READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECE
CHAPTER XXXIII.
EUBOEA.—CYCLADES.
Among the Ionic portion of Hellas are to be reckoned
(besides Athens) Euboea, and the numerous group of islands included between the
southernmost Euboean promontory, the eastern coast of Peloponnesus and the
north-western coast of Crete. Of these islands some are to be considered
as outlying prolongations, in a south-easterly direction, of the
mountain-system of Attica; others, of that of Euboea; while a certain
number of them lie apart from either system, and seem referable to
a volcanic origin. To the first class belong Keos, Kythnus, Seriphus, Pholegandrus, Sikinus, Gyarus, Syra,
Paros, and Antiparos; to the second class, Andros, Tenos, Mykonos, Delos,
Naxos, Amorgos; to the third class, Kimolus, Melos,
Thera. These islands passed amongst the ancients by the general name
of the Cyclades and the Sporades; the former denomination being commonly
understood to comprise those which immediately surrounded the sacred
island of Delos,—the latter being given to those which lay more scattered
and apart. But the names are not applied with uniformity or steadiness
even in ancient times: at present, the whole group are usually known by
the title of Cyclades.
The population of these islands was called Ionic—with
the exception of Styra and Karystus in the southern part of Euboea, and the island of Kythnus,
which were peopled by Dryopes, the same tribe as
those who have been already remarked in the Argolic peninsula; and with the exception also of Melos and Thera, which were
colonies from Sparta.
The island of Euboea, long and narrow like Crete, and
exhibiting a continuous backbone of lofty mountains from north-west to
south-east, is separated from Boeotia at one point by a strait
so narrow (celebrated in antiquity under the name of the Euripus),
that the two were connected by a bridge for a large portion of the
historical period of Greece, erected during the later times of
the Peloponnesian war by the inhabitants of Chalcis. Its general want
of breadth leaves little room for plains: the area of the island consists
principally of mountain, rock, dell, and ravine, suited in many parts
for pasture, but rarely convenient for grain-culture or town habitations. Some
plains there were, however, of great fertility, especially that of Lelantum, bordering on the sea near Chalcis,
and continuing from that city in a southerly direction towards
Eretria. Chalcis and Eretria, both situated on the western coast, and both
occupying parts of this fertile plain, were the two principal places
in the island: the domain of each seems to have extended across the island
from sea to sea. Towards the northern end of the island were situated Histiaea,
afterwards called Oreus—as well as Kerinthus and Dium: Athdnae Diades, Aedepsus, Aegae, and Orobiae, are also
mentioned on the north-western coast, over against Locris. Dystus, Styra, and Karystus are made known to us in the portion of the
island south of Eretria—the two latter opposite to the Attic demes Halae Araphenides and Prasiae. The
large extent of the island of Euboea was thus distributed between six or
seven cities, the larger and central portion belonging to Chalcis and
Eretria. But the extensive mountain lands, applicable only for pastures in
the summer—for the most part public lands, let out for pasture to such
proprietors as had the means of providing winter sustenance elsewhere
for their cattle,—were never visited by any one except the shepherds; and
were hardly better known to the citizens resident in Chalcis and
Eretria than if they had been situated on the other side of the Aegean.
The towns above enumerated in Euboea, excepting Athenae Diades, all find a place
in the Iliad. Of their history we know no particulars until considerably after
776 b.c., and they are first introduced to us as
Ionic, though in Homer the population are called Abantes. The Greek authors are
never at a loss to give us the etymology of a name. While Aristotle tells
us that the Abantes were Thracians who had passed over into the island
from Abae in Phocis, Hesiod deduces the name of
Euboea from the cow Io. Hellopia, a district
near Histiaea, was said to have been founded by Hellops son
of Ion: according to others, Aeklus and Kothus, two Athenians, were the founders, the
former of Eretria, the latter of Chalcis and Kerinthus: and
we are told, that among the demes of Attica, there were two named Histiaea
and Eretria, from whence some contended that the appellations of
the two Euboean towns were derived. Though Herodotus represents the
population of Styra as Dryopian,
there were others who contended that it bad originally been peopled from
Marathon and the Tetrapolis of Atica,
partly from the deme called Steireis. The principal
writers whom Strabo consulted seem to trace the population of Euboea,
by one means or another, to an Attic origin, though there were
peculiarities in the Eretrian dialect which gave rise to the supposition
that they had been joined by settlers from Elis, or from the Triphylian Makistus.
Our earliest historical intimations represent Chalcis
and Eretria as the wealthiest, most powerful, and most enterprising Ionic
cities in European Greece—apparently surpassing Athens, and not inferior
to Samos or Miletus. Besides the fertility of the plain Lelantum, Chalkis possessed the
advantage of copper and iron ore, obtained in immediate proximity both to the
city and to the sea— which her citizens smelted and converted into
arms and other implements, with a very profitable result: the Chalcidic
sword acquired a distinctive renown4. In this mineral source of wealth
several of the other islands shared: iron ore is found in Keos, Kythnus, and Seriphus, and
traces are still evident in the latter island of extensive smelting
formerly practised. Moreover in Siphnus, there were
in early times veins of silver and gold, by which the inhabitants were
greatly enriched; though their large acquisitions, attested by the
magnitude of the tithe which they offered at the Delphian temple,
were only of temporary duration, and belong particularly to the
seventh and sixth centuries before the Christian sera. The island of Naxos too
was at an early day wealthy and populous. Andros, T6nos, Ke6s, and
several other islands, were at one time reduced to dependence upon
Eretria9: other islands seem to have been in like manner dependent upon
Naxos, which at the time immediately preceding the Ionic revolt
possessed a considerable maritime force, and could muster 8000 heavy-armed
citizens—a very large force for any single Grecian city. Nor was the
military force of Eretria much inferior; for in the temple of the Amarynthian Artemis, nearly a mile from the city, to
which the Eretrians were in the habit of
marching in solemn procession to celebrate the festival of the goddess, there
stood an ancient column, setting forth that the procession had been
performed by no less than 3000 hoplites, 600 horsemen, and 60 chariots.
The date of this inscription cannot be known, but it can hardly be earlier
than the 45th Olympiad, or 600 b.c.—near about the
time of the Solonian legislation. Chalcis was still more powerful than
Eretria: both were in early times governed by an oligarchy, which
among the Chalcidians was called the Hippobotae or Horsefeeders—proprietors probably of most part of
the plain called Lelantum, and employing the
adjoining mountains as summer pasture for their herds. The extent of
their property is attested by the large number of 4000 Kleruchs or out-freemen, whom Athens quartered upon their lands, after the victory
gained over them when they assisted the expelled Hippias in his efforts to
regain the Athenian sceptre.
Confining our attention, as we now do, to the first
two centuries of Grecian history, or the interval between 776 b.c. and 560 b.c., there are
scarce any facts which we can produce to ascertain the condition of
these Ionic islands. Two or three circumstances however may be named which go
to confirm our idea of their early wealth and importance.
1. The Homeric Hymn to Apollo presents to us the
island of Delos as the centre of a great periodical festival in honour of
Apollo, celebrated by all the cities, insular and continental, of the
Ionic name. What the date of this hymn is, we have no means of
determining: Thucydides quotes it without hesitation as the production of
Homer, and doubtless it was in his time universally accepted
as such—though modern critics concur in regarding both that and the other
hymns as much later than the Iliad and Odyssey: it cannot probably be
later than 600 b.c. The description of the Ionic
visitors presented to us in this hymn is splendid and imposing: the number
of their ships, the display of their finery, the beauty of their women,
the athletic exhibitions as well as the matches of song and dance—all
these are represented as making an ineffaceable impression on the spectator:
“the assembled Ionians look as if they were beyond the reach of old
age or death.” Such was the magnificence of which Delos was the periodical
theatre, and which called forth the voices and poetical genius
not merely of itinerant bards, but also of the Delian maidens in the
temple of Apollo, during the century preceding 560 b.c. At that time it was the great central festival of the Ionians in Asia and
Europe; frequented by the twelve Ionic cities in and near Asia Minor,
as well as by Athens and Chalcis in Europe: it had not yet been superseded
by the Ephesia as the exclusive festival of the former, nor had the
Panathenaea of Athens reached the importance which afterwards came to belong to
them during the plenitude of the Athenian power.
We find both Polycrates of Samos, and Peisistratus of
Athens, taking a warm interest in the sanctity of Delo’s and the celebrity of
this festival. But it was partly the rise of these two great Ionian despots,
partly the conquests of the Persians in Asia Minor, which broke up the
independence of the numerous petty Ionian cities, during the last
half of the sixth century before the Christian aera; hence the great
festival at Delos gradually declined in importance. Though never wholly
intermitted, it was shorn of much of its previous ornament,
and especially of that which constituted the first of
all ornaments—the crowd of joyous visitors. And Thucydides, when he
notices the attempt made by the Athenians during the Peloponnesian war, in
the height of their naval supremacy, to revive the Delian festival,
quotes the Homeric Hymn to Apollo as a certificate of its foregone and
long-forgotten splendour. We perceive that even he could find
no better evidence than this hymn, for Grecian transactions of a century
anterior to Peisistratus—and we may therefore judge how imperfectly the
history of this period was known to the men who took part in the
Peloponnesian war. The hymn is exceedingly precious as an historical document,
because it attests to us a transitory glory and extensive association of the
Ionic Greeks on both sides of the Aegean Sea, which the conquests of the
Lydians first, and of the Persians afterwards, overthrew—a time when
the hair of the wealthy Athenian was decorated with golden ornaments, and
his tunic made of linen, like that of the Milesians and Ephesians, instead
of the more sober costume and woollen clothing which he subsequently
copied from Sparta and Peloponnesus—a time too when the Ionic
name had not yet contracted that stain of effeminacy and cowardice which
stood imprinted upon it in the time of Herodotus and Thucydides, and
which grew partly out of the subjugation of the Asiatic Ionians by
Persia, partly out of the antipathy of the Peloponnesian Dorians to
Athens. The author of the Homeric hymn, in describing the proud
Ionians who thronged in his day to the Delian festival, could hardly
have anticipated a time to come when the name Ionian would become a
reproach, such as the European Greeks, to whom it really belonged, were
desirous of disclaiming.
2. Another illustrative fact, in reference both to the
Ionians generally and to Chalcis and Eretria in particular during the
century anterior to Peisistratus, is to be found in the war between these
two cities respecting the fertile plain Lelantum which lay between them. In general, it appears, these two important
towns maintained harmonious relations; but there were some occasions of
dispute, and one in particular, wherein a formidable war
ensued between them. Several allies joined with each, and it is remarkable
that this was the only war known to Thucydides (anterior to the Persian
conquest) which had risen above the dignity of a mere quarrel between
neighbours; and in which so many different states manifested a disposition to
interfere, as to impart to it a semi-Hellenic character. Of the
allies of each party on this occasion we know only that the Milesians lent
assistance to Eretria, and the Samians, as well as the Thessalians and
the Chalcidic colonies in Thrace, to Chalcis. A column, still visible
during the time of Strabo in the temple of the Amarynthian Artemis near Eretria, recorded the covenant entered into mutually by the
two belligerents, to abstain from missiles, and to employ nothing but
hand-weapons. The Eretrians are said to have
been superior in horse, but they were vanquished in the battle: the tomb of Kleomachus of Pharsalus, a distinguished warrior who
had perished in the cause of the Chalcidians, was erected in
the agora of Chalcis. We know nothing of the date, the duration, or
the particulars of this war1; but it seems that the Eretrians were worsted, though their city always maintained its dignity as the
second state in the island. Chalcis was decidedly the first, and
continued to be flourishing, populous and commercial, long after it had lost
its political importance, throughout all the period of Grecian independent
history.
3. Of the importance of Chalcis and Eretria, during
the seventh and part of the eighth century before the Christian sera, we gather
other evidences—partly in the numerous colonies founded by them (which I
shall advert to in a subsequent chapter),— partly in the prevalence
throughout a large portion of Greece, of the Euboic scale of weight and money. What the quantities and proportions of this
scale were, has been first shown by M. Boeckh in
his ‘Metrologie’. It was of Eastern origin, and
the gold collected by Darius in tribute throughout the vast Persian
empire was ordered to be delivered in Euboic talents.
Its divisions—the talent equal to 60 minae, the
mina equal to 100 drachms, the drachm equal to 6 obols—were the same as
those of the scale called Aeginaean, introduced by Pheidon of Argos;
but the six obols of the Euboic drachm contained
a weight of silver equal only to five Aeginaean obols, so that the Euboic denominations—drachm, mina, and talent—were equal
only to five-sixths of the same denominations in the Aiginaean scale. It was the Euboic scale which prevailed at
Athens before the debasement introduced by Solon; which debasement
(amounting to about 27 per cent., as has been mentioned in a
previous chapter,) created a third scale, called the Attic, distinct
both from the Aeginaean and Euboic— standing to
the former in the ratio of 3 : 5, and to the latter in the ratio of 18 :
25. It seems plain that the Euboic scale was
adopted by the Ionians through their intercourse with the Lydians1
and other Asiatics, and that it became
naturalised among their cities under the name of the Euboic,
because Chalcis and Eretria were the most actively commercial states in the Aegean—just
as the superior commerce of Aegina, among the Dorian states, had given to
the scale introduced by Pheidon of Argos the name of Aeginaean. The fact
of its being so called indicates a time when these two Euboean cities
surpassed Athens in maritime power and extended commercial relations, and when
they stood among the foremost of the Ionic cities throughout Greece.
The Euboic scale, after having been debased by Solon
in reference to coinage and money, still continued in use at Athens for
merchandise: the Attic mercantile mina retained its primitive Euboic weight.
CHAPTER XXXIV.
ASIATIC IONIANS.
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