READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECE
CHAPTER XXXV.
AEOLIC GREEKS IN ASIA.
On the coast of Asia Minor to the north of the twelve
Ionic confederated cities, were situated the twelve Aeolic cities, apparently
united in a similar manner. Besides Smyrna, the fate of which has already
been described, the eleven others were— Temnos,
Larissa, Neon-Teichos, Kyme, Aegae, Myrina, Gryneium,
Killa, Notium, Aegiroessa, Pitane. These twelve are especially noted by Herodotus as
the twelve ancient continental Aeolic cities, and distinguished on the one
hand from the insular Aeolic Greeks, in Lesbos, Tenedos, and Hekatonnesoi—and on the other hand from the Aeolic establishments
in and about Mount Ida, which seem to have been subsequently formed and
derived from Lesbos and Kyme.
Of these twelve Aeolic towns, eleven were situated
very near together, clustered round the Elaeitic Gulf: their territories, all
of moderate extent, seem also to have been conterminous with each other.
Smyrna, the twelfth, was situated to the south of Mount Sipylus, and at a greater distance from the remainder—one
reason why it was so soon lost to its primitive inhabitants.
These towns occupied chiefly a narrow but fertile strip of territory lying
between the base of the woody mountain-range called Sardene and the sea. Gryneium, like Colophon and Miletus,
possessed a venerated sanctuary of Apollo, of older date than the Aeolic
immigration. Larissa, Temnos, and Aegae were
at some little distance from the sea; the first at a short distance north
of the Hermus, by which its territory was watered and occasionally
inundated, so as to render embankments necessary; the last two upon rocky
mountain-sites, so inaccessible to attack, that the inhabitants were
enabled, even during the height of the Persian power, to
maintain constantly a substantial independence. Elaea,
situated at the mouth of the river Kaikus, became
in later times the port of the strong and flourishing city of
Pergamus; while Pitana, the northernmost of the
twelve, was placed between the mouth of the Kaikus and the lofty promontory of Kanae, which closes in the Elaeitic Gulf to the
northward. A small town Kanae close to that promontory is said to
have once existed.
It has already been stated that the legend ascribes
the origin of these colonies to a certain special event called the Aeolic
emigration, of which chronologers profess to know the precise date,
telling us how many years it happened after the Trojan war, considerably
before the Ionic emigration. That the Aeolic as well as the Ionic
inhabitants of Asia were emigrants from Greece, we may reasonably believe,
but as to the time or circumstances of their emigration we can pretend to
no certain knowledge. The name of the town Larissa, and perhaps that
of Magnesia on Mount Sipylus (according to what has
been observed in the preceding passage), has given rise to the supposition
that the anterior inhabitants were Pelasgians, who, having once
occupied the fertile banks of the Hermus, as well as those of the Kaister near Ephesus, employed their industry in the work
of embankment. Kyme was the earliest as well as
the most powerful of the twelve Aeolic towns; Neon-Teichos having been originally established by the Kymaeans as
a fortress for the purpose of capturing the Pelasgic Larissa. Both Kyme and Larissa were designated by the
epithet of Phrikonis : by some this was traced to the
mountain Phrikium in Locris, from whence it was
alleged that the Aeolic emigrants had started to cross the Aegean; by
others it seems to have been connected with an eponymous hero Phrikon.
It was probably from Kyme and its sister cities on the Elaeitic Gulf that Hellenic inhabitants penetrated
into the smaller towns in the inland plain of the Kaikus—Pergamus, Halisama, Gambreion, &c.
In the more southerly plain of the Hermus, on the northern declivity of
Mount Sipylus, was situated the city of
Magnesia, called Magnesia ad Sipylum in
order to distinguish it from Magnesia on the river Meander. Both these towns
called Magnesia were inland—the one bordering upon the Ionic Greeks, the
other upon the Aeolic, but seemingly not included in any Amphictyony either
with the one or the other. Each is referred to a separate and early
immigration either from the Magnates in Thessaly or from Crete. Like many
other of the early towns, Magnesia ad Sipylum appears to have been originally established higher up on
the mountain—in a situation nearer to Smyrna, from which it was
separated by the Sipylene range—and to have been
subsequently brought down nearer to the plain on the north side as well as
to the river Hermus. The original site, Palae-Magnesia, was still occupied as a
dependent township, even daring the times of the Attalid and Seleucid kings. A like transfer of situation, from a height
difficult of access to some lower and more convenient position, took place
with other towns in and near this region; such as Gambreion and Skepsis, which had their Palae-Gambreion and
Palae-Skepsis not far distant.
Of these twelve Aeolic towns, it appears that all
except Kyme were small and unimportant. Thucydides’,
in recapitulating the dependent allies of Athens at the commencement of
the Peloponnesian war, does not account them worthy of being enumerated.
Nor are we authorized to conclude, because they bear the general name of Aeolians, that
the inhabitants were all of kindred race, though a large proportion of
them are said to have been Boeotians, and the feeling of fraternity
between Boeotians and Lesbians was maintained throughout the
historical times: one etymology of the name is indeed founded upon the
supposition that they were of miscellaneous origin. We do not hear, moreover,
of any considerable poets produced by the Aeolic continental towns: in this
respect Lesbos stood alone—an island said to have been the
earliest of all the Aeolic settlements, anterior even to Kyme. Six towns were originally established in Lesbos—Mitylene,
Methymna, Eresus, Pyrrha, Antissa,
and Arisbe: the last-mentioned town was subsequently enslaved and
destroyed by the Methymnaeans, so that there
remained only five towns in all. According to the political subdivision usual
in Greece, the island had thus, first six, afterwards five, independent
governments, of which, however, Mitylene, situated in the south-eastern
quarter and facing the promontory of Kane, was by far the first,
while Methymna, on the north of the island over against Cape Lekton, was the second. Like so many other Grecian
colonies, the original city of Mitylene was founded upon an islet divided
from Lesbos by a narrow strait; it was subsequently extended on
to Lesbos itself, so that the harbour presented two distinct
entrances.
It appears that the native poets and fabulists who
professed to deliver the archaeology of Lesbos, dwelt less upon the Aeolic
settlers than upon the various heroes and tribes who were alleged to have
had possession of the island anterior to that settlement, from the
deluge of Deukalion downwards,—just as the Chian
and Samian poets seem to have dwelt principally upon the ante-ionic
antiquities of their respective islands. After the Pelasgian
Xanthus son of Triopas, comes Makar son of Krinakus, the great native hero of the island, supposed by
Plehn to be the eponym of an occupying race called the Makares:
the Homeric hymn to Apollo brings Makar into connection with the Aeolic
inhabitants, by calling him son of Aeolus, and the native historian Myrsilus also seems to have treated him as an Aeolian.
To dwell upon such narratives suited the disposition of the Greeks; but
when we come to inquire for the history of Lesbos, we find ourselves
destitute of any genuine materials, not only for the period prior to the Aeolic
occupation, but also for a long time after it: nor can we pretend
to determine at what date that occupation took place. We may
reasonably believe it to have occurred before 776 b.c.,
and it therefore becomes a part of the earliest manifestations of real
Grecian history: both Kyme, with its eleven
sister towns on the continent, and the islands Lesbos and
Tenedos, were then Aeolic; and I have already remarked that the
migration of the father of Hesiod the poet, from the Aeolic Kyme to Askra in Boeotia, is
the earliest authentic fact known to us on
contemporary testimony,—seemingly between 776 and 700 b.c.
But besides these islands, and the strip of the
continent between Kyme and Pitane (which constituted the territory properly called Aeolis), there were many
other Aeolic establishments in the region near Mount Ida, the Troad, and the Hellespont, and even in European Thrace. All
these establishments seem to have emanated from Lesbos, Kyme and Tenedos, but at what time they were formed we have no information.
Thirty different towns are said to have been established by these cities,
and nearly all the region of Mount Ida (meaning by that term the territory
west of a line drawn from the town of Adramyttion northward to Priapos on the Propontis) came to be Aeolised.
A new Aeolis was thus formed, quite distinct from the Aeolis near the
Elaeitic Gulf, and severed from it partly by the territory of Atarneus,
partly by the portion of Mysia and Lydia, between Atarneus and Adramyttium,
including the fertile plain of Thebe: a portion of the lands on this coast
seem indeed to have been occupied by Lesbos, but the far larger part
of it was never Aeolic. Nor was Ephorus accurate when he talked of the
whole territory between Kyme and Abydos as known
under the name of Aeolis.
The inhabitants of Tenedos possessed themselves of the
strip of the Troad opposite to their island,
northward of Cape Lekton—those of Lesbos founded Assus, Gargara, Lamponia, Antandrus, &c.,
between Lek ton, and the north-eastern comer of the Adra-myttian Gulf—while the Kymaeans seem to have established
themselves at Kebron and other places in the inland Idaean district. As far as we can make out, this north-western corner (west of a
line drawn from Smyrna to the eastern corner of the Propontis) seems
to have been occupied, anterior to the Hellenic settlements, by Mysians and Teucrians—who are mentioned together, in such
manner as to show that there was no great ethnical difference between them. The
elegiac poet Kallinus, in the middle of the seventh century b.c.,
was the first who mentioned the Teucrians: he treated them’ as immigrants
from Crete, though other authors represented them as indigenous, or as
having come from Attica: however the fact may stand as to their
origin, we may gather that in the time of Kallinus, they were still the great
occupants of the Troad. Gradually the south and
west coasts, as well as the interior of this region, became
penetrated by successive colonies of Aeolic Greeks, to whom the iron
and ship timber of Mount Ida were valuable acquisitions; and thus the small Teucrian townships
(for there were no considerable cities) became Aeolised;
while on the coast northward of Ida, along the Hellespont and Propontis,
Ionic establishments were formed from Miletus and Phocaea, and Milesian
colonists were received into the inland town of Skepsis. In the time of
Kallinus, the Teucrians seem to have been in possession of Hamaxitus and Koldnae, with the
worship of the Sminthian Apollo, in the
south-western region of the Troad: a century and
a half afterwards, at the time of the Ionic revolt, Herodotus notices the
inhabitants of Gergis (occupying a portion of the northern region of Ida
in the line eastward from Dardanus and Ophrynion)
as “ the remnant of the ancient Teucrians.” We also find the Mityleneans and Athenians contending by arms about
600-580 b.c., for the possession of Sigeium at
the entrance of the Hellespont: probably the Lesbian settlements on the
southern coast of the Troad, lying as they do so
much nearer to the island, as well as the Tenedian settlements on the western coast opposite Tenedos, had been formed at some
time prior to this epoch. We farther read of Aeolic inhabitants
as possessing Sestos on the European side of the Hellespont. The name
Teucrians gradually vanished out of present use, and came to belong
only to the legends of the past; preserved either in connection with the
worship of the Sminthian Apollo, or by writers
such as Hellanikus and Cephalon of Gergis, from whence it passed to the later
poets and to the Latin epic. It appears that the native place of Cephalon was a
town called Gergis or Gergithes near Kyme: there was also another place called Gergetha on the river Kalkus,
near its sources, and therefore higher up in Mysia. It was from Gergithes near Kyme (according to Strabo), that the place called Gergis in Mount Ida was
settled: probably the non-Hellenic inhabitants, both near Kyme and in the region of Ida, were of kindred race,
but the settlers who went from Kyme to Gergis in
Ida were doubtless Greeks, and contributed in this manner to the
conversion of that place from a Teucrian to an Hellenic settlement. In one
of those violent dislocations of inhabitants, which were so
frequent afterwards among the successors of Alexander in Asia Minor,
the Teucro-Hellenic population of the Idaean Gergis is said to have been carried away
by Attalus of Pergamus, in order to people the village of Gergetha near the river Kaikus.
We are to regard the Aeolic Greeks as occupying not
only their twelve cities on the continent round the Elaeitic Gulf, and the
neighbouring islands, of which the chief were Lesbos and Tenedos—but
also as gradually penetrating and hellenising the Idaean region and the Troad.
This last process belongs probably to a period subsequent to 776 b.c., but Kyme and Lesbos
doubtless count as Aeolic from an earlier period.
Of Mitylene, the chief city of Lesbos, we hear some
facts between the fortieth and fiftieth Olympiad (620-580 b.c.),
which unfortunately reach us only in a faint echo. That city then numbered as
its own the distinguished names of Pittakus, Sappho,
and Alkaeus: like many other Grecian communities of that time, it suffered much
from intestine commotion, and experienced more than one violent
revolution. The old oligarchy called the Penthilids (seemingly a gens with heroic origin), rendered themselves intolerably
obnoxious by misrule of the most reckless character; their brutal use of
the bludgeon in the public streets was avenged by Megakles and his friends, who slew them and put down their government. About the
forty-second Olympiad (612 b.c.) we hear of Melanchrus, as despot of Mityldnd,
who was slain by the conspiracy of Pittakus,
Kikis, and Antimenidds—the last two being
brothers of Alkaeus the poet. Other despots, Myrsilus, Megalagyrus, and the Kleanaktidae,
whom we know only by name, and who appear to have been immortalized
chiefly by the bitter stanzas of Alkaeus, acquired afterwards the
sovereignty of Mitylene. Among all the citizens of the town, however, the
most fortunate, and the most deserving, was Pittakus the son of Hyrrhadus—a champion trusted by his
countrymen alike in foreign war and in intestine broils.
The foreign war in which the Mityleneans were engaged and in which Pittakus commanded
them, was against the Athenians on the continental coast opposite to
Lesbos, in the Troad near Sigeium. The Mityleneans had already established
various settlements along the Troad, the
northernmost of which was Achilleium: they laid
claim to the possession of this line of coast, and when Athens (about the
43rd Olympiad, as it is said) attempted to plant a settlement at Sigeium,
they resisted the establishment by force. At the head of the Mitylenean troops, Pittakus engaged in single combat with the Athenian commander Phrynon,
and had the good fortune to kill him. The general struggle was
however carried on with no very decisive result. On one memorable occasion the Mityleneans fled, and Alkaeus the poet, serving as an
hoplite in their ranks, commemorated in one of his odes both his flight
and the humiliating loss of his shield, which the victorious Athenians
suspended as a trophy in the temple of Athene at Sigeium. His predecessor
Archilochus, and his imitator Horace, have both been frank enough to
confess a similar misfortune, which Tyrtaeus perhaps would not
have endured to survive. It was at length agreed by Mitylene and Athens to
refer the dispute to Periander of Corinth. While the Mityleneans laid claim to the whole line of coast, the Athenians alleged that inasmuch as a
contingent from Athens had served in the host of Agamemnon against
Troy, their descendants had as good a right as any other Greeks to
share in the conquered ground. It appears that Periander felt unwilling to
decide this delicate question of legendary law. He directed that each
party should retain what they possessed, and his verdict1 was still
remembered and appealed to even in the time of Aristotle, by the
inhabitants of Tenedos against those of Sigeium.
Though Pittakus and Alkaeus
were both found in the same line of hoplites against the Athenians at
Sigeium, yet in the domestic politics of their native city, their bearing
was that of bitter enemies. Alkaeus and Antimenidas his brother were worsted in this party-feud, and banished: but even as
exiles they were strong enough seriously to alarm and afflict their
fellow-citizens, while their party at home, and the general dissension
within the walls, reduced Mitylene to despair. In this
calamitous condition, the Mityleneans had
recourse to Pittakus, who with his great rank in
the state (his wife belonged to the old gens of the Penthilids),
courage in the field, and reputation for wisdom, inspired greater
confidence than any other citizen of his time. He was by universal consent
named Aesymnete or dictator for ten years, with
unlimited powers: and the appointment proved eminently successful. How
effectually he repelled the exiles, and maintained domestic tranquillity,
is best shown by the angry effusions of Alkaeus, whose songs
(unfortunately lost) gave vent to the political hostility of the time in
the same manner as the speeches of the Athenian orators two centuries
afterwards, and who in his vigorous invectives against Pittakus did not spare even the coarsest nicknames, founded on alleged
personal deformities. Respecting the proceedings of this eminent Dictator, the
contemporary and reported friend of Solon, we know only in a general
way, that he succeeded in re-establishing security and peace, and that at
the end of his term he voluntarily laid down his authority—an evidence not
only of probity superior to the lures of ambition, but also of that
conscious moderation during the period of his dictatorship which left
him without fear as a private citizen afterwards. He enacted various
laws for Mitylene, one of which was sufficiently curious to cause it to be
preserved and commented on—for it prescribed double penalties against
offences committed by men in a state of intoxication. But he did not (like
Solon at Athens) introduce any constitutional changes, nor provide any new
formal securities for public liberty and good government: which
illustrates the remark previously made, that Solon in doing this was
beyond his age and struck out new lights for his successors—since on the score
of personal disinterestedness Pittakus and he are
equally unimpeachable. What was the condition of Mityldnd afterwards, we have no authorities to tell us. Pittakus is said (if the chronological computers of a later age can be
trusted) to have died in the 52nd Olympiad (b.c. 572-568). Both he and Solon are numbered among the Seven Wise Men of
Greece, respecting whom something will be said in a future
chapter. The various anecdotes current about him are little better
than uncertified exemplifications of a spirit of equal and generous civism: but his songs and his elegiac compositions
were familiar to literary Greeks in the age of Plato.
CHAPTER XXXVI.
ASIATIC DORIANS.
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