed to the Persians, the chances were adverse to the Greeks; not
from the disparity of numbers, but from the deficiency of the Greeks in
cavalry.
In spring Mardonius was joined by Artabazus and the
troops who had conducted Xerxes to the Hellespont. The total number of the
forces now at the disposal of Mardonius is unknown; it is said to have been
300,000. Meanwhile the Persian fleet, 400 strong, but without the Phoenician
ships, was collected at Samos, with the purpose of guarding Ionia; and a
Greek squadron of 110 ships gathered at Aegina under the command of
the Spartan king Leotychidas, for the purpose of defending the coasts
of Greece, but not intending to assume the offensive. With great
difficulty some envoys from Chios induced Leotychidas to advance as far as
Delos, but he could not be moved to sail farther east with a view to the
liberation of Ionia, for “Samos seemed as far away as the Pillars of Heracles,”
and he dreaded the Persian waters teeming with unknown dangers. It seems
probable that Athenian policy was working upon the Spartan admiral’s
inexperience in military affairs. The object of the Athenians was to secure
their own land against a second Persian occupation. They therefore desired the
protection of the fleet for their coasts; but there was a more important
consideration still. If the fleet took the offensive and gained another naval
victory, the Peloponnesus would be practically secured against a Persian
attack, defended at once by a victorious navy and the fortifications of the
Isthmus. The result would be that the Peloponnesians would refuse to take any
further part in the defence of northern Greece and
would leave Athens a prey to the army of Mardonius. It was therefore the policy
of the Athenians to keep the fleet inactive until the war should have been
decided by a battle on land; and for this reason they equipped only a few of
their ships.
Mardonius, well aware of this fatal division of
interests between the Athenians and Peloponnesians, made a politic attempt to
withdraw Athens from the Greek league. He sent an honourable ambassador, King Alexander of Macedon himself, with the most generous offers.
He undertook to repair all the injuries suffered by Athens from the Persian
occupation, to help her to gain new territory, and asked only for her alliance
as an equal and independent power. In a desolated land, amid the ruins of their
city and its temples, knowing well that their allies, indifferent to the fate
of Attica, were busy in completing the walls of Isthmus, the Athenians might be
sorely tempted to lend an ear to these seductive overtures. Had they done so,
the fate of Peloponnesus would have been sealed,—as the Lacedaemonians knew.
Accordingly envoys were sent from Sparta to counteract the negotiations of
Alexander, and to offer Athens material help in the privations which she was
suffering. Tempting as the proposals of Mardonius sounded, and good reason as
they had to depend little on the co-operation of their allies, the Athenians
were constrained by that instinct of freedom which made them a great people, to
decline the Persian offer. “Tell Mardonius,” they said to Alexander, “that the
Athenians say: so long as the sun moves in his present course, we will never
come to terms with Xerxes.” This answer utters the spirit of Europe in the
“eternal question” between the East and West—the spirit of the Senate when
Hannibal was at the gates of Rome, the spirit of Roman and Goth when they met
the riders of Attila on the Catalaunian Plain.
Thus the embassy of Alexander ought to have
strengthened rather than weakened the Greek league. It ought to have made the
Lacedaemonians more actively conscious of the importance of Athenian
co-operation, and consequently readier to co-operate with Athens. It enabled
Athens to exert stronger pressure on the Peloponnesians, with a view to the defence of northern Greece; and the Spartan envoys promised
that an army should march into Boeotia. But still stronger pressure was needed
to overcome the selfish policy of the Peloponnesians. Soon after the embassy of
Alexander they had completed the walling of the Isthmus, and, feeling secure,
they took no thought of fulfilling their promise. The Spartans alleged in
excuse the festival of the Hyacinthia, just as the year before they had pleaded
the Carnea. And in the meantime Mardonius had set his
army in motion and advanced into Boeotia, with the purpose of reoccupying
Attica. Once more the Athenians had been cruelly deceived by their allies; once
more they had to leave their land and remove their families and property to the
refuge of Salamis. Mardonius reached Athens without burning or harrying; he
still hoped to detach the Athenians from the Greek cause; herein lay his best
chance of success. If they would now accept his former offers he would retreat
from their land, leaving it unravaged. But even at this extremity, under the
bitter disappointment of the ill-faith of their allies, the Athenians rejected
the insidious propositions which were laid by an envoy before the Council of
the Five Hundred at Salamis. Immediately the three northern states which had
not yielded to the Mede, Athens, Megara, and Plataea, sent ambassadors to
Sparta, to insist upon an army marching at once to oppose Mardonius in Attica—a
tardy redemption of their promises—with the threat that otherwise there would
be nothing for it but to come to terms with the foe. Even now the narrow
Peloponnesian policy of the Ephors almost betrayed Greece. For ten days, it is
said, they postponed answering the ambassadors, and would have ultimately
refused to do anything, but for the intervention of a man of Tegea, named Chileos, who impressively pointed out that the alliance of
the Athenian naval power with the Persians would render the Isthmian
fortifications on which the Ephors relied absolutely useless. One would have
fancied that this was obvious even to an Ephor, without a prophet from Tegea to
teach him. However it happened, the Lacedaemonian government suddenly changed
its policy and dispatched a force of 5000 Spartans, each attended by some
Helots, to northern Greece. Never since, never perhaps before, did so large a
body of Spartan citizens take the field at once. They were followed by 5000 perioeci, each attended by one Helot. It was clear that
Sparta had risen at last to an adequate sense of the jeopardy of the
Peloponnesus. The command was entrusted to Pausanias, who was acting as regent
for his child-cousin Pleistarchus, son of the hero of
Thermopylae. At the Isthmus, the Lacedaemonian army was joined by the troops of
the Peloponnesian allies, and by contingents from Euboea, Aegina, and western
Greece; in the Megarid they were reinforced by the Megarians, and at Eleusis by
Aristides in command of 8000 Athenians and 600 Plataeans. It was entirely an
army of foot soldiers, and the total number, including light armed troops, may
have approached 70,000. The task of leading this host devolved upon Pausanias.
The strong fortress of Thebes, which he had abundantly
supplied of with provisions, was the base of Mardonius; and once the Greek army
was in the field, he could not run the risk of having his communications with
his base broken off, and finding himself shut up in Attica, a land exhausted by
the devastation of the preceding autumn. Accordingly he withdrew into Boeotia,
having completed the ruin of Athens, and having sent a detachment to make a
demonstration in the Megarid. He did not take the direct route to Thebes, but
marching northward to Decelea and by the north side of Mount Parnes he reached
Tanagra and the plain of the Asopus. Marching up this stream, westward, he came
to the spot where it is crossed by the road from Athens to Thebes, at the point
where that road descends from the heights of Cithaeron. The river Asopus was
the boundary between the Theban and Plataean territories, and the destruction of Plataea was probably an object of the
Persians. But the main purpose of Mardonius in posting himself on the Asopus
was that he might fight with Thebes behind him. The Persians had every cause to
be sanguine. Not only had they superior, though not overwhelmingly superior,
forces, but they had a general who was far abler than any commander on the side
of the Greeks. Mardonius was not anxious to bring on a battle. He fully realised that his true strategy was to do as little as
possible; he knew that the longer the army of the Greeks remained in the field,
the more would its cohesion be relaxed through the jealousies and dissensions
of the various contingents. We need not take too seriously the story which the
Greeks were afterwards fain to believe, that at this moment there was a certain
dispiritedness and foreboding of disaster in the Persian camp. An anecdote told
by one of the guests at a Theban banquet was thought to illustrate this gloomy
mood. Attaginus, a Theban general, made a feast in honour of Mardonius. A hundred guests were present,
arranged on double couches, a Persian and a Boeotian on each. Thersander of
Orchomenus was among the guests, and in after-days he told the historian
Herodotus that his Persian couchfellow spoke these
words to him: “Since we have now shared the same table and wine, I wish to
leave thee a memorial of my opinion; that being forewarned thou mayest look to
thine own welfare. Seest thou these Persians feasting,—and the host which we
left encamped by the river? In a little while thou shalt see few of all these
remaining.” The Persian shed tears as he spoke, and Thersander rejoined: “It behoves thee to tell this to Mardonius”; but the Persian
said: “Stranger, man cannot avert what God hath ordained. No one would believe
me. Many of us Persians know it and follow the army under constraint. No human
affliction is worse than this, to know and to be helpless.”
Mardonius had taken up his position and constructed a
fortification near the bridge of the Asopus, before the Greeks had crossed
Cithaeron. He was acting on the defensive, but it was the defensive strategy of
a superior army, the inactivity of a master. In this respect the campaign of
the second year of the war is sharply distinguished from the campaign of the
year before. At Thermopylae, the Persians were attacking, their objective being
Boeotia and Attica; the Greeks were on the defensive. At Salamis, the Persians
were again the aggressors, their objective being the Isthmus; the Greeks were
again on the defensive. But in the campaign of Plataea the positions are
reversed. The Greeks are now taking the offensive; their objective is Thebes;
and the Persians are barring their way.
Sect.
7. Battle of Plataea
The field on which the fate of Greece was decided is
bounded on the north by the river Asopus, on the south by Mount Cithaeron. The
town of Plataea stood in the south-west of this space, on the most westerly of
six ridges which connect the lower heights of the mountain with the plain.
Three roads descended here into Boeotia: on the extreme east the road from
Athens to Thebes; in the centre, that from Athens to
Plataea; from the west, that from Megara to Plataea. The Greek army took the
most easterly way, which after a gradual ascent on the Attic side reaches the
fortress of Eleutherae and the pass of the Oak’s
Heads, and then descends steeply into the Boeotian land. They found when they
reached the other side that the road passed through the Persian camp, and they
were forced to take up a position at the foot of the pass. Their right wing,
consisting of the Spartans and Tegeates, rested on
the high bastion of the mountain. which rises above the town of Erythrae; their centre on lower ground close to the town; and the
left wing, where the Athenians and Megarians were posted, was advanced right
down to the foot of the descent. Thus the position of the Greeks was astride
the road to Thebes. The only assailable point was the left wing, and against it
Mardonius sent cavalry under the command of Masistius.
Sore bestead by the darts and arrows of the enemy, and with no cavalry to aid
them, the Megarians required succour. Three hundred
Athenians (for the Athenians were also on the left wing) went down to the scene
of battle, and the fortune of the day was at last changed when the general Masistius, a conspicuous figure in the fight, fell from his
wounded charger. He was slain with difficulty by a spear which pierced his eye,
for his armour was impenetrable; and the Persian
horsemen, after a furious and fruitless charge to recover the body of their
leader, abandoned the attack. The camp of the Persians was filled with loud
wailing and lamentation—echoing, says Herodotus, all over Boeotia—for the death
of Masistius.
But this success was far from dealing any solid
advantage to the Greeks or serious injury to their foes. The Persians were well
content to remain where they were; their great host and their fortifications
still barred the road. Pausanias, intent on carrying out his purpose of
striking at Thebes, and aware that delay would disorganise his army and play his opponent’s game, decided to cross the Asopus farther to
the west, by the road which connected Plataea with Thebes. In order to do this
he moved north-westward along the spurs of Cithaeron, past the towns of
Erythrae and Hysiae. To understand the operations
which ensued, it is to be observed that the region between Cithaeron and the
Asopus falls into two parts separated by a depression in the ground. The
southern part is marked by the six ridges already mentioned and the streams
which divide them; while the northern tract is also hilly, being marked by
three ridges between which rivulets flow into the Asopus. Westward the
depression opens out into flat land, the only flat land here, which stretches
northward from Plataea to the river and is traversed by the road to Thebes.
In the movement towards this road, the Athenians who
formed the left wing were naturally the vaward, and it was upon them that the
trying duty would devolve of first crossing the bridge in the face of Persian
cavalry. The only chance of accomplishing the general’s object of cutting off
the enemy from their base lay in a rapid advance, before Mardonius should have
time to extend his position westward and block the Plataean road. Upon the Athenians lies the responsibility of having thrown away this
chance. It can only have been due to their delays and hesitations that the
river was never crossed. The whole army halted near the eastern limit of the
flat land, hard by the spring of Gargaphia, which
afforded an abundant supply of fresh water, and the temple of the hero Androcrates. In this position it was screened by the rising
ground from the view of the Persians on the other side of the river. Pausanias
was now in an awkward situation. He had failed to accomplish his strategic
object; he had exchanged an almost impregnable for a weak position; and he had
lost the control of the eastern passes across Mount Cithaeron. The Persian
general, as soon as the Greeks had left their first position, promptly occupied
the passes; and cut off a provision train which was on its way to supply the
Greek army. The western road was an insufficient path of communication, and it
was clearly desirable to recover command of the main road. Pausanias could no
longer attempt the offensive.
It would seem that the Greeks remained about two days
inactive in this weak position, harassed by the Persian cavalry, which crossed
the river, hovered on the ridges, discharged darts into the camp, and finally
succeeded in choking up the waters of the Gargaphia spring. The only course open to the Greeks was to fall back upon the mountain,
and either take up a position on the ridges between Hysiae and Plataea, or seek to regain their former position at the foot of the main
pass. Pausanias held a council of war, and it was determined that the
Lacedaemonians and right wing should move eastward to recover command of the
eastern pass. This movement was to be carried out at night, and was to be
covered and supported by the rest of the army who were to fall back towards the
mountain. A little to the south-east of Plataea, a spur of Cithaeron was inclosed by the two branches of a stream which met again at
the foot of the ridge and went by the name of the Island. The centre and the left were instructed to retreat to this
ridge, whereon they would be out of the reach of the enemy’s cavalry. But the
scheme was ill carried out. The troops of the centre,
whether they mistook their orders or were deceived by the darkness, did not
reach the Island, but took up their post in front of the temple of Hera which
was just outside the walls of Plataea. The Athenians, for some unexplained
reason, failed to obey orders, and remained where they were in a dangerous and
isolated position. The Lacedaemonians themselves also wasted the precious hours
of the short night. Their delay is ascribed to the obstinacy of the commander
of one of the Spartan divisions, who had not been present at the council of
war, and refused to obey the order to retreat. His name was Amompharetus; he
was a man of blameless valour, and Pausanias could
not persuade himself to leave him behind. But the morning was approaching, and
at length Pausanias began his march, convinced that his stubborn captain would
follow when he found himself deserted. And so it fell out. When they had moved
about ten stades, the Spartans saw that Amompharetus
was coming, and waited for him. But the day had dawned; the Persians had
perceived that the Greek position was deserted, and Mardonius decided that now
was the moment to attack when the forces of the enemy were divided. His cavalry
came up and prevented the Lacedaemonians from proceeding. It was on the slopes
under Hysiae, near the modem village of Kriekouki, that Pausanias was compelled to turn and
withstand the Persian horsemen, who were speedily supported by the main body
advancing under Mardonius himself. The Persians threw up a light barricade of
their wicker shields, from behind which they discharged innumerable arrows.
Under this fire the Greeks hesitated; for the victims were unfavourable.
At length Pausanias, looking towards the temple of Hera, invoked the goddess;
and after his prayer the prophets obtained good omens from the sacrifices. The
Lacedaemonians no longer held back. Along with the Tegeates who were with them they carried the barricade and pressed the Persians backward
towards the temple of Demeter which stood on a high acclivity above them. In
this direction the battle raged hotly; but the discipline of the best spearmen
of Greece approved itself brilliantly; and, when Mardonius fell, the battle was
decided.
The Lacedaemonians and Tegeates had borne the brunt of the day. At the first attack, Pausanias had dispatched a
hasty messenger to the Athenians. As they marched to the scene they were
attacked by the Greeks of the left wing of the enemy’s army, who effectually
hindered them from marching farther. Meanwhile the tidings had reached the rest
of the Greek army at Plataea, that a battle was being fought and that Pausanias
was winning it. They hastened to the scene, but the action was practically
decided before their arrival; some of them were cut off, on the way, by Theban
cavalry. The defeated host fled back across the Asopus to their fortified camp;
the Greeks pursued, and stormed it The tent of Mardonius was plundered by the
men of Tegea, who dedicated in the temple of Athena Aiea in their city the
brass manger of his horses; while his throne with silver feet and his scimitar
were kept by the Athenians on the Acropolis, along with the breastplate of Masistius, as memorials of the fateful day. The body of
Mardonius was respected by Pausanias, but it was mysteriously stolen, and none
ever knew the hand that buried it. The slain Greek warriors, among whom was the
brave Amompharetus, were buried before the gates of Plataea, and the honour of celebrating their memory by annual sacrifice was
assigned to the Plataeans, who also agreed to commemorate the day of the
deliverance of Hellas by a “Feast of Freedom” every four years. Pausanias
called the host together, and in the name of the Spartans and all the
confederacy guaranteed to Plataea political independence and the inviolability
of her town and territory. The hour of triumph for Plataea was an hour of
humiliation for Thebes. Ten days after the battle the army advanced against the
chief Boeotian city and demanded the surrender of the leaders of the medizing
party. On a refusal, Pausanias laid siege to the place, but presently the
leaders were given up, by their own wish, for they calculated on escaping
punishment by the influence of bribery. But Pausanias caused them to be
executed, without trial, at Corinth. A Theban poet who sympathised with the national effort of Hellas might well feel “distressed in soul.”
The battle had been won simply and solely by the
discipline and prowess of the Spartan hoplites. The plans of the exceptionally
able commander, who was matched indeed with a commander abler than himself,
were frustrated once and again through the want of unity and cohesion in his
army, through the want apparently of tactical skill—most of all perhaps through
the half-heartedness of the Athenians. Never do the Athenians appear in such an
ill light, as in the campaign of Cithaeron; and in no case have they exhibited
so strikingly their faculty of refashioning history, in no case so successfully
imposed their misrepresentations on the faith of posterity. They had no share
in the victory; but they told the whole story afterwards so as to exalt
themselves and to disparage the Spartans. They represented the night movements
planned by Pausanias as a retreat before an expected attack of the enemy, and
they invented an elaborate tale to explain how the attack came to be expected.
Mardonius, they said, growing impatient of the delay, called a council of war,
and it was decided to abandon defensive tactics and provoke a battle. Then
Alexander of Macedon showed at this critical moment that his real sympathies
were with Hellas and not with his barbarian allies. He rode down to the
outposts of the Athenians, and, shouting, we must suppose, across the river,
revealed the decision of the Persian council of war. Thus made aware of the
Persian resolve to risk a battle, the Spartans proposed to the Athenians to
change wings, in order that the victors of Marathon might fight with the
Persians, whose ways of warfare they had already experienced, while the
Spartans themselves could deal better with the Boeotians and other Greeks, with
whose methods of fighting they were familiar. The proposal was agreed to, and
as day dawned the change was being effected. But the enemy perceived it, and
immediately began to make a corresponding change in their own array. Seeing
their plan frustrated, the Greeks desisted from completing it; and both the
adversaries resumed their original positions. Mardonius then sent a message to
the Lacedaemonians, complaining that he had been deeply disappointed in them,
for though they had the repute of never fleeing or deserting their post, they
had now attempted to place the Athenians in the place of danger. He challenged
them to stand forth as champions for the whole Greek host and fight against an
equal number of Persians. To this proposal the Spartans made no reply. Then
Mardonius began his cavalry operations which led to the retreat of the Greeks
from their second position. The three striking incidents of this malicious
tale, the night-visit of Alexander, the fruitless attempt of the Spartans to
shirk the responsibility of their post on the right wing, the challenge of
Mardonius, are all improbable in themselves; but nevertheless this story was
circulated and believed, and has received a sort of consecration in the pages
of Herodotus.
Sect.
8. Battle of Mycale and Capture of Sestos
The battle of Cithaeron shares with Salamis the
dignity of being decisive battles in the world’s history. Pindar links them
together as the great triumphs of Sparta and Athens respectively, battles
“wherein the Medes of the bent bows were sore afflicted.” Notwithstanding the
immense disadvantage of want of cavalry, the Lacedaemonians had turned at
Plataea a retreat into a victory. The remarkable feature of the battle was that
it was decided by a small part of either army. Sparta and Tegea were the actual
victors; and on the Persian side, Artabazus, at the head of 40,000 men, had not
entered into the action at all. On the death of Mardonius, that general
immediately faced about and began without delay the long march back to the
Hellespont. Never again was Persia to make a serious attempt against the
liberty of European Greece; “a god,” said a poet of the day—and the poet was a
Theban—“turned away the stone of Tantalus imminent above our heads.” For the
following century and a half, the dealings between Greece and Persia will only
affect the western fringe of Asia, and then the balance of power will have so
completely shifted that Persia will succumb to a Greek conqueror, and Alexander
of Macedon will achieve against the Asiatic monarchy what Xerxes failed to achieve
against the free states of Europe.
One memorial of this victory of Europe over Asia has
survived till today. The votive offering which the Greeks sent to Delphi was a
tripod of gold set upon a pillar of three brazen serpents, with the names of
the Greek peoples who offered it inscribed upon the base. The pillar still
stands in Byzantium, whither it was transferred after that city had been
renamed Constantinople by her second founder. The immense booty which was found
in the Persian camp was divided, when portions had been set apart for the gods
and for the general who had led the Greeks to victory.
The achievement of the Hellenic army under Mount
Cithaeron, which rescued Greek Europe from the invader, was followed in a few
days by an achievement of the Hellenic fleet which delivered the Asiatic Greeks
from their master. The Greek fleet was still at Delos. We saw that it was the
policy of the Athenians to remain inactive at sea until a battle had been
fought on land. For a naval victory would probably have meant the retreat of
the Spartans from northern Greece, on the calculation that the enemy would not
attack Peloponnesus without the co-operation of the fleet. But the armament at
Delos was drawn into action by a message from the Samians, seeking to join the
Greek league, and begging help against the Persian. For the Persian fleet was
at Samos, and hard by at Cape Mycale a large Persian army, including many
Ionian troops, was encamped. The Samian request was granted; Leotychidas sailed
to the island, and on his approach the Persian ships withdrew to the shelter of
Cape Mycale and their army. The Greeks landed; attacked, carried, and burned
the enemy’s camp. Their victory was decided by the desertion of the Ionians,
who won their freedom on this memorable day. Mycale followed so hard upon
Plataea, that the belief easily arose that the two victories were won on the
same afternoon. There is more to be said for the tradition that as the
Athenians and their comrades assailed the entrenchments on the shore of Mycale
the tidings of Plataea reached them and heartened them in their work.
The Athenians and Ionians, led by the admiral
Xanthippus, followed up the great victory by vigorous action in the Hellespont,
while the Peloponnesians with Leotychidas, content with what they had achieved,
returned home. The difference between the Athenian and the Spartan character,
between the cautious policy of Sparta and the imperial instinct of Athens, is
here distinctly and, it is not too much to say, momentously expressed. The
Lacedaemonians were unwilling to concern themselves further with the Greeks of
the eastern and north-eastern Aegean; the Athenians were both capable of taking
a Panhellenic point of view, and moved by the impulse to extend their own
influence. The strong fortress of Sestos, which stands by the straits of Helle,
was beleaguered and taken; and with this event Herodotus closes his history of
the Persian wars. The independence of the Hellespontine regions was a natural
consequence of the victory of Mycale, but its historical significance lies in
the fact that it was accomplished under the auspices of Athens. The fall of
Sestos is the beginning of that Athenian empire, to which Pisistratus and the
elder Miltiades had pointed the way.
Sect.
9. Geron Tyrant of Syracuse
While the eastern Greeks were securing their future
development against the Persian foe, and were affirming their possession of the
Aegean waters, the western Greeks had been called upon to defend themselves
against that Asiatic power which had established itself in the western
Mediterranean and was a constant threat to their existence. The Greeks had
indeed, on their side, proved a formidable check and hindrance to the expansion
of the dominion and trade of Carthage. The endeavours of this vigorous Phoenician state to secure the queen-ship of the western seas,
from Africa to Gaul, from the coast of Spain to the shores of Italy, depended
largely for their success on her close connexion and
identity of interests with her sister-towns in Sicily; and secondly, on her
alliance with the strong pirate power of Etruria. The friendly Phoenician ports
of western Sicily—Motya, Panormus, and Solus—were an indispensable aid for the
African city, both for the maintenance of her communications with Tuscany and
for the prosecution of designs upon Sardinia and Corsica. In Corsican waters as
well as in Sicily, the Phoenician clashed with the Greek. It was in the first
quarter of the sixth century that Dorian adventurers from Cnidus and Rhodes
sought to gain a foothold in the barbarian corner of Sicily, at the very gates
of the Phoenicians. The name of their leader was Pentathlus.
He attempted to plant a settlement on Cape Lilybaeum, hard by Motya,—a direct
menace to the communications between Motya and Carthage. The Phoenicians
gathered in arms, and they were supported by their Elymian neighbours; the Greeks were defeated and Pentathlus was slain. It was not the destiny of Lilybaeum to be the place of a Hellenic
city; but long afterwards it was to become illustrious as the site of a Punic
stronghold which would take the place of Motya, when Motya herself had been
destroyed by a Greek avenger of Pentathlus. After
their defeat the men of Pentathlus, casting about for
another dwelling-place, betook themselves to the volcanic archipelago off the
north coast of Sicily, and founded Lipara in the largest of the islands. This
little state was organised on communistic principles.
The soil was public property: a certain portion of the citizens were set apart
to till it for the common use; the rest were employed in keeping watch and ward
on the coasts of their little home against the descents of Tuscan rovers. This
system was indeed subsequently modified: the land was portioned out in lots,
but was redistributed every twenty years.
The attempt of Pentathlus,
the occupation of the Liparaean group, the recent
settlement of Acragas, pressed upon Carthage the need of stemming the Greek
advance. Accordingly we find her sending an army to Sicily. The commander of
this expedition, precursor of many a greater, was Malchus; and it is possible
that he was opposed by Phalaris, who established a tyranny at Acragas. There
was a long war, c. 560-50, of which we know nothing except that the invader was
successful and Greek territory was lost to the Phoenician. In the northern seas
Carthage was also confronted by the Greeks. The Phocaeans of Massalia planted colonies and won influence on the coast of
Spain. We are told that in the days of Cambyses “the Phocaeans gained repeated
victories over the Carthaginians by sea.” Moreover the new Phocaean settlement
at Alalia in Corsica was a challenge to Carthage in what she regarded as her
own domain. But Greek Alalia was short-lived. Carthage and her powerful
Etruscan allies nearly annihilated the Phocaean fleet; and the crews which
escaped were only able to rescue their families and goods. Alalia was deserted;
Corsica fell under the power of the Etruscans, and the coasts of Sardinia were
gradually appropriated by Carthage. Thus the chance of establishing a chain of
Greek settlements between Massalia and Sicily was
frustrated.
It now remained for Carthage to establish and extend
Phoenician power in Sicily. We have seen how Dorieus, son of a Spartan king,
made an attempt to do somewhat the same thing which the Cnidian adventurer had essayed—to gain a footing in Sicily within the Phoenician
circle. He too failed; but such incidents brought home to Carthage the need of
dealing another and a mightier blow at the rival power in Sicily. She was
occupied with the conquest of Sardinia and with a Libyan war, and the struggle
was postponed; but the hour came at last, and the Carthaginians put forth all
their power to annihilate colonial Greece at the very time when the Great King
had poured forth the resources of Asia against the mother-country. It was, in
the first instance, an accident that the two struggles happened at the same
moment. The causes which led to the one were independent of the causes which
led to the other. But the exact moment chosen by Carthage for her attack upon
Sicily was probably determined by the attack of Xerxes upon Greece; and
although the two struggles ran each its independent course, there is no reason
to question the statement that the courts of Susa and Carthage exchanged
messages, through the mediation of the Phoenicians, and were conscious of
acting in concert against the same enemy.
In the second decade of the fifth century Greek Sicily
was dominated by four tyrants. Anaxilas of Rhegium
had made himself master of Zancle, which from this
time forward is known as Messana, and he thus controlled both sides of the
straits, which he secured against the passage of Etruscan pirates. Terillus, his father-in-law, was tyrant of Himera. Over
against this family group in the north stood another family group in the south:
Gelon of Syracuse and his father-in-law Theron of Acragas.
Gelon had been the general of Hippocrates, a tyrant of
Gela, who had extended his sway, whether as lord or over-lord, over Naxos, Zancle, and other Greek cities, and had aimed at winning
Syracuse. Hippocrates had defeated the Syracusans on the bank of Helorus, and would have seized the city, if it had not been
for the intervention of Corinth and Corcyra. But Syracuse was forced to cede
her dependency, Camarina, to the victor. Hippocrates died in besieging Hybla;
and the men of Gela had no mind to allow his sons to continue their father’s
tyranny. But Gelon, son of Deinomenes, a general who had often led the cavalry
of Gela to victory, espoused the cause of his master’s heirs, and as soon as he
had gained possession of the city brushed them aside and took the tyranny for
himself. The new lord of Gela achieved what his predecessors had vainly striven
to accomplish. The Gamori or nobles of Syracuse had been driven out by the commons, and they appealed to
Gelon to restore them. The Syracusan people, unable to resist the forces which
Gelon brought against them, made terms with him, and he established his power
in Syracuse over oligarchs and democrats alike. It seems probable that Gelon
was either at once or at a later stage of his rule appointed formally “General
with full powers”; we find his brother Hieron, who succeeded to his position,
addressed by the poet Bacchylides as “General” of the
Syracusan horsemen.
The tyrant of Gela now abandoned his own city and took
up his abode in Syracuse, making it the centre of a
dominion which embraced the eastern part of the island. Gela had for a short
space enjoyed the rank of the first of Sicilian cities; she now surrendered it
to Syracuse, which was marked out by its natural site for strength and
domination. Gelon may be called the second founder of Syracuse. He joined the
Island of Ortygia with the fortified height of Achradina which looked down upon it. In the course of the sixth century a mole had been
constructed connecting the Island with the mainland, so that the city, though
it was still called the Island, had become strictly a peninsula. Gelon built a
wall from the Achradina fort down to the shore of the
Great Harbour. Thus Achradina and Ortygia were included within the same circuit of wall; Achradina became part of the city, Ortygia remained the “acropolis.” The chief gate of
Syracuse was now in the new wall of Gelon, close to the Harbour;
and near it a new agora was laid out, for the old agora in the Island no longer
sufficed. Hard by docks were built, for Syracuse was to become a naval power.
She was now by far the greatest Greek city in the west.
Gelon, belonging to a proud and noble family, sympathised and most willingly consorted with men of his
own class, and looked with little favour on the
people, whom he described in a famous phrase as “a thankless neighbour.” He
held court at Syracuse like a king, surrounded by men of noble birth. He
tolerated the Syracusan commons; he was not unpopular with them; but he showed
elsewhere what his genuine feelings were. One of his first needs was to find
inhabitants to fill the spaces of his enlarged town. For this purpose he
transplanted men on a large scale from other places of his dominions. His own
town Gela was sacrificed to the new capital; the half of its citizens were
removed to Syracuse. Harder was the fate of luckless Camarina, which was now
for the second time blotted out from the number of Greek cities. Two
generations had hardly passed since she had been swept away by the Syracusan
republic; and now the Syracusan tyrant carried off all the inhabitants and made
them burgesses of the ruling state. Megara, the next-door neighbour of Syracuse
on the north, and Euboea higher up the coast, also contributed to swell the
population of Gelon’s capital. Megara became an outpost of Syracuse, while
Euboea was so entirely blotted out that its very site is uncertain. But in both
these cases the policy of Gelon strikingly displayed the prejudice of his
class. He admitted the nobles of Megara and Euboea to Syracusan citizenship; he
sold the mass of the commons in the slave market. In abolishing cities and
transplanting populations Gelon set an example which we shall see followed by
later tyrants. He also invited new settlers from elder Greece, and he gave the
citizenship to 10,000 mercenary soldiers.
Gelon was supported in his princely power by his three
brothers, Hieron, Polyzalus, and Thrasybulus. He
entered into close friendship with Theron, his fellow-tyrant, who made Acragas
in wealth a power second only to Syracuse itself. Theron, like Gelon, was a
noble, belonging to the family of the Emmenids, and
his rule was said to have been mild and just. Gelon married Damareta,
the daughter of Theron ; and Theron married a daughter of Polyzalus.
The brilliant lords of Syracuse and Acragas, thus joined by close bonds, were
presently associated in the glorious work of delivering Greek Sicily from the
terrible danger which was about to come against her from over-seas.
Sect.
10. The Carthaginian Invasion of Sicily, and the Battle of Himera
A quarrel between Theron of Acragas and Terillus tyrant of Himera led up to the catastrophe which
might easily have proved fatal to the freedom of all the Sicilian Greeks. The
ruler of Acragas crossed the island and drove Terillus out of Himera. The exiled tyrant had a friend in Anaxilas of Rhegium; but Rhegium was no match for the combined power of Acragas and
Syracuse, and so Terillus sought the help of
Carthage, the common enemy of all.
Carthage was only waiting for the opportunity. She had been making
preparations for a descent on Sicily, and the appeal of Terillus merely determined the moment and the point of her attack. Terillus urging the Phoenitians against Himeras plays the same part as Hippias urging the Persians against Athens, but in
neither case is a tyrant’s fall the cause of the invasion. The motive of the Carthaginian expedition against
Sicily at this particular epoch is to be found in a far higher range of
politics than the local affairs of Himera or the interests of a petty despot.
There can hardly be a doubt that the Great King and the Carthaginian republic
were acting in concert, and that it was deliberately planned to attack,
independently but at the same moment, eastern and western Greece. While the
galleys of the elder Phoenicia, under their Persian master, sailed to crush the
elder Hellas, the galleys of the younger Phoenician city would cross
over on her own account against the younger Hellas. In the Phoenicians of Tyre
and Sidon, Xerxes had willing intermediaries to arrange with Carthage the plan
of enslaving or annihilating Hellas. The western island mattered little to
Xerxes; but it mattered greatly to him that the lord of Syracuse should be
hindered from sending a powerful succour in men and
ships to the mother-country. We have already the seen how the mother-country
sought the help of Ge]on and how the danger of Sicily forced him to refuse.
When the preparations were complete, Hamilcar, the shophet of Carthage, sailed with a large armament and
landed at Panormus ; for the call of Terillus determined that accompanied by the warships, and proceeded to besiege thet city, which Theron was himself guarding with a large
force. Hamilcar made two camps in front of the town. The sea camp lay on the
low ground between the hill of Himera and the beach: the land camp stretched
along the low hills on the western side of the town. A sally of the besieged resulted
in loss, and Theron sent a message to Syracuse to hasten the coming of his
son-in-law. With 50,000 foot-soldiers and 5000 horsemen Gelon marched to the
rescue without delay. He approached the town on the east side and for
The decisive battle was brought about in a strange
way, if we can trust the story. Hamilcar determined to enlist the gods of his
foes on his own side. He appointed a day for a great sacrifice to Poseidon near
the shore of the sea. For this purpose it was needful to have Greeks present
who understood how the sacrifice should be performed. Accordingly Hamilcar
wrote to Selinus, which had become a dependency of Carthage, bidding that city
send horsemen to the Punic camp by a fixed day. The letter fell into the hands
of Gelon, and he conceived a daring stratagem. On the morning of the appointed
day a band of Syracusan horsemen stood at the gate of the sea camp, professing
to be the expected contingent from Selinus. The Carthaginians could not
distinguish strangers of Syracuse from strangers of Selinus, and they were
admitted without suspicion. They cut down Hamilcar by the altar of Poseidon,
and they set fire to the ships. All this was visible from the high parts of the
town above them, and men posted there signalled to
Gelon the success of the plan. The Greek commander immediately led his troops
round the south side of the city against the land camp of the enemy. There the
battle was fought, a long and desperate struggle, in which the scale was
finally turned in favour of the Greeks by a body of
men which Theron sent round to take the barbarians in the rear. The victory was
complete; the great expedition was utterly destroyed; the chief himself was
slain.
But of the death of that chieftain the Carthaginians
had another and a far grander tale to tell. This tale does not explain how the
battle was brought about. It simply gives us a splendid picture. The battle
rages “from the morning till the late evening,” and during that long day
Hamilcar stands at the altar of Baal, in his camp by the sea. A great fire
devours the burnt-offerings to the god; victim after victim, whole bodies of
beasts and perhaps of men, are flung into the flames, and the omens are favourable to Carthage. But as he is pouring out a
drink-offering, he looks forth, and behold his army is put to flight. The
moment for a supreme sacrifice has come; he leaps into the fire and the flames
consume him. The offering of his life did not retrieve the day; but hereafter
Himera was destined to pay a heavy penalty for the death of Hamilcar.
The common significance of the battles of Salamis and
Himera, or the repulse of Asia from Europe, was appreciated at the time and
naively expressed in the fanciful tradition that the two battles were fought on
the same day. But Himera, unlike Salamis, was immediately followed by a treaty
of peace. Carthage paid the lord of Syracuse 2000 talents as a war indemnity,
but this was a small treasury compared with the booty taken in the camp. Out of
a portion of that spoil a beautiful issue of large silver coins was minted and
called “Damaretean,” after Gelon’s wife; and some
pieces of this memorial of the great deliverance of Sicily are preserved.
Sect.
11. Syracuse and Acragas under Hieron and Theron
Theron and Acragas had played an honourable part in the deliverance of Sicily, though it was a part which was second to
that of Gelon and Syracuse. Theron survived the victory by eight years, and
during that time he was engaged in doing for Acragas what had been already done
for Syracuse by his fellow-tyrant. The enlargement of the Syracusan and the Acragantine cities was effected by opposite processes.
Syracuse had sprung up a hill; Acragas which was perched aloft on a height
sprang down the slope. The enlarged city was encompassed by a wall, of which
nature had already done half the building. The most striking feature of the new
city was the southern wall, stretching between the rivers, and lined by a row
of temples. Theron laid the foundations of the temples along the wall; but it
was not till long after his death that they were completed, and the line of
holy buildings shone forth in all its glory. In all this work, and in the
watercourses which he also constructed, Theron had slave-labour in abundance—the barbarians who had been captured after the battle of Himera.
Theron placed rescued Himera under the government of his son Thrasydaeus, who however, unlike Theron himself, proved an
oppressor and was hated by the citizens.
Meanwhile Gelon died, and left the fruits of his
enterprise and statesmanship to be enjoyed by his brother Hieron. While Hieron
was to have the sovereign power, Gelon desired that Polyzalus,
whom he ordered to marry his widow Damareta, should
have the supreme command of the Syracusan army. The idea of this dual system
was unwise; and it necessarily led to fraternal discord. Polyzalus was popular at Syracuse, and his double connexion with Theron secured him the support of that tyrant. To Hieron he seemed a dangerous
rival, and in the end he was compelled to seek refuge at Acragas. This led to
an open breach between Hieron and Theron, but it did not come to actual war,
and it is said that the lyric poet Simonides, who was a favourite at both courts, acted as peacemaker. War between the two chief cities of Sicily
did not come till after Theron’s death, and then it brought freedom to Acragas.
Hieron may be said to have completed the work of
Himera the defeat which he inflicted upon the Etruscans at Cyme. Etruscans were
the other rival power which, besides the Carthaginians, threatened the “Greater
Greece” of the west. The possession of the northern outpost of Hellas on the
Italian coast, the colony of Cyme, was one of the great objects of Etruscan
politics; and, three or four years after the accession of Hieron, it was
pressed hard by a Tuscan squadron. Hieron was a statesman of a sufficiently large
view to answer the prayer of Cyme for help. The Syracusan fleet sailed to the
spot and defeated the besiegers. From this time the Etruscan power rapidly
declined and ceased to menace the development of western Greece. From the booty
Hieron sent a bronze helmet to Olympia; and this precious memorial of one of
the glorious exploits of Greece is now in the great London collection of
antiquities. More precious still is the song in which Pindar of Thebes immortalised the victory.
It is perhaps from the hymns of Pindar that we win the
most lively impression of the wealth and culture of the courts of Sicily in the
fifth century. Pindar, like other illustrious poets of the day, Simonides and Bacchylides, and Aeschylus, visited Sicily, to bask in the
smiles, and receive the gifts, of the tyrant. The lord of Syracuse—or king, as
he aspired to be styled—sent his race-horses and chariots to contend in the
great games at Olympia and Delphi, and he employed the most gifted lyric poets
to celebrate these victories in lordly odes. Pindar and Bacchylides were sometimes gaset to celebrate the same victory in
rival strains. These poets give us an impression of the luxury and magnificence
of the royal courts and the generosity of the royal victors. Syracuse, on whose
adornment the tyrants could spend the Punic spoils, and Acragas, “fairest of
the cities of men,” seemed wonderful to the visitors from elder Greece. Yet
amid all their own magnificence and amid their absorbing political activity,
the princes of this younger western world coveted above all things that their
names should be glorious in the mother country. They still looked to the holy
place of Delphi as the central sanctuary of the world, and they enriched it
with costly dedications. The golden tripod, which Gelon and his brothers
dedicated from Punic treasure, became, like the other golden things of Delphi,
the loot of robbers; but we are reminded of that fraternal union by a precious
bronze charioteer, which was dug up recently in the ruins of the Delphic
sanctuary. It was dedicated by Polyzalus, perhaps in honour of a Pythian victory.
It were easy to be blinded by the outward show of
these princely tyrants, which the genius of Pindar has invested with a certain
dignity. But Pindar, himself born of a noble family, cherished the ideas and
prejudices of a bygone generation. He belonged to a class, he wrote chiefly for
a class, whose day was past: nobles whose sole aim in life was to win victories
at the public games. These men were out of sympathy with the new ideas and the
political tendencies of their own age; they were belated survivals of an
earlier society. Pindar sympathised with them. He
liked aristocracies best; he accepted monarchy even in the form of tyranny; but
democracy he regarded as the rule of a mob’s passions. The despots of Sicily
and Cyrene supported the national games of Greece, and that was in truth their
great merit in the eyes of the poet. The chariot race, the athletic contests,
seen in the midst of a gay crowd, then the choral dance and song in honour of the victory, and the carouse, in the hall perhaps
of some noble Aeginetan burgher, these were “the delightful things in Hellas”
which to Pindar were the breath of life. He was religious to the heart’s core;
and all these things were invested with the atmosphere of religion. But
allowing for this, we feel that he takes the games too seriously, and that when
Aeschylus was wrestling with the deep problems of life and death, the day was
past for regarding an Olympian victory as the grandest thing in the world. We
must not be beguiled by Pindar’s majestic art into ascribing to the tyrants any
high moral purpose. It was enough that they should aspire to an Olympian crown,
and incur the necessary outlay, and seek immortality from the poet’s craft;
the poet could hardly dare to demand a higher purpose.
Fair as the outside of a Syracusan state might seem to
a favoured visitor who was entertained in the
tyrant’s palace, underneath there was no lack of oppression and suspicion. The
system of spies which Hieron organised to watch the
lives of private citizens, tells its own tale. One of his most despotic acts
was his dealing with the city of Catane. He deported
all the inhabitants to Leontini, peopled the place with new citizens, and gave
it the name of Aetna. His motive was partly vanity, partly selfish prudence. He
aspired to be remembered and worshipped as the founder of a city; and he also
intended Aetna to be a stronghold of refuge to himself or his dynasty, in case
a day of jeopardy should come. His son Deinomenes was installed as “King of
Aetna.” But the Dorian city of Aetna, so cruelly founded, though it was
celebrated in lofty phrases by Pindar and had the still higher honour of supplying the motive of a play of Aeschylus, had
but a short duration; it was soon to become Catane again.
At Acragas, the mild rule of Theron seems to have
secured the love and trust of his fellow-citizens; but at Himera he showed what
a tyrant might do, by slaughtering without any mercy those who had showed their
discontent at the rule of his son. Neither the Syracusan nor the Acragantine dynasty endured long. After Theron’s death, Thrasydaeus misruled Acragas, as he had already misruled
Himera. But for some unknown reason he had the folly to go to war with Hieron,
who discomfited him in a hard-fought battle. This defeat led to his fall.
Himera became independent, and Acragas adopted a free constitution. The
deliverance of Syracuse came about five years later. When Hieron died, his
brother Thrasybulus took the reins of government, and, being a less able and dexterous
ruler than Hieron, he soon excited a revolution by his executions and
confiscations. The citizens rose in a mass, and obtaining help from other
Sicilian cities besieged the tyrant and his mercenaries in Syracuse. He was
ultimately forced to surrender and retired into private life in a foreign land.
Thus the tyranny at Syracuse came to an end, and the feast of Eleutheria was
founded to preserve the memory of the dawn of freedom.
The rule of the despots seems to have wiped out the
old feud between the nobles and the commons. But a new strife arose instead.
The old citizens, nobles and commons alike, distrusted the new citizens, whom
Gelon had gathered together from all quarters. A civil war broke out; for some
time, the old citizens were excluded from both the Island and Achradina; but in the end all the strangers were driven
out, and the democracy of Syracuse was securely established. One good thing the
tyrants had done. They had obliterated the class distinctions which had existed
before them; and thus the cities could now start afresh on the basis of
political equality for all. The next half-century was a period of weal and
prosperity for the republics of Sicily, especially for the greatest among them,
Syracuse and Acragas, and for Selinus, freed from the Phoenician yoke. At
Acragas the free people carried to completion the works which their beneficent
tyrant had begun. The stately row of temples along the southern wall belongs to
this period. “It was a grand conception to line the southern wall, the wall
most open to the attacks of mortal enemies, with this wonderful series of holy
places of the divine protectors of the city. It was a conception due, we may
believe, in the first instance, to Theron, but which the democracy fully
entered into and carried out.” But her sacred buildings brought less glory to
Acragas than the name of the most illustrious of her sons. The poet and
philosopher Empedocles was reared in what he describes as the “great town above
the yellow river of Acragas.” He was not only a profound philosopher, an
inspired poet, a skilful physician, but he had lent
his hand to the reform of the constitution of his city. Unhappily his
personality is lost in the dense covert of legends which quickly grew up around
him. The true Empedocles who, banished from his home, died quietly in the Peloponnesus,
becomes the seer and magician who hurled himself into the bowl of Aetna that he
might become a god. A god indeed he proclaims himself to be, going about from
city to city, crowned with Delphic wreaths, and worshipped by men and women.
For a time indeed the Siceliots were threatened with a
remarkable danger, the revival of the native power of the Sicels.
This revival was entirely due to the genius of one man, and the danger
disappeared on his death. Ducetius organised a federation of the Sicel towns, and aspired to
bring the Greek cities under Sicel rule. He displayed his talent in the
foundation of new cities, which survived the failure of his schemes. His first
settlement was on the hill-top of Menaenum,
overlooking the sacred lake and temple of the Palici.
As his power and ambitions grew, he descended from the hill and founded Palica close to the national sanctuary, to be the political
capital of the nation. He captured Aetna, gained a victory over the Acragantines and Syracusans, but was subsequently defeated
by Syracuse, and on this defeat his followers deserted him, and the fabric
which he had reared collapsed. He boldly took refuge himself at the altar in
the Syracusan market-place; his case was debated in the Assembly; and by an act
of clemency, which we might hardly expect, he was spared and sent to Corinth.
Five years later we find him again in Sicily, engaged in the congenial work of
founding a third city, Kale Akte or Fairshore, on the
northern coast, with the approbation of Syracuse. It is uncertain whether he
dreamed of repeating his attempt at a national revival or had become convinced
that the fortune of the Sicel lay in Hellenization. His foundations were more
abiding than those of Hieron; one of them, Mineo, survives today. The career of Ducetius exhibited the decision of destiny that the
Greek was to predominate in the island of the Sicels.
Sect.
12. Religious Movements in the Sixth Century
In the latter part of the sixth century, the expansion
of the Persian power had suspended a stone of Tantalus over Hellas, and it
seemed likely that Greek civilisation might be
submerged in an oriental monarchy. We have seen how Greek generals, Greek
spearmen, and Greek seamen averted this calamity. We have now to see how
another danger was averted, a danger which, though it is not like the Persian
invasion written large on the face of history, threatened Greece with a no less
terrible disaster. This danger lay in the dissemination of a new religion,
which, if it had gained the upper hand, as at one time it seemed likely to do,
would have pressed with as dead and stifling a weight upon Greece as any
oriental superstition. Spiritually the Greeks might have been annexed to the
peoples of the orient.
The age of Solon witnessed not only a social and
political movement among the masses in various parts of Greece, but also an
intellectual and spiritual stirring. There was an intellectual dissatisfaction
with the theogony of Hesiod as an explanation of the origin of the world; and
the natural philosophy of Thales and his successors came into being in Ionia.
But there was also a moral dissatisfaction with the tales of religious
mythology, as they were handed down by the epic bards; and this feeling took the
form of interpreting and modifying them, so as to make them conform to ethical
ideals. The poet Stesichorus was a pioneer in this direction, and it was he who
first imported into the legend of the house of Atreus—the murder of Agamemnon
by his wife, and the murder of Clytaemnestra by her son—the terrible moral
significance which Aeschylus and the Attic tragedians afterwards made so
familiar. Further than this, men began to feel a craving for an existence after
death, and intense curiosity about the world of shades, and a desire for
personal contact with the supernatural. Both the scientific and the religious
movements have the same object—to solve the mystery of the existence, but
religious craving demanded a short road and immediate satisfaction. The craving
led to the propagation of a new religion, which began to spread about the
middle of the sixth century. We know not where it originally took shape, but
Attica became its most active centre, and it was
propagated to western Hellas beyond the sea. Based partly on the wild Thracian
worship of Dionysus, this religion was called Orphic from Orpheus, poet and
priest, who was supposed to have been born in Thrace and founded the bacchic
rites; and it exercised a deep influence over not only the people at large, but
even the thinkers of Greece. The Orphic teachers elaborated a theology of their
own; a special doctrine of the future world; peculiar rites and peculiar rules
of conduct. But they took up into their system, so far as possible, the old
popular beliefs. The Orphic religion might almost be described as based on
three institutions: the worship of Dionysus, the mysteries connected with the
gods of the underworld, and the itinerant prophets; but Dionysus, the
underworld, and the art of the seer and purifier, all acquired new significance
in the light of the Orphic theology.
It was perhaps as early as the eighth century that the
worship of Dionysus was introduced into northern Greece, and various legends
record the opposition which was at first offered to the reception of the
stranger. His orgies spread, especially in Boeotia and Attica. The worshippers
gathered at night on the mountains, by torchlight, with deer-skins on their
shoulders and long ivy-wreathed wands in their hands, and danced wildly to the
noise of cymbals and flutes. Men and women tore and devoured the limbs of the
sacred victims. They desired to fall, and they often fell, especially the
women, into a sort of frenzied ecstasy, in which their souls were thought to be
in mystic communion with Dionysus. It was probably the influence of the
Dionysiac worship that induced the Delphic god to give his oracles through the
mouth of a woman cast into a state of divine frenzy.
Men could also deal with the supernatural world
through the mediation of seers. Wise men and women, called bakids and sibyls, attached to no temple or sanctuary, travelled about and
made their livelihood by prophesying, purifying, and healing. They practised these three arts through their intimacy with the
invisible world of spirits; to which the causes of disease and uncleanness were
ascribed. Epimenides was one of the most famous and
powerful of these wizards; we saw how he was called upon to purify Athens.
Mysteries, connected with the cult of the deities of
the underworld, supplied another means of approaching the supernatural. The
Homeric bards of Ionia may have lived in a society where life yielded so many
pleasures that men could look forward with equanimity and resignation to that colourless existence in the grey kingdom of Persephone,
which is described in the epics. But the conditions of life were very different
in the mother-country in the seventh century. The strife for existence was
hard, and the Boeotian poet must have echoed the groans of many a wretched
wight when he cried
The earth is full of ills, of ills the sea.
It was a time when men were ready to entertain new
views of a future world, suggesting hopes that a tolerable existence,
unattainable here, might await them there. These new hopes which begin to take
shape in the course of the seventh century were naturally connected with the
religion of the deities of the underworld. In Homer we find Persephone as queen
in the realm of the ghosts, but we meet there no hint of a connexion between her worship and that of Demeter, the goddess of the fruits of the
earth. But as the earth which yields the sustenance of men’s life also receives
men into her bosom when they die, Demeter and Persephone came to be associated
in many local cults throughout Greece, and there grew up the legend of the rape
of Persephone, which was specially developed at Eleusis and was the subject of
the Eleusinian Hymn to Demeter, composed in the seventh century. At Eleusis
this chthonian cult acquired a peculiar character by the introduction of a new
doctrine touching the state of souls in the life beyond the grave.
In the days of Eleusinian independence, the kings
themselves were the priests of the two goddesses. When Eleusis became part of
the Athenian state, the Eleusinian worship was made part of the Athenian
state-religion; a temple of the two goddesses was built under the Acropolis and
called the Eleusinion; and the Eleusinian Mysteries
became one of the chief festivals of the Attic year, conducted by the king. The
Mysteries, which were probably of a very simple nature in the seventh century,
were subsequently transformed under Athenian influence. Two points in this
transformation are especially to be noted. The old Eleusinian king Triptolemus is made more prominent, and is revered as the
founder of agriculture, sent abroad by Demeter herself to sow seed and instruct
folk in the art. But far more important is the association of the cult of
Iacchus with the Eleusinian worship. Iacchus was a god of the underworld, who
had a shrine in Athens. In the Mysteries he was borne to Eleusis and solemnly
received there every year. He was originally distinct from the mystic Dionysus,
with whom he was afterwards identified.
The Mysteries seem to have consisted of a
representation in dumb show of the story of Persephone and Demeter. Mystic
spells were uttered at certain moments in the spectacle, and certain sacred
gear was exhibited. There was no explanation of any system of doctrine; the
initiated were seers not hearers. When the scheme of the Mysteries was fully
developed the order of the festival, which took place in September, was on this
wise. On the first day, the cry was heard in the streets of Athens—
Seaward, O mystae, mystae, to the sea!
And the initiated went down to the shore and cleansed
themselves in the sea water. Hence the day was called alade mistai. The next two days were occupied
with offerings and ceremonies at Athens, and on the fourth, the image of
Iacchus was taken forth from his shrine and carried in solemn procession along
the Sacred Way, over Mount Aegaleos to Eleusis. The Mystae, as they went, sang the song of Iacchus, and reached
the temple of the goddesses, under the Eleusinian acropolis, late at night, by
the light of torches. The great day was when they assembled in the Hall of
Initiation, and sat around on the tiers of stone-seats. The Hierophant, who
always belonged to the Eleusinian royal family of the Eumolpids, displayed the
secret things of the worship. Beside him the Torch-holder, the Herald, and the
Priest of the Altar, conducted the mystic ceremonies. The Mysteries are
mysterious still, so far as most of the details are concerned. Yet we may
perhaps say that no definite dogma was taught, no systematic interpretation was
laid on the legends; but the “acts” were calculated to arouse men’s hopes,
mysterious enough to impress their imaginations, and vague enough to suggest to
different minds different significances. The rites gave to many an assurance of
future weal and even to harder reasoners a certain sense of possibilities in
the unknown. And it was believed that the Mystae had
an advantage over the uninitiated not only here but hereafter,—an interest as
it were with the powers of the other world. So it is said in the old Eleusinian
Hymn :
Bliss hath he won whoso these things hath seen,
Among all men upon the earth that go ;
But they to whom those sights have never been
Unveiled have other dole of weal and woe,
Even dead, shut fast within the mouldy gloom below.
The Eleusinian Mysteries became Panhellenic. All
Greeks, not impure through any pollution, were welcome to the rites of
initiation, women were not excluded by their sex, nor slaves by their
condition. It is probable that the development of the Mysteries owed a good
deal to the Pisistratids ; and the ground plan of the
Hall of Ceremonies, which was erected in their time, can be traced at Eleusis.
Sect.
13. Spread of the Orphic Religion
The Orphic teachers promulgated a new theory of the
creation of the world—a theory which may have derived some suggestions from
Babylonia. They taught that Time was the original principle; that then Ether
and Chaos came into being; that out of these two elements Time formed a silver
egg, from which sprang the first-born of the gods, Phanes god of light; the development of the world is the self-revelation of Phanes. It was necessary to bring this cosmogony into connexion with Greek theology. Accordingly, Zeus swallows Phanes and thereby becomes the original force from which
the world has to be developed anew. The Thracian god, Dionysus Zagreus, is the
son of Zeus and Persephone—and thus closely connected with the underworld. Zeus
gives him the kingdom of the universe, while he is still a boy; but he is
pursued by the Titans, and when, after many escapes, he takes the shape of a
bull, he is rent in pieces by them, but Athena saves his heart. Zeus swallows
it, and afterwards brings forth the new Dionysus. The Titans, still wet with
the blood of their victim, he strikes with lightning, and the race of men
springs from their ashes. So that the nature of men is compact of Titanic and
Dionysiac elements, good and bad. The motive of the myth was to awaken in the
human soul a consciousness of its divine origin, and help it on its way back to
the divine state. To escape from the prison or tomb of the body, to become free
from the Titanic elements, penalties and purifications are necessary, and the
soul has to pass through a cycle of incarnations. In the intervals between
these incarnations which recur at fixed times the soul exists in the kingdom of
Hades. To attain a final deliverance, a man must live ascetically according to
rules which the Orphics prescribed, and be initiated
in the orgies of Dionysus. Thus they prescribed abstinence from animal food,
and imposed necessary ceremonies of purification. They taught the doctrine of
judgment after death, and rewards and punishments in Hades, according to men’s
deeds in the body.
Thus the Orphics reintroduced, as it were, into Greece the Thracian Dionysus, who seemed almost
another god when brought face to face with the Dionysus who had been hellenized and sobered since his admission into the society
of the Greek gods of Olympus. They adopted and developed the ideas of the
Eleusinian Mysteries; and in a poem on the Descent of Orpheus into Hades they
described the geography of the underworld. They also aspired to take the place
of the old prophets and purifiers; and they sought out and collected the
oracles which those prophets had disseminated. Their doctrines were published
in poems which were intended to supersede the Theogony of Hesiod; and the
surviving fragments of these works show more poetical power than the
compositions of the later successors of Homer.
The Orphic religion found a welcome at Athens, and was
encouraged by Pisistratus and his sons. Onomacritus, one of the most eminent
Orphic teachers, reputed the author of a poem on the “Rites of Initiation,” won
great credit and influence at the court of the tyrants. It was supposed that he
took part in preparing the new edition of Homer; and certainly a splendid
passage of Orphic origin was introduced into the episode of the visit of
Odysseus to the world of shades. But another interpolation is said to have led
to the banishment of Onomacritus; he was detected in making additions of his
own to a collection of ancient oracles, which were ascribed to the mythical
poet Musaeus.
The Orphic doctrines were taken up by a man of genius,
Pythagoras of Samos, who went to Italy and settled at Croton, where he was well
received. His philosophy had two sides, the philosophic and the religious. He
made important discoveries in mathematics and the theory of music; he recognised the circular form of the earth, and his
astronomical researches led to a considerable step, taken by his followers, in
the direction of the Copernican system—the distinction of real and apparent
motions. The Pythagoreans knew that the motion of the sun round the earth was
only apparent, but they did not discover the revolution of the earth on its
axis. They conceived a fire in the centre of the
universe, round which the earth turns in twenty-four hours; the five known
planets also revolving round it; and the moon and the sun, in a month and a
year respectively. We never see the fire, because we live on the side of the
earth which is always turned away from it. The whole world is warmed and lit
from that fire—the “hearth of the universe.” Pythagoras sought to explain the
world, spiritual and material, by numbers; and, though he could plausibly
defend the idea in general, its absurdity was evident when carried out in
detail.
At Croton he founded a religious sect or brotherhood, organised according to strict rules. The most important
doctrine was the transmigration of souls, and the ascetic mode of life
corresponded to that of the Orphic sects. In fact, the Pythagoreans were
practically an Orphic community. Their brotherhood, which did not exclude
women, obtained adherents not only in Croton but in the neighbouring cities, and won a decisive political influence in Italiot Greece. But this influence was exerted solely in the interests of oligarchy; it
would seem indeed that the nobles became members of the religious organisation, in order to use it as an instrument of
political power. It was during the ascendency of the Pythagoreans that a war
broke out between Croton and its neighbour Sybaris, which was then subject to a
tyranny. The men of Croton harboured the exiles whom Telys, the despot of Sybaris, drove out, and refused his
demand for their surrender. Telys led forth a large
host; a battle was fought; and the Sybarites were routed. Then the victors
captured Sybaris and utterly blotted it out. New cities were to arise near the
place; one was for a few months to resume its name; but the old Sybaris, which
had become proverbial throughout Greece for its wealth and luxury, disappeared
so completely that its exact site is unknown. The destruction of the rival city
was the chief exploit of the Pythagorean oligarchy of Croton; but a strong
opposition arose in Croton against the government and against the Pythagorean
order. Pythagoras himself found it prudent to escape from the struggle by
leaving Croton, and he ended his life at Metapontion.
The democratic party was led by Cylon, but the Cylonians did not get the upper hand till more than half a
century had passed; and the Pythagorean order flourished in Croton and the neighbouring cities. At length a sudden blow dissolved
their power. One day forty brethren were assembled at Croton in the house of
Milon. Their opponents set the building on fire, and only two escaped. It was a
signal for a general persecution throughout Italy; everywhere the members of
the society were put to death or banished.
At the time of the fall of the Pythagoreans, the
Orphic religion was no longer a danger to Greece. It was otherwise in the
lifetime of Pythagoras himself. Then it seemed as if the Orphic doctrines had
been revealed as the salvation which men’s minds craved; and, if those
doctrines had taken firm hold of Greece, all the priesthoods of the national
temples would have admitted the new religion, become its ministers, and thereby
exercised an enormous sacerdotal power. Nor would the Orphic teachers have failed,
if there had not been a powerful antidote to counteract their mysticism. Even
as it was, they exercised a permanent influence, stimulating the imaginations
of poets, like Aeschylus and Pindar, and diffusing a vivid picture of the world
of Hades, which has affected all subsequent literature.
Sect.
14. Ionian Reason
The antidote to the Orphic religion was the philosophy
of Ionia. In Asiatic Greece, that religion never took root; and most
fortunately the philosophical movement—the separation of science from theology,
of “cosmogony ” from “theogony”—had begun before the Orphic movement was
disseminated. Europe is deeply indebted to Ionia for having founded philosophy;
but that debt is enhanced by the fact that she thereby rescued Greece from the
tyranny of a religion interpreted by priests. We have met Thales and Anaximander
already. Pythagoras, although he and his followers made important advances in
science, threw his weight into the scale of mysticism; affected by both the
religious and the philosophical movements, he sought to combine them; and in
such unions the mystic element always wins the preponderance. But there were
others who pursued, undistracted, the paths of reason, and among these the most
eminent and influential were Xenophanes and Heraclitus.
No man was more active in the cause of reason than
Xenophanes of Colophon, who, after the Persian subjugation of Ionia, migrated
to Elea, where he died in extreme old age. But he spent his long life in
wandering about the world, and none saw and heard more of many lands and many
men than he. The feeble resistance of Ionia to the invader had disgusted him
with the Greeks, and produced a reaction in his mind against their religion and
their ideals. His experience of many lands helped him to cast away national
prejudices, and he spent his strength in warring against received opinions. In
the first place he attacked the orthodox religion and showed up the irrational
side of gods made in the image of men. If oxen or horses or lions, he said, had
hands to make images of their gods, they would fashion them in the shape of
oxen, horses, and lions. In the next place, he protested against the accepted
teachers of the Greeks, the poets Homer and Hesiod, whom Greece regarded as
inspired. All they have taught men, he said, is theft, adultery, and mutual
deceit. Again, he ridiculed the conventional ideals of Greek life, the ideal,
for instance, of the athlete. He deprecated the folly which showed great honours to a victor in a race or a contest. “Our wisdom is
better than the strength of human animals and horses.” He carried about and
spread his revolutionary ideas from city to city in the guise of a musician,
attended by a slave with a cithern. But he was not merely destructive; he had
something to put in the place of the beliefs which he overthrew. He constructed
a philosophy of which the first principle was god—not like mortals in either
form or mind—which he identified with the whole cosmos, and which was thus
material, existing in space, and not excluding the existence of particular
subordinate gods animating nature. He was also distinguished as a geologist; he
drew conclusions from fossils as to the past history of the earth. As a
fearless thinker, seeking to break through national prejudices, he is one of
the most attractive of the pioneers of Greek thought.
But what especially concerns us here is that
Xenophanes rejected Orpheus as utterly as he rejected Hesiod. He would have
nothing to do with mysticism and divine revelation; he regarded the Orphic
priests as impostors, and he inveighed strongly against Pythagoras. We can
hardly over-value his services in thus actively fighting the battle of reason,
and diffusing ideas which counteracted not only the comparatively harmless
superstitions of the vulgar but also the more serious and subtle danger of the
Orphic religion. Long before he died, Greek philosophy had become a living
power which no religion would stifle, a waxing force which would hinder
sacerdotalism from ever turning back the stream of progress.
The rationalism of Xenophanes affected Heraclitus of
Ephesus, a man of very different temper. Heraclitus heartily despised the
vulgar—he was an aristocrat in politics—and he wrote in a hard style, for the
few. In old age he retreated to the woods to end his life, having deposited the
book of his philosophy in the temple of Artemis. A man of greater genius than
any of the Ionian philosophers who preceded him, he thought out the “doctrine
of the flux,” which exercised an immense influence on his successors. This
principle was the constant change in all things; existence is change; “we are
and we are not.” But the process of change observes a certain law; nature has
her measures; and thus, while he had developed the doctrine of relativity—“good
and bad,” he said, “are the same”—he had a basis for ethics. His influence was
both subversive and conservative, according as one took hold of the doctrine of
the flux or the fixed law of the world.
The pantheistic principle of Xenophanes was taken up
at Elea by Parmenides, who gave it a new metaphysical meaning. He assumed an
eternal unchanging Being, and treated it with the scientific method which he
learned from the Pythagoreans. One of the most important services of Parmenides
and his followers was their argument that sense is deceptive and leads us into
self-contradiction. Here, they said, was the capital error of Heraclitus, who
founded his system on the senses.
With Parmenides and Heraclitus, philosophy in the
strict sense, metaphysics as we call it, was fully founded. We have not to
pursue the development here; but we have to realise that the establishment of the study of philosophy was one of the most momentous
facts in the history of the Greeks. It meant the triumph of reason over
mystery; it led to the discrediting of the Orphic movement; it ensured the free
political and social progress of Hellas. A danger averted without noise or
bloodshed, not at a single crisis but in the course of many years, is a danger
which soon ceases to be realised; and it is perhaps
hard to imagine that in the days of Pisistratus the religion which was then
moving Greece, and especially Attica, bid fair to gain a dominant influence and
secure a fatal power for the priests. The Delphic priesthood had, doubtless, an
instinct that the propagation of the Orphic doctrines might ultimately redound
to its own advantage. Although the new religion had arisen when the
aristocracies were passing away and had addressed itself to the masses, it is
certain that, if it had gained the upper hand, it would have lent itself to the
support of aristocracy and tyranny. The tyrants of Athens might have made an
Orphic priesthood an useful instrument of terror; and the brotherhood of
Pythagoras was an unmistakable lesson to Greece what the predominance of a
religious order was likely to mean.
We may say, with propriety, that a great peril was
averted from Greece by the healthful influence of the immortal thinkers of
Ionia. But this, after all, is only a superficial way of putting the fact. If
we look deeper, we see that the victory of philosophy over the doctrines of
priests was simply the expression of the Greek spirit, which inevitably sought
its highest satisfaction in the full expansion of its own powers in the free
light of reason.
The sixth century, the most critical period in the
mental development of the Greeks, came to be known afterwards as the age of the
Seven Sages. The national instinct for shaping legends chose out a number of
men who had made some impression by their justice and prudence, and, regardless
of dates, invented an ideal community among them, as if they had formed a sort
of college; and brought them into connexion with
great people, like Lydian kings. Periander, the tyrant of Corinth, was
curiously added to the list, which included Solon and Thales. To them were
attributed wise maxims like “Know thyself,” “Avoid excess,” “It is hard to be
virtuous.” The spirit, which the legend ascribes to these sages and which the
lives of Solon and Pittacus displayed, reflects the wisdom, which sought to
solve, or rather to evade, the everlasting problem of the discrepancy between
man’s ideal of justice and the actual ordering of the world, by enjoining a
life of moderation. But it is not without significance that, when the Orphic
agitation had abated, Greece should have enshrined the worldly wisdom of men
who stood wholly aloof from mystic excitements and sought for no revelation, in
the fiction of the Seven Sages.
CHAPTER VIII.
THE FOUNDATION OF THE ATHENIAN EMPIRE
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