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    HISTORY OF ANCIENT GREECE | 
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A HISTORY OF GREECE TO   THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER THE GREAT
          
        
 CHAPTER III.
              
        GROWTH OF SPARTA. FALL OF THE ARISTOCRACIES
          
         
               Sect. 1. Sparta and her Constitution
                
        The Dorian settlers from the north, who took
          possession of the valley of the Eurotas, established themselves in a number of
          village communities throughout the land, and bore the name of Lacedaemonians.
          In the course of time, a city-state grew up in their midst and won dominion
          over the rest. The town was formed by the union of five villages which,
          after their union, still continued to preserve their identity, as separate
          units within the larger unity. The city was called Sparta, and took the dominant
          place in Laconia which had been formerly held by Amyclae.
          The other Lacedaemonian communities were called the perioeci,
          or "dwellers round about" the ruling city, and, though they were free
          and managed their local affairs, they had no political rights in the Spartan
          state. The chief burdens which fell on them were military service and the
          farming ot the royal domains.
   The Spartans were always noted for their conservative
          spirit. Hence we find in their constitution, which was remarkable in many ways,
          survivals of an old order of things which existed in the days of Homeric
          poetry, but has passed away in most places when trustworthy history begins. The
          most striking of these survivals was royalty; Sparta was nominally ruled by
          kings.
               This conservative spirit of the Spartans rendered them
          anxious to believe, and others willing to accept the view, that their
          constitution had existed from very ancient times in just the same shape and
          feature which it displayed in the days of recorded history. We are, however,
          forced to suspect that this was not the case. There can be little doubt that
          the Spartan state developed up to the end of the seventh century on the same
          general lines as other Greek states, though with some remarkable peculiarities.
          There can be little doubt that, like most other states, it passed through the
          stages of royalty and aristocracy; and that the final form of the constitution
          was the result of a struggle between the nobles and the people. The remarkable
          thing was that throughout these changes hereditary kingship survived.
               The machine of the Spartan constitution, as we know it
          when it was fully developed, had four parts: the Kings, the Council, the
          Assembly, and the Ephors. The first three are the original institutions, which
          were common, as we saw, to the whole Greek race; the Ephors were a later
          institution, and were peculiar to Sparta.
               We saw that towards the end of the Homeric period the
          powers of the king were limited, and that this limited monarchy then died out,
          sometimes leaving a trace behind it, perhaps in the name of a magistracy—like
          the king-archon at Athens. In a few places it survived, and Sparta was one of
          them. But, if it survived here, its powers were limited in a twofold way. It
          was limited not only by the other institutions of the state, but by its own
          dual character. For there were two kings at Sparta, and had been since the
          memory of men. It seems possible that the origin of this double kingship lay in
          the coalition of two distinct communities, each of which had its own king. One
          tribe dwelt about Sparta, and its kings belonged to the clan of the Agidae. The other tribe, we may guess, was settled
          somewhere in southern Laconia, and its royal clan was that of the Eurypontidae. These two tribes must have united to form a
          large city-state at Sparta; and the terms of the union were that neither tribe
          should give up its king, but that two kings, with coequal authority, should
          rule over the joint community. The kingship passed from father to son in the
          two royal houses of the Agids and Eurypontids; and if the Agid kings
          possessed a slight superiority in public estimation over their colleagues, this
          may have been due to the fact that the Eurypontids were the strangers who migrated to Sparta. According to a pedigree which
          was made out for them in later days, when the myth of the return of the Heraclidae had become current, both dynasties traced
          themselves back to Heracles.
   It seems probable that it was partly because there
          were two kings, the one a check upon the other, that kingship was not abolished
          in Sparta, or reduced to a mere magistracy. But the powers of the' kings were
          largely curtailed; and we may suppose that the limitations were introduced by
          degrees during that epoch in which throughout Greece generally, monarchies were
          giving way to aristocratic republics. Of the religious, military, and judicial
          functions, which belonged to them and to all other Greek kings, they lost some
          and retained others.
               They were privileged to hold certain
          priesthoods; they offered solemn sacrifices for the city every month to
          Apollo; they prepared the necessary sacrifices before warlike expeditions and
          battles; they were priests, though not the sole priests, of the community.
   They were the supreme commanders of the army. They had
          the right of making war upon whatever country they chose, and penalties were
          laid on any Spartan who presumed to hinder them. In the field they had
          unlimited right of life and death; and they had a bodyguard of a hundred men.
          It is clear that these large powers were always limited by the double nature of
          the kingship. But at a later period it was defined by law that only one of the
          kings, to be chosen on each occasion by the people, should lead the army in
          time of war, and moreover they were made responsible to the community for their
          conduct in their campaigns.
               But while they enjoyed this supreme position as
          high-priests and leaders of the host, they could hardly be considered
          judges any longer. The right of dealing out dooms like the Homeric Agamemnon
          had passed away from them; only in three special cases had they still judicial
          or legal powers. They presided at the adoption of children; they decided who
          was to marry an heiress whose father had died without betrothing her; and they
          judged in all matters concerning public roads.
   There were royal domains in the territory of the perioeci from which the kings derived their revenue. But
          they also had perquisites at public sacrifices; on such occasions they were
          (like Homeric kings) given the first seat at the banquet, were served first,
          and received a double portion of everything, and the hides of the slaughtered
          beasts. The pious sentiment with which royalty, as a hallowed institution, was
          regarded, is illustrated by the honours which were
          paid to the kings when they died. "Horsemen," says Herodotus,
  "carry round the tidings of the event through all Laconia, and in the city
          women go about beating a cauldron. And at this sign, two free persons of each
          house, a man and a woman, must put on mourning garb, and if any fail to do this
          great pains are imposed". The funeral was attended by a fixed number of
          the perioeci, and it was part of the stated ceremony
          that the dead king should be praised by the mourners as better than all who had
          gone before him. Public business was not resumed for ten days after the
          burial. The king was succeeded by his eldest son, but a son born before his
          father's accession to the kingship had to give way to the eldest of those who
          were born after the accession. If there were no children, the succession fell
          to the nearest male kinsman, who was likewise the regent in the case of a
          minority.
   The gerontes or elders whom we find in Homer advising the king
          and also acting as judges have developed at Sparta into a body of fixed number,
          forming a definite part of the constitution, called the gerusia. This Council consisted of thirty members,
          including the two kings, who belonged to it by virtue of their kingship. The
          other twenty-eight must be over sixty years of age, so that the council was a
          body of elders in the strict sense of the word. They held their office for life
          and were chosen by acclamation in the general assembly of citizens, whose
          choice was supposed to fall on him whose moral merits were greatest; membership
          of the Council was described as a "prize for virtue". The Council
          prepared matters which were to come before the Assembly; it exercised, as an
          advising body, a great influence on political affairs; and it formed a court of
          justice for criminal cases.
   But though the Councillors were elected by the people, they were not elected from the people. Nobility of
          birth retained at Sparta its political significance; and only men of the noble
          families could be chosen members of the Council. And thus the Council formed an
          oligarchical element in the Lacedaemonian constitution.
               Every Spartan who had passed his thirtieth year was a
          member of the Apella,
          or Assembly of Citizens, which met every month between the bridge of Babyka and the stream of Knakion.
          In old days, no doubt, it was summoned by the kings, but in historical times we
          find that this right has passed to the ephors. The assembly did not debate, but
          having heard the proposals of kings or ephors, signified its will by
          acclamation. If it seemed doubtful to which opinion the majority of the voices
          inclined, recourse was had to a division. The people elected the members of the Gerusia, the ephors and other magistrates;
          determined, questions of war and peace, and foreign politics; and decided
          disputed successions to the kingly office. Thus, theoretically, the Spartan
          constitution was a democracy. No Spartan was excluded from the apella of the people; and the will of the people expressed
          at their apella was supreme. "To the
          people," runs an old statute, shall belong the decision and the
          power". But the same statute granted to the executive authorities—the
          elders and magistrates—a power which restricted this apparent supremacy of the
          people. It allowed them "to be seceders, if the people make a crooked
          decree". It seems that the will of the people, declared by their acclamations,
          did not receive the force of law, unless it were then formally proclaimed
          before the assembly was formally dissolved. If the elders and magistrates did
          not approve of the decision of the majority of the assembly, they could annul
          the proceedings by refusing to proclaim it—"seceding" and dissolving
          the meeting, without waiting for the regular dissolution by king or ephor.
   The five ephors were the most characteristic part of the political constitution of Sparta. The
          origin of the office is veiled in obscurity; it was supposed to have been
          instituted in the first half of the eighth century. But we must
          distinguish between the first institution of the office and the beginning of
          its political importance. It is probable that, in the course of the eighth
          century, the kings finding it impossible to attend to all their duties were
          constrained to give up the civil jurisdiction, and that the ephors or
  "overseers" were appointed for this purpose. The number of the
          ephors would seem to be connected with the number of the five demes or villages
          whose union formed the city; and perhaps each one of the ephors was assigned originally
          to one of the villages. But it cannot have been till the seventh century that
          the ephors won their great political power. They must have won that power in a
          conflict between the nobility who governed in conjunction with the kings, and
          the people who had no share in the government. In that struggle the kings
          represented the cause of the nobility, while the ephors were the
          representatives of the people. A compromise, as the result of such a
          conflict, is implied in the oaths which were every month exchanged between the
          kings and the ephors. The king swore that he would observe the laws of the
          state in discharging his royal functions; the ephor that he would maintain the
          royal power undiminished, so long as the king was true to his oath. In this
          ceremony we have the record of an acute conflict between the government and
          people. The democratic character of the ephorate appears from the fact that any
          Spartan might be elected. The mode of election, which is described by Aristotle
          as "very childish", was practically equivalent to an election by lot.
          When the five ephors did not agree among themselves, the minority gave way.
   The ephors entered upon their office at the beginning
          of the Laconian year, which fell on the first new moon after the autumnal
          equinox. As chosen guardians of the rights of the people, they were called upon
          to watch jealously the conduct of the kings. With this object two ephors always
          accompanied the king on warlike expeditions. They had the power of indicting
          the king and summoning him to appear before them. The judicial functions which
          the kings lost passed partly to the ephors, partly to the Council. The ephors
          were the supreme civil court; the Council, as we have seen, formed the supreme
          criminal court. But in the case of the Perioeci the
          ephors were criminal judges also. They were moreover responsible for the strict
          maintenance of the order and discipline of the Spartan state, and, when they
          entered upon office, they issued a proclamation to the citizens to "shave
          their upper lips and obey the laws."
   This unique constitution cannot be placed under any
          general head, cannot be called kingdom, oligarchy, or democracy, without
          misleading. None of these names is applicable to it, but it participated in all
          three. A stranger who saw the kings going forth with power at the head of the
          host, or honoured above all at the public feasts in
          the city, would have described Sparta as a kingdom. If one of the kings
          themselves had been asked to define the constitution, it is probable that he
          would have regretfully called it a democracy. Yet the close Council, taken from
          a privileged class, exercising an important influence on public affairs, and
          deferring to an Assembly which could not debate, might be alleged to prove that
          Sparta was an oligarchy. The secret of this complex character of the Spartan
          constitution lies in the fact that, while Sparta developed on the same general
          path as other states and had to face the same political crises, she overcame
          each crisis with less violence and showed a more conservative spirit. When she
          ought to have passed from royalty to aristocracy, she diminished the power of
          the kings, but she preserved hereditary kingship as a part of the aristocratic
          government. When she ought to have advanced to democracy, she gave indeed
          enormous power to the representatives of the people, but she still preserved
          both her hereditary kings and the Council of her nobles.
   
           
  
               Sect.
          2. Spartan Conquest of Messenia
              
        
           In the growth of Sparta the first and most decisive
          step was the conquest of Messenia. The southern portion of the Peloponnesus is
          divided into two parts by Mount Taygetus. Of these,
          the eastern part is again severed by Mount Parnon into two regions: the vale of the river Eurotas, and the rugged strip of coast
          between Parnon and the sea. The western country is
          less mountainous, more fruitful, and Messenia, blessed by a milder climate, nor
          is it divided in the same way by a mountain chain; the hills rise irregularly,
          and the river Pamisos waters the central plain of Stenyclarus where the Greek invaders are said to have fixed
          their abode. The natural fortress of the country was the lofty rock of Ithome
          which rises to the west of the river. It is probable that under its protection
          a town grew up at an early period, whose name Messene was afterwards
          transferred to the whole country.
   The fruitful soil of Messenia, " good to plant
          and good to ear", as one of her poets sang, could not but excite the
          covetousness of her martial neighbours. It is impossible to determine the date
          of the First Messenian War with greater precision than the eighth century.
          Legends grew up freely as to its causes and its course. All that we know with
          certainty is that the Spartan king, under whose auspices it was waged, was
          named Theopompus; that it was decided by the capture of the great fortress of
          Ithome; and that the eastern part of the land became Laconian. A poet writing
          at the beginning of the seventh century would have naturally spoken of Messene
          or Pherae as being "in Lacedaemon". When the Second War broke out
          towards the end of the seventh century, it was either history or legend that
          the previous war had lasted twenty years. Legends grew up around it in which
          the chief figure was a Messenian hero named Aristodemus. The tale was that he
          offered his daughter as a sacrifice to save his country, in obedience to the
          demand of an oracle. Her lover made a despairing effort to save her life by
          spreading a report that the maiden was about to become a mother, and the
          calumny so incensed Aristodemus that he slew her with his own hand. Afterwards,
          terrified by evil dreams and portents, and persuaded that his country was
          doomed, he killed himself upon his daughter's tomb.
   As the object of the Spartans was to increase the
          number of the lots of land for their citizens, many of the conquered Messenians
          were reduced to the condition of Helots, and servitude was hard sentans' though their plight might have been harder. They
          paid to their lords only one-half of the produce of the lands which they
          tilled, whereas in Attica at the same period the free tillers of the soil had
          to pay five-sixths. The Spartan poet Tyrtaeus describes how the Messenians
          endured the insolence of their masters :—
    
               As asses worn by loads intolerable,
               So them did stress of cruel force compel,
               Of all the fruits the well-tilled land affords,
               The moiety to bear to their proud lords.
                
               For some generations they submitted patiently, but at
          length, when victorious Sparta felt secure, a rebellion was organised in the northern district of Andania.
          The rebels were supported by their neighbours in Arcadia and Pisatis, and they are said to have found of an able and
          ardent leader in Aristomenes, sprung from an old Messenian family. The
          revolt was at first successful. (c. 7th Century BC). The Spartans fared ill,
          and their young men experienced the disgrace of defeat. The hopes of the serfs
          rose, and Sparta despaired of recovering the land. But a leader and a poet
          arose amongst them. The lame Tyrtaeus is recorded to have inspired his
          countrymen with such martial vigour that the tide of
          fortune turned, and Sparta began to retrieve her losses and recover her
          reputation. Some scraps of the poems of Tyrtaeus have been preserved, and they
          supply the only trustworthy material we have for the history of the Messenian
          wars; and he won such fame by the practical successes of his art that at a
          later time the Athenians sought to claim him as one of their sons and gave out
          that Sparta, by the counsel of an oracle, had sent for him. The warriors
          advanced to battle singing his "marches" to the sound of flutes,
          while his elegies, composed in the conventional epic dialect, are said to have
          been recited in the tents after the evening meal. But we learn from himself
          that his strategy was as effective as his poetry, and the Messenians were
          presently defeated in the Battle of the Great Foss. They then retired to the
          northern stronghold of Eira on the river Nedon, which plays the same part in
          the second war that Ithome played in the first, while Aristomenes takes the
          place of Aristodemus. As to Eira, indeed, we possess no record on the
          contemporary authority of Tyrtaeus, whose extant fragments notice none of the
          adventures, nor even the name, of the hero Aristomenes. Yet Eira may well have
          been the place where the last stand was made; for the Spartans had rased the fortifications of Ithome, which is not mentioned
          in connection with the second war. At Eira the defenders were near their
          Arcadian supporters and within reach of Pylos which seems not to have been yet
          Lacedaemonian. But Eira fell; legend says that it was beleaguered for
          eleven years. Aristomenes was the soul of the defence,
          and his wonderful escapes became the argument of a stirring tale. On one
          occasion he was thrown, with fifty fellow-countrymen, captured by the Spartans,
          into a deep pit. His comrades perished, and Aristomenes awaited certain death.
          But by following the track of a fox he found a passage in the rocky wall of his
          prison and appeared on the following day at Eira. When the Spartans surprised
          that fortress, he made his escape wounded to Arcadia. He died in Rhodes, but
          two hundred and fifty years later, on the field of Leuctra, he reappeared
          against the Spartans to avenge his defeat.
   Those Messenians who were left in the land were mostly
          reduced again to the condition of Helots, but the maritime communities and
          even a few in the interior remained free, as perioeci,
          in the possession of their estates. Many escaped to Arcadia, while some of the
          inhabitants of the coast-towns may have taken ship and sailed to other places.
   At this time Sparta, like most other Greek states,
          suffered from domestic discontent. There was a pressing land question, with
          which Tyrtaeus dealt in a poem named Eunomia, or Law and
            Order. This question was partly solved by the conquest of the whole land of
          Messenia, and doubtless the foundation of the colony of Taras in southern Italy
          was undertaken for the purpose of relieving an excessive population.
   The Messenian war, as recorded by Tyrtaeus, shows us
          that the power of the privileged classes had been already undermined by a great
          change in the method of warfare. The fighting is done, and the victory won, by
          regiments of mailed foot-lancers, who march and fight together in close ranks.
          The secret has been discovered that such well-drilled spearsmen — hoplites as they were called—were superior to cavalry; and much about the
          same period in Ionia, we find the infantry of Smyrna holding their own against
          the Lydian horsemen of Gyges. The recognition of serried bodies of foot, as a
          useful weapon in battle, can be traced in the later parts of the Iliad; but it
          was in Sparta first that their value was fully appreciated. There they became
          the main part of the military establishment. The city no longer depended
          chiefly on her nobles in time of war; she depended on her whole people. The
          progress of metal-smiths in their trade, which accompanied the general
          industrial advance of Greece, rendered possible this transformation in the art
          of war. very well-to-do citizen could now provide himself with an outfit of armour and go forth to battle in panoply. The
          transformation was distinctly levelling and democratic; for it placed the noble
          and the ordinary citizen on an equality in the field. We shall not be wrong in
          connecting this military development with those aspirations of the people for a
          popular constitution, which resulted in the investment of the ephorate with its
          great political powers.
   From Sparta, where it was brought to a perfection
          which in the days of Tyrtaeus it had not yet attained, the institution of the
          heavy foot-lancers spread throughout Greece, and its natural tendency
          everywhere was to promote the progress to democracy. It is significant that in
          Thessaly, where the system of hoplites was not introduced and cavalry was
          always the kernel of the army, democratic ideas never made way.
               Sect. 3. Internal Development of Sparta and her
          Institutions
           In the seventh century one could not have foretold
          what Sparta was destined to be. Her nobles lived luxuriously, like the nobles
          of other lands; the individual was free, as in other cities, to order his life
          as he willed. She showed some promise of other than military interests. Lyric
          poetry was transported from its home in Lesbos to find for a while a second
          home on the banks of the Eurotas. Songs to be sung at banquets, at weddings, at
          harvest feasts, and at festivals of the gods, by single singers or choirs of
          men or maidens, were older than memory could reach; but with the development of
          music and the improvement of musical instruments the composition of these songs
          became an art, and lyric poetry was created. The introduction of a lyre of
          seven strings instead of the old tetrachord was attributed to Terpander of
          Lesbos, who was at all events an historical person, and both a poet and a
          musician. He visited Sparta, and is said to have instituted the musical contest
          at the Carnea, the great festival of Lacedaemon. His
          music was certainly welcomed there, and Sparta soon had a poet, who, though not
          her own, was at least her adopted, son. Alcman from Lydian Sardis made Sparta
          his home, and we have some fragments of songs which he composed for choirs of
          Laconian maidens. Sparta had her epic poet too in Cinaethon.
          But this promise of a school of music and poetry was not to be fulfilled.
   When Sparta emerges into the full light of history we
          find her under an iron discipline, which invades every part of a man's life and
          controls all his actions from his cradle to his death-bed. Everything is
          subordinated to the art of war, and the sole aim of the state is to create
          invincible warriors. The martial element was doubtless, from the very
          beginning, stronger in Sparta than in other states; and as a city ruling over a
          large discontented population of subjects and serfs, she must always be prepared
          to fight; but we shall probably never know how, and under what influences, the
          singular Sparta discipline which we have now to examine was introduced. Nor can
          we, in describing the Spartan society, distinguish always between older and
          later institutions.
               The whole Spartan people formed a military caste; the
          life of a Spartan citizen was devoted to the service of the state. In order to
          carry out this ideal it was necessary that every citizen should be freed from
          the care of providing for himself and his family. The nobles owned family
          domains of their own; but the Spartan community also came into possession of
          common land, which was divided into a number of lots. Each Spartan obtained a
          lot, which passed from father to son, but could not be either sold or divided;
          thus a citizen could never be reduced to poverty. The original inhabitants,
          whom the Lacedaemonians dispossessed and reduced to the state of serfs,
          cultivated the land for their lords. Every year the owner of a lot was entitled
          to receive seventy medimni of corn for himself,
          twelve for his wife, and a stated portion of wine and fruit. All that the land
          produced beyond this, the Helot was allowed to retain for his own use. Thus the
          Spartan need take no thought for his support; he could give all his time to the
          affairs of public life. Though the Helots were not driven by taskmasters, and
          had the right of acquiring private property, their condition seems to have been
          hard; at all events, they were always bitterly dissatisfied and ready to rebel,
          whenever an occasion presented itself. The system of Helotry was a source of
          danger from the earliest times, but especially after the conquest of Messenia;
          and the state of constant military preparation in which the Spartans lived may
          have been partly due to the consciousness of this peril perpetually at
          their doors. The Krypteia or
          secret police was instituted — it is uncertain at what date—to deal with this
          danger. Young Spartans were sent into the country and empowered to kill every
          Helot whom they had reason to regard with suspicion. Closely connected with
          this system was the remarkable custom that the ephors, in whose hands lay the
          general control over the Helots, should every year on entering office proclaim
          war against them. By this device, the youths could slay dangerous Helots
          without any scruple or fear of the guilt of manslaughter. But notwithstanding
          these precautions serious revolts broke out again and again. A Spartan had no
          power to grant freedom to the Helot who worked on his lot, nor yet to sell him
          to another. Only the state could emancipate. As the Helots were called upon to
          serve as light-armed troops in time of war, they had then an opportunity of
          exhibiting bravery and loyalty in the service of the city, and those who
          conspicuously distinguished themselves might be rewarded by the city with the meed of freedom. Thus arose a class of freedmen
          called neodamôdes, or new demesmen. There
          was also another class of persons, neither serfs nor citizens, called mothônes, who probably sprang from illegitimate
          unions of citizens with Helot women.   
   Thus relieved from the necessity of gaining a
          livelihood, the Spartans devoted themselves to the good of the state, and the
          aim of the state was the cultivation of the art of war. Sparta was a large
          military school. Education, marriage, the details of daily life were all
          strictly regulated with a view to the maintenance of a perfectly efficient
          army. Every citizen was to be a soldier, and the discipline began from birth.
          When a child was born it was submitted to the inspection of the heads of the
          tribe, and if they judged it to be unhealthy or weak, it was exposed to die on
          the wild slopes of Mount Taygetos. At the age of
          seven years, the boy was consigned to the care of a state-officer, and the
          course of his education was entirely determined by the purpose of inuring him
          to bear hardships, training him to endure an exacting discipline, and
          instilling into his heart a sentiment of devotion to the state. The boys, up to
          the age of twenty, were marshalled in a huge school formed on the model of an
          army. The captains and prefects who instructed and controlled them were young
          men who had passed their twentieth year, but had not yet reached the thirtieth,
          which admitted them to the rights of citizenship. Warm friendships often sprang
          up between the young men and the boys whom they were training; and this was the
          one place in Spartan life where there was room for romance.
   At the age of twenty the Spartan entered upon military
          service and was permitted to marry. But he could not yet enjoy home-life; he
          had to live in "barracks" with his companions, and could only pay
          stolen and fugitive visits to his wife. In his thirtieth year, having completed
          his training, he became a "man", and obtained the full rights of
          citizenship. The Homoioi or peers,
          as the Spartan citizens were called, dined together in tents in the Hyacinthian
          Street. These public messes were in old days called andreia or
  "men's meals", and in later times phiditia.
          Each member of a common tent made a fixed monthly contribution, derived from
          the produce of his lot, consisting of barley, cheese, wine, and pigs, and the
          members of the same mess-tent shared the same tent in the field in time of war.
          These public messes are a survival, adapted to military purposes, of the old
          custom of public banquets, at which all the burghers gathered together at a
          table spread for the gods of the city.
   Of the organisation of the
          Spartan hoplites in early times we have no definite knowledge. Three hundred
  "horsemen", chosen from the Spartan youths, formed the king's
          bodyguard; but though, as their name shows, they were originally mounted, in
          later times they fought on foot. The light infantry was supplied by the Perioeci and Helots.
   Spartan discipline extended itself to the women too,
          with the purpose of producing mothers who should be both physically strong and
          saturated with the Spartan spirit. The girls, in common with the boys, went
          through a gymnastic training; and it was not considered immodest for them to practise their exercises almost nude. They enjoyed a
          freedom which was in marked contrast with the seclusion of women in other Greek
          states. They had a high repute for chastity; but if the government directed
          them to breed children for the state, they had no scruples in obeying the
          command, though it should involve a violation of the sanctity of the
          marriage-tie. They were, proverbially, ready to sacrifice their maternal
          instincts to the welfare of their country. Such was the spirit of the place.
   Thus Sparta was a camp in which the highest object of
          every man's life was to be ready at any moment to fight with the utmost
          efficiency for his city. The aim of every law, the end of the whole social
          order was to fashion good soldiers. Private luxury was strictly forbidden;
          Spartan simplicity became proverbial. The individual man, entirely lost in the
          state, had no life of his own; he had no problems of human existence to solve
          for himself. Sparta was not a place for thinkers or theorists; the whole duty of
          man and the highest ideal of life were contained for a Spartan in the laws of
          his city. Warfare being the object of all the Spartan laws and institutions,
          one might expect to find the city in a perpetual state of war. One might look
          to see her sons always ready to strive with their neighbours without any
          ulterior object, war being for them an end in itself. But it was not so; they
          did not wage war more lightly than other men; we cannot rank them with
          barbarians who care only for fighting and hunting. We may attribute the
          original motive of their institutions, in some measure at least, to the
          situation of a small dominant class in the midst of ill-contented subjects and
          hostile serfs. They must always be prepared to meet a rebellion of Perioeci or a revolt of Helots, and a surprise would have
          been fatal. Forming a permanent camp in a country which was far from friendly,
          they were compelled to be always on their guard. But there was something more
          in the vitality and conservation of the Spartan constitution, than precaution
          against the danger of a possible insurrection. It appealed to the Greek sense
          of beauty. There was a certain completeness and simplicity about the
          constitution itself, a completeness and simplicity about the manner of life
          enforced by the laws, a completeness and simplicity too about the type of
          character developed by them, which Greeks of other cities never failed to
          contemplate with genuine, if distant, admiration. Shut away in "hollow
          many-clefted Lacedaemon", out of the world and not sharing in the progress
          of other Greek cities, Sparta seemed to remain at a standstill; and a stranger
          from Athens or Miletus in the fifth century visiting the straggling villages
          which formed her unwalled unpretentious city must have had a feeling of being
          transported into an age long past, when men were braver, better, and simpler,
          unspoiled by wealth, undisturbed by ideas. To a philosopher, like Plato,
          speculating in political science, the Spartan state seemed the nearest approach
          to the ideal. The ordinary Greek looked upon it as a structure of severe and
          simple beauty, a Dorian city stately as a Dorian temple, far nobler than his
          own abode but not so comfortable to dwell in. If this was the effect produced
          upon strangers, we can imagine what a perpetual joy to a Spartan peer was the
          contemplation of the Spartan constitution; how he felt a sense of superiority
          in being a citizen of that city, and a pride in living up to its ideal and
          fulfilling the obligations of his nobility. In his mouth "not beautiful"
          meant "contrary to the Spartan laws", which were believed to have
          been inspired by Apollo. This deep admiration for their constitution as an
          ideally beautiful creation, the conviction that it was incapable of
          improvement—being, in truth, wonderfully effective in realising its aims—is bound up with the conservative spirit of the Spartans, shown so
          conspicuously in their use of their old iron coins down to the time of
          Alexander the Great.
   It was inevitable that, as time went on, there should
          be many fallings away, and that some of the harder laws should, by tacit
          agreement, be ignored. The other Greeks were always happy to point to the weak
          spots in the Spartan armour. From an early period it
          seems to have been a permitted thing for a citizen to acquire land in addition
          to his original lot. As such lands were not, like the original lot,
          inalienable, but could be sold or divided, inequalities in wealth necessarily
          arose, and the "communism" which we observed in the life of the
          citizens was only superficial. But it was specially provided by law that no
          Spartan should possess wealth in the form of gold or silver. This law was at
          first eluded by the device of depositing money in foreign temples, and it
          ultimately became a dead letter; Spartans even gained throughout Greece an evil
          reputation for avarice. By the fourth century they had greatly degenerated, and
          those who wrote studies of the Lacedaemonian constitution contrasted Sparta as
          it should be and used to be with Sparta as it was.
   There is no doubt that the Spartan system of
          discipline grew up by degrees; yet the argument from design might be plausibly
          used to prove that it was the original creation of a single lawgiver. We may
          observe how well articulated and how closely interdependent were its various
          parts. The whole discipline of the society necessitated the existence of
          Helots; and on the other hand the existence of Helots necessitated such a
          discipline. The ephorate was the keystone of the structure; and in the dual
          kingship one might see a cunning intention to secure the powers of the ephors
          by perpetual jealousy between the kings. In the whole fabric one might trace an
          artistic unity which might be thought to argue the work of a single mind. And
          until lately this was generally believed to be the case; some still maintain
          the belief. A certain Lycurgus was said to have framed the Spartan institutions
          and enacted the Spartan laws about the beginning of the ninth century.
               But the grounds for believing that a Spartan lawgiver
          named Lycurgus ever existed are of the slenderest kind The earliest statements
          as to the origin of the constitution date from the fifth century, and their
          discrepancy shows that they were mere guesses, and that the true origins were
          buried completely in the obscurity of the past. Pindar attributed the
          Lacedaemonian institutions to Aegimius, the mythical
          ancestor of the Dorian tribes; the historian Hellanicus regarded them as the
          creation of the two first kings of Sparta, Procles and Eurysthenes. The more critical Thucydides, less ready to record
          conjectures, contents himself with saying that the Lacedaemonian constitution
          had existed for rather more than 400 years at the end of the Peloponnesian war.
          Herodotus states that the Spartans declared Lycurgus to have been the guardian
          of one of their early kings, and to have introduced from Crete their laws and
          institutions. But the divergent accounts of this historian's contemporaries,
          who ignore Lycurgus altogether, prove that it was simply one of many guesses
          and not a generally accepted tradition. It may be added that if the old Spartan
          poet Tyrtaeus had mentioned Lycurgus as a lawgiver his words would certainly
          have been quoted by later writers; and may fairly conclude that he knew
          nothing of such a tradition.
   Lycurgus, or to give him his name in its true
          form Lyco-vorgos, was not a man; he was
          only a god. He was an Arcadian deity or "hero,"—perhaps some form of
          the Arcadian Zeus Lycaeus, god of the wolf-mountain;
          and his name meant "wolf-repeller." He was
          worshipped at Lacedaemon where he had a shrine, and we may conjecture that his
          cult was adopted by the Spartans from the older inhabitants whom they
          displaced. He may have also been connected with Olympia, for his name was
          inscribed on a very ancient quoit—the so-called quoit of Iphitus—which
          was preserved there, and perhaps dated from the seventh century. The belief
          that this deity was a Spartan lawgiver, inspired by the Delphic oracle,
          gradually gained ground and in the fourth century generally prevailed.
          Aristotle believed it, and made use of the old quoit to fix the date of the Lycurgean legislation to the first half of the eighth
          century. But while everybody regarded Lycurgus as unquestionably an historical
          personage, candid investigation confessed that nothing certain was known
          concerning him, and the views about his chronology were many and various.
   Sect. 4. The Cretan Constitutions
          
        Ancient Greek students of constitutional history were
          struck by some obvious and remarkable resemblances between the Spartan and the
          Cretan states, and it was believed by many that the Spartan constitution was
          derived from Crete, though there are notable differences as well as notable
          likenesses. It will be convenient to glance here at the political condition of
          this island, to which we shall seldom have to recur, since, owing to its
          geographical situation and the lack of political union, it was isolated and
          withdrawn from the main course of Greek history.
               In a passage in the Odyssey the inhabitants of Crete
          are divided into five classes: Achaeans, Eteo-Cretans, Cydonians, Dorians, and Pelasgians. Of these the Eteo-Cretans, as we saw, were the original people who
          dwelled in the island before the Greeks came, like the Eteo-Carpathians
          of Carpathus. They survived chiefly in the eastern
          part of the island and they continued to speak their own tongue in historical
          times, writing it, however, not in their ancient pictorial script but in Greek
          characters. A specimen of it—but we have no key to the meaning—has been
          preserved in an inscription sfound at Praesus, their most important city. The people of Cydonia
          were perhaps ancient settlers from the Peloponnesus. The Achaeans and
          Pelasgians point to Thessaly, and there are some links which seem to connect
          Cretan towns with Perrhaebia. We may consider it probable that early settlers
          from Thessaly found their way to Crete.
   But the most important settlers belonged to the Dorian
          branch of the Greek race, easily recognised by the
          three tribes, Hylleis, Pamphyli,
          and Dymanes, which always accompanied its migrations.
          These three tribes can be traced in many Cretan cities, and we saw that this
          island was one of the first places to receive the Dorian wanderers. But at a
          later time there seems to have been a further infusion of the
  "Dorian" element. New settlers came from Argolis and Laconia and
          mingled with the older inhabitants, refounding many
          cities. Thus Gortyn in the south of the island, in the valley of the river Lethaeus, was re-settled; and her neighbour Phaestos, distinguished by a mention in Homer, was invaded
          by newcomers from Argolis. "Well-built Lyttus",
          in its central site, also of Homeric fame, and Polyrrhenion,
  "rich in sheep", in the north-western corner, a haunt of the divine
          huntress Dictynna, were both colonised from Laconia. In the mid part of the north coast, Cnosus "the great city" of Minos, Cnosus "the
          broad," set on a hill, had existed in the heroic age but was re-peopled by
          Dorians.     
   The island then, colonised first by a folk closely akin to those who conquered Lacedaemon and Argos, colonised again by those very conquerors, may be said
          to be doubly "Dorian"; and there is thus a double reason for
          resemblances between Laconian and Cretan institutions. In the Cretan
          cities themselves there were of course many local divergences, but the
          general resemblances are so close, wherever we can trace the facts, that
          for our purpose we may safely follow the example of the ancients in
          assuming a general type of Cretan polity.
   The population of a Cretan state consisted of two
          classes, warriors and serfs. In a few cases where one city had subjugated
          another, the people of the subject city held somewhat the same position as the
          Laconian Perioeci and formed a third class, but these
          cases were exceptional. In general, one of the main differences between a
          Cretan state and Sparta was that the Cretan state had no perioeci.
          There were two kinds of serfs, mnoitai and aphamiotai. The mnoites belonged
          to the state, while the aphamiotes, also
          called clarotes or
  "lot-men", were attached to the lots of the citizens, and belonged to
          the owners of the lots. These bondsmen cultivated the land themselves and could
          possess private property, like the Spartan Helots, but though we do not know
          exactly what their obligations were, they seem to have been in some ways in a
          better condition than the bondsmen of Laconia. If the pastas or lord of a
          Cretan serf died childless, the serf had an interest in his property. He could
          contract a legal marriage, and his family was recognised by law. The two privileges from which he was always jealously excluded were the
          carrying of arms and the practice of athletic exercises in the gymnasia. Unlike
          the Helots, the Cretan serfs found their condition tolerable, and we never hear
          that they revolted. The geographical conditions of the Cretans enabled them to
          excuse their slaves from military service.
   Of the monarchical period in Crete we know nothing. In
          the sixth century we find that monarchy has been abolished by the aristocracy,
          and that the executive governments are in the hands of boards of ten annual
          magistrates, entitled kosmoi. The kosmoi were chosen from certain important clans
          (startoi), and the military as well as the
          other functions of the king had passed into their hands. They were
          assisted by the advice of the Council of elders which was elected from those
          who had filled the office of kosmos. The
          resolves of the kosmoi and Council
          were laid before the agorai or
          general assemblies of citizens, who merely voted and had no right to propose or
          discuss.
   There is a superficial resemblance between this
          constitution, which prevailed in most Cretan cities, and that of Sparta. The
          Cretan agora answers to the Spartan apella, the
          Cretan to the Spartan gerusia, and the kosmoi to the ephors. The most obvious difference is that
          in Crete there was no royalty. But there is another important difference. The
          democratic feature of the Spartan constitution is absent in Crete. While the
          ephors were chosen from all the citizens, in a Cretan state only certain noble
          families were eligible to the office of kosmos; and,
          as the gerusia was chosen from the kosmoi, it is clear that the whole power of the state
          resided in a privileged class consisting of those families or clans. Thus the
          Cretan state was a close aristocracy.
   The true likeness between Sparta and Crete lies in the
          circumstance that the laws and institutions of both countries aimed at creating
          a class of warriors. Boys were taught to read and write, and to recite certain
          songs ordained by law; but the chief part of their training was bodily, with a
          view to making them good soldiers. At the age of seventeen they were admitted
          into "herds", agelai, answering
          to the Spartan buai, which were organised by sons of noble houses and supported at the
          expense of the state. The members of these associations went through a training
          in the public gymnasia or dromoi, and hence were called dromeis. Great days were held, on which sham fights
          took place between these "herds" to the sound of lyres and flutes.
          The dromeus was of age in the eyes
          of the law, and he was bound to marry, but his wife continued to live in the
          house of her father and kinsman, until he passed out of the state of a dromeus and became a "man." The men dined at
          public messes called andreia,
          corresponding to the Spartan phiditia,
          but the boys were also permitted to join them. These meals were not defrayed
          altogether, as at Sparta, by the contributions of the members, but were partly
          at least paid for by the state; and the state also made provision for the
          sustenance of the women. The public income, which defrayed these and other such
          burdens and maintained the worship of the gods, must have been derived from
          public land cultivated by the mnoites, and distinct
          from the land which was apportioned in lots among the citizens.
   We see then that in the discipline and education of
          the citizens, in the common meals of the men, in general political objects,
          there is a close and significant likeness between Sparta and Crete. But
          otherwise there are great differences. (1) In Crete there were, as a rule, no Perioeci; (2) the Cretan serfs lived under more favourable conditions than the Helots, and were not a
          constant source of danger; (3) kingship did not survive in Crete, and
          consequently (4) the functions which in Sparta were divided between kings and
          ephors were in Crete united in the hands of the kosmoi;
          (5) the Cretan state was an aristocracy, while Sparta, so far as the city
          itself was concerned, was a limited democracy; a difference which clearly
          reveals itself in (6) the modes of electing kosmoi and ephors; (7) there is a more advanced form of communism in Crete, in so far
          as state stores contribute largely to the maintenance of the citizens. If one
          city had become dominant in Crete and reduced the others to subjection, the
          resemblance between Laconia and Crete would have been much greater. A class of
          Cretan perioeci would have forthwith been formed.
    
               Sect. 5. The Supremacy and Decline of Argos. The
          Olympian Games
                
        
           The rebellion of Messenia had been especially
          formidable to Sparta, because the rebels had been supported by two foreign
          powers, Arcadia and Pisa. Part of Arcadia seems to have been united at this
          time under the lordship of the king of the Arcadian Orchomenus.
               The king of Pisa on the Alpheus had recently risen to
          new power and honour with the help of Argos; and
          Argos itself had been playing a prominent part in the peninsula under the
          leadership of her king Pheidon. The reign of this king was the last epoch of
          Argos as an active power of the first rank. We know little about him, but his
          name became so famous that in later times the royal house of distant Macedonia,
          when it reached the height of its success in Alexander the Great, was anxious
          to connect its line of descent with Pheidon. Under his auspices a system of
          measures was introduced into Argos and the Peloponnesus. These measures were
          called after his name Pheidonian, and were likewise adopted at Athens; they
          seem to have been closely connected with the Aeginetan system of weights. But
          the only clear action of Pheidon is his expedition to the west. He led an
          Argive army across Arcadia to the banks of the Alpheus, and presided there over
          the celebration of the Olympian festival, which is now for the first time heard
          of in the history of Greece.
   The altis or sacred grove of
          Olympia lay,under the wooded mount 0f Cronus, where
          the river Cladeus flows into the Alpheus, in the
          angle between the two streams. It was dedicated to the worship of Zeus; but the
          spot was probably sacred to Pelops, before Zeus claimed it for himself, and
          Pelops, degraded to the rank of a hero, kept his own sacred precinct within the
          larger enclosure. The sanctuary was in belongs to the territory of Pisa, and
          there is no doubt that the care of the worship and the conduct of the
          festivals belonged originally to the Pisan community. But the men of Elis,
          the northern neighbours of Pisa, set their hearts on having the control of the
          Olympian sanctuary, which, though it is not once mentioned, as DelPhi and Dodona are mentioned, in the poems of Homer,
          must by the seventh century    have won a high prestige in
          the Peloponnesus and drawn many visitors. As Elis was stronger than Pisa,
          the Eleans finally succeeded in usurping the conduct
          of the festival. Games were the chief feature of the festival, which was held
          every fourth year, at the time of the second full moon after midsummer's day.
          The games at first included foot-races, boxing, and wrestling; chariot-races
          and horse-races were added later. Such contests were an ancient institution in
          Greece. We know not how far back they go, or in what circumstances they were
          first introduced, but the funeral games of Patroclus, described in the Iliad,
          permit us to infer that they were a feature of Ionian life in the ninth
          century. We can see but dimly into the political relations of Pheidon's age; but we can discern at least that Sparta lent
          her countenance to Elis in this usurpation, and that Argos, jealous of the
          growing power of Sparta, espoused the cause of Pisa. This was the purpose of
          king Pheidon's expedition to Olympia. He took the
          management of the games out of the hands of Elis and t0 restored it to
          Pisa. And for many years Pisa maintained her rights.
   She maintained them so long as Sparta, absorbed in the
          Messenian strife, had no help to spare for Elis; and during that time she did
          what she could to help the foes of Sparta. But when the revolt was suppressed,
          it was inevitable that Elis should again, with Spartan help, win the control of
          the games, for Argos, declining under the successors of Pheidon, could give no
          aid to Pisa.
               When king Pheidon held his state at Olympia, the most
          impressive shrine in the altis was the temple of Hera
          and Zeus; and this is the most ancient temple of which the foundations are
          still preserved on the soil of Hellas. It was built of sun-baked bricks, upon lower courses of stone, and the Doric columns were of wood. The
          days of stone temples were at hand; but it was not till two centuries later
          that the elder shrine was overshadowed by the great stone temple of Zeus. The
          temple of Hera is supposed by some to have been founded in the eleventh or
          tenth century; it is hardly likely to be so old; but it was certainly very old,
          like the games of the place. The mythical institution of the games was ascribed
          to Pelops or to Heracles; and, when the Eleans usurped the presidency, the story gradually took shape that the celebration had
          been revived by the Spartan Lycurgus and the Elean Iphitus in the year 776 B.C., and this year was reckoned as the first Olympiad. From
          that year until the visit of Pheidon, the Eleans professed to have presided over the feast; and their account of the matter won
          its way into general belief.
   It is possible that king Pheidon reorganised the games and inaugurated a new stage in the history of the festival. At all
          events, by the beginning of the sixth century the festival was no longer an
          event of merely Peloponnesian interest. It had become famous wherever the Greek
          tongue was spoken, and, when the feast-tide came round in each cycle of four
          years, there thronged to the banks of the Alpheus, from all quarters of the
          Greek world, athletes and horses to compete in the contests and spectators to
          behold them. During the celebration of the festival a sacred truce was
          observed, and the men of Elis claimed that in those days their territory was
          inviolable. The prize for victory in the games was a wreath of wild olive; but
          rich rewards always awaited the victor when he returned home in triumph and
          laid the Olympian crown in the chief temple of his city.
               It may seem strange that the greatest and most
          glorious of all Panhellenic festivals should have been celebrated near the
          western shores of the Peloponnesus. One might have looked to find it nearer the
          Aegean. But situated where it was, the scene of the great games was all the
          nearer to the Greeks beyond the western sea; and none of the peoples of the
          mother-country vied more eagerly or more often in the contests of Olympia than
          the children who had found new homes far away on Sicilian and Italian soil. This
          nearness of Olympia to the western colonies comes into one's thoughts, when
          standing in the sacred altis one beholds the terrace
          on the northern side of the precinct, and the scanty remains of the row of
          twelve treasure-houses which once stood there. For of those twelve treasuries
          five at least were dedicated by Sicilian and Italian cities. Thus the Olympian
          festival helped the colonies of the west to keep in touch with the
          mother-country; it furnished a centre where Greeks of
          all parts met and exchanged their ideas and experiences; it was one of the
          institutions which expressed and quickened the consciousness of fellowship
          among the scattered folks of the Greek race; and it became a model, as we shall
          see, for other festivals of the same kind, which concurred in promoting a
          feeling of national unity.
   The final success of Sparta in the long struggle with
          Messenia marks the period at which the balance of power among the Peloponnesian
          states began to shift. In the seventh century, Argos is the leading state. She
          has reduced Mycenae; she has annihilated Asine; she has made Tiryns an Argive
          fort; she has defeated Sparta at Hysiae. There can be
          little doubt that Pheidon's authority extended over
          all Argolis; possibly his influence was felt in Aegina, and the Laconian island
          of Cythera may have been an Argive possession, as well as the whole eastern
          coast of Laconia. But his reign is the last manifestation of the greatness of
          the southern Argos. Fifty years after the subjugation of Messenia, the Spartans
          become the strongest state in the Peloponnesus, and the Argives sink into the
          position of a second-rate power—always able to maintain their independence,
          always a thorn in the side of Sparta, always to be reckoned with as a foe and
          welcomed as a friend, but never leading, dominant, or originative.
    
               Sect. 6. Democratic Movements. Lawgivers and
          Tyrants
                
        It is clear that there is no security that equal
          justice will be meted out to all, so long as the laws by which the judge is
          supposed to act are not accessible to all. A written code of laws is a
          condition of just judgment, however just the laws themselves may be. It was
          therefore natural that one of the first demands the people in Greek cities
          pressed upon their aristocratic governments, and one of the first concessions
          those governments were forced to make, was a written law. It must be borne in
          mind that in old days deeds which injured only the individual and did not touch
          the gods or the state, were left to the injured person to deal with as he chose
          or could. The state did not interfere. Even in the case of blood- shedding, it
          devolved upon the kinsfolk of the slain man to wreak punishment upon the
          slayer. Then, as social order developed along with centralisation,
          the state took justice partly into its own hands; and the injured man, before
          he could punish the wrong-doer, was obliged to charge him before a judge, who
          decided the punishment. But it must be noted that no crime could come before a
          judge, unless the injured person came forward as accuser. The case of
          blood-shedding was exceptional, owing to the religious ideas connected with it.
          It was felt that the shedder of blood was not only impure himself, but had also
          defiled the gods of the community; so that, as a consequence of this theory,
          manslaughter of every form came under the class of crimes against the religion
          of the state.
   The work of writing down the laws, and fixing customs
          in legal shape, was probably in most cases combined with the work of reforming;
          and thus the great codifiers of the seventh century were also lawgivers. Among
          them the most famous were the misty figures of Zaleucus who made laws for the western Locrians, and Charondas the legislator of Catane; the clearer figure of the Athenian Dracon, of whom
          more will be said hereafter, and, most famous of all, Solon the Wise. But other
          cities in the elder Greece had their lawgivers too, men of knowledge and
          experience; the names of some are preserved but they are mere names. It is
          probable that the laws of Sparta herself, which she afterwards attributed to
          the light-god, were first shaped and written down at this period. The cities of
          Crete too were affected by the prevalent spirit of law-shaping, and some
          fragments are preserved of the early laws of Gortyn, which were the beginning
          of an epoch of legislative activity culminating in the Gortynian Code which has come down to us on tablets of stone.
   In many cases the legislation was accompanied by
          political concessions to the people, and it was part of the lawgiver's task to
          modify the constitution. But for the most part this was only the beginning of a
          long political conflict; the people striving for freedom and equality, the
          privileged classes struggling to retain their exclusive rights. The social
          distress, touched on in a previous chapter, was the sharp spur which drove the
          people on in this effort towards popular government. The struggle was in some
          cases to end in the establishment of a democracy; in many cases, the oligarchy
          succeeded in maintaining itself and keeping the people dow ; in most cases, perhaps, the result was a perpetual oscillation between
          oligarchy and democracy—an endless series of revolutions, too often sullied by
          violence. But though democracy was not everywhere victorious—though even the
          states in which it was most firmly established were exposed to the danger of
          oligarchical conspiracies—yet everywhere the people aspired to it; and we may
          say that the chief feature of the domestic history of most Greek cities, from
          the end of the seventh century forward, is an endeavour,
          here successful, yonder frustrated, to establish or maintain popular government
          In this sense then we have now reached a period in which the Greek world is
          striving and tending to pass from the aristocratic to the democratic
          commonwealth. The movement passed by some states, like Thessaly,—just as there
          had been some exceptions, like Argos, to the general fall of the monarchies;
          while remote kingdoms like Macedonia and Molossia were not affected.
   As usually, or at least frequently, happens in such
          circumstances, the popular movement received help from within the camp of
          the adversary. It was help indeed for which there was no reason to
          be grateful to those who gave it; for it was not given for love of
          the people. In many cities feuds existed between some of the power-holding
          families; and, when one family was in the ascendant, its rivals were
          tempted to make use of the popular discontent in order to subvert it. Thus
          discontented nobles came forward to be the leaders of the discontented
          masses. But when the government was overthrown, the revolution generally
          resulted in a temporary return to monarchy. The noble leader seized the
          supreme power and maintained it by armed might. The mass of the people
          were not yet ripe for taking the power into their own hands; and they
          were generally glad to entrust it to the man who had helped them
          to overthrow the hated government of the nobles. This new kind
          of monarchy was very different from the old; for the position of
          the monarch did not rest on hereditary right but on physical force.
   Such illegitimate monarchs were called tyrants, to
          distinguish them from the hereditary kings, and this form of monarchy was
          called a tyrannis. The name "tyrant" was perhaps
          derived from Lydia, and first used by Greeks in designating the Lydian
          monarchs; Archilochus, in whose fragments we first meet
  "tyrannis", applied it to the sovereignty of Gyges. The word was
          in itself morally neutral and did not imply that the monarch was bad or
          cruel; there was nothing self-contradictory in a good tyrant, and many tyrants were
          beneficent. But the isolation of these rulers, who, being without the support
          of legitimacy, depended on armed force, so often urged them to be suspicious
          and cruel, that the tyrannis came into bad odour;
          arbitrary acts of oppression were associated with the name : and
  "tyrant" inclined to the evil sense in which modern languages have
          adopted it. For the Greek dislike of the tyrannis there was
          however a deeper cause than the fact that many tyrants were oppressors. It
          placed in the hands of an unconstitutional ruler arbitrary control, whether he
          exercised it or not, over the lives and fortunes of the citizens. It was thus
          repugnant to the Greek love of freedom, and it seemed to arrest their
          constitutional growth. As a matter of fact, this temporary arrest during the
          period when the first tyrannies prevailed may have been useful; for the tyrannis,
          though its direct political effect was retarding, forwarded the progress of the
          people in other directions. And even from a constitutional point of view it may
          have had its uses at this period. In some cases, it secured an interval of
          repose and growth, during which the people won experience and knowledge to fit
          them for self-government.
   The period which saw the fall of the aristocracies is
          often called the age of the tyrants. The expression is unhappy, because it
          might easily mislead. The tyrany first came into
          existence at this period; there was a large crop of tyrants much about the same
          time in different parts of Greece; they all performed the same function of
          overthrowing aristocracies, and in many cases they paved the way for
          democracies. But on the other hand, the tyrannis was not a
          form of government which appeared only at this transitional crisis, and then
          passed away. There is no age in the subsequent history of Greece which might
          not see, and did not actually see, the rise of tyrants here and there. Tyranny
          was always with the Greeks. It, as well as oligarchy, was a danger by which
          their democracies were threatened at all periods.
   Ionia seems to have been the original home of the
          tyrannis, and in this may have been partly due to the seductive example of the
          rich court of the Lydian "tyrants" at Sardis. But of the Ionian
          tyrannies we know little. We hear of factions and feuds in the cities, of
          aristocratic houses overthrown and despotisms established in various states. A
          tyrant of Ephesus marries the daughter of the Lydian monarch Alyattes. The most
          famous of these tyrants was Thrasybulus of Miletus, under whose rule that city
          held a more brilliant position than ever. Abroad, he took part in planting some
          of the colonies on the Black Sea, and successfully resisted the menaces of
          Lydia. At home, he developed the craft of tyranny to a fine art.
   In Lesbian Mytilene we see the tyrannis and also a
          method by which it might be avoided. Mytilene had won great commercial
          prosperity; its ruling nobles, the Penthilids, were
          wealthy and luxurious and oppressed the people. Tyrants rose and fell in rapid
          succession; the echoes of hatred and jubilation still ring to us from relics of
          the lyric poems of Aleaeus. "Let us drink and
          reel, for Myrsilus is dead." The poet was a
          noble and a fighter; but in a war with the Athenians on the coast of the
          Hellespont he threw away his shield, like Archilochus, and it hung as a trophy
          at Sigeum. He plotted with Pittacus against the
          tyrant, but Pittacus was not a noble and his friendship with Aleaeus was not enduring. Pittacus however, who
          distinguished himself for bravery in the same war with Athens, was to be the saviour of the state. He gained the trust of the people
          and was elected ruler for a period of ten years in order to heal the sores
          of the city. Such a governor, possessing supreme power but for a limited time,
          was called an aesymnetes. Pittacus gained
          the reputation of a wise lawgiver and a firm, moderate ruler. He banished the
          nobles who opposed him, among others the two most famous of all Lesbians, the
          poets Aleaeus and Sappho. At the end of ten years he
          laid down his office, to be enrolled after his death in the number of the Seven
          Wise Men. The ship of state had reached the haven, to apply a metaphor of Aleaeus, and the exiles could safely be allowed to return.
   This was the brilliant period of the history of
          Lesbos, and a few surviving fragments of its two great poets, who struck new
          notes and devised new cadences of lyric song, give a glimpse ot the free and luxurious life of the Aeolian island. The
          radiant genius of Sappho was inspired by her passionate attachments to young
          Lesbian maidens; the songs of Aleaeus, mirroring the
          commotions of party warfare, rang with the clatter of arms and the clinking of
          drinking-cups.
   Sect. 7. The Tyrannies of Central Greece
          
        I. Corinth.
               About the middle of the seventh century, three
          tyrannies arose in central Greece in the neighbourhood of the Isthmus : at Corinth, at Sicyon, and at Megara. In each case the
          development was different, and is in each case instructive. In Sicyon the
          tyranny is brilliant and beneficent, in Corinth brilliant and oppressive, in
          Megara shortlived and followed by long intestine
          struggles.
   The ruling clan of the Bacchiads at Corinth was
          overthrown by Cvpselus, who had put himself at the
          head of the people. A characteristic legend was formed at an early time about
          the birth of Cypselus, suggested by the connection of
          his name with kupsela, a jar. His mother
          was a Bacchiad lady named Labda,
          who, being lame and consequently compelled to wed out of her own class,
          married a certain Eetion, a man of the people.
          Having no children and consulting the Delphic oracle on the matter, Eetion received this reply :—
   High honour is thy due, Eetion,
               Yet no man doth thee honour,
          as were right.
               Labda thy wife will bear a huge millstone,
               Destined to fall on them who rule alone,
               And free thy Corinth from their rightless might.
               
           The prophecy came to the ears of the Bacchiads and was
          confirmed to them by another oracle. So, as soon as Labda's child was born, they sent ten men to slay it. When the men came to the court of Eetion's dwelling they found that he was not at home,
          and they asked Labda for the infant. Suspecting
          nothing, she gave it to one of them to take in his arms, but, as he was about
          to dash it to the ground, the child smiled at him and he had not the heart to
          slay it. He passed it on to the second, but he too was moved with pity; and so
          it was passed round from hand to hand, and none of the ten could find it in his
          heart to destroy it. Then giving the infant back to the mother, and going out
          into the courtyard, they reviled each other for their weakness, and resolved to
          go in again and do the deed together. But Labda listening at the door overheard what they said, and hid the child in a jar,
          where none of them thought of looking. Thus the boy was saved, but the men
          falsely reported to the Bacchiads that they had performed their errand.
   The Bacchiads were banished and their property
          confiscated; dangerous persons were executed, and Cypselus took the reins of government into his own hands. Of the rule of Cypselus himself we know little; he is variously
          represented as harsh and mild. His son Periander succeeded, and of him more is
          recorded. The general features of the Cypselid tyrannis were a vigorous colonial and commercial policy, and the encouragement
          of art.
   One of the earliest triumphs of Cypselus was probably the reduction of Corcyra, which had formed a fleet of its own and
          had grown to be a rival of its mother in the Ionian seas. It has been already
          mentioned that the earliest battle of ships between two Greek states was
          supposed to have been fought between Corinth and Corcyra. The attempt of
          Corinth to form a colonial empire was an interesting experiment. The idea of Cypselus corresponded to our modern colonial system, in
          which the colonies are in a relation of dependence to the mother-country, and
          not to that of the Greeks, in which the colony was an independent sovereign
          state. Geographical conditions alone rendered it out of the question to apply
          the new principle to Syracuse, but the success at Corcyra was followed up by a
          development of Corinthian influence in the north-west of Greece. The Acarnanian
          peninsula of Leucas was occupied and made into an island by piercing a channel
          through the narrow isthmus. Anactorion was founded on
          the south side of the Ambracian gulf, and inland, on the north side, Ambracia.
          Apollonia was planted on the coast of Epirus; and farther north Corcyra, under
          the auspices of her mother-city, colonised Epidamnus.
          At a later period, and in another quarter of the Greek world, a son of
          Periander founded Potidaea in the Chalcidic peninsula.
   Cypselus and Periander did their utmost to promote the commercial activity of their
          city. In the middle of the seventh century the rival Euboean cities, Chalcis
          and Eretria, were the most important merchant states of Greece. But fifty years
          later they had somewhat declined; Corinth and Aegina were taking their place.
          Their decline was brought about by their rivalry, which led to an s exhausting
          war for the Lelantine plain. It is said that this
          struggle assumed the larger proportions of a Greek mercantile war, involving on
          one side Corinth and Samos as allies of Chalcis, on the other Megara and
          Miletus as allies of Eretria. The dates are uncertain, but the fact seems to be
          that the strife was protracted and interrupted, and at some points in its
          course it may have led to consequences beyond Euboea. Archilochus sang how
    
               Euboea's spear-famed lords
               Shoot not with slings or bows, but smite with swords;
                
               and Theognis of Megara at a much later date speaks of
          the end of the war as a recent event :—
                
               Cerinthus fallen; the Lelantine plain
               Waste, and the vineyards; all the Good have fled ;
               The city in the power of evil men!
               O might the Cypselids even
          so be sped !
                
               an utterance which shows that the end of the war was
          complicated by domestic factions. Eretria suffered most in the struggle;
          she lost her share in the Lelantine plain, and
          she presently lost also her continental territory, the plain of Oropus,
          which in the course of the sixth century passed under the power of
          Thebes. Moreover her sway over the islands of Andros, Tenos, and Ceos was undermined, and they came after a while
          under Athenian influence.
   The decline of Chalcis was perhaps promoted by a
          radical change in the foreign policy of Corinth. This city had formerly
          cultivated the alliance of Samos. She now deserted this alliance and
          formed a friendship with her old foe Miletus. The causeof this change was, at least in great measure, the natural sympathy of
          tyrannies. Thrasybulus thepowerful tyrant of Miletus sympathised with Periander the powerful tyrant of Corinth.
          This change in policy is connected with the change in the balance of
          mercantile power. Corinth is more prosperous than ever; and Aegina is
          beginning to share with her the place which was hitherto held by the cities of
          Euboea.
   The foreign relations of Periander extended to Egypt,
          and there are two indications of his intercourse with the Egyptian monarchs
          Necho and Psammetichus II. His nephew and successor
          was called after the last-named king. Moreover we may guess that the canal
          works of Necho suggested to Periander undertakings of the same kind—the small
          canal which he actually cut at Leucas, and the great canal which he designed to
          cut through the isthmus of Corinth itself. But a Greek tyrant had not at his
          command the slave-labour of which an Egyptian king
          disposed, and the design fell through—an enterprise more than once attempted
          since, but not accomplished till our own day. Had Periander had the resources
          to carry out his idea, the subsequent history of Greek military and naval
          operations would have been largely changed.
   While the most successful of the tyrants, like
          Periander, furthered material civilization, they often manifested an interest
          in intellectual pursuits, and did something for the promotion of art. A new
          form of poetry called the dithyramb was developed at Corinth during this
          period, the rude strains which were sung at vintage-feasts in honour of Dionysus being moulded into an artistic shape. The discovery was attributed to Arion, a mythical
          minstrel, who was said to have leaped into the sea under the compulsion of
          mariners who robbed him, and to have been carried to Corinth on the back of a
          dolphin, the fish of Dionysus.
   In architecture, Corinthian skill had made an
          important contribution to the development of the temple. In the course of the
          seventh century men began to translate into stone the old shrine of brick and
          wood; and stone temples arose in all parts of the Greek world—the lighter
  "Ionic" form in Ionia, the heavier "Doric" in the elder
          Greece. By the invention of roof-tiles, Corinthian workmen rendered it
          practicable to give a considerable inclination to the roof; and thus in each
          gable of the temple a large triangular space was left, inviting the sculptor to
          fill it with a story in marble. The pediment, as we name it, was called by the
          Greeks the "eagle ; and thus it was said that Corinth had discovered the
          eagle.
   Seven great columns of limestone, which till the other
          day were almost the only sign that marked the site of ancient Corinth, are
          probably a relic of the reign of Periander. They belonged to the colonnade of a
          large Doric temple, with two separate chambers in which two gods were
          worshipped; one was Apollo, the other, we may guess, was Artemis, his sister.
          The dedicatory offerings of the Cypselids at Delphi
          and Olympia were rich and remarkable. The treasure-house of the Corinthians at
          Delphi was ascribed to Cypselus. More famous, on
          account of the legend which was in later times attached to it, was a large
          chest of cedar-wood, which was dedicated, probably by Periander, in the shrine
          of Hera at Olympia. It was called the chest of Cypselus,
          and was said to have been the place in which Labda hid her child. This story overlooked the fact that a chest was an obvious place
          to search in, and fabricated the theory that the Corinthians called a chest a
  "jar". Three sides of the chest were ornamented with mythological scenes
          which ran round in five bands. It was still in existence eight centuries later,
          and a traveller who saw it then has left a
          minute description, which enables us to form a notion how Greek art in the days
          of Periander attempted the treatment of legend.
   Judged by a modern standard, the government of
          Periander was strict, though in accordance with the practice in other cities
          and with the Greek views of the time. There were laws forbidding men to acquire
          large staffs of slaves or to live beyond their income; suppressing excessive
          luxury and idleness; hindering country people from fixing their abode in the
          city.
               In his home-life Periander was unlucky. He married
          Melissa, the daughter of Procles, who had made
          himself tyrant of Epidaurus. It was believed that he put her to death, and this
          led to an irreconcilable quarrel with his son Lycophron.
          The story is that Procles invited his two
          grandchildren, Lycophron and an elder
          brother  t0 his court. When they were leaving he said to
          them, "Do ye know, boys, who killed your mother?" The elder was
          dull and did not understand; but the word sank into the heart of Lycophron, and henceforward he showed dislike and suspicion
          towards his father. Periander, pressing him, discovered what Procles had said; and the affair ended, for the time, in a
          war with Epidaurus, in which Procles was captured,
          and the banishment of Lycophron to Corcyra. As years
          went on and Periander was at . growing old, seeing that his elder son was dull
          of wit, he desired to hand over the government to Lycophron.
          But the son was implacable, and did not deign even to answer his father's
          messenger. Then Periander sent his daughter to intercede, but Lycophron replied that he would never come to Corinth while
          his father was there. Periander then decided to go himself to Corcyra and leave
          Corinth to his son, but the Corcyraeans were so terrified at the idea of having
          the tyrant among them that they slew Lycophron in
          order to foil the plan. For this act Periander chastised them heavily.
   The great tyrant died and was succeeded by his nephew Psammetichus, who having ruled for a few years was slain.
          With him the tyranny of the Cypselids came to an end,
          and an aristocracy of merchants was firmly established. At the same time the Cypselid colonial system partly broke down, for Corcyra
          became independent and hostile, while the Ambraciots set up a democracy. But over her other colonies Corinth retained her influence,
          and was on friendly terms with all of them.
   
           II.  Megara.      
               The natural sympathy of tyrannies affected the
          relations of Corinth and Megara. Some time after the inauguration of the Cypselid tyranny, a similar constitutional change occurred
          at Megara, and a friendship sprang up between the two cities. The mercantile
          development of Megara, famous for her weavers, had enriched the nobles, who
          held the political power and oppressed the peasants with Theagenes, a grinding
          despotism. Then Theagenes arose as a deliverer and made himself tyrant. The
          example of Cypselus, and probably his direct
          influence and help, had something to do with the enterprise of Theagenes. A
          connection between the tyrannies of Corinth and Megara seems implied in the
          rancorous reference which the Megarian poet Theognis makes to the Cypselids. Having obtained a bodyguard, Theagenes
          surprised and massacred the aristocrats. His term of tyranny was marked by one
          solid work, the construction of an aqueduct. He was overthrown and did not,
          like Cypselus, transmit his power to his
          descendants. Then followed a political struggle between the aristocracy, which
          had regained its power, and the people. But the time for an unmitigated
          aristocracy had gone by; the demos could not be ignored or brushed aside.
          Concessions were wrung from the government. The economical condition of the
          peasants was relieved by a measure which forced the capitalists to pay back the
          interest which they had extorted, while the political disabilities were
          relieved by extending citizenship to the country population and admitting the
          tillers of the soil to the Assembly. These conflicts and social changes are
          reflected in the poems of Theognis, who meditated and lamented them. He sang in
          the early part of the sixth century, pouring out his heart to Cyrnus, a young noble of the Polypaid family. He had made an unsuccessful voyage, lost his land and fortune, and
          consequently his influence. He judges severely the short-sighted, greedy policy
          of his own caste, and sees that it is likely to lead to another tyranny. On the
          other hand, his sympathies are with an aristocratic form of government, and he
          discerns with dismay the growth of democratic tendencies, and the changed
          condition of the country folk, whom he regarded with true aristocratic
          contempt. The exclusiveness of the nobility was breaking down in the new
          circumstances, and mixed marriages were coming in. He cries:
    
               Unchanged the walls, but, ah, how changed the folk!
               The base, who knew erstwhile nor law nor right,
               But dwelled like deer, with goatskin for a cloak,
               Are now ennobled; and, O sorry plight!
               The nobles are made base in all men's sight.
                
               It was not long before the importance of Megara as a
          power in Greece dwindled. The war with Athens which resulted in the loss of the
          island of Salamis was decisive for her own decline and for the rise of her
          rival.
               
           III. Sycion
           The rise of a tyranny in agricultural Sicyon seems to
          have occurred much about the same time as at mercantile Corinth. We know
          nothing of the circumstances. The name of the first founder, who was of low
          birth, is said to have been Orthagoras. The first of
          the house of whom we have any historical record is Cleisthenes, who ruled in
          the first quarter of the sixth century. His hostility to Argos, which claimed
          lordship over Sicyon, the part he took in the Sacred War of Delphi, and the splendour of his court are the chief facts of which we
          know. He was engaged in an Argive war. He would not permit rhapsodists to
          recite the Homeric poems at Sicyon, because there was so much in them about
          Argos and Argives; and he did away with the worship of the Argive hero
          Adrastus, whose cult in Sicyon had been conspicuous. It is also stated that not
          wishing that the tribes of Sicyon and Argos should have the same names, he
          substituted for the Dorian tribes—Hylleis, Pamphyli, Dymanes—the insulting
          names Swine-ites, Assites,
          and Pigites, and called his own tribe Archelaoi, "Rulers"; and that this nomenclature
          endured for sixty years after his death, when the old Dorian names were
          restored and Archelaoi changed to Aigialeis.
          In this form the story seems highly unlikely, for such a change would have been
          a greater slight to the mass of the Sicyonians than to the Argives. But it is
          quite possible that the tyrant changed the name of his own tribe Aigialeis to Archelaoi, and we
          can understand how the story might have arisen out of a word spoken in jest:
  "I have changed my Goats into Rulers of the folk; I have a mind to change
          those Argive and the rest of them into Swine and Asses."
   Cleisthenes married his daughter Agarista to an Athenian noble, Megacles, of the famous family of the Alcmaeonids. A
          legend is told of the wooing of Agarista which
          illustrates the tyrant's wealth and hospitality and the social ideas of the
          age. On the occasion of an Olympian festival at which he had himself won in the
          chariot-race, Cleisthenes made proclamation to the Greeks that all who aspired
          to the hand of his daughter should assemble at Sicyon, sixty days hence, and be
          entertained at his court for a year. At the end of the year he would decide who
          was most worthy of his daughter. Then there came to Sicyon all the Greeks who
          had a high opinion of themselves or of their families. From Sybaris and Siris
          in the far west, from Epidamnus and Aetolia, Arcadia and Elis, Argos and
          Athens, Euboea and Thessaly, the suitors for the hand of Agarista came. Cleisthenes tested their accomplishments for a year. He tried them in
          gymnastic exercises, but laid most stress on their social qualities. The two
          Athenians, Hippocleides and Megacles, pleased him
          best, but to Hippocleides of these two he most
          inclined. The day appointed for the choice of the husband came, and Cleisthenes
          sacrificed a hundred oxen and feasted all the suitors and all the folk of
          Sicyon. After the dinner, the wooers competed in music and general conversation. Hippocleides was the most brilliant, and, as his
          success seemed assured, he bade the flute-player strike up and began to dance.
          Cleisthenes was surprised and disconcerted at this behaviour,
          and his surprise became disgust when Hippocleides,
          who thought he was making a decisive impression, called for a table and danced
          Spartan and Athenian figures on it. The host controlled his feelings, but, when Hippocleides proceeded to dance on his head, he could
          no longer resist, and called out, "O son of Tisander,
          you have danced away your bride". But the Athenian only replied, "Hippocleides careth not,"
          and danced on. Megacles was chosen for Agarista and
          rich presents were given to the disappointed suitors.
    
               Sect. 8. The Sacred War. The Panhellenic Games
          
        The most important achievement of Cleisthenes, and
          that which won him most fame in the Greek world, was his championship of the
          Delphic oracle.
               The temple of Delphi, or Pytho,
          lay in the territory of the Phocian town of Crisa. A
          Delphic Hymn tells how Apollo came " to Crisa, a
          hill facing to westward, under snowy Parnassus; a beetling cliff overhangs it,
          beneath is a hollow, rugged glen. Here," he said, "I will make me a
          fair temple, to be an oracle for men". The poet's picture is perfect The
          sanctuary of "rocky Pytho" was terraced on
          a steep slope, hard under the bare sheer cliffs of Parnassus, looking down upon
          the deep glen of the Pleistus; an austere and
          majestic scene, supremely fitted for the utterance of the oracles of God. The
          city of Crisa lay on a vine-tressed hill to the west
          of the temple, and commanded its own plain which stretched southward to the
          sea. The men of Crisa claimed control over the
          Delphians and the oracle, and levied dues on the visitors who came to consult
          the deity. The Delphians desired to free themselves from the control of the Crisaeans, and they naturally looked for help to the great
          league of the north, in which the Thessalians, the ancient foes of the
          Phocians, were now the dominant member. The folks who belonged to this
          religious union were the "dwellers around" the shrine of Demeter at Anthela, close to the pass of Thermopylae; and hence they
          were called the Amphictiones of Anthela or Pylae. The league was probably old; it was formed,
          at all events, before the Thessalians had incorporated Achaean Phthiotis in Thessaly; for the people of Phthiotis were an independent member of the league, which
          included the Locrians, Phocians, Boeotians, and Athenians, as well as the
          Dorians, Malians, Dolopians, Enianes,
          Thessalians, Perrhaebians, and Magnetes. The members
          of the league were bound not to destroy, or cut off running water from, any
          city which belonged to it.
   The Amphictions espoused warmly the cause of Apollo
          and his Delphian servants, and declared a holy war against the men of Crisa who had violated the sacred territory. And
          Delphi found a champion in the south as well as in the north. The tyrant of
          Sicyon across the gulf went forth against the impious city. It was not enough
          to conquer Crisa and force her to make terms or
          promises. As she was situated in such a strong position, commanding the road
          from the sea to the sanctuary, it was plain that the utter destruction of the
          city was the only conclusion of the war which could lead to the assured
          independence of the oracle. The Amphictions and Sicyonians took the city after
          a sore struggle, rased it to the ground, and slew the
          indwellers. The Crisaean plain was dedicated to the
          god; solemn and heavy curses were pronounced against whosoever should till it.
          The great gulf which sunders northern Greece from the Peloponnesus, and whose
          old name "Crisaean" testified to the
          greatness of the Phocian city, received, after this, its familiar name
  "Corinthian" from the city of the Isthmus.
   One of the consequences of this war was the
          establishment of a close connexion between Delphi and
          the Amphictiony of Anthela.
          The Delphic shrine became a second place of meeting, and the league was often
          called the Delphic Amphictiony. The temple was taken
          under the protection of the league; the administration of the property of the
          god was placed in the hands of the Hieromnemones or sacred councillors,
          who met twice a year in spring and autumn, both at Anthela and at Delphi. Two Hieromnemones were sent as its representatives by each
          member of the league. The oracle and the priestly nobles of Delphi thus won a
          position of independence; their great career of prosperity and power began. The
          Pythian games were now reorganised on a more splendid
          scale, and the ordering of them was one of the duties of the Amphictions. The
          festival became,  like the Olympian, a four-yearly celebration, being
          held in the middle of each Olympiad; gymnastic contests were introduced, whereas
          before there had been only a musical competition; and money-prizes were
          abolished for a wreath of bay. Cleisthenes won the laurel in the first
          chariot-race in the new hippodrome which was built in the plain below the ruins
          of Crisa. Hard by was the stadion or racecourse in which the athletes ran and wrestled; and it was not till after
          many years had passed that the new stadion was built
          high up above Delphi itself, close under the cliffs. Cleisthenes was remembered
          as having taken a prominent part both in the Sacred War and in the institution
          of the games; and he commemorated the occasion of his victory by founding
          Pythian games at Sicyon, which afterwards, by a stroke of the irony of history,
          became associated with the hated hero Adrastus.
   Before the Sacred War it would seem that Sicyon had a
          treasure-house within the Delphic precinct; some traces of its round form, some
          traces possibly of its primitive sculptures, have been discovered; but not long
          after the war, the old building had to make way for a larger house in the shape
          of a Doric temple, and it is hard not to believe that it was Cleisthenes
          himself who erected this lordlier treasury for Sicyon.
               Much about the same time two other Panhellenic
          festivals were instituted at Isthmus and at Nemea. It is uncertain whether the
          Isthmian games in honour of Poseidon were founded by
          Periander, or in commemoration of the abolition of tyranny at Corinth after the
          death of Psammetichus. The games in honour of Nemean Zeus were administered by the little town
          of Cleonae, and seem to have been established by the
          influence of Cleisthenes. Both the Isthmian and the Nemean festivals were
          two-yearly. Thus from the beginning of the sixth century four Panhellenic
          festivals are celebrated, two in the Peloponnesus, one on the isthmus, one in
          the north; and throughout the course of Grecian history the prestige of these
          gatherings never wanes.
   These four Panhellenic festivals helped to maintain a
          feeling of fellowship among all the Greeks; and we may suspect that the
          promotion of this feeling was the deliberate policy of the rulers who raised
          these games to Panhellenic dignity. But it must not be overlooked that the
          festivals were themselves only a manifestation of a tendency towards unity,
          which had begun in the eighth century. We have already seen how this tendency
          was promoted by colonization, and confirmed by the introduction of a common name
          for the Greek race. About the middle of the seventh century, we meet the name
  "Panhellenes" in a poem of Archilochus. The
          Panhellenic idea, the conception of a common Hellenic race with common
          interests, was displayed above all in the reconstruction of the history of the
          past. The Trojan war had come to be regarded as a common enterprise of all the
          Greeks; and this, as we saw, was the idea which inspired the composer of the
          Homeric Catalogue of the Ships, a work of the seventh century. This poet was
          studious that nearly all the states of Greece should be represented at Troy;
          and, as the Catalogue became part of the Iliad in its final shape, the fiction
          won universal acceptance. The Homeric poems were a bond among all men of Greek
          speech. The feeling of community was also displayed in the recognition of the
          Pythian Apollo as the chief and supreme oracle of Greece. The growth of the
          prestige of the Delphic god might almost have been used as a touchstone for
          measuring the growth of the feeling of community. As a meeting-place for
          pilgrims and envoys from all quarters of the Greek world, Delphi served to keep
          distant cities in touch with one another, and to spread news; purposes which
          were effected in a less degree by the Panhellenic the festivals. The tendencies
          to unity were also shown by the leagues, chiefly of a religious kind, which
          were formed among neighbouring states. The maritime
          league of Calauria is an instance; the northern Amphictiony of Anthela is
          another; and we shall presently have a glimpse of the Ionic federation of
          Delos. Early in the sixth century we find the cities of Italy bound together by
          a sort of commercial league, which was indicated in the character of their
          coinage. We shall soon see Sparta uniting a large part of the Peloponnesus in a
          confederacy under her presidency.
   These tendencies to unity never resulted in a
          political union of all Hellas. The Greek race never became a Greek nation; for
          the Panhellenic idea was weaker than the love of local independence. But an
          ideal unity was realised; it was realised in those beliefs and institutions which we have just been considering. They
          fostered in the hearts of the Greeks a lively feeling of fellowship and a deep
          pride in Hellas; though there was no political tie. And it is to be noted that
          the Delphic oracle made no efforts to promote political unity, though
          unintentionally it promoted unity of another kind. If it had made any such
          efforts, they would certainly have failed; for the oracle had little influence
          in initiation. Greek states did not ask Apollo to originate or direct their
          policy; they only sought his authority for what they had already determined.
   We saw that the Boeotians were a member of the
          northern Amphictiony. The unity of Boeotia itself had
          taken the form of a federation, in which Thebes was the dominant power, being
          not only the federal capital, but—at all events in later times—being
          represented by two members on the board of Boeotarchs, as the federal magistrates
          were called, whereas each of the other cities returned only one Boeotarch. Its religious centre—for
          like all old Greek federations it was religious before it became political—was
          the sanctuary of Poseidon at Onchestus. In the
          seventh century it did not yet include all Boeotia; Orchomenus still resisted.
          But at length Thebes forced Orchomenus to join, and in the course of the sixth
          century the Graian land of Oropus was annexed. The unity of Boeotia, thus
          completed, had its weak points; its maintenance depended upon the power of
          Thebes; some of the cities were reluctant members. Above all, Plataea chafed;
          she had kept herself pure from mixture with the Boeotian settlers, and her
          whole history—of which some remarkable episodes will pass before us—may be
          regarded as an isolated continuation of the ancient struggle between the elder
          Greek inhabitants of the land and the Boeotian conquerors.
   
 
 CHAPTER IV.
              
        THE UNION OF ATTICA AND THE FOUNDATION OF THE ATHENIAN
          DEMOCRACY
              
        
 
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