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    HISTORY OF ANCIENT GREECE | 
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A HISTORY OF GREECE TO   THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER THE GREAT
          
        
 CHAPTER XIV.
            
        THE HEGEMONY OF THEBES
          
        
           Sect.
          1. Jason of Pherae; and the Battle of Leuctra
                
        The balance of power in Greece had been swayed for a
          hundred years by the two rivals Sparta and Athens ; and now the Peace of
          Callias had formally adjusted an equilibrium between them. But this dual system
          was threatened from the very outset by formidable dangers. It was clear that
          new forces had arisen within the last few years, which would dispute the
          leadership of Hellas with the two older states. There had been a development of
          military power in the north, and two cities had come into dangerous prominence,
          Thebes and Pherae.
               Of the rise of Pherae we know less than of the rise of
          Thebes. At the time of the Peace of Callias we make the sudden discovery that
          the Thessalian cities which were usually in a state of feud have been united,
          and that Thessaly has consequently become one of the great powers of Greece.
          This was the doing of one man. There had arisen at Pherae a despot, who was not
          merely vigorous and warlike, but whose ambition ranged beyond the domestic
          politics of Thessaly and sought to play a great part on the wider stage of
          Hellas. Jason had established his dominion by means of a well-trained body of
          6000 mercenaries, and also doubtless by able diplomacy. The most influential
          citizen of Pharsalus exposed at Sparta the ambitious and menacing views of
          Jason, and proved the importance of checking his career before he became too
          powerful; but Sparta, pressed by other more importunate claims, declined to
          interfere. Then Pharsalus yielded to the solicitations of Jason, and helped to
          install him as Tagus of an united
          Thessaly. The power of the despot extended on one side into Epirus, where Alcetas, prince of the Molossi, became his vassal; and on
          the other side to Macedonia.
   A monarch, endowed with uncommon political and
          military ability, at the head of all Thessaly, with the best cavalry in Greece
          at his command, seemed likely to change the whole course of Hellenic affairs.
          That he aimed at becoming the first power in Hellas—at attaining the hegemony
          or leadership, as it was called—there can be no question; nor, considering the
          weakness and jealousies of the southern Grecian states, would this object, with
          his resources, be difficult of achievement. But, if his ambition was not
          bounded by Thessaly, neither was it confined to Hellas. His dream was to lead
          Hellas against Persia, and overthrow the power of the Great King. How serious
          he was in his great projects is shown by the fact that he set about building a
          navy. Thessaly was again to become a seapower, as in
          the days of legendary story, when the Argo ventured forth from the land-locked
          bay of Iolcus.
   The power of Sparta had evidently declined, but she
          was still regarded as holding the highest position in Greece; and it was the
          first object of Jason to weaken her still further and dethrone her from that
          place. His second immediate object was to gain control of the key of southern
          Greece—the pass of Thermopylae; and as this was commanded by the Spartan
          fortress of Heraclea, these two objects were intimately connected. His obvious
          policy was to ally himself with Sparta’s enemy, Thebes; and Thebes, in her isolated
          position, leapt at his alliance. The treaty between the Boeotian and Thessalian
          federations was probably concluded not long before the Peace of Callias.
          According to the terms of that Peace, all parties were to recall their
          armaments from foreign countries and their garrisons from foreign towns. Athens
          promptly recalled Iphicrates from Corcyra, but Sparta on her side failed to
          fulfil the contract. King Cleombrotus had, shortly
          before, led an army to Phocis, and now, instead of disbanding it, he was ordered
          to march against Thebes and compel that state to set free the Boeotian cities.
          One voice, perhaps, in the Spartan assembly was raised against this violation
          of the recent oaths, a violation which was also unfair to the allies who served
          in the Lacedaemonian army. But in this hour Sparta was led on, as one of her
          admirers said, by a fatal impulse inspired by the gods ; the feeling of hatred
          against Thebes, diligently fostered by Agesilaus, swept away all thoughts of
          policy or justice; and the voice which was raised for justice and policy was
          scornfully cried down. The duel between Thebes and Sparta was inevitable; and
          all Greece, confident in Spartan superiority, looked to see Thebes broken up
          into villages or wiped out from among the cities of Hellas. Even Thebes herself
          hardly hoped for success. But Sparta would have done well to disband the army
          of Cleombrotus, and organise a new force with the help of those allies who were willing to support her.
   The object of Cleombrotus,
          who was posted near Chaeronea, in the gate between Phocis and Boeotia, was to
          reach Thebes; and, as we have seen in the case of former military operations in
          this country, his direct road lay along the western and southern banks of Lake
          Copais, by Coronea and Haliartus.
          The aim of the Thebans was to prevent him from reaching his objective; and they
          posted their forces nigh to Coronea, where, nearly a
          quarter of a century before, a confederate army had waylaid Agesilaus. But Cleombrotus disappointed his enemy ; he marched southward
          by a difficult road round Mount Helicon to Thisbe, and thence pounced on the
          port of Creusis, which he captured along with twelve Theban ships in the harbour; and, by this swift stroke having secured his rear,
          he advanced northward along the road to Thebes.
   When he reached the height of Leuctra, he found that
          the way was barred by the Theban army. Leuctra lies on the hills which form the
          south limit of a small plain, somewhat more than half a mile broad, traversed
          by the brook of the upper Asopus. The road from the coast to Thebes crosses it
          and ascends the hills on the northern side, where the Boeotarchs and their army
          were now drawn up. The round top of one of these low hills, just east of the
          road, was levelled and enlarged to form a smooth platform. Here the Theban
          hoplites of the left wing were posted, and the artificial mound marks their
          place to this day. The numbers of the two hosts are uncertain; the
          Lacedaemonians, in any case considerably superior, may have been about eleven,
          the Theban about six, thousand strong. But the military genius of one of the
          Boeotarchs, now for the first time fully revealed, made up for the deficiency
          in strength. Instead of drawing out the usual long and shallow line,
          Epaminondas made his left wing deep. This wedge, fifty shields deep, of
          irresistible weight, with the Sacred Band, under the captaincy of Pelopidas, in
          front, was opposed to the Spartans who, with Cleombrotus himself, were drawn up on the right of the hostile army. “It was on his left
          wing that Epaminondas relied for victory; the shock between the Spartans and
          Thebans would decide the battle; it mattered little about the Boeotians on the centre and left, whom he could not entirely trust. The
          Thespians, who were present on constraint, were at the last moment permitted to
          depart; but their retreat was cut off and they were driven back to the camp by
          the Phocians and other of the Lacedaemonian allies, who, by detaching
          themselves for this purpose, weakened their own army without effecting an
          useful result.
   The battle began with an engagement of the cavalry. In
          this arm the Lacedaemonians were notoriously weak; and now their horsemen,
          easily driven back, carried disorder into the line of foot. Cleombrotus,
          who was confident of victory, then led his right wing down the slopes—the centre and left being probably impeded in their advance by
          the cavalry; and on his side Epaminondas with the Theban left moved down from
          their hill, deliberately keeping back the rest of the line. The novel tactics
          of Epaminondas decided the battle. The Spartans, twelve deep, though they
          fought ever so bravely, could not resist the impact of the Theban wedge led by
          Pelopidas. King Cleombrotus fell, and after a great
          carnage on both sides the Thebans drove their enemies up the slopes back to
          their camp. In other parts of the field there seems to have been little
          fighting or slaughter; the Lacedaemonian allies, when they saw the right wing
          worsted, retired without more ado.
   A thousand Lacedaemonians had fallen, including four
          hundred Spartans  and the survivors
          acknowledged their defeat by demanding the customary truce to take up the dead.
          It might be thought that they would have immediately retreated to Creusis, the
          place of safety which the dead king had prudently provided in their rear. It is
          not likely that the enemy, whom they still considerably outnumbered, would have
          attempted to stop their way, or even to harass them seriously from behind. The
          Thebans could hardly realise the victory which they
          had never expected; it was more than enough to have defeated the Lacedaemonians
          in the open field, to have slain their king, and to have compelled them to
          evacuate Boeotia. But the Lacedaemonian army remained in its entrenchments on
          the hill of Leuctra, in the expectation of being reinforced by a new army from
          Sparta and retrieving the misfortune. A messenger was sent home with the
          inglorious tidings, and the shock was borne there with that studied
          self-repression which only the discipline of Sparta could inculcate in her
          citizens. The remaining forces of the city were Army of hastily got together,
          and placed under the command of Archidamus, relief son of Agesilaus. Some of
          the allied states sent aid, and the troops were transported by ship from
          Corinth to Creusis. 
   But all this took time, and meanwhile Thebes had not
          been idle. Two messengers were sent with the good news, to Athens and to
          Thessaly. At Athens the wreathed messenger was received with an ominous
          silence. The Theban victory was distinctly unwelcome there; it opened up an
          indefinite prospect of warfare and seemed likely to undo the recent
          pacification; while the Athenians were far less jealous of Sparta than of
          Thebes. At Pherae the tidings had a very different reception. Jason marched
          forthwith to the scene of action, at the head of his cavalry and mercenaries,
          flying so rapidly through Phocis that the Phocians, his irreconcilable enemies,
          did not realise his presence until he had passed. He
          cannot have reached Leuctra until the sixth or seventh day after the battle.
          The Thebans thought that with the help of his forces they might storm the
          Lacedaemonian entrenchments, dangerous though the task would be. But for the
          policy of Jason the humiliation already inflicted on Sparta was enough; the
          annihilation of the enemy or any further enhancement of the Theban success
          would have been too much. He dissuaded the Thebans from the enterprise, and
          induced them to grant a truce to the Lacedaemonians, with leave to retire
          unharmed. This the Lacedaemonians were now forced to accept, notwithstanding
          the approach of reinforcements. For their position was totally altered through
          the presence of the seasoned troops of Jason, and it was clear that the foe
          would not wait to attack them till the expected reinforcements arrived. The
          retreat was carried out at night, for the leaders suspected the good faith of
          their opponents. On the coast the defeated troops met the army of Archidamus,
          which had come in vain, and all the forces were disbanded.
   Such were the circumstances of the Lacedaemonian
          evacuation of Boeotia after the battle of Leuctra, according to the historian
          whose authority we are naturally inclined to prefer. But the memory of Xenophon
          might have misled him in regard to some of the details, and there was another
          account from which it might be inferred that events moved more rapidly. There
          is something to be said for the view that the army of Archidamus was not
          dispatched as a relief force after the battle of Leuctra, but was already on
          its way before the battle was fought; that Cleombrotus had the alternative of waiting for Archidamus before he ventured on an action,
          and that his visit to Creusis was, in fact, connected with the expected arrival
          of reinforcements; that Jason too was hastening to support the Thebans, and
          that the messenger who bore the news of victory met him on his southward march.
          On this view' the truce might have been concluded on the morrow of the battle,
          and we avoid the difficulty of supposing that the defeated army decided to
          remain for a week on the hill of Leuctra, when the road to Creusis was open
          behind them.
   The question is of little moment save in so far as it
          concerns the movements of the Tagus of Thessaly. The significance of the sequel
          of the battle lies in the prominent part which he played as a mediator; and we
          should like well to know whether his original purpose was to fight side by side
          with his Theban allies. We also hear darkly of his avowed intention to bring
          help by sea; and we are tempted to speculate at what point the new Thessalian
          navy would have acted at this crisis. Jason returned to his northern home, but
          on his way he dealt another blow at Sparta on his own account, by dismantling
          Heraclea, the fort which controlled the pass of Thermopylae. He thus compassed
          an object of great importance for his further designs. These designs he soon
          began to unfold. He fixed on the next celebration of the Pythian festival as a
          time to display his greatness and his power to the eyes of assembled Hellas. He
          sent mandates around to the Thessalian cities to prepare oxen, sheep, and goats
          for the sacrifice at Delphi, offering a gold crown as a prize for the fairest
          ox. And he issued commands that the armed host of the Thessalians should be
          ready to march with him to keep the feast. He proposed to usurp the rights of
          the Amphictyonic board, and preside himself over the games. A rumour was floated that he intended to seize the treasures
          of the temple; but it is hard to believe that an aspirant to the hegemony of
          Greece would have perpetrated an act so manifestly impolitic. Apollo told the
          Delphians, who were fluttered by the report, that he would himself guard his
          treasure.
   But the priests were soon to breathe freely; the
          Phocians were to be spared the mortification of seeing the hated Thessalian in
          their land. One day Jason held a review of his cavalry, and afterwards sat to
          hear petitions. Seven young men, to all appearance wrangling hotly, drew near
          to lay their dispute before him, and slew him where he sat. The death of Jason
          was the knell of all his plans. The unity of Thessaly, the high position which
          it had attained among the Grecian powers, depended entirely on him. The
          brothers who succeeded to his place were slight insignificant men, without the
          ability, even if they had possessed the will, to carry out his far-reaching
          designs. It is the bare truth to say that the blades of the seven young men
          changed the course of history. Jason was well on his way to attain in eastern
          Greece the supreme position which his great fellow-despot Dionysius held in the
          west. Nor is it extravagant to suppose that under him Thessaly might have
          accomplished part of the work which was reserved for Macedonia. Politically,
          indeed, his work is to be condemned. He had not laid the foundations of a
          national unity in Thessaly; the unity which he had compassed was held by
          military force only and his own genius. We cannot congratulate a statesman on a
          result of which the stability hangs on the chances of his own life. In this
          respect Jason stands in the same rank with Epaminondas.
               The death of the Thessalian potentate decided that, of
          the two northern states which had recently risen into prominence, Boeotia not
          Thessaly, should take the torch from Sparta. 
    The
          significance of the battle of Leuctra is perhaps most clearly revealed in the
          fact that during the wars between Sparta and Thebas which followed it, the parts hitherto played by the two states are reversed.
          Thebes now becomes the invader of the Peloponnese, as Sparta before had been
          the invader of Boeotia. Thebes is now the aggressor; it is as much as Sparta
          can do to defend her own land. The significance of Leuctra is also displayed in
          the effect which it produced upon the policy of Athens, and in its stimulating
          influence on the lesser Peloponnesian states, especially Arcadia, which was
          wakened up into new life.
   The supremacy of Thebes was the result of no
          overmastering imperial instinct and was inspired by no large idea, but it
          brought about some beneficial results. Sparta had grievously abused the
          dominion which had fallen into her hands; and the period of Theban greatness
          represents the reaction against the period of Lacedaemonian oppression. The two
          objects of Theban policy are to hinder Sparta from regaining her old position
          in the Peloponnesus, and to prevent the revival of Jason’s power in Thessaly.
               Although no express record has been handed down as to
          constitutional changes, there is some evidence which has suggested the belief
          that the Thebans drew tighter the bond which united the Boeotian communities by
          transforming the federation into a national state. Thebes, seemingly, became in
          Boeotia what Athens was in Attica; the other cities, Coronea, Thespiae, Haliartus, and
          the rest, were uncitied and became as Marathon and
          Eleusis; their citizens exercised their political rights in an Assembly at
          Thebes. If this be so, we may suspect that Epaminondas played the part of
          legendary Theseus; but the new constitution had no elements of stability, and
          it endured but for a few years.
   
           Sect.
          2. Policy of Thebes in Southern Greece, Arcadia and Messenia
                 
           The defeat of a Lacedaemonian army in the open field
          by an enemy inferior in numbers was a thrilling shock to the Greeks, who deemed
          it part of the order of nature that the Spartan hoplites should be invincible
          except in front of an overwhelmingly larger force. The event was made more
          impressive by the death of king Cleombrotus; a
          Spartan king had never fallen in battle since Leonidas laid down his life at
          the gates of Greece. The news agitated every state in the Peloponnesus. The
          harmosts, whom Sparta had undertaken to withdraw three weeks before, when she
          signed the Peace, were now expelled from the cities; there was an universal
          reaction against the local oligarchies which had been supported by Sparta and
          had excited universal discontent; and these democratic revolutions flooded the Scytalism, land with troops of dangerous exiles. The
          contagion spread even to Argos, though Sparta had no influence there, and broke
          out with such violence that many citizens were cudgelled to death by the infuriated people.
   But it was in Arcadia that the most weighty political
          results followed. A general feeling, which had perhaps been growing for some
          years back, now took definite shape, that the cities of Arcadia must combine
          together to oppose an united front to Lacedaemonian pretensions. The only way
          in which each city could hope to preserve her independence against the power of
          Sparta was by voluntarily surrendering a portion of that independence to a
          federal union of her sister cities. The most zealous advocate of the Pan-Arcadian
          idea was the Mantinean Lycomedes, a native of the district which had been more
          cruelly used than all others by the high-handed policy of Lacedaemon. The fall
          of Sparta was the signal for the Mantineans to rebuild their walls, desert
          their villages, and resume the dignity and pleasures of city life. The old king
          Agesilaus had the insolence to remonstrate; he requested them at least to ask
          the gracious permission of Sparta, but he had no power to enforce his request.
               The Mantineans resolved that their city should not
          again be captured, as king Agesipolis had captured it, by means of its own
          river. They dug a new bed, so that the Ophis when it
          approached the south-eastern wall parted into two channels and, having
          described a great loop, reunited its waters on the north-western side. In this
          loop the city of Mantinea rose again, and by this means the river, which had
          proved itself a danger, was forced to become a fortification, entirely
          encompassing the walls. The stone foundations of the wall enable us to trace
          the circuit of the city; but they were only the base for a superstructure
          which, like the buildings of the town, was of brick. The ten gates were
          curiously constructed, no two alike, yet all elaborations of a principle which
          was adopted by the builders of the fortress of Tiryns—the principle of exposing
          the undefended right side of an approaching enemy to the defenders who manned
          the walls and flanking towers. The general design may be best grasped by
          conceiving the wall not as a continuous circle but as composed of ten separate
          pieces, which did not join but overlapped, while the gates connected the
          overlapping ends.
   Mantinea, arisen from her ruins, and the other towns
          of Arcadia —with the important exceptions of Tegea, Orchomenus, and Heraea —now
          agreed to form a Pan-Arcadian union and constitute a federal state. Several
          reasons made it expedient to establish a new seat as the federal capital of the
          country. The Arcadian cities were too small for the purpose. The selection of
          one of them would have excited the jealousies of the other, and it was intended
          that there should be no Thebes in the Arcadian state. The site chosen for the
          new city was in the western of the two large plains which define the
          geographical character of central Arcadia. It lay, in a long narrow irregular
          shape, on both sides of the river Helisson. Not far
          off rose Lycaeon, the mountain to which the Arcadian
          folk attached their most sacred associations; and in the centre of the market-place was built a shrine of Zeus of that holy hill. The town was
          entitled to its name of Megalopolis, or Great City, by the large circuit of its
          double wall, a circuit of five miles and a half—a somewhat rough piece of work,
          built of stone in the lower courses and brick above, and furnished with towers
          at intervals.
   It must be kept in view that Megalopolis had a double
          character. It was to be the federal capital, but it was also to be one of the
          federal cities. Apart from its relation to all Arcadia, it had a special
          relation to its own plain. The change which had come to pass in the eastern
          plain, so long ago that no man could tell when, by the founding of Tegea and
          Mantinea, was now brought to pass in the western plain. The village communities
          of the surrounding districts were induced to exchange their separate existence
          for joint life in a city. Lying close to the north-western frontier of Laconia,
          Megalopolis would be a bulwark against Sparta on this side, corresponding to
          Tegea on the north. It is natural to compare it with Mantinea, which arose in
          its new shape at the same time. Both cities seem to have had a similar system
          of fortification, double walls of stone and brick, strengthened by towers; but
          Megalopolis, which was the larger, was also the stronger by nature. For
          Mantinea lay on a dead level, all its strength was due to art; Megalopolis lay
          on sloping irregular ground, offering hills of which the architect could take
          advantage. The difference is illustrated by the fact that the little theatre in
          Mantinea rested on a stone substructure, while the huge theatre in Megalopolis
          is cut out of a hill.
               The Federal Constitution was modelled on the ordinary
          type of democratic constitutions. There was an Assembly, which met at stated
          periods to consider all important questions. Every citizen of the federal
          communities was a member of this Assembly, of which the official title was the Ten Thousand, The name indicates an
          approximate, not an exact, number, like the Five
            Thousand in the constitution of Theramenes at Athens. We have no.
          information as to the working of this body, but from the analogy of other ancient
          federations it is probable that the votes were taken by cities, the vote of
          each city being determined by the majority of the votes of those of its
          citizens who were present. The Ten Thousand made war and peace, concluded
          alliances, and sat in judgment on offenders against the League. There was also
          a Council, composed of fifty members
          from the various cities, and this body had doubtless the usual executive and
          deliberative functions which belonged to the Greek conception of a Council.
   On the south side of the river stood the Thersilion, the federal building in which meetings of the
          Arcadian league were held. The foundations of this spacious covered hall have
          been recently laid bare, and display an ingenious arrangement of the internal
          pillars, converging in lines whereby as few as possible of a crowded audience
          might be hindered from seeing and hearing. It is an attempt to apply the
          principle of the theatre to a covered building. The Thersilion stood close in front of the hill from which the theatre was hewn, and the place
          of political deliberation seemed part of the same structure as the place of
          dramatic spectacles. For the Doric portico, which adorned the southern side of
          the federal house, faced the audience; the orchestra in which the chorus danced
          and the actors sometimes played stretched from the circle of scats up to the
          steps of the portico. Such was the original arrangement, changed in later
          years; and it illustrates the fact that the stone theatres which began to
          spring up throughout Greece in the fourth century were intended as much for
          political assemblies as for theatrical representations.
   The river Helisson divides
          Megalopolis into two nearly equal parts; and it would seem that this division
          corresponded to the double character of the place. The city of Megalopolis, in
          the strict sense, was on the northern side; there was the market-place on the
          bank of the river, there was the hall in which the Council of the Megalopolitan
          state met together. But the southern half of Megalopolis was federal ground;
          here was the federal Hall of Assembly, here was the theatre, which was in fact
          an open-air hall for federal meetings. Here, we may suppose, were the dwellings
          of the permanent armed force, 5000 strong, which army maintained by the
          Federation; here were lodgings for the “Ten Thousand” when they assembled to
          vote on the affairs of the Arcadian state.
               Tegea had hitherto been a sort of Laconian outpost,
          and a the revolution was necessary to bring about its adhesion to the new
          federation. With the help of a Mantinean band, the philo-Laconian
          party was overthrown, and 800 exiles sought refuge at Sparta. This blow stung
          Sparta to action. She might brook the resuscitation of Mantinea, she might look
          on patiently at the measures taken by the presumptuous Arcadians for managing
          their own affairs; but it was too much to see Tegea, her steadfast ally, the
          strong warder of her northern frontier, pass over to the camp of the rebels.
          Agesilaus led an army into Arcadia, and displayed the resentment of Sparta by
          ravaging the fields of Mantinea; neither he nor the federal forces risked a
          conflict.
   In view of this Spartan invasion, which came to so
          little, the Arcadians had sought the help of foreign powers. To Athens their
          first appeal was made. The tidings of Leuctra had excited in that city mixed
          feelings of pleasure and jealousy. The humiliation of Sparta opened up a
          prospect of regaining empire, notwithstanding the undertakings of the recent
          peace; but the triumph of Thebes was unwelcome and dangerous. These hopes and
          fears spurred Athens to new activity. Shortly after the battle of Leuctra she showed
          her appreciation of the changed condition of Hellas byinviting delegates from the Peloponnesian cities to pledge themselves anew to the King’s
          Peace (which, it must always be remembered, was the basis of the Peace of
          Callias) and to pledge themselves to one another for mutual help in case of
          hostile attack. Elis, refusing to recognise the
          autonomy of some of her subjects, was forced to hold aloof; but most of the
          other states swore to the alliance. It was a contract between Athens and her
          allies on one side, and the former allies of Sparta on the other. By virtue of
          this act of alliance, Athens was bound to help Mantinea and the Arcadian cities
          whenever they were threatened by an invasion. But it appeared that, though
          ready to usurp the place of Sparta, she was not ready to renew the war with her
          old rival. Perhaps a change of feeling had been wrought in the course of the
          nine or ten months which had run since the congress at Athens ; the violence of
          the democratic movements in the Peloponnese may have caused disgust; certain it
          is that Athens refused the Arcadian appeal; she seems to have contemplated a
          policy of neutrality.
   The rebuff at Athens drove Arcadia into the arms of
          Thebes. The battle which had been fought to secure the unity of Boeotia had
          been the means of promoting the unity of Arcadia; and there was a certain
          fitness in the northern state coming to the aid of its younger fellow. But it
          was not mere sympathy with federal institutions that induced Thebes to send a
          Boeotian army into the Peloponnesus. To keep Sparta down and prevent her from
          recovering her influence was the concern of Thebes, and an united Arcadia was
          the best instrument that could be devised for the purpose. At this juncture,
          the situation in northern Greece permitted Thebes to comply with the Arcadian
          request. The Phocians and Ozolian Locrians, the
          Locrians of Opus, the Malians, had sought her alliance after Leuctra, and even
          the Euboeans had deserted to her; so that all central Greece, as far as
          Cithaeron, was under the Boeotian influence. But if the request had come some
          months sooner, it would have been impossible to grant it; for Jason of Pherae was
          then alive, preparing to march to Delphi, and the Boeotian forces could not
          have left Boeotia.
   It was already winter when the Theban army, led by
          Epaminondas, accompanied by his fellow Boeotarchs, arrived in Arcadia to find
          that invade Agesilaus had withdrawn from the field. But, though the purpose
          Lac0nta- of the expedition was thus accomplished, the Arcadians persuaded
          Epaminondas not to return home without striking a blow at the enemy. To invade
          Laconia and attack Sparta herself was the daring proposal—daring in idea at
          least; for within the memory of history no foeman had ever violated Laconian soil,
          the unwalled city had never repelled an assault. There was little danger, with
          an army of such size as that which was now assembled; and a march to the gates
          of Sparta would drive home the lesson of Leuctra. The invaders advanced in four
          divisions by four roads, converging on Sellasia, and
          met no serious attempt to block their way; some neodamodes and Tegeate exiles were annihilated by the Arcadians. Sellasia was burnt, and the united army descended
          into the plain on the left bank of the Eurotas. The river which separated them
          from Sparta was swollen with winter rains, and this probably saved the city;
          for the bridge was too strongly guarded to be safely attacked. Epaminondas
          marched southward a few miles further, as far as Amyclae,
          where he crossed the stream by a ford. But Sparta was now saved. On the first
          alarm of the coming invasion, messages had flown to the Peloponnesian cities
          which were still friendly; and these—Corinth, Sicyon, Phlius, Pellene, and the towns of the Argolic coast—had promptly sent auxiliary forces. The northern roads being barred by
          the enemy, these forces were obliged to land on the eastern shore of Laconia
          and make their way across Mount Parnon. They reached
          the Eurotas bridge, after the invaders had moved to Amyclae;
          and their coming added such strength to the defence of Sparta that Epaminondas did not attack it, but contented himself with
          marching up defiantly to its outskirts. It was indeed a sufficient revenge even
          for Theban hatred to have wounded Sparta as none had wounded her before, to
          have violated the precinct of the Laconian land. The consternation of the
          Spartans at a calamity which, owing to the immunity of ages, they had never
          even conceived as possible, can hardly be imagined. The women, disciplined
          though they were in repressing their feelings when sons or husbands perished in
          battle, now fell into fits of distress and despair: for, unlike the women of so
          many other Greek cities, they had never looked upon the face of an enemy
          before. Old Agesilaus, who loathed the Theban above all other names, was
          charged with the defence; and his task was the
          harder, since he had to watch not only the foe, but the disaffected. Freedom
          had been promised to 6000 helots who came forward to serve; but this aid was a
          new danger.
   It is needless to say that the loss of a few hundred
          soldiers on the field of Leuctra had nothing to do with the impotence displayed
          by Sparta at this crisis. And if Leuctra had been won by superior generalship,
          it was not inferior generalship that exposed Laconia. The disease lay far
          deeper. The vigour of Sparta was decaying from the
          mere want of men; it has been calculated that at this time there were not more
          than 1.500 with full citizenship. Not merely constant warfare, but, far more,
          economical conditions, brought about this dispeopling.
          Since money had begun to flow into Laconia, and since a new law permitted
          citizens to alienate their holdings, the inevitable result ensued; the small
          lots which meagrely supported each Spartan were
          gathered into large estates; and with the lots the citizens disappeared. This
          disease which was sapping the energies of his enemy cannot have escaped the
          view of Epaminondas, and his next step is significant.
   Having ravaged southern Laconia, from the banks of the
          Eurotas to the foot of Taygetus, as far as Gytheion—where they failed, we know not why, to take the
          arsenal—the allies returned to Arcadia. But, though it was midwinter, their
          work was not over yet; a far greater blow was still to be inflicted on Sparta.
          Epaminondas led them now into another part of the Spartan territory, the
          ancient Messenia. The serfs, who belonged to the old Messenian race, arose at
          their coming; and on the slopes of Mount Ithome the foundations of a new
          Messene were laid by Epaminondas. The ancient heroes and heroines of the race
          were invited to return to the restored nation; the ample circuit of the town
          was marked out, and the first stones placed, to the sound of flutes. Ithome was
          the citadel, and formed one side of the town, whose walls of well-wrought
          masonry descended the slopes and met in the plain below. The Messenian exiles
          who had been wandering over the Greek world had now a home once more.
   Messene, like Megalopolis, was founded by
          “synoecizing” the districts round about. But its political position was
          entirely different from that of Megalopolis. Messene was not a federal capital;
          it was the Messenian state—a city with the whole country for its territory. Corone and Methone were not cities like Mantinea and Clitor; they were places like Brauron and Marathon; their inhabitants possessed the citizenship of Messene, but it
          was only under Mount Ithome that they could exercise their burgher-rights. The
          relation of Messene to Messenia was that of Athens to Attica, not that of
          Megalopolis to Arcadia.
   Thus not only a new stronghold but a new enemy was
          erected against Sparta in Sparta’s own domain. All western Laconia, all the
          land between Ithome and the sea (except Asine and Cyparissia),
          were subtracted from the Spartan dominion; all the perioeci and helots became the freemen of a hostile state. Under the auspices of Thebes
          an old act of injustice was undone, and the principle of autonomy was
          strikingly affirmed. But, besides the glory which Thebes won by so popular an
          act, besides the direct injury inflicted on Sparta and the establishment of a
          hostile fort, the policy of Epaminondas was calculated to produce a result of
          greater importance. The loss of Messenia would accelerate that process of
          decline in the Spartan state, which had already advanced so far. The fewer the
          lots, the fewer the citizens, according to the indissoluble connexion between land and burgher-rights on the Lycurgean system. It was high time for Sparta to reform her constitution.
   The Arcadians celebrated this memorable invasion of
          Laconia by dedicating with part of the spoil a group of statues to the Delphian
          god. The verses of dedication signify that the indigenous people from sacred
          Arcadia, having laid Lacedaemon waste, set up the monument as a witness to
          future generations. The statues are gone, but the verses on their stone have
          come to light in our own day.
               In the meantime Sparta had begged aid from Athens, and
          Athens had decided to depart from her position of neutrality. A vote was
          passed, strongly supported by the orator Callistratus, to send the entire force
          of the city under Iphicrates to assist Sparta. This was evidently the most
          politic course for Athens to adopt. Sparta was a necessary makeweight against
          Thebes. Nor is it doubtful that, notwithstanding all their rivalries, no such
          antipathy parted Athens from Sparta as that which existed between the two
          states and Thebes. Iphicrates marched to the Isthmus and occupied Corinth and Cenchreae, thus commanding the line of Mount Oneion. His object, it must be clearly understood, was not
          to prevent the enemy from leaving the Peloponnesus, but to protect the rear of
          his own army marching into a hostile country. He advanced into Arcadia, but
          found that the Thebans and their allies had left Laconia, and Sparta was no
          longer in danger. He therefore drew back to Corinth, and harassed the Boeotian
          army on its return march, without attempting to bar its passage. For the object
          of the Athenian expedition was simply to rescue Sparta, not, except so far as
          Sparta’s peril might demand, to fight with the Thebans. 
   But the hasty vote to march to the rescue was soon
          followed by a deliberate treaty of alliance; and Athens definitely ranged
          herself with Sparta against Boeotia and Arcadia. She was already meditating
          schemes of extending her empire; she was nourishing the hope of recovering the
          most precious of all her former imperial possessions, the Thracian Amphipolis.
          With such designs it was impossible to remain neutral; and, as we shall see,
          there was some danger of a collision with Thebes in Macedonia.
               Fighting went on
          in the Peloponnese between the Arcadians and the allies of Sparta ; and a few
          months later Epaminondas (who had been re-elected Boeotarch in his absence at the beginning of the year) appeared again at the head of the
          Boeotian army. The Spartans and Athenians had occupied the line of Mount Oneion; this time the  object was to keep out the Thebans. But
            Epaminondas broke through their lines, joined his allies, won over Sicyon and Pellene, and failed to win Phlius.
            A new succour for Sparta arrived at this moment from
            over-seas. Twenty ships bearing 2000 Celtic and Iberian mercenaries came from
            her old ally, the tyrant of Syracuse, to whom she had once sent aid in an hour
            of peril, and who had more than once sent succour to
            her. Their coming seems to have decided Epaminondas to return home, though he
            had accomplished but little, and his political opponent Meneclidas took advantage of the general disappointment to indict him for treason. The
            result was that Epaminondas was not re-elected Boeotarch for the following year.
   To establish her supremacy, Thebes was adopting the
          same policy as Sparta. She placed a harmost in Sicyon; as the Boeotian cities
          had formerly been garrisoned by Sparta, the Peloponnesian cities were now to be
          garrisoned by Thebes. Messenia and Arcadia were to be autonomous, but the
          Thebans desired to be regarded as both the authors and preservers of that
          autonomy. As a mistress, distant Thebes might be more tolerable than neighbouring Lacedaemon; but the free federation of Arcadia
          determined to be free in very deed. Sparta was now sunk so low that the
          Arcadians—with friendly Messene on one side, and friendly Argos on the
          other—could hope to maintain their liberty with their own swords, without
          foreign aid. Their leading spirit Lycomedes animated them to this resolve of
          independence and self-reliance. “You are the only indigenous natives of the
          Peloponnesus, and you are the most numerous and hardiest nation in Greece. Your valour is proved by the fact that you have been
          always in the greatest request as allies. Give up following the lead of others.
          You made Sparta by following her lead; and now if you follow the lead of
          Thebes, without yourselves leading in turn, she will
            prove perhaps a second Sparta.” In this mood the Arcadians displayed a
            surprising activity and achieved a series of successes. The two important
            cities, Heraea in the west, and Orchomenus in the north, which had hitherto
            stood aloof, were forced to join the league, which now became in the fullest
            sense Pan-Arcadian. Some of the northern villages of Laconia were annexed, and
            the Triphylian towns sought in the league a support
            against the hated domination of Elis. The federal forces were active in the
            opposite quarters of Argolis and Messenia. Against all this activity Sparta
          felt herself helpless. But a second armament of auxiliaries Sparta arrived from
          her friend, the tyrant of Syracuse, and thus reinforced receives she ventured
          to take the field, and marched into the plain of Megalopolis. But the
          expedition was suddenly interrupted; time had been wasted, and the Syracusan
          force, in accordance with its orders, was obliged to return to Sicily. Its way
          lay through Laconia, in order to take ship at Gytheion;
          and the enemy tried to cut it off summer in the mountain defiles. The Spartan
          commander Archidamus, who was in the rear, hastened to the rescue, and
          dispersed the Arcadians with great loss. Not a single Lacedaemonian was killed,
          and the victory was called the “tearless battle.” The joy displayed in Sparta
          over this slight success showed how low Sparta had fallen.
   It may be thought that Dionysius might have kept his
          troops at home, if they were charged to return before they had well time to
          begin to fight. But the truth is, that these troops were for some months
          inactive in Greece, while an attempt was being made to bring about a general
          peace. The initiative came from Ariobarzanes, the Persian satrap of Phrygia,
          who sent to Greece an agent well furnished with money; and this move on the
          part of Persia was probably suggested by Athens. The Syracusan sovereign also
          intervened in the interests of peace, and the stone remains on which the
          Athenians thanked Dionysius and his sons for being “good men in regard to the
          people of the Athenians and their allies, and helping the King’s Peace.” Thus
          the King’s Peace was the basis of the negotiations of the congress which met at
          Delphi. Both Athens, which was doubtless the prime mover, and Sparta were most
          anxious for peace; but each had an ultimate condition from which she would not
          retreat. Sparta’s very life seemed to demand the recovery of Messenia, and
          Athens had set her heart on Amphipolis. But neither condition would be admitted
          by Thebes, and consequently the negotiations fell through. They led, however,
          to independent negotiations of various states with Persia, each seeking to win
          from the king a recognition of its own claims. Pelopidas went up to Susa on
          behalf of Thebes to obtain a royal confirmation of the independence of
          Messenia. The Athenians sent envoys to convince the king of their rights to
          Amphipolis. Arcadia, Elis, and Argos were also represented. Pelopidas was
          entirely successful. The king issued an order to Greece, embodying Persian the
          wishes of Thebes : Messenia and Amphipolis to be independent, the Athenians to
          recall their warships. The question of Triphylia — whether it was to be
          dependent on Elis or a part of Arcadia—was decided in favour of Elis; this decision in a question of absolute indifference to Persia was
          clearly due to Pelopidas, and indicates strained relations between Thebes and
          Arcadia. Pelopidas returned with the royal letter, but it found no acceptance
          in Greece, cither at the congress of allies which was convoked at Thebes, or
          when the document was afterwards sent round to the cities. Arcadia would not
          abandon Triphylia, and Lycomedes formally protested against the headship of
          Thebes.
   The answer of Thebes to this defiance of her will was
          an invasion of the Peloponnesus. The line of Mount Oneion was still defended, but negligently; and Epaminondas passed it with Argive
          help. His object was not to depress Sparta further, for Sparta was now too
          feeble to be formidable, but to check the pretensions of Arcadia. And this
          could only be done through strengthening Theban influence in the Peloponnesus
          by winning new allies. Accordingly, Epaminondas advanced to Achaea, and easily
          gained the adhesion of the Achaean cities.
   But the gain of Achaea was soon followed by its loss.
          Counter to the moderate policy of Epaminondas, the Thebans had insisted on
          overthrowing the oligarchical constitutions and banishing the oligarchical
          leaders; these exiles from the various cities banded together, and recovered
          each city successively, overthrowing the democracies and expelling the
          harmosts. Henceforward Achaea was an ardent partisan of Sparta.
               The unsettled state of the Peloponnesus was
          conspicuously shown by the events which happened at Sicyon. When the Theban
          harmost was installed in the acropolis, the oligarchy had been spared; but soon
          afterwards one of the chief citizens, named Euphron, brought about the
          establishment of a democracy, and then, procuring his own election as general, organising a mercenary force, and surrounding himself with
          a bodyguard,—the usual and notorious steps of a despot’s progress,—made himself
          master of the city and harbour. The Arcadians had
          helped Euphron in his first designs, but the intrigues of his opponents were so skilful, that Arcadia again intervened and restored
          to Sicyon the exiles whom the tyrant had driven out. Euphron fled from the city
          to the harbour, which he surrendered to the
          Lacedaemonians; but the Lacedaemonians failed to hold it. Sicyon, however, was
          not yet delivered from her tyrant. He was restored by the help of Athenian
          mercenaries. Afterwards, seeing that he could not maintain himself without the
          support of Boeotia, he visited Thebes, and was slain on the Cadmea in front of
          the Hall of Council, by two Sicyonian exiles who had
          dogged him. His assassins were tried and acquitted at Thebes, but at Sicyon his
          memory was cherished and he was worshipped as a second founder of the city. The
          fact shows that under the rule of Euphron the masses of the people were happier
          than under the political opponents whom he had so mercilessly treated. His son
          succeeded to his power.
   
           The expedition of Epaminondas was attended with
          results which Thebans were in the end injurious to Thebes. The relations with
          Arcadia became more and more strained. But in the same year Oropus was wrested
          from Athens and occupied by a Theban force. The  Athenians were unable to cope alone with Thebes; they called on their
          allies, but none moved to their aid. The moment was seized by Arcadia.
          Lycomedes visited Athens and induced the Athenians, smarting with resentment
          against their allies, to conclude an alliance with the league. Thus Athens was
          now in the position of being an ally of both Arcadia and Sparta, which were at
          war with each other; and Arcadia was the ally of Athens and Thebes, which were
          also at war with each other. The visit of Lycomedes incidentally led to a
          disaster for Arcadia which outweighed the benefit of the alliance. The
          ambassador, on his way back, was slain by some exiles into whose hands he fell;
          and the league lost its ablest statesman.
   This change in the mutual relations among the Greek
          states, brought about by the seizure of Oropus, was followed by another change,
          brought about by an Athenian plot to seize Corinth. The object was to secure
          permanent control over the passage into the Peloponnesus. But the plot was
          discovered and foiled by the Corinthians, who then politely dismissed the
          Athenian soldiers stationed at various posts in the Corinthian territory. But
          by herself Corinth would have been unable to resist the combined pressure Thebes
          on one side and Argos on the other; and, as Sparta could not help her, she was
          driven to make peace with ThebesShe was joined by her
          neighbour Phlius and by the cities of the Argolic coas; all these states
          formally recognised the independence of Messene, but
          did not enter into any alliance with Thebes, or give any pledge to obey her
          headship. They became, in fact, neutral.
   It was a blow to Sparta, who still refused to accept a
          peace on any terms save the restoration of Messenia. The Messenian question
          gave political speculators at Athens a subject for meditation. Was the demand
          of Sparta just? The publicist Isocrates argued the case for Sparta in a speech
          which he put in the mouth of king Archidamus. Another orator, Alcidamas, vindicated in reply the liberty of the
          Messenians and declared a principle which was far in advance of his time, “God
          has left all men free; nature has made no man a slave.”
   If we survey the political relations of
          southern Hellas at this epoch, we see Thebes, supported by Argos, still at war
          with Sparta, who is supported by Athens; Achaea actively siding with Sparta;
          Elis hostile to Arcadia; the Arcadian league at war with Sparta, in alliance with Athens, in alliance with, but cool towards, Thebes, and
            already—having lost its leader Lycomedes—beginning to fall into disunion with
            itself.
   The peace with Corinth and others of the belligerent
          states marks the time at which Peloponnesian affairs cease to occupy the chief
          place in the counsels of Thebes, and her most anxious attention turns to a
          different quarter. For Sparta is disabled, and the mistress of Boeotia recognises that it is with Athens that the strife for
          headship will now be. While events were progressing in the Peloponnesus, as we
          have seen, Athens was busily engaged in other parts of the world with a view to
          restoring her maritime empire ; and we have now to see how she succeeded, and
          how Thebes likewise was pushing her own supremacy in the north.
   
           Sect.
          3. Policy and Action of Thebes in Northern Greece
           
           The same year which saw the death of Jason
          of Pherae saw the death of another potentate in the north, his neighbour and
          ally Amyntas of Macedonia. We have seen how Amyntas had to fight for his
          kingdom with the Chalcidian league; how he was driven out of his land and
          restored; and how the league was crushed by the power of Sparta. Both Jason and
          Amyntas were succeeded by an Alexander.  At Pherae, the power first passed to Jason’s brothers, of whom one
            murdered the other and was in turn murdered by his victim’s son,— Alexander,
            whose reign was worthy of its sanguinary inauguration. The Thessalian cities
            refused to bow down to the supremacy of Pherae, now
              that Pherae had no man who was worthy to be obeyed;  and to resist Alexander of Pherae they
              invoked the aid of Alexander   of
            Macedonia. The aid was given, and Larissa, Crannon,
            and other cities passed under Macedonian sway. But this was not the purpose of
            the Thessalians, to exchange a native for a foreign ruler; and accordingly they
            invoked the help of Thebes against both Alexanders alike. It was sound policy
            on the part of Thebes to accede to the request. It was impossible to discern
            yet what manner of man the  successor of
            Jason might prove to be; and it was important, from  the Boeotian point
              of view, to hinder the reunion of Thessaly  under a monarch. The conduct of  an expedition was entrusted to Pelopidas, who brought Larissa and other
              towns in the northern part of Thessaly under a Theban protectorate. 
   At the same time, the Thessalians sought to strengthen
          their position by a federal union,—a political experiment which had been tried
          in Thessaly before. The little we know of the league which was established
          about this time suggests rather the revival of an old system than a new
          creation. The country was divided into four political divisions corresponding
          to the old geographical districts; at the head of each was a polemarch, who had
          officers of horse and foot under him; and at the head of the league was an
          archon, elected if not for life at least for longer than a year. Thus the organisation was military; but there are indications that
          it grew out of an old amphictionic association. There
          is no reason to think that Pelopidas had more to do with the establishment of
          the Thessalian federation than Epaminondas with that of the Pan-Arcadian
          league; the part of Thebes in either case was simply to support and confirm.
   Macedonia offered no obstacles to the operations of
          Pelopidas in Thessaly, for it was involved in a domestic struggle. One of the
          nobles, Ptolemy of Alorus, rebelled against the king,
          and was supported by the king’s unnatural mother Eurydice. The two parties
          called upon Pelopidas to adjudicate between them, and he patched up a temporary
          arrangement and concluded a Theban alliance with Macedonia. Hardly had he
          turned his back when Ptolemy murdered Alexander and married Eurydice. But it
          seemed as if the paramours would not be permitted to reap the profits of their
          crime. Another pretender to the throne had gathered an army of mercenaries and
          occupied all the land along the Chalcidian frontier. Help, however, was at
          hand. An Athenian fleet was cruising in the Thermaic gulf, under the command of Iphicrates. The queen visited the admiral on the
          coast, accompanied by her two sons, Perdiccas and Philip,—the brothers of
          Iphicrates, since he had been adopted as a son Amyntas,—and persuaded him to
          help her in her need. By his exertions the pretender was expelled, and the
          succession of Perdiccas was secured under the regency of Ptolemy.
   The interests of Athens on the Chalcidian and the
          adjacent coasts had forced that state to keep an ever-watchful eye on political
          events in Macedonia and to seek influence at the court of Aegae.
          The intervention of Iphicrates was not the first case in which Athenian power
          had settled a dynastic question. His settlement was more abiding than that of
          Pelopidas; we may conjecture that the opportune appearance of the Athenian
          fleet was due to the circumstance that Thebes had interfered. But Thebes was
          resolved to continue her interference, and oust the Athenian influence.
          Pelopidas, again dispatched to the north, compelled the regent Ptolemy to enter
          into alliance with Thebes and assure his fidelity by furnishing a number
          of hostages. Among the young Macedonian nobles who were sent as pledges to
          Thebes was the boy Philip, who was destined to be the maker of Macedonia, and
          was now to be trained for the work in the military school of Boeotia, under the
          eye of Epaminondas himself.
   Having thus brought Macedonia within the circle of the
          Theban supremacy, Pelopidas on his way home visited the camp of the despot of
          Pherae. But he did not know that Alexander had become the ally of Athens—an
          inevitable combination, since it was the interest of both to oppose Theban
          expansion in the north. Supported by Athens, the despot could defy Thebes, and
          he detained his visitor Pelopidas as a hostage. A Boeotian army marched to
          rescue the captive; but an armament of 1000 men arrived by sea from Athens, and
          the invaders, who were commanded by incompetent generals, were outmanoeuvred and forced to retreat. Epaminondas was
          serving as a common hoplite in the ranks, and but for his presence the army
          would have been lost. The soldiers unanimously invited him turned to Thessaly
          at the head of another army to deliver his friend. It was necessary to apply a
          compulsion severe enough to frighten the tyrant, but not so violent as to
          transport him with fury, which might be fatal to his prisoner. This was
          achieved by dexterous military operations, and Pelopidas was released in return
          for a month’s truce. It seems probable that at the same time Epaminondas freed
          Pharsalus from the rule of Pherae. But it was not the interest of Thebes to
          overthrow the tyrant or even limit his authority to his own city. It was well
          that he should be there, as a threat to the rest of Thessaly; it was well that
          Thessaly should be unable to dispense with Theban protection. The power of
          Alexander extended over Phthiotis and Magnesia, and
          along the shores of the Pagasaean Bay, and to neighbouring towns like Scotussa.
          His tyranny and brutality seem to have been extreme, though the anecdotes of
          his cruelty cannot be implicitly trusted. We read that he buried men alive, or
          sewed them up in the hides of wild beasts for his hounds to tear. We read that
          he massacred the inhabitants of two friendly cities. We read that he worshipped
          as a divine being the dagger with which he had slain his uncle, and gave it the
          name of “Sir Luck”—an anecdote Tyindicating a strain
          of madness which often attends the taste for cruelty. Excellently invented, if
          not true, is the story that, having seen with dry eyes a performance of the Troades of Euripides, a drama unutterably sad, the tyrant
          sent an apology to the actor, explaining  that his apparent want of emotion was due to no defect in the acting,
          but to a feeling of shame that tears for the sorrows of Hecuba should fall from
          the eyes of one who had shown no pity for so many victims.
   It has been said that the chief desire of Athens at
          this time was to regain the finest jewel of her first empire, Amphipolis. The
          fleet, under Iphicrates, was cruising and watching, with this purpose in
          view  but the hopes of success—which
          depended much on the goodwill of Macedonia—were lessened by the ties which
          Ptolemy had contracted with Thebes. And, besides losing Macedonian support,
          Athens was impeded by the cities of the Chalcidian league, who now broke away from
          the Athenian alliance and made a treaty with Amphipolis.
   Meanwhile Athens began to act in the Eastern Aegean.
          The opportunity was furnished by the revolt of her friend Ariobarzanes, the
          satrap of Phrygia. It was the policy of Athens to help the satrap without
          breaking with the Great King, from whom she still hoped to obtain a recognition
          of her claim to Amphipolis. A fleet of thirty galleys and 8000 troops was sent
          under her other experienced general Timotheus, and he accomplished more in the
          east than Iphicrates had accomplished in the north. He laid siege to Samos, on
          which Persia had laid hands, contrary to the King’s Peace; and took it at the
          end of ten months. At the same time he lent assistance to Ariobarzanes, who had
          to maintain himself against the satraps of Lydia and Caria; and as a reward for
          these services Athens obtained the cession of two cities in the Thracian
          Chersonese—Sestos and Crithote.
   Of these acquisitions Sestos was of special value,
          from its position on the Hellespont, securing to Athens control at this point
          over the ships which supplied her with com from the Euxine coasts. But more
          than this, she now regained a foothold in the peninsula which Miltiades had won
          for her, and she hoped to make it entirely her own up to a line drawn across
          the isthmus north of Cardia, marked at one point by an altar of “Zeus of
          Boundaries.” Timotheus himself began the work of expansion by annexing Elaeus near the southern extremity. Thus Athens began to
          revive her old empire, i but in Samos she revealed
          her designs even more clearly. This island was not treated as a subject ally,
          but was appropriated as Athenian territory. Outsettlers were sent from Athens to occupy Samos, and thus the system of cleruchies, which
          had been the most j unpopular feature of the first Confederacy, and had been
          expressly guarded against at the formation of the second Confederacy, was
          renewed. It did not indeed violate the letter of the constitution of the
          league, which only bound Athens not to force outsettlers upon members of the league; but it was distinctly a violation in spirit The
          treatment of Samos showed Greece that Athens was bent on rising again to her
          old Imperial position; while the second Confederacy was based on the principle
          that she had renounced such pretensions for ever.
   Delighted with the achievements of Timotheus, the
          Athenians appointed him to command the fleet which had been operating for years
          on the Macedonian coast under Iphicrates, whose failure was strikingly
          contrasted with the success of Timotheus. It must be remembered that while
          Iphicrates was hindered by the hostility of the regent of Macedon, Timotheus
          was helped by the friendship of the satrap of Phrygia; but Timotheus possessed
          a diplomatic dexterity which Iphicrates never displayed. And now fortune favoured the diplomatist. Shortly before his new
          appointment, the regent Ptolemy was assassinated by the young king Perdiccas,
          who thus avenged his brother Alexander. The change in the holders of power led
          to a change in policy. Macedonia freed itself from the influence of Thebes, and
          the young king sought the support of Athens. And so Timotheus, not only untrammelled by Macedonian opposition, but even aided by
          Macedonian auxiliaries, set about the reduction of towns around the Thermaic gulf. He compelled Methone and Pydna to join the
          Athenian confederacy; and in the Chalcidic peninsula he made himself master of
          Potidaea and Torone. The acquisition of these
          Chalcidic towns was valuable in itself and Potidaea was occupied by Athenian outsettlers; but the main purpose of the general was to
          weaken the resources of Olynthus, which,  at the head of the Chalcidian states, gave powerful support to its ally
          Amphipolis, the supreme object coveted by Athens, whose rights to it had been
          recently recognised by the Persian king. A famous
          mercenary captain named Charidemus, who had
          previously served under Iphicrates, was now secured again by Timotheus; but two
          efforts to capture Amphipolis were repelled. The work of Brasidas was not
          destined to be undone.
   It was high time for Thebes to interfere. If the
          successes of Timotheus were allowed to continue, Athens would soon recover
          Euboea, and the adhesion of that island was, from its geographical position, of
          the highest importance to Boeotia. But in order to check the advance of her
          neighbour it would be necessary for Thebes to grapple with her on her own
          element. By the advice of Epaminondas, Boeotian in spite of the advice of Meneclidas, it was resolved to create a navy and enter upon
          the career of a sea-power. This was a momentous decision, which demanded a
          careful consideration of ways and means. Given the problem, to break the power
          of Athens, there can be no question that Epaminondas advised the only possible
          method of solving it. But it might be well to consider whether its solution was
          a necessity for Thebes. The history of Boeotia had marked it out as a
          continental power; and it would have been wiser to consolidate its sway on the
          mainland. The maintenance of a navy involved financial efforts which could not
          be sustained by any but a great commercial state; and the cities of Boeotia had
          no trade. It was the natural antipathy of the two neighbours far more than any
          mature consideration of her own interests that drove Boeotia to take this
          indiscreet step. Yet the step had immediate success. A hundred triremes were
          built and manned and sent to the Propontis under the Boeotarch,
          Epaminondas.
   The sailing of this fleet was a blow to Athens, not
          from any victory that it gained—there was no battle—but from the support and
          encouragement which it gave to those members of the Confederacy which were
          eager to break their bonds. The establishment of the cleruchies of Samos had
          created great discontent and apprehension among the Athenian allies, and they
          wanted only the support of a power like Thebes to throw off the federal yoke.
          Byzantium openly rebelled; Rhodes and Chios negotiated with Epaminondas; and
          even Ceos, close to Attica itself, defied Athens.
          When the Theban fleet returned home, Chabrias recalled Ceos to its allegiance, and a new act of
          treaty was drawn up; but a second rebellion had to be put down at Julis before
          the island acquiesced in Athenian sway. The expedition of Epaminondas also
          served to support the enemies of Athens, who opposed her advance in the
          Chersonese; namely, the free city of Cardia, and the Thracian king Cotys, who
          was aided by his son-in-law Iphicrates. This general, superseded by Timotheus,
          had not ventured to return to Athens, and now sided with her enemies.
   While the young Theban navy went forth to
          oppose Athens in the Propontis, a Theban army had marched against the ally of
          Athens, Alexander of Pherae, whose hand, strengthened by a mercenary force, had
          been heavy against the Thessalians. Once more, but for the last time, Pelopidas
          entered Thessaly at the head of an army to assist the Federation. Before he
          left Thebes, the sun suffered an eclipse, and this celestial event, interpreted
          by the prophets as a sign of coming evil, cast a gloom over his departure.
           At Pharsalus he was joined by forces of
          the Thessalian league, and immediately advanced against Pherae itself.
          Alexander came forth to meet him with a large force, and it was a matter of
          great importance, for the purpose of barring the Theban advance, to occupy the
          heights known as the Dog’s Heads, on the road from Pharsalus to Pherae. The
          armies reached the critical spot nearly at the same time, and there was a rush
          for the crests. The Theban cavalry beat off the cavalry of the foe, but lost
          time in pursuing it, and in the meantime the infantry of Alexander seized the
          hills. In the battle which followed the object of the Thebans was to drive the
          enemy from this position. Having been repeatedly repelled, Pelopidas, by a
          combined assault of horse and foot, at length won the summit and forced the
          enemy to give way. But in the moment of victory the impetuous general espied
          the hated despot in whose dungeon he had languished, and yielding to an
          irresistible fit of passion, aggravated by the excitement of battle, he forgot
          the duties of a general and rushed against his enemy. Alexander withdrew into
          the midst of his guards, and Pelopidas, plunging desperately after him, was
          overwhelmed by numbers. It was even so that Cyrus threw away his victory at
          Cunaxa. The death of Pelopidas was not fatal to his followers, who routed the
          enemy with heavy loss  but it was a sore
          blow both to his own Thebes, of which he had been the deliverer and strong
          pillar, and to Thessaly, of which he had been the protector. In the following year
          an army was sent against Pherae, and avenged his death. Alexander was obliged
          to relinquish all his possessions except his own city and submit to the
          headship of Thebes.
   It was about this time that Thebes shocked
          the Hellenic world by the destruction of her venerable rival, the Minyan
          Orchomenus. Some Theban exiles induced the horsemen of Orchomenus to join them
          in a plot to subvert the constitution. But, the hearts of the principal
          conspirators failing them before the day of action came, they informed the
          Boeotarchs; the horsemen were promptly seized and condemned to death; and the
          Assembly passed a resolution to raze Orchomenus and enslave its people. The
          Thebans rejoiced at a fair pretext to wreak the hatred of ages upon their
          unhappy neighbour. They marched forth and executed the doom; the men were slain
          because they resisted, the rest of the folk were enslaved.
           It was a deed on which Greece cried shame;
          and, if the moderate and humane Boeotarch, who was
          then in the Hellespontine regions, had been present to control the counsels of
          his country, it would possibly never have been committed.
   
           Sect. 4. The Battle of Mantinea
           
           While Thebes was intent on opposing
          Athens, now her only serious rival, she had kept aloof from the Peloponnesus.
          But the course of affairs there was soon to demand a new intervention. The
          interest now centres on the relations of Elis with
          Arcadia; and the decisive element in the situation is the rift in the Arcadian
          league, perceptibly widening every month.
   Her rights over Triphylia were the chief
          question of political importance for Elis. They had been recognised in the Persian rescript, but Arcadia refused to admit them and Thebes did not
          interfere. Thus Elis found herself in the same plight as Sparta in regard to
          the Arcadian league. It had always been a principle of Lacedaemonian policy to
          preserve against Elis the independence of her two southern neighbours, the Pisatans and the Triphylians. But
          now Sparta was only too ready to renounce this policy and recognise the Elean claim, for the sake of winning an ally. It was in the nature of
          things that the two states should combine to recover Messenia and Triphylia.
          Thus there came to pass a change for the better in the prospect of Sparta  enemies had risen up against Arcadia on the
          north and on the west, and Thebes held aloof. The Spartans had recently gained
          a welcome success in the recovery of Sellasia, with
          the help of a force which had been sent to their aid by the second Dionysius of
          Syracuse.
   Besides Triphylia there were certain
          places on the mountainous frontier between Elis and Arcadia to which Elis
          professed to have claims. One of these was Lasion, in
          the high plateau of Pholoe, north-east of Olympia.
          The Eleans occupied the district, but were speedily
          driven out by the Pan-Arcadian eparitoi, who were always ready for such emergencies. The
          plains of Elis were far more assailable than the highlands of Arcadia, and the
          Arcadians were able to carry the war to the very heart of their foe. The Olympian
          festival would fall next year, and they were resolved that it should not be
          celebrated under the time-honoured presidency of
          Elis. They marched to Olympia, and occupied and fortified the Hill of Cronus,
          which looks down upon the Altis. Then they made an attack on the unwalled city
          of Elis, in concert with the democratic faction. But the attempt at a
          revolution failed and the Arcadians were repulsed. In the following year a
          second invasion reduced the Eleans to such distress
          that they implored Sparta to make a diversion and draw off the Arcadian forces.
          In answer to this prayer Archidamus occupied Cromnon,
          a fort which commands the road from Megalopolis to Messenia, with a garrison of
          200 men. The importance of this step is shown by the fact that not only did the
          Arcadians promptly leave Elis, but they were also joined by allies, Argives as
          well as Messenians, to besiege Cromnon. A Spartan
          post there cut off the communication between the Arcadian and the Messenian
          capitals and was a threat to both. Archidamus at first tried to create a second
          diversion by ravaging northern Laconia, which was now politically part of
          Arcadia. When this failed, he made an attempt to relieve Cromnon,
          but was driven back with some loss. A second attempt at rescue would have been
          successful, if it had been better concerted, but it led to the capture of
          almost the whole garrison; an event which ten years before would have sent a
          shock through the Hellenic world, but now seemed an ordinary occurrence.
   The Arcadians were again free to continue
          their designs in Elis. The time of the Olympian games was approaching, and the
          people of Pisa, the ancient possessors of the sanctuary, who had by no means
          forgotten the rights which Elis had usurped in days long gone by, were
          installed as presidents of the festival. It was fully expected that the feast
          would not pass without battle and bloodshed. The hill of Cronus had been
          occupied for a year by the Arcadian garrison, but now the whole army of the
          federation, as well as 2000 spearmen from Argos and 400 cavalry from Athens,
          arrived to protect the solemn celebration. The day came round and the games
          began. The horse race was run and won. The next contest was the pentathlon,
          which demanded excellence in five different kinds of athletic prowess — in
          running, wrestling, hurling the javelin, throwing the disc, and leaping. The
          first event, the race, was over when the company became aware that the men of
          Elis were marching up to the bank of the Cladeus,
          which bounded the western side of the Altis. The soldiers took up their
          position on the opposite bank, but the games went on. Those competitors who had
          not failed in the race proceeded to the wrestling; but as the spectators, when
          the alarm was given, moved from the race-course into the Altis, to be nearer
          the scene of action, the wrestling match was held in the open space between the
          race-course and the Great Altar, under the terrace of the Treasure-houses. The Eleans, who were supported by an Achaean force, performed a
          sacrifice, and then, charging across the stream with unexpected boldness, drove
          back the Arcadian and Argive line into the Altis. A battle ensued in the
          southern part of the holy precinct, between the Hall of Council and the great
          Temple of Zeus, the Altis. But the colonnades of these and other adjacent
          buildings gave shelter and points of vantage to the defenders; and the Eleans, when their captain fell, retired across the stream
          to their camp. The Arcadians improvised a fortification on the western side of
          the Altis, using for this purpose the tents of the spectators; and the men of
          Elis, seeing that it would be useless to repeat their attack, returned home,
          obliged to content themselves with declaring the festival to be null and void,
          and marking the year in their register as an “An-Olympiad.” The religious
          sentiment of Greece was outraged by these violent scenes at a sanctuary which
          belonged to all Greece rather than to any single state; and there can be no
          question that the general sympathy—independently of all political
          considerations— was on the side of Elis, whose presidency was regarded in
          Hellas as part of the order of nature, and was strongly adverse to the Arcadian
          intruders supporting with arms the antiquated rights of Pisa. But it was far
          worse when the Arcadians began to make free use of the sacred treasures of
          Olympia, for the purpose of paying the federal army. This was an act of
          sacrilegious spoliation which could not be defended, and it was disastrous to
          the Arcadian Federation.
   It was inevitable that, when the first
          impulse of enthusiasm which drove the Arcadian cities to unite together had
          spent itself, the old jealousies would emerge again and imperil the
          Pan-Arcadian idea. So it was that the two neighbours, Mantinea and Tegea, whose
          common action had been the chief cause of the federal union, began to resume
          something of their traditional enmity. The scandal of Olympia gave Mantinea,
          who was jealous of Megalopolis also, a fair opportunity to secede from the
          League, which had put itself so signally in the wrong. This step necessarily
          involved the consequence that Mantinea would definitely range herself with the
          other camp in the Peloponnesus—with Sparta, Elis, and Achaea. And thus the
          traditional policies of Mantinea and Tegea were reversed. Tegea, the support of
          Sparta, had become the life and soul of the anti-Spartan movement; Mantinea,
          the state which Sparta had uncitied, was now Sparta’s
          support. Though the Arcadian Assembly resented and tried to punish the protest
          of Mantinea, the pressure of public opinion induced it to forbid any further
          plundering of the Olympian sanctuaries.
   When this resolution was taken, the
          weakness of the Arcadian League was exhibited. There was no money in the
          federal treasury to pay the standing army, and without this army it would be
          impossible for Arcadia to maintain herself against enemies on three sides—not
          to speak of disaffected Mantinea—without the protection of Thebes. But there
          was a strong feeling throughout the country against a Theban protectorate, and
          a large number of wealthy Arcadians, who shared this feeling, proposed to solve
          the difficulty by enrolling themselves in the corps of Eparitoi and serving without pay. Occupying this position they would be able to dictate
          the policy of the League. There was little doubt that the predominance of this
          party would soon bring Arcadia into alliance with Sparta, which was no longer
          dangerous to Arcadian liberty. But such a political revolution would be fatal
          to Theban influence, which rested on the antagonism between Arcadia and Sparta;
          it might even imperil the independence of Messenia.
   To meet this danger of an alliance between
          Sparta and Arcadia, Thebes was constrained to send a fourth expedition into the
          Peloponnese. It was imperative to support the Theban party in Arcadia. Both
          parties alike were probably satisfied with the resolution of the Assembly to
          make peace with Elis and acknowledge her rights at Olympia. Each city swore to
          the peace. At Tegea the solemnity of the oath led to an incident. Arcadians
          from other places had gathered together for the occasion, which they celebrated
          by feast and merriment. The commander of the Boeotian garrison ordered the
          gates to be shut and arrested the leaders of the anti-Theban party. Most of the
          Mantineans present had left the town at an early hour, but there were a few
          among the prisoners; and the energetic protests of Mantinea frightened the
          faint-hearted harmost into releasing all his prisoners and excusing his act by
          a false explanation. The coup had doubtless been planned long beforehand, and
          consent obtained from the highest quarter. Epaminondas, when complaint was made
          at Thebes, approved the act of arrest, and condemned the act of release. At the
          same time he declared to the Arcadian League that it had no right to make peace
          with Elis without consulting Thebes. “We will march into Arcadia”, he said,
          “and assist our friends”.
               The threat was seriously meant, and the
          friends and enemies of Thebes prepared for war. Athens, the ally of both Sparta
          and Arcadia, could now fulfil without difficulty the double obligation, by
          supporting those Arcadians who were on Sparta’s side. The common dread of
          Thebes was reflected in the quintuple alliance which Athens (with her allies),
          Mantinea, Elis, Achaia, and Phlius formed for the
          sake of mutual protection. Part of the text of this treaty is preserved to us
          on fragments of one of the original marble copies. It is worthy of remark that
          the Mantineans, who seem to have been the only Arcadian community that entirely
          dissociated itself from the government at Megalopolis, appear in the treaty as
          “the Arcadians” — thus claiming to be the true representatives of their
          country.
   The Boeotian force in its full strength,
          accompanied by all the allies of central Greece who were pledged to follow
          Thebes into the field, went forth under Epaminondas to bring back the unruly
          Peloponnesians under Boeotian control. The Phocians alone refused to go; the
          terms of the alliance which bound them to Boeotia obliged them to bear aid only
          if Boeotia were itself attacked. When he reached Nemea, Epaminondas halted his
          army, with the hope of intercepting the forces which Athens prepared to send to
          her allies. But the Athenian forces came not and he advanced to Tegea, the
          chief centre of Theban influence in the peninsula,
          which he had appointed as the meeting-place for all his allies — Arcadian,
          Argive, and Messenian. His enemies were also gathering to the rival city of
          Mantinea, and a Spartan army under old Agesilaus was expected there.
          Epaminondas marched to attack them before the Spartans and Athenians arrived,
          but found their position too strong and retired to his camp in Tegea. Learning
          that Agesilaus had already set out, he determined to strike a second blow at
          Sparta. He would have found the place as unprotected as “a nest of young
          birds,” if his plan had not been thwarted by a Cretan runner who carried the
          news to Agesilaus. The king immediately returned on his steps; and when
          Epaminondas after a night’s march reached Sparta, he found it prepared and
          defended. Baffled in this project by an incalculable chance, Epaminondas
          promptly resolved to attempt another surprise. He foresaw that the army at Mantinea
          would immediately march to the rescue of Sparta, and that Mantinea would
          consequently be inadequately guarded. His camp at Tegea commanded the direct
          road from Mantinea to Sparta, so that the enemy would be obliged to march by
          the longer western road. Moving rapidly he reached Tegea, where he rested his
          hoplites, but he sent on his cavalry to surprise Mantinea. The army had
          departed, as he calculated, and the people were out in the fields, busy with
          the harvest. But in the same hour in which the Theban horse approached from the
          south, a body of Athenian cavalry had reached the city. They had not yet eaten
          or drunk, but they rode forth and drove the assailants back. The conflict
          between the two weary troops of horsemen was sharp, and was marked by the death
          of Gryllus, the son of Xenophon the historian.
   The allied army, learning that Sparta was
          no longer in danger, soon returned from its fruitless excursion to its former
          post, now reinforced by both the Spartan and Athenian contingents. Foiled in
          his two projects of surprise, Epaminondas was obliged to attack the united
          enemy at Mantinea; the difficulty of supplying his army with provisions, and
          the anxiety of his allies to return home as soon as possible, rendered it
          imperative to bring the campaign to a swift decision. The enemy occupied the
          narrow part of the plain, south of Mantinea, where ridges of the opposite
          mountains approach each other; the object of Epaminondas was to sweep them out
          of his way and take the city. But instead of marching straight for the gap, he
          adopted a strategical movement which puzzled his antagonists. He led his army
          north-westwards to a point in the hills near the modern Tripolitza, and then
          moved a short distance along the skirts of the mountain so as to approach the
          right wing of the foe. He then halted and formed in battle array. The enemy
          were deceived by the indirect advance. Seeing him march obliquely towards the
          hills, they concluded that he would not attack that day, and even when he
          changed his direction and advanced towards them, persisted in their false
          opinion.
           Epaminondas adopted the same tactics by
          which he had won at Leuctra. On the left he placed the Boeotian hoplites, under
          his own immediate command, in a deep column, destined to break through the
          right wing of the enemy before the rest of the armies could come to blows. The
          oblique advance, besides its chief purpose of deceiving the foe, had the
          further advantage of assisting the peculiar tactics of the general ; for, when
          he formed his line, there was obviously a far greater distance between his
          right and the hostile left than that which divided his left from the hostile
          right. The Mantineans (since it was their territory) had the place of honour on the extremity of the enemy’s right wing, and the
          Lacedaemonians were next them; the Athenians were on the farthest left; and
          both wings were protected by squadrons of horse. Epaminondas placed his own
          cavalry in deep column in front of the deep column of infantry. But there was
          one danger against which he had to guard. When the Boeotian column charged, the
          Athenian left might wheel round and attack it on the unshielded side—a movement
          which could be executed owing to the distance dividing them from his own right.
          To meet this danger, he sent a body of horse and foot to occupy a rising
          ground, out in the plain, considerably in advance of his line; this body could
          attack the Athenians in the rear if they tried such a movement.
   With an extraordinary lack of perception,
          the Lacedaemonians and their allies witnessed these manoeuvres without
          understanding their drift; and it was not until Epaminondas began to advance in
          full march against them, that they realised his
          meaning and rushed tumultuously to arms. All fell out as he designed. His
          cavalry routed their cavalry, and the force of his wedge of hoplites, led by
          himself, broke through the opposing array and put the Lacedaemonians to flight.
          It is remarkable indeed how the tactical lesson of Leuctra seems to have been
          lost on the Spartans. The men of Achaea and Elis and the rest, when they saw
          the flight of the right wing, wavered before they came into collision with
          their own opponents.
   It is not quite clear what happened, but
          here again Mantinea seems to repeat Leuctra: the charge of the Theban left
          decided the battle; with the exception of cavalry engagements, there was but
          little and desultory fighting along the rest of the line.
           It was a great Theban victory, and yet a
          chance determined that this victory should be the deathblow to the supremacy of
          Thebes. As he pursued the retreating foe, at the head of his Thebans,
          Epaminondas received a mortal thrust from a spear. When the news spread through
          the field, the pursuit was stayed and the effect of the victory was undone; the
          troops fell back like beaten men. “So striking a proof has hardly ever been
          rendered, on the part of soldiers towards their general, of devoted and
          absorbing sentiment. All the hopes of this army, composed of such diverse
          elements, were centred in Epaminondas; all their
          confidence of success, all their security against defeat, were derived from the
          idea of acting under his orders ; all their power, even of striking down a
          defeated enemy, appeared to vanish when those orders were withdrawn”. And there
          was no one to take his place. In his dying moments, before the point of the
          fatal spear was extracted, Epaminondas asked for Iolaidas and Daiphantus, whom he destined as his successors.
          He was told that they were slain. “Then,” he said, “make peace with the enemy.”
          Peace was made on condition that things should remain as they were; Megalopolis
          and Messenia were recognised—the abiding results of
          Theban policy. In this peace Sparta would not acquiesce; she still persisted in
          refusing to recognise the independence of Messenia,
          but her allies would not listen to her protests.
   The military genius of Epaminondas, the
          qualities of mind and character which distinguished him among his countrymen,
          and the actual work which he accomplished in the deliverance of Messenia and
          the support of Arcadia, must not be suffered to obscure the fact that his
          political faculty was mediocre. What could be done by the energy and ability of
          a general, or by the discretion of a magistrate, that he did; but he failed to
          solve the fundamental problems which demanded solution at the hands of a
          statesman who aimed at making his country great. It was necessary to create an
          efficient machinery, acting on definite principles, for conducting the foreign
          affairs of Boeotia—like the machinery which existed at Sparta. This was the
          only possible substitute for brains, which were not plentiful in Boeotia;
          Epaminondas could not hope to communicate any part of his own virtue to his
          successors. It was necessary to decide whether it was possible or desirable for
          Boeotia to enter into competition with Athens as a maritime power. If the
          decision were affirmative, it was of capital importance to organise,
          the navy on a sound financial foundation. There is no sign that Epaminondas
          grappled with the problems of government and finance; his voyage to the
          Propontis was an experiment which had no results. Nor does he seem to have
          taken steps to secure Boeotia on the side of her dangerous Phocian neighbours,
          though he had the insight to organise anew the
          Amphictionic League and make it an instrument of Theban policy. Above all, he did
          not succeed in accomplishing the first thing needful, the welding together of
          Boeotia into a real national unity. He aspired to expand Boeotia into an
          empire; the worst of it was that no one had come before him to make it into a
          nation. That which mythical Lycurgus and Theseus had done for Sparta and Athens
          had never been done for Thebes by any of her numerous heroes. Epaminondas seems
          to have attempted to unify Boeotia; if he had known how to build such an unity
          on solid foundations, he might have bestowed on Thebes a future of glory which
          he would not have lived to see. But his ambition—for his country, not for
          himself—was too impatient and imaginative. The ardour of his patriotism impelled him to enter upon paths of policy which his
          countrymen felt no resistless impulse to pursue; the successes of Thebes were
          achieved by his brains, not by her force. He bore his country aloft on the
          wings of his genius, but did not impart to her frame the principle of that
          soaring motion; so that when the shaft pierced the heart of her sustainer, she
          sank to the earth, never to rise again. Epaminondas was a great general; he was
          not a great statesman.
   
           Sect. 6. The Last Expedition of Agesilaus
           
           To no one in Greece can the supremacy of
          Thebes have come as a sorer trial than to the Spartan king Agesilaus. He who
          had once dreamed of conquering Persia had lived to see his own inviolable land
          twice trodden by an invader, his own city quake twice before an enemy at her
          doors. But he had at least the consolation of outliving the triumph of the
          Theban, and seeing the brief supremacy pass away. The death of Epaminondas, of
          which he could not mistake the significance, did not restore Messenia or give
          Sparta any immediate power; but, Epaminondas dead and Arcadia spent, Sparta had
          now a prospect of regaining something of her old influence. With her own
          diminished population she could do little; it would be necessary to follow the
          general example and take mercenary forces into her pay; but to do this a
          well-filled treasury was needful. Accordingly we find Sparta, as well as
          Athens, busy beyond the sea, taking part in the troubles which in these years
          agitated the western portion of the Persian kingdom, and lending help to the
          satraps and dynasts who were rebelling against the Great King. The object of
          Athens was territory, the object of Sparta was money. While Timotheus had been
          engaged in winning Samos, 365 BC, Agesilaus had visited Asia Minor and done his
          utmost in support of Ariobarzanes— for the sake of gold. And after the battle
          of Mantinea, he again went forth in a guise which differed little from that of
          a mercenary in foreign service.
           The borders of Western Asia, from the
          Hellespont to the Nile, were in revolt against the Great King. The expedition
          of Cyrus was only the first of a series of rebellions which troubled the reign
          of Artaxerxes. We have seen how Cyprus rebelled and was subjugated, but Egypt
          still defied the Persian power, and its success set a bad example to the
          satraps of the adjoining countries. The Athenian general Chabrias had helped the Egyptians to strengthen their country by a scientific system of defences, but he was recalled to Athens after the King’s
          Peace; and the Athenian whom we next find in Egypt is fighting on the other
          side—the free-lance Iphicrates, giving sound military advice to the Persian
          commander, which the Persian commander does not follow. Soon after this the
          satraps of Asia began to rebel—first in Cappadocia, then in Phrygia, then
          successively in Ionia, Caria, and Lydia—and the insurrection extended to
          Phoenicia and Syria. A scheme of co-operation was formed between the satraps
          and the Egyptian king Tachos, who had recently come
          to the throne, and Sparta decided to support this coalition. Athens held aloof,
          but Chabrias went once more to Egypt as a volunteer.
   At the head of a thousand men, and
          accompanied by thirty Spartans as advisers, Agesilaus set sail for the Nile. It
          is said that the small figure, the lame leg, and the plain dress of the
          experienced old soldier made a bad impression in Egypt; in any case he was not
          given the supreme command of the army as he expected. When a sufficient force
          was gathered, Tachos, accompanied by Agesilaus and Chabrias, made an expedition to Phoenicia, to act there
          against the Persian troops; but they were obliged to return almost immediately
          in consequence of a revolt against Tachos, headed by
          his cousin Nektanebos. The Spartan king, who
          considered that he had been slighted by Tachos,
          supported the rival; and Tachos fled to Susa and made
          his peace with the Persian monarch. Another competitor then arose, but was
          defeated by the effective support which Agesilaus gave to Nektanebos.
          In consequence of these struggles for the Egyptian throne nothing was done
          against Persia, and the great coalition signally failed. Ariobarzanes of Phrygia,
          the friend of Timotheus, was betrayed and crucified; another satrap was
          murdered; the rest made their submission to their king. Within a year Western
          Asia was entirely subject to Artaxerxes.
   But Sparta had won from the futile project
          what she really wanted. She might shelter her dignity under the pretext that
          she had gone forth to punish the Persian king for recognising the independence of Messenia, but every one knew that her motive was to
          replenish her treasury. Nektanebos presented her with
          230 talents, in return for the support of Agesilaus. It was the last service
          the old king was destined to perform for his country. Death carried him off—he
          was eighty-four years old—at the Harbour of Menelaus
          on the way to Cyrene, and his embalmed body was sent home to Sparta.
   Though not in any sense a great man,
          though not in the same rank as Lysander, Agesilaus had been for forty years a
          prominent figure in Greece. There is something melancholy about his career. He
          could remember the outbreak of the Peloponnesian War; he had seen the triumph
          of Sparta, and had conducted her policy during a great part of thirty years of
          supremacy; and then, as an old man, he shared in her humiliation. He had begun
          by dreaming of the conquest of Persia; he had been forced to abandon such dreams;
          and he had translated his ardour into a bitter hatred
          against an Hellenic city. It is tragic to see him, at the age of eighty-three,
          going forth against Persia once more, not now for conquest or glory, but to
          earn by any and every means the money needed by his indigent country.
   
 
 CHAPTER XV.
              
        THE SYRACUSAN EMPIRE AND THE STRUGGLE WITH CARTHAGE
              
        
           
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