READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECE
CHAPTER LVIII (58).IONIC PHILOSOPHERS— PYTHAGORAS. — KROTON AND SYBARIS
The history of the powerful Grecian
cities in Italy and Sicily, between the accession of Peisistratus and the
battle of Marathon, is for the most part unknown to us. Phalaris, despot of
Agrigentum in Sicily, made for himself an unenviable name during this obscure
interval. His reign seems to coincide in time with the earlier part of the rule
of Peisistratus (about 560-540 BC), and the few and vague statements which we
find respecting it, merely show us that it was a period of extortion and
cruelty, even beyond the ordinary license of Grecian despots. The reality of
the hollow bull of brass, which Phalaris was accustomed to heat in order to
shut up his victims in it and burn them, appears to be better authenticated
than the nature of the story would lead us to presume: for it is not only
noticed by Pindar, but even the actual instrument of this torture, the brazen
bull itself,—which had been taken away from Agrigentum as a trophy by the
Carthaginians when they captured the town, was restored by the Romans, on the
subjugation of Carthage, to its original domicile. Phalaris is said to have
acquired the supreme command, by undertaking the task of building a great
temple to Zeus Polieus on the citadel
rock; a pretence whereby he was enabled to assemble
and arm a number of workmen and devoted partisans, whom be employed, at the
festival of the Thesmophoria, to put down the authorities. He afterwards
disarmed the citizens by a stratagem, and committed cruelties which rendered
him so abhorred, that a sudden rising of the people, headed by Telemachus
(ancestor of the subsequent despot, Thero), overthrew and slew him. A severe
revenge was taken on his partisans after his fall.
During
the interval between 540-500 bc, events of much importance occurred
among the Italian Greeks,—especially at Kroton and Sybaris,—events, unhappily,
very imperfectly handed down. Between these two periods fall both the war
between Sybaris and Kroton, and the career and ascendency of Pythagoras. In
connection with this latter name, it will be requisite to say a few words
respecting the other Grecian philosophers of the sixth century bc.
I
have, in a former chapter, noticed and characterized those distinguished
persons called the Seven Wise Men of Greece, whose celebrity falls in the first
half of this century,—men not so much marked by scientific genius as by
practical sagacity and foresight in the appreciation of worldly affairs, and
enjoying a high degree of political respect from their fellow-citizens. Out of
them, however, the Milesian Thales, claims our notice, not only on this ground,
but also as the earliest known name in the long line of Greek scientific
investigators. His life, nearly contemporary with that of Solon, belongs
seemingly to the interval about 610-550 bc: the stories mentioned in Herodotus— perhaps borrowed in part from the Milesian Hecataeus—are
sufficient to show that his reputation for wisdom, as well as for science,
continued to be very great, even a century after his death, among his
fellow-citizens. And he marks an important epoch in the progress of the Greek
mind, as having been the first man to depart both in letter and spirit from the
Hesiodic Theogony, introducing the conception of substances with their
transformations and sequences, in place of that string of persons and
quasi-human attributes which had animated the old legendary world. He is the
father of what is called the Ionic philosophy, which is considered as lasting
from his time down to that of Sokrates; and writers, ancient as well as modern,
have professed to trace a succession of philosophers, each one the pupil of
the. preceding, between these two extreme epochs. B it the appellation is, in
truth, undefined, and even incorrect, since nothing entitled to the name of a
school, or sect, or succession,—like that of the Pythagoreans, to be noticed
presently,—can be made out. There is, indeed, a certain general analogy in the
philosophical vein of Thales, Hippo, Anaximenes, and Diogenes of Apollonia,
whereby they all stand distinguished from Xenophanes of Elea, and his
successors, the Eleatic dialecticians, Parmenides and Zeno; but there are also
material differences Bet ween their respective doctrines,—no two of them
holding the same. And if we look to Anaximander, the person next in order of
time to Thales, as well as to Heraclitus, we find
them departing, in a great degree, even from that character which all the rest
have in common, though both the one and the other are usually enrolled in the
list of Ionic philosophers.
Of
the old legendary and polytheistic conception of nature, which Thales partially
discarded, we may remark that it is a state of the human mind in which the
problems suggesting themselves to be solved, and the machinery for solving
them, bear a fair proportion one to the other. If the problems be vast,
indeterminate, confused, and derived rather from the hopes, fears, love,
hatred, astonishment, etc., of men, than from any genuine desire of knowledge,—so
also does the received belief supply invisible agents in unlimited number, and
with every variety of power and inclination. The means of explanation are thus
multiplied and diversified as readily as the phenomena to be explained. And
though no future events or states can be predicted on trustworthy grounds, in
such manner as to stand the scrutiny of subsequent verification,—yet there is
little difficulty in rendering a specious and plausible account of matters
past, of any and all things alike; especially as. at such a period, matters of
fact requiring explanation are neither collated nor preserved with care. And
though no event or state, which has not yet occurred, can be predicted, there
is little difficulty in rendering a plausible account of everything which has
occurred in the past. Cosmogony, and the prior ages of the world, were
conceived as a sort of personal history, with intermarriages, filiation,
quarrels, and other adventures, of these invisible agents; among whom some one
or more were assumed as unbegotten and self-existent—the latter assumption
being a difficulty common to all systems of cosmogony, and from which even this
flexible and expansive hypothesis is not exempt.
Now
when Thales disengaged Grecian philosophy from the old mode of explanation, he
did not at the same time disengage it from the old problems and matters
propounded for inquiry. These he retained, and transmitted to his successors,
as vague and vast as they were at first conceived; and so they remained, though
with some transformations and modifications, together with many new questions
equally insoluble, substantially present to the Greeks throughout their whole
history, as the legitimate problems for philosophical investigation. But these
problems, adapted only to the old elastic system of polytheistic explanation
and omnipresent personal agency, became utterly disproportioned to any
impersonal hypotheses such as those of Thales and the philosophers after him,—whether
assumed physical laws, or plausible moral and metaphysical dogmas, open to
argumentative attack, and of course requiring the like defence.
To treat the visible world as a whole, and inquire when and how it began, as
well as into all its past changes,—to discuss the first origin of men, animals,
plants, the sun, the stars, etc.,—to assign some comprehensive reason why
motion or change in general took place in the universe,—to investigate the
destinies of the human race, and to lay down some systematic relation between
them and the gods,—all these were topics admitting of being conceived in many
different ways, and set forth with eloquent plausibility, but not reducible to
any solution either resting on scientific evidence, or commanding steady
adherence under a free scrutiny.
At
the time when the power of scientific investigation was scanty and helpless,
the problems proposed were thus such as to lie out of the reach of science in
its largest compass. Gradually, indeed, subjects more special and limited, and
upon which experience, or deductions from experience, could be brought to bear,
were added to the list of quaesita, and examined with great profit and
instruction: but the old problems, with new ones, alike unfathomable, were
never eliminated, and always occupied a prominent place in the philosophical
world. Now it was this disproportion, between questions Io be solved and means
of solution, which gave rise to that conspicuous characteristic of Greek
philosophy,—the antagonist force of suspensive skepticism, passing in some
minds into a broad negation of the attainability of general truth, —which it
nourished from its beginning to its end; commencing as early as Xenophanes,
continuing to manifest itself seven centuries afterwards in Aenesidemus and Sextus Empiricus, and including in the interval
between these two extremes some of the most powerful intellects in Greece. The
present is not the time for considering these Skeptics, who bear an unpopular
name, and have not often been fairly appreciated; the more so, as it often
suited the purpose of men, themselves essentially skeptical, like Socrates and
Plato, to denounce professed skepticism with indignation. But it is essential
to bring them into notice at the first spring of Greek philosophy under
Thales, because the circumstances were then laid which so soon afterwards
developed them.
Though
the celebrity of Thales in antiquity was great and universal, scarcely any
distinct facts were known respecting him: it is certain that he left nothing in
writing. Extensive travels in Egypt and Asia arc ascribed to him, and as a
general fact these travels are doubtless true, since no other means of
acquiring knowledge were then open. At a time when the brother of the Lesbian
Alkaeus was serving in the Babylonian army, we may easily conceive that an
inquisitive Milesian would make his way to that wonderful city wherein stood
the templeobservatory of the Chaldean priesthood;
nor is it impossible that he may have seen the still greater city of Ninus, or
Nineveh, before its capture and destruction by the Medes. How great his
reputation was in his lifetime, the admiration expressed by his younger
contemporary, Xenophanes, assures us; and Herakleitus,
in the next generation; a severe judge of all other philosophers, spoke of him
with similar esteem. To him were traced, by the Grecian inquirers of the fourth
century BC, the first beginnings of geometry, astronomy, and physiology in its
large and really appropriate sense, the scientific study of nature: for the
Greek word denoting nature (φύσις),
first comes into comprehensive use about this time (as I have remarked in an
earlier chapter), with its derivatives physics and physiology, as
distinguished from the theology of the old poets. Little stress can be
laid on those elementary propositions in geometry which are specified as
discovered, or as first demonstrated, by Thales,—still less upon the solar
eclipse respecting which, according to Herodotus, he determined beforehand the
year of occurrence. But the main doctrine of his physiology,—using
that word in its larger Greek sense,—is distinctly attested. He stripped Oceanus
and Tethys, primeval parents of the gods in the Homeric theogony, of their
personality,—and laid down water, or fluid substance, as the single original
element from which everything came, and into which everything returned. The
doctrine of one eternal element, remaining always the same in its essence, but
indefinitely variable in its manifestations to sense, was thus first introduced
to the discussion of the Greek public. We have no means of knowing the
reasons by which Thales supported this opinion, nor could even Aristotle do
more than conjecture what they might have been; but one of the statements urged
on behalf of it,—that the earth itself rested on water,—we may safely refer to
the Milesian himself, for it would hardly have been advanced at a later age.
Moreover, Thales is reported to have held, that everything was living and full
of gods; and that the magnet, especially, was a living thing. Thus the gods, as
far as we can pretend to follow opinions so very faintly transmitted, are
conceived as active powers, and causes of changeful manifestation, attached to
the primeval substance: the universe being assimilated to an organized body or
system.
Respecting
Hippo,—who reproduced the theory of Thales under a more generalized form of
expression, substituting, in place of water, moisture, or something common to
air and water,—we do not know whether he belonged to the sixth or the fifth
century bc. But Anaximander, Xenophanes, and Pherecydes
belong to the latter half of the sixth century. Anaximander, the son of Praxiades, was a native of Miletus,— Xenophanes, a native of
Kolophon; the former, among the earliest expositors of doctrine in prose, while
the latter committed his opinions to the old medium of verse. Anaximander
seems to have taken up the philosophical problem, while he materially altered
the hypothesis of his predecessor Thales. Instead of the primeval fluid of the
latter, he supposed a primeval principle, without any actual determining
qualities whatever, but including all qualities potentially, and manifesting
them in an infinite variety from its continually self-changing nature,—a
principle, which was nothing in itself, yet had the capacity of producing any
and all manifestations, however contrary to each other,—a primeval something,
whose essence it was to be eternally productive of different phenomena, a sort
of mathematical point, which counts for nothing in itself, but is vigorous in
generating lines to any extent that may be desired. In this manner, Anaximander
professed to give a comprehensive explanation of change in general, or
generation, or destruction,—how it happened that one sensible thing began and
another ceased to exist,—according to the vague problems which these early
inquirers were in the habit of setting to themselves. He avoided that which the
first philosophers especially dreaded, the affirmation that generation could
take place out of Nothing; yet the primeval Something, which he supposed was
only distinguished from noting by possessing this very power of generation.
In
his theory, he passed from the province of physics into that of metaphysics. He
first introduced into Greek philosophy that important word which signifies a
beginning or a principle, and first opened that metaphysical
discussion, which was carried on in various ways throughout the whole period of
Greek philosophy, as to the one and the many—the continuous and the variable—that
which exists eternally, ai distinguished from that which comes and passes away
in ever-changing manifestations. His physiology, or explanation of nature, thus
conducted the mind into a different route from that suggested by the hypothesis
of Thales, which was built upon physical considerations, and was therefore
calculated to suggest and stimulate observations of physical phenomena for the
purpose of verifying or confuting it,—while the hypothesis of Anaximander
admitted only of being discussed dialectically, or by reasonings expressed in
general language; reasonings sometimes, indeed, referring to experience for the
purpose of illustration, but seldom resting on it, and never looking out for it
as a necessary support. The physical explanation of nature, however, once
introduced by Thales, although deserted by Anaximander, was taken up by
Anaximenes and others afterwards, and reproduced with many divergences of doctrine,—yet
always more or less entangled and perplexed with metaphysical additions, since
the two departments were never clearly parted throughout all Grecian
philosophy. Of these subsequent physical philosophers I shall speak hereafter:
at present, I confine myself to the thinkers of the sixth century bc, among whom Anaximander stands
prominent, not as the follower of Thales, but as the author of an hypothesis
both new and tending in a different direction.
It
was not merely as the author of this hypothesis, however, that Anaximander
enlarged the Greek mind and roused the powers of thought: we find him also
mentioned as distinguished in astronomy and geometry. He is said to have been
the first to establish a sun-dial in Greece, to construct a sphere, and to explain
the obliquity of the ecliptic; how far such alleged authorship
really belongs to him, we cannot be certain,—but there is one step of immense
importance which he is clearly affirmed to have made. He was the first to
compose a treatise on the geography of the land and sea within his cognizance,
and to construct a chart or map founded thereupon,—seemingly a tablet of brass.
Such a novelty, wondrous even to the rude and ignorant, was calculated to
stimulate powerfully inquisitive minds, and from it may be dated the
commencement of Grecian rational geography,—not the least valuable among the
contributions of this people Io the stock of human knowledge.
Xenophanes
of Kolophon, somewhat younger than Anaximander, and nearly contemporary with
Pythagoras (seemingly from about 570-480 bc), migrated from Kolophon to Zankle and Katana in Sicily and Elea in Italy, soon
after the time when Ionia became subject to the Persians, (540-530 bc). He was the founder of what is called
the Eleatic school of philosophers,—areal school, since it appears that
Parmenides, Zeno, and Melissus, pursued and
developed, in a great degree, the train of speculation which had been begun by
Xenophanes, —doubtless with additions and variations of their own, but
especially with a dialectic power which belongs to the age of Pericles, and is
unknown in the sixth century BC. He was the author of more than one poem of
considerable length, one on the foundation of Kolophon and another on that of
Elea; besides his poem on Nature, wherein his philosophical doctrines were set
forth. His manner appears to have been controversial and full of asperity
towards antagonists; but what is most remarkable is the plain-spoken manner in
which he declared himself against the popular religion, and in which he
denounced as abominable the descriptions of the gods given by Homer and
Hesiod.
He
is said to have controverted the doctrines both of Thales and Pythagoras: this
is probable enough; but he seems to have taken his start from the philosophy of
Anaximander,—not, however, to adopt it, but to reverse it,—and to set forth an
opinion which we may call its contrary. Nature, in the conception of
Anaximander, consisted of a Something having no other attribute except the
unlimited power of generating and cancelling phenomenal changes: in tins
doctrine, the something or substratum existed only in and for those changes,
and could not be said to exist at all in any other sense: the permanent was
thus merged and lost in the variable,—the one in the many. Xenophanes laid down
the exact opposite: he conceived Nature as one unchangeable and indivisible
whole, spherical, animated, endued with reason, and penetrated by or indeed
identical with God: he denied the objective reality of all change, or
generation, or destruction, which he seems to have considered as only changes
or modifications in the percipient, and perhaps different in one percipient
and another. That which exists, he maintained, could not have been generated,
nor could it ever be destroyed: there was neither real generation nor real
destruction of anything; but that which men took for such, was the change in
their own feelings and ideas. He thus recognized the permanent without the
variable,—the one without the many. And his treatment of the received religious
creed was in harmony with such physical or metaphysical hypothesis; for while
he held the whole of Nature to be God, without parts or change, he at the same
time pronounced the popular gods to be entities of subjective fancy, imagined
by men after their own model: if oxen or lions were to become religious, he
added, they would in like manner provide for themselves gods after their
respective shapes and characters. This hypothesis, which seemed to set aside
altogether the study of the sensible world as a source of knowledge, was
expounded briefly, and as it should seem, obscurely and rudely, by Xenophanes;
at least we may infer thus much from the slighting epithet applied to him by
Aristotle. But his successors, Parmenides and Zeno, in the succeeding century,
expanded it considerably, supported it with extraordinary acuteness of
dialectics, and even superadded a second part, in which the phenomena of
sense— though considered only as appearances, not partaking in the reality of
the one Ens—were yet explained by a new physical hypothesis; so that they will
be found to exercise great influence over the speculations both of Plato and
Aristotle. We discover in Xenophanes, moreover, a vein of skepticism, and a
mournful despair as to the attainability of certain knowledge, which the nature
of his philosophy was well calculated to suggest, and in which the sillograph Timon of the third century BC, who seems to have
spoken of Xenophanes better than of most of the other philosophers, powerfully
sympathized.
The
cosmogony of Pherecydes of Syrus, contemporary of Anaximander and among the
teachers of Pythagoras, seems, according to the fragments preserved, a
combination of the old legendary fancies with Orphic mysticism, and
probably exercised little influence over the subsequent course of Grecian
philosophy. By what has been said of Thales. Anaximander, and Xenophanes, it
will be seen that the sixth century BC witnessed the opening of several of
those roads of intellectual speculation which the later philosophers pursued
farther, or at least from which they branched off. Before the year 500 BC many
interesting questions were thus brought into discussion, which Solon, who died
about 558 BC, had never heard of,—just
as he may probably never have seen the map of Anaximander. But neither of these
two distinguished men— Anaximander or Xenophanes was anything more than a
speculative inquirer. The third eminent name of this century, of whom I am now
about to speak,—Pythagoras, combined in his character disparate elements which
require rather a longer development.
Pythagoras
was founder of a brotherhood, originally brought together by a religious
influence, and with observances approaching to monastic peculiarity,—working
in a direction at once religious, political, and scientific, and exercising for
some time a real political ascendency, —but afterwards banished from government
and state affairs into a sectarian privacy with scientific pursuits, not
without, however, still producing some statesmen individually distinguished.
Amidst the multitude of false and apocryphal statements which circulated in
antiquity respecting this celebrated man, we find a few important facts
reasonably attested and deserving credence, he was a native of Samos, son of an
opulent merchant named Mnesarchus,—or, according to
some of his later and more fervent admirers, of Apollo; born, as far as we can
make out, about the 50th Olympiad, or 580 BC. On the many marvels recounted
respecting his youth, it is unnecessary to dwell. Among them may be numbered
his wide-reaching travels, said to have been prolonged for nearly thirty
years, to visit the Arabians, the Syrians, the Phenicians, the Chaldeans, the
Indians, and the Gallic Druids. But there is reason to believe that he really
visited Egypt—perhaps also Phenicia—and Babylon, then Chaldean and
independent. At the time when he saw Egypt, between 560-540 bc, about one century earlier than Herodotus, it was under Amasis, the last of its
own kings, with its peculiar native character yet unimpaired by foreign
conquest, and only slightly modified by the admission during the preceding
century of Grecian mercenary troops and traders. The spectacle of Egyptian
habits, the conversation of the priests, and the initiation into various
mysteries or secret rites and stories not accessible to the general public, may
very naturally have impressed the mind of Pythagoras, and given him that turn
for mystic observance, asceticism, and peculiarity of diet and clothing,—which
manifested itself from the same cause among several of his contemporaries, but
which was not a common phenomenon in the primitive Greek religion. Besides
visiting Egypt. Pythagoras is also said to have profited by the teaching of
Thales, of Anaximander, and of Pherecydes of Syros. Amidst the towns
of Ionia, he would, moreover, have an opportunity of conversing with many Greek
navigators who had visited foreign countries, especially Italy and Sicily. His
mind seems to have been acted upon and impelled by this combined stimulus,—partly
towards an imaginative and religious vein of speculation, with a life of mystic
observance,—partly towards that active exercise, both of mind and body, which
the genius of an Hellenic community so naturally tended to suggest.
Of
the personal doctrines or opinions of Pythagoras, whom we must distinguish from Philolaus and the subsequent Pythagoreans, we have
little certain knowledge, though doubtless the first germ of their geometry,
arithmetic, astronomy, etc. must have proceeded from him. But that he believed
in the metempsychosis or transmigration of the souls of deceased men into other
men, as well as into animals, we know, not only by other evidence, but also by
the testimony of his contemporary, the philosopher Xenophanes of Elea.
Pythagoras, seeing a dog beaten, and hearing him howl, desired the striker to
desist, saying: “It is the soul of a friend of mine, whom I recognized by his
voice.” This—together with the general testimony of Heraclitus, that
Pythagoras was a man of extensive research and acquired instruction, but artful
for mischief and destitute of sound judgment—is all that we know about him
from contemporaries. Herodotus, two generations afterwards, while he conceives
the Pythagoreans as a peculiar religious order, intimates that both Orpheus and
Pythagoras had derived the doctrine of the metempsychosis from Egypt, but had
pretended to it as their own without acknowledgment.
Pythagoras
combines the character of a sophist (a man of large observation, and clever,
ascendent, inventive mind,—the original sense of the word Sophist, prior to the
polemics of the Platonic school, and the only sense known to Herodotus) with
that of an inspired teacher, prophet, and worker of miracles,—approaching to
and sometimes even confounded with the gods,—and employing all these gifts to
found a new special order of brethren, bound together by religious rites and
observances peculiar to themselves. In his prominent vocation, analogous to
that of Epimenides, Orpheus, or Melampus, he appears
as the revealer of a mode of life calculated to raise his disciples above the
level of mankind, and to recommend them to the favor of the gods; the
Pythagorean life, like the Orphic life, being intended as the exclusive
prerogative of the brotherhood— approached only by probation and initiatory
ceremonies which were adapted to select enthusiasts rather than to an
indiscriminate crowd,—and exacting entire mental devotion to the master. In
these lofty pretensions the Agrigentine Empedocles
seems to have greatly copied him, though with some varieties, about half a century
afterwards. While Aristotle tells us that the Krotoniates identified Pythagoras with the Hyperborean Apollo, the satirical Timon
pronounced him to have been “a juggler of solemn speech, engaged in fishing for
men.” This is the same character, looked at from the different points of view
of the believer and the unbeliever. There is, however, no reason for regarding
Pythagoras as an impostor, because experience seems to show, that while in
certain ages it is not difficult for a man to persuade others that he is
inspired, it is still less difficult for him to contract the same belief
himself.
Looking
at the general type of Pythagoras, as conceived by witnesses in and nearest to
his own age,—Xenophanes, Heraclitus, Herodotus, Plato, Aristotle, Isokrates,— we
find in him chiefly the religious missionary and schoolmaster, with little of
the politician. His efficiency in the latter character, originally subordinate,
first becomes prominent in those glowing fancies which the later Pythagoreans
communicated to Aristoxenus and Dikaearchus.
The primitive Pythagoras inspired by the gods to reveal a new mode of life,—the
Pythagorean life,—and to promise divine favor to a select and docile few, as
the recompense of strict ritual obedience, of austere self-control, and of
laborious training, bodily as well as mental. To speak with confidence of the
details of his training, ethical or scientific, and of the doctrines which he
promulgated, is impossible; for neither he himself nor any of his disciples
anterior to Philolaus—who was separated from him by
about one intervening generation—left any memorials in writing. Numbers and
lines, studied partly in their own mutual relations, partly under various symbolizing
fancies, presented themselves to him as the primary constituent elements of the
universe, and as a sort of magical key to phenomena physical as well as moral.
And these mathematical tendencies in his teaching, expanded by Pythagoreans,
his successors, and coinciding partly also, as has been before stated, with the
studies of Anaximander and Thales, acquired more and more development, so as to
become one of the most glorious and profitable manifestations of Grecian
intellect. Living as Pythagoras did at a time when the stock of experience was
scanty, the license of hypothesis unbounded, and the process of deduction
without rule or verifying test,—he was thus fortunate enough to strike into
that track of geometry and arithmetic, in which, from data of experience few,
simple, and obvious, an immense field of deductive and verifiable
investigation may be travelled over. We must at the same time remark, however,
that in his mind this track, which now seems so straightforward and well
defined, was clouded by strange fancies which it is not easy to understand, and
from which it was but partially cleared by his successors. Of his spiritual
training much is said, though not upon very good authority. We hear of his
memorial discipline, his monastic self-scrutiny, his employment of music to
soothe disorderly passions, his long novitiate of silence, his knowledge of
physiognomy, which enabled him to detect even without trial unworthy subjects,
his peculiar diet, and his rigid care for sobriety as well as for bodily vigor.
lie is also said to have inculcated abstinence from animal food, and this
feeling is so naturally connected with the doctrine of the metempsychosis, that
we may well believe him to have entertained it, as Empedocles also did after
him. It is certain that there were peculiar observances, and probably a certain
measure of self-denial embodied in the Pythagorean life; but on the other hand,
it seems equally certain that the members of the order cannot have been all
subjected to the same diet, or training, or studies. For Milo the Krotoniate was among them, the strongest man and the unparalleled
wrestler of his age,—who cannot possibly have dispensed with animal food and
ample diet (even setting aside the tales about his voracious appetite), and is
not likely to hat e bent his attention on speculative study. Probably
Pythagoras did not enforce the same bodily or mental discipline on all, or at
least knew when to grant dispensations. The order, as it first stood under him,
consisted of men different both in temperament and aptitude, but bound together
by common religious observances and hopes, common reverence for the master, and
mutual attachment as well as pride in each other’s success; and it must thus
be distinguished from the Pythagoreans of the fourth century BC, who had no
communion with wrestlers, and comprised only ascetic, studious men, generally
recluse, though in some cases rising Io political distinction.
The
succession of these Pythagoreans, never very numerous, seems to have continued
until about 300 BC, and then nearly died out; being superseded by other schemes
of philosophy more suited to cultivated Greeks of the age after Socrates. But
during the time of Cicero, two centuries afterwards, the orientalizing tendency—then beginning to spread over the Grecian and Roman world, and
becoming gradually stronger and stronger—caused the Pythagorean philosophy to
be again revived. It was revived too, with little or none of its scientific
tendencies, but with more than its primitive religious and imaginative
fanaticism,—Apollonius of Tyana constituting himself a living copy of
Pythagoras. And thus, while the scientific elements developed by the disciples
of Pythagoras had become disjoined from all peculiarity of sect, and passed
into the general studious world,—the original vein of mystic and ascetic fancy
belonging to the master, without any of that practical efficiency of body and
mind which had marked his first followers, was taken up anew into the pagan
world, along with the disfigured doctrines of Plato. Neo-Pythagorism,
passing gradually into Neo-Platonism, outlasted the other more positive and
masculine systems of pagan philosophy, as the contemporary and rival of
Christianity. A large proportion of the false statements concerning Pythagoras
come from these Neo-Pythagoreans, who were not deterred by the want of
memorials from illustrating, with ample latitude of fancy, the ideal character
of the master.
That
an inquisitive man like Pythagoras, at a time when there were hardly any books
to study, would visit foreign countries, and converse with all the Grecian
philosophical inquirers within his reach, is a matter which we should presume,
even if no one attested it; and our witnesses carry us very little beyond this
general presumption. What doctrines he borrowed, or from whom, we are unable to
discover. But, in fact, his whole life and proceedings bear the stamp of an
original mind, and not of a borrower,—a mind impressed both with Hellenic and
with non-Hellenic habits and religion, yet capable of combining the two in a
manner peculiar to himself; and above all endued with those talents for
religion and personal ascendency over others, which told for much more than the
intrinsic merit of his ideas. We are informed that after extensive travels and
inquiries he returned to Samos, at the age of about forty: he then found his
native island under the despotism of Polycrates, which rendered it an
unsuitable place cither for free sentiments or for marked individuals. Unable
to attract hearers, or found any school or brotherhood, in his native island,
he determined to expatriate. And we may presume that at this period (about
535-530) the recent subjugation of
Ionia by the Persians was not without influence on his determination. The trade
between the Asiatic and the Italian Greeks,—and even the intimacy between
Miletus and Cnidus on the one side, and Sybaris and Tarentum on the other,—had
been great and of long standing, so that there was more than one motive to
determine him to the coast of Italy; in which direction also his contemporary
Xenophanes, the founder of the Eleatic school of philosophy, emigrated,
seemingly, about the same time,—from Kolophon to Zankle, Katana, and Elea.
Kroton
and Sybaris were at this time in their fullest prosperity,—among the first
and most prosperous cities of the Hellenic name. To the former of the two
Pythagoras directed his course. A council of one thousand persons, taken from
among the heirs and representatives of the principal proprietors at its first
foundation, was here invested with the supreme authority: in what manner the
executive offices were filled, we have no information. Besides a great extent
of power, and a numerous population, the large mass of whom had no share in the
political franchise, Kroton stood at this time distinguished for two things, the
general excellence of the bodily habit of the citizens, attested, in part, by
the number of conquerors furnished to the Olympic games, —and the superiority
of its physicians, or surgeons. These two points were, in fact,
greatly connected with each other. For the therapeutics of the day consisted
not so much of active remedies as of careful diet and regimen; while the
trainer, who dictated the life of an athlete during his long and fatiguing
preparation for an Olympic contest, and the professional superintendent of the
youths who frequented the public gymnasia, followed out the same general
views, and acted upon the same basis of knowledge, as the physician who
prescribed for a state of positive bad health. Of medical education properly so
called, especially of anatomy, there was then little or nothing. The physician
acquired his knowledge from observation of men sick as well as healthy, and
from a careful notice of the way in which the human body was acted upon by
surrounding agents and circumstances: and this same knowledge was not less
necessary for the trainer; so that the same place which contained the best men
in the latter class was also likely to be distinguished in the former. It is
not improbable that this celebrity of Kroton may have been one of the reasons
which determined Pythagoras to go thither; for among the precepts ascribed to
him, precise rules as to diet and bodily regulation occupy a prominent place.
The medical or surgical celebrity of Demokedes (son-in-law of the Pythagorean
Milo), to whom allusion has been made in a former chapter, is contemporaneous
with the presence of Pythagoras at Kroton; and the medical men of Magna Graecia
maintained themselves in credit, as rivals of the schools of the Asclepiads at
Kos and Cnidus, throughout all the fifth and fourth centuries BC.
The
biographers of Pythagoras tell us that his arrival there, his preaching, and
his conduct, produced an effect almost electric upon the minds of the people,
with an extensive reform, public as well as private. Political discontent was
repressed, incontinence disappeared, luxury became discredited, and the women,
hastened to exchange their golden ornaments for the simplest attire. No less
than two thousand persons were converted at his first preaching; and so
effective were his discourses to the youth, that the Supreme Council of One
Thousand invited him into their assembly, solicited his advice, and even
offered to constitute him their prytanis
or president, while his wife and daughter were placed at the head of the
religious processions of females. Nor was his influence confined to Kroton.
Other towns in Italy and Sicily,— Sybaris, Metapontum, Rhegium, Katana, Himera,
etc., all felt the benefit of his exhortations, which extricated some of them
even from slavery. Such are the tales of which the biographers of Pythagoras
are full. And we see that even the disciples of Aristotle, about the year 300
BC,—Aristoxenus, Dikatarchus,
Herakleides of Pontus, etc., are hardly less charged with them than the
Neo-Pythagoreans of three or four centuries later: they doubtless heard them
from their contemporary Pythagoreans, the last members of a declining sect,
among whom the attributes of the primitive founder passed for godlike, but who
had no memorials, no historical judgment, and no means of forming a true
conception of Kroton as it stood in 530 BC.
To
trace these tales to a true foundation is impossible: but we may entertain
reasonable belief that the success of Pythagoras, as a person favored by the
gods and patentee of divine secrets, was very great,—that he procured to
himself both the reverence of the multitude and the peculiar attachment and
obedience of many devoted adherents, chiefly belonging to the wealthy and
powerful classes,—that a select body of these adherents, three hundred in
number, bound themselves by a sort of vow both to Pythagoras and to each other,
and adopted a peculiar diet, ritual, and observances, as a token of union,—though
without anything like community of property, which some have ascribed to them.
Such a band of men, standing high in the city for wealth and station, and bound
together by this intimate tie, came by almost unconscious tendency to mingle
political ambition with religious and scientific pursuits. Political clubs with
sworn members, under one form or another, were a constant phenomenon in the
Grecian cities, and the Pythagorean order at its first formation was the most
efficient of all clubs; since it presented an intimacy of attachment among its
members, as well as a feeling of haughty exclusiveness against the public
without, such as no other fraternity could parallel. The devoted attachment of
Pythagoreans towards each other is not less emphatically set forth than their
contempt for every one else. In fact, these two attributes of the order seem
the best ascertained, as well as the most permanent of all: moreover, we may be
sure that the peculiar observances of the order passed for exemplary virtues in
the eyes of its members, and exalted ambition into a duty, by making them
sincerely believe that they were the only persons fit to govern. It is no
matter of surprise, then, to learn that the Pythagoreans gradually drew to
themselves great ascendency in the government of Kroton. And as similar clubs,
not less influential, were formed at Metapontum and other places, so the Pythagorean
order spread its net and dictated the course of affairs over a large portion of
Magna Graecia. Such ascendency of the Pythagoreans must Lave procured for the
master himself some real, and still more supposed, influence over the march of
government at Kroton and elsewhere, of a nature not then possessed by any of
his contemporaries throughout Greece. But his influence was probably exercised
in the background, through the medium of the brotherhood who reverenced him:
for it is hardly conformable to Greek manners that a stranger of his character
should guide personally and avowedly the political affairs of any Grecian city.
Nor
are we to believe that Pythagoras came originally to Kroton with the express
design of creating for himself an ascendent political position,—still less
that, he came for the purpose of realizing a great preconceived political idea,
and transforming Kroton into a model-city of pure Dorism,
as has been supposed by some eminent modern authors. Such schemes might indeed
be ascribed to him by Pythagoreans of the Platonic age, when large ideas of
political amelioration were rife in the minds of speculative men,—by men
disposed to forego the authorship of their own opinions, and preferring to
accredit them as traditions handed down from a founder who had left no
memorials; but it requires better evidence than theirs to make us believe that
any real Greek born in 580 BC actually conceived such plans. We cannot construe
the scheme of Pythagoras as going farther than the formation of a private,
select order of brethren, embracing his religious fancies, ethical tone, and
germs of scientific idea,—and manifesting adhesion by those observances which
Herodotus and Plato call the Pythagorean orgies and mode of life. And his
private order became politically powerful, because he was skilful or fortunate enough to enlist a sufficient number of wealthy Krotoniates, possessing individual influence which they
strengthened immensely by thus regimenting themselves in intimate union. The
Pythagorean orgies or religious ceremonies were not inconsistent with public
activity, bodily as well as mental: probably the rich men of the order may have
been rendered even more active, by being fortified against the temptations of a
life of indulgence. The character of the order as it first stood, different
from that to which it was afterwards reduced, was indeed religious and
exclusive, but also active and domineering ; not despising any of those bodily
accomplishments which increased the efficiency of the Grecian citizen, and
which so particularly harmonized with the preexisting tendencies of Kroton.
Niebuhr and O. Muller have even supposed that the select Three Hundred
Pythagoreans constituted a sort of smaller senate at that city,—an hypothesis
no way probable; we may rather conceive them as a powerful private club,
exercising ascendency in the interior of the senate, and governing through the
medium of the constituted authorities. Nor can we receive without great allowance
the assertion of Varro, who, assimilating Pythagoras to Plato, tells us that he
confined his instructions on matters of government to chosen disciples, who had
gone through a complete training, and had reached the perfection of wisdom and
virtue. It seems more probable that the political Pythagoreans were those w ho
were most qualified for action, and least for speculation. And we may
reasonably suppose in the general of the order that skill in turning to account
the aptitudes of individuals, which two centuries ago was so conspicuous in the
Jesuits; to whom, in various ways, the Pythagoreans bear considerable resemblance.
All that we can be said to know about their political principles is, that they
were exclusive and aristocratical, adverse to the control and interference of
the people; a circumstance no way disadvantageous to them, since they coincided
in this respect with the existing government of the city,—had not their own
conduct brought additional odium on the old aristocracy, and raised up an
aggravated democratical opposition, carried to the most deplorable lengths of
violence.
All
the information which we possess, apocryphal as it is, respecting this
memorable club, is derived from its warm admirers ; yet even their statements
are enough to explain how it came to provoke deadly and extensive enmity. A
stranger coming to teach new religious dogmas and observances, with a tincture
of science and some new ethical ideas and phrases, though he would obtain some
zealous votaries, would also bring upon himself a certain measure of antipathy.
Extreme strictness of observances, combined with the art of touching skilfully the springs of religious terror in others, would
indeed do much both to fortify and to exalt him. But when it was discovered
that science, philosophy, and even the mystic revelations of religion, whatever
they were, remained confined to the private talk and practice of the disciples,
and were thus thrown into the background, while all that was seen and felt
without, was the political predominance of an ambitious fraternity,—we need
not wonder that Pythagorism in all its parts became
odious to a large portion of the community. Moreover, we find the order
represented not merely as constituting a devoted and exclusive political party,
but also as manifesting an ostentatious self-conceit throughout their personal
demeanor,—refusing the hand of fellowship to all except the brethren, and
disgusting especially their own familiar friends and kinsmen. So far as we know
Grecian philosophy, this is the only instance in which it was distinctly abused
for political and party objects: the early days of the Pythagorean order stand
distinguished for such perversion, which, fortunately for the progress of
philosophy, never presented itself afterwards in Greece. Even at
Athens, however, we shall hereafter see that Sokrates, though standing really
aloof from all party intrigue, incurred much of his unpopularity from supposed
political conjunction with Critias and Alcibiades, to which, indeed, the orator
Aeschines distinctly ascribes his condemnation, speaking about sixty years
after the event. Had Sokrates been known as the founder of a band holding
together intimately for ambitious purposes, the result would have been
eminently pernicious to philosophy, and probably much sooner pernicious to
himself.
It
was this cause which brought about the complete and violent destruction of the
Pythagorean order. Their ascendency had provoked such widespread discontent,
that their enemies became emboldened to employ extreme force against them. Kylon
and Nino—the former of whom is said to have sought admittance into the order,
but to have been rejected on account of his bad character—took the lead in
pronounced opposition to the Pythagoreans; and the odium which the latter had
incurred extended itself farther to the Senate of One Thousand, through the
medium of which their ascendency had been exercised. Propositions were made
for rendering the government more democratical, and for constituting a new
senate, taken by lot from all the people, before which the magistrates should
go through their trial of accountability after office; an opportunity being
chosen in which the Senate of One Thousand had given signal offence by refusing
to divide among the people the recently conquered territory of Sybaris. In
spite of the opposition of the Pythagoreans, this change of government was
carried through. Ninon and Kylon, their principal enemies, made use of it to
exasperate the people still farther against the order, until they provoked
actual popular violence against it. The Pythagoreans were attacked when
assembled in their meeting-house near the temple of Apollo, or, as some said,
in the house of Milo: the building was set on fire, and many of the members
perished; none but the younger and more vigorous escaping. Similar
disturbances, and the like violent suppression of the order, with destruction
of several among the leading citizens, are said to have taken place in other
cities of Magna Gracia,—Tarentum, Metapontum, Kaulonia.
And we are told that these cities remained for some time in a state of great
disquietude and commotion from which they were only rescued by the friendly
mediation of the Peloponnesian Achaeans, the original founders of Sybaris and
Kroton,—assisted, indeed, by mediators from other parts of Greece The cities
were at length pacified, and induced to adopt an amicable congress, with
common religious festivals at a temple founded expressly for the purpose, and
dedicated to Zeus Homarius.
Thus
perished the original Pythagorean order. Respecting Pythagoras himself, there were
conflicting accounts; some representing that he was burnt in the temple with
his disciples others, that he had died a short time previously; others again
affirmed that he was alive at the time, but absent, and that he died not long
afterwards in exile, after forty days of voluntary abstinence from food. His
tomb was still shown at Metapontum in the days of Cicero. As an active
brotherhood, the Pythagoreans never revived; but the dispersed members came
together as a sect, for common religious observances and common pursuit of
science. They were readmitted, after some interval, into the cities of Magna
Graecia, from which they had been originally expelled, but to which the sect is
always considered as particularly belonging,—though individual members of it
are found besides at Thebes and other cities of Greece. Indeed, some of these
later Pythagoreans sometimes even acquired great political influence, as we see
in the case of the Tarentine Archytas, the contemporary of Plato.
It
has already been stated that the period when Pythagoras arrived at Kroton may
be fixed somewhere between bc 540-530; and his arrival is said to have occurred at a time of great
depression in the minds of the Krotoniates. They had
recently been defeated by the united Lokrians and Rhegians, vastly inferior to themselves in number, at the
river Sagra; and the humiliation thus brought upon them is said to have
rendered them docile to the training of the Samian missionary. As
the birth of the Pythagorean order is thus connected with the defeat of the Krotoniates at the Sagra, so its extinction is also
connected with their victory over the Sybarites at the river Traeis, or Trionto, about twenty
years afterwards.
Of
the history of these two great Achaean cities we unfortunately know very
little. Though both were powerful, yet down to the period of 510 BC Sybaris
seems to have been decidedly the greatest: of its dominion as well as of its
much-denounced luxury I have spoken in a former chapter. It was at that time
that the. war broke out between them which ended in the destruction of
Sybaris. It is certain that the Sybaritans were
aggressors in the war; but by what causes it had been preceded in their own
town, or what provocation they had received, we make out very indistinctly.
There had been a political revolution at Sybaris, we are told, not long before,
in which a popular leader named Telys had headed a
rising against the oligarchical gov eminent, and induced the people to banish
five hundred of the leading rich men, as well as to confiscate their
properties. He had acquired the sovereignty and become despot of Sybaris and it
appears that he, er his rule at Sybaris, was much abhorred at Kroton—since the Krotoniate Philippus. a man of splendid muscular form and
an Olympic victor, was exiled for having engaged himself to marry the daughter
of Telys. According to the narrative given by the
later Pythagoreans, those exiles, whom Telys had
driven from Sybaris, took refuge at Kroton, and cast themselves as suppliants
on the altars for protection. It may well be, indeed, that they were in part
Pythagoreans of Sybaris. A body of powerful exiles, harbored in a town so close
at hand, naturally inspired alarm, and Telys demanded that they should be delivered up, threatening war in case of refusal.
This demand excited consternation at Kroton, since the military strength of
Sybaris was decidedly superior. The surrender of the exiles was much debated,
and almost decreed, by the Krotoniates, until at
length the persuasion of Pythagoras himself is said to have determined them to
risk any hazard sooner than incur the dishonor of betraying suppliants.
On
the demand of the Sybarites being refused, Telys marched against Kroton, at the head of a force which is reckoned at three
hundred thousand men. He marched, too, in defiance of the strongest religious
warnings against the enterprise,—for the sacrifices, offered on his behalf by
the Jamid prophet Kallias of Elis, were decisively unfavorable, and the prophet
himself fled in terror to Kroton. Near the river Traeis,
or Trionto, he was met by the forces of Kroton,
consisting, we are informed, of one hundred thousand men, and commanded by the
great athlete and Pythagorean Milo; who was clothed, we are told, in the
costume and armed with the club of Herakles. They were farther reinforced,
however, by a valuable ally, the Spartan Dorieus, younger brother of king
Kleomenes, then coasting along the gulf of Tarentum with a body of colonists,
intending to found a settlement in Sicily. A bloody battle was fought, in which
the Sybarites were totally worsted, with prodigious slaughter; while the
victors, fiercely provoked and giving no quarter, followed up the pursuit so
warmly that they took the city, dispersed its inhabitants, and crushed its
whole power in the short space of seventy days. The Sybarites fled in great
part to Laus and Skidrus, their settlements planted
on the Mediterranean coast, across the Calabrian peninsula. And so eager were
the Krotoniates to render the site of Sybaris
untenable, that they turned the course of the river Krathis so as to overwhelm and destroy it: the dry bed in which the river had
originally flowed was still visible in the time of Herodotus, who was among the
settlers in the town of Thurii, afterwards founded, nearly
It
appears, however, that the Krotoniates for a long
time kept the site of Sybaris deserted, refusing even to allot the territory
among the body of their own citizens: from which circumstances, as has been
before noticed, the commotion against, the Pythagorean order is said to have
arisen. They may perhaps have been afraid of the name and recollections of the
city; wherein no large or permanent establishment was ever formed, until Thurii
was established by Athens about sixty-five years afterwards. Nevertheless, the
name of the Sybarites did not perish. Having maintained themselves at Laos, Skidros, and elsewhere, they afterwards formed the
privileged old-citizens among the colonists of Thurii; but misbehaved
themselves in that capacity, and were mostly either slain or expelled. Even
after that, however, the name of Sybaris still remained on a reduced scale in
some portion of the territory. Herodotus recounts what he was told by the
Sybarites, and we find subsequent indications of them even as late as Theokritus.
The
conquest and destruction of the original Sybaris—perhaps in 510 BC, the
greatest of all Grecian cities—appears to have excited a strong sympathy in the
Hellenic world. In Miletus, especially, with which it had maintained intimate
union, the grief was so vehement, that all the Milesians shaved their heads in
token of mourning. The event happened just at the time of the expulsion of
Hippias from Athens, and must have made a sensible revolution in the relations
of the Greek cities on the Italian coast with the rustic population of the
interior. The Krotoniates might destroy Sybaris, and
disperse its inhabitants, but they could not succeed to its wide dominion over
dependent territory; and the extinction of this great aggregate power,
stretching across the peninsula from sea to sea, lessened the means of
resistance against the Oscan movements from the inland. From this time forward,
the cities of Magna Gracia, as well as those of Ionia, tend to decline in
consequence, while Athens, on the other hand, becomes both more conspicuous and
more powerful. At the invasion of Greece by Xerxes, thirty years after this
conquest of Sybaris, Sparta and Athens send to ask for aid both from Sicily and
Corcyra,—but not from Magna Gracia.
It
is much to be regretted that we do not possess fuller information respecting
these important changes among the Greco-Italian cities, but we may remark that
even Herodotus,—himself a citizen of Thurii, and dwelling on the spot not more
than eighty years after the capture of Sybaris,—evidently found no written
memorials to consult; and could obtain from verbal conversation nothing better
than statements both meagre and contradictory. The material circumstance, for
example, of the aid rendered by the Spartan Dorieus and his colonists, though
positively asserted by the Sybarites, was as positively denied by the Krotoniates, who alleged that they had accomplished the
conquest by themselves, and with their own unaided forces. There can be little
hesitation in crediting the affirmative assertion of the Sybarites, who showed
to Herodotus a temple and precinct erected by the Spartan prince in testimony
of his share in the victory, on the banks of the dry, deserted channel, out of
which the Krathis had been turned, and in honor of
the Krathian Athene. This of itself forms a proof,
coupled with the positive assertion of the Sybarites, sufficient for the case.
But they produced another indirect argument to confirm it, which deserves
notice. Dorieus had attacked Sybaris while he was passing along the coast of
Italy to go and found a colony in Sicily, under the express mandate and
encouragement of the oracle ; and after tarrying awhile at Sybaris, he pursued
his journey to the southwestern portion of Sicily, where he and nearly all
his companions perished in a battle with the Carthaginians and Egestaeans,—though
the oracle had promised him that he should acquire and occupy permanently the
neighboring territory near Mount Eryx. Now the Sybarites deduced from this
fatal disaster of Dorieus and his expedition, combined with the favorable
promise of the oracle beforehand, u confident proof of the correctness of their
own statement that he had fought at Sybaris. For if he had gone straight to the
territory marked out by the oracle, they argued, without turning aside for any
other object, the prophecy on which his hopes were founded would have been
unquestionably realized, and he would have succeeded; but the ruinous disappointment
which actually overtook him was at once explained, and the truth of prophecy
vindicated, when it was recollected that he had turned aside to help the Krotoniates against Sybaris, and thus set at nought the
conditions prescribed to him. Upon this argument, Herodotus tells us, the
Sybarites of his day especially insisted. And while we note their pious and
literal faith in the communications of an inspired prophet, we must at the same
time observe how perfectly that faith supplied the place of historical
premises,—how scanty their stock was of such legitimate evidence,—and how
little they had yet learned to appreciate its value.
It
is to be remarked, that Herodotus, in his brief mention of the fatal war
between Sybaris and Kroton, does not make the least allusion to Pythagoras or
his brotherhood. The least which we can infer from such silence is, that the
part which they played in reference to the war, and their general ascendency
in Magna Graecia, was in reality less conspicuous and overruling than the
Pythagorean historians set forth. Even making such allowance, however, the
absence of all allusion in Herodotus, to the commotions which accompanied the
subversion of the Pythagoreans, is a surprising circumstance. Nor can I pass
over a perplexing statement in Polybius, which seems to show that he too must
have conceived the history of Sybaris io a way different from that in which it
is commonly represented. He tells us that after much suffering in Magna Graecia,
from the troubles which followed the expulsion of the Pythagoreans, the cities
were induced by Achman mediation to come to an accommodation, and even to
establish something like a permanent league, with a common temple and
sacrifices. Now the three cities which he specifies as having been the first to
do this, are Kroton, Sybaris, and Kaulonia. But
according to the sequence of events and the fatal war, just described, between
Kroton and Sybaris, the latter city must have been at that time in ruins;
little, if at all, inhabited. I cannot but infer from this statement of
Polybius, that he followed different authorities respecting the early history
of Magna Graecia in the beginning of the fifth century BC.
Indeed,
the early history of these cities gives us little more than a few isolated
facts and names. With regard to their legislators, Zaleukus and Charondas, nothing is made out except their existence,—and even that fact
some ancient critics contested. Of Zaleukus, whom
chronologists place in 664 bc, I have already spoken; the date of
Charondas cannot be assigned, but we may perhaps presume that it was at some
time between 600-500 bc. He was a citizen of middling station,
born in the Chalcidic colony of Katana in Sicily, and he framed laws not only
for his own city, but for the other Chalcidic cities in Sicily and Italy,—Leontini,
Naxos, Zankle, and Rhegium. The laws and the solemn preamble ascribed to him by
Diodorus and Stobaeus, belong to a later day, and we
are obliged to content ourselves with collecting the brief hints of Aristotle,
who tells us that the laws of Charondas descended to great minuteness of
distinction and specification, especially in graduating the fine for offences
according to the property of the guilty person fined,—but that there was
nothing in his laws strictly original and peculiar, except that, he was the
first to introduce the solemn indictment against perjured witnesses before
justice. The perjured witness, in Grecian ideas, was looked upon as having
committed a crime half religious, half civil; and the indictment raised against
him, known by a peculiar name, partook of both characters, approaching in some
respects to the procedure against a murderer. Such distinct form of indictment
against perjured testimony—with its appropriate name, which we
shall find maintained at Athens throughout the best-known days of Attic law—was
first enacted by Charondas.
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