READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECE
CHAPTER LVI (56)IONIC REVOLT.
Hitherto, the history of the
Asiatic Greeks has flowed in a stream distinct from that of the European
Greeks. The present chapter will mark the period of confluence between the two.
At
the time when Darius quitted Sardis on his return to Susa, carrying with him
the Milesian Histiaeus, he left Artaphernes, his brother, as satrap of Sardis,
invested with the supreme command of Western Asia Minor. The Grecian cities on
the coast, comprehended under his satrapy, appear to have been chiefly governed
by native despots in each; and Miletus especially, in the absence of Histiaeus,
was ruled by his son-in-law Aristagoras. That city was now in the height of
power and prosperity,—in every respect the leading city of Ionia. The return of
Darius to Susa may be placed seemingly about 512 bc, from which time forward the state of things above described
continued, without disturbance, for eight or ten years—“a respite from suffering,”
to use the significant phrase of the historian.
It
was about the year 506 BC, that the exiled Athenian despot Hippias, after
having been repelled from Sparta by the unanimous refusal of the Lacedemonian
allies to take part in his cause, presented himself from Sigeium as a
petitioner to Artaphernes at Sardis. He now, doubtless, found the benefit of
the alliance which he bad formed for his daughter with the despot Aeantides of Lampsacus, whose favor with Darius would stand
him in good stead. He made pressing representations to the satrap, with a view
of procuring restoration to Athens, on condition of holding it under Persian
dominion and Artaphernes was prepared,
if an opportunity offered, to aid him in his design. So thoroughly had he
resolved on espousing actively the cause of Hippias, that when the Athenians despatched envoys to Sardis, to set forth the case of the
city against its exiled pretender, he returned to them an answer not merely of
denial, but of menace,—bidding them receive Hippias back again, if they looked
for safety. Such a reply was equivalent to a declaration of war, and so it was
construed at Athens. If leads us to infer that he was even then revolving in
his mind an expedition against Attica, in conjunction with Hippias; but,
fortunately for the Athenians, other projects and necessities intervened to
postpone for several years the execution of the scheme.
SARDIS (SARDES)
Of
these new projects, the first was that of conquering the island of Naxos. Here,
too, as in the case of Hippias, the instigation arose from Naxian exiles,—a rich oligarchy which had been expelled by a rising of the people.
This island, like all the rest of the Cyclades, was as yet independent of the
Persians. It was wealthy, prosperous, possessing a large population both of
freemen and slaves, and defended as well by armed ships as by a force of eight
thousand heavy-armed infantry. The exiles applied for aid to Aristagoras, who
saw that he could turn them into instruments of dominion for himself in the
island, provided he could induce Artaphernes to embark in the project along
with him,—his own force not being adequate by itself. Accordingly, he went to
Sardis, and laid his project before the satrap, intimating that as soon as the
exiles should land with a powerful support. Naxos would be reduced with little
trouble: that the neighboring islands of Paros, Andros, Tenos, and the other Cyclades,
could not long hold out after the conquest of Naxos, nor even the large and
valuable island of Euboea. He himself engaged, if a fleet of one hundred ships
were granted to him, to accomplish all these conquests for the Great King, and
to bear the expenses of the armament besides. Artaphernes warmly entered into
the scheme, loaded him with praise, and promised him in the ensuing spring two
hundred ships instead of one hundred. A messenger despatched to Susa, having brought back the ready consent of Darius, a large armament was
forthwith equipped, under the command of the Persian Megabates,
to be placed at the disposal of Aristagoras,—composed both of Persians and ail
the tributaries near the coast.
With
this force Aristagoras and the Naxian exiles set sail
from Miletus, giving out that they were going to the Hellespont. On reaching
Chios, they waited in its western harbor of Kaukasa for a fair wind to carry
them straight across to Naxos. No suspicion was entertained in that island of
its real purpose, nor was any preparation made for resistance, and the success
of Aristagoras would have been complete, had it not been defeated by an
untoward incident ending in dispute. Megabates, with
a solicitude which we are surprised to discern in a Persian general, personally
made the tour of his fleet, to see that every ship was under proper watch, and
discovered a ship from Myndus (an Asiatic Dorian city near Halikarnassus), left
without a single, man on board. Incensed at this neglect, he called before him Skylax, the commander of the ship, and ordered him to be
put in chains, with his head projecting outwards through one of the apertures
for oars in the ship’s side. Skylax was a guest and
friend of Aristagoras, who, on hearing of this punishment, interceded with Megabates for his release; but finding the request refused,
took upon him to release the prisoner himself. He even went so far as to treat
the remonstrance of Megabates with disdain,
reminding him that, according to the instructions of Artaphernes, he was only
second and himself (Aristagoras) first. The pride of Megabates could not endure such treatment: as soon as night arrived, he sent a private
intimation to Naxos of the coming of the fleet, warning the islanders to be on
their guard. The warning thus fortunately received was turned by the Naxians to the best account. They carried in their
property, laid up stores, and made every preparation for a siege, so that when
the fleet, probably delayed by the dispute between its leaders, at length
arrived, it was met by a stout resistance, remained on the shore of the island
for four months in prosecution of an unavailing siege, and was obliged to
retire without accomplishing anything beyond the erection of a fort, as
lodgment for the Naxian exiles. After a large cost
incurred, not only by the Persians, but also by Aristagoras himself, the
unsuccessful armament was brought back to the coast of Ionia.
The
failure of this expedition threatened Aristagoras with entire ruin. He had
incensed Megabates, deceived Artaphernes, and
incurred an obligation, which he knew not how to discharge, of indemnifying the
latter for the costs of the fleet. He began to revolve in his mind the scheme
of revolting from Persia, when it so happened that there arrived nearly at the
same moment a messenger from his father-in-law, Histiaeus, who was detained at
the court of Susa, secretly instigating him to this very resolution. Not
knowing whom to trust with this dangerous message, Histiaeus had caused the
head of a faithful slave to be shaved,—branded upon it the words necessary,—and
then despatched him, so soon as his hair had grown,
to Miletus, with a verbal intimation to Aristagoras that his head was to be
again shaved and examined. Histiaeus sought to provoke this perilous rising,
simply as a means of procuring his own release from Susa, and in the
calculation that Darius would send him down to the coast to reestablish order.
His message, arriving at so critical a moment, determined the faltering
resolution of Aristagoras, who convened his principal partisans at Miletus,
and laid before them the formidable project of revolt. All of them approved it,
with one remarkable exception,—the historian Hecataeus of Miletus; who opposed
it as altogether ruinous, and contended that the power of Darius was too vast,
to leave them any prospect of success. When he found direct opposition
fruitless, he next insisted upon the necessity of at once seizing the large
treasures in the neighboring temple of Apollo, at Branchidae, for the purpose
of carrying on the revolt. By this means alone, he said, could the Milesians,
too feeble to carry on the contest with their own force alone, hope to become
masters at sea,—while, if they did not take these treasures, the victorious
enemy surely would. Neither of these recommendations, both of them indicating
sagacity and foresight in the proposer, were listened to. Probably the seizure
of the treasures,—though
highly useful for the impending struggle, and though in the end they fell into
the hands of the enemy, as Hecataeus anticipated,—would have been insupportable
to the pious feelings of the people, and would thus have proved more injurious
than beneficial: perhaps, indeed, Hecataeus himself may have urged it with the
indirect view of stifling the whole project. We may remark that he seems to
have urged the question as if Miletus were to stand alone in the revolt; not
anticipating, as indeed no prudent man could then anticipate, that the Ionic
cities generally would follow the example.
Aristagoras
and his friends resolved forthwith to revolt, and their first step was to
conciliate popular favor throughout Asiatic Greece by putting down the despots
in all the various cities,—the instruments not less than the supports of
Persian ascendency, as Histiaeus had well urged at the bridge of the Danube.
The opportunity was favorable for striking this blow at once on a considerable
scale. The fleet, recently employed at Naxos, had not yet dispersed, but was
still assembled at Myus, with many of the despots
present at the head of their ships. Iatragoras was despatched from Miletus, at once to seize as many of them
as he could, and to stir up the soldiers to revolt. This decisive proceeding
was the first manifesto against Darius. Iatragoras was successful: the fleet went along with him, and many of the despots fell
into his hands,—among them Histiaeus (a second person so named) of Termera, Oliatus of Mylasa (both Carians),
Koes of Mitylene and Aristagoras (also a second person so named) of Kyme. At the same time the Milesian Aristagoras himself,
while he formally proclaimed revolt against Darius, and invited the Milesians
to follow him, laid down his own authority, and affected to place the
government in the hands of the people. Throughout most of the towns of Asiatic
Greece, insular and continental, a similar revolution was brought about; the
despots were expelled, and the feelings of the citizens were thus warmly
interested in the revolt. Such of these despots as fell into the bands of
Aristagoras were surrendered into the hands of their former subjects, by whom
they were for the most part quietly dismissed, and we shall find them hereafter
active auxiliaries to the Persians. To this treatment the only exception
mentioned is Koes, who was stoned to death by the Mitylenaeans.
By
these first successful steps the Ionic revolt was made to assume an extensive
and formidable character; much more so, probably, than the prudent Hecataeus
had anticipated as practicable. The naval force of the Persians in the Aegean
was at once taken away from them, and passed to their opponents, who were thus
completely masters of the sea; and would in fact have remained so, if a second
naval force had not been brought up against them from Phenicia,—a proceeding
never before resorted to, and perhaps at that time not looked for.
Having
exhorted all the revolted towns to name their generals, and to put themselves
in a state of defence, Aristagoras crossed the Aegean
to obtain assistance from Sparta, then under the government of king Kleomenes;
to whom he addressed himself, “holding in his hand a brazen tablet, wherein was
engraved the circuit of the entire earth, with the whole sea and all the
rivers.” Probably this was the first map or plan which had ever been seen at
Sparta, and so profound was the impression which it made, that it was
remembered there even in the time of Herodotus. Having emphatically entreated
the Spartans to step forth in aid of their Ionic brethren, now engaged in a
desperate struggle for freedom,—he proceeded to describe the wealth and abundance
(gold, silver, brass, vestments, cattle, and slaves), together with the
ineffective weapons and warfare of the Asiatics. The
latter, he said, could be at once put down, and the former appropriated, by
military training such as that of the Spartans,—whose long spear, brazen helmet
and breastplate, and ample shield, enabled them to despise the bow, the short
javelin, the light wicker target, the turban and trowsers,
of a Persian. He then traced out on his brazen plan the road from Ephesus to
Susa, indicating the intervening nations, all of them affording a booty more or
less rich; but he magnified especially the vast treasures at Susa: “Instead of
fighting your neighbors, he concluded, Argeians,
Arcadians, and Messenians, from whom you get hard blows and small reward, why
do you not make yourself ruler of all Asia, a prize not less easy than
lucrative?” Kleomenes replied to these seductive instigations by desiring him
to come for an answer on the third day. When that day arrived, he put to him
the simple question, how for it was from Susa to the sea? To which Aristagoras
answered, with more frankness than dexterity, that it was a three months’
journey; and he was proceeding to enlarge upon the facilities of the road when
Kleomenes interrupted him: “Quit Sparta before sunset, Milesian stranger; you
are no friend to the Lacedemonians, if you want to carry them a three months’
journey from the sea.” In spite of this peremptory mandate, Aristagoras tried a
last resource. He took in his hand the bough of supplication, and again went to
the house of Kleomenes, who was sitting with his daughter Gorgo, a girl of
eight years old. He requested Kleomenes to send away the child, but this was
refused, and he was desired to proceed; upon which he began to offer to the
Spartan king a bribe for compliance, bidding continually higher and higher from
ten talents up to fifty. At length, the little girl suddenly exclaimed, “
Father, the Stranger will corrupt you, if you do not at once go away.” The
exclamation so struck Kleomenes. that he broke up the interview, and
Aristagoras forthwith quitted Sparta.
Doubtless
Herodotus heard the account of this interview from Lacedemonian informants. But
we may be permitted to doubt, whether any such suggestions were really made, or
any such hopes held out, as those which he places in the mouth of Aristagoras,—suggestions
and hopes which might well be conceived in 450-440 bc, after a generation of victories over the Persians, but
which have no pertinence in the year 502 bc. Down even to the battle of Marathon, the name of the Medes
was a terror to the Greeks, and the Athenians are highly and justly extolled as
the first who dared to look them in the face. To talk about an easy march up to
the treasures of Susa and the empire of all Asia, at the time of the Ionic
revolt, would have been considered as a proof of insanity. Aristagoras may very
probably have represented, that the Spartans were more than a match for
Persians in the field; but even thus much would have been considered, in 502 BC,
rather as the sanguine hope of a petitioner than as the estimate of a sober
looker-on.
The
Milesian chief had made application to Sparta, as the presiding power of
Hellas,—a character which we thus find more and more recognized and passing
into the habitual feeling of the Greeks. Fifty years previously to this, the
Spartans had been flattered by the circumstance, that Croesus singled them out
from all other Greeks to invite as allies: now they accepted such priority as a
matter of course.
Rejected
at Sparta, Aristagoras proceeded to Athens, now decidedly the second power in
Greece. And here he found an easier task,
not only as it was the metropolis, or mother-city, of Asiatic Ionia, but also
as it had already incurred the pronounced hostility of the Persian satrap, and
might look to be attacked as soon as the project came to suit his convenience,
under the instigation of Hippias: whereas the Spartans had not only no kindred
with Ionia, beyond that of common Hellenism, but were in no hostile relations
with Persia, and would have been provoking a new enemy by meddling in the
Asiatic war. The promises and representations of Aristagoras were accordingly
received with great favor by the Athenians: who, over and above the claims of
sympathy, had a powerful interest in sustaining the Ionic revolt as an
indirect protection to themselves,—and to whom the abstraction of the Ionic
fleet from the Persians afforded a conspicuous and important relief. The Athenians
at once resolved to send a fleet of twenty ships, under Melanthius,
as an aid to the revolted Ionians,—ships which are styled by Herodotus, “the
beginning of the mischiefs between Greeks and barbarians,” —as the ships in
which Paris crossed the Aegean had before been called in the Iliad of Homer. Herodotus
farther remarks that it seems easier to deceive many men together than one,—since
Aristagoras, after having failed with Kleomenes, thus imposed upon the thirty
thousand citizens of Athens. But on this remark two comments suggest
themselves. First, the circumstances of Athens and Sparta were not the name in
regard to the Ionic quarrel,—an observation which Herodotus himself had made a
little while before: the Athenians had a material interest in the quarrel,
political as well as sympathetic, while the Spartans had none. Secondly, the
ultimate result of their interference, as it stood in the time of Herodotus,
though purchased by severe intermediate hardship, was one eminently gainful and
glorifying, not less to Athens than to Greece.
When
Aristagoras returned, he seems to have found the Persians engaged in the siege
of Miletus. The twenty Athenian ships soon crossed the Aegean, and found there
five Eretrian ships which had also come to the succor of the Ionians; the Eretrians generously taking this opportunity to repay
assistance formerly rendered to them by the Milesians in their ancient war with
Chalcis. On the arrival of these allies, Aristagoras organized an expedition
from Ephesus up to Sardis, under the command of his brother Charopinus, with others. The ships were left at Koressus, a mountain and seaport five miles from Ephesus,
while the troops inarched up under Ephesian guides, first, along the river Caister,
next, across the mountain range of Tmolus to Sardis. Artaphernes had not troops
enough to do more than hold the strong citadel, so that the assailants
possessed themselves of the town without opposition. But he immediately
recalled his force near Miletus, and summoned Persians and Lydians from all the
neighboring districts, thus becoming more than a match for Charopinus;
who found himself, moreover, obliged to evacuate Sardis, owing to an
accidental conflagration. Most of the houses in that city were built in great
part with reeds or straw, and all of them had thatched roofs; hence it happened
that a spark touching one of them set the whole, city in flame. Obliged to
abandon their dwellings by this accident, the population of the town
congregated in the market-place,—and as reinforcements were hourly crowding
in, the position of the Ionians and Athenians became precarious: they evacuated
the town, took up a position on Mount Tmolus, and, when night came, made the
best of their way to the sea-coast. The troops of Artaphernes pursued, overtook
them near Ephesus, and defeated them completely. Eualkides, the Eretrian
general, a man of eminence and a celebrated victor at the solemn games,
perished in the action, together with a considerable number of troops. After
this unsuccessful commencement, the Athenians betook themselves to their
vessels and sailed home, in spite of pressing instances on the part of
Aristagoras to induce them to stay. They took no farther part in the struggle; a
retirement at once so sudden and so complete, that they must probably have
experienced some glaring desertion on the part of their Asiatic allies, similar
to that which brought so much danger upon the Spartan general Derkyllidas, in
396 BC. Unless such was the case, they seem open to censure rather for having
too soon withdrawn their aid, than for having originally lent it.
The
burning of a place so important as Sardis, however, including the temples of
the local goddess Kybebe, which perished with the remaining buildings, produced
a powerful effect on both sides—encouraging the revolters,
as well as incensing the Persians. Aristagoras despatched ships along the coast, northward as far as Byzantium, and southward as far as
Cyprus. The Greek cities near the Hellespont and the Propontis were induced,
either by force or by inclination, to take part with him: the Carians embraced
his cause warmly; even the Kaunians, who Lad not
declared themselves before, joined him as soon as they heard of the capture of
Sardis; while the Greeks in Cyprus, with the single exception of the town of Amathus, at once renounced the authority of Darius, and
prepared for a strenuous contest. Onesilus of Salamis, the most considerable
city in the island,—finding the population willing, but his brother, the despot Gorgus, reluctant,—shut the latter out of the gates,
took the command of the united forces of Salamis and other revolting cities,
and laid siege to Amathus. These towns of Cyprus were
then, and seem always afterwards to have continued, under the government of
despots; who. however, unlike the despots in Ionia generally, took part along
with their subjects in the revolt against Persia.
The
rebellion had now assumed a character more serious than ever, and the Persians
were compelled to put forth their strongest efforts to subdue it. From the
number of different nations comprised in their empire, they were enabled to
make use of the antipathies of one against the other; and the old adverse
feeling of Phenicians against Greeks was now found extremely serviceable. After
a year spent in getting together forces, the Phenician fleet was employed to
transport into Cyprus the Persian general Artybius with a Cilician and Egyptian army,—while the force under Artaphernes at Sardis
was so strengthened as to enable him to act at once against all the coast of
Asia Minor, from the Propontis to the Triopian promontory. Un the other side, the common danger had for the moment brought the
Ionians into a state of union foreign to their usual habit, and we hear now,
for the first and the last time, of a tolerably efficient Pan-Ionic authority.
Apprized
of the coming of Artybius with the Phenician fleet,
Onesilus arid his Cyprian supporters solicited the aid of the Ionic fleet,
which arrived shortly after the disembarkation of the Persian force in the
island. Onesilus offered to the Ionians their choice, whether they would fight
the Phenicians at sea or the Persians on land. Their natural determination was
in favor of the seafight, and they engaged with a
degree of courage and unanimity which procured for them a brilliant victory;
the Samians being especially distinguished. But the combat on land, carried on
al the same time, took a different turn. Onesilus and the Salaminians brought into the field, after the fashion of Orientals rather than of Greeks, a
number of scythed chariots, destined to break the enemy’s ranks; while on the
other hand the Persian general Artybius was mounted
on a horse, trained to rise on his hind legs and strike out with his fore legs
against an opponent on fool. In the thick of the fight, Onesilus and his Carian shieldbearer came into personal conflict with this
general and his horse; and by previous concert, when I he horse so reared as to
get his fore legs over the shield of Onesilus, the Carian with a scythe severed
the legs from his body, while Onesilus with his own hand slew Artybius. But the personal bravery of the Cypriots was
rendered useless by treachery in their own ranks. Stesenor,
despot of Kurium, deserted in the midst of the
battle, and even the scythed chariots of Salamis followed his example. The
brave Onesilus, thus weakened, perished in the total rout of his army, along
with Aristokyprus despot of Soli, on the north coast of the island: this latter
being son of that Philokyprus who had been
immortalized more than sixty years before, in the poems of Solon. No farther
hopes now remained for the revolters, and the
victorious Ionian fleet returned home. Salamis relapsed under the sway of its
former despot Gorgus, while the remaining cities in
Cyprus were successively besieged and taken: not without a resolute defence, however, since Soli alone held out five months.
Meanwhile
the principal force of Darius having been assembled at Sardis,—Daurises, Hymeas, and other
generals who had married daughters of the Great King, distributed their efforts
against different parts of the western coast. Daurises attacked the towns near the Hellespont,—Abydus, Perkote,
Lampsacus, and Paesus,—which made little resistance.
He was then ordered southward into Caria, while Hymeas,
who, with another division, had taken Kios on the Propontis, marched down to
the Hellespont and completed the conquest of the Troad as well as of the Aeolic
Greeks in the region of Ida. Artaphernes and Otanes attacked the Ionic and Aeolic
towns on the coast,—the former taking Klazomenae, the
latter Kyme. There remained Caria, which, with
Miletus in its neighborhood, offered a determined resistance to Daurises. Forewarned of his approach, the Carians assembled
at a spot called the White Pillars, near the confluence of the rivers Maeander
and Marsyas. Pixodarus, one of their chiefs,
recommended the desperate expedient of fighting with the river at their back,
so that all chance of flight might be cut off; but most of the chiefs decided
in favor of a contrary policy,—to let the Persians pass the river, in hopes of
driving them back into it and thus rendering their defeat total. Victory,
however, after a sharp contest, declared in favor of Daurises,
chiefly in consequence of his superior numbers: two thousand Persians, and not
less than ten thousand Carians, are said to have perished in the battle. The
Karian fugitives, reunited after the flight, in the grove of noble plane-trees
consecrated to Zeus Stratius, near Labranda, were deliberating whether they should now submit
to the Persians or emigrate forever, when the appearance of a Milesian
reinforcement restored their courage. A second battle was fought, anti a second
time they were defeated, the loss on this occasion falling chiefly on the
Milesians. The victorious Persians now proceeded to assault Carian cities, but
Herakleides of Mylasa laid an ambuscade for them with so much skill and good
fortune, that their army was nearly destroyed, and Daurises with other Persian generals perished. This successful effort, following upon
two severe defeats, does honor to the constancy of the Carians, upon whom Greek
proverbs generally fasten a mean reputation. It saved for the time the Karian
towns, which the Persians did not succeed in reducing until after the capture
of Miletus.
On
land, the revolters were thus everywhere worsted,
though at sea the Ionians still remained masters. But the unwarlike Aristagoras
began to despair of success, and to meditate a mean desertion of the companions
and countrymen whom he had himself betrayed into danger. Assembling his chief
advisers, he represented to them the unpromising state of affairs, and the
necessity of securing some place of refuge, in case they were expelled from
Miletus. He then put the question to them, whether the island of Sardinia, or
Myrkinus in Thrace, near the Strymon (which Histiaeus had begun some time
before to fortify, as I have mentioned in the preceding chapter), appeared to
them best adapted to the purpose. Among the persons consulted was Hecataeus the
historian, who approved neither the one nor the other scheme, but suggested the
erection of a fortified post in the neighboring island of Leros; a Milesian
colony, wherein a temporary retirement might be sought, should it prove
impossible to hold Miletus, but which permitted an easy return to that city, so
soon as opportunity offered. Such an opinion must doubtless have been founded
on the assumption, that they would be able to maintain superiority at sea. And
it is important to note such confident reliance upon this superiority in the
mind of a sagacious man, not given to sanguine hopes, like Hecataeus,—even
under circumstances very unprosperous on land. Emigration to Myrkinus, as
proposed by Aristagoras, presented no hope of refuge at all; since the
Persians, if they regained their authority in Asia Minor, would not fail again
to extend it to the Strymon. Nevertheless, the consultation ended by adopting
this scheme, since, probably, no Ionians could endure the immeasurable distance
of Sardinia as a new home. Aristagoras set sail for Myrkinus, taking with him
all who chose to bear him company; but he perished not long after landing,
together with nearly all his company, in the siege of a neighboring Thracian
town. Though making profession to lay down his supreme authority at the commencement
of the revolt, he had still contrived to retain it in gi eat measure; and on departing for Myrkinus, he devolved it on Pythagoras, a
citizen in high esteem. It appears however that the Milesians, glad to get rid
of a leader who bad brought them nothing but mischief, paid little
obedience to his successor, and made their government from this period popular
in reality as well as in profession. The desertion of Aristagoras, with the
citizens whom he carried away, must have seriously damped the spirits of those
who remained: nevertheless, it seems that the cause of the Ionic revolters was quite as well conducted without him.
Not long after his departure, another despot—Histiaeus of
Miletus, his father-in-law, and jointly with him the fomenter of the revolt—presented
himself at the gates of Miletus for admission. The outbreak of the revolt had
enabled him, as he had calculated, to procure leave of departure from Darius.
That prince had been thrown into violent indignation by the attack and burning
of Sardis, and by the general revolt of Ionia, headed (so the news reached him)
by the Milesian Aristagoras, but carried into effect by the active cooperation
of the Athenians. “The Athenians (exclaimed Darius), who are they?” On receiving
the answer, he asked for his bow, placed an arrow on the string, and shot as
high as he could towards the heavens, saying: “Grant me, Zeus, to revenge
myself on the Athenians.” He at the same time desired an attendant to remind
him thrice every day at dinner: “Master, remember the Athenian, for as to the
Ionians, he felt assured that their hour of retribution would come speedily and
easily enough”.
This
Homeric incident deserves notice as illustrating the epical handling of
Herodotus. His theme is, the invasions of Greece by Persia: he has now arrived
at the first eruption, in the bosom of Darius, of that passion which impelled
the Persian forces towards Marathon and Salamis,—and he marks the beginning of
the new phase by act and word both alike significant. It may be compared to the
libation and prayer addressed by Achilles in the Iliad to Zeus, at the moment
when he is sending forth Patroklus and the Myrmidons to the rescue of the
despairing Greeks.
At
first, Darius had been inclined to ascribe the movement in Ionia to the secret
instigation of Histiaeus, whom he called into his presence and questioned. But
the latter found means to satisfy him, and even to make out that no such
mischief would have occurred, if he, Histiaeus, had been at Miletus instead of
being detained at Susa. “Send me down to the spot, be asseverated, and I engage
not merely to quell the revolt, and put into your hands the traitor who heads
it, but also, not to take off this tunic from my body, before I shall have
added to your empire the great island of Sardinia.” An expedition to Sardinia,
though never realized, appears to have been among the favorite fancies of the Ionic
Greeks of that day. By such boasts and assurances he obtained his liberty, and
went down to Sardis, promising to return as soon as he should have accomplished
them.
But
on reaching Sardis he found the satrap Artaphernes better informed than the
Great King at Susa. Though Histiaeus, when questioned as to the causes which
had brought on the outbreak, affected nothing but ignorance and astonishment,
Artaphernes detected his evasions, and said: “I will tell you how the facts
stand, Histiaeus: it is you that have stitched this shoe, and Aristagoras has
put it on.” Such a declaration promised little security to the suspected
Milesian who heard it; and accordingly, as soon as night arrived, he took to
flight, went down to the coast, and from thence passed over to Chios. Here he
found himself seized on the opposite count, as the confidant of Darius and the
enemy of Ionia: he was released, however, on proclaiming himself not merely a
fugitive escaping from Persian custody, but also as the prime author of the
Ionic revolt. And he farther added, in order to increase his popularity, that
Darius had contemplated the translation of the Ionian population to Phenicia as
well as that of the Phenician population to Ionia,—to prevent which translation
he, Histiaeus, had instigated the revolt. This allegation, though nothing better
than a pure fabrication, obtained for him the good-will of the Chians, who
carried him back to Miletus. But before he departed, he avenged himself on
Artaphernes by despatching to Sardis some false
letters, implicating many distinguished Persians in a conspiracy jointly with
himself: these letters were so managed as to fall into the hands of the satrap
himself, who became full of suspicion, and put to death several of the parties,
to the great uneasiness of all around him.
On
arriving at Miletus, Histiaeus found Aristagoras no longer present, and the
citizens altogether adverse to the return of their old despot. Nevertheless, he
tried to force his way by night into the town, but was repulsed and even wounded
in the thigh, he returned to Chios, but the Chians refused him the aid of any
of their ships: he next passed to Lesbos, from the inhabitants of which island
he obtained eight triremes, and employed them to occupy Byzantium, pillaging
and detaining the Ionian merchantships as they
passed into or out of the Euxine. The few remaining piracies of
this worthless traitor, mischievous to his countrymen down to the day of his
death; hardly deserve our notice, amidst the last struggles and sufferings of
the subjugated Ionians, to which we are now hastening.
A
vast Persian force, both military and naval, was gradually concentrating itself
near Miletus, against which city Artaphernes had determined to direct his
principal efforts. Not only the whole army of Asia Minor, but also the Cilician
and Egyptian troops fresh from the conquest of Cyprus, and even the conquered
Cypriots themselves, were brought up as reinforcements; while the entire
Phenician fleet, no less than six hundred ships strong, cooperated on the
coast. To meet such a land-force in the field, being far beyond the
strength of the Ionians, the joint Pan-Ionic council resolved that I he
Milesians should be left to defend their own fortifications, while the entire
force of the confederate cities should be mustered on board the ships. At sea
they had as yet no reason to despair, having been victorious over the
Phenicians near Cyprus, and having sustained no defeat. The combined Ionic fleet,
including the Aeolic Lesbians, amounting in all to the number of three hundred
and fifty-three ships, was accordingly mustered at Lade,—then a little island
near Miletus, but now joined on to the coast, by the gradual accumulation of
land in the bay at the mouth of the Maeander. Eighty Milesian ships formed the
right wing, one hundred Chian ships the centre, and
sixty Samian ships the left wing; while the space between the Milesians and the
Chians was occupied by twelve ships from Priene, three from Myus,
and seventeen from Teos,—the space between the Chians and Samians was filled by
eight ships from Erythrae, three from Phocaea, and seventy from Lesbos.
The
total armament thus made up was hardly inferior in number to that which,
fifteen years afterwards, gained the battle of Salamis against a far larger
Persian fleet than the present. Moreover, the courage of the Ionians, on
ship-board, was equal to that of their contemporaries on the other side of the Aegean;
while in respect of disagreement among the allies, we shall hereafter find the
circumstances preceding the battle of Salamis still more menacing than those
before the coming battle of Lade. The chances of success, therefore, were at
least equal between the two; and indeed the anticipations of the Persians and
Phenicians on the present occasion were full of doubt, so that they thought it
necessary to set on foot express means for disuniting the Ionians,—it was
fortunate for the Greeks that Xerxes at Salamis could not be made to conceive
the prudence of aiming at the same object. There were now in the Persian camp
all those various despots whom Aristagoras. at the beginning of the revolt, had
driven out of their respective cities. At the instigation of Artaphernes, each
of these men despatched secret communications to
their citizens in the allied fleet, endeavoring hi detach them severally from
the general body, by promises of gentle treatment in the event of compliance,
and by threats of extreme infliction from the Persians if they persisted in
armed efforts. Though these communications were sent to each without the
knowledge of the rest, yet the answer from all was one unanimous negative. And he
confederates at Lade seemed more one, in heart and spirit, than the Athenians,
Spartans, and Corinthians will hereafter prove to be at Salamis.
But
there was one grand difference which turned the scale,— the superior energy and
ability of the Athenian leaders at Salamis, coupled with the fact that they
were Athenians,—that is, in command of the largest and most important
contingent throughout the fleet.
At
Lade, unfortunately, this was quite otherwise: each separate contingent had
its own commander, but we hear of no joint commander at all. Nor were the
chiefs who came from the larger cities—Milesian, Chian, Samian, or Lesbian—men
like Themistocles, competent and willing to stand forward as self-created
leaders, and to usurp for the moment, with the general consent and for the
general benefit, a privilege not intended for them. The only man of sufficient
energy and forwardness to do this, was the Phocaean Dionysius,—unfortunately,
the captain of the smallest contingent of the fleet, and therefore enjoying the
least respect. For Phocaea, once the daring explorer of the western waters, had
so dwindled down since the Persian conquest of Ionia, that she could now
furnish no more than three ships; and her ancient maritime spirit survived only
in the bosom of her captain. When Dionysius saw the Ionians assembled at Lade,
willing, eager, full of talk and mutual encouragement, but untrained and taking
no thought of discipline, or nautical practice, or cooperation in the hour of
battle,—he saw the risk which they ran for want of these precautions, and
strenuously remonstrated with them: “Our fate hangs on the razor’s edge, men
of Ionia: either to be freemen or slaves,—and slaves too, caught after running
away. Set yourself at once to work and duty,—you will then have trouble indeed
at first, with certain victory and freedom afterwards. But if you persist in
this carelessness and disorder, there is no hope lor you to escape the king’s
revenge for your revolt. Be persuaded and commit yourself to me: and I pledge
myself, if the gods only hold an equal baance, that your enemies either will
not fight, or will be severely beaten.”
The
wisdom of this advice was so apparent, that the Ionians, quitting their
comfortable tents on the shore of Lade and going on board their ships,
submitted themselves to the continuous nautical labors and manoeuvres imposed
upon them by Dionysius. The rowers, and the hoplites on the deck, were
exercised in their separate functions, and even when they were not so employed,
the ships were kept at anchor, and the crews on board, instead of on shore; so
that the work lasted all day long, under a hot summer’s sun. Such labor, new
to the Ionian crews, was endured for seven successive days, after which they
broke out with one accord into resolute mutiny and refusal: “Which of the gods
have we offended, to bring upon ourselves such a retribution as this? madmen as
we are, to put ourselves into the hands of this Phocaean braggart, who has
furnished only three ships! He has now got us and is ruining us without remedy:
many of us are already sick, many others are sickening; we had better make up
our minds to Persian slavery, or any other mischiefs, rather than go on with
these present sufferings. Come, we w ill net obey this man any longer.” And
they forthwith refused to execute his orders, resuming their tents on shore,
with the enjoyments of shade, rest, and inactive talk, as before.
I
have not chosen to divest this instructive scene of the dramatic liveliness
with which it is given in Herodotus,—the more so as it has all the air of
reality, and as Hecataeus, the historian, was probably present in the island of
Lade, and may have described what he actually saw and heard. When we see the intolerable
hardship which these nautical manoeuvres and labors imposed upon the Ionians,
though men not unaccustomed to ordinary ship-work,—and when we witness their
perfect incapacity to submit themselves to such a discipline, even with extreme
danger staring them in the face,—we shall be able to appreciate the severe and
unremitting toil whereby the Athenian seaman afterwards purchased that
perfection of nautical discipline which characterized him at the beginning of
the Peloponnesian war. It will appear, as we proceed with this history, that
the full development of the Athenian democracy worked a revolution in Grecian
military marine, chiefly by enforcing upon the citizen seaman a strict
continuous training, such as was only surpassed by the Lacedaemonian drill on
land,—and by thus rendering practicable a species of nautical manoeuvring which was unknown even at the time of the
battle of Salamis. I shall show this more fully hereafter: at present, I
contrast it briefly with the incapacity of the Ionians at Lade, in order that
it may be understood how painful such training really was. The reader of
Grecian history is usually taught to associate only ideas of turbulence and
anarchy with the Athenian democracy; but the Athenian navy, the child and
champion of that democracy, will be found to display an indefatigable labor and
obedience nowhere else witnessed in Greece, and of which even the first
lessons, as in the case now before us, prove to others so irksome as to outweigh
the prospect of extreme and imminent peril. The same impatience of steady toil
and discipline, which the Ionians displayed to their own ruin before the
battle of Lade, will be found to characterize them fifty years afterwards as
allies of Athens, as I shall have occasion to show when I come to describe the
Athenian empire.
Ending
in this abrupt and mutinous manner, the judicious suggestions of the Phocaean
leader did more harm than good. Perhaps his manner of dealing may have been
unadvisedly rude, but we are surprised to see that no one among the leaders of
the larger contingents had the good sense to avail himself of the first
readiness of the Ionians, and to employ his superior influence in securing the
continuance of a good practice once begun. Not one such superior man did this
Ionic revolt throw up. From the day on which the Ionians discarded Dionysius,
their camp became a scene of disunion and mistrust. Some of them grew reckless and unmanageable, that the
better portion despaired of maintaining any orderly battle; and the Samians in
particular now repented that they had declined the secret offers made to them
by their expelled despot,—Aeakes, son of Syloson.
They sent privately to renew the negotiation, received a fresh promise of the
same indulgence, and agreed to desert when the occasion arrived. On the day of
battle, when the two fleets were on the point of coming to action, the sixty Samian
ships all sailed off, except eleven, whose captains disdained such treachery.
Other Ionians followed their example; yet amidst the reciprocal crimination
which Herodotus had heard, he finds it difficult to determine who was most to
blame, though he names the Lesbians as among the earliest deserters. The
hundred ships from Chios, constituting the centre of
the fleet—such ship carrying forty chosen soldiers fully armed—formed a
brilliant exception to the rest; they fought with the greatest fidelity and
resolution, inflicting upon the enemy, and themselves sustaining, heavy loss.
Dionysius, the Phocaean, also behaved in a manner worthy of his previous
language,—capturing with his three ships the like number of Phenicians. But
these examples of bravery did not compensate the treachery or cowardice of the
rest, and the defeat of the Ionians at Lade was complete as well as irrecoverable.
To the faithful Chians, the loss was terrible, both in the battle and after it.
For though some of their vessels escaped from the defeat safely to Chios,
others were so damaged as to be obliged to run ashore close at hand on the
promontory of Mykale, where the crews quitted them, w ith the intention of marching northward, through the Ephesian territory, to the
continent opposite their own island. We hear with astonishment that, at that
critical moment, the Ephesian women were engaged in solemnizing the
Thesmophoria,—a festival celebrated at night, in the open air, in some
uninhabited portion of the territory, and without the presence of any male
person. As the Chian fugitives entered the Ephesian territory by night, their
coming being neither known not anticipated,—it was believed that they were
thieves or pirates coming to seize the women, and under this error they were
attacked by the Ephesians and slain. It would seem from this
incident that the Ephesians had taken no part in the Ionic revolt, nor are they
mentioned amidst the various contingents. Nor is anything said either of
Kolophon, or Lebedus, or Erse.
The
Phocaean Dionysius, perceiving that the defeat of Lade was the ruin of the
Ionic cause, and that his native city was again doomed to Persian subjection,
did not think it prudent even to return home. Immediately after the battle he
set sail, not for Phocaea, but for the Phenician coast, at this moment stripped
of its protecting cruisers. He seized several Phenician merchantmen, out of
which considerable profit was obtained: then setting sail for Sicily, he
undertook the occupation of a privateer against the Carthaginians and
Tyrrhenians, abstaining from injury towards Greeks. Such an employment seems
then to have been perfectly admissible. A considerable body of Samians also migrated
to Sicily, indignant at the treachery of their admirals in the battle, and yet
more indignant at the approaching restoration of their despot Aeakes. How these Samian emigrants became established in
the Sicilian town of Zankle, I shall mention as a part of the course of
Sicilian events, which will come hereafter.
The
victory of Lade enabled the Persians to attack Miletus by sea as well as by
land; they prosecuted the siege with the utmost vigor, by undermining the
walls, and by various engines of attack: in which department their resources
seem to have been enlarged since the days of Harpagus. In no long time the city
was taken by storm, and miserable was the fate reserved to it. The adult male
population was chiefly slain; while such of them as were preserved, together
with the women and children, were Bent in a body to Susa, to await the orders
of Darius,—who assigned to them a residence at Ampe, not far from the mouth of
the Tigris. The temple at Branchidae was burned and pillaged, is Hecataeus had
predicted at the beginning of the revolt: the large treasures therein contained
must have gone far to defray the costs of the Persian army. The Milesian
territory is said to have been altogether denuded of its former inhabitants,—the
Persians retailing for themselves the city with the plain adjoining to it. and
making over the mountainous portions to the Carians of Pedasa.
Some few of the Milesians found a place among the Simian emigrants to Sicily. It is certain, however, that new Grecian inhabitants must have been
subsequently admitted into Miletus; for it appears ever afterwards as a Grecian
town, though with diminished power and importance.
The
capture of Miletus, in the sixth year from the commencement of the revolt,
carried with it the rapid submission of the neighboring towns in Karia. During
the next summer,—the Phenician fleet having wintered at Miletus,—the Persian
forces by sea and land reconquered all the Asiatic Greeks, insular as well as
continental. Chios, Lesbos, and Tenedos,—the towns in the Chersonese,—Selymbria and Perinthus in Thrace,— Proconnesus and Artake in the Propontis,—all these towns were taken or
sacked by the Persian and Phenician fleet. The inhabitants of Byzantium and Chalcedon
fled for the most part, without even awaiting its arrival, to Mesembria, and
the Athenian Miltiades only escaped Persian captivity by a rapid flight from
his abode in the Chersonese to Athens. His pursuers were indeed so close upon
him, that one of his ships, with his son Metiochus on
board, fell into their hands. As Miltiades had been strenuous in urging the
destruction of the bridge over the Danube, on the occasion of the Scythian
expedition, the Phenicians were particularly anxious to get possession of his
person, aft the most acceptable of all Greek prisoners to the Persian king;
who, however, when Metiochus the son of Miltiades was
brought to Susa, not only did him no harm, but treated him with great kindness,
and gave him a Persian wife with a comfortable maintenance.
Far
otherwise did the Persian generals deal with the reconquered cities on and near
the coast. The threats which had been held out before the battle of Lade were
realized to the full. The most beautiful Greek youths and virgins were picked
out, to be distributed among the Persian grandees as eunuchs, or inmates of the
harems; the cities with their edifices, sacred as well as profane, were made a
prey to the flames; and m the case of the islands, Herodotus even tells us,
that a line of Persians was formed from shore to shore, which swept each
territory from north to south, and drove the inhabitants out of it. That much
of this hard treatment is well founded, there can be no doubt. But it must be
exaggerated as to extent of depopulation and destruction, for these islands
and cities appear ever afterwards as occupied by a Grecian population, and even
as in a tolerable, though reduced, condition. Samos was made an exception to
the rest, and completely spared by the Persians, as a reward to its captains
for setting the example of desertion at the battle of Lade; at the same time, Aeakes the despot of that island was reinstated in his
government. If appears that several other despots were also replaced in their
respective cities, though we are not told which.
Amidst
the sufferings endured by so many innocent persons, of every age and of both
sexes, the fate of Histiaeus excites but little sympathy. Having learned, while
earning on his piracies at Byzantium, the surrender of Miletus, he thought it
expedient to sail with his Lesbian vessels to Chios, where admittance was refused
to him. But the Chians, weakened as they had been by the late battle, were in
little condition to resist, so that he defeated their troops and despoiled the
island. During the present breakup of the Asiatic Greeks, there were doubtless
many who, like the Phocaean Dionysius, did not choose to return home to an enslaved
city, yet had no fixed plan for a new abode: of these exiles, a considerable
number put themselves under the temporary command of Histiaeus, and
accompanied him to the plunder of Thasos. While besieging that town,
he learned the news that the Phenician fleet had quitted Miletus to attack the
remaining Ionic towns; and he left his designs on Thasos unfinished, in order
to go and defend Lesbos. But in this latter island the dearth of provisions was
such, that he was forced to cross over to the continent to reap the standing
corn around Atarneus and in the fertile plain of Mysia near the river Kaikus. Here he fell in with a considerable Persian force
under Harpagus,—was beaten, compelled to flee, and taken prisoner. On his being
carried to Sardis, Artaphernes the satrap caused him to be at once crucified :
partly, no doubt, from genuine hatred, but partly also under the persuasion
that, if he were sent up as a prisoner to Susa, he might again become
dangerous,—since Darius would even now spare his life, under an indelible
sentiment of gratitude for the maintenance of the bridge over the Danube. The
head of Histiaeus was embalmed and sent up to Susa, where Darius caused it to
be honorably buried, condemning this precipitate execution of a man who had
once been his preserver.
We
need not wonder that the capture of Miletus excited the strongest feeling, of
mixed sympathy and consternation, among the Athenians. In the succeeding year
(so at least we are led to think, though the date cannot be positively
determined), it was selected as the subject of a tragedy,—The Capture of Miletus,—by
the dramatic poet Phrynichus; which, when performed, so painfully wrung the
feelings of the Athenian audience, that they burst into tears in the theatre,
and the poet was condemned to pay a fine of one thousand drachmae, as “having recalled
to them their own misfortunes.” The piece was forbidden to be afterwards
acted, and has not come down to us. Some critics have supposed that Herodotus
has not correctly assigned the real motive which determined the Athenians to
impose this fine. For it is certain that the subjects usually selected for tragedy
were portions of heroic legend, and not matters of recent history; so that the
Athenians might complain of Phrynichus on the double ground,—for having violated
an established canon of propriety, as well as for touching their sensibilities
too deeply. Still, I see no reason for doubting that the cause assigned by Herodotus
is substantially the true one; but it is very possible that Phrynichus, at an
age when tragic poetry had not yet reached its full development, might touch
this very tender subject with a rough and offensive hand, before a people who
had fair reason to dread the like cruel fate for themselves. Aeschylus, in his Persae, would naturally carry with him the full tide
of Athenian sympathy, while dwelling on the victories of Salamis and Plataea.
But to interest the audience in Persian success and Grecian suffering, was a
task in which much greater poets than Phrynichus would have failed,—and which
no judicious poet would have undertaken. The sack of Magdeburg, by Count Tilly,
in the Thirty Years’ war, was not likely to be endured as the subject of dramatic
representation in any Protestant town of Germany.
CHAPTER LVII (57).FROM THE IONIC REVOLT TO THE BATTLE OF MARATHON.
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