CHAPTER
II
THE
ASCENDANCY OF SPARTA
I.
LYSANDER’S
SETTLEMENT
THE end of
the Peloponnesian War is one of the most clearly defined turning-points in
Greek History. No previous Greek war, as Thucydides pointed out, drew in such
large measure upon the resources of Greece, and none had a more decisive issue.
These facts, however, are hardly sufficient to establish the common opinion
that the Peloponnesian War was the culminating catastrophe of Greek History,
the ‘suicide of Greece,’ and that the later chapters of that history are but
the record of a prolonged death-agony. The damage inflicted upon Greece by the War
was by no means irreparable. Its wastage in life and wealth was hardly
proportionate to its extent and duration. Except before Syracuse and in the
concluding naval actions, the fighting was mostly desultory and resulted in no
heavy slaughter. On land the destruction of crops and even the despoiling of
plantations inflicted no loss which a few years’ cultivation could not repair.
On sea the ships of Athens and her allies, in whose hands the trade of Greece
was mostly gathered, had carried on with little interruption. Again, and this
is the most vital point, the effect of the War upon the mental life of the
Greeks was not permanently ruinous. No doubt the strain and exasperation of a
long-protracted conflict left its mark: in the fourth century the Greek people
lacked that youthful buoyancy which inspired it after the ‘great deliverance’
of the Persian Wars. But as yet its capacity for sustained effort and
constructive imagination was little impaired, as the history of Greek art,
literature and science, no less than of politics and strategy, declares. In
fine, the fourth century was not an age of senile decay, but of mature and
active manhood.
The
destruction of the Athenian Empire at the peace of 404 was a political event of the first magnitude.
At first sight it might appear an irreparable disaster, for that Empire
represented the first resolute attempt to solve the key problem of Greek
politics, the assembling of the scattered Greek communities into a United
States of Greece. But the seeds of decay had been planted in the Athenian
state-system when the Athenians on their own confession degraded a free
confederacy of allies into a ‘tyranny’ whose sanction lay in sheer force. The
Peloponnesian War merely hastened its dissolution, but did not cause it. Nay more,
the disappearance of the Athenian Empire left a clear site for a new and better
structure; and Sparta, upon whom the political reconstruction of Greece
devolved, possessed several important qualifications for that task. Although
the Spartans fell as far below the general average of Greek culture as the
Athenians surpassed it, their military prowess and the reputation which they
enjoyed for stability of character were more important assets in a political
leader than sheer brilliancy of intellect. After the Peloponnesian War their
prestige stood higher than that of the Athenians at the zenith of their
fortunes: indeed, as Xenophon said, ‘a Spartan could now do as he liked in any
Greek town.’ Last but not least, Sparta had in her Peloponnesian League a ready-made
pattern for the production of a general Hellenic League which should be at once
comprehensive and liberal.
It may be
objected that no Greek federation could be permanent, because the passion for
local autonomy overrode the sense of Greek nationality, and that Sparta of all
states could least afford to disregard this sentiment, since she had
represented the Peloponnesian War as a crusade against ‘tyranny’. True enough,
in the fifth century Greek jealousy for local autonomy had grown more powerful.
But Greek national consciousness had also been quickened, for the remembrance
of a common victory over Persia, and the universal comradeship of the Olympic
games, then at the zenith of their popularity, had stimulated the sense of
Greek solidarity. In the fourth century local dialects and alphabets were being
replaced by a common language and script; the theatre and the schools of Athens
were standardizing Greek thought; and above the babel of ephemeral politicians
who proclaimed that Greeks were made to destroy each other, the voice could be
heard of those who preached national union as the true goal of Greek politics.
Moreover the meaning of the word ‘autonomy’ requires definition. So long as a
Greek state was unfettered in its internal administration and had a voice in
the framing of any foreign policy for which it might have to fight, it retained
its ‘autonomy’, as that term was commonly understood. Thus autonomy was
perfectly compatible with membership of a federal state, and Sparta could quite
well proceed to form such a state without violating any of her pledges.
But would
Sparta grasp her chance? During the Persian Wars she had led the Greeks like
one who has greatness thrust upon him, and at the earliest moment she had
bolted from her responsibilities as a national leader. Her outlook was by her
own tradition almost confined to the Peloponnese. In 404, however, tradition
counted for nothing in the shaping of Spartan policy. The government of the
ephors, the guardians of Spartan tradition, had been virtually suspended, and
all real power was vested for the time being in the hands of the war-winner
Lysander. His victory at Aegospotami, no less complete and profitable than
Octavian’s ‘crowning mercy’ at Actium, gave him an authority like that which
Octavian used to remodel the policy of Rome. The future of Sparta and Greece
alike lay in Lysander’s hands: his was an opportunity such as had never come to
Themistocles or Pericles.
The architect
of the New Greece was not without qualifications for his task. He had more than
the usual Spartan capacity for leadership, for he was conspicuously free from
love of wealth, the Spartans’ besetting sin, and unlike most of his
fellow-citizens he could ‘slip on a fox hide where a lion’s skin did not
avail.’ He also had a talent for organization which had been one of the
decisive factors in the Peloponnesian War, and, in theory at least, he knew
that a people accustomed to freedom must be led, not driven. To such a man it
should have been possible to grasp the essentials of a lasting political
settlement, and to devise the means of carrying it into effect. But Lysander’s
good qualities were nullified by his consuming passion, a love of power which
blinded him to morality and even to reason. Among a people which had acquired
more than the elements of political decency he professed that ‘dice served to
cheat boys, and oaths to cheat men.’ Though all Greek history proclaimed that
despotism was not a stable form of government, he cast himself for the role of
a despot.
The methods
by which Lysander proceeded to establish his personal ascendancy over Greece
are illustrated by his dealings with Miletus in 405. In this town he instigated
a bloody oligarchic uprising and installed a government which in the nature of
things could only maintain itself by sheer force. Immediately after the
capitulation of Athens he led his victorious fleet to Samos, and having reduced
this one remaining Athenian ally he expelled the entire population and handed
over the island to a party of oligarchic refugees, at whose head he set up a
‘decarchy’ or Government of Ten (summer 404). Later in the year he made a tour
of the Aegean Sea with a fresh squadron which was nominally commanded by his
brother Libys but in reality stood under his own orders. The primary purpose of
this expedition seems to have been to confirm the surrender of the states which
had deserted Athens after Aegospotami, and to acquire a palpable proof of this
surrender in the shape of war-contributions. But the principal use which
Lysander made of his authority was to create more decarchies. It was probably
during this tour that the decarchic system of government was made general
throughout the Aegean area. In all the cities visited by him he placed despotic
power in the hands of a few men drawn from his own adherents. In many instances
these revolutions were attended with further violence—at Thasos, Lysander
massacred his opponents wholesale after decoying them with a false offer of
amnesty—in every case they left the city at the mercy of blind fanatics or mere
adventurers, the scum that bubbles up in the cauldron of civil war. Indeed the
more worthless the decarchies, the better they suited Lysander, for the less
they could rely on the support of the governed, the more they depended on him.
As a further precaution Lysander confirmed and probably extended the system of
garrisoning the Aegean cities with mercenary forces under Spartan ‘harmosts’ or
governors, whose maintenance became a charge upon the victims of this
supervision. By these means he at once gratified many influential Spartans who
coveted lucrative posts overseas, and provided a prop for the authority of the
decarchs.
In the
pursuit of his personal ambition Lysander threw away an opportunity of
constructive statesmanship such as is not often repeated in a nation’s history.
The best that can be said of his settlement is that it was too bad to last. As
we shall see presently, his prestige at home did not endure long, and after his
fall some of his worst measures were rescinded. Yet the Spartan empire never
recovered from the bad start which Lysander gave it. The example of arbitrary
interference in the affairs of the dependent states created a precedent which
had a fatal attraction for Lysander’s successors, and for the duration of
Sparta’s ascendancy the idea of an equitable Greek federation was lost out of
sight.
II.
SPARTAN
HOME AFFAIRS
Before we
trace the consequences of Lysander’s settlement in the Aegean area, it will be
well to pass under review the domestic crises of Sparta after the Peloponnesian
War, and her relations with the states of the Greek mainland.
One
unforeseen result of the War was a sudden glut of precious metals in Sparta.
The spoils of victory which Lysander and his agents brought home are credibly
reported to have amounted to some 2000 talents. The tribute imposed upon the
Athenians and their former allies is estimated to have exceeded 1000 talents,
and although this total is probably exaggerated we need not doubt that Sparta
exacted from her dependents more than she spent upon them. To these public
revenues should be added the money which Spartan officials diverted into their
own pockets, no inconsiderable sum, if these officials acted up to the usual
Spartan reputation for rapacity. This accumulation of money, it is true, was
strictly speaking illegal, for an ancient statute roundly forbade Spartan
citizens to possess gold or silver. But in an imperial state which had to
maintain mercenary forces and equip men-of-war such a statute was plainly
obsolete, and although the ephors made a rule that precious metal must still
not be gathered in private hands, this ordinance was only enforced in isolated
cases. The makers of the ordinance were readily bribed to turn a blind eye on
smugglers, and ere long the possession of gold at Sparta became a matter for
open boasting.
This influx
of treasure, it may safely be said, brought no good to its owners. The Spartans
did not devote it to productive purposes, but were content to remain dependent
on their Helot population for subsistence. Neither did they use it for the
relief of their own war-victims, the so-called ‘ Hypomeiones ’ or ‘ Inferiors.’
These were mostly citizens who had been prevented by military service from
supervising the cultivation of their land lots and had therefore fallen in
arrears in their contribution to their ‘phiditia’ or messes. By an inexorable
law these defaulters, while still liable to non-combatant duties at the
discretion of the ephors, lost the Spartan franchise and its social privileges.
The Inferiors constituted a peculiar danger, in that they had the ability,
which the Helots lacked, to organize rebellion. In 398 a conspiracy for a
general uprising of Inferiors, Helots and Perioeci was actually planned by a
disfranchised citizen named Cinadon. This plot, it is true, was easily
suppressed, for its author began by talking unguardedly and ended by betraying
his accomplices. But since nothing was
done to remove its causes, the discontent of the Inferiors remained a latent
peril to the state.
On the other hand,
there is little evidence of positive harm accruing from Sparta’s enrichment.
The accumulation of money consequent upon the Peloponnesian War must not be
confused with the concentration of landed wealth which Aristotle noted as a
characteristic of Sparta in his own day, and it is the latter, not the former
process, that caused the eventual rapid decline in Sparta’s citizen population.
Again, though we need not doubt that those who broke the laws by acquiring gold
and silver further contravened them by spending it on what would have seemed to
Lycurgus culpable luxury, we must admit that the discipline and endurance of
the Spartan home levy was not impaired thereby. In their last losing battles
the Spartans displayed the same steady valour as at Thermopylae or Plataea.
Another
consequence of Sparta’s aggrandizement was a severe strain upon her man-power.
It is not known whether the wastage of the Peloponnesian War had caused a
serious absolute decrease in Sparta’s population. But after 404 the enlargement
of her responsibilities created fresh calls upon her human resources. For her
overseas garrisons, it is true, she employed mercenaries drawn from other Greek
districts, but the governors and their staffs were mostly Spartan citizens, and
as overseas service was highly popular the numbers of the staff were probably
none too small. Thus Sparta’s foreign-service drafts depleted her effectives at
home. Hence the Spartan home levies were increasingly diluted with Perioeci.
During the Peloponnesian War the normal proportion of Perioeci to Spartans in a
field company was three to two; in 390 it was two to one. As a means of
increasing their effective man-power, and at the same time of palliating the
perpetual discontentment of the serf population, the ephors had, during the
Peloponnesian War, granted personal freedom to Helots who volunteered for
military service. But this policy was not carried beyond the experimental
stage. Enfranchisement on a large scale, by depleting the stock of serf labour
which was reckoned indispensable to the cultivation of the land, would have
undermined the economic basis of Spartan society. Rather than stint their land
the Spartans resolved to eke out their military resources with increased drafts
of Perioeci. It must be admitted that this makeshift was remarkably successful.
The Perioeci, being incorporated in the same platoons and squads as the
Spartans, acquired a sufficient measure of Spartan discipline, and their
loyalty stood the test of several hard-fought battles.
The chief
source of danger to Sparta’s internal stability lay in the revolutionary
ambitions of Lysander, which became a menace to the victors no less than to the
vanquished. After the reduction of Samos the Spartan generalissimo accepted
divine worship from his clients in that city and surrounded himself with a bevy
of courtpoets. On the monument erected by him at Delphi out of the spoils of
Aegospotami his figure was exhibited in the forefront amid a company of gods,
while his vice-admirals stood huddled along the back wall. Lysander’s arrogance
bore an ominous resemblance to the demeanour of Pausanias after his victories
in the Persian Wars and heralded a fresh attack upon the Spartan constitution.
The trial of
strength between the war-winner and the home authorities began in the autumn of
404, when a new board of ephors assumed office. This board proved less
complaisant to Lysander than its predecessors. It rebuffed him by breaking up a
colony of his former naval officers which he had established on his own
authority at Sestos, and it clearly proved its intention of disarming him by
taking the final settlement of Athenian affairs out of his hands and
transferring it to his enemy, King Pausanias. The policy of the ephors was
confirmed by the Council of Elders, who acquitted Pausanias of a charge of
treason preferred against him by Lysander’s friends after the king’s return
from Athens, and it was continued in 403—2 by the magistrates of that year. In
the autumn of 403 or the spring of 402 Lysander was permitted to make a fresh
tour of inspection among the overseas dependencies, but he acquired a new enemy
in the person of the Persian satrap Pharnabazus, whose territory he plundered
in the vain belief that his victim would not dare to ask for redress.
Pharnabazus however lodged a complaint at Sparta, and the ephors, who at this
stage had good reason not to incur an open breach with Persia, recalled
Lysander and several of his harmosts. Lysander obeyed the summons. Unlike the
warwinners who overturned the Roman Republic, he could not settle his quarrel
with the home authorities by a sudden military coup. The ephorate possessed
what the Roman Senate lacked, a home levy whom no foreign-service soldatesca could overawe.
But although
Lysander had been disarmed for the time being, he did not finally abandon his
hope of a revolution. The dictatorship which he had lost might yet be recovered
and set on a permanent basis if only he could secure for himself the succession
to the aged king Agis; the usurpation of absolute power which King Cleomenes
accomplished in the third century would not lie beyond the means of King
Lysander in the fourth. Accordingly he conceived a plan of making the Spartan
kingship elective instead of hereditary, and under pretence of a pilgrimage he
visited the sanctuary of Zeus Ammon, and also sounded the oracles of Delphi and
Dodona, so as to obtain, more Lycurgeo, religious sanction for his
constitutional schemes. But the priests could tell the difference between a
Lycurgus and a Lysander, and, true to their usual practice, they refused to
abet political intrigue. Thus Lysander’s plan broke down at the outset, for
nothing short of a divine sanction could have commended his revolutionary
proposals to the Spartan folk-moot.
For a while
Lysander was reduced to a waiting role. But in 399 a new opportunity offered.
In that year the long expected death of King Agis brought about a disputed
succession. The claims of the heir-apparent Leotychidas were contested by Agis’
half-brother Agesilaus on the ground that Leotychidas was not a son of Agis but
of the Athenian Alcibiades. Into this fray Lysander threw himself with all his
vigour, hoping that Agesilaus, who had hitherto made no display of his talents
and ambitions, would permit the king-maker to exercise the royal power on his
behalf. The eventual success of Agesilaus was no doubt due in part to Lysander,
who explained away a warning from Delphi against a ‘lame reign’ as referring
not to his client’s physical deformity but to the halting pedigree of
Leotychidas. But Agesilaus also owed his election to other causes such as his
personal geniality, which had won him many friends, and, in any case, he was
not prepared to repay Lysander by becoming his puppet. As we shall see presently,
the new king took an early opportunity of declaring his independence, and
Lysander henceforth resigned himself to his reduction to the rank of an
ordinary citizen.
There was a
saying in Sparta that ‘Greece could not have endured two Lysanders’. This is an
understatement of the case. Had Lysander realized his ambitions, he would have
exercised a despotism in Greece as ruthless as that which Dionysius wielded in
Sicily, yet without the justification of a great national emergency which made
Dionysius a deliverer no less than an oppressor. Greece and Sparta alike would
have found a single Lysander beyond the limits of their endurance.
The reaction
of Sparta’s foreign conquests upon her domestic affairs was on the whole
singularly small. Her conservatism made her all but impervious to those
influences which transformed Rome after the Punic and Macedonian Wars.
III.
SPARTA’S
DEPENDENTS IN THE GREEK HOMELAND
In the
Peloponnese the authority of Sparta, which had been seriously impaired by her
early failures in the War, was not wholly restored by her later successes, for
the people of Elis took little or no part in the last campaigns against Athens,
and in defiance of Sparta’s ruling they retained possession of the borderland
of Triphylia. At the close of the War the Spartans took no immediate steps
against the Eleans, but in 401 they ordered them to surrender not only Lepreum
but all their other dependencies, and in the ensuing year they sent King Agis
at the head of a large allied force to coerce them. The Eleans offered a long
but purely passive resistance behind the walls of their fortified towns. Agis’
columns, being thus left free to ravage the countryside, did their work so
thoroughly and so persistently that in 399 the Eleans sued for peace. The terms
of the previous year’s ultimatum were now enforced upon them. Of the dependent
communities which were detached from them Triphylia and the villages of the Lower
Alpheus valley received their independence, the hill-country on the Arcadian
border was made over to the nearest Arcadian communities.
While the
Spartans thus repaid the Eleans in full for their insubordination, they offered
no return for the loyalty of their remaining allies. Considering that their
armies, and still more so their fleets, had been indispensable instruments of
Sparta’s victory over Athens, the loyal Peloponnesians were morally, if not
legally, entitled to a share of the war-booty, and had they gone further and
claimed a voice in the government of Sparta’s new empire overseas, they would
scarcely have exceeded their equitable rights. Yet the Spartans appropriated
all the fruits of victory to themselves and sent their confederates home empty-handed.
This shabby treatment of course did not make the Peloponnesians any the more
zealous in fulfilling their treaty obligations, and in their operations against
the democrats at the Piraeus, and against the Eleans, the Spartans lacked their
usual contingent from Corinth. As we shall see presently, the Corinthians did
not stop short at this species of passive resistance. On the other hand, there
is no good evidence that at this stage the Spartans introduced harmosts and
decarchies into the Peloponnese. Moreover, however much Sparta’s allies might
nurse their grievances, they could not readily forget that it was to her that
they owed the ‘pax Peloponnesiaca ’ which was their economic mainstay, and in Sparta’s
new empire those veterans of the war who wished to make a profession of
soldiering could find plenty of employment. The discontent in the Peloponnese
would probably not have passed beyond the smouldering stage, had not other
fires broken out close by.
Among the
neighbouring states the one which contained most inflammable material was
Athens. The misrule of the Thirty Tyrants could not but leave many bitter
memories here. After the restoration of the democracy several agents of the
Thirty had to stand a trial, and we may fairly assume that many victims of the
Thirty would have liked to wreak their vengeance on Sparta for installing and
abetting these oppressors. The soreness of feeling which the misrule of the
Thirty engendered is forcibly illustrated in the forensic speeches which the
orator Lysias, himself a victim of their cupidity, directed against one
surviving member of them, and against one of their agents. The deadly calm of
Lysias’ tone betrays a deep-seated resentment, and the irrelevant
vindictiveness with which he blackens the memory of Theramenes shows that his
anger was indiscriminate as well as profound.
Furthermore,
the lost empire of Athens could not be readily forgotten by the proletariat who
had found their livelihood in the navy and the administrative services, and by
the evicted landowners from the cleruchies. Indeed the hope of restoring the
spacious days of Pericles lived on in Athens for another half century and at
times became the determinant factor in Athenian politics. Nevertheless in the
early years of the restored democracy the desire for revanche was firmly
repressed, and the yoke of Sparta was borne with unfaltering acquiescence.
This
submissive policy was imposed upon Athens by a new political party which from
the fourth century onwards acquired an ever-increasing preponderance. Under
stress of the sufferings inflicted by the Peloponnesian War the more solid
elements of the Athenian population who subsisted on agriculture and industry
began to draw together in opposition to those who lived on the perquisites of
empire. After the restoration of 403 these ‘moderates’ made a better economic
recovery than the ‘imperialists’ whose vocation was now gone. In 401 their
numbers were increased by the break-up of the separatist settlement at Eleusis
and the repatriation of the moderate section among the emigres. Under the
leadership of some old associates of Theramenes who had acquired prestige by
sharing in Thrasybulus’ forlorn hope, the new party seized and for several
years maintained the initiative in shaping Athenian policy. Under their
influence the Athenian people abode strictly by the settlement of 403. The
amnesty to political offenders was made secure by a new law which required the
law-courts to stay all proceedings against defendants who could show that the
amnesty covered their case; and not a single clear instance of the amnesty
being broken is on record. To avoid opening up old wounds Anytus, one of the
‘moderate’ leaders, renounced his just claims to properties which had been
confiscated under the Thirty, and Thrasybulus himself waived his rights in the
same way. For fear of further complications the ‘moderates’ even defeated an
equitable proposal by Thrasybulus that the Athenian franchise should be
conferred en bloc upon those foreigners who had flocked to his standard,
and only allowed certain selected categories of metics to receive citizenship.
The obligations imposed upon Athens by Sparta were likewise observed with
religious care. In spite of financial difficulties which drove the Athenians to
issue plated coins and even to pronounce unjust sentences of confiscation on
well-to-do defendants in the courts, the debts contracted at Sparta by the
Thirty were honoured by their successors and gradually repaid, and Athenian
contingents were sent to serve under Spartan orders in Elis and Asia Minor.
From Athens the Spartans at first had nothing to fear.
The
conciliatory attitude of Athens towards Sparta stood in marked contrast to the
provocative policy of Thebes. This city owed to the Lacedaemonians its
restoration to the headship of the Boeotian League, and while it rendered good
service to Sparta during the Peloponnesian War it had fully repaid itself for
its exertions by systematically looting the occupied areas of Attica. But when
the Thebans claimed their share of the spoils of the maritime war, they were
met with a point-blank refusal, despite the fact that they were not dependents
of Sparta but free and equal allies. In return for this rebuff they both
refused assistance to Sparta in her campaign against Elis and furnished
assistance to the exiles whom the Thirty had banished from Athens, and Sparta
had endeavoured to outlaw from all Greece. A further cause of offence was
provided by Spartan activities in Thessaly where Thebes had hopes of establishing her own influence. A few years
later, when the Spartan king Agesilaus made an unauthorized but inoffensive
landing on the Boeotian coast, the Theban government drove him off with threats
of open force. Thus were laid the seeds of a long and bitter quarrel, which
presently broke out into open war. But the anti-Spartan party in Thebes had to
reckon with a strong minority who desired to restore good relations with
Sparta, and until they had won allies outside of Boeotia they were in no
position to try a fall with their former allies.
Of the
remaining Greek states Thessaly alone requires notice here. This district had
scarcely been touched by the turmoil of the Peloponnesian War, but ever since
the decay of its federal institutions it had been distracted by the conflicting
ambitions of its principal landlords, whose wealth enabled them to arm their
tenants or to hire professional troops. In 404 Lycophron, the chief noble of
Pherae, engaged and heavily defeated the armies of Larissa and other Thessalian
towns; but he was presently held in check by Aristippus, who had established a
quasi-despotic ascendancy in Larissa and provided himself with a strong
mercenary corps. These internal dissensions made Thessaly a prey to foreign
intervention. The Macedonian king Archelaus, who had successfully begun the
task of modernizing his country and organizing it for foreign conquest, entered
Thessaly on the invitation of some exiles from Larissa and made himself master
of that town (c. 400 BC). This encroachment on Greek soil by a prince who was an
ostentatious patron of Greek culture, yet was regarded by most Greeks as a
barbarian, made some impression beyond the borders of Thessaly. A leading Greek
rhetorician, Thrasymachus of Chalcedon, issued an appeal on behalf of Larissa,
whose gist is probably contained in an extant rhetorical exercise of the second
century A.D. The appeal was not without effect, for the Spartans, to whom it
was principally directed, actually sent a force which occupied the frontier
fortress of Heraclea and installed a garrison at Pharsalus (399 BC). These
operations, we may assume, were but the opening moves in a war of liberation
against the usurper Archelaus. But in the selfsame year the death of Archelaus,
which threw Macedonia into a state of prolonged confusion, automatically set
Larissa free. The Spartans thereupon turned their attention from Thessaly in
order to pursue with more energy another war of Hellenic deliverance, of which
we shall speak presently. For the time being Thessaly was left to its own
devices, and Medius, the successor of Aristippus at Larissa, resumed an
indecisive war with Lycophron.
This survey
of Greek affairs has shown that Sparta missed her chance of establishing a
permanent Hellenic peace and prepared for fresh inter-Hellenic conflicts by
estranging some of her chief allies. Yet her authority was not immediately
threatened with any active rebellion. Like the Athenian empire at the outset of
the Peloponnesian War, the Spartan empire at the beginning of the fourth
century was too strong to be overthrown without foreign intervention. The first
successful attack upon the Spartan empire originated not in Greece but in
Persia.
IV.
SPARTA’S
RELATIONS WITH PERSIA
Of all the
legacies which the Peloponnesian War bestowed upon Sparta none was more embarrassing
than the debt which she had contracted with Persia in accepting subsidies from
that power. By the terms of her pact she was bound to hand over to Persia ‘all
the land in Asia which belonged to the King’, i.e. all the Greek cities
of Asia Minor whom Sparta had but lately delivered from the yoke of Athens. At
the end of the War Sparta stood in an awkward dilemma. By honouring her
contract she would dishonour herself in the eyes of Greece. If she went back on
her promise, she would furnish Persia with a casus belli, and although
she might clear herself morally by offering to refund the subsidies, it was by
no means certain whether Persia would forego her legal rights and accept an
equitable compromise. Still less certain were the prospects of success in a
Persian war. True enough, Persia was not as strong as she was big. Under a
succession of weak kings, and none of them weaker than the reigning sovereign,
Artaxerxes II, she was beginning to dissolve into her component satrapies,
whose rulers were often disloyal both to the King and to each other; and her
military machine was woefully out of date. Given the loyal support of her
dependents new and old, Sparta need not have feared a trial of strength with
Persia, and a victorious Persian war would have been as good a cement for her
empire as it had been for the Delian League. But could Sparta make sure that
her home front would not fail her? In view of the course which events actually
took, she was entitled to have misgivings on this point.
The course which
Sparta actually adopted was a series of tacks between the opposite policies of
compliance and defiance. In 404, contrary to her compact, she concluded peace
with Athens without consulting Persia. On the Hellespontine seaboard, whose
satrap Pharnabazus as yet commanded little influence, she kept the Greek towns
in her own possession. On the other hand she ceded the Ionian towns to prince
Cyrus, whom she could not decently or safely offend. In 401, when Cyrus
rebelled against his brother, she gave him every facility to recruit Greek
mercenaries and thus incidentally to rid Greece of unemployed soldiers; yet
realizing that Cyrus might fail, or that if he succeeded he might become as
dangerous to Greece as his namesake, the founder of the Persian empire, she
gave him no overt support. After Cyrus’ death the ephors at first appeared
anxious to put themselves right with Artaxerxes. In 400 they forbade the
remnant of Cyrus’ Greek auxiliaries to settle down in Pharnabazus’ satrapy and
bundled them away into the backwoods of Thrace. But before the year was out
they changed their course and definitely broke with Persia.
The reason
for this sudden reversal of policy is to be found in the action of the satrap
Tissaphernes, who had been reduced during Cyrus’ governorship to the Carian
province, but after Cyrus’ death resumed control of Lydia. In 404 Tissaphernes
had seized Miletus, the chief Greek town on the Carian coast, and thrown a
garrison into it. In 400 he proceeded against the towns of Cyrus’ former province,
which had profited by Cyrus’ rebellion to slip out of Persian control, and laid
siege to Cyme. The threatened Greek cities appealed to Sparta, and not in vain.
It may be that Cyrus’ Anabasis and the retreat of the Ten Thousand were
beginning to alter Sparta’s ideas of Persian power. In any case, she had little
reason to give anything away to Tissaphernes, for this satrap, unlike Cyrus,
had never properly kept his part of the bargain with Sparta in the payment of
subsidies; and though Sparta might at a pinch have made an amicable cession of
Greek territory to Persia, she could not decently connive at its forcible
conquest.
In the autumn
of 400 the ephors dispatched an expeditionary force of some 5000 men, mostly
Peloponnesians, to Ephesus. On their arrival they discovered that Tissaphernes
had withdrawn from Cyme. But their commander Thibron, not to be denied, carried
the war into enemy country. After a preliminary foray into the Maeander valley,
where the Persian horse soon headed him off, he reinforced himself with the
6000 Greek survivors of Cyrus’ Anabasis, who now passed out of Thrace
into Spartan service, and in the summer of 399 opened a new attack in the hilly
hinterland of Cyme. In this broken country the Persian cavalry was unable to
molest his advance, and its impotence encouraged several local dynasts of Greek
origin, and chief among them the lords of the castle of Pergamum, to make
common cause with him. On the other hand Thibron made little headway against
strongholds which offered resistance. In spite of the contributions which he
had imposed upon his allies he ran short of funds; and not having realized
enough booty to pay his large forces he weakly gave them licence to plunder the
Greek towns where they were quartered. The ephors hereupon, while approving
Thibron’s policy of attack, recalled him to Sparta and entrusted the execution
of his plans to a former officer of Lysander named Dercyllidas.
The new
commander was content at first to carry on Thibron’s campaign; but, thanks to
the better discipline which he maintained and to the mutinous disposition of
the Greek mercenaries employed by the local dynasts, he met with prompt
success. In a whirlwind campaign of eight days he carried the whole coastline
of the Troad and the Scamander valley, and in the castle of Scepsis he seized
enough treasure to maintain his 8000 soldiers for a year. At the end of the
season the satrap of the Hellespontine region Pharnabazus, who had evidently
been caught unprepared, concluded a truce with Dercyllidas, and in the spring
of 398 he extended it over the whole of that year. This left Dercyllidas free
to undertake a minor but urgent task in the Gallipoli peninsula, where the
scattered Greek population was unable to protect its highly cultivated lands
from the inroads of plundering Thracians. These inroads Dercyllidas checked for
a while by repairing the fortifications on the Bulair isthmus.
So far the
Greeks had hardly crossed swords with Tissaphernes, who had, as was his wont,
left Pharnabazus in the lurch. Yet until Tissaphernes had been forced to come
to an agreement the Greek cities could enjoy no security. In 397 therefore the
ephors ordered Dercyllidas to attack Tissaphernes in his Carian province and
sent a small naval squadron to co-operate with him. But this double assault was
never carried out, for Tissaphernes, who had summoned Pharnabazus to his aid
and received his loyal support, was strong enough to threaten a counter-attack
upon the Ionian seaboard. Dercyllidas, who had advanced from Ephesus across the
Maeander, was caught up on his retreat along the river valley by the Persian
field force, and a panic which seized his Asiatic recruits nearly involved the
whole Greek army in disaster. But the Peloponnesians and Cyrus’ old troops held
firm, and Tissaphernes, who had seen Greek hoplites carrying all before them at
Cunaxa, called off his attack.
The campaign
of 397 having thus ended in a deadlock, the rival captains arranged an
armistice until the ensuing year and threw out feelers to ascertain the terms
of a definitive peace. At this stage it is likely that the Spartans would have
accepted any settlement that safeguarded the liberties of the Asiatic Greeks.
But the Persian commanders made an unreasonable stipulation that the Spartans
should withdraw all their troops without offering guarantees as to their own
movements. Their object in parleying was probably nothing more than to gain time
while a new Persian armament was being prepared in another quarter.
V.
THE
PERSIAN THALASSOCRACY
In the
previous winter Pharnabazus had paid a visit to the Persian court in order to
urge upon the King the need of a naval counter-stroke against the Greeks. So
successful was his suit that he obtained a commission to raise a fleet, and a
sum of 500 talents. With this fund he betook himself to Cyprus, which he had
selected for his naval base (spring 397). This island, a standing battleground
between Greeks and Phoenicians, had since 410 been almost wholly absorbed into
the dominion of a Greek captain of fortune named Evagoras. Having wrested the
city of Salamis from the Phoenicians by a daring coup de main and installed
himself as king of that town, Evagoras had attracted to his service adventurers
from all parts of Greece, and with their help he had made such systematic
conquests, that by 399 the Greeks had come to call him 'king of Cyprus’. Having
made these conquests without any commission from his overlord the Persian king,
he further compromised himself by neglecting to pay his tribute. But in 398 he
showed a sudden desire to put himself right with Persia and sent up the sums
due from him. The reason for this change of policy may be found in the
influence exerted upon him by his most distinguished guest, the former Athenian
admiral Conon, who was scheming to use Evagoras for the furtherance of his own
plans, the avenging of Aegospotami and the restitution of the Athenian empire.
Evagoras, who had a sentimental affection for Athens as the focus of Greek
culture, and had more than once rendered the Athenians political aid, fell in
so far with Conon’s proposals that he allowed him to send a petition to
Artaxerxes reinforcing Pharnabazus’ plea. It was no doubt in view of this
petition, which was presented at court on Conon’s behalf by the King’s Greek
house-surgeon Ctesias, that Pharnabazus resolved to use Evagoras and Conon as
his principal coadjutors in the naval war. On his arrival at Salamis he
presented Conon with an admiral’s commission from Artaxerxes and left him in
charge of the naval preparations. In the summer of 397, as we have seen,
Pharnabazus was back on the western front, where he joined hands with
Tissaphernes against Dercyllidas. The truce which the satrap subsequently
arranged with Dercyllidas was no doubt intended to let Pharnabazus’ naval
policy mature.
When news of
Persia’s naval effort reached Sparta, the ephors, realizing that the war was
taking a critical turn, convened a congress of their allies, the first since
404. The congress resolved on energetic counter-preparations and agreed to
raise a fresh expeditionary force of 8000 men for service under the new king
Agesilaus (winter 397—6). The decision of the congress was mainly due to
Lysander, who at this time still believed that he could use Agesilaus for his
own purposes and counted on restoring his dominion in the Aegean area through
the king’s agency. In the spring of 396 Lysander went out to Asia as chief of
staff to Agesilaus. He immediately set to work to secure appointments of all
sorts for his nominees. But the king readily divined Lysander’s purpose and
lost no time in asserting his authority. Although Agesilaus had hitherto
neither solicited nor received any high command, he was determined to make the
most of his present opportunity. Indeed he fancied himself a second Agamemnon
leading forth the Greeks in a new Trojan War, and it was in hopes of repeating
Agamemnon’s farewell sacrifices at Aulis that he made a preliminary excursion
to Boeotia, with results which we have already noticed. He therefore refused to
let Lysander exercise any patronage and presently dispensed with his services
altogether.
In the
campaigns of 396 and 395 Agesilaus revealed unsuspected powers of generalship,
and he was well served by his army, whom he infected with his own enthusiasm.
At the expiry of the armistice in the summer of 396, he hoodwinked Tissaphernes
by a pretended attack on Caria, and, having thus only Pharnabazus left to deal
with, made a bold advance into Phrygia, where he plundered freely until a
defeat inflicted upon his horsemen by the superior Persian cavalry compelled
him to retreat. Having reinforced his mounted contingent, Agesilaus resumed the
attack in the spring of 395. This time he played the double bluff on
Tissaphernes by proclaiming his intention to attack Sardes and keeping to it.
Advancing from Ephesus by way of Smyrna he arrived close to Sardes before
Tissaphernes, who had guessed that the real attack would fall on Caria, could
overtake him. Before the Persian infantry could come up he decoyed the horse
into an ambuscade and put it out of action for that season. Having thus won a
free road Agesilaus made a promenade up the Hermus and Cogamis valleys and back
along the Maeander. This expedition finally rid the Greeks of Tissaphernes, who
was now discredited at the Persian court and put to death at the instance of
the mother of his former rival Cyrus. His successor, the vizier Tithraustes,
showed even less fight; by offering a six months’ truce and a danegeld of 30
talents he treacherously persuaded Agesilaus to transfer his attention to
Pharnabazus. Agesilaus, being thus left free to attack Phrygia, now undertook a
truly ambitious invasion. Advancing up the Caicus he gained the Phrygian
plateau and came out on the Sangarius valley at Gordium. From here he struck
back along the river to the Sea of Marmora, establishing his winter quarters
within Pharnabazus’ grounds by Dascylium.
This foray,
the last which Agesilaus made on Asian soil, fell short of complete success, in
that the Spartan king failed to carry any fortified centre, and therefore could
not establish a secure line of communications. Nevertheless he had accomplished
a march of some 500 miles without serious hindrance from Pharnabazus, and he
had won over the hill-tribes as far east as Paphlagonia for a systematic attack
upon Pharnabazus’ province in 394. It is even reported that Agesilaus now
dreamt of lopping all Asia Minor from the Persian empire. Not that Agesilaus
was in any position to anticipate Alexander’s conquests. His cavalry was weak,
his siege-train non-existent, and his tactical ability did not match his
undoubted powers as a strategist. From end to end the Spartan campaigns in Asia
were mere predatory raids, and as the war went on it became increasingly clear
that the invaders could not force a decision. Yet these campaigns fully
attained their primary object of protecting the Greek towns; they demonstrated
afresh the invincibility of the Greek hoplite; and they brought together the
Spartans and their allies in a common enterprise. The reason for their
discontinuance after 395 is to be found not in their own lack of success, but
in Persia’s effective counter-attacks on other fronts.
In 396 the
Persian naval offensive was opened by Conon at the head of an advance squadron
of 40 ships, mostly manned by Greek rowers. This flotilla was all but destroyed
on its first venture, for the hitherto lethargic Spartan admiral, sallying
forth from his base at Rhodes, drove it into the Carian port of Caunus and put
it under blockade. The intervention of Tissaphernes and Pharnabazus, who were
at this time guaranteed by armistice against an attack from Agesilaus, saved
Conon from disaster, for on their approach the Spartan admiral raised the
blockade. A further reinforcement of 40 ships which Conon now received enabled
him to draw closer to Rhodes, where the mere news of his approach precipitated
a democratic revolution and defection from Sparta. The offerings which King
Artaxerxes dedicated to Athena at Lindus in memory of this event no more than
repaid a just debt, for the example of rebellion set by Rhodes eventually
changed the whole face of the war.
In its
immediate strategic effects, however, the revolt of Rhodes was of little
consequence, for Conon was unable to follow up his success. Owing to the
remissness of Artaxerxes in providing funds for the payment of his fleet, the
crews became mutinous and could scarcely be prevented from disbanding. It was
fortunate for Conon that in 395 no counter-attack was attempted by the Spartan
admiral, who was content to wait on some decisive move by Agesilaus on land.
After a year’s inaction Conon at length paid personal visits to Tithraustes and
to the Persian king (late 395). From both of these sources he drew fresh supplies
of money, and from the King he also obtained a commission for Pharnabazus to
assume the nominal supreme command by sea. In 394 Pharnabazus and Conon resumed
naval operations. To secure better co-operation between the Spartan army and
fleet, the ephors had left the choice of an admiral for this year in the hands
of Agesilaus, who gave the command to his brother-in-law Peisander, a man who
made up in resolution for what he lacked in experience. The new Spartan
commander at first showed no more fight than his predecessors. A change on the
home front, which we shall describe presently, had compelled Agesilaus to
abandon his projected campaign in the interior of Asia Minor and to withdraw
the greater part of his forces into Europe. While this retreat was in progress,
Peisander was content to cover his brother-in- law’s movements. But after
Agesilaus’ departure he offered battle near Cnidus, and with 85 ships of his
own engaged the Persian fleet, now augmented to some 100 sail (August 394). On
the centenary of Lade history repeated itself. While Peisander’s Peloponnesian
crews gave a good account of themselves, the contingents drawn from the insular
and Asiatic Greeks broke into a general flight, Peisander himself fell
fighting, and the whole of his fleet was sunk or scattered. At one stroke the
Persian navy became undisputed master of the Aegean Sea.
How are we to
account for the poor spirit displayed by a Greek squadron fighting on behalf of
Greek liberty against an enemy over whom the Greeks had held a moral ascendancy
since Salamis? In the first place, the Persian navy was largely manned by Greek
crews and led by a Greek admiral. Secondly, Sparta’s insular and Asiatic
dependents had come to the conclusion that the price paid by them for Spartan
protection was too high. The debacle at Cnidus completed the proof of what the
revolt at Rhodes had already indicated, that in the Aegean area Sparta had come
to be viewed as an oppressor rather than a defender.
Thus in the
catastrophe of Cnidus we recognize the fruits of Lysander’s policy of
government by harmosts and decarchies. Though little is recorded of the actual
performance of these rulers, such evidence as we have plainly shows that they
generally followed the example of the Thirty Tyrants at Athens. True enough,
after Lysander’s fall in 402 BC the ephors allowed the dependent cities to
revert to their previous form of government, and it is not unlikely that they
diminished the overseas garrisons. But this arrangement was overturned by
Agesilaus, who restored the system of Lysander in all its essential features.
In following out this policy the Spartan king did not act at Lysander’s
dictation, neither did he have recourse to Lysander’s sanguinary methods. But
he copied Lysander’s example in setting up narrow oligarchies drawn from his
personal adherents. At first sight it may seem strange that Agesilaus should
have repeated Lysander’s mistakes. Jealous as he was of the authority which
attached by right to the kingly office, he did not share Lysander’s aspirations
to a political dictatorship. But the king was a convinced believer in
oligarchic methods of government, and though herein he acted from sentiment
rather than cool calculation, he shared Lysander’s excessive zeal on behalf of
his personal followers. We may probably acquit Agesilaus’ oligarchies of the
gross excesses which marked the rule of Lysander’s decarchies, but we cannot be
surprised at their unpopularity, for they exercised an essentially arbitrary
rule in communities which were accustomed to a democratic or at any rate a
responsible form of government.
The same
discontents which caused the loss of Sparta’s fleet at Cnidus brought about the
collapse of Sparta’s overseas empire after that defeat. The appearance of
Conon’s victorious squadron in Aegean waters was the signal for a general
rebellion against Sparta’s authority, and only at a few isolated points, where
sufficient garrisons had been left by Agesilaus before his departure, was
Sparta’s supremacy maintained. In one campaign Sparta lost the fruits of her
victory over Athens and was reduced once more to the rank of a continental
power.
VI.
THE
CORINTHIAN WAR
But the loss
of her naval empire is not a full measure of the damage which Persia inflicted
upon Sparta. The naval attack which obtained its decision at Cnidus was
supplemented by a political offensive whose success was equally complete. In
396 Pharnabazus was encouraged by the anti-Spartan insurrection at Rhodes to
try the effect of propaganda behind the Spartan fighting line. For this purpose
he dispatched a Rhodian named Timocrates—presumably one of the revolutionary
leaders—on a diplomatic mission to Greece. Among the states which Timocrates
visited, Thebes and Corinth were already estranged from Sparta; and Argos, as
usual, was ready to take part where a coalition against Sparta was in the
making. At Athens the first news of naval preparations in Cyprus had roused the
dormant hopes of a new empire. While Thrasybulus joined hands with the
moderates in maintaining a correct attitude towards Sparta, the imperialists,
led by Cephalus and Epicrates, sent unofficial messages to Susa and smuggled
out men and material to Conon. In these four cities Timocrates secured the
ascendancy of a party which desired an open breach with Sparta. As an earnest
of Persian support the Rhodian brought with him a liberal supply of gold. The
institution of payment for attendance at the Athenian Assembly may be regarded
as a result of Timocrates’ bounty; and it is not unlikely that personal bribery
played its part in mobilizing opinion against Sparta. But we need not doubt
that the promise of Persian co-operation by sea and of further rebellions among
Sparta’s overseas dependents were the main inducements to Sparta’s enemies in
Greece Proper to risk an open conflict.
The
‘Corinthian War,’ as this conflict came to be called, was precipitated in
summer 395 by the action of Thebes in taking sides in a fortuitous frontier
quarrel between the Phocians and Western Locrians, and invading the land of
Phocis. Though there is no convincing evidence that this quarrel was originally
fomented by the Thebans, it is clear that they overran Phocis with the
deliberate intention of forcing war upon Sparta, for when the ephors in answer
to an appeal from the Phocians offered to arbitrate the dispute in a council
of their allies, the Thebans refused to negotiate.
In view of
their commitments in Asia, the Spartans had good reason to avoid a fresh war at
home; but once the war was fastened upon them they took prompt measures to
carry it into the enemy country. While King Pausanias assembled the
Peloponnesian army, Lysander was commissioned to raise a force of Phocians and
other Central Greeks and enter Boeotia by the Cephisus valley. These rapid
strokes took the Thebans unawares, for Pausanias crossed Mt Cithaeron without
opposition, and Lysander was allowed to carry Orchomenus by friendly overtures
and to penetrate into Boeotia as far as Haliartus. At this point Lysander planned
to join forces with Pausanias, but his message was intercepted and Pausanias’
march thereby delayed. Nevertheless Lysander attempted a coup de main upon
Haliartus, only to find himself trapped between the defenders of the town and a
Theban field force which hurried up to the spot. The Spartan general himself
was killed and his army routed in this surprise, but had Pausanias come at once
to the rescue the defeat might yet have been retrieved. The Spartan king,
however, gave the Thebans time to receive reinforcements from Athens, their
nearest ally, and rather than risk an engagement with an enemy who had now
grown superior in numbers and morale he agreed to evacuate Boeotia under a
convention.
On his return
to Sparta Pausanias was put on trial and only escaped death by timely flight.
The chagrin of the Spartans at the failure of the Boeotian campaign need cause
no wonder, for the entire political situation was thereby altered. The
quadruple alliance between Thebes, Athens, Corinth and Argos, which had been
thrown out of gear by Sparta’s quick initiative, was now put into working
order, and a congress was convened at Corinth for the joint prosecution of the
war. The first measure of the congress was to invite Sparta’s remaining allies
to rebellion. In the Peloponnese the appeal failed in its main purpose, but it
deterred the Spartans from ordering any fresh levies for the best part of a
year. In Central and Northern Greece, where Sparta’s arm could no longer reach,
not only the neighbours of Thebes, such as the Locrians and Euboeans, but the
more distant peoples such as the Acarnanians, the Chalcidians and most of the
Thessalians, joined the coalition.
In the spring
of 394 BC, while Sparta stood inactive, the new coalition assumed the
offensive. A joint expedition of Boeotians and Argives co-operated with Medius
of Larissa in expelling the Spartan garrison from Pharsalus, and on its way
home took by surprise the fortress of Heraclea; another composite army under
the Theban Ismenias drove the Phocians out of the field. These preliminary
successes encouraged the coalition to force a decision by invading Laconia. At
midsummer the full confederate force mustered at Corinth. Had this army
advanced forthwith, it might have prevented the concentration of the enemy forces
and so reduced Sparta to desperate straits. But the allies wasted time
discussing tactical details, and this delay enabled the Spartans to push
forward to the Isthmus, collecting their allies as they went. The decisive
action of the campaign was therefore fought, not in Laconia, but on the plain
between Sicyon and Corinth; and instead of the Spartans facing hopeless odds
they brought up a force of 20—25,000 men which roughly equalled that of the
enemy. The battle of Nemea was a typical encounter of the pre-scientific age of
Greek warfare. As the armies moved up into action the opposing lines edged away
to the right, so that each right wing eventually overlapped and enfiladed the
adversary’s left. At one end of the field the Argives and Corinthians overbore
Sparta’s allies; at the other the Spartans outfought the Athenians, who broke
away in disorder, despite the efforts of Thrasybulus to rally them. Thus far
the battle remained drawn; but the Spartans checked their pursuit in
Cromwellian fashion and caught in the flank three successive enemy divisions as
these returned separately to their base, inflicting heavy losses upon each. The
action of Nemea was in so far decisive as it deterred the confederates from
ever attempting another offensive on a large scale.
From
henceforth the Spartans maintained the initiative in the land operations of the
war. But they were prevented from exploiting their advantage by the extensive
fortifications of the Isthmus, behind which the beaten enemy forces soon
rallied. In addition to its own ring wall Corinth had a pair of ‘Long Walls’ to
connect it with Lechaeum on the Corinthian Gulf, and a chain of forts to guard
the defiles in the mountainous tract between the city and its eastern port of
Cenchreae. Before attacking this position the Spartans decided to await the
result of a new invasion of Boeotia which befel some two or three weeks after
Nemea.
In the spring
of 394 the ephors, believing that all available men were required for home
defence, recalled Agesilaus from Asia. The Spartan king, however loth to
abandon his crusade against Persia, obeyed the home government’s summons with
prompt loyalty. Leaving only a few garrisons in Asia he made a rapid march home
through Macedonia and Thessaly with the greater part of his forces. In Thessaly
the horsemen of the cities allied to Thebes hovered round his column but dared
not engage him at close quarters. Thus Agesilaus arrived unscathed in Central
Greece, where he received reinforcements from Phocis and Orchomenus and a
division which came from the Peloponnese across the Corinthian Gulf. Advancing
with this combined force into Boeotia he was brought to battle in the gap of
Coronea by a general levy of the coalition states. In this encounter, as at
Nemea, each right wing routed its opponents; the victorious Spartans thereupon
turned inward to cut off the winners on the other flank; but the Theban
division thus intercepted rallied and despite heavy casualties cut its way
clear through the Spartan obstruction. In effect, Coronea was a Theban victory,
for it definitely stayed Agesilaus’ advance. Having left a small force to
protect Orchomenus and Phocis and disbanded the veterans of his Asiatic
campaigns, the Spartan king led back the rest of his force to the Peloponnese
by way of the Corinthian Gulf.
The failure
of Agesilaus’ Boeotian campaign left the Spartans no effective point of attack
except at Corinth, which was the keystone of the enemy coalition. A tedious war
of positions ensued round this city. At first the Spartans tried the effect of
systematically ravaging the Corinthian territory. By 393 the Corinthian
landowners began to agitate for peace. But the Corinthian war-party met this
clamour by instituting a massacre among its opponents and calling in a garrison
from Argos. For the rest of the war Corinth remained under Argive control:
nominally it was even absorbed into the Argive state and stood to Argos as
Acharnae or Marathon stood to Athens. Some Corinthian dissentients nevertheless
contrived to admit a Spartan force within the Long Walls. Having gained a
foothold within the Corinthian lines, the Spartans not only defeated a
determined attempt by a large confederate force to dislodge them, but made a
clear gap through the Long Walls, and captured the ports of Lechaeum on the
western, of Sidus and Crommyon on the eastern seaboards of Corinth.
The blockade
thus established round Corinth was relieved in 392 by the Athenians, who
realized that if Corinth fell the way would lie open for a Spartan invasion of
Attica. Lechaeum and the Long Walls were recaptured by the Athenian hoplite
levy, and the Long Walls were repaired by an Athenian labour corps. The
pressure upon Corinth was further eased by an Athenian flying column which
penetrated the Peloponnese as far as Arcadia. The leader of this column was a
soldier of fortune named Iphicrates, who may be regarded as the prototype of
the fourthcentury condottieri. His soldiers, professionals like himself,
constituted the first of those light corps which henceforth played a
substantial part in Greek military history. While they dispensed with the
expensive equipment of the hoplite, these ‘peltasts’ were drilled with no less
care than the heavy troops and under favourable circumstances could defeat them
in a set combat. Iphicrates’ corps at once established an ascendancy over
Sparta’s allies, and its forays must have seriously hampered Sparta’s
operations against Corinth.
The campaigns
of 393-2 on the Greek mainland thus ended in a stalemate. We must now follow
the course of the naval war from the battle of Cnidus. In 394 the victorious
Persian fleet sailed up the east Aegean coast, expelling the Spartan garrisons
as it went. In 393 it made a prolonged cruise in European waters. After a
preliminary descent on the coast of Laconia and on Cythera, where an Athenian
governor was left in charge, Pharnabazus and Conon repaired to the Isthmus and
contracted a formal treaty of alliance between Persia and the enemies of Sparta
in Greece. Having made a parting gift of money to his new allies, Pharnabazus
sailed home. But Conon obtained permission from his colleague to take a strong
detachment to Athens and to employ the crews and the remainder of Pharnabazus’
funds in reconstructing the Long Walls. The repair of these fortifications had
been commenced in 394 with the help of Thebes and other allies, but owing to
lack of funds and labour the work had proceeded but slowly. With Conon’s
assistance the Long Walls were practically completed in 393, though they did
not receive the finishing touches until 391. It is not unlikely that the sudden
emission of gold coins from the mint of Thebes at this period was an effect of
the Persian subsidies.
VII.
A
NEW PACT BETWEEN SPARTA AND PERSIA
The visit of Conon to Athens had a
far-reaching effect on the war. After the restoration of the Long Walls the
Athenians were free to take a lesser interest in the politics of the mainland
and to devote themselves again to maritime expansion. The impulse to this
renewal of the old imperial policy was given by Conon himself, who stayed on in
Athens after the departure of his fleet and resumed active Athenian
citizenship. Though he failed in an attempt to negotiate a treaty with the
Syracusan despot Dionysius, Conon succeeded in contracting alliances with
several of the Aegean cities recently liberated by him. These states, having
forfeited the protection of Sparta, had now to consider whether they could
stand alone. True enough, they had little to fear from Pharnabazus, who had
promised to respect the autonomy of the towns set free by him and Conon, and
not to impose garrisons upon them. But though Pharnabazus might be trusted,
there was little likelihood of other Persian governors keeping their hands off.
In view of these risks the Aegean cities began to cast about for fresh
alliances. One short-lived League, in which Rhodes, Cnidus, Iasus, Samos,
Ephesus and Byzantium were associated, has come to our notice through its
coins. The common type of these pieces, Heracles strangling the snakes, was
evidently borrowed from Thebes, which had recently adopted it for the Boeotian
coins as a symbol of liberty. But the general tendency among the Aegean states
was to seek a rapprochement with Athens. In 393, or shortly after,
Rhodes, Cos, Cnidus, Carpathus, Eretria are known to have made fresh alliances
with Athens, and the same probably holds true of Ephesus, Chios, Erythrae,
Mitylene and some other towns. At the same time the Athenians resumed
possession of Lemnos, Imbros and Scyros, and by 390 they had recovered the
sacred island of Delos.
This
gathering of the fruits of Persia’s victory by Athens afforded Sparta an
opportunity of creating a rift between Persia and her Greek allies. In pursuit
of this war-aim, the ephors decided to write off their overseas possessions,
which in any case appeared irrecoverable, and to execute another volte-face in
their Persian policy. At the end of 393 a Spartan envoy named Antalcidas
visited Tiribazus, the new satrap of Lydia, and protested that Sparta, not
Athens, was his friend. In proof thereof he declared that Sparta was now
prepared to cede all the Greek cities of Asia to Persia and stipulated nothing
beyond the enjoyment of their autonomy for the other states of Greece, whereas
Athens was plainly reviving the anti-Persian imperialism of Cimon’s age. With
these arguments Antalcidas carried his point against the pleas of a
counter-embassy from Athens, Thebes, Corinth and Argos. In proof of his
conversion Tiribazus at once supplied the Spartan with money for the equipment
of a new fleet and arrested Conon, the head of the Athenian mission, as a
deserter from the Persian navy.
Tiribazus’
reversal of policy was supported by the logic of facts, and it was eventually
confirmed by the Persian court. But when the Lydian satrap went to Susa to
obtain a royal warrant for his procedure he found that the King was little
disposed to transfer his affections at such short notice. Far from sanctioning
Tiribazus’ change of front, Artaxerxes detained him at court and sent an
officer named Struthas, with Ionia for his province, to resume active
co-operation with Athens (end of 392). Meantime Conon escaped from prison and
returned to his patron Evagoras, but, before he could render further aid to the
Athenians, he fell sick and died.
Stung by the
rejection of their advances, the ephors prepared to resume active warfare with
Persia, and at the same time opened negotiations with their enemies in Greece.
In the winter of 392—1 they summoned a peace congress to Sparta and proposed a
general settlement on the basis of ‘autonomy for all.’ Under this convenient
formula, which was henceforth impressed into service wherever diplomatists met
to settle the map of Greece, Sparta offered to let Athens complete her fortifications,
rebuild her fleet and retain her new connections with the Aegean states; from
Argos she required the liberation of Corinth and from Thebes a guarantee not to
coerce Orchomenus. The Thebans, who had come to consider that the war was a
luxury beyond their means, assented to these conditions; the Argives refused on
behalf of themselves and Corinth. At Athens the case for acceptance was put in
a still extant speech by the envoy Andocides, who had no difficulty in showing
that Sparta was offering a good bargain. But his arguments were met with the
familiar cries, ‘we want back our cleruchies,’ and ‘the democracy is in
danger.’ Andocides and his colleagues were sent into exile for their pains; the
terms which they brought from Sparta were rejected.
Had the
Assembly voted for peace, Argos must certainly have given way, and a settlement
more equitable than that of 386 would have been the result. As it was, Athens
dragged Thebes back into the war, and hostilities were resumed in 391 along the
whole front. At first the fighting went in favour of Sparta. King Agesilaus
once more pierced the Long Walls of Corinth, while his brother Teleutias with a
Spartan fleet recaptured Lechaeum. In 390 the king passed through the gap in
the Long Walls to the eastern side of the Isthmus and wrested from the Argives
the stewardship of the Isthmian festival then in process of celebration. After
dealing this coup de théâtre he returned to the Corinthian Gulf and
carried the posts of Peiraeum and Oenoe in the extreme north of the Corinthian
territory. By these captures he deprived Corinth of its remaining
pasture-grounds and severed its communications with Boeotia.
Corinth was
now in greater danger than ever; but once more the Athenians came to the
rescue. Shortly after the fall of Peiraeum the corps of Iphicrates caught a
company of 600 Spartans marching to Lechaeum without the usual flank-guard of
cavalry. Choosing their own range and rallying promptly from each
counter-attack, the peltasts had the hoplites at their mercy; under the fire of
their javelins the Spartan company broke into pieces and was all but destroyed.
Though this encounter was no true measure of the relative merits of weight and
speed in battle, yet by its moral effect it profoundly influenced the course of
the war. A separate peace overture which the Boeotians had been making to King
Agesilaus was hastily withdrawn. On the other hand, the prestige of the Spartan
fighting forces was so much lowered that they could scarcely maintain
discipline among Sparta’s auxiliaries.
After the
battle of Lechaeum Iphicrates followed up his success by recapturing the posts
of Oenoe, Sidus and Crommyon. The blockade of Corinth was thus once more
broken. But Iphicrates’ exploits did not lure Athens or her allies into more
ambitious ventures. Once Corinth had been made safe, they remained content to
hold their ground. On the other hand, the Spartans were henceforth reduced to
making mere demonstrations. In 389 and 388 Agesilaus made two successful forays
into Acarnania. By these expeditions he confirmed the loyalty of the Achaeans,
whose outlying possessions on the north coast of the Gulf were now restored to
them, and made the Acarnanians purchase peace at the price of their
independence; but he derived no strategic advantage from them. In 387
Agesipolis, the successor of King Pausanias, invaded Argolis but occupied no
permanent posts there.
The only
other land operation that requires notice was an expedition which the Spartans
directed against Struthas in 391. Its commander Thibron was even more
unfortunate than in 399. Having recovered possession of Ephesus for a base, he
made plundering incursions into the Maeander valley, but was presently killed
with a great part of his force in a surprise attack by Struthas’ horse. This
was Sparta’s last Anabasis into Asia.
The issue of
the Corinthian War was thus left to be fought out on sea. While Artaxerxes was
practising his usual economies by laying up his ships, Athens in misplaced
reliance on him had dispensed with a fleet of her own. This gave the Spartans a
new opportunity. With Tiribazus’ subsidies they had built a fresh squadron
which eventually totalled 27 sail. In 390 this flotilla recaptured Samos and
Cnidus and made preparations for the reconquest of Rhodes. But here its
achievements came to an end. In 389 a new Athenian fleet of 40 sail appeared
under Thrasybulus. In this last campaign of his the hero of Phyle made no
direct attack upon the Spartans. His chief preoccupation was to raise funds for
the upkeep of his squadron. To this end he reimposed the customs duties of the
Delian Confederacy on the cities which had again allied with Athens, and
plundered the territories of the rest. The penury of Thrasybulus, and the
methods by which he relieved it, epitomize the decline and fall of the revived
Athenian Empire. They were fatal to Thrasybulus himself, who was killed during
a piratical raid on Aspendus in southern Asia Minor, and to his treasurer
Ergocles, whom the Athenians subsequently executed on a charge of extortion and
embezzlement. Nevertheless Thrasybulus achieved some important successes. In
the northern Aegean he enrolled Thasos as an ally. By winning over Byzantium
and Chalcedon and securing the friendship of the Thracian chieftains on either
side of the Gallipoli peninsula, he restored the free use of the Black Sea
route to Athens. With the help of the Mityleneans he conquered all the minor
towns of Lesbos. In addition, the mere presence of his fleet prevented fresh
conquests by the Spartan squadron.
In 388-7 the
centre of operations shifted to the Dardanelles, where Dercyllidas had retained
the key positions of Sestos and Abydos for Sparta. Here again the Athenians got
the upper hand, for under Iphicrates’ leadership they penned up Dercyllidas’
successor in Abydos.
But the
decision in the naval war was imposed not by Athens but by Persia, and Persia’s
final stroke was delivered in aid of Sparta against Athens. The reason for
Persia’s ultimate rally to the side of Sparta is to be found in a new turn of events
on Cyprus, where King Evagoras resumed his attack upon the communities, both
Greek and Phoenician, which had not yet submitted to him, and thus roused the
suspicions of his Persian overlord. In defence of the threatened cities
Artaxerxes mobilized a fresh army under the new Lydian satrap Autophradates,
and a fleet under a native dynast named Hecatomnus who had succeeded
Tissaphernes in the satrapy of Caria. Evagoras in turn invoked the aid of the
Athenians, and they with greater chivalry than discretion sent two small
squadrons to his support (389 and 387 BC). The warning which Antalcidas had
given to Tiribazus about the dangers of a revived Athenian Empire thus came
true. In 388 moreover the same envoy was sent by the ephors to Susa to drive
home his point. Artaxerxes now required no further convincing. To give effect
to his new friendship with Sparta he recalled Pharnabazus from Phrygia and
reinstated Tiribazus in Lydia.
In 387
Tiribazus had a small squadron ready to cooperate with the Spartans. In the
same year Dionysius of Syracuse, who had in past years received support from
Sparta, sent 20 ships in answer to an appeal for assistance. Antalcidas, taking
charge of the combined squadrons of Sparta, Persia and Syracuse, 80 sail in
all, was now able to deal a decisive blow. With this overwhelming force he
entered the Dardanelles and cut off the Athenian fleet.
The way to a
general peace was thus laid open, for the Athenians, who had previously been
the chief obstacle to a settlement, now became most eager for it. The new
empire for whose sake they had prolonged the war had proved a burden rather
than a benefit. Besides the contributions levied upon the allies, the upkeep of
their navy had entailed a property-tax and increased customs duties upon themselves.
Athenian commerce had suffered at the hands of a flotilla established by the
Spartans at Aegina, and the Piraeus itself had been raided by this force. Thus
the policy of naval expansion, which the landowners of Attica had steadily
opposed, fell into temporary disfavour with the urban population of Athens and
Piraeus. A contemporary comedy of Aristophanes, the Plutus, shows that the old
spirit of adventure, to which he had formerly given expression in his Birds,
was for the time being dead: the dominant issue for the Athenians was now to
make ends meet. At the news of Antalcidas’ successes the price of corn rose
sharply and completed the disillusionment of the imperialists.
Towards the
end of 387 Tiribazus summoned delegates from all the belligerents to Sardes to
receive conditions of peace; and the delegates came. The terms proved to be the
same as Antalcidas had suggested in 393: all the Asiatic mainland and the
island of Cyprus to be the King’s; Lemnos, Imbros and Scyros to remain Athenian
dependencies, as of old; all other Greek states, great and small, to receive
autonomy.
When the
delegates referred this paix octroyée to their respective states, there
was some demur on the part of the Argives, who wanted to keep Corinth in their
own pocket, and of the Thebans, who apprehended that in the name of autonomy
they would have to dissolve the Boeotian League. But Athens gave these
recalcitrants no support, and the mere mobilization of a general Peloponnesian
levy by King Agesilaus sufficed to disarm their opposition. Early in 386 the
peace was everywhere accepted and carried into effect: the Athenians dissolved
their alliances in the Aegean area, the Argives withdrew from Corinth, and the
Thebans conceded full independence to the other Boeotian cities. Thus the
Corinthian War was concluded by a settlement which was sometimes styled the
‘Peace of Antalcidas,’ but was commonly known by the more appropriate name of
the ‘ King’s Peace.’
THE SECOND ATHENIAN LEAGUE
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