CHAPTER 66
.
PROCEEDINGS
OF THE CONFEDERACY UNDER ATHENS AS HEAD — FIRST FORMATION AND RAPID EXPANSION
OF THE ATHENIAN EMPIRE.
I have already recounted, in the
preceding chapter, how the Asiatic Greeks, breaking loose from the Spartan
Pausanias, entreated Athens to organize a new confederacy, and to act as presiding
city (Vorort),—and how this confederacy, framed not only for common and
pressing objects, but also on principles of equal rights and constant control
on the part of the members, attracted soon the spontaneous adhesion of a large
proportion of Greeks, insular or maritime, near the Aegean sea. I also noticed
this event as giving commencement to a new era in Grecian politics. For whereas
there had been before a tendency, not very powerful, yet on the whole steady
and increasing, towards something like one Pan-Hellenic league under Sparta as
president,—from henceforward that tendency disappears and a bifurcation begins:
Athens and Sparta divide the Grecian world between them, and bring a much
larger number of its members into cooperation, either with one or the other,
than had ever been so arranged before.
Thucydides
marks precisely, as far as general words can go, the character of the new
confederacy during the first years after its commencement: but unhappily he
gives us scarcely any particular facts,—and in the absence of such controlling
evidence, a habit has grown up of describing loosely the entire period between
477 bc, and 405 bc (the latter date is that of the
battle of Egos Potamos), as constituting “the Athenian empire.” This word
denotes correctly enough the last part, perhaps the last forty years, of the
seventy-two years indicated; but it is misleading when applied to the first
part: nor, indeed, can any single word be found which faithfully characterizes
as well the one part as the other. A great and serious change had taken place,
and we disguise the fact of that change,, if we talk of the Athenian hegemony,
or headship, as a portion of the Athenian empire. Thucydides carefully
distinguishes the two, speaking of the Spartans as having lost, and of the
Athenians as having acquired, not empire, but headship, or hegemony. The
transition from the Athenian hegemony to the Athenian empire was doubtless gradual,
so that no one could determine precisely where the former ends and the latter
begins : but it had been consummated before the thirty years’ truce, which was
concluded fourteen years before the Peloponnesian war,—and it was in fact the
substantial cause of that war. Empire then came to be held by Athens,—partly as
a fact established, resting on acquiescence rather than attachment or consent
on the minds of the subjects,—partly as a corollary from necessity of union
combined with her superior force: while this latter point, superiority of force
as a legitimate title, stood more and more forward, both in the language of her
speakers and in the conceptions of her citizens. Nay, the Athenian orators of
the middle of the Peloponnesian war venture to affirm that their empire had
been of this same character ever since the repulse of the Persians: an
inaccuracy so manifest, that if we could suppose the speech made by the Athenian
Euphemus at Kamarina in 415 bc to
have been heard by Themistokles or Aristeides fifty years before, it would have
been alike offensive to the prudence of the one and to the justice of the
other. The imperial state of Athens, that which she held at the beginning of
the Peloponnesian war, when her allies, except Chios and Lesbos, were
tributary subjects, and when the Aegean sea was an Athenian lake,—was of course
the period of her greatest splendor and greatest action upon the Grecian
world. It was also the period most impressive to historians, orators, and
philosophers,—suggesting the idea of some one state exercising dominion over
the Aegean, as the natural condition of Greece, so that if Athens lost such
dominion, it would be transferred to Sparta,—holding out the dispersed maritime
Greeks as a tempting prize for the aggressive schemes of some new conqueror,—and even bringing up by association into men's fancies the mythical Minos of Crete,
and others, as having been rulers of the Aegean in times anterior to Athens.
Even
those who lived under the full-grown Athenian empire had before them no good
accounts of the incidents between 479- 450 BC; for we may gather from the
intimation of Thucydides, as well as from his barrenness of facts, that while
there were chroniclers both for the Persian invasion and for the times before,
no one cared for the times immediately succeeding. Hence, the
little light which has fallen upon this blank has all been borrowed—if we
except the careful Thucydides—from a subsequent age; and the Athenian hegemony
has been treated as a mere commencement of the Athenian empire: credit has
been given to Athens for a long-sighted ambition, aiming from the Persian war
downwards at results which perhaps Themistocles may have partially divined, but
which only time and successive accidents opened even to distant view. But such
systematic anticipation of subsequent results is fatal to any correct
understanding, either of the real agents or of the real period; both of which
are to be explained from the circumstances preceding and actually present, with
some help, though cautious and sparing, from our acquaintance with that which
was then an unknown future. When Aristeides and Cimon dismissed the
Lacedaemonian admiral Dorkis, and drove Pausanias away from Byzantium on his
second coming out, they had to deal with the problem immediately before them;
they had to complete the defeat of the Persian power, still formidable,—and to
create and organize a confederacy as yet only inchoate. This was quite enough
to occupy their attention, without ascribing to them distant views of Athenian
maritime empire.
In
that brief sketch of incidents preceding the Peloponnesian war, which
Thucydides introduces as “the throwing off of his narrative,” he neither
gives, nor professes to give, a complete enumeration of all which actually
occurred. During the interval between the first desertion of the Asiatic allies
from Pausanias to Athens, in 477 bc,—and
the revolt of Naxos in 466 bc,—he
recites three incidents only: first, the siege and capture of Eion, on the
Strymon, with its Persian garrison,next, the capture of Skyros, and
appropriation of the island to Athenian kleruchs, or out-citizens,— thirdly,
the war with Karystus in Euboea, and reduction of the place by capitulation. It
has been too much the practice to reason as if these three events were the full
history of ten or eleven years. Considering what Thucydides states respecting
the darkness of this period, we might perhaps suspect that they were all which
he could learn about it on good authority : and they are all, in truth, events
having a near and special bearing on the subsequent history of Athens herself,—for
Eion was the first stepping-stone to the important settlement of Amphipolis,
and Skyros in the time of Thucydides was the property of outlying Athenian
citizens, or kleruchs. Still, we are left in almost entire ignorance of the
proceedings of Athens, as conducting the newly-established confederate force:
for it is certain that the first ten years of the Athenian hegemony must have
been years of most active warfare against the Persians. One positive testimony
to this effect has been accidentally preserved to us by Herodotus, who
mentions, that before the invasion of Xerxes, there were Persian commanders
and garrisons everywhere in Thrace and the Hellespont all of whom
were conquered by the Greeks after that invasion, with the single exception of
Maskames, governor of Doriskus, who could never be taken, though many different
Grecian attempts were made upon the fortress. Of those who were captured by the
Greeks, not one made any defence sufficient to attract the admiration of
Xerxes, except Boges, governor of Eion”. Boges, after bravely defending
himself, and refusing offers of capitulation, found his provisions exhausted,
and farther resistance impracticable. He then kindled a vast funeral pile,—slew
his wives, children, concubines, and family, and cast them into it,— threw his
precious effects over the wall into the Strymon,—and lastly, precipitated
himself into the flames. His brave despair was the theme of warm encomium among
the Persians, and his relatives in Persia were liberally rewarded by Xerxes.
This capture of Eion, effected by Cimon, has been mentioned, as already stated, by Thucydides;
but Herodotus here gives us to understand that it was only one of a string of
enterprises, all unnoticed ‘by Thucydides, against the Persians. Nay, it would
seem from his language, that Maskames main- sained himself in Doriskus during
the whole reign of Xerxes, end perhaps longer, repelling successive Grecian
assaults.
The
valuable indication here cited from Herodotus would be of itself a sufficient
proof that the first years of the Athenian hegemony were full of busy and
successful hostility against the Persians. And in truth this is what we should
expect: the battles of Salamis, Plataea, and Mykale, drove the Persians out of
Greece, and overpowered their main armaments, but did not remove them at once
from all the various posts which they occupied throughout the Aegean and
Thrace. Without doubt, the Athenians had to clear the coasts and the islands of
a great number of different Persian detachments: an operation never short nor
easy, with the then imperfect means of siege, as wo may see by the cases of
Sestus and Eion; nor, indeed, always practicable, as the case of Doriskus
teaches us. The tear of these Persians, vet remaining in the neighborhood, and
even the chance of a renewed Persian invading armament, formed one pressing
motive for Grecian cities to join the new confederacy: while the expulsion of
the enemy added to it those places which he had occupied. It was by these years
of active operations at sea against the common enemy, that the Athenians first
established that constant, systematic, and laborious training, among their own
ships’ crews, which transmitted itself with continual improvements down to the
Peloponnesian war: it was by these, combined with the present fear, that they
were enabled to organize the largest and most efficient confederacy ever known
among Greeks,—to bring together deliberative deputies,—to plant their own
ascendency as enforcers of the collective resolutions,—and to raise a
prodigious tax from universal contribution. Lastly, it was by these same
operations, prosecuted so successfully as to remove present alarm, that they
at length fatigued the more lukewarm and passive members of the confederacy,
and created in them a wish either to commute personal service for pecuniary
contribution, or to escape from the obligation of service in any way. The.
Athenian nautical training would never have been acquired,—the confederacy
would never have become a working reality,—the fatigue and discontents among
its members would never have arisen,—unless there had been a real fear of the
Persians, and a pressing necessity for vigorous and organized operations
against them, during the ten years between 477 and 466 BC.
As
to the ten years from 477-466 BC, there has been a tendency almost unconscious
to assume that the particular incidents mentioned by Thucydides about Eion,
Skyros. Karystus, and Naxos, constitute the sum total of events. To contradict
this assumption, I have suggested proof sufficient, though indirect, that they
are only part of the stock of a very busy period,—the remaining details of
which, indicated in outline by the large general language of Thucydides, we are
condemned not to know. Nor are we admitted to be present at the synod of Delos,
which during all this time continued its periodical meetings: though it would
have been highly interesting to trace the steps whereby an institution which at
first promised to protect not less the separate rights of the members than the
security of the whole, so lamentably failed in its object. We must recollect
that this confederacy, formed for objects common to all, limited to a certain
extent the autonomy of each member; both conferring definite rights and
imposing definite obligations. Solemnly sworn to by all, and by Aristeides on
behalf of Athens, it was intended to bind the members in perpetuity,—marked
even in the form of the oath, which was performed by casting heavy lumps of iron into the sea never again to be seen. As
this confederacy was thus both perpetual and peremptory, binding each member to
the rest, and not allowing either retirement or evasion, so it was essential
that it should be sustained by some determining authority and enforcing
sanction. The determining authority was provided by the synod at Delos : the
enforcing sanction was exercised by Athens as president. And there is every
reason to presume that Athens, for a long time, performed this duty in a
legitimate and honorable manner, acting in execution of the resolves of the
synod, or at least in full harmony with its general purposes. She exacted from
every member the regulated quota of men or money, employing coercion against
recusants, and visiting neglect of military duty with penalties. In all these
requirements she only discharged her appropriate functions as chosen leader of
the confederacy, and there can be no reasonable doubt that the general synod
went cordially along with her in strictness of dealing towards
those defaulters who obtained protection without bearing their share of the
burden.
But
after a few years, several of the confederates becoming weary of personal
military service, prevailed upon the Athenians to provide ships and men in
their place, and imposed upon themselves in exchange a money-payment of
suitable amount. This commutation, at first probably introduced to meet some
special case of inconvenience, was found so suitable to the taste of all
parties that it gradually spread through the larger portion of the confederacy.
To unwarlike allies, hating labor and privation, it was a welcome relief,—while
to the Athenians, full of ardor and patient of labor, as well as discipline,
for the aggrandizement of their country, it afforded constant pay for a fleet
more numerous than they could otherwise have kept afloat. It is plain from the
statement of Thucydides that this altered practice was introduced from the
petition of the confederates themselves, not from any pressure or stratagem, on
the part of Athens. But though such was its real source, it did not the less
fatally degrade the allies in reference to Athens, and extinguish the original
feeling of equal rights and partnership in the confederacy, with communion of
danger as well as of glory, which had once bound them together. The Athenians
came to consider themselves as military chiefs and soldiers, with a body of
tribute-paying subjects, whom they were entitled to hold in dominion, and
restrict, both as to foreign policy and internal government, to such extent as
they thought expedient,—but whom they were also bound to protect against
foreign enemies. The military force of these subject-states was thus in a great
degree transferred to Athens, by their own act, just as that of so many of the
native princes in India has been made over to the English. But the military
efficiency of the confederacy against the Persians was much increased, in
proportion as the vigorous resolves of Athens were less and less
paralyzed by the contentions and irregularity of a synod; so that the war was
prosecuted with greater success than ever, while those motives of alarm, which
had served as the first pressing stimulus to the formation of the confederacy,
became every year farther and farther removed.
Under
such circumstances several of the confederate states grew tired even of paying
their tribute,—and averse to continuance as members. They made successive
attempts to secede, but Athens, acting seemingly in conjunction with the synod,
repressed their attempts one after the other,—conquering, fining, and
disarming the revolters; which was the more easily done, since in most cases
their naval force had been in great part handed over to her. As these events
took place, not all at once, but successively in different years,—the number of
mere tributepaying allies as well as of subdued revolters continually increasing,—so
there was never any one moment of conspicuous change in the character of the
confederacy: the allies slid unconsciously into subjects, while Athens, without
any predetermined plan, passed from a chief into a despot. By strictly
enforcing the obligations of the pact upon unwilling members, and by employing
coercion against revolters, she had become unpopular in the same proportion as
she acquired new power,—and that, too, without any guilt of her own. In this
position, even if she had been inclined to relax her hold upon the tributary
subjects, considerations of her own safety would have deterred her from doing
so; for there was reason to apprehend that they might place their strength at
the disposal of her enemies. It is very certain that she never was so inclined;
it would have required a more self-denying public morality than has ever been
practised by any state, either
ancient or modern, even to conceive the idea of relinquishing voluntarily an
immense ascendency as well as a lucrative revenue: least of all was such an
idea likely to be conceived by Athenian citizens, whose ambition increased with
their power, and among whom the love of Athenian ascendency was both passion
and patriotism. But though the Athenians were both disposed and qualified to
push all the advantages offered, and even to look out for new, we must not
forget that the foundations of their empire were laid in the most honorable
causes: voluntary invitation, efforts both unwearied and successful against a
common enemy, unpopularity incurred in discharge of an imperative duty, and inability
to break up the confederacy without endangering themselves as well as laying
open the Aegean sea to the Persians.
There
were two other causes, besides that which has just been adverted to, for the
unpopularity of imperial Athens. First, the existence of the confederacy,
imposing permanent obligations, was in conflict with the general instinct of
the Greek mind, tending towards separate political autonomy of each city, as
well as with the particular turn of the Ionic mind, incapable of that steady
personal effort which was requisite for maintaining the synod of Delos, on its
first large and equal basis. Next,—and this is the great cause of all,—Athens,
having defeated the Persians, and thrust them to a distance, began to employ
the force and the tribute of her subject-allies in warfare against Greeks,
wherein these allies had nothing to gain from success, —everything to
apprehend from defeat,—and a banner to fight for, offensive to Hellenic
sympathies. On this head, the subject-allies had great reason to complain,
throughout the prolonged wars of Greek against Greek, for the purpose of
sustaining Athenian predominance : but on the point of practical grievances or
oppressions, they had little ground for discontent, and little feeling of
actual discontent, as I shall show more fully hereafter. Among the general body
of citizens in the subject-allied cities, the feeling towards Athens was rather
indifference than hatred: the movement of revolt against her proceeded from
small parties of leading men, acting apart from the citizens, and generally
with collateral views of ambition for themselves: and the positive hatred
towards her was felt chiefly by those who were not her subjects.
It
is probable that the same indisposition to personal effort, which prompted the
confederates of Delos to tender money-payment as a substitute for military
service, also induced them to neglect attendance at the synod. But we do not
know the steps whereby this assembly, at first an effective reality, gradually
dwindled into a mere form and vanished. Nothing, however, can more forcibly
illustrate the difference of character between the maritime allies of Athens,
and the Peloponnesian allies of Sparta, than the fact,—that while the former
shrank from personal service, and thought it an advantage to tax themselves in
place of it,—the latter were “ready enough with their bodies,” but uncomplying
and impracticable as to contributions. The contempt felt by these Dorian
landsmen for the military efficiency of the Ionians recurs frequently, and
appears even to have exceeded what the reality justified: but when we turn to
the conduct of the latter twenty years earlier, at the battle of Lade, In the
very crisis of the Ionic revolt from Persia,—we detect the same want of energy,
the same incapacity of personal effort and labor, as that which broke up the
confederacy of Delos with all its beneficial promise. To appreciate fully the
indefatigable activity and daring, together with the patient endurance of
laborious maritime training, which characterized the Athenians of that day,—we
have only to contrast them with these confederates, so remarkably destitute of
both. Amidst such glaring inequalities of merit, capacity, and power, to
maintain a confederacy of equal members was impossible: it was in the nature of
things that the confederacy should either break up, or be transmuted into an
Athenian empire.
It
has already been mentioned that the first aggregate assessment of tribute,
proposed by Aristeides, and adopted by the synod at Delos, was four hundred and
sixty talents in money. At that time many of the confederates paid their quota,
not in money but in ships; but this practice gradually diminished, as the commutations
above alluded to, of money in place of ships, were" multiplied, while the
aggregate tribute, of course, became larger. It was no more than six hundred
talents at the commencement of the Peloponnesian war, forty-six years after the
first formation of the confederacy; from whence we may infer that it was never
at all increased upon individual members during the interval. For the
difference between four hundred and sixty talents and six hundred admits of
being fully explained by the numerous commutations of service for money, as
well as by the acquisitions of new members, which doubtless Athens had more or
less the opportunity of making. It is not to be imagined that the confederacy
had attained its maximum number, at the date of the first assessment of
tribute: there must have been various cities, like Sinope and Aegina,
subsequently added.
Without
some such preliminary statements as those just given, respecting the new state
of Greece between the Persian and Peloponnesian wars, beginning with the
Athenian hegemony, or headship, and ending with the Athenian empire, the reader
would hardly understand the bearing of those particular events which our
authorities enable us to recount; events unhappily few in number, though the
period must have been full of action, and not well authenticated as to dates.
The first known enterprise of the Athenians in their new capacity—whether the
first absolutely or not, we cannot determine—between 476 bc and 466 BC, was the conquest of the
important post of Eion, on the Strymon, where the Persian governor, Boges,
starved out after a desperate resistance, destroyed himself rather than
capitulate, together with his family and precious effects, as has already been
stated. The next events named are their enterprises against the Dolopes and
Pelasgi in the island of Skyros, seemingly about 470 BC, and the Dryopes in the
town and district of Karystus, in Euboea. To the latter, who were of a
different kindred from the inhabitants of Chalcis and Eretria, and received no
aid from them, they granted a capitulation: the former were more rigorously
dealt with, and expelled from their island. Skyros was barren, and had little
to recommend it, except a good maritime position and an excellent harbor; while
its inhabitants, seemingly akin to the Pelasgian residents in Lemnos, prior to
the Athenian occupation of that spot, were alike piratical and cruel. Some
Thessalian traders, recently plundered and imprisoned by them, had raised a
complaint against them before the Amphictyonic synod, which condemned the
island to make restitution: the mass of the islanders threw the burden upon
those who had committed the crime; and these men, in order to evade payment,
invoked Kimon with the Athenian armament,— who conquered the island, expelled
the inhabitants, and peopled it with Athenian settlers.
Such
clearance was a beneficial act, suitable to the new character of Athens as
guardian of the Aegean sea against piracy: but it seems also connected with
Athenian plans. The island lay very convenient for the communication with
Lemnos, which the Athenians had doubtless reoccupied after the expulsion of the
Persians, and became, as well as Lemnos, a recognized adjunct, or outlying
portion, of Attica: moreover, there were old legends which connected the
Athenians with it, as the tomb of their hero Theseus, whose name, as the
mythical champion of democracy, was in peculiar favor at the period immediately
following the return from Salamis. It was in the year 476 bc, that the oracle had directed them
to bring home the bones of Theseus from Skyros, and to prepare for that hero a
splendid entombment and edifice in their new city : they had tried to effect
this, but the unsocial manners of the Dolopians had prevented a search, and it
was only after Kimon had taken the island that he found, or pretended to find,
the body. It was brought to Athens in the year 469 bc, and after being welcomed by the people in solemn and
joyous procession, as if the hero himself had come back, was deposited in the
interior of the city,—the monument called the Theseium, with its sacred precinct
being built on the spot, and invested with the privilege of a sanctuary for men
of poor condition who might feel ground for dreading the oppressions of the
powerful, as well as for slaves in case of cruel usage. Such were
the protective functions of the mythical hero of democracy, whose installation
is interesting as marking the growing intensity of democratical feeling in
Athens since the Persian war.
It
was about two years or more after this incident, that the first breach of union
in the confederacy of Delos took place. The important island of Naxos, the
largest of the Cyclades, an island which thirty years before had boasted a
large marine force and eight thousand hoplites—revolted on what special ground we do not know : but
probably the greater islands fancied themselves better able to dispense with
the protection of the confederacy than the smaller,—at the same time that they
were more jealous of Athens. After a siege, of unknown duration, by Athens and
the confederate force, it was forced to surrender, and reduced to the condition
of a tributary subject; its armed ships being doubtless taken away, and its
fortifications razed : whether any fine or ulterior penalty was levied, we have
no information.
We
cannot doubt that the reduction of this powerful island, however untoward in
its effects upon the equal and self-maintaining character of the confederacy,
strengthened its military force by placing the whole Naxian fleet with new
pecuniary contributions in the hands of the chief: nor is it surprising to
hear that Athens sought both to employ this new force, and to obliterate the
late act of severity, by increased exertions against the common enemy. Though
we know no particulars respecting operations against Persia, since the attack
on Eion, such operations must have been going on; but the expedition under
Kimon, undertaken not long after the Naxian revolt, was attended with memorable
results. That commander, having under him two hundred triremes from Athens, and
one hundred from the various confederates, was despatched to attack the
Persians on the southwestern and southern coast of Asia Minor. He attacked and
drove out several of their garrisons from various Grecian settlements, both in
Caria and Lycia: among others, the important trading city of Phaselis, though
at first resisting, and even standing a siege, was prevailed upon by the
friendly suggestions of the Chians in Kimon’s armament to pay a contribution of
ten talents and join in the expedition. From the length of time occupied in
these various undertakings, the Persian satraps had been enabled to assemble a
powerful force, both fleet and army, near the mouth of the river Eurymedon, in
Pamphylia, under the command of Tithraustes and Pherendates, both of the regal blood.
The fleet, chiefly Phenician, seems to have consisted of two hundred ships, but
a farther reinforcement of eighty Phenician ships was expected, and was
actually near at hand, and the commanders were unwilling to hazard a battle
before its arrival. Kimon, anxious for the same reason to hasten on the combat,
attacked them vigorously: partly from their inferiority of numbers, partly
from discouragement at the absence of the reinforcement, they seem to have
made no strenuous resistance. They were put to flight and driven ashore; so
speedily, and with so little loss to the Greeks, that Kimon was enabled to
disembark his men forthwith, and attack the land-force which was drawn up on
shore to protect them. The battle on land was long and gallantly contested,
but Kimon at length gained a complete victory, dispersed the army with the
capture of many prisoners, and either took or destroyed the entire fleet. As
soon as his victory and his prisoners were secured, he sailed to Cyprus for the
purpose of intercepting the reinforcement of eighty Phenician ships in their
way, and was fortunate enough to attack them while yet they were ignorant of
the victories of the Eurymedon. These ships too were all destroyed, though most
of the crews appear to have escaped ashore on the island. Two great victories,
one at sea and the other on land, gained on the same day by the same armament,
counted with reason among the most glorious of all Grecian exploits, and were
extolled as such in the inscription on the commemorative offering to Apollo,
set up out of the tithe of the spoils. The number of prisoners, as
well as the booty taken by the victors, was immense.
A victory thus remarkable, which thrust back the Persians to
the region eastward of Phaselis, doubtless fortified materially the position of
the Athenian confederacy against them; but it tended not less to exalt the
reputation of Athens, and even to popularize her with the confederates
generally, from the large amount of plunder divisible among them. Probably this
increased power and popularity stood her instead throughout her approaching
contest with Thasos, at the same time that it explains the increasing fear and
dislike of the Peloponnesians.
Thasos was a member of the confederacy of Delos; but her
quarrel with Athens seems to have arisen out of causes quite distinct from
confederate relations. It has been already stated that the Athenians had within
the last few years expelled the Persians from the important post of Eion, on
the Strymon, the most convenient post for the neighboring region of Thrace,
which was not less distinguished for its fertility than for its mining Wealth.
In the occupation of this post, the Athenians had had time, to become
acquainted with the productive character of the adjoining region, chiefly
occupied by the Edonian Thracians; and it is extremely probable that many
private settlers arrived from Athens, with the view of procuring grants or
making their fortunes by partnership with powerful Thracians in working the
gold-mines round Mount Pangaeus. In so doing, they speedily found themselves in
collision with the Greeks of the opposite island of Mount Thasos, who possessed
a considerable strip of .and, with various dependent towns on the continent of
Thrace, and derived a large revenue from the mines of Skapte Hyle, as well as
from others in the neighborhood. The condition of Thasos at this time, about
465 bc, indicates to us the
progress which the Grecian states in the Aegean had made since their liberation
from Persia. It had been deprived both of its fortifications and of its
maritime force, by order of Darius, about 491 BC, and must have remained in
this condition until after the repulse of Xerxes; but we now find it
well-fortified and possessing a powerful maritime force.
In
what precise manner the quarrel between the Thasians and the Athenians of Eion
manifested itself, respecting the trade and the mines in Thrace, we are not
informed; but it reached such a height that the Athenians were induced to send
a powerful armament against the island, under the command of Kimon. Having vanquished the Thasian force at sea, they disembarked, gained various
battles, and blocked up the city by land as well as by sea. And at the same
time they undertook—what seems to have been part and parcel of the same scheme—the
establishment of a larger and more powerful colony on Thracian ground not far
from Eion. On the Strymon, about three miles higher up than Eion, near the spot
where the river narrows itself again out of a broad expanse of the nature of a
lake, was situated the Edonian town or settlement called Ennea Hodoi, (Nine
Ways), a little above the bridge, which here served as an important
communication for all the people of the interior. Both Histiaeus and
Aristagoras, the two Milesian despots, had been tempted by the advantages of
this place to commence a settlement there: both of them had failed, and a third
failure on a still grander scale was now about to be added. The Athenians sent
thither a large body of colonists, ten thousand in number, partly from their
own citizens, partly collected from their allies : and the temptations of the
site probably rendered volunteers numerous. As far as Ennea Hodoi was
concerned, they were successful in conquering it and driving away the Edonian
possessors : but on trying to extend themselves farther to the eastward, to a
spot called Drabeskus, convenient for the mining region, they encountered a
more formidable resistance from a powerful alliance of Thracian tribes, who had
come to the aid of the Edonians in decisive hostility to the new colony,—probably
not without instigation from the inhabitants of Thasos. All er most of the ten
thousand colonists were slain in this warfare, and the new colony was for the
time completely abandoned: we shall find it resumed hereafter.
Disappointed
as the Athenians were in this enterprise, they did not abandon the blockade of
Thasos, which held out more than two years, and only surrendered in the third
year. Its fortifications were razed; its ships of war, thirty-three in number,
taken away its possessions and mining establishments on the opposite continent
relinquished: moreover, an immediate contribution in money was demanded from
the inhabitants, over and above the annual payment assessed upon them for the
future. The subjugation of this powerful island was another step in the growing
dominion of Athens over her confederates.
The
year before the Thasians surrendered, however, they had taken a step which
deserves particular notice, as indicating the newly-gathering clouds in the
Grecian political horizon. They had made secret application to the Lacedaemonians
for aid, entreating them to draw' off the attention of Athens by invading
Attica; and the Lacedaemonians, without the knowledge of Athens, having
actually engaged to comply with this request, were only prevented from
performing their promise by a grave and terrible misfortune at home. Though
accidentally unperformed, however, this hostile promise is a most significant
event : it marks the growing fear and hatred on the part of Sparta and the
Peloponnesians towards Athens, merely on general grounds of the magnitude of
her power, and without any special provocation. Nay, not only had Athens given
no provocation, but she was still actually included as a member of the
Lacedaemonian alliance, and we shall find her presently both appealed to and
acting as such. We shall hear so much of Athens, and that too with truth, as
pushing and aggressive,—and of Sparta as homekeeping and defensive,—that the
incident just mentioned becomes important to remark. The first intent of
unprovoked and even treacherous hostility—the germ of the future Peloponnesian
war—is conceived and reduced to an engagement by Sparta.
We
are told by Plutarch, that the Athenians, after the surrender of Thasos and
the liberation of the armament, had expected from Kimon some farther conquests
in Macedonia,—and even that he had actually entered upon that project with such
promise of success, that its farther consummation was certain as well as easy.
Having under these circumstances relinquished it and returned to Athens, he was
accused by Pericles and others of having been bought off by bribes from the
Macedonian king Alexander; but was acquitted after a public trial.
During
the period which Lad elapsed between the first formation of the confederacy of
Delos and the capture of Thasos (about thirteen or fourteen years, bc 477-463), the Athenians seem to have
been occupied almost entirely in their maritime operations, chiefly against the
Persians,—having been free from embarrassments immediately around Attica. But
this freedom was not destined to last much longer; and during the ensuing ten
years, their foreign relations near home become both active and complicated;
while their strength expands so wonderfully, that they are found competent at
once to obligations on both sides of the Aegean sea, the distant as well as the
near.
Of
the incidents which had taken place in Central Greece during the twelve or
fifteen years immediately succeeding the battle of Plataea. we have scarcely
any information. The feelings of the time, between those Greeks who had
supported and those who had resisted the Persian invader, must have remained unfriendly
even after the war was at an end, and the mere occupation of the Persian
numerous host must have inflicted severe damage both upon Thessaly and Boeotia.
At the meeting of the Amphictyonic synod which succeeded the expulsion of the
invaders, a reward was proclaimed for the life of the Melian Ephialtes, who had
betrayed to Xerxes the mountain-path over Oeta, and thus caused the ruin of
Leonidas at Thermopylae: moreover, if we may trust Plutarch, it was even
proposed by Lacedaemon that all the medizing Greeks should be expelled from the
synod,—a proposition which the more long-sighted views of Themistokles
successfully resisted. Even the stronger measure, of razing the fortifications
of all the extra-Peloponnesian cities, from fear that they might be used to aid
some future invasion, had suggested itself to the Lacedaemonians,—as we see
from their language on the occasion of rebuilding the walls of Athens; and in
regard to Boeotia, it appears that the headship of Thebes as well as the
coherence of the federation was for the time almost suspended. The destroyed
towns of Plataea and Thespiac were restored, and the latter in part repeopled,
under Athenian influence; and the general sentiment of Peloponnesus as well as
of Athens would have sustained these towns against Thebes, if the latter had
tried at that time to enforce her supremacy over them in the name of “ancient
Boeotian right and usage.” The Theban government was then in discredit for its
previous medism,—even in the eyes of Thebans themselves; while the party
opposed to Thebes in the other towns was so powerful, that many of them would
probably have been severed from the federation to become allies of Athens like
Plataea, if the interference of Lacedaemon had not arrested such a tendency.
The latter was in every other part of Greece an enemy to organized aggregation
of cities, either equal or unequal, and was constantly bent on keeping the
little autonomous communities separate; whence she sometimes became by
accident the protector of the weaker cities against compulsory alliance
imposed upon them by the stronger: the interest of her own ascendency was in
this respect analogous to that of the Persians when they dictated the peace of
Antalcidas,—of the Romans in administering their extensive conquests,—and of
the kings of medieval Europe in breaking the authority of the barons over their
vassals. But though such was the policy of Sparta elsewhere, her fear of
Athens, which grew up during the ensuing twenty years, made her act differently
in regard to Boeotia : she had no other means of maintaining that country as
her own ally and as the enemy of Athens, except by organizing the federation
effectively, and strengthening the authority of Thebes. It is to this
revolution in Spartan politics that Thebes owed the recovery of her ascendency,—
a revolution so conspicuously marked, that the Spartans even aided in enlarging
her circuit and improving her fortifications: nor was it without difficulty
that she maintained this position, even when recovered, against the dangerous
neighborhood of Athens, a circumstance which made her not only a vehement
partisan of Sparta, but even more furiously anti-Athenian than Sparta, down to
the close of the Peloponnesian war.
The
revolution, just noticed, in Spartan politics towards Boeotia, did not manifest
itself until about twenty years after the commencement of the Athenian maritime
confederacy. During the course of those twenty years, we know that Sparta had
had more than one battle to sustain in Arcadia, against the towns and villages
of that country, in which she came forth victorious: but we have no
particulars respecting these incidents. We also know that a few years after the
Persian invasion, the inhabitants of Elis concentrated themselves from many
dispersed townships into the one main city of Elis: and it seems probable that
Lepreum in Triphylia, and one or two of the towns of Achaia, were either formed
or enlarged by a similar process near about the same time. Such aggregation of
towns out of preexisting separate villages was not conformable to the views,
nor favorable to the ascendency, of Lacedaemon : but there can be little doubt
that her foreign policy, after the Persian invasion, was both embarrassed and
discredited by the misconduct of her two contemporary kings, Pausanias, who,
though only regent, was practically equivalent to a king, and Leotychides,—not
to mention the rapid development of Athens and Peiraeus. But in the year BC
164, the year preceding the surrender of Thasos to the Athenian armament, a
misfortune of yet more terrific moment befell Sparta. A violent earthquake took
place in the immediate neighborhood of Sparta itself, destroying a large
portion of the town, and a vast number of lives, many of them Spartan citizens.
It was the judgment of the earth-shaking god Poseidon, according to the view of
the Lacedaemonians themselves, for a recent violation of his sanctuary at
Tamarus, from whence certain suppliant Helots had been dragged away not long
before for punishment,—not improbably some of those Helots whom Pausanias had
instigated to revolt. The sentiment of the Helots, at all times one of enmity
towards their masters, appears at this moment to have been unusually
inflammable: so that an earthquake at Sparta, especially an earthquake
construed as divine vengeance for Helot blood recently spilt, was sufficient to
rouse many of them at once into revolt, together with some even of the Perioeki.
The insurgents took arms and marched directly upon Sparta, which they were on
the point of mastering during the first moments of consternation, had not the
bravery and presence of mind of the young king Archidamus reanimated the
surviving citizens and repelled the attack. But though repelled, the insurgents
were not subdued: for some time they maintained the field against the Spartan
force, and sometimes with considerable advantage, since Aeimnestus, the warrior
by whose hand Mardonius had fallen at Plataea, was defeated and slain with
three hundred followers in the plain of Stenyklerus, overpowered by superior
numbers. When at length defeated, they occupied and fortified the memorable
hill of Ithome, the ancient citadel of their Messenian forefathers. Here they
made a long and obstinate defence, supporting themselves doubtless by
incursions throughout Laconia: nor was defence difficult, seeing that the
Lacedemonians were at that time confessedly incapable of assailing even the
most imperfect species of fortification. After the siege had lasted some two or
three years, without any prospect of success, the Lacedemonians, beginning to
despair of their own sufficiency for the undertaking, invoked the aid of their
various allies, among whom we find specified the Aeginetans, the Athenians, and
the Plataeans. The Athenian troops are said to have consisted of four thousand
men, under the command of Kimon; Athens being still included in the list of
Lacedaemonian allies.
So
imperfect were the means of attacking walls at that day, even for the most
intelligent Greeks, that this increased force made no immediate impression on
the fortified hill of Ithome. And when the Lacedaemonians saw that their
Athenian allies were not more successful than they had been themselves, they
soon passed from surprise into doubt, mistrust, and apprehension. The troops
had given no ground for such a feeling, and Cimon, their general, was notorious
for his attachment to Sparta; yet the Lacedemonians could not help calling to
mind the ever-wakeful energy and ambition of these Ionic strangers, whom they
had introduced into the interior of Laconia, together with their own promise—though
doubtless a secret promise—to invade Attica, not long before, for the benefit
of the Thasians. They even began to fear that the Athenians might turn against
them, and listen to solicitations for espousing the cause of the besieged.
Under the influence of such apprehensions, they dismissed the Athenian
contingent forthwith, on pretence of having no farther occasion for them; while
all the other allies were retained, and the siege or blockade went on as
before.
This
dismissal, ungracious in the extreme, and probably rendered even more
offensive by the habitual roughness of Spartan dealing, excited the strongest
exasperation both among the Athenian soldiers and the Athenian people,—an
exasperation heightened by circumstances immediately preceding. For the resolution
to send auxiliaries into Laconia, when the Lacedaemonians first applied for
them, had not been taken without considerable debate at Athens : the party of
Pericles and Ephialtes, habitually in opposition to Cimon, and partisans of
the forward democratical movement, had strongly discountenanced it, and
conjured their countrymen not to assist in renovating and strengthening their
most formidable rival. Perhaps the previous engagement of the Lacedaemonians to
invade Attica on behalf of the Thasians may have become known to them, though
not so formally as to exclude denial; and even supposing this engagement
to have remained unknown at that time to every one, there were not wanting
other grounds to render the policy of refusal plausible. But Cimon, with an
earnestness which even the philo-Laconian Critias afterwards characterized as a
sacrifice of the grandeur of Athens to the advantage of Lacedaimon, employed
all his credit and influence in seconding the application. The maintenance of
alliance with Sparta on equal footing,—peace among the great powers of Greece,
and common war against Persia,—together with the prevention of all farther
democratical changes in Athens,—were the leading points of Ins political creed.
As yet, both his personal and political ascendency was predominant over his
opponents : as yet, there was no manifest conflict, which had only just begun
to show itself in the case of Thasos, between the maritime power of Athens, and
the union of land-force under Sparta: and Kimon could still treat both of these
phenomena as coexisting necessities of Hellenic well-being. Though no way
distinguished as a speaker, he carried with him the Athenian assembly by
appealing to a large and generous patriotism, which forbade them to permit the
humiliation of Sparta. “Consent not to see Hellas lamed of one leg, and Athens
drawing without her yoke-fellow; such was his language, as we learn from his
friend and companion, the Chian poet Ion: and in the lips of Cimon it proved
effective. It is a speech of almost melancholy interest since ninety years
passed over before such an appeal was ever again addressed to an Athenian
assembly. The despatch of the auxiliaries was thus dictated by a generous
sentiment, to the disregard of what might seem political prudence: and we may
imagine the violent reaction which took place in Athenian feeling, when the
Lacedemonians repaid them by singling out their troops from all the other
allies as objects of insulting suspicion,—we may imagine the triumph of Pericles
and Ephialtes, who had opposed the mission,—and the vast loss of influence to Cimon,
who had brought it about,—when Athens received again into her public assemblies
the hoplites sent back from Ithome.
Both
in the internal constitution, indeed,—of which more presently,—and in the
external policy" of Athens, the dismissal of these soldiers was pregnant
with results. The Athenians immediately passed a formal resolution to renounce
the alliance between themselves and Lacedaemon against the Persians. They did
more: they looked out for land enemies of Lacedaemon, with whom to ally
themselves. Of these by far the first, both in Hellenic rank and in real power,
was Argos. That city, neutral during the Persian invasion, had now recovered
from the effects of the destructive defeat suffered about thirty years before
from the Spartan king Kleomenes: the sons of the ancient citizens had grown to
manhood, and the temporary predominance of the Perioeki, acquired in
consequence of the ruinous loss of citizens in that defeat, had been again put
down. In the neighborhood of Argos, and dependent upon it, were situated Mycenae,
Tiryns, and Midea— small in power and importance, but rich in mythical renown.
Disdaining the in glorious example of Argos, at the period of danger, these
towns had furnished contingents both to Thermopylae and Plataea, which their
powerful neighbor had been unable either to prevent at the time, or to avenge
afterwards, from fear of the intervention of Lacedaemon. But so soon as the
latter was seen to be endangered and occupied at home, with a formidable
Messenian revolt, the Argeians availed themselves of the opportunity to attack
not only Mycenae and Tiryns, but also Orneae, Midea, and other semi-dependent
towns around them. Several of these were reduced; and the inhabitants robbed of
their autonomy, were incorporated with the domain of Argos: but the Mycenaeans,
partly from the superior gallantry of their resistance, partly from jealousy of
their mythical renown, were either sold as slaves or driven into banishment.
Through these victories Argos was now more powerful than ever, and the propositions
of alliance made to her by Athens, while strengthening both the two against
Lacedaemon, opened to her a new chance of recovering her lost headship in
Peloponnesus. The Thessalians became members of this new alliance, which was a
defensive alliance against Lacedaemon: and hopes were doubtless entertained of
drawing in some of the habitual allies of the latter.
The
new character which Athens had thus assumed, as a competitor for landed
alliances, not less than for maritime ascendency, came opportunely for the
protection of the neighboring town of Megara. It appears that Corinth, perhaps
instigated, like Argos, by the helplessness of the Lacedaemonians, had been
making border encroachments on the one side upon Kleonte, on the other side
upon Megara : on which ground the latter, probably despairing of protection
from Lacedaemon, renounced the Lacedaemonian connection, and obtained
permission to enrol herself as an ally of Athens. This was an acquisition of
signal value to the Athenians, since it both opened to them the whole range of
territory across the outer isthmus of Corinth to the interior of the Krissaean
gulf, on which the Megarian port of Pegae was situated, and placed them in
possession of the passes of Mount Geraneia, so that they could arrest the march
of a Peloponessian army over the isthmus, and protect Attica from invasion. It
was moreover, of great importance in its effects on Grecian politics: for it
was counted as a wrong by Lacedaemon, gave deadly offence to the Corinthians,
and lighted up the flames of war between them and Athens; their allies, the
Epidaurians and Aeginetans, taking their part. Though Athens had not yet been
guilty of unjust encroachment against any Peloponnesian state, her ambition
and energy had inspired universal awe; while the maritime states in the
neighborhood, such as Corinth, Epidaurus, and Egina, saw these terror-striking
qualities threatening them at their own doors, through her alliance with Argos
and Megara. Moreover, it is probable that the ancient feud between the
Athenians and Aeginetans, though dormant since a little before the Persian invasion,
had never been appeased or forgotten: so that the Aeginetans, dwelling within
sight of Peiraeus, were at once best able to appreciate, and most likely to
dread, the enormous maritime power now possessed by Athens. Perikles was wont
to call Egina the eyesore of Piraeus : but we may be very sure that Peiraeus,
grown into a vast fortified port, within the existing generation, was in a much
stronger degree the eyesore of Egina.
The
Athenians were at this time actively engaged in prosecuting the war against
Persia, having a fleet of no less than two hundred sail, equipped by or from
the confederacy collectively, now serving in Cyprus and on the Phenician coast.
Moreover, the revolt of the Egyptians under Inaros, about 460 BC, opened to
them new means of action against the Great King; and their fleet, by invitation
of the revolters, sailed up the Nile to Memphis, where there seemed at first a
good prospect of throwing off the Persian dominion. Yet in spite of so great an
abstraction from their disposable force, their military operations near home were
conducted with unabated vigor: and the inscription which remains,—a
commemoration of their citizens of the Erechtheid tribe, who were slain in one
and the same year, in Cyprus, Egypt, Phenicia, the Halieis, Egina, and Megara,—brings
forcibly before us that energy which astonished and even alarmed their contemporaries.
Their first proceedings at Megara were of a mature altogether novel, in the
existing condition of Greece. It was necessary for the Athenians to protect
their new ally against the superiority of Peloponnesian land-force, and to
insure a constant communication with it by sea; but the city, like most of the
ancient Hellenic towns, was situated on a hill at some distance from the sea,
separated from its port Nisaea by a space of nearly one mile. One of the
earliest proceedings of the Athenians was to build two lines of wall, near and
parallel to each other, connecting the city with Nisaea, so that the two thus
formed one continuous fortress, wherein a standing Athenian garrison was
maintained, with the constant means of succor from Athens in case of need.
These “long walls,” though afterwards copied in other places, and on a larger
scale, were at that juncture an ingenious invention, for the purpose of
extending the maritime arm of Athens to an inland city.
The
first operations of Corinth, however, were not directed against Megara. The
Athenians having undertaken a landing in the territory of the Halieis, the
population of the southern Argolic peninsula, bordering on Troezen and
Hermione, were defeated on land by the Corinthian and Epidaurian forces : possibly
it may have been in this expedition that they acquired possession of Troezen,
which we find afterwards in their dependence, without knowing when it became
so. But in a sea-fight which took place off the island of Kekryphaleia, between
Aegina and the Argolic peninsula, the Athenians gained the victory. After this
victory and defeat,—neither of them apparently very decisive,—the Aeginetans
began to take a more energetic part in the war, and brought out their full
naval force, together with that of their allies,—Corinthians, Epidaurians, and
other Peloponnesians : while Athens equipped a fleet of corresponding
magnitude, summoning her allies also: though we do not know the actual numbers
on either side. In the great naval battle which ensued off the island of Aegina,
the superiority of the new nautical tactics, acquired by twenty years’ practice
of the Athenians since the Persian war—over the old Hellenic ships and seamen,
as shown in those states where, at the time of the battle of Marathon, the
maritime strength of Greece had resided,—was demonstrated by a victory most
complete and decisive. The Peloponnesian and Dorian seamen had as yet had no
experience of the improved seacraft of Athens and when we find how much they
were disconcerted with it, even twenty-eight years afterwards, at the beginning
of the Peloponnesian war, we shall not wonder at its destructive effect upon
them in this early battle. The maritime power of Aegina was irrecoverably
ruined: the Athenians captured seventy ships of war. landed a large force upon
the island, and commenced the siege of the city by land as well as by sea.
If
the Lacedaemonians had not been occupied at home by the blockade of Ithome,
they would have been probably induced to invade Attica as a diversion to the Aeginetans;
especially as the Persian Megabazus came to Sparta at this time on the part of
Artaxerxes to prevail upon them to do so, in order that the Athenians might be
constrained to retire from Egypt: this Persian brought with him a large sum of
money, but was nevertheless obliged to return without effecting his mission.
The Corinthians and Epidaurians, however, while they carried to Aegina a
reinforcement of three hundred hoplites, did their best to aid her farther by
an attack upon Megara; which place, it was supposed, the Athenians could not
possibly relieve without withdrawing their forces from Aegina, inasmuch as so
many of their men were at the same time serving in Egypt. But the Athenians
showed themselves equal to all these three exigencies at one and the same time,—to
the great disappointment of their enemies. Myronides marched from Athens to
Megara at the head of the citizens in the two extremes of military age, old and
young; these being the only troops at home. He fought the Corinthians near the
town, gaining a slight, but debatable advantage, which he commemorated by a
trophy, as soon as the Corinthians had returned home. But the latter when they
arrived at home, were so much reproached by their own old citizens, for not
having vanquished the refuse of the Athenian military force, that they
returned back at the end of twelve days and erected a trophy on their side,
laying claim to a victory in the past battle. The Athenians, marching out of
Megara, attacked them a second time, and gained on this occasion a decisive
victory. The defeated Corinthians were still more unfortunate in their
retreat; for a body of them, missing their road, became entangled in a space of
private ground, inclosed on every side by a deep ditch, and having only one
narrow entrance. Myronides, detecting this fatal mistake, planted his hoplites
at the entrance to prevent their escape, and then surrounded the enclosure with
his lightarmed troops, who, with their missile weapons, slew all the Corinthian
hoplites, without possibility either of flight or resistance. The bulk of the
Corinthian army effected their retreat, but the destruction of this detachment
was a sad blow to the city.
Splendid
as the success of the Athenians had been during this year, both on land and at
sea, it was easy for them to foresee that the power of their enemies would
presently be augmented by the Lacedaemonians taking the field. Partly on this
account,—partly also from the more energetic phase of democracy, and the
long-sighted views of Pericles, which were now becoming ascendent in the city,—the
Athenians began the stupendous undertaking of connecting Athens with the sea by
means of long walls. The idea of this measure had doubtless been first suggested
by the recent erection of long walls, though for so much smaller a distance,
between Megara and Nisaea : for without such an intermediate stepping-stone,
the idea of a wall forty stadia long (equal to four and a half miles) to join
Athens with Peiraeus, and another wall of thirty-five stadia (equal to about
four miles) to join it with Phalerum, would have appeared extravagant even to
the sanguine temper of Athenians,—as it certainly would have seemed a few years
earlier to Themistocles himself. Coming as an immediate sequel of great recent
victories, and while Aegina, the great Dorian naval power, was prostrate and
under blockade, it excited the utmost alarm among the Peloponnesians,—being
regarded as the second great stride, at once conspicuous and of lasting effect,
in Athenian ambition, next to the fortification of Peiraeus. But besides this
feeling in the bosom of enemies, the measure was also interwoven with the
formidable contention of political parties then going on at Athens. Cimon had
been recently ostracized; and the democratical movement pressed by Perikles and
Ephialtes—of which more presently—was in its full tide of success, yet not
without a violent and unprincipled opposition on the part of those who
supported the existing constitution. Now, the long walls formed a part of the
foreign policy of Perikles, continuing on a gigantic scale the plans of
Themistokles when he first schemed the Peiraeus. They were framed to render
Athens capable of carrying on war against any superiority of landed attack, and
of bidding defiance to the united force of Peloponnesus. But though thus
calculated for contingencies which a long-sighted man might see gathering in
the distance, the new walls were, almost on the same grounds, obnoxious to a
considerable number of Athenians: to the party recently headed by Cimon, who
were attached to the Lacedaemonian connection, and desired above all things to
maintain peace at home, reserving the energies of the state for anti-Persian
enterprise : to many landed proprietors in Attica, whom they seemed to threaten
with approaching invasion and destruction of their territorial possessions : to
the rich men and aristocrats of Athens, averse to a still closer contact and
amalgamation with the maritime multitude in Piraeus: lastly, perhaps, to a
certain vein of old Attic feeling, which might look upon the junction of Athens
with the separate demes of Peiraeus and Phalerum as effacing the special
associations connected with the holy rock of Athene. When, to all these grounds
of opposition, we add, the expense and trouble of the undertaking itself, the
interference with private property, the peculiar violence of party which happened
then to be raging, and the absence of a large proportion of military citizens
in Egypt,—we shall hardly be surprised to find that the projected long walls
brought on a risk of the most serious character both for Athens and her
democracy. If any farther proof were wanting of the vast importance of these
long walls, in the eyes both of friends and of enemies, we might find it in the
fact, that their destruction was the prominent mark of Athenian humiliation
after the battle of Aegos Potamos, and their restoration the immediate boon of
Pharnabazus and Konon after the victory of Cnidus.
Under
the influence of the alarm now spread by the proceedings of Athens, the
Lacedaemonians were prevailed upon to undertake an expedition out of
Peloponnesus, although the Helots in Ithome were not yet reduced to surrender.
Their force consisted of fifteen hundred troops of their own, and ten thousand
of their various allies, under the regent Nikomedes. The ostensible motive, or
the pretence, for this march, was the protection of the little territory of
Loris against the Phocians, who had recently invaded it and taken one of its
three towns. The mere approach of so large a force immediately compelled the
Phocians to relinquish their conquest, but it was soon seen that this was only
a small part of the objects of Sparta, and that her main purposes, under
instigation of the Corinthians, were directed against the aggrandizement of
Athens. It could not escape the penetration of Corinth, that the Athenians
might presently either enlist or constrain the towns of Boeotia into their
alliance, as they had recently acquired Megara, in addition to their previous
ally, Plataea: for the Boeotian federation was at this time much disorganized,
and Thebes, its chief, had never recovered her ascendency since the discredit
of her support lent to the Persian invasion. To strengthen Thebes, and to
render her ascendency effective over the Boeotian cities, was the best way of
providing a neighbor at once powerful and hostile to the Athenians, so as to
prevent their farther aggrandizement by land: it was the same policy as
Epaminondas pursued eighty years afterwards in organizing Arcadia and Messene
against Sparta. Accordingly, the Peloponnesian force was now employed partly in
enlarging and strengthening the fortifications of Thebes herself, partly in constraining
the other Boeotian cities into effective obedience to her supremacy: probably
by placing their governments in the hands of citizens of known oligarchical
politics, and perhaps banishing suspected opponents. To this scheme
the Thebans lent themselves with earnestness; promising to keep down for the
future their border neighbors, so as to spare the necessity of armies coming
from Sparta.
But
there was also a farther design, yet more important, in contemplation by the
Spartans and Corinthians. The oligarchical opposition at Athens were so
bitterly hostile to the Long Walls, to Pericles, and to the democratical
movement, that several of them opened a secret negotiation with the
Peloponnesian leaders, inviting them into Attica, and entreating their aid in
an internal rising for the purpose not only of putting a stop to the Long
Walls, but also of subverting the democracy. And the Peloponnesian army, while
prosecuting its operations in Boeotia, waited in hopes of seeing the Athenian
malcontents in arms, encamping at. Tanagra, on the very borders of Attica, for
the purpose of immediate cooperation with them. The juncture was undoubtedly
one of much hazard for Athens, especially as the ostracized Cimon and his
remaining friends in the city were suspected of being implicated in the
conspiracy. But the Athenian leaders, aware of the Lacedaemonian operations in Boeotia,
knew also what was meant by the presence of the army on their immediate
borders, and took decisive measures to avert the danger. Having obtained a
reinforcement of one thousand Argeians and some Thessalian horse, they marched
out to Tanagra, with the full Athenian force then at home ; which must, of
course, have consisted chiefly of the old and the young, the same who had
fought under Myronides at Negara; for the blockade of Aegina was still going
on. Nor was it possible for the Lacedaemonian army to return into Peloponnesus
without fighting; for the Athenians, masters of the Megarid, were in possession
of the difficult highlands of Geraneia, the road of march along the isthmus;
while the Athenian fleet, by means of the harbor of Pegae, was prepared to
intercept them, if they tried to come by sea. across the Krissaean gulf, by
which way it would appear that they had come out. Near Tanagra, a bloody
battle took place between the two armies, wherein the Lacedaemonians were
victorious, chiefly from the desertion of the Thessalian horse, who passed over
to them in the very heat of the engagement. But though the advantage was on
their side, it was not sufficiently decisive to favor the contemplated rising
in Attica: nor did the Peloponnesians gain anything by it, except an
undisturbed retreat over the highlands of Geraneia, after having partially
ravaged the Megarid.
Though
the battle of Tanagra was a defeat, yet there were circumstances connected with
it which rendered its effects highly beneficial to Athens. The ostracized Cimon
presented himself on the field as soon as the army had passed over the
boundaries of Attica, requesting to be allowed to occupy his station as an
hoplite and to fight in the ranks of his tribe,—the Oeneis. But such was the
belief, entertained by the members of the senate and by his political enemies
present, that he was an accomplice in the conspiracy known to be on foot, that
permission was refused and he was forced to retire. In departing, he conjured
his personal friends, Euthippus, of the deme Anaphlystus, and others, to behave
in such a manner as might wipe away the stain resting upon his fidelity, and in
part also upon theirs. His friends retained his panoply, and assigned to it the
station in the ranks which he would himself have occupied: they then entered
the engagement with desperate resolution, and one hundred of them fell side by
side in their ranks. Pericles, on his part, who was present among the hoplites
of his own tribe, the Akamantis, aware of this application and repulse of
Kimon, thought it incumbent upon him to display not merely his ordinary
personal courage, but an unusual recklessness of life and safety, though it
happened that he escaped unwounded. All these incidents wrought about a
generous sympathy and spirit of compromise among the contending parties at
Athens, while the unshaken patriotism of Kimon and his friends discountenanced
and disarmed those conspirators who had entered into correspondence with the
enemy, at the same time that it roused a repentant admiration towards the
ostracized leader himself. Such was the happy working of this new sentiment
that a decree was shortly proposed and carried,—proposed too, by Pericles
himself,—to abridge the ten years of Kimon’s ostracism, and permit his immediate
return. We may recollect that, under circumstances partly analogous,
Themistokles had himself proposed the restoration of his rival Aristeides from
ostracism, a little before the battle of Salamis : and in both
cases, the suspension of enmity between the two leaders was partly the sign,
partly also the auxiliary cause, of reconciliation and renewed fraternity
among the general body of citizens. It was a moment analogous to that salutary
impulse of compromise, and harmony of parties, which followed the extinction of
the oligarchy of Four Hundred, forty-six years afterwards, and on which
Thucydides dwells emphatically as the salvation of Athens in her distress,—a
moment rare in free communities generally, not less than among the jealous
competitors for political ascendency at Athens.
So
powerful was this burst of fresh patriotism and unanimity after the battle of
Tanagra, which produced the recall of Cimon, and appears to have overlaid the
preexisting conspiracy, that the Athenians were quickly in a condition to wipe
off the stain of their defeat. It was on the sixty-second day after the battle
that they undertook an aggressive march under Myronides into Boeotia : the
extreme precision of this date,—being the single case throughout the summary of
events between the Persian and Peloponnesian wars, wherein Thucydides is thus
precise, marks how strong an impression it made upon the memory of the
Athenians. At the battle of Oenophyta, engaged against the aggregate Theban and
Boeotian forces,—or, if Diodorus is to be trusted, in two battles, of which
that of Oenophyta was the last, Myronides was completely victorious. The
Athenians became masters of Thebes as well as of the remaining Boeotian towns;
reversing all the arrangements recently made by Sparta,—establishing
democratical governments,—and forcing the aristocratical leaders, favorable to
Theban ascendency and Lacedaemonian connection, to become exiles. Nor was it
only Boeotia which the Athenians thus acquired : Phocis and Locris were both
successively added to the list of their dependent allies,—the former being in
the main friendly to Athens and not disinclined to the change, while the latter
were so decidedly hostile that one hundred of their chiefs were detained and
sent to Athens as hostages. The Athenians thus extended their influence,—maintained
through internal party-management, backed by the dread of interference from
without in case of need,—from the borders of the Corinthian territory,
including both Megara and Pegae to the strait of Thermopylae.
These
important acquisitions were soon crowned by the completion of the Long Walls
and the conquest of Aegina. That island, doubtless starved out by its
protracted blockade, was forced to capitulate on condition of destroying its
fortifications, surrendering all its ships of war, and submitting to annual tribute
as a dependent ally of Athens. The reduction of this once powerful maritime
city, marked Athens as mistress of the sea on the Peloponnesian coast not less
than on the Aegean. Her admiral Tolmides displayed her strength by sailing
round Peloponnesus, and even by the insult of burning the Lacedaemonian ports of
Methone and of Gythium. He took Chalcis, a possession of the Corinthians, and Naupaktus
belonging to the Ozolian Locrians, near the mouth of the Corinthian gulf,—disembarked
troops near Sicyon with some advantage in a battle against opponents from that
town, and either gained or forced into the Athenian alliance not only Zakynthus
and Cephalonia, but also some of the towns of Achaia; for we afterwards find
these latter attached to Athens without knowing when the connection began.
During
the ensuing year the Athenians renewed their attack upon Sicyon, with a force
of one thousand hoplites under Pericles himself, sailing from the Megarian
harbor of Pegae in the Krissaian gulf. This eminent man, however, gained no
greater advantage than Tolmides,—defeating the Sicyonian forces in the field
and driving them within their walls : he afterwards made an expedition into
Akarnania, taking the Achaean allies in addition to his own forces, but
miscarried in his attack on Oeniadae and accomplished nothing. Nor were the
Athenians more successful in a march undertaken this same year against
Thessaly, for the purpose of restoring Orestes, one of the exiled princes or
nobles of Pharsalus. Though they took with them an imposing force, including
their Boeotian and Phocian allies, the powerful Thessalian cavalry forced them
to keep in a compact body and confined them to the ground actually occupied by
their hoplites; while all their attempts against the city failed, and their
hopes of internal rising were disappointed.
Had
the Athenians succeeded in Thessaly, they would have acquired to their alliance
nearly the whole of extra-Peloponnesian Greece: but even without Thessaly their
power was prodigious, and had now attained a maximum height, from which it
never varied except to decline. As a counterbalancing loss against so many
successes, we have to reckon their ruinous defeat in Egypt, after a war of six
years against the Persians (bc 460
-455). At first, they had gained brilliant advantages, in conjunction with the
insurgent prince Inaros; expelling the Persians from all Memphis except the
strongest part, called the White Fortress: and such was the alarm of the
Persian king, Artaxerxes, at the presence of the Athenians in Egypt, that he
sent Megabazus with a large sum of money to Sparta, in order to induce the
Lacedaemonians to invade Attica. This envoy, however, failed, and an augmented
Persian force being sent to Egypt under Megabyzus, son of Zopyrus, drove the
Athenians and their allies, after an obstinate struggle, out of Memphis into
the island of the Nile called Prosopitis. Here they were blocked up for
eighteen months, until at length Megabyzus turned the arm of the river, laid
the channel dry, and stormed the island by land. A very few Athenians escaped
by land to Cyrene : the rest were either slain or made captive, and Inaros
himself was crucified. And the calamity of Athens was farther aggravated by the
arrival of fifty fresh Athenian ships, which, coming after the defeat, but
without being aware of it, sailed into the Mendesian branch of the Nile, and
thus fell unawares into the power of the Persians and Phoenicians; very few
either of the ships or men escaping. The whole of Egypt became again subject to
the Persians, except Amyrtaeus, who contrived, by retiring into the
inaccessible fens, still to maintain his independence. One of the largest
armaments ever sent forth by Athens and her confederacy was thus utterly
ruined.
It
was about the time of the destruction of the Athenian army in Egypt, and of the
circumnavigation of Peloponnesus by Tolmides, that the internal war, carried on
by the Lacedaemonians, against the Helots or Messenians at Ithome, ended. These
besieged men, no longer able to stand out against a protracted blockade, were
forced to abandon this last fortress of ancient Messenian independence,
stipulating for a safe retreat from Peloponnesus with their wives and
families, with the proviso, that if any one of them ever returned to
Peloponnesus, he should become the slave of the first person who seized him.
They were established by Tolmides at Naupaktus, which had recently been taken
by the Athenians from the Ozonan Lokrians,—where they will be found rendering
good service to Athens in the following wars.
After
the victory of Tanagra, the Lacedaemonians made no farther expeditions out of
Peloponnesus for several succeeding years, not even to prevent Boeotia and
Phocis from being absorbed into the Athenian alliance. The reason of this
remissness lay, partly, in their general character; partly, in the continuance
of the siege of Ithome, which occupied them at home; but still more, perhaps,
in the fact that the Athenians, masters of the Megarid, were in occupation of
the road over the highlands of Geraneia, and could therefore obstruct the march
of any army out from Peloponnesus. Even after the surrender of Ithome, the Lacedaemonians
remained inactive for three years, after which time a formal truce was
concluded with Athens by the Peloponnesians generally, for five years longer.
This truce was concluded in a great degree through the influence of Kimon, who
was eager to resume effective operations against the Persians; while it was not
less suitable to the political interests of Perikles that his most
distinguished rival should be absent on foreign service, so as not to
interfere with his influence at home. Accordingly, Cimon equipped a fleet of
two hundred triremes, from Athens and her confederates, and set sail for
Cyprus, from whence he despatched sixty ships to Egypt, at the request of the
insurgent prince Amyrtaeus, who was still maintaining himself against the
Persians amidst the fens,—while with the remaining armament he laid siege to
Kitium. In the prosecution of this siege, he died, either of disease or of a
wound. The armament, under his successor, Anaxikrates, became so embarrassed
for want of provisions that they abandoned the undertaking altogether, and
went to fight the Phoenician and Cilician fleet near Salamis, in Cyprus. They
were here victorious, first on sea, and afterwards on land, though probably not
on the same day, as at the Eurymedon; after which they returned home, followed
by the sixty ships which had gone to Egypt for the purpose of aiding Amyrtaeus.
From
this time forward no farther operations were undertaken by Athens, and her
confederacy against the Persians. And it appears that a convention was
concluded between them, whereby the Great King on his part promised two things:
To leave free, undisturbed, and untaxed, the Asiatic maritime Greeks, not
sending troops within a given distance of the coast: to refrain from sending
any ships of war either westward of Phaselis (others place the boundary at the
Chelidonean islands, rather more to the westward) or within the Kyanean rocks
at the confluence of the Thracian Bosphorus with the Euxine. On their side, the
Athenians agreed to leave him in undisturbed possession of Cyprus and Egypt.
Kallias, an Athenian of distinguished family, with some others of his
countrymen, went up to Susa to negotiate this convention : and certain envoys
from Argos, then in alliance with Athens, took the opportunity of going
thither at the same time, to renew the friendly understanding which their city had
established with Xerxes at the period of his invasion of Greece.
As
is generally the case with treaties after hostility,—this convention did little
more than recognize the existing state of things, without introducing any new
advantage or disadvantage on cither side, or calling for any measures to be
taken in consequence of it. We may hence assign a reasonable ground for the
silence of Thucydides, who does not even notice the convention as having been
made: we are to recollect always that in the interval between the Persian and
Peloponnesian wars, he does not profess to do more than glance briefly at the
main events. But the boastful and inaccurate authors of the ensuing century,
orators, rhetors, and historians, indulged in so much exaggeration and untruth
respecting this convention, both as to date and as to details,—and extolled as
something so glorious the fact of having imposed such hard conditions on the
Great King—that they have raised a suspicion against themselves. Especially,
they have occasioned critics to ask the very natural question, how this
splendid achievement of Athens came to be left unnoticed by Thucydides? Now
the answer to such question is, that the treaty itself was really of no great
moment: it is the state of facts and relations implied in the treaty, and
existing substantially before it was concluded. which constitutes the real
glory of Athens. But to the later writers, the treaty stood forth as the
legible evidence of facts which in their time wore passed and gone; while
Thucydides and his contemporaries, living in the actual fulness of the
Athenian empire, would certainly not appeal to the treaty as an evidence, and
might well pass it over, even as an event, when studying to condense the
narrative. Though Thucydides has not mentioned the treaty, he says nothing
which dis proves its reality, and much which is in full harmony with it. For
we may show, even from him : 1. That
all open and direct hostilities between Athens and Persia ceased, after the
last-mentioned victories of the Athenians near Cyprus: that this island is renounced
by Athens, not being included by Thucydides in his catalogue of Athenian
allies prior to the Peloponnesian war; and that no farther aid is given by
Athens to the revolted Amyrtaeus, in Egypt. 2. That down to the time when the
Athenian power was prostrated by the ruinous failure at Syracuse, no tribute
was collected by the Persian satraps in Asia Minor from the Greek cities on the
coast, nor were Persian ships of war allowed to appear in the waters of the Aegean,
nor was the Persian king admitted to be sovereign of the country down to the coast.
Granting, therefore, that we were even bound, from the silence of Thucydides,
to infer that no treaty was concluded, we should still be obliged also to
infer, from his positive averments, that a state of historical fact, such as
the treaty acknowledged and prescribed, became actually realized. But when we
reflect farther, that Herodotus certifies the visit of Kallias and other
Athenian envoys to the court of Susa, we can assign no other explanation of
such visit so probable as the reality of this treaty: certainly, no envoys
would have gone thither during a state of recognized war; and though it may be
advanced as possible that they may have gone with the view to conclude a
treaty, and yet not have succeeded,—this would be straining the limits of
possibility beyond what is reasonable.
We
may therefore believe in the reality of this treaty between Athens and Persia,
improperly called the Cimonian treaty : improperly, since not only was it
concluded after the death of Kimon, but the Athenian victories by which it was
immediately brought on were gained after his death. Nay, more,—the probability
is, that if Cimon had lived, it would not have been concluded at all; for his
interest as well as his glory led him to prosecute the war against Persia,
since he was no match for his rival Pericles, either as a statesman or as an
orator, and could only maintain his popularity by the same means whereby he had
earned it,—victories and plunder at the cost of the Persians. His death
insured more complete ascendency to Perikles, whose policy and character were
of a cast altogether opposite : while even Thucydides, son of
Melesias, who succeeded Cimon, his relation, as leader of the anti-Periclean
party, was also a man of the senate and public assembly rather than of
campaigns and conquests. Averse to distant enterprises and precarious
acquisitions, Perikles was only anxious to maintain unimpaired the Hellenic
ascendency of Athens, now at its very maximum : he was well aware that the
undivided force and vigilance of Athens would not be too much for this object,—nor
did they in fact prove sufficient, as we shall presently see. With such dispositions
he was naturally glad to conclude a peace, which excluded the Persians from all
the coasts of Asia Minor, westward of the Chelidoneans, as well as from all the
waters of the Aegean, under the simple condition of renouncing on the part of
Athens farther aggressions against Cyprus, Phenicia, Cilicia, and Egypt. The
Great King on his side had had sufficient experience of Athenian energy to fear
the consequences of such aggressions, if prosecuted; nor did he lose much by
relinquishing formally a tribute which at the time he could have little hope of
realizing, and which of course he intended to resume on the first favorable
opportunity. Weighing all these circumstances, we shall find that the peace,
improperly called Cimonian, results naturally from the position and feelings of
the contracting parties.
Athens
wits now at peace both abroad and at home, under the administration of Pericles,
with a great empire, a great fleet, and a great accumulated treasure. The
common fund collected from the contributions of the confederates, and
originally deposited at Delos, had before this time been transferred to the
acropolis at Athens. At what precise time this transfer took place, we cannot
state : nor are we enabled to assign the successive stages whereby the
confederacy, chiefly with the freewill of its own members, became transformed
from a body of armed and active warriors under the guidance of Athens, into
disarmed and passive tribute-payers, defended by the military force of Athens,—from
allies free, meeting at Delos, and self-determining, into subjects isolated,
sending their annual tribute, and awaiting Athenian orders. But it would appear
that the change had been made before this time: some of the more resolute of
the allies had tried to secede, but Athens had coerced them by force, and
reduced them to the condition of tribute-payers, without ships or defence; and
Chios, Lesbos, and Samos were now the only allies free and armed on the
original footing. Every successive change of an armed ally into a tributary,—every
subjugation of a receder,—tended of course to cut down the numbers, and enfeeble
the authority, of the Delian synod; and, what was still Athens it altered the
reciprocal relation and feelings both of worse, and her allies,—exalting the
former into something like a despot, and degrading the latter into mere passive
subjects.
Of
course, the palpable manifestation of the change must have been the transfer of
the confederate fund from Delos to Athens. The only circumstance which we know
respecting this transfer is, that it was proposed by the Samians,—the second
power in the confederacy, inferior only to Athens, and least of all likely to
favor any job or sinister purpose of the Athenians. It is farther said that,
when the Samians proposed it, Aristeides characterized it as a motion unjust,
but useful: we may well doubt, however, whether it was made during his
lifetime. When the synod at Delos ceased to be so fully attended as to command
respect,—when war was lighted up, not only with Persia, but with Aegina and
Peloponnesus,—the Samians might not unnaturally feel that the large accumulated
fund, with its constant annual accessions, would be safer at Athens than at
Delos, which latter island would require a permanent garrison and squadron to
insure it against attack. But whatever may have been the grounds on which the
Samians proceeded, when we find them coming forward to propose the transfer, we
may reasonably infer that it was not displeasing, and did not appear unjust, to
the larger members of the confederacy,—and that it was no highhanded and
arbitrary exercise of power, as it is often called, on the part of Athens.
After
the conclusion of the war with Aegina, and the consequences of the battle of Oenophyta,
the position of Athens became altered more and more. She acquired a large
catalogue of new allies, partly tributary, like Aegina,—partly in the same
relation as Chios, Lesbos, and Samos; that is, obliged only to a conformity of
foreign policy and to military service. In this last category were Megara, the
Boeotian cities, the Phocians, Locrians, etc. All these, though allies of
Athens, were strangers to Delos and the confederacy against Persia; and
accordingly, that confederacy passed insensibly into a matter of history,
giving place to the new conception of imperial Athens, with her extensive list
of allies, partly free, partly subject. Such transition, arising spontaneously
out of the character and circumstances of the confederates themselves, was thus
materially forwarded by the acquisitions of Athens extraneous to the
confederacy. She was now not merely the first maritime state of Greece, but
perhaps equal to Sparta even in land-power,—possessing in her alliance Megara, Boeotia,
Phocis, Locris, together with Achaea and Troezen, in Peloponnesus. Large as
this aggregate already was, both at sea and on land, yet the magnitude of the
annual tribute, and still more the character of the Athenians themselves, superior
to all Greeks in that combination of energy and discipline which is the grand
cause of progress, threatened still farther increase. Occupying the Megarian
harbor of Pegae, the Athenians had full means of naval action on both sides of
the Corinthian isthmus: but, what was of still greater importance to them, by
their possession of the Megarid, and of the highlands of Geraneia, they could
restrain any land-force from marching out of Peloponnesus, and were thus,
considering besides their mastery at sea, completely unassailable an Attica.
Ever since the repulse of Xerxes, Athens had been advancing in an uninterrupted
course of power and prosperity at home, as well as of victory and ascendency
abroad,—to which there was no exception, except the ruinous enterprise in
Egypt. Looking at the position of Greece, therefore, about 440 BC—after the conclusion
of the live years’ truce between the Peloponnesians and Athens, and of the
so-called Cimonian peace between Persia and Athens,—a discerning Greek might
well calculate upon farther aggrandizement of this imperial state as the
tendency of the age; and accustomed as every Greek was to the conception of
separate town-autonomy as essential to a freeman and a citizen, such prospect
could not but inspire terror and aversion. The sympathy of the Peloponnesians
for the islanders and ultramaritime states, who constituted the original
confederacy of Athens, was not considerable; but when the Dorian island of Aegina
was subjugated also, and passed into the condition of a defenceless tributary,
they felt the blow sorely on every ground. The ancient celebrity and eminent
service rendered at the battle of Salamis, of this memorable island, had not
been able to protect it; while those great Aeginetan families, whose victories
at the sacred festival-games Pindar celebrates in a large proportion of his
odes, would spread the language of complaint and indignation throughout their
numerous “guests” in every Hellenic city. Of course, the same anti-Athenian
feeling would pervade those Peloponnesian states who had been engaged in actual
hostility with Athens,—Corinth, Sicyon, Epidaurus, etc., as well as Sparta, the
once-recognized head of Hellas, but now tacitly degraded from her preeminence,
baffled in her projects respecting Boeotia, and exposed to the burning of her
port at Gythium, without being able even to retaliate upon Attica. Putting all
those circumstances together, we may comprehend the powerful feeling of dislike
and apprehension now diffused so widely over Greece against the upstart despot
city; whose ascendency, newly acquired, maintained by superior force, and not
recognized as legitimate,—threatened, nevertheless, still farther increase.
Sixteen years hence, this same sentiment will be found exploding into the
Peloponnesian war; but it became rooted in the Greek mind during the period
which we have now reached, when Athens was much more formidable than she had
come to be at the commencement of that war : nor shall we thoroughly appreciate
the ideas of that later period, unless we take them as handed down from the
earlier date of the five years’ truce, about 451446 bc.
Formidable as the Athenian empire both really was and appeared
to be, however, this widespread feeling of antipathy proved still stronger, so
that, instead of the threatened increase, the empire underwent a most material
diminution. This did not arise from the attack of open enemies; for during the
five years’ truce, Sparta undertook only one movement, and that not against
Attica : she sent troops to Delphi, in an expedition dignified with the name
of the Sacred War,—expelled the Phocians, who had assumed to themselves the
management of the temple,—and restored it to the native Delphians. To this the
Athenians made no direct opposition: but as soon as the Lacedaemonians were
gone, they themselves marched thither and placed the temple again in the hands
of the Phocians, who were then their allies. The Delphians were
members of the Phocian league, and there was a dispute of old standing as to
the administration of the temple,—whether it belonged to them separately or
to the Phocians collectively. The favor of those who administered it counted as
an element of considerable moment in Grecian politics; the sympathies of the
leading Delphians led them to embrace the side of Sparta, but the Athenians now
hoped to counteract this tendency by means of their preponderance in Phocis.
We are not told that the Lacedaemonians took any ulterior step in consequence
of their views being frustrated by Athens,—a significant evidence of the
politics of that day.
The
blow which brought down the Athenian empire from this its greatest exaltation,
was struck by the subjects themselves. The Athenian ascendency over Boeotia,
Phocis, Locris, and Euboea, was maintained, not by means of garrisons, but
through domestic parties favorable to Athens, and a suitable form of
government; just in the same way as Sparta maintained her influence over her Peloponnesian
allies. After the victory of Oenophyta, the Athenians had broken up the
governments in the Boeotian cities established by Sparta before the battle of
Tanagra, and converted them into democracies at Thebes and elsewhere. Many of
the previous leading men had thus been sent into exile: and at the same process
had taken place in Phocis and Locris, there was at this time a considerable
aggregate body of exiles, Boeotian, Phocian, Locrians, Euboean, Aeginetan,
etc., all bitterly hostile to Athens, and ready to join in any attack upon her
power. We learn farther that the democracy, established at Thebes after the
battle of Oenophyta, was ill-conducted and disorderly: which circumstances laid
open Boeotia still farther to the schemes of assailants on the watch for every
weak point. These various exiles, all joining their forces and concerting
measures with their partisans in the interior, succeeded in mastering
Orchomenus, Chaeronea, and some other less important places in Boeotia. The
Athenian general, Tolmides, marched to expel them, with one thousand Athenian
hoplites and an auxiliary body of allies. It appears that this march was
undertaken in haste and rashness: the hoplites of Tolmides, principally
youthful volunteers, and belonging to the best families of Athens, disdained
the enemy too much to await a larger and more commanding force: nor would the
people listen even to Pericles, when he admonished them that the march would be
full of hazard, and adjured them not to attempt it without greater numbers as
well as greater caution. Fatally, indeed, were his predictions
justified. Though Tolmides was successful in his first enterprise,—the
recapture of Chaeronaea, wherein he placed a garrison, —yet in his march,
probably incautious and disorderly, when departing from that place, he was
surprised and attacked unawares, near Koronaea, by the united body of exiles
and their partisans. No defeat in Grecian history was ever more complete or
ruinous. Tolmides himself was slain, together with many of the Athenian
hoplites, while a large number of them were taken prisoners. In order to recover
these prisoners, who belonged to the best families in the city, the Athenians
submitted to a convention whereby they agreed to evacuate Boeotia altogether:
in all the cities of that country, the exiles were restored, the democratical
government overthrown, and Boeotia was transformed from an ally of Athens into
her bitter enemy. Long, indeed, did the fatal issue of this action
dwell in the memory of the Athenians, and inspire them with an
apprehension of Boeotian superiority in heavy armor on land : but if the
hoplites under Tolmides had been all slain on the field, their death would
probably have been avenged and Boeotia would not have been lost,—whereas, in
the case of living citizens, the Athenians deemed no sacrifice too great to
redeem them. We shall discover hereafter in the Lacedaemonians a feeling very
similar, respecting their brethren captured at Sphakteria.
The
calamitous consequences of this defeat came upon Athens in thick and rapid
succession. The united exiles, having carried their point in Boeotia, proceeded
to expel the philo-Athenian goernment both from Phocis and Locris, and to
carry the flame of revolt into Euboea. To this important island Perikles
himself proceeded forthwith, at the head of a powerful force; but before he had
time to complete the reconquest, he was summoned home by news of a still more
formidable character. The Megarians had revolted from Athens : by a conspiracy
previously planned, a division of hoplites from Corinth, Sicyon, and Epidaurus,
was already admitted as garrison into their city : the Athenian soldiers who
kept watch over the Long Walls had been overpowered and slain, except a few who
escaped into the fortified port of Nisaea. As if to make the Athenians at once
sensible how seriously this disaster affected them, by throwing open the road
over Geraneia,—Pleistoanax, king of Sparta, was announced as already on his
march for an invasion of Attica. He did, in truth, conduct an army, of mixed
Lacedaemonians and Peloponnesian allies, into Attica, as far as the
neighborhood of Eleusis and the Thriasian plain. He was a very young man, so
that a Spartan of mature years, Kleandrides, had been attached to him by the
ephors as adjutant and counsellor. Perikles, it is said, persuaded both the one
and the other, by means of large bribes, to evacuate Attica without advancing
to Athens. We may well doubt whether they had force enough to adventure so far
into the interior, and we shall hereafter observe the great precautions with
which Archidamus thought it necessary to conduct his invasion, during the first
year of the Peloponnesian war, though at the head of a more commanding force.
Nevertheless, on their return, the Lacedaemonians, believing that they might
have achieved it, found both of them guilty of corruption. Both were banished:
Kleandrides never came back, and Pleistoanax himself lived for a long time in
sanctuary near the temple of Athene, at Tegea, until at length he procured his
restoration by tampering with the Pythian priestess, and by bringing her bought
admonitions to act upon the authorities at Sparta.
So
soon as the Lacedaemonians had retired from Attica, Perikles returned with his
forces to Euboea, and reconquered the island completely. With that caution
which always distinguished him as a military man, so opposite to the fatal
rashness of Tolmides, he took with him an overwhelming force of fifty triremes
and five thousand hoplites. He admitted most of the Euboean towns to surrender,
altering the government of Chalcis by the expulsion of the wealthy oligarchy
called the Hippobotae; but the inhabitants of Histiaea, at the north of the
island, who had taken an Athenian merchantman and massacred all the crew, were
more severely dealt with,—the free population being all or in great part
expelled, and the land distributed among Athenian kleruchs, or outsettled
citizens.
But
the reconquest of Euboea was far from restoring Athens to the position which
she had occupied before the fatal engagement of Koronaea. Her land empire was
irretrievably gone, together with her recently acquired influence over the
Delphian oracle; and she reverted to her former condition of an exclusively
maritime potentate. For though she still continued to hold Nisaea and Pegae,
yet her communication with the latter harbor was now cut off by the loss of
Megara and its appertaining territory, so that she thus lost her means of
acting in the Corinthian gulf, and of protecting as well as of constraining her
allies in Achaia. Nor was the port of Nisaea of much value to her, disconnected
from the city to which it belonged, except as a post for annoying that city.
Moreover, the precarious hold which she possessed over unwilling allies had
been demonstrated in a manner likely to encourage similar attempts among her
maritime subjects,—attempts which would now be seconded by Peloponnesian
armies invading Attica. The fear of such a combination of embarrassments, and
especially of an irresistible enemy carrying ruin over the flourishing
territory round Eleusis and Athens, was at this moment predominant in the
Athenian mind. We shall find Pericles, at the beginning of the Peloponnesian
war, fourteen years afterwards, exhausting all his persuasive force, and not
succeeding without great difficulty, in prevailing upon his countrymen to endure
the hardship of invasion,—even in defence of their maritime empire, and when
events had been gradually so ripening as to render the prospect of war
familiar, if not inevitable. But the late series of misfortunes had burst upon
them so rapidly and unexpectedly, as to discourage even Athenian confidence,
and to render the prospect of continued war full of gloom and danger. The
prudence of Perikles would doubtless counsel the surrender of their remaining
landed possessions or alliances, which had now become unprofitable, in order
to purchase peace; but we may be sure that nothing short of extreme temporary
despondency could have induced the Athenian assembly to listen to such advice,
and to accept the inglorious peace which followed. A truce for thirty years
was concluded with Sparta and her allies, in the beginning of 445 bc, whereby Athens surrendered Nisaea,
Pegae, Achaia, and Troezen—thus abandoning Peloponnesus altogether, and leaving
the Megarians—with their full territory and their two ports—to be included
among the Peloponnesian allies of Sparta.
It
was to the Megarians, especially, that the altered position of Athens after
this truce was owing: it was their secession from Attica and junction with the
Peloponnesians, which laid open Attica to invasion. Hence, arose the deadly
hatred on the part of the Athenians towards Megara, manifested during the
ensuing years,— a sentiment the more natural, as Megara had spontaneously
sought the alliance of Athens a few years before as a protection against the
Corinthians, and had then afterwards, without any known ill-usage on the part
of Athens, broken off from the alliance and become her enemy, with the fatal
consequence of rendering her vulnerable on the land-side. Under such
circumstances we shall not be surprised to find the antipathy of the Athenians
against Megara strongly pronounced, insomuch that the system of exclusion which
they adopted against her was among the most prominent causes of the
Peloponnesian war.
Having
traced what we may call the foreign relations of Athens down to this thirty
years’ truce, we must notice the important internal and constitutional changes
which she had experienced during the same interval.