CHAPTER
VIII
THE
RISE OF MACEDONIA
I.
THE
GREEK WORLD AT THE ACCESSION OF PHILIP
IN the year
360 BC the position of Athens in the Greek world was, to all appearance, a very
strong one. The battle of Mantinea had put an end for the time to the rivalry
of Thebes; the influence of Sparta even in the Peloponnese itself was held in check
by the recently established powers of Messene and Megalopolis; the Athenians
had made up their differences with the minor Peloponnesian states; there was no
city which could at the moment compete with Athens in naval and military
strength or in the number of its allies. Nevertheless there were difficulties
which she had to face, and some of which were destined to test severely both
her statesmanship and her military capacity.
The failure
of one Athenian general after another in the hostilities against Cotys, king of
the Odrysian Thracians, had led to a most
unsatisfactory situation, which was complicated by the inconstant behaviour of
the mercenary captains, Iphicrates and Charidemus,
who were taking part in the operations. Iphicrates,
indeed, though son-in-law to Cotys, did not forget that he was an Athenian, and
would not assist his father-in-law except in defensive measures; and after the
siege of Sestos by Cotys (probably at the beginning of 360) he refused to
proceed with him against Elaeus and Crithote, which had come into Athenian hands about 364, and
retired into temporary inactivity in Lesbos, where he was of no service to
either side. Charidemus, on the other hand, was unashamedly treacherous. When
Cephisodotus was sent from Athens in 360, in succession to a number of
unsuccessful commanders, to protect her possessions in the Chersonese and to
support Miltocythes, a prince who was in revolt
against Cotys, Charidemus (who had been engaged for a year or two in trying to
found a little kingdom of his own in the Troad, and
was finding the attempt unlikely to succeed) wrote to Cephisodotus and offered
to help the Athenians against Cotys, if he and his men could be transported
across the Hellespont in Athenian ships. As it happened, circumstances enabled
him to cross without this help, and he promptly joined Cotys at Sestos against
Cephisodotus, besieged Elaeus and Crithote,
and (now or later) married Cotys’ daughter.
In other
quarters also Athens was in difficulties. The dispute for the possession of Amphipolis
was unsettled. Perdiccas III, though he had until recently been friendly to
Athens, and (probably with a view to setting up some counter-influence to that
of Olynthus) had helped the Athenians to establish themselves in the towns on
the coast of the Thermaic Gulf, was not prepared to
give up his claim to Amphipolis, and Timotheus had failed to take the place.
Finally, the
Athenian alliance was weakened by the retirement from it of Corcyra (about
361), and the discontent, which in two or three years led to the outbreak of
war between Athens and her allies, must already have begun to show itself.
It is the
development of these difficulties which we have now to trace.
Before the
end of the year 360 Cotys was murdered, to avenge a private quarrel, by two
Greeks from Aenus, who were crowned with gold by the
Athenians for their action, and given the citizenship of Athens. He was
succeeded by his son Cersobleptes, whom Charidemus
supported, as he had supported Cotys. The request of Cephisodotus for the fulfilment
of Charidemus’ promises was met by fresh acts of hostility; Charidemus
inflicted heavy loss on the crews of ten Athenian ships while they were
breakfasting on shore at Perinthus; and when Cephisodotus was attempting to
exterminate a nest of pirates at Alopeconnesus (on the western shore of the
Chersonese), Charidemus marched to their assistance down the Chersonese.
Finally, after some months of hostilities, he obliged Cephisodotus to conclude
a treaty with him, in which, among other provisions dishonourable to Athens,
the town of Cardia, the key of the Chersonese and already hostile to Athens,
was handed over to Charidemus as his own possession. The Athenians deprived
Cephisodotus of his command, fined him five talents, and repudiated the treaty.
Among the witnesses against him was the young Demosthenes, who had sailed in
the expedition as trierarch, taking the General on his ship.
Cersobleptes was but a
youth, and despite the support of Charidemus, his succession to the Odrysian kingdom did not go unchallenged. Two rivals, Amadocus, a prince of the royal house, and Berisades, whose origin is unknown, each claimed a portion,
and each was supported by Greek generals whom they bound to them (as Iphicrates and Charidemus had been bound to the house of
Cotys) by ties of intermarriage, Berisades being
aided by Athenodorus, an Athenian who had a
considerable estate in the Chersonese itself or not far off, Amadocus by Simon and Bianor. A
miscalculation on the part of Charidemus himself helped their cause. Miltocythes was betrayed into his hands by a certain Smicythion. Instead of handing him over to Cersobleptes, who, true to the Thracian dislike of
political murders, would have saved his life, he delivered him to the Cardians, who took him out to sea and drowned him, after
killing his son before his eyes. This brutal act roused the feelings of the
Thracians very strongly against Charidemus. Berisades and Amadocus joined forces, with Athenodorus as commander, and sent to Athens for aid; and Athenodorus was able to force Cersobleptes to agree to divide the Odrysian Kingdom with his two rivals, the eastern
portion, from the Hebrus to Byzantium, going to Cersobleptes, the western, as far as the neighbourhood of
Amphipolis, to Berisades, and the coast between Maronea and the Chersonese to Amadocus.
By the same
treaty the Chersonese was to be surrendered to Athens, and Chabrias was sent from Athens with a single ship to receive the surrender. But, though
it must have been obvious that the treaty would not be respected unless it were
maintained by force, the Athenians, by failing to contribute the necessary
funds to Athenodorus, obliged him to dismiss his
army; and Chabrias was reduced to consenting to a
revision of the treaty, in the same terms as those previously accepted by
Cephisodotus. The Athenians again repudiated these terms, and sent
commissioners to demand the formal renewal on oath of the treaty of Athenodorus; but, despite the repeated charges of bad faith
made against them by Berisades and Amadocus, they still failed to supply men or money, and it
was probably not before the latter half of 357—after the Euboean expedition, to
be described shortly—that Chares sailed with a considerable fleet and enforced the
surrender of the Chersonese to Athens, though Cardia still remained de facto in the hands of Charidemus.
In the
meantime the deaths of three monarchs had taken place, bringing changes which
were of great moment for the history of the next years. Artaxerxes Mnemon had died, and the Persian throne was ascended,
probably in the year 358, by his son Artaxerxes Ochus.
Alexander of Pherae had been murdered by Tisiphonus,
Lycophron and Peitholaus, the brothers of his wife
Thebe, who had been alienated by his savagery and herself directed the plot.
Perdiccas III of Macedon had also fallen; whether by assassination instigated
by his mother Eurydice, or in consequence of a wound received in battle with
the Illyrians, remains uncertain.
The new
Persian sovereign was less inclined than his predecessor to submit to any
encroachments upon his power either by his own satraps or by the Greeks; this
will appear in the sequel. The despotism which had been exercised by Alexander
was at first shared by Thebe and Tisiphonus, but a
few years later Lycophron and Peitholaus appear as
tyrants of Pherae, and the former is frequently mentioned alone. It appears
also that the position of the princes of Pherae in Thessaly was no longer
unchallenged, as it had been, and that the way was open for any external power
to play upon the divisions which arose.
But it was
the death of Perdiccas which was fraught with the most momentous consequences.
His son Amyntas was an infant, and Philip, the
younger brother of Perdiccas, and, like him, the son of Eurydice, assumed the
regency as the infant’s guardian. But there were five other actual or possible
claimants to the crown—Archelaus, Arrhidaeus and
Menelaus, half-brothers of Philip; Pausanias, also of royal descent, who had
been prevented by Iphicrates from snatching the royal
power from Perdiccas at his accession; and Argaeus,
who was favoured by Athens. In view of these difficulties, as well as of the
constant danger from neighbouring tribes, the Macedonians obliged Philip to
take the monarchy himself. He at once put Archelaus to death; Arrhidaeus and Menelaus fled from the country; the chances
of Pausanias were undermined by gifts and promises to the Thracians—probably Berisades and his subjects—on whom he chiefly relied; and
the Athenians were weakened in their support of Argaeus by the skill with which Philip conducted himself towards them.
Argaeus had promised
the Athenians Amphipolis, if he should succeed in getting the crown. Philip
countered this promise by actually withdrawing the Macedonian force with which
Perdiccas had garrisoned the town, and dispatched a letter to Athens, asking
for an alliance such as his father Amyntas had had
with her. Consequently the Athenians did no more for Argaeus than to escort him to Methone with a considerable
number of ships; and when he attempted to make his way to the old Macedonian
capital of Aegae, he had but a few Athenian
volunteers to reinforce his mercenary troops and the Macedonian exiles who were
with him. The people of Aegae would have nothing to
say to him, and he attempted to return to Methone, but
on the way was overpowered by Philip. The Athenians who were captured with him
were treated with great generosity, and restored to Athens with polite
messages; and a formal peace was made, probably early in 358, in which Philip
admitted the Athenian claim to Amphipolis.
II.
THE
EARLY YEARS OF PHILIP’S REIGN, 359-356 BC
Such was the
beginning of one of the most remarkable reigns recorded in history. For it is
the personality of Philip, now about twenty-three years old, that dominates the
course of events from this time till his death. In 367 he had been taken to
Thebes as a hostage for the good behaviour of Macedonia towards Thebes, and
there, in the house of Pammenes, he had learned to know Epaminondas and
Pelopidas, and had acquired an unbounded admiration for the former. It was
doubtless from Epaminondas that he learned, through precept and example, the
value of new ideas in military organization and tactics,—while at the same time
he came to appreciate that fine Hellenic culture which was already in favour at
the court of Perdiccas, but was still regarded by the more warlike Macedonians
as a form of degeneracy. (Whether or not the Macedonians as a whole were
closely akin to the Hellenic stock is a question which will probably never be
settled. Demosthenes speaks of them, and of Philip, as barbarians, when he is
in the mood to do so; but the royal house at least was in part of Hellenic
blood). On his return from Thebes after about three years’ sojourn, Philip was
entrusted with the administration of a district in Macedonia, and he had
organized a military force there in accordance with his own ideas, when he was
called to the throne.
As soon as he
had got rid of all possible rivals, it became necessary for him to secure
himself against the aggressions of neighbouring tribes. The Paeonians, to the
north, he had already bought off temporarily by presents and promises, when
they invaded Macedonia on the death of Perdiccas, and now, their king Agis
having died, he reduced them to subjection. Alarmed at this, the Illyrian king Bardylis, who had overrun a great part of Western
Macedonia, offered to make terms on condition that each power should retain
what it held at the moment. Philip refused, and a battle was fought, probably
in the neighbourhood of the modern Monastir, in which Philip was victorious,
his cavalry encircling the Illyrian left wing, and so attacking the Illyrian
army in front and rear at once. After a very fierce struggle Bardylis was forced to yield all the territory east of the
lake Lychoridus (Ochrida);
the semi-independent princes of the regions of Lyncestis and Orestis, who had helped the Illyrians, were
reduced to definite subjection, and probably other district-princes were
similarly brought within a definite organization.
The success of
Philip against the Paeonians and Illyrians was probably due in the main to that
re-organization of the Macedonian army which must have been one of his first
undertakings on coming to the throne. It is not possible, indeed, to trace the
steps by which the new model was brought to perfection, but its main features
are clear. Before this time the strength of the army had lain in its cavalry,
composed of the ‘Companions’ of the sovereign—a hereditary aristocracy of
land-holders; the infantry had been an ill-organized mass. Philip retained the
‘Companions,’ and took special measures to attach the nobility to himself,
surrounding himself in court and camp with the sons of the chief houses as his
personal attendants, and forming an inner circle of noble ‘Companions of the
King’s Person,’ whose position was the most coveted of all. The ‘Companions’
also remained a most important part of the army; but there was now to be, in
addition, a well-organized infantry. Part of this force, the Hypaspistae, are commonly thought to have been armed after
the manner of Iphicrates’ peltasts, who had become
the model for mercenary troops generally, though the fact that Alexander
employed them in the East as heavy infantry, no less than the phalanx, makes
this somewhat doubtful. The phalanx itself, which became the most notable
element in the Macedonian army, was certainly furnished with a weapon strange
to Greek troops, the long pike or sarissa,
which gave it the advantage of the first blow. Moreover, it was formed into a
less dense mass than the conventional Greek hoplite force, its object being no
longer to carry the day by sheer weight, but to give room for a more skilled
play of weapons, and to keep the enemy’s front engaged, while other troops won
the victory by freer movements. To the new infantry was given the name of
‘Foot-Companions,’ which assimilated their position in relation to the king to
that of the Companions, and so gave them a pride in their status and an
incentive to loyalty. At the same time Philip consulted Macedonian sentiment by
retaining within these larger units the territorial or tribal organization
which was traditional. The armies of the Greek city-states were in the main
composed of heavy infantry, though most of them had a small cavalry-corps, and
the mercenaries whom they employed often possessed greater mobility. It was
Philip who first created a national army on a broad basis, and planned out
carefully the relation to one another, not only of cavalry and infantry, but of
archers and all kinds of light-armed troops, so that he had at his disposal
many mobile elements, which could be used in a great variety of ways in
conjunction with the heavier phalanx.
Philip
appears to have followed normally the principle, developed by Epaminondas, of
strengthening one wing in particular for his main attack, and of using cavalry,
in combination with infantry, for this purpose, as had been done both by
Pelopidas at Cynoscephalae, and by Epaminondas afterwards; but he went far
beyond the Theban generals in the tactical use of a very varied force for a
carefully planned end. It was the elasticity which his new organization
rendered possible that was so immense an advantage, as against the more rigid
methods of ordinary Greek armies; and the infusion of a spirit of loyalty to
himself gave his troops the inspiration which was so often lacking to the
forces of the Greek city-states, particularly when composed, as they often
were, largely of mercenaries.
Moreover
Philip’s army was kept constantly at work, and never allowed to fall out of
practice; and though Demosthenes once hints that this continual labour was not
exacted without arousing great discontent, there is no confirmation of such a
view, nor any reason to believe that Philip overtaxed the loyalty of his men.
The armies of most of the Greek states, which were only accustomed to operate
during certain regular campaigning seasons, and were very unwilling to be away
from home for long periods, could hardly hope to compete with one so trained. The
military reorganization of Macedonia seems to have been accompanied, by a
thorough reorganization of the internal Government, which, without departing
from the territorial principle, effected a much greater centralization of
political and financial control. Financial reforms had already been begun by Callistratus, who, when exiled from Athens, was called in
to his aid by Perdiccas. Security was given to the new order of things by the
foundation of new towns or fortresses in various parts of the country.
It was not
long before the advantages of the new regime in Macedonia were to be strikingly
displayed in contrast with the characteristic vacillation and ineffectiveness
of democratic Athens. Early in 357 Philip took advantage of the opportunity
offered by some unfriendliness on the part of the Amphipolitans to lay siege to Amphipolis, which, a year or two before, he had acknowledged to
be an Athenian possession. The Athenians had apparently been content with this
acknowledgment, and had taken no steps to make good their claim by sending a
garrison to the town. It is true that they had, at least for a short time, had
other employment for their troops. For the Euboeans, who had been under the
domination of Thebes since the battle of Leuctra, had grown restless, and on
the appearance of a Theban army to crush their rising, had appealed to Athens.
Timotheus supported the appeal in an energetic speech; the Athenians were
roused to enthusiasm; volunteers came forward eagerly (Demosthenes among them)
to serve as trierarchs; within five days a naval and
military armament was ready; by the end of a month the Thebans had been forced
to leave Euboea, and Chares, who had joined in the expedition with a mercenary
force, was set free to go to the Chersonese, where, as has already been
narrated, he brought Charidemus to terms. The Euboean cities became members of
the Athenian confederacy.
But the
expedition to Euboea took place only very shortly before Philip’s attack on
Amphipolis, and does not explain the neglect of the Athenians to garrison the
town, nor their blind credulity in regard to Philip’s assurances, when, to
counteract the appeal made on behalf of the Amphipolitans to Athens by their envoys Hierax and Stratocles, he affirmed his intention of giving it up to
Athens as soon as he had captured it. Negotiations followed, and an arrangement
was made by which the Athenians were to receive Amphipolis, and were to hand
over to Philip in exchange the sea-port of Pydna,
which had been taken by Timotheus. But, as it was known that Pydna would not willingly consent to this, the arrangement
was kept secret even from the Athenian Assembly, the Council only having
cognizance of it. The arrangement was not carried out. Amphipolis resisted
bravely, but in the latter half of 357 Philip obtained possession of the town
with the aid of traitors from within, and got rid of his enemies there, while
treating the inhabitants as a whole with kindness; but as the Athenians did not
fulfil their part of the dishonourable bargain, he did not give them
Amphipolis. So confident, however, were the Athenian statesmen even now in
Philip’s intentions, that they persuaded the Assembly to reject the overtures
made by the inhabitants of Olynthus, who appealed to Athens in alarm at the
evidences of Philip’s power. Thus disappointed, the Olynthians thought it
prudent to make terms with Philip himself, according to which neither side was
to make a treaty with Athens apart from the other.
The Athenians
were by this time involved in the war with their own allies, and Philip had no
need to hesitate. Instead of waiting for the Athenians to give him Pydna, he seized it by force, again aided by treachery
(early in 356). Then, assisted by the Olynthians, he took Potidaea, though not
without trouble, and handed both it and Anthemus over
to the Olynthians, who seemed so far to have derived nothing but benefit from
their alliance with him. At the same time, Philip did not confess to any
hostility to Athens; in the attack on Potidaea he professed to be acting as the
ally of Olynthus, and the Athenian settlers captured in the town were allowed
to return in safety to Athens. The Athenians themselves appear to have done
nothing to oppose Philip’s conquests, except to order an expedition to Potidaea
when it was too late, though this at least showed that their faith in his
friendship had at last been shaken.
The
possession of Amphipolis was of the utmost value to Philip; for beyond the town
stood the Pangaean Mountain, which was being
developed as a field for gold-production by settlers from Thasos. A few years
before this they had founded the town of Crenides as
the centre of their operations, being accompanied and probably inspired by the
exiled Callistratus, before the ill-advised attempt
to return to Athens, which ended in his execution. Crenides was within the district which formed part of the kingdom of Berisades,
and which, on his death in 357 and the distribution of his kingdom between his
sons, fell to Cetriporis, the eldest of them. Cetriporis’ ownership was already being threatened by Cersobleptes, when Philip came on the scene and occupied Crenides, settling large numbers of his own subjects there
and renaming it Philippi. He at once began to produce gold on a very large
scale, and before long derived as much as 1000 talents a year from this one
source; while the forests of the neighbourhood gave him abundance of timber for
ships. He was thus provided with the two things which he most needed—a large
and steady revenue, and a fleet, with which he could annoy the Athenians on
their own element. The Athenians were at present unable to retaliate, owing to
the war with their allies, but they endeavoured to check Philip by making an
alliance with Cetriporis in the summer of 356. Two
other princes, the Paeonian Lyppeius and the Illyrian Grabus, were joined with them in the
treaty; but the alliance had little effect. Philip at once took military
measures against both Paeonians and Illyrians, and it was doubtless the victory
of his general, Parmenion, over the Illyrians in this campaign that was
reported to Philip shortly after midsummer, 356, along with the news of the
birth of Alexander, his son by Olympias, and of the victory of his horse at
Olympia. It was possibly at this time that the Nestus was made the recognized boundary between the Macedonian and Thracian kingdoms.
The
gold-works on the Pangaean Mountain also enabled
Philip to introduce a new coinage, in which were included both the gold
staters, named after himself, and a silver coinage bearing a fixed relation to
them. This new coinage not only helped to unify his own kingdom, but also to
increase its economic importance, as against both Athens and Persia, the two
states whose money had hitherto been most widely current in the Greek world.
III.
THE
WAR OF ATHENS AND HER ALLIES 357-355 BC
We must now
return and consider the main cause of the failure of the Athenians to take any
effective steps against Philip. In the latter half of the year 357, three
members of the Athenian League, Chios, Rhodes and Byzantium, formed a separate
alliance, in which they were soon afterwards joined by Cos. It may be that the
seed sown by Epaminondas in his naval expedition in 364 was now bearing fruit,
or that the allies had been alarmed by the establishment in 365 of Athenian cleruchs in Samos (which had remained outside the Athenian
League till then), and their reinforcement by new settlers in 361. The recent
subjection of Ceos and Naxos to the jurisdiction of
the Athenian Courts may also have had its effect in arousing suspicion. But the
immediate cause of the revolt was probably the instigation of Mausolus, satrap
of Caria, who gave it open aid.
Mausolus is
one of the more striking figures of this period. While nominally a satrap of
the Persian king, he had virtually an independent princedom, founded by his father Hecatomnus of Mylasa, and
extending not only over Caria, but over a considerable part of Ionia and Lycia.
His own capital was at Halicarnassus, a more convenient base of operations than Mylasa; and, with a large fleet at his disposal, he
had begun to threaten the independence of the Greek islands adjacent to the
Asiatic coast. The union of the inhabitants of Cos into one community in 366—5
was probably a precautionary measure against his possible encroachments. Only
the Athenian League appeared to stand in the way of his ambition, and in order
to get rid of this obstacle, he determined to break it up by detaching from it
its most powerful members. His intrigues succeeded, and the war of these allies
against Athens (357—5 BC) was the result.
The fleets of
the disaffected allies met at Chios, and Athens sent against them a large naval
force, of which Chabrias was in command, and a
considerable body of mercenaries under Chares. The latter landed at Chios and
attacked the town, while Chabrias engaged the hostile
fleet. Both failed, and Chabrias was killed while
dashing ahead, apparently without adequate support from the rest of the
Athenian fleet, which afterwards sailed away, taking Chares and his troops with
it.
This disaster
caused the revolt to spread more widely; Sestos and other towns joined the
allies, and a fleet of 100 ships led by the Chians did much damage to Lemnos, Imbros and other places which had remained true to
Athens, and (probably early in 356) laid siege to Samos. To meet the expense of
the war, the Athenians passed a law proposed by Periander,
providing a more businesslike and expeditious method
of obtaining the funds required for the equipment of the fleet, by transferring
the responsibility for trierarchy to twenty Boards or Symmories of sixty persons each. The new plan was open to abuses, since the wealthier
members of each Board had the practical management, and did not act fairly
towards their poorer associates in the apportionment of contributions; but it
appears to have worked at least as well as the method of collecting the
war-tax, on which it was modelled.
Chares, with
only sixty ships, had been unable to oppose the 100 ships of the enemy; but
apparently it was not till the middle of 356 that the Athenians sent out a
large naval armament to join him, under the command of Iphicrates,
his son Menestheus, and Timotheus. To divert the
allies from Samos, and to secure the route followed by the Athenian corn-trade,
the combined fleet proceeded to threaten Byzantium. The allies left Samos, and
came up with the Athenian fleet in the Hellespont, but, when the Athenians
offered battle, withdrew again till they reached Embatum,
in the strait between Chios and Erythrae. Here the
Athenian generals arranged a plan of attack; but Iphicrates and Timotheus were deterred by the stormy sea, and Chares unwisely led his
ships into battle without them, and was driven back. He at once prosecuted his
colleagues for treachery, alleging that they had been bribed by the enemy to
desert him, and he was joined in the prosecution by Aristophon,
who had been the leading statesman in Athens since the fall of Callistratus. It is uncertain whether the trial was
concluded within the year, or whether it dragged on until 354; but in the
result, Iphicrates and Menestheus were acquitted; their defence appears to have been both spirited and businesslike; Timotheus, who was already unpopular in
Athens owing to his haughty demeanour, was fined the enormous sum of 100
talents, and withdrew to Chalcis, where, in 354, he died. The fine was never
paid; but his son Conon, on spending one-tenth of the sum on the repair of the
fortifications of the city, was granted a discharge from the debt. Iphicrates lived a few years longer, but was never again
given a command. In this way Athens treated the two commanders of real genius
whom she possessed.
Chares was
now in sole command, but instead of taking further steps against the enemy, he
gave his services to Artabazus, satrap of Hellespontine Phrygia, who was in revolt against the Persian king and was being hard pressed
by the other satraps whom Artaxerxes Ochus had sent
against him. Chares won a great victory, and was richly rewarded and so enabled
to pay his troops. Moreover, in return for his services he appears to have been
given possession of Sigeum, and perhaps of Lampsacus also. But there were some who saw in his action
an illustration of the excessive independence of mercenary armies, and more who
were not free from the dread of Persia; and when news was brought that
Artaxerxes, who had already dispatched strong protests to Athens, was preparing
an immense force, it was assumed that its object was to take revenge upon
Athens for the action of Chares. Consequently the Athenians thought it prudent
to recall him and to come to terms with the allies; and in the course of the
year 355—4 peace was made, and the independence of Chios, Cos, Byzantium and
Rhodes was recognized.
Athenian
feeling, however, was not unanimous. There were orators who saw an opportunity
for urging again the policy which they liked to think of as traditional for
Athens, and calling upon the Greeks to attack Persia in force. Fortunately the
leading statesmen in Athens had the good sense to resist this suggestion, and
it is interesting to find Demosthenes, who was now beginning to take part in
public affairs, speaking on the side of prudence, and at the same time
proposing (though without effect) some modifications of the Law of Periander, in order to get rid of the abuses which were
possible under that law. Others, and particularly Isocrates, whose speech or
essay On the Peace belongs to the year 355, thought that Athens should abandon
all claim to maritime empire, and free herself and her allies from the evils
attendant upon the employment of unreliable mercenary armies.
The war with
the allies had in fact brought Athens to the verge of exhaustion. It had cost
her over a thousand talents. Not only had she lost the allies who revolted, but
others soon declared their independence—among them Perinthus and Selymbria, Mitylene and Methymna; and both her prestige and her revenues were very
greatly diminished. Only Euboea, with the islands in the Northern Aegean and a
few towns on the Thracian coast, now remained to her.
Yet it was
not long before some of the allies themselves had reason to regret that they
had listened to Mausolus, who, having rid himself of the Athenians, proceeded
to act according to his plan. Within a year or two he had mastered Cos and
Rhodes, driving out the partisans of democracy, and establishing oligarchies
obedient to himself. In Chios also there was an oligarchic revolution, and
ultimately the island came under the power of the Carian dynasty. In 353
Mausolus died and was succeeded by his widow Artemisia, who reigned two years
and then succumbed to her inconsolable grief for his loss, before even the
magnificent monument was completed which has perpetuated his name in many
modern languages. After her accession the exiled Rhodian democrats appealed to
Athens for restoration, and were supported by Demosthenes, who spoke eloquently
in the name of Democracy. But the Athenians could hardly forget that it was
this same party that had led the revolt in 357, nor would it have been safe to
underrate (with Demosthenes) the danger of hostile action by the Carian or Persian
powers. Accordingly Rhodes was suffered to remain subject to the Carian house.
IV.
THE
SACRED WAR DOWN TO 353 BC
But long
before the events last described, a new conflict had begun, which was fated to
transform the whole aspect of the Greek world. The Council of the Amphictyonic League, originally a religious association
which had the care of the temple and oracle of Delphi, was so composed that the
Thebans and the leading Thessalians, with the insignificant neighbouring tribes
who were virtually at their mercy, could, if united, determine its decisions;
and they had little scruple about making use of the religious prestige of the
Council for political ends. The so-called ‘Sacred War’ originated in such an
attempt. Thebans and Thessalians alike were natural enemies of their Phocian neigbours, and it was probably by some of their
representatives that a charge was brought before the Council against the
Phocians in 357 or 356, to the effect that they had been cultivating part of
the land which was consecrated to Apollo. Other charges may have been added,
and a fine of many talents was imposed.
As this
remained unpaid, the Amphictyonic Council resolved,
probably early in April 355, that unless the debt were discharged, the
territory of the Phocians should be confiscated and dedicated to the god. At
the same time the Council ordered the payment of the fines which they had
imposed upon other states, one of these being Sparta, which had been condemned
to pay a large sum for the seizure of the Cadmea at
Thebes in 382. Upon this, Philomelus of Ledon, a prominent Phocian, persuaded his fellow-
countrymen, who could not pay so large a sum, not to submit tamely to the loss
of their territory, but to retort by claiming from the Council, as by ancestral
right, the control of the oracle of Delphi, and to appoint him general with
full powers of action. This done he went to Sparta and interviewed the king Archidamus, urging that both Spartans and Phocians were in
the same case, and promising that, if successful, he would get the Amphictyonic sentence on Sparta annulled. Archidamus would not at present promise open assistance,
Sparta having traditionally taken sides with the inhabitants of Delphi in
opposition to the claims of the Phocians; but he undertook to send funds and
mercenaries secretly. With fifteen talents from Archidamus,
and much more provided by himself, Philomelus hired a
body of mercenaries; and with these and a picked band of 1000 Phocian peltasts
he seized the temple, probably towards the end of May, 355. Pie destroyed the
clan of the Thracidae, who opposed him, and
confiscated their property. (Only the intercession of Archidamus prevented much greater brutality.) He compelled the priestess of the oracle to
mount the tripod and to pronounce as to his future prospects, and while
protesting against this violation of religious custom, she impatiently
exclaimed that he could do what he liked. This utterance he proclaimed as
oracular before the assembled Delphians, and declared that they need have no
fears of him. He was further encouraged by a good omen—an eagle which chased
and carried off some of the doves that flew about the altar of Apollo.
Upon this the
Locrians of Amphissa and the neighbourhood (old rivals of the Phocians and
friends of Thebes) attempted to drive Philomelus out
of Delphi, and a battle was fought above the Phaedriades,
the great cliffs by which Delphi is dominated. Philomelus was victorious, taking many of the enemy prisoners, and forcing others to throw
themselves over the cliffs. About the same time he despatched messengers to the
chief Greek states, and especially to Athens, Sparta and Thebes, to declare
that he had no lawless intentions, but was asserting the ancient right of his
people, proved by lines of Homer himself, to the possession of Delphi; he
promised to be strictly accountable for the templetreasures,
and asked the states for military assistance, or, at worst, for neutrality. The
formal appeal to the government of the states was probably combined with
informal propaganda. In response to this appeal Athens and Sparta each made an
alliance with the Phocians, though they did not follow it up by action, and the
Athenians appear to have halted between the two sentiments of abhorrence of the
sacrilege, and anxiety lest the Phocian people should be exterminated. On the
other hand, the Thebans (to whom the defeated Locrians had also sent an
appeal), together with the Locrians of the Eastern or Epicnemidian branch and some other tribes, resolved to oppose the Phocians in the name of
the god of Delphi.
The next
step, which was doubtless taken on the instigation of the Thebans, was to
procure the formal declaration of war by the Amphictyonic Council against the Phocians. This probably was done at a special meeting,
after midsummer in 355, and was followed by embassies from Thebes to the
Thessalians and the smaller tribes who were members of the Amphictyonic League. These all declared war upon the sacrilegious Phocians, and in the
meantime Philomelus, seeing that the danger was now
serious, threw a wall round the temple-precinct, and collected as large a
mercenary force as possible by offering half as much again as the ordinary rate
of pay, at the same time enrolling all the fittest of the Phocians. His whole
force amounted to some 5000 men. He obtained funds by extorting all that he
could from the most prosperous of the inhabitants of Delphi, and made clear
that he would tolerate no opposition from them to the Phocian cause.
When his army
was complete, probably in the autumn of 355, Philomelus invaded the territory of the Eastern Locrians, which lay upon the routes by
which the Thessalians and Boeotians would naturally join forces. After
devastating much of the country, he laid siege to a stronghold by a river, but,
failing to take it, raised the siege, and in a battle with the Locrians lost
twenty men, whose bodies the Locrians refused to give up, as Greek religious
principles required, for burial, on the ground that they were those of
sacrilegious robbers. Philomelus, however, in a further
attack, killed some of the enemy, and refused in turn to give up their bodies
till the Locrians consented to an exchange. Then, after over-running the open
country and providing his mercenaries with plenty of plunder, he returned to
Delphi for the winter. The Boeotians—whether because they were naturally slow
to move, or because, as is likely, they were in financial difficulties—had
taken no steps to oppose Philomelus in the field, but
it was clear that they intended to do so with a great force; and, in order to
be prepared to meet them, he now at last began to lay hands on the offerings
dedicated in the temple, and with the proceeds to collect a larger mercenary
army, composed, Diodorus tells us, mainly of unscrupulous men, on whom the
impiety of his actions had no deterrent effect, and numbering 10,000 in all.
With this force he again invaded Eastern Locris, probably in the spring of 354,
and got the better of the Boeotian and Locrian troops in a cavalry battle. A
force of 6000 Thessalians and other Northern Greeks was next defeated by the
hill Argolas. Then the Boeotians confronted him with
13,000 men; 1500 Achaeans from the Peloponnese joined the Phocians, and the two
armies encamped opposite each other at a short distance. After some .acts of
ferocity on both sides towards prisoners casually taken, both the armies
shifted their ground, and the foremost troops in each suddenly found themselves
entangled with one another in a rough wooded place by Neon, on the north side
of Mount Parnassus. A general engagement followed, in which the Boeotians were
victorious by weight of numbers; and in attempting to escape over precipitous
ground many of the Phocians and their mercenaries were cut to pieces. Philomelus, after fighting with the courage of despair and
sustaining many wounds, threw himself over a cliff and perished. His colleague
Onomarchus took the survivors of the Phocian army back to Delphi, and the
Boeotians, thinking their victory decisive, also returned home.
The battle of
Neon probably was fought about August, 354; but the whole chronology of the
Sacred War is keenly disputed, owing to the contradictions between the ancient
authorities, and the uncertainty as to the precise events to which some of them
refer as the ‘beginning’ and ‘end’ of the war, and in relation to which other
events must be dated. Accordingly the dates given in this chapter can be
regarded only as probable. Some modern authorities date the whole of the events
just recorded about a year earlier, and place the occupation of Delphi by Philomelus in June, 356, rearranging the intervals between
subsequent events in various ways in consequence. There is in fact no
absolutely fixed date until we come to the trial of Aristocrates and the siege of Heraeon Teichos,
and calculations based upon the length of time which certain expeditions ‘must
have taken’ are very untrustworthy. But the general sequence of events is
fairly certain and intelligible, and there are only one or two occurrences, the
place of which in the series is really open to doubt.
The defeat of Philomelus gave those of the Phocians who had
scruples about the war an opportunity of urging that peace should be made; but
Onomarchus, who was one of those upon whom the fines imposed by the Amphictyonic Council would have fallen most disastrously,
made a carefully prepared speech in defence of the Phocian claim to the temple,
and secured a vote for the continuance of the war under his own supreme
command. Encouraged by a dream, he at once began to fill up the depleted ranks
of his army, and made free use of the temple treasures, turning the bronze and
iron into armour, and the gold and silver into coin, which he distributed
freely to the allied cities and their leading citizens 2. He also used bribes
to secure the support or the neutrality of some of those who, like Lycophron of
Pherae, had been hostile to the Phocian cause. At the same time he arrested the
Phocians who were opposed to his plans, and confiscated their property.
His
preparations having been made, he invaded Eastern Locris once more, probably
early in 353, and besieged and took Thronium, one of
the towns commanding the Pass of Thermopylae, of which he must have obtained
control. Then he made an attack upon Amphissa, and terrified the inhabitants
into subjection, and next proceeded to overrun Doris, sacking the towns and
ravaging the country. He then invaded Boeotia itself, and took Orchomenus, but
failed in the siege of Chaeronea, and was forced to return into Phocis,
probably about the end of August, 353.
His failure
at the end of so successful a campaign was perhaps due to a division of forces
which he had been led to make in consequence of the appearance of Philip in
Thessaly.
V.
PHILIP’S
ACTIVITIES IN THRACE AND THESSALY DOWN TO 352 BC. THE SACRED WAR CONTINUED
Our survey of
Philip’s actions was broken off at the point at which he had delivered his
counterstroke to the Athenian alliance with Cetriporis, Lyppeius and Grabus, by a
victorious campaign against the Illyrian and Paeonian members of the alliance (356—5). We have no clear view of him again, until we
find him, probably late in the summer of 354, capturing the Thracian
coast-towns of Abdera and Maronea, and, apparently,
intervening in the long-standing dispute between Amadocus and Cersobleptes, the latter of whom, supported by
Charidemus, was as anxious as ever to extend his dominions at the expense of
the other Thracian princes. On this occasion Philip appears to have favoured Cersobleptes, in so far as he accepted the pledges of
friendship which Cersobleptes offered him by the hand
of Apollonides of Cardia. Both Cersobleptes and the Cardians were enemies of Athens, while Amadocus was in friendly relation with her; and it is clear
that the event would emphasize the increasing incompatibility of the interests
of Athens in Thrace with those of Philip.
Cersobleptes is said to
have given pledges at the same time to Pammenes, who had been dispatched from
Thebes under somewhat remarkable circumstances. Artabazus, as we have seen, had
lost the assistance of Chares in his revolt against the Persian king, and in
his anxiety for a new ally he had applied to Thebes. The application probably
came just at the moment when the defeat and death of Philomelus seemed likely to relieve the pressure of the war with the Phocians; and although
the Thebans were generally on good terms with the Persian king (and indeed were
so once more within three years or so of this time), it may have been the case
that they were short of funds, and were glad to give Artabazus the use of
Pammenes and 5000 men for a sufficient recompense. So Pammenes marched through
Thrace, and met Philip, his former guest, at Maronea,
where he joined him in accepting the overtures of Cersobleptes.
When he arrived in Asia Minor, Pammenes won two victories over the satraps sent
by the Persian king to quell the revolt of Artabazus; but he appears to have
subsequently been suspected of disloyalty, and arrested by Artabazus himself.
He was afterwards released, and doubtless was allowed to return home with his
men; but it was not long before Artabazus was himself obliged to take flight,
and we find him later at Philip’s court in Macedonia.
Philip may
have intended to proceed beyond Maronea; but his
march was opposed by Amadocus, and, for whatever
reason, he thought it better to return. At Neapolis, Chares, who had perhaps
been sent in answer to an appeal from Neapolis some time before, endeavoured to
intercept Philip’s ships; but Philip evaded him by a ruse and got safely away.
It must have been at about this time that Chares gained a victory over a body
of Philip’s mercenaries under Adaeus, a general who
was nicknamed ‘the cock,’ and was ridiculed by the comic poets as a Miles Gloriosus, Chares had participated in the distribution
of the Delphic treasures by Onomarchus, and used his share to feast the people
of Athens in celebration of this victory.
Early in the
spring of 353, Cersobleptes, perhaps disappointed at
receiving so little aid from Philip against Amadocus,
and distrustful of the king’s future intentions, once more returned to Athens,
and sent Aristomachus to declare the friendly feeling
of himself and his general Charidemus towards the Athenians, and to promise
that if Athens would elect Charidemus their general, he would capture
Amphipolis for them from Philip. Possibly the former treaty between Athens and Cersobleptes was confirmed, by which the latter
acknowledged the title of Athens to the towns of the Chersonese, with the
exception of Cardia. An Athenian named Aristocrates went so far as to propose that anyone who killed Charidemus should be liable to
summary arrest in any place within the dominions of Athens. Such a decree must
necessarily have been taken as an unfriendly act by the other Thracian princes
and their generals, against whom Charidemus had been fighting; and Aristocrates was indicted for the illegality of the decree
by one Euthycles: its operation was suspended in
consequence, and as the indictment did not come to trial for over a year later,
the decree, in accordance with Athenian law, fell to the ground. Demosthenes
spoke on behalf of the prosecution, and his speech is an invaluable source of
information both as to events in Thrace, and as to Athenian policy. It is not
known what was the result of the trial; but the action of Athens was not
without its adverse effects; for when Philip appears again in Thrace, we shall
find that Amadocus is in alliance with him against Cersobleptes. In the summer of 352 Chares reoccupied Sestos
(which had revolted in 357 or 356) in the name of Athens, after meeting with stout
resistance from the inhabitants, whom he proceeded to slay or sell into
slavery. Shortly afterwards the Athenians sent cleruchs to occupy the town.
After leaving
the Thracian coast in the autumn of 354, Philip may have returned to Macedonia.
The next act of war on his part which is recorded is the taking of Methone, which fell after a long siege, probably in the
early summer of 353. The inhabitants were expelled. Methone was the last Athenian stronghold on the Thermaic Gulf, and after its capture Philip virtually controlled the whole coast from
Mount Olympus to the mouth of the Nestus. In the
course of the siege of Methone he lost an eye.
It must again
be noted that the chronology of these events is uncertain, and that the
evidence admits of no more definite conclusions. It is possible that Methone fell a year earlier, before Philip marched against
Abdera and Maronea, and there is some slight ground
for thinking that it was at least threatened in the last days of 355. The
mission of Pammenes to Asia and his meeting with Philip at Maronea may belong to the early spring of 353, though the meeting must have occurred
before the overtures of Cersobleptes to Athens. But
not much turns on the precise chronological order of these events, and whether
he came immediately from Macedonia or Thrace or Methone,
in the summer of 353 Philip appeared in Thessaly.
It seems that
(probably ever since the death of Alexander of Pherae) Philip had taken the
opportunity of fostering the divisions which already existed among the Thessalians;
and now his aid had been invoked by Eudicus and Simus, the princes of Larissa, of the house of the Aleuadae, against Lycophron of Pherae, once the enemy and
now, thanks to Onomarchus, the friend of the Phocians. Lycophron at once
appealed for aid to Onomarchus, who sent his brother Phayllus to Thessaly with
a force of 7000 men. Phayllus was defeated by Philip and ejected from Thessaly.
Thereupon Onomarchus, probably soon after his retirement from Boeotia, went
with his whole army to the aid of Lycophron, and being superior in numbers to
Philip and his Thessalian allies, defeated them in two battles, in which the
Macedonian troops lost so heavily that his mercenaries were inclined to abandon
Philip. But he succeeded in reviving their spirit, and withdrew into Macedonia,
as he said, ‘like a ram, to butt the harder next time’.’ He did not fail to
carry out his intention. Early in the spring of 352 Onomarchus again invaded
Boeotia, and he had taken Coronea and Corsiae, when he was once more called away to oppose Philip
in Thessaly. Philip had succeeded in persuading most of the Thessalians to
abandon their mutual hostilities and make common cause against Lycophron’s sacrilegious allies; and Onomarchus had only
20,000 infantry and 500 cavalry, to oppose a somewhat larger number of infantry
and as many as 3000 cavalry. Philip inspired his men with a kind of religious
zeal against the temple-robbers and decorated them with laurel as the champions
of the injured god. In the battle which ensued Philip was victorious, thanks to
the decisive action of his cavalry. The Phocian soldiers were driven to the sea
with great slaughter. Some threw off their armour and tried to swim out to an
Athenian squadron, commanded by Chares, which happened to be sailing past; but
over 6000 perished, including Onomarchus himself, who, according to one
account, was killed by his own men, as being the cause of the defeat; and the
3000 who were captured were thrown into the sea by Philip’s orders, on the
pretext of their impiety.
Philip now
took Pherae, and besieged the important town of Pagasae.
The inhabitants of Pagasae appealed to Athens, and an
expedition was ordered to go to their relief, but did not move in time. The
town passed into Philip’s possession, as did the whole of Magnesia. He was now
able to make such arrangements as would secure his control of Thessaly; but,
when he advanced towards Thermopylae—probably about August, 3521—he found that
the Athenians, at last aroused, had sent an expedition under Nausicles to defend the pass. History had shown that even a
small force could hold the gates of Thermopylae against a very large one, and
Philip, not wishing to face such a conflict, returned to Macedonia, and thence
in the autumn marched once more along the Thracian coast.
The precise
order of events is again uncertain; but in November, 352, he was besieging Heraeon Teichos, which (though
its exact position is now unknown) was a stronghold of great importance in the
neighbourhood of the Chersonese, and was now held by Cersobleptes.
The Athenians once more had a fit of alarm, and resolved to send forty ships,
carrying citizen troops, and to raise sixty talents by special taxation. But
Philip fell ill and was obliged to raise the siege; a rumour of his death
reached Athens; the armament was disbanded, and it was nearly a year before the
Athenians took any further step.
So much is
certain. It is also certain that in his hostilities against Cersobleptes Philip was now allied with Amadocus, as well as with
Byzantium and Perinthus. The combined forces were victorious, and Cersobleptes was forced to give his son to Philip as a
hostage. Philip also made alliance with Cardia, and the campaign served to make
it plain that, unless some diplomatic settlement could be achieved, a struggle
must almost inevitably take place between Philip and the Athenians for the
control of the Chersonese. But in order to explain the policy of Athens during
this period, it is necessary to go back a few years.
VI.
ATHENIAN
POLICY: ARISTOPHON, EUBULUS, DEMOSTHENES
After the
banishment of Callistratus, about the year 361, the
leading statesman in Athens was Aristophon, whose
policy seems to have been in accordance with the imperialistic and militant
predilections of the democracy, and to have been carried out, to a great
extent, in conjunction with Chares, who was a hero to the masses. Thus he
fought the disaffected allies, instead of meeting their suspicions in more
peaceable ways, and when the allies were successful, he prosecuted the generals
in true democratic style, and secured the condemnation of the unpopular
Timotheus. When funds ran short, he had recourse to measures which would
chiefly trouble the wealthier citizens, such as a commission to enquire into
debts of the State, and the abolition of grants of immunity from taxation—a
measure proposed by Leptines, but supported by Aristophon,
and made more famous than its intrinsic importance would warrant by a striking
speech of Demosthenes against it. Finally, when the Messenians, whose
independence helped to neutralize the power of Sparta in the Peloponnese,
applied to Athens for alliance (about the year 355, when Thebes, their old
ally, was too much occupied with the Sacred War to attend to Peloponnesian
affairs), it was probably Aristophon who secured that
the request should be granted, though it might easily involve hostilities with
Sparta.
But the
failure of Athens against the allies, and the military and financial exhaustion
which it entailed, gradually discredited the military party; and in the latter
part of 355 Eubulus begins to come into prominence. His official position was
that of a member of the Board which controlled the Theoric Fund. This fund
consisted of the sums allocated for distribution to the people, nominally to
enable them to attend the public festivals—a system which had been begun by
Pericles, and was apparently renewed in the fourth century and then fused with
the distribution of two obols a head to the citizens, instituted towards the
end of the fifth century by the demagogue Cleophon.
The mass of the people were naturally greatly attached to the distributions of
festival-money; these not only ministered to their pleasure, but also
symbolized the democratic principle that all alike were entitled to share in
the profits of State-management; they were, as Demades called them, the ‘cement of the democracy’. Now the aim of Eubulus was, above
all, financial recuperation; and this required a change in the attitude of
Athens to Hellenic affairs generally. The fact that the members of the Theoric
Board held office for four years made some continuity of policy possible, and
the reputation of Eubulus was such that his supporters came to fill most of the
administrative posts to which appointment was made by election. This popularity
Eubulus obtained by giving security to the theoric distributions. Much might be said against such a spending of public funds upon
pleasures, even though some religious sentiment may still have attached itself
to the festivals; and we find it said in strong terms by Demosthenes and by
Aristotle. But Eubulus evidently thought it right to pay this price for the
provision which he obtained thereby for the real needs of the State.
It appears
that, according to the system in force, certain portions of the revenue were permanently
allocated by the laws to the regular departments of State-expenditure. Whether
these allocations understanding laws were supplemented by annual budgets,
taking into account expenditure not covered by these laws, is uncertain. In any
case, the allocations having been made, the surplus was at the disposal of the
people, who could vote money from it at pleasure for military expeditions or
for any object; and no doubt the Theoric Fund got its share when it was
possible. Eubulus appears to have carried a law, perhaps two or three years
after his election to office, that the whole surplus should always go to the
Theoric Fund; but at the same time, by good administration and skilful
budgeting, he secured sufficient funds to put the city into a thoroughly sound
financial and military condition. He brought the number of the fleet again up
to 300 triremes; he repaired the docks and fortifications; he took care, by
exercising strict surveillance over officials, that the State should really
receive the income to which it was entitled; he conferred benefits on trade and
commerce by unobtrusive changes, such as a better procedure for the settlement
of trading disputes; he improved the roads of Attica, and gave the city a good watersupply. (His predecessors had probably starved such
public services in their anxiety to secure a large surplus for war.) But though
he maintained a large fleet as a security for peace, he provided no funds for
ambitious military designs. The Theoric Fund was to have the whole surplus; so
that if any great war were undertaken, money would have to be raised by special
taxation; and this also was to some extent a guarantee of peace.
The
ascendancy of Eubulus, when combined with the great reluctance of the Athenians
to serve in the army in person, except on short and sharp expeditions, explains
in a great measure the failure of Athens to act energetically, or even to send
mercenary forces to represent her, since mercenaries were very expensive. His
policy was plainly justified by the condition in which Athens found herself at
the end of 355. Whether it was compatible with a proper attitude towards Philip
is another question; and it was upon this question that, from about 352
onwards, Athenian politicians were most sharply divided, until at last the
opposite view to that of Eubulus once more prevailed.
At first
Eubulus was successful enough. The peace with the allies was probably due to
his influence, as well as the recall of Chares from Asia Minor, and the
rejection of the appeal of the Rhodian democrats. Athens could not risk
hostilities with Persia. Nor would it have been well for her to be led into war
with Sparta. Consequently when the people of Megalopolis appealed to Athens for
help, probably in the winter of 353—2, they met with a different reception from
that which Aristophon had given to the Messenians.
The cause of the appeal was an astute move made by the Spartans, who, seeing
that Thebes, the chief supporter of the anti-Spartan States in the Peloponnese,
was deeply involved in the Sacred War, made a proposal to the Greek States
generally for the restitution of territory to its original possessors. The aim
of Sparta was the recovery of her own control over Messenia and Arcadia, and
she might well hope for support, not only from Elis and Phlius,
parts of whose former territory were in the hands of the Arcadians and the
Argives respectively, but above all from Athens; for the Athenians had never
ceased to resent the Theban occupation of Oropus, and the suppression of the
Boeotian towns which had been friendly to her—Orchomenus, Thespiae and Plataea; and Athens was also an ally, at least in name, of the Phocians
against Thebes. But these considerations could not weigh with Eubulus against
the danger of unnecessary war with Sparta, and the people of Megalopolis went
away unsatisfied. At the same time Eubulus was no undiscerning peace-fanatic.
He was ready to acquiesce in Philip’s conquests at Amphipolis and about the Thermaic Gulf; but Philip’s approach to Thermopylae was
another matter, and the expedition of Nausicles was
sent promptly and with good results. The encroachments of Philip along the
Thracian coast might be endured, and Cersobleptes,
fortified by his understanding with Athens, might be left to resist Philip as
well as he could; but the safety of the corn-route was of vital importance, and
the recovery of Sestos was doubtless favoured by Eubulus, who appears to have
been, on the whole, a wise and level-headed statesman, such as the time
required.
It was during
the early years of Eubulus’ administration that Demosthenes came forward on to
the political stage. He had made himself an orator by heroic persistence in
overcoming his physical defects, and by persistent study of history and
rhetoric; and he acquired practice in private cases, mostly of no political
importance. A man of strong public spirit, he had already served twice as
trierarch; and though he appears to have been personally unattractive, and was
uncompromising both in his enthusiasms and his dislikes, he was filled with an
intense belief in Athens as the champion of freedom—which meant, at that time,
of democracy—whether against orators and generals whom he believed to be making
profit for themselves instead of maintaining the traditions of the city, or
against any who, like Philip and his supporters, appeared to threaten the
autonomous city-state with what seemed like servitude; though men of wider
outlook, like Isocrates, might see in the movement of events a progress towards
the realization of Hellenic unity.
At first he
seems to have supported Eubulus, so far at least as practical policy was
concerned. He deprecated the idea of military preparations against Persia in
354; and, if the speech which has come down to us as the thirteenth in the Demosthenic Corpus is a true representation of his views,
he had no objection in principle to the theoric distributions; in fact he himself joined in renewing them after the battle of
Chaeronea, when the need for their suspension was over. But his whole bent was
towards active measures: the very debate upon Persian affairs he made an
occasion for suggesting (without success) a drastic reform of the trierarchic system, which would bear heavily upon citizens
of substance; in the speech for the Rhodians he was ready to give active help
to the exiled democrats, and was unduly confident that there was no need to
fear embroilment with Caria or Persia; and throughout, while admitting the
claim of the citizens to the funds of the State, he insisted that they should
earn their share by practical work, and above all by service in the army. It is
clear that his main object was to raise a standing army, ready to fight
whenever it might be required, and throughout his early career he regarded the
gratuitous distributions of festival-money as the great obstacle to this. In
the matter of the appeal of Megalopolis he spoke, with an air of impartiality,
but with complete conviction, in favour of the suppliants, and discounted the
risk of war with Sparta; and in speaking against the law of Aristocrates he showed his desire to support the rivals of Cersobleptes,
and so to neutralize the danger to Athenian interests from him and from
Charidemus, whose untrustworthiness was abundantly proved. In both these
speeches he made much use of the idea of the Balance of Power as the right
principle of Athenian policy—the maintenance of an equipoise between Thebes and
Sparta, between Amadocus and Cersobleptes—with
armed intervention, if necessary, to adjust the balance. Prudence was clearly
on the side of Eubulus; but when the danger to Athens from Philip seemed to be
unmistakable, Demosthenes claimed to stand for a higher principle than
prudence—the maintenance of the great traditions of Athens, and above all, of
autonomy against tyranny. Whether he was right is a question which is not
easily settled by argument; and we may conveniently return to the consideration
of the course of events during the year 352.
VII.
THE
SACRED WAR CONTINUED, 352-347 BC
In the course
of that year the Spartans invaded the territory of Megalopolis, perhaps some
months after the rejection of the latter by Athens. The Megalopolitans,
with troops sent to their aid by Argos, Sicyon and Messene, encamped near the
sources of the Alpheus, and awaited the help which they had asked for from
Thebes. The Spartans, on the other hand, received at once the aid of 3000
infantry from the Phocians—perhaps mercenaries who transferred their services
to Sparta in the interval between the defeat of Onomarchus and the resumption
of hostilities by Phayllus in the autumn of 352; and also of a small squadron
of cavalry from Lycophron and Peitholaus, whom Philip
had allowed to depart unharmed from Pherae. The combined Spartan army encamped
near Mantinea, whence they made a surprise attack upon the Argive town of Orneae and took it, defeating the Argives who came to its
assistance. The Thebans, perhaps because they had their eyes on the energetic
preparations being made by Phayllus, had as yet made no move to help
Megalopolis; and it was probably not until the spring of 351, when the
hostility of the Phocians appeared to be less formidable, that Thebes sent 4000
infantry and 500 cavalry to join the Megalopolitans.
After a doubtful battle, in which the superior numbers of the Megalopolitan and
Theban army were neutralized by their inferiority in discipline, the Argives
and other Peloponnesian allies of Megalopolis went home, and after storming Helissus in Arcadia, the Spartans also returned to Laconia.
After an interval, hostilities were renewed; the Thebans defeated a Spartan
division at Telphussa and gained the advantage in two
other engagements. Then the Spartans won a considerable victory and made a
truce with Megalopolis, which, however, retained its independence. The Theban
forces returned to Boeotia, where they were once more required to deal with the
Phocians.
Phayllus had
succeeded to the command of the Phocian forces after the death of Onomarchus.
Even the loss of 9000 men in the recent engagement seems not to have daunted
him; the templetreasures appeared to be
inexhaustible, and he used them unscrupulously to obtain allies and
mercenaries, even coining into money the blocks of gold dedicated by Croesus.
From Sparta came 1000 men, from the Achaeans 2000, from Athens 5000 men and 400
cavalry under Nausicles. Lycophron and Peitholaus also joined him with 2000 mercenaries, and the
gold given to the leading men in the smaller States brought its reward in
troops. It was probably towards autumn (352) when he invaded Boeotia. He was
defeated with considerable loss near Orchomenus, and again in a battle near the Cephisus, and a few days later at Coronea.
On this he seems to have changed his plan, and to have invaded Eastern Locris.
After capturing all the other towns in this district, he was driven out of Naryx, which he had taken one night with the help of
treachery. He then encamped near Abae, but the
Boeotian troops inflicted great loss upon him in a night attack, and then,
elated by their victory, proceeded to ravage Phocis itself and acquired rich
booty. In the meantime he had renewed the attack on Naryx;
the Boeotians, returning from Phocis, tried to relieve it, but were routed by
Phayllus, who now took and destroyed the town. This, however, was his last
success. He fell ill, and, after a long sickness, died in the course of the
winter, leaving Phalaecus, the younger son of Onomarchus, in command, with Mnaseas as his guardian. But Mnaseas soon fell in a night affray, and not long afterwards (probably in the spring of
351) Phalaecus himself was worsted in a cavalry battle near Chaeronea. Little
seems to have been effected by either side during most of the year, and we have
seen that a Theban force was engaged in the Peloponnese. Late in the year
Phalaecus succeeded in taking Chaeronea, but was expelled by the Thebans, perhaps
after the troops sent to the Peloponnese had returned; and the Boeotian army
once more overran Phocis, taking much plunder and destroying some of the local
fortresses.
But both
sides were more or less, exhausted, and in the next year (350) only desultory
fighting and occasional forays occurred. The Thebans, however, who were in
great financial straits, sent ambassadors to Artaxerxes to ask for aid; he
responded gladly, and sent them 300 talents. Evidently the expedition of
Pammenes could be overlooked, and Artaxerxes, who was anxious to recover his
lost empire over Egypt, Phoenicia and Cyprus, was doubtless eager for
assistance from Greek troops, like that which had been so invaluable to the
provinces in their revolt. Nor was he wholly disappointed.
We know
little of the course of the Sacred War from this point onwards. Our chief
authority, Diodorus XVI, 56 sqq., crowds into
the one year 347—6 events which certainly belong in part to the two years
preceding. The Boeotians (according to his narrative) once more ravaged Phocis,
and won a victory at Hyampolis, but were defeated,
probably in 349, near Coronea by the Phocians, who,
besides Coronea, held Orchomenus and Corsiae in Boeotian territory. Next we hear of the
Boeotians destroying the standing corn in Phocis—this must have been in the
early summer of 348 or 347—and of the Phocians ravaging Boeotia from the
strongholds which they occupied; and Demosthenes also mentions engagements at
Neon and Hedyleum. Phalaecus and his treasurer Philon
seem to have outdone their predecessors in their disregard for the sanctity of
Delphi, and Philon had actually begun excavations within the temple walls and
beneath the sacred tripod in the hope of finding treasure, when a terrible
earthquake, which was taken by pious minds to be a sign of the anger of Apollo,
put a stop to the operations. But the concluding scenes of the Sacred War are
so closely bound up with the movements of Philip that we must return to these.
VIII.
THE
OLYNTHIAN WAR
We have seen
that in 352, and perhaps during some portion of 351, Philip was in Thrace. The
order of events from the beginning of 351 to the end of 349 has been the
subject of endless controversy, which the evidence is not sufficient to settle.
It seems, however, that the Olynthians, who had agreed not to make alliance
with Athens apart from Philip, had become mistrustful of him, and had not only
begun to solicit the friendship of Athens, but had given an asylum to Arrhidaeus, who had been one of Philip’s rivals for the
throne, and his brother Menelaus. Philip is said to have warned them not to
invite War and Violence within their borders, and he doubtless began to foster
a Macedonian party within the city. He seems also to have marched through Olynthian territory on his way back from Thrace, thus
making a demonstration, though one unaccompanied by hostile action; perhaps
this took place in the course of a campaign against the Bisaltae, who
overlapped the Chalcidic peninsula. Besides this, he was probably occupied for
some time in establishing fortresses in Illyrian territory, and he made an
expedition against Arybbas, king of the Molossians,
by the subjugation of whom he became virtual master of a great part of Epirus.
It was during the same period that his ships began to interfere seriously with
the Athenians. They raided Lemnos and Imbros, and made prisoners of Athenian
citizens there; they captured an Athenian fleet, carrying corn, off the south
coast of Euboea; they even landed a force near Marathon, and took an Athenian
state-galley on its way to a religious solemnity at Delos.
These events
caused no little excitement in Athens. It may have been on account of them that
in October, 351, Charidemus, now in Athenian service, was sent to the
Hellespont with ten ships and five talents, with which to procure mercenaries
and, no doubt, to secure the corn-route. Whether it was now or somewhat earlier
that an agreement was made with Orontes, satrap of Mysia,
who had already helped to supply the Athenian commanders with corn, cannot be
decided. It is unsafe to conclude, with some historians, that Orontes must have
been in revolt against Persia at the time of these communications; Eubulus was
not anxious to provoke Persia to hostility, and Artaxerxes had every reason, at
this period, for wishing to maintain peaceful relations with Athens. It is true
that his enemies in Egypt had an Athenian commander to aid them; but in 350
Phocion, one of the most famous generals of Athens, was helping the Persian
cause in Cyprus; both of course were acting not as Athenians, but as captains
of mercenaries. For the rest, the activities of the Athenians during 351 and
350 seem to have been confined to some rather trifling quarrels with Megara and
Corinth, which led to two unimportant military excursions.
But the
energy of Philip, the widening breach between him and the Olynthians, and the
appeal of the latter to Athens, roused the party of action in Athens, and,
perhaps in 351, perhaps not till the beginning of 349—the evidence is once more
indecisive—Demosthenes for the first time took the lead in a public debate,
with the speech which we know as the First Philippic. The speech is a
passionate appeal to the Athenians to realize their danger from Philip, and to
meet it by a consistent and energetic policy, and above all by the creation of
a standing naval and military force, which could act at a moment’s notice,
without the delays involved in the preparation of a separate force on each
occasion, under conditions which made it impossible for it to act in time. No
army that Athens could create could meet Philip in the field; but such a force
could make descents upon the weak points in his coast-line, blockade his
harbours and protect the allies of Athens. It was, moreover, essential to his
plan that the army should be composed of citizens, not of mercenaries who could
not be counted upon. The fine patriotic zeal of Demosthenes must always command
admiration, and on the present occasion the details of the scheme, as regards
both recruitment and finance, were carefully worked out; but for the moment the
speech can hardly have had more than an educative effect on the Assembly.
Eubulus was evidently not prepared to act. It may be doubted also whether
Demosthenes allowed sufficiently for the virtual necessity of a professional
soldiery, in view of the recent developments in the art of war, the greater
length of military campaigns, and the increasing preoccupation of the Athenians
with trade, which is liable to suffer heavily from the interruptions of military
and naval service, and tends to require the specialization of the fighting
profession. On the other hand, the habit of having their fighting done by proxy
must itself have lowered the patriotic spirit of the Athenians, since there is
no such stimulus to love of one’s country as that which is given by fighting
for it.
The appeal of
Olynthus was renewed when, in the spring of 349, Philip demanded that the
Olynthians should give up Arrhidaeus and Menelaus;
and Demosthenes strongly supported the appeal in his first Olynthiac Oration, once more drawing a strong contrast between the persistent energy of
Philip and the slowness of the Athenians both in decision and in action. While
urging the preparation of a double force—part to defend Olynthus, part to carry
on an offensive campaign against the Macedonian ports—he proposed that a
sufficient war-tax should be levied, though he made it plain that the best
course, if only the Athenians would consent to it, would be to suspend the theoric distributions and use the money for the war.
Probably as the result of this debate, the alliance with Olynthus was at last
made, and a considerable armament was dispatched under the command of Chares.
This was to be reinforced later; but sufficient funds were not voted, and the
expedition proved ineffective, probably because Chares had to raise funds by
plundering friend and foe alike. That at least is what is suggested by the
second Olynthiac Oration, which, delivered probably
in the course of the summer of 349, appears to aim at meeting arguments which
the peaceparty had used, to the effect that Philip
was too strong to be resisted. Demosthenes in reply maintained that power
founded upon deception and aggression was essentially rotten, and drew a
picture, which appears to have been almost wholly imaginary, of disunion among
Philip’s troops. He also returned to the attack upon the levity of the
Athenians, and once more demanded of them that they should serve in person in
the army and reform their financial methods.
In both the first
two Olynthiac Orations Demosthenes speaks of the
Thessalians as becoming restless under Philip’s supremacy; his appropriation of
their harbour- and market-dues bore hardly on them; and they appear to have
thought of requesting him to restore the port of Pagasae to Pherae. The request may have been prompted by Peitholaus,
who seems to have found his way back to Pherae; and it was necessary for Philip
to go to Thessaly in person—the exact date of the expedition is uncertain—to
eject Peitholaus and quiet the Thessalian unrest.
But Philip’s
main task was now the subjugation of Olynthus and the other towns of the
Chalcidic League. Stagirus, the birthplace of
Aristotle, whom Philip afterwards selected as the instructor of his son
Alexander, was razed to the ground, and the Athenians did little to help the
town. Chares was recalled and prosecuted for misconduct; but Charidemus, who
was sent, in response to a further appeal, with eighteen ships and a large
mercenary force, after making some excursions into territory which Philip had
overrun and harrying Bottiaea (a district of
Macedonia to the south of Pella), abandoned active warfare to indulge in gross
luxury at the expense of the Olynthians.
At last the
war-party in Athens ventured to demand unambiguously the surrender of the
Theoric Fund for the purpose of the war. A decree was carried by Apollodorus that the Assembly should decide to which
purpose the surplus should be applied; but the procedure which he followed was
illegal; he was prosecuted and fined, and the decree invalidated. Demosthenes,
with greater regard for legality, urged in the third Olynthiac Oration that the party of Eubulus should itself take the necessary steps for
the repeal of the law which made the Theoric Fund inviolable, and that public
funds should only be distributed to those who gave personal service, whether in
the army or in administrative posts. The proposal seems to have failed, though
it is evident that at the time when it was made—probably in the autumn of
349—the prospects of Olynthus had changed greatly for the worse.
The situation
was now complicated by a movement against Athens in Euboea, the cities of which
had been converted from the Theban to the Athenian alliance in 357. There can
be little doubt that the change was due to intrigues on the part of Philip, who
desired to divide the Athenian forces and distract them from the support of
Olynthus. Plutarchus, the ruler of Eretria, an ally
of Athens, found himself threatened by a rising under Cleitarchus,
and asked the Athenians for aid. This aid Eubulus, supported by Meidias, a wealthy Athenian and a friend of Plutarchus, was prepared to give, doubtless on account of
the importance of keeping control of Euboea. Demosthenes, on the other hand,
opposed Plutarchus’ application, the granting of
which could only weaken the campaign against Philip; but in vain. A force was
sent under Phocion, about February, 348, and at first fared badly, being hemmed
in near Tamynae by the troops of Callias and Taurosthenes of Chaicis, who were
aided by mercenaries sent from Phocis. (The circumstances under which they were
dispatched are not clear. Possibly Phalaecus had already conceived the
hostility to Athens which he displayed strongly at a later period; or perhaps
some of his mercenaries were allowed to occupy themselves in Euboea at a time
when little fighting was going on on the mainland).
The Athenians sent some reinforcements, and, in view of the financial pressure,
they were obliged to ask that those who could do so should undertake the expense
of the trierarchy voluntarily; but the reinforcements did not start in time for
the battle of Tamynae, which was brought on by a rash sally on the part of Plutarchus, and was only won with difficulty by Phocion. Callias betook himself to Philip’s side; Plutarchus’ conduct, and his flight before Phocion came
into action, were condemned as due to treachery, and he was expelled by Phocion
from Eretria. Phocion occupied the important stronghold of Zaretra,
and reinforcements of cavalry arrived from Athens, probably at the beginning of
April; but the campaign went badly under Molossus, who succeeded Phocion some time afterwards, and ended in the defeat and capture
of Molossus, and the acknowledgment of the independence of all the Euboean
towns except Carystus.
While the
Euboean campaign was in progress, the Dionysiac festival took place; and Meidias, who was opposed to Demosthenes in regard to the
campaign, assaulted him violently in the theatre. Demosthenes was serving
voluntarily as choregus, and the assault at such a
time was sacrilege, and was rendered worse by many other insults on the part of Meidias. Demosthenes obtained from the Assembly a
vote of censure on Meidias, and gave notice of his
intention to prosecute him for impiety. The speech which he wrote is an
eloquent and uncompromising denunciation of the life-long insolence of Meidias; but (like Cicero’s speech for Milo against Clodius, which it somewhat resembles) it was never
delivered. The trial was postponed for more than a year, and by that time the
political situation had changed. Demosthenes was then temporarily acting in
harmony with Eubulus, and so was content to compromise, and to accept half a
talent from Meidias in atonement of the injury.
While the
Athenians were engaged in Euboea, Philip had not been idle. Throughout the
early part of 348 he was taking the Chalcidic towns in quick succession, more
by the help of his hirelings in each than by force. All the time he appears to
have kept up the pretence that he intended no hostility against Olynthus
itself, and his hired accomplices in the city, Euthycrates and Lasthenes, no doubt tried to foster the illusion;
and it was not until he had taken Mecyberna, the port
of Olynthus, and the important town of Torone, that he threw off the mask and
told the Olynthians that their continuance in Olynthus was incompatible with
his continuance in Macedonia. The Athenians, again appealed to, were in
difficulties in Euboea, but the charges against Chares, which had not yet come
to trial, were hurriedly dropped, and he was sent off with 2000 citizen
foot-soldiers and 300 cavalry. Once more it was too late; the winds were
contrary, and the traitors in Olynthus had done their work. They betrayed their
cavalry to Philip on the field of battle, and in August, 348, the town
capitulated. The inhabitants were sold into slavery; Arrhidaeus and Menelaus were put to death; lands, property and captives were distributed
among leading Macedonians and other friends of Philip, and, according to
Demosthenes’ statement, thirty-two towns in the peninsula were entirely wiped
out. The accounts which have come down to us may be somewhat exaggerated, and
Philip was only doing on a large scale what Chares had done on a small at
Sestos in the name of Athens; but the destruction was probably without a
parallel in Greek history. While the Athenians did what they could for the
relief of the fugitives, Philip held high festival in Macedonia, and celebrated
his conquests by games, dramatic performances and abundant feasting.
IX.
THE
PEACE OF PHILOCRATES, AND THE END OF THE SACRED WAR
But Philip
had for some time been anxious for peace with Athens. Probably he intended to
assert his supremacy in due time over her and the other Greek states; but the
time was not yet, and the Athenian ships were in the meantime capable of
inflicting no little injury on his coasts and hindering his operations. There
was still something to be done before he could regard even Thrace as a secure
possession; and before he could claim the overlordship of Greece, there would
be much preliminary work to do. So he proceeded to approach Athens, as he had
once approached Amphipolis and Olynthus, with professions of friendly feeling.
Some such messages were sent, even before the fall of Olynthus, through an
Athenian named Phrynon, whom he had captured and
released, and through Ctesiphon, who had been sent to ask Philip for the return
of the money paid for Phrynon’s ransom. The Assembly
welcomed the messages, and on the proposal of Philocrates it was resolved to allow Philip’s representatives to come to Athens to propose
the terms of an understanding. But about this time the fall of Olynthus and
its attendant horrors shocked the Athenians so greatly that, instead of sending
any such invitation, they resolved, on the motion of Eubulus himself, to make
an attempt to unite all the Greek States against Philip.
The proposal
was eloquently advocated by Aeschines, an orator who now for the first time
took a prominent part in public life. A man of great natural gifts and good
education, he had once been obliged to follow somewhat humble callings—those of
schoolmaster, actor and clerk in a public office; but, with his brother Aphobetus, he had for some time been a supporter of
Eubulus, and on the present occasion he took an active part in the embassies
which were sent to invite the Greek States to a congress, to discuss the
measures to be taken against Philip. But despite the eloquent indignation of
Aeschines the embassies failed; the natural disunion of the States, and a
certain want of imagination (such as had on other occasions prevented the
Spartans from anticipating any possible danger to themselves) led them to turn
a deaf ear; and there was nothing for it but to make peace. Informal messages
passed for some time, gradually becoming more definite, until (probably in the
late summer of 347) one of the messengers, the Athenian actor Aristodemus, was awarded a crown by the Council on the
motion of Demosthenes, who was now as much convinced as anyone of the necessity
of peace, and was acting in harmony with Eubulus. Demosthenes even defended Philocrates, who had been arraigned by one Lycinus for the illegality of his original peace-proposal,
and secured for him an easy acquittal.
But a new
complication was introduced into the situation by the turn of events in the
Sacred War. In the course of 347, if not earlier, dissensions had arisen in the
Phocian ranks. Phalaecus was accused of appropriating the temple treasures to
his own use, and the Phocian government deposed him from his command. Three
generals, Deinocrates, Callias and Sophanes were appointed in his place, and his treasurer,
Philon, was tortured till he revealed his companions in theft, and died
miserably. Evidently, however, Phalaecus retained the support of a large body
of mercenaries; he appears to have made his headquarters not far from
Thermopylae: and the Thebans, suffering severely from loss of men and lack of
funds, applied to Philip for aid. Philip was well content to see their
humiliation; and, to lower their ‘Leuctric pride’
still further, he only sent a few soldiers—just enough to show that he was not
indifferent to the sacrilege at Delphi. An attempt of the Phocians to fortify Abae was defeated, and a number of them who took sanctuary
in Apollo’s temple there perished in an accidental conflagration. Both sides
now appealed for allies, the Boeotians once more to Philip, the
Phocians—probably, that is, the home-government of Phocis, which had appointed
Deinocrates and his colleagues—to Sparta and Athens. The Phocians offered to
give into the hands of the Athenians the strongholds which commanded the Pass
of Thermopylae, if the Athenians would assist them. In consideration of this,
Athens sent Proxenus, probably in the autumn of 347, to take possession of the
strongholds, and ordered the equipment of fifty ships with citizen troops. But
Proxenus found Phalaecus, and not a representative of the Phocian government,
at Thermopylae, and Phalaecus repudiated the agreement with contumely; the
ships, of course, were not sent. Archidamus, who was
sent from Sparta with 1000 men, also received a rebuff and returned home. It
seems to have been generally assumed that Philip was about to join forces with
the Thessalians, and to settle the Sacred War adversely to the Phocians; but
for the present he concealed his hand, doubtless waiting for the development of
the Athenian inclination for peace, and watching for the right moment to
intervene in the war. The only action which he is known to have taken about
this time was in support of the Thessalian town of Pharsalus against Halus, which was on terms of friendship with Athens, and
was probably assisted by the presence of Athenian ships.
The movement
for peace came to a head in Athens early in 346. On the motion of Philocrates, it was resolved to send ten ambassadors,
accompanied by a representative of the allies of Athens, to Philip. The
ambassadors included several of those through whom the previous informal
communications had passed, as well as Philocrates himself, Aeschines and Demosthenes. It was thus representative both of the
supporters and of the opponents of Eubulus, both parties being temporarily at
one as regards the peace. The ambassadors sailed with the least possible delay,
landed at Halus, which was being besieged by Parmenion,
Philip’s ablest general, and then hastened overland to Pella, where Philip
received them very graciously. Aeschines (according to his own account of the
proceedings, which is the only one that we possess) devoted his speech mainly
to the Athenian claim to Amphipolis; other speakers must have discussed the
questions relating to the Chersonese, the Phocians and Halus;
Demosthenes, who spoke last, broke down from nervousness. He was never a ready
extempore speaker, and it is quite likely that the nine or ten earlier speeches
may have left him at a loss for arguments.
Philip’s
reply was friendly in tone. The claim to Amphipolis, indeed, he must have
plainly rejected; but he promised to take no hostile steps against the
Chersonese while the negotiations were in progress, and offered to do great
things for Athens, if he were granted an alliance with her, as well as the
Peace. His manner, as well as his offers, made a very favourable impression
upon the ambassadors, and particularly upon Aeschines, who had hitherto been
one of his most outspoken enemies; and they did not fail to declare this
impression to the Council and the Assembly on their return to Athens, though
Demosthenes, who had fallen out with his colleagues, criticized them somewhat
peevishly for their flattery, and simply proposed in unvarnished language that
Philip’s envoys should be received with the usual civilities, and that two days
should be set apart for the discussion of the Peace in the Assembly.
The two
debates were held about the middle of April, 346. The course of the proceedings
is known only from the contradictory accounts given several years later by
Demosthenes and Aeschines, at a time when each was eager to prove that he had
had nothing to do with a Peace which had ended, as this was destined to end, in
the sacrifice of the Phocians. But apparently there were two proposals before
the Assembly, the one formulated by the Synod of the allies of Athens, that any
Greek State (and therefore, of course, the Phocians and Halus)
should have the opportunity of joining in the Peace within the next three
months: the other put forward by Philocrates, who was
no doubt closely in touch with Philip’s envoys, Antipater and Parmenion, that
the Athenians should make an alliance as well as a Peace with Philip, but that
the Phocians and Halus should not be permitted to
join in it. The Assembly was evidently anxious to save the Phocians; but in the
interval between the two debates, the chief statesmen must have become aware
that Philip would not agree to this, and apparently Antipater, when publicly
interrogated by Demosthenes, said so plainly. The attempt was then made to get
the Assembly to approve the Peace and the alliance, without any express mention
of the Phocians or Halus being inserted in the terms,
but with an assurance, given almost certainly by Aeschines, that Philip really
intended to behave as the Athenians desired, though his close connection with
the Thebans and Thessalians forbad him to say so expressly. There is no reason
to doubt that Aeschines believed this, however severely he may be criticized
for allowing himself to be deceived by Philip’s conciliatory manner. But even
this failed; and it was only when Eubulus pointed out that there was no
alternative between simple acceptance and the renewal of war, and that the
latter would involve the sacrifice of the festival-money to pay the expense,
that the Assembly yielded. It was then agreed that peace should be made by
Athens and her allies with Philip and his allies, each party retaining what they
possessed at the time of the ratification. Thus Philip kept Amphipolis, the
Athenians the Chersonese, except Cardia. A few days later, in the presence of
Antipater and Parmenion, the Peace was sworn to by the Athenians and their
allies. A demand made by a representative of Cersobleptes that his master should be included among the allies was quite rightly rejected
by Demosthenes, as president of the Assembly for the day; since Cersobleptes, though on friendly terms with Athens, was not
a member of her alliance.
The ten
ambassadors who had previously served were directed to go once more to Philip,
to receive the oaths of himself and his allies, and to procure the freedom of
the Athenians who were prisoners in his hands. The differences which had sprung
up between Demosthenes and his colleagues on the first embassy now made
themselves felt more acutely. There is no doubt that Aeschines and Philocrates, supported by Eubulus and his party, desired a
permanent settlement with Philip; while Demosthenes, though convinced of the
necessity of peace for the moment, was still irreconcilable, and looked on the
Peace simply as a breathing-space, during which Athens could recover herself
before renewing what was, for him, the conflict between the free city-state and
the tyrant. In consequence he was anxious to give Philip as little opportunity
as possible of extending those possessions which would be his from the moment
of his taking the oath. Philip had, in fact, been occupied, while the Peace was
being discussed at Athens, in the effectual subjugation of Cersobleptes,
whose title to participate in the Peace he had never recognized; and, probably
on the very day before the Athenians themselves swore to the Peace, he had
completed his occupation of a series of fortified places in Thrace by the
capture of Cersobleptes himself in the stronghold
known as the Sacred Mountain; any opposition which Chares and his mercenaries
may have offered was without effect; and before the ambassadors obtained an
interview with him, he had taken possession of the Odrysian Kingdom, leaving Cersobleptes himself there as a
vassal-prince, and retaining his son as a hostage.
Demosthenes
was naturally anxious that the ambassadors should accomplish their mission with
all speed; but it was necessary for him to procure a special decree of the
Council, before they could be induced to move at all. They delayed on the
journey; they did not follow the instruction that they were to join Proxenus
and his ships, and cause him to carry them to any place where they could find
Philip; but, after meeting Proxenus, they went to Pella, and waited there for
about a month before Philip arrived, having made his Thracian conquests secure.
It was fifty days since they had left Athens. Their object in delaying their
approach to Philip is unknown; Demosthenes imputed it to deliberate treachery,
conceived under the influence of presents from Philip; but of this there is no
further proof, nor is it clear that their greater haste would really have
effected any change in Philip’s plans, or that it could have availed to check
his seizure of places in Thrace, even though they were defended in part by
Athenian soldiers fighting, under the generalship of
Chares, for Cersobleptes.
The Athenian
ambassadors found envoys from many other Greek States assembled at
Pella—Thebans, eager to secure Philip’s immediate aid against the Phocians;
Spartans, Euboeans, Phocians (though whether of Phalaecus’ following, or of the
party in power in Phocis, is unknown)—each with their own object, for which
they desired his good-will, and each beguiled, with his characteristic skill,
into thinking that they had attained it. Demosthenes differed strongly from his
colleagues not only in his ultimate aim, but also in regard to the policy to be
pursued at the moment. It followed from his desire to renew the struggle
against Philip, when occasion offered, that he would not wish to weaken Thebes,
or to take any step which might prevent an alliance of Thebes and Athens
against Philip. His colleagues, who in this were in sympathy with the general
feeling of the Athenians, were hostile to Thebes and anxious to save the
Phocians; and when the ambassadors were granted an interview with Philip,
Aeschines did all he could to promote this object, laying stress upon all that
could be said against the Thebans in their conduct of the Sacred War, and
pleading for a solution, not by armed intervention, but by a vote of the Amphictyonic Council, to be given after both sides had been
heard. Demosthenes, who had spoken first, seems again to have cut a poor
figure, hinting at the differences of opinion between himself and his
colleagues, commending himself for the civilities which he had shown to
Philip’s envoys, and at the same time mocking his colleagues for the flattery
which they had bestowed upon Philip. Philip was certainly not diverted a hair’s
breadth from his plan by the orators, but he seems to have led Aeschines
genuinely to believe that he intended the Phocians no harm, and his air of
friendliness was enhanced by lavish presents to the ambassadors, which all but
Demosthenes accepted without misgiving. He declared his consent to the Peace,
but did not take the oath until, accompanied by his army and escorted by the
ambassadors, he had marched southward as far as Pherae. Here also the
ambassadors received the oaths of Philip’s allies, instead of visiting their
cities for the purpose as they had been instructed to do. At some stage in the
proceedings Philip must have made it clear that the Phocians and Halus were not included in the Peace, and in fact Halus was forced to surrender to him not long afterwards,
and was treated with great severity. Demosthenes, being unable to act with his
colleagues in regard to the Phocian question, had devoted himself chiefly to
the interests of the Athenian prisoners, and these Philip promised to send home
in time for the Panathenaic festival.
When Philip
had taken the oath, the ambassadors returned home, sending before them a
despatch announcing the results of the mission. Before they reached Athens,
about July 7, Philip was at Thermopylae. The Athenian Council was so far
impressed by the charges of breach of instructions which Demosthenes brought
against his colleagues that it neither gave them the usual vote of thanks nor
the complimentary feast which generally went with it. But the Assembly was
carried away by Aeschines’ declaration that in a few days they would see Thebes
besieged by Philip and punished for the contemplated occupation of the temple
of Delphi; Thespiac and Plataea would then be rebuilt,
and (he hinted) Oropus would be restored to Athens. A letter from Philip was
read, in which he took upon himself the blame for the ambassadors’ failure to
carry out their instructions literally, and offered to do anything that he
could honourably do to satisfy the Athenians. Demosthenes (according to his own
account) was refused a hearing, when he rose to express his disbelief in these
assurances, and the Assembly laughed with delight when Philocrates cried, ‘No wonder that Demosthenes and I disagree; he drinks water; I drink
wine.’ The Assembly passed the motion of Philocrates,
thanking Philip for his righteous intentions, extending the alliance first made
to his posterity, and calling upon the Phocians to surrender the temple to the Amphictyons and lay down their arms; failing which, Athens
would take arms against them.
Clearly the
Assembly must have been convinced that Philip intended to treat both the
Phocians and Athens generously, and this impression must have been due to the
assurances of Aeschines and his colleagues; otherwise its action, considering
the favour with which it had always regarded the Phocians, is inexplicable. The
same confidence was probably the reason for their declining Philip’s invitation
to them to send an army to join him at Thermopylae, and assist in the
settlement of the matters which concerned the Amphictyonic powers, though Demosthenes and Hegesippus (a violent
anti-Macedonian), who recommended the refusal of the invitation, may themselves
have desired to avoid any such clash of Athenian and Theban policies at
Thermopylae as would have rendered subsequent co-operation against Philip
difficult. The refusal was almost certainly a mistake, since it deprived Athens
of all influence in the settlement of North Greece.
However this
may be, the Athenians were suddenly startled by the news that on the day after
the resolution of Philocrates had been passed,
Phalaecus had surrendered to Philip at Thermopylae. The news was brought by the
ambassadors sent to inform Philip of that resolution, who had turned back in
alarm on hearing it at Chalcis. For a moment the Athenians were panic-stricken,
and thinking that Philip’s next move would be against themselves, ordered
defensive measures to be taken immediately, at the same time sending the
ambassadors once more on their journey, to use such influence as they could
upon Philip in his camp.
The surrender
of Phalaecus was no doubt due to the disunion in the Phocian ranks, and the
exhaustion of his funds. He was allowed to depart with a force of 8000
mercenaries. After various adventures, he perished towards the end of the year
in Crete, where he and his men had taken part in a quarrel between Cnossus and
some other Cretan towns. Those who survived of his army met their end in 343 in
Elis, where they had sold their swords to some Elean exiles desirous of restoration. The historian Diodorus does not fail to draw a
moral from the fate of the sacrilegious Phocians and their allies, and notes
with satisfaction how Archidamus, who had once helped
them, afterwards died in battle in Italy, where he had gone to help the people
of Tarentum against their Lucanian neighbours.
On the
surrender of Phalaecus, some of the Phocian towns capitulated to Philip, and
those which did not were rapidly reduced. Many of the inhabitants fled to
Athens and were welcomed there. Philip appears to have been both surprised and
annoyed at the manner in which Athens had received the news of his action, and
sent a letter, strongly worded, protesting that the Phocians had not been
included in the treaty of peace, and that he was acting within his rights.
The fate of
the Phocians was left to be determined by the Amphictyonic Council. After more barbarous proposals had been rejected, it was resolved that
the Phocian towns should be dismantled, and the citizens dispersed into
villages of not more than fifty houses each, with at least 200 yards’ interval
between one village and another; that they should repay the value of the
temple-treasures by annual instalments, and should not bear arms or own horses
until complete restitution had been made, and that the fugitives of the
sacrilegious race should be liable to seizure in any country. The destructive
part of the sentence was carried out by the Thebans, and Demosthenes, three
years later, drew an impressive picture of the desolation which was caused,
though, judged by Greek standards, their fate was not a specially cruel one,
and the fact that the repayment to the temple began within three years, and
proceeded without interruption, shows that they must soon have recovered some
measure of prosperity. Some of the Phocian territory was occupied by Thebes;
the Boeotian towns which had joined the Phocians against Thebes were destroyed
and their inhabitants enslaved. The Phocians lost their votes in the Amphictyonic Council, and votes were now assigned to Philip
and to the Delphians, who resumed charge of the temple. Sparta also is said to
have lost her Amphictyonic rights, but the evidence
of inscriptions leaves this very doubtful. Athens was deprived of her right to
precedence in the consultation of the oracle.
To assert
before the world his newly-acquired dignity, Philip was appointed to preside
over the forthcoming Pythian games; but Athens and Sparta, by way of protest,
refused to send the customary deputations to attend the festival. Accordingly
Philip demanded from Athens a formal recognition of himself as a member of the Amphictyonic Council, and Aeschines argued in favour of
this recognition, on the ground that the adverse action of the Council had been
due to the preponderant influence of the Thessalians and Thebans. But the
Assembly refused to give him a hearing, and it was not until Demosthenes
himself, who saw that Athens could not at present resist the forces of Philip
and his allies, recommended the Athenians to accede to Philip’s request, that
they submitted. In the speech On the Peace, which was delivered on this
occasion, he professed to make light of the matter; but there can be no doubt
that the Athenians felt their humiliation greatly.
Thus, by the
autumn of 346, Philip had become by far the strongest power in the Greek world.
His influence extended over nearly the whole of North Greece, and over all
Thrace, with the exception of the Chersonese, and he was already entering into communication
with some of the Peloponnesian States. There was good reason for Isocrates’
anticipation that the day of small states was done, and that the Greek peoples
could achieve well-being, if at all, only by subordination to such a
controlling power as Philip. Whether he was right in the further view which he
expressed in a pamphlet addressed to Philip just at this time, that they would
achieve unity best by combining in a common enterprise against the Persian
Empire, is perhaps less certain. Probably some such project was already in the
mind of Philip; but the unity which the enterprise, when it was undertaken, did
impose was but superficial.
The
significance of Philip’s success, apart from the proof which it gave of his own
skill in planning movements and playing upon both individuals and peoples, was
that it emphasized unmistakably the advantages of central and personal control,
as compared with the Athenian method of government by discussion with its
inevitable delays, its spasmodic activities, its fluctuations of policy,
constant only in its assumption that the one thing that ultimately mattered was
that the festival-money should not be interfered with; and there was also
plainly to be seen the immeasurably greater efficiency of the united Macedonian
army, when compared with the disconnected bands of mercenaries who for the most
part represented the Greek cities.
Philip, no
doubt, was aware of these advantages, and so was Isocrates, who, as a
reflective spectator of events, was in some ways more clear-sighted than the
politicians themselves. Demosthenes was also aware of them, and it was for that
reason that he strove with all his eloquence to rouse his fellow-citizens to
fight and act for themselves, and to act in accordance with some consistent policy;
and for the same reasons he desired to bring about a combination between Athens
and Thebes, such as alone could offer any hope of successful resistance to
Philip. Clearly he did not despair of the free city-state. It was his
detestation of what seemed to him to be foreign domination that animated all
his efforts, and he claimed with justice to be upholding the traditions of
which Athens was most proud.
Of his
opponents, and in particular of Aeschines, it is less easy to speak with
confidence. The charges of corruption which Demosthenes brought against
Aeschines are certainly not proved. Philip did, it is true, use money freely to
open the gates of cities and to foster Macedonian parties within their walls;
but Demosthenes, with all his greatness, was one of those unfortunate persons
who find it difficult to ascribe a good motive when they can imagine a bad one;
and he saw corruption everywhere. There is no reason to doubt that Aeschines,
after the example of his first political leader Eubulus, was convinced that a
peace with Philip which secured the Chersonese for Athens, gave her freedom
from war, and included (as it did) provisions for the suppression of piracy and
the security of the trade-routes by the joint action of Philip and the
Athenians, was a compromise worth accepting, even if Amphipolis and most of the
Thracian coast passed finally out of Athenian control. As for the Phocians, he
had done his best to help them both at Philip’s court and at the Amphictyonic Council; and it was by no means certain that
Philip intended anything but friendship towards Athens. In truth, little
substantial criticism can be passed upon the main policy of either party at
Athens. The divergence between men with imperialistic sentiments and a pride in
national traditions, and men whose instinct leads them to care most for peace,
with economic prosperity and financial stability, is one which exists
everywhere, and is not discreditable to either side. If criticism is to be
passed it must be rather upon those faults of temper which marred the attempts
of both sides to carry out their policy,—upon the rancour shown by Demosthenes
both towards Philip and towards his political opponents in Athens, when a more
reasonable demeanour might have secured better results even from his own point
of view; upon the liability of Aeschines and his friends to be deceived by
Philip’s generosity and his well-timed assurances of good-will; and upon the
readiness of both to distort the truth, whether in the Assembly or in the Law
Courts. These defects wall appear still more plainly in the years which form
the subject of the next chapter.
MACEDONIAN
SUPREMACY IN GREECE
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