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      READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
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GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECECHAPTER XCVIII
                 OUTLYING HELLENIC CITIES
                 
             1. In Gaul and Spain
                 2. On the Coast of the Euxine
                 
             To complete the picture of the Hellenic world while
            yet in its period of full life, in freedom and self-action, or even during its
            decline into the half-life of a dependent condition—we must say a few words
            respecting some of its members lying apart from the general history, yet of not
            inconsiderable importance. The Greeks of Massalia formed its western wing; the
            Pontic Greeks (those on the shores of the Euxine), its eastern; both of them
            the outermost radiations of Hellenism, where it was always militant against
            foreign elements, and often adulterated by them. It is indeed little that we
            have the means of saying; but that little must not be left unsaid.
                 In my twenty-seventh chapter, I briefly noticed the
            foundation and first proceedings of Massalia (the modern Marseilles), on the
            Mediterranean coast of Gaul or Liguria. This Ionic city, founded by the
            enterprising Phocaeans of Asia Minor, a little before their own seaboard was
            subjugated by the Persians, had a life and career of its own, apart from those
            political events which determined the condition of its Hellenic sisters in
            Asia, Peloponnesus, Italy, or Sicily. The Massaliots maintained their own
            relations of commerce, friendship or hostility with their barbaric neighbours,
            the Ligurians, Gauls, and Iberians, without becoming involved in the larger
            political confederacies of the Hellenic world. They carried out from their
            mother-city established habits of adventurous coastnavigation and commercial activity. Their situation, distant from other Greeks and
            sustained by a force hardly sufficient even for defence, imposed upon them the
            necessity both of political harmony at home, and of prudence and persuasive
            agency in their mode of dealing with neighbours. That they were found equal to
            this necessity, appears sufficiently attested by the few general statements
            transmitted in respect to them; though their history in its details is unknown.
             Their city was strong by position, situated upon a
            promontory washed on three sides by the sea, well fortified, and possessing a
            convenient harbour securely closed against enemies. The domain around it
            however appears not to have been large, nor did their population extend itself
            much into the interior. The land around was less adapted for com than for the
            vine and the olive; wine was supplied by the Massaliots throughout Gaul. It was
            on shipboard that their courage and skill was chiefly displayed; it was by
            maritime enterprise that their power, their wealth, and their colonial
            expansion were obtained. In an age when piracy was common, the Massaliot ships and seamen were effective in attack and
            defence not less than in transport and commercial interchange; while their
            numerous maritime successes were attested by many trophies adorning the
            temples. The city contained docks and arsenals admirably provided with
            provisions, stores, arms, and all the various muniments of naval war. Except
            the Phenicians and Carthaginians, these Massaliots were the only enterprising
            mariners in the Western Mediterranean; from the year 500 B.C. downward, after
            the energy of the Ionic Greeks had been crushed by inland potentates. The
            Iberian and Gallic tribes were essentially landsmen, not occupying permanent
            stations on the coast, nor having any vocation for the sea; but the Ligurians,
            though chiefly mountaineers, were annoying neighbours to Massalia as well by
            their piracies at sea as from their depredations by land.5 To all these landsmen,
            however, depredators as they were, the visit of the trader soon made itself
            felt as a want, both for import and export; and to this want the Massaliots,
            with their colonies, were the only ministers, along the Gulfs of Genoa and
            Lyons, from Luna (the frontier of Tuscany) to the Dianium (Cape della Nao) in Spain. It was not until the first
            century before the Christian era that they were outstripped in this career by Narbon, and a few other neighbours, exalted into Roman
            colonies.
             Along the coast on both sides of their own city, the
            Massaliots planted colonies, each commended to the protection, and consecrated
            by the statue and peculiar rites, of their own patron goddess, the Ephesian
            Artemis. Towards the east were Tauroentium, Olbia,
            Antipolis, Nicaea, and the Portus Monoeki; towards
            the west, on the coast of Spain, were Rhoda, Emporiae,
            Alone, Hemeroskopium, and Artemisium or Dianium. These colonies were established chiefly on
            outlying capes or sometimes islets, at once near and safe; they were intended
            more as shelter and accommodation for maritime traffic, and as depots for trade
            with the interior,—than for the purpose of spreading inland, and including a
            numerous outlying population round the walls. The circumstances of Emporiae were the most remarkable. That town was built
            originally on a little uninhabited islet off the coast of Iberia; after a
            certain interval it became extended to the adjoining mainland, and a body of
            native Iberians were admitted to joint residence within the new-walled circuit
            there established. This new circuit however was divided in half by an
            intervening wall, on one side of which dwelt the Iberians, on the other side
            the Greeks. One gate alone was permitted, for intercommunication, guarded night
            and day by appointed magistrates, one of whom was perpetually on the spot.
            Every night, one third of the Greek citizens kept guard on the walls, or at
            least held themselves prepared to do so. How long these strict and fatiguing
            precautions were found necessary, we do not know; but after a certain time they
            were relaxed and the intervening wall disappeared, so that Greeks and Iberians
            freely coalesced into one community. It is not often that we are allowed to see
            so much in detail the early difficulties and dangers of a Grecian colony.
            Massalia itself was situated under nearly similar circumstances among the rude
            Ligurian Salyes; we hear of these Ligurians hiring
            themselves as labourers to dig on the fields of Massaliot proprietors. The various tribes of Ligurians, Gauls, and Iberians extended down
            to the coast, so that there was no safe road along it, nor any communication
            except by sea, until the conquests of the Romans in the second and first
            century before the Christian era.
             The government of Massalia was oligarchical, carried
            on chiefly by a Senate or Great Council of Six Hundred (called Timuchi), elected for life—and by a small council of
            fifteen, chosen among this larger body to take turn in executive duties. The
            public habits of the administrators are said to have been extremely vigilant
            and circumspect; the private habits of the citizens, frugal and temperate—a
            maximum being fixed by law for dowries and marriage-ceremonies. They were
            careful in their dealings with the native tribes, with whom they appear to have
            maintained relations generally friendly. The historian Ephorus (whose History
            closed about 340 B.C.) represented the Gauls as especially phil-Hellenic; an
            impression which he could hardly have derived from any but Massaliot informants. The Massaliots (who in the first century before Christ were trilingues, speaking Greek, Latin, and Gallic6) contributed
            to engraft upon these unlettered men a certain refinement and variety of wants,
            and to lay the foundation of that taste for letters which afterwards became
            largely diffused throughout the Roman Province of Gaul. At sea, and in traffic,
            the Phenicians and Carthaginians were their formidable rivals. This was among
            the causes which threw them betimes into alliance and active co operation with
            Rome, under whose rule they obtained favourable treatment, whenth6 blessing of
            freedom was no longer within their reach.
             Enough is known about Massalia to show that the city
            was a genuine specimen of Hellenism and Hellenic influences—acting not by force
            or constraint, but simply by superior intelligence and activity—by power of
            ministering to wants which must otherwise have remained unsupplied—and by the
            assimilating effect of a lettered civilisation upon ruder neighbours. This is
            the more to be noticed as it contrasts strikingly with the Macedonian
            influences which have occupied so much of the present volume; force admirably
            organised and wielded by Alexander, yet still nothing but force. The loss of
            all details respecting the history of Massalia is greatly to be lamented; and
            hardly less, that of the writings of Pytheas, an intelligent Massaliotic navigator, who, at this early age (330320),
            with an adventurous boldness even more than Phokaean, sailed through the
            Pillars of Herakles, and from thence northward along the coast of Spain, Gaul,
            Britain, Germany—perhaps yet farther. Probably no Greek except a Massaliot could have accomplished such a voyage; which in
            his case deserves the greater sympathy, as there was no other reward for the
            difficulties and dangers braved, except the gratification of an intelligent
            curiosity. It seems plain that the publication of his Survey of the Earth—much
            consulted by Eratosthenes, though the criticisms which have reached us through
            Polybius and Strabo dwell chiefly upon its mistakes, real or supposed—made an
            epoch in ancient geographical knowledge.
             From the western wing of the Hellenic world, we pass
            to the eastern—the Euxine Sea. Of the Pentapolis on its western coast south of
            the Danube (Apollonia, Mesembria, Kallatis, Odessus, and probably Istrus)—and
            of Tyras near the mouth of the river so called (now Dniester)—we have little to
            record; though Istrus and Apollonia were among the
            towns whose political constitutions Aristotle thought worthy of his
            examination. But Herakleia on the south coast, and Pantikapaeum or Bosporus between the Euxine and the Palus Maeotis (now Sea of Azof), are not
            thus unknown to history nor can Sinope (on the south coast) and Olbia (on the
            north-west) be altogether passed over. Though lying apart from the political
            headship of Athens or Sparta, all these cities were legitimate members of the
            Hellenic brotherhood. All supplied spectators and competitors for the
            Pan-Hellenic festivals—pupils to the rhetors and philosophers—purchasers, and
            sometimes even rivals, to the artists. All too were (like Massalia and Kyrene)
            adulterated partially—Olbia and Bosporus considerably—by admixture of a
            non-Hellenic element.
             Of Sinope, and its three dependent colonies Kotydra, Kerasus, and Trapezus, I
            have already said something, in describing the retreat of the Ten Thousand
            Greeks. Like Massalia with its dependencies Antipolis, Nicaea, and
            others—Sinope enjoyed not merely practical independence, but considerable
            prosperity and local dignity, at the time when Xenophon and his companions
            marched through those regions. The citizens were on terms of equal alliance,
            mutually advantageous, with Korylas prince of
            Paphlagonia, on the borders of whose territory they dwelt. It is probable that
            they figured on the tribute list of the Persian king as a portion of
            Paphlagonia, and paid an annual sum; but here ended their subjection. Their
            behaviour towards the Ten Thousand Greeks, pronounced enemies of the Persian
            king, was that of an independent city. Neither they, nor even the inland
            Paphlagonians, warlike and turbulent, were molested with Persian governors or
            military occupation. Alexander however numbered them among the subjects of
            Persia; and it is a remarkable fact, that envoys from Sinope were found
            remaining with Darius almost to his last hour, after he had become a conquered
            fugitive, and had lost his armies, his capitals, and his treasures. These Sinopian envoys fell into the hands of Alexander; who set
            them at liberty with the remark, that since they were not members of the
            Hellenic confederacy, but subjects of Persia—their presence as envoys near
            Darius was very excusable. The position of Sinope placed her out of the direct
            range of the hostilities carried on by Alexander’s successors against each
            other; and the ancient Cappadocian princes of the Mithridatic family
            (professedly descendants of the Persian Achaemenidae),
            who ultimately ripened into the king of Pontus, had not become sufficiently
            powerful to swallow up her independence until the reign of Pharnakes, in the
            second century before Carist. Sinope then passed
            under his dominion ; exchanging (like others) the condition of a free Grecian
            city for that of a subject of the barbaric kings of Pontus, with a citadel and
            mercenary garrison to keep her citizens in obedience. We know nothing however
            of the intermediate events.
             Respecting the Pontic Herakleia, our ignorance is not
            so complete. That city—much nearer than Sinope to the mouth of the Thracian
            Bosporus, and distant by sea from Byzantium only one long day’s voyage of a
            rowboat—was established by Megarians and Boeotians on the coast of the
            Mariandyni. These natives were subdued, and reduced to a kind of serfdom;
            whereby they became slaves, yet with a proviso that they should never be sold
            out of the territory. Adjoining, on the westward, between Herakleia and Byzantium,
            were the Bithynian Thracians—villagers not merely independent, but warlike and
            fierce wreckers, who cruelly maltreated any Greeks stranded on their coast. We
            are told in general terms that the government of Herakleia was oligarchical;
            perhaps in the hands of the descendants of the principal original colonists,
            who partitioned among themselves the territory with its Mariandynian serfs, and who formed a small but rich minority among the total population. We
            hear of them as powerful at sea, and as being able to man, through their
            numerous serfs, a considerable fleet, with which they invaded the territory of Leukon prince of the Cimmerian Bosporus. They were also
            engaged in land-war with Mithridates, a prince of the ancient Persian family established as district rulers in Northern Cappadocia.
               Towards 380-370 the Herakleots became disturbed by violent party-contentions within the city. As far as we can
            divine from a few obscure hints, these contentions began among the oligarchy
            themselves; some of whom opposed, and partially threw open, a close political
            monopoly—yet not without a struggle, in the course of which an energetic
            citizen named Clearchus was banished. Presently however the contest assumed
            larger dimensions; the plebs sought admission into the constitution, and are
            even said to have required abolition of debts with a redivision of the lands. A
            democratical constitution was established ; but it was speedily menaced by
            conspiracies of the rich, to guard against which, the classification of the
            citizens was altered. Instead of three tribes, and four centuries, all were
            distributed anew into sixty-four centuries, the tribes being discontinued. It
            would appear that in the original four centuries, the rich men had been so
            enrolled as to form separate military divisions (probably their rustic serfs
            being armed along with them)—while the three tribes had contained all the rest
            of the people; so that the effect of thus multiplying the centuries was, to
            divest the rich of their separate military enrolment, and to disseminate them
            in many different regiments along with a greater number of poor.
                 Still however the demands of the people were not fully
            granted, and dissension continued. Not merely the poorer citizens, but also the
            population of serfs— homogeneous, speaking the same language, and sympathising
            with each other, like Helots or Penestae—when once
            agitated by the hope of liberty, were with difficulty appeased. The government,
            though greatly democratised, found itself unable to maintain tranquillity, and
            invoked assistance from without. Application was made first, to the Athenian
            Timotheus—next, to the Theban Epaminondas; but neither of them would
            interfere—nor was there, indeed, any motive to tempt them. At length
            application was made to the exiled citizen Clearchus.
             This exile, now about forty years of age, intelligent,
            audacious and unprincipled, had passed four years at Athens partly in hearing
            the lessons of Plato and Isocrates—and had watched with emulous curiosity the
            brilliant fortune of the despot Dionysius at Syracuse, in whom both these
            philosophers took interest. During his banishment, moreover, he had done what
            was common with Grecian exiles; he had taken service with the enemy of his
            native city, the neighbouring prince Mithridates, and probably enough against
            the city itself. As an officer, he distinguished himself much; acquiring renown
            with the prince and influence over the minds of soldiers. Hence his friends,
            and a party in Herakleia, became anxious to recall him, as moderator and
            protector under the grievous political discords prevailing. It was the
            oligarchical party who invited him to come back, at the head of a body of
            troops, as their auxiliary in keeping down the plebs. Clearchus accepted their
            invitation; but with the full purpose of making himself the Dionysius of
            Herakleia. Obtaining from Mithridates a powerful body of mercenaries, under
            secret promise to hold the city only as his prefect, he marched thither with
            the proclaimed purpose of maintaining order, and upholding the government. As
            his mercenary soldiers were soon found troublesome companions, he obtained
            permission to construct a separate stronghold in the city, under colour of
            keeping them apart in the stricter discipline of a barrack. Having thus secured
            a strong position, he invited Mithridates into the city, to receive the
            promised possession; but instead of performing this engagement, he detained the
            prince as prisoner, and only released him on payment of a considerable ransom.
            He next cheated, still more grossly, the oligarchy who had recalled him;
            denouncing their past misrule, declaring himself their mortal enemy, and
            espousing the pretensions as well as the antipathies of the plebs. The latter
            willingly seconded him in his measures—even extreme measures of cruelty and
            spoliation—against their political enemies. A large number of the rich were
            killed, imprisoned, or impoverished and banished; their slaves or serfs, too,
            were not only manumitted by order of the new despot, but also married to the
            wives and daughters of the exiles. The most tragical scenes arose out of these
            forced marriages; many of the women even killed themselves, some after having
            first killed their new husbands. Among the exiles, a party, driven to despair,
            procured assistance from without, and tried to obtain by force readmittance
            into the city; but they were totally defeated by Clearchus, who after this
            victory became more brutal and unrelenting than ever.
                 He was now in irresistible power; despot of the whole
            city, plebs as well as oligarchy. Such he continued to be for twelve years;
            during which he displayed great warlike energy against exterior enemies,
            together with unabated cruelty towards the citizens. He further indulged in the
            most overweening insolence of personal demeanour, adopting an Oriental costume
            and ornaments, and proclaiming himself the son of Zeus—as Alexander the Great
            did after him. Amidst all these enormities, however, his literary tastes did
            not forsake him; he collected a library, at that time a very rare possession.
            Many were the conspiracies attempted by suffering citizens against this tyrant;
            but his vigilance baffled and punished all. At length two young men, Chion and Leonides (they too having been among the hearers
            of Plato), found an opportunity to stab him at a Dionysiac festival. They, with
            those who seconded them, were slain by his guards, after a gallant resistance;
            but Clearchus himself died of the wound, in torture and mental remorse.
             His death unfortunately brought no relief to the Herakleots. The two sons whom he left, Timotheus and
            Dionysius, were both minors; but his brother Satyrus, administering in their
            name, grasped the sceptre and continued the despotism, with cruelty not merely
            undiminished, but even aggravated and sharpened by the past assassination. Not
            inferior to his predecessor in energy and vigilance, Satyrus was in this
            respect different, that he was altogether rude and unlettered. Moreover he was
            rigidly scrupulous in preserving the crown for his brother’s children, as soon
            as they should be of age. To ensure to them an undisturbed succession, he took
            every precaution to avoid begetting children of his own by his wife. After a
            rule of seven years, Satyrus died of a lingering and painful distemper.
                 The government of Herakleia now devolved on Timotheus,
            who exhibited a contrast, alike marked and beneficent, with his father and
            uncle. Renouncing all their cruelty and constraint, he set at liberty every man
            whom he found in prison. He was strict in dispensing justice, but mild and even
            liberal in all his dealings towards the citizens. At the same time, he was a
            man of adventurous courage, carrying on successful war against foreign enemies,
            and making his power respected all around. With his younger brother Dionysius,
            he maintained perfect harmony, treating him as an equal and partner. Though
            thus using his power generously towards the Herakleots,
            he was, however, still a despot, and retained the characteristic marks of
            despotism—the strong citadel, fortified separately from the town, with a
            commanding mercenary force. After a reign of about nine years, he died, deeply
            mourned by every one.
             Dionysius, who succeeded him, fell upon unsettled
            times, full both of hope and fear; opening chances of aggrandisement, yet with
            many new dangers and uncertainties. The sovereignty which he inherited
            doubtless included, not simply the city of Herakleia, but also foreign
            dependencies and possessions in its neighbourhood; for his three predecessors
            had been all enterprising chiefs, commanding a considerable aggressive force.
            At the commencement of his reign, indeed, the ascendency of Memnon and the
            Persian force in the northwestern part of Asia Minor was at a higher pitch
            than ordinary; it appears too that Clearchus—and probably his successors
            also—had always taken care to keep on the best terms with the Persian court.
            But presently came the invasion of Alexander (334), with the battle of the
            Granikus, which totally extinguished the Persian power in Asia Minor, and was
            followed, after no long interval, by the entire conquest of the Persian empire.
            The Persian control being now removed from Asia Minor—while Alexander with the
            great Macedonian force merely passed through it to the east, leaving viceroys
            behind him—new hopes of independence or aggrandisement began to arise among the
            native princes in Bithynia, Paphlagonia, and Cappadocian. The Bithynian prince
            even contended successfully in the field against Kalas, who had been appointed
            by Alexander as satrap in Phrygia. The Herakleot Dionysius, on the other hand, enemy by position of these Bithynians,
            courted the new Macedonian potentates, playing his political game with much
            skill in every way. He kept his forces well in hand, and his dominions
            carefully guarded; he ruled in a mild and popular manner, so as to preserve
            among the Herakleots the same feelings of attachment
            which had been inspired by his predecessor. While the citizens of the
            neighbouring Sinope (as has been already related) sent their envoys to Darius,
            Dionysius kept his eyes upon Alexander; taking care to establish a footing at
            Pella, and being peculiarly assiduous in attentions to Alexander’s sister, the
            princess Kleopatra. He was the better qualified for this courtly service, as he
            was a man of elegant and ostentatious tastes, and had purchased from his
            namesake, the fallen Syracusan Dionysius, all the rich furniture of the
            Dionysian family, highly available for presents.
             By the favour of Antipater and the regency at Pella,
            the Herakleotic despot was enabled both to maintain and extend his dominions,
            until the return of Alexander to Susa and Babylon in 324. All other authority
            was now superseded by the personal will of the omnipotent conqueror; who,
            mistrusting all his delegates—Antipater, the princesses, and the satraps—
            listened readily to complainants from all quarters, and took particular pride
            in espousing the pretensions of Grecian exiles. I have already recounted how,
            in June 324, Alexander promulgated at the Olympic festival a sweeping edict,
            directing that in every Grecian city the exiles should be restored—by force, if
            force was required. Among the various Grecian exiles, those from Herakleia were
            not backward in soliciting his support, to obtain their own restoration, as
            well as the expulsion of the despot. As they were entitled, along with others,
            to the benefit of the recent edict, the position of Dionysius became one of
            extreme danger. He now reaped the full benefit of his antecedent prudence, in
            having maintained both his popularity with the Herakleots at home, and his influence with Antipater, to whom the enforcement of the edict
            was entrusted. He was thus enabled to ward off the danger for a time; and his
            good fortune rescued him from it altogether, by the death of Alexander in June
            323. That event, coming as it did unexpectedly upon every one, filled Dionysius
            with such extravagant joy, that he fell into a swoon; and he commemorated it by
            erecting a statue in honour of Euthymia, or the tranquillising goddess. His
            position however seemed again precarious, when the Herakleotic exiles renewed
            their solicitations to Perdikkas; who favoured their cause, and might probably
            have restored them, if he had chosen to direct his march towards the Hellespont
            against Antipater and Craterus, instead of undertaking the ill-advised
            expedition against Egypt, wherein he perished.
             The tide of fortune now turned more than ever in
            favour of Dionysius. With Antipater and Craterus, the preponderant potentates
            in his neighbourhood, he was on the best terms; and it happened at this
            juncture to suit the political views of Craterus to dismiss his Persian wife
            Amastris (niece of the late Persian king Darius, and conferred upon Craterus by
            Alexander when he himself married Statira), for the
            purpose of espousing Phila daughter of Anti pater. Amastris was given in
            marriage to Dionysius; for him, a splendid exaltation—attesting the personal
            influence which he had previously acquired. His new wife, herself a woman of
            ability and energy, brought to him a large sum from the regal treasure, as well
            as the means of greatly extending his dominion round Herakleia. Noway corrupted by this good fortune, he still persevered
            both in his conciliating rule at home, and his prudent alliances abroad, making
            himself especially useful to Antigonus. That great chief, preponderant
            throughout most parts of Asia Minor, was establishing his ascendency in
            Bithynia and the neighbourhood of the Propontis, by founding the city of Antigonia in the rich plain adjoining the Askanian Lake. Dionysius lent effective maritime aid to
            Antigonus, in that war which ended by his conquest of Cyprus from the Egyptian
            Ptolemy (307 B.C.). To the other Ptolemy, nephew and general of Antigonus,
            Dionysius gave his daughter in marriage ; and he even felt himself powerful
            enough to assume the title of king, after Antigonus, Lysimachus, and the Egyptian
            Ptolemy had done the like. He died, after reigning thirty years with consummate
            political skill and uninterrupted prosperity—except that during the last few
            years he lost his health from excessive corpulence.
             Dionysius left three children under age—Clearchus,
            Oxathres and a daughter—by his wife Amastris; whom he constituted regent, and
            who, partly through the cordial support of Antigonus, maintained the
            Herakleotic dominion unimpaired. Presently Lysimachus, king of Thrace and of
            the Thracian Chersonese (on the isthmus of which he had founded the city of
            Lysimacheia), coveted this as a valuable alliance, paid his court to Amastris, and
            married her. The Herakleotic queen thus enjoyed double protection, and was
            enabled to avoid taking part in the formidable conflict of Ipsus (300 B.C); wherein the allies Lysimachus, Kassander, Ptolemy, and Seleucus were
            victorious over Antigonus. The latter being slain, and his Asiatic power
            crushed, Lysimachus got possession of Antigonia, the
            recent foundation of his rival in Bithynia, and changed its name to Nicaea.
            After a certain time, however, Lysimachus became desirous of marrying Arsinoe,
            daughter of the Egyptian Ptolemy; accordingly, Amastris divorced herself from
            him, and set up for herself separately as regent of Herakleia. Her two sons
            being now nearly of age, she founded and fortified, for her own residence, the
            neighbouring city of Amastris, about sixty miles eastward of Herakleia on the
            coast of the Euxine. These young men, Clearchus and Oxathres, assumed the
            government of Herakleia, and entered upon various warlike enterprises; of which
            we know only, that Clearchus accompanied Lysimachus in his expedition against
            the Getae, sharing the fate of that prince, who was defeated and taken
            prisoner. Both afterwards obtained their release, and Clearchus returned to
            Herakleia; where he ruled in a cruel and oppressive manner, and even committed
            the enormity (in conjunction with his brother Oxathres) of killing his mother
            Amastris. This crime was avenged by her former husband Lysimachus ; who, coming
            to Herakleia under professions of friendship (B.C. 286), caused Clearchus and Oxathres
            to be put to death, seized their treasure, and keeping separate possession of
            the citadel only, allowed the Herakleots to establish
            a popular government.
             Lysimachus, however, was soon persuaded by his wife
            Arsinoe to make over Herakleia to her, as it had been formerly possessed by
            Amastris; and Arsinoe sent thither a Kymaean officer
            named Herakleides, who carried with him force sufficient to re-establish the
            former despotism, with its oppressions and cruelties. For other purposes too,
            not less mischievous, the influence of Arsinoe was all-powerful. She prevailed
            upon Lysimachus to kill his eldest son (by a former marriage) Agathocles, a
            young prince of the most estimable and eminent qualities. Such an atrocity,
            exciting universal abhorrence among the subjects of Lysimachus, enabled his
            rival Seleucus to attack him with success. In a great battle fought between
            these two princes, Lysimachus was defeated and slain—by the hand and javelin of
            a citizen of Herakleia, named Malakon.
             This victory transferred the dominions of the
            vanquished prince to Seleucus. At Herakleia too, its effect was so powerful,
            that the citizens were enabled to shake off their despotism. They at first
            tried to make terms with the governor Herakleides, offering him money as an
            inducement to withdraw. From him i he v obtained only
            an angry refusal; yet his subordinate officers of mercenaries, and commanders
            of detached posts in the Herakleotic territory, mistrusting their own power of
            holding out, accepted an amicable compromise with the citizens, who tendered to
            them full liquidation of arrears of pay, together with the citizenship. The Herakleots were thus enabled to discard Herakleides, and
            regain their popular government. They signalised their revolution by the impressive
            ceremony of demolishing their Bastile—the detached
            fort or stronghold within the city, which had served for eighty-four years as
            the characteristic symbol, and indispensable engine, of the antecedent
            despotism. The city, now again a free commonwealth, was further reinforced by
            the junction of Nymphis (the historian) and other
            Herakleotic citizens, who had hitherto been in exile. These men were restored,
            and welcomed by their fellow-citizens in full friendship and harmony; yet with
            express proviso, that no demand should be made for the restitution of their
            properties, long since confiscated. To the victor Seleucus, however, and his
            officer Aphrodisius, the bold bearing of the
            newly-emancipated Herakleots proved offensive. They
            would probably have incurred great danger from him, had not his mind been first
            set upon the conquest of Macedonia, in the accomplishment of which he was
            murdered by Ptolemy Keraunus.
             The Herakleots thus became
            again a commonwealth of free citizens, without any detached citadel or
            mercenary garrison ; yet they lost, seemingly through the growing force and
            aggressions of some inland dynasts, several of their outlying dependencies—Kierus, Tium, and Amastris. The
            two former they recovered some time afterwards by purchase, and they wished
            also to purchase back Amastris; but Eumenes, who held it, hated them so much,
            that he repudiated their money, and handed over the place gratuitously to the Cappadocian
            chief Ariobarzanes. That their maritime power was  at this time very great,
              we may see by the astonishing account given of their immense ships,—numerously
              manned, and furnished with many brave combatants on the deck— which fought with
              eminent distinction in the naval battle between Ptolemy Keraunus (murderer and successor of Seleucus) and Antigonus Gonatas.
               It is not my purpose to follow lower down the
            destinies of Herakleia. It maintained its internal autonomy, with considerable
            maritime power, a dignified and prudent administration, and a partial, though
            sadly circumscribed, liberty of foreign action—until the successful war of the
            Romans against Mithridates (B.C. 69). In Asia Minor, the Hellenic cities on the
            coast were partly enabled to postpone the epoch of their subjugation, by the
            great division of power which prevailed in the interior; for the potentates of
            Bithynia, Pergamus, Cappadocian, Pontus, Syria, were in almost perpetual
            discord—while all of them were menaced by the intrusion of the warlike and
            predatory Gauls, who extorted for themselves settlements in Galatia (B.C. 276).
            The kings, the enemies of civic freedom, were kept partially in check by these
            new and formidable neighbours, who were themselves however hardly less
            formidable to the Grecian cities on the coast. Sinope, Herakleia,
            Byzantium,—and even Rhodes, in spite of the advantage of an insular
            position,—isolated relicts of what had once been an Hellenic aggregate, become
            from henceforward cribbed and confined by inland neighbours almost at their
            gates—dependent on the barbaric potentates, between whom they were compelled to
            trim, making themselves useful in turn to all. It was however frequent with
            these barbaric princes to derive their wives, mistresses, ministers,
            negotiators, officers, engineers, literati, artists, actors, and intermediate
            agents both for ornament and recreation—from some Greek city. Among them all,
            more or less of Hellenic influence became thus insinuated; along with the Greek
            language which spread its roots everywhere—even among the Gauls or Galatians,
            the rudest and latest of the foreign immigrants.
                 Of the Grecian maritime towns in the Euxine south of
            the Danube—Apollonia, Mesembria, Odessus, Kallatis, Tomi, and Istrus—five
            (seemingly without Tomi) formed a confederate Pentapolis. About the year 312,
            we hear of them as under the power of Lysimachus king of Thrace, who kept a
            garrison in Kallatis—probably in the rest also. They
            made a struggle to shake off his yoke, obtained assistance from some of the
            neighbouring Thracians and Scythians, as well as from Antigonus. But
            Lysimachus, after a contest which seems to have lasted three or four years,
            overpowered both their allies and them, reducing them again into subjection. Kallatis sustained a long siege, dismissing some of its
            ineffective residents; who were received and sheltered by Eumelus prince of Bosporus. It was in pushing his conquests yet farther northward, in
            the steppe between the rivers Danube and Dniester, that Lysimachus came into
            conflict with the powerful prince of the Getae—Dromichaetes;
            by whom he was defeated and captured, but generously released. I have already
            mentioned that the empire of Lysimachus ended with his last defeat and death
            by Seleucus—(281 B.C.). By his death, the cities of the Pontic Pentapolis
            regained a temporary independence. But their barbaric neighbours became more
            and more formidable, being reinforced seemingly by immigration of fresh hordes
            from Asia; thus the Sarmatians, who in Herodotus’s time were on the east of the Tanais, appear, three centuries afterwards, even
            south of the Danube. By these tribes— Thracians, Getae, Scythians, and
            Sarmatians—the Greek cities of this Pentapolis were successively pillaged.
            Though renewed indeed afterwards, from the necessity of some place of traffic,
            even for the pillagers themselves—they were but
            poorly renewed, with a large infusion of barbaric residents. Such was the
            condition in which the exile Ovid found Tomi, near the beginning of the
            Christian era. The Tomitans were more than half
            barbaric, and their Greek not easily intelligible. The Sarmatian or Getic
            horse-bowmen, with their poisoned arrows, ever hovered near, galloped even up
            to the gates, and carried off the unwary cultivators into slavery. Even within
            a furlong of the town, there was no security either for person or property. The
            residents were clothed in skins of leather; while the women, ignorant both of
            spinning and weaving, were employed either in grinding corn or in carrying on
            their heads the pitchers of water.
             By these same barbarians, Olbia also (on the right
            bank of the Hypanis or Bug near its mouth) became
            robbed of that comfort and prosperity which it had enjoyed when visited by
            Herodotus. In his day, the Olbians lived on good
            terms with the Scythian tribes in their neighbourhood. They paid a stipulated
            tribute, giving presents besides to the prince and his immediate favourites;
            and on these conditions, their persons and properties were respected. The
            Scythian prince Skyles (son of an Hellenic mother from Istrus,
            who had familiarised him with Greek speech and letters) had built a fine house
            in the town, and spent in it a month, from attachment to Greek manners and
            religion, while his Scythian army lay near the gates without molesting any one.
            It is true that this proceeding cost Skyles his life; for the Scythians would
            not tolerate their own prince in the practice of foreign religious rites,
            though they did not quarrel with the same rites when observed by the Greeks. To
            their own customs the Scythians adhered tenaciously, and those customs were
            often sanguinary, ferocious, and brutish. Still they were warriors, rather than
            robbers—they abstained from habitual pillage, and maintained with the Greeks a
            reputation for honesty and fair dealing, which became proverbial with the early
            poets. Such were the Scythians as seen by Herodotus (probably about 440 to 430 B.C.);
            and the picture drawn by Ephorus a century afterwards (about 340 B.C.) appears
            to have been not materially different.8 But after that time it gradually
            altered. New tribes seem to have come in—the Sarmatians out of the East—the
            Gauls out of the West; from Thrace northward to the Tanais and the Palus Maeotis, the most different tribes became intermingled—Gauls,
            Thracians, Getae, Scythians, Sarmatians, &. Olbia was in an open plain,
            with no defence except its walls and the adjoining river Hypanis,
            frozen over in the winter. The hybrid Helleno-Scythian
            race, formed by intermarriages of Greeks with Scythians—and the various
            Scythian tribes who had become partially sedentary cultivators of corn for
            exportation—had probably also acquired habits less warlike than the tribes of
            primitive barbaric type. At any rate, even if capable of defending themselves,
            they could not continue their production and commerce under repeated hostile
            incursions.
             A valuable inscription remaining enables us to compare
            the Olbia (or Borysthenes) seen by Herodotus, with the same town in the second
            century B.C.  At this latter period, the
            city was diminished in population, impoverished in finances, exposed to
            constantly increasing exactions and menace from the passing barbaric hordes,
            and scarcely able to defend against them even the security of its walls.
            Sometimes there approached the barbaric chief Saitapharnes with his personal suite, sometimes his whole tribe or horde in mass, called Saii. Whenever they came, they required to be appeased by
            presents, greater than the treasury could supply, and borrowed only from the
            voluntary help of rich citizens; while even these presents did not always avert
            ill treatment or pillage. Already the citizens of Olbia had repelled various
            attacks, partly by taking into pay a semi-Hellenic population in their
            neighbourhood (Mix-Hellenes, like the Liby-Phenicians in Africa); but the
            inroads became more alarming, and their means of defence less, through the
            uncertain fidelity of these Mix-Hellenes, as well as of their own slaves—the
            latter probably barbaric natives purchased from the interior. In the midst of
            public poverty, it was necessary to enlarge and strengthen the fortifications;
            for they were threatened with the advent of the Gauls—who inspired such terror
            that the Scythians and other barbarians were likely to seek their own safety by
            extorting admission within the walls of Olbia. Moreover even corn was scarce,
            and extravagantly dear. There had been repeated failures in the produce of the
            lands around, famine was apprehended, and efforts were needed, greater than the
            treasury could sustain, to lay in a stock at the public expense. Among the many
            points of contrast with Herodotus, this is perhaps the most striking; for in
            his time, corn was the great produce and the principal export from Olbia; the
            growth had now been suspended, or was at least perpetually cut off, by
            increased devastation and insecurity.
             After perpetual attacks, and even several captures, by
            barbaric neighbours—this unfortunate city, about fifty years before the
            Christian era, was at length so miserably sacked by the Getae, as to become for
            a time abandoned. Presently, however, the fugitives partially returned, to
            re-establish themselves on a reduced scale. For the very same barbarians who
            had persecuted and plundered them, still required an emporium with a certain
            amount of import and export, such as none but Greek settlers could provide;
            moreover it was from the coast near Olbia, and from the care of its
            inhabitants, that many of the neighbouring tribes derived their supply of salt.
            Hence arose a puny after-growth of Olbia—preserving the name, traditions, and
            part of the locality, of the deserted city—by the return of a portion of the
            colonists with an infusion of Scythian or Sarmatian residents; an infusion
            indeed so large, as seriously to dishellenise both
            the speech and the personal names in the town.
             To this second edition of Olbia, the rhetor Dion
            Chrysostom paid a summer visit (about a century after the Christian era), of
            which he has left a brief but interesting account. Within the wide area once
            filled by the original Olbia—the former circumference of which was marked by
            crumbling walls and towers—the second town occupied a narrow corner ; with poor
            houses, low walls, and temples having no other ornament except the ancient
            statues mutilated by the plunderers. The citizens dwelt in perpetual insecurity,
            constantly under arms or on guard; for the barbaric horsemen, in spite of
            sentinels posted to announce their approach, often carried off prisoners,
            cattle, or property, from the immediate neighbourhood of the gates. The picture
            drawn of Olbia by Dion confirms in a remarkable way that given of Tomi by Ovid.
            And what imparts to it a touching interest is, that the Greeks whom Dion saw
            contending with the difficulties, privations, and dangers of this inhospitable
            outpost, still retained the activity, the elegance, and the intellectual
            aspirations of their Ionic breed; in this respect much superior to the Tomitans of Ovid. In particular, they were passionate
            admirers of Homer; a considerable proportion of the Greeks of Olbia could
            repeat the Iliad from memory.1 Achilles (localised under the surname of Pontarches, on numerous islands and capes in the Euxine)
            was among the chief divine or heroic persons to whom they addressed their
            prayers. Amidst Grecian life, degraded and verging towards its extinction, and
            stripped even of the purity of living speech—the thread of imaginative and
            traditional sentiment thus continues without suspension or abatement.
             Respecting Bosporus or Pantikapaeum (for both names denote the same city, though the former name often comprehends
            the whole annexed dominion), founded by Milesian settlers on the European side
            of the Cimmerian Bosporus (near Kertch), we first
            hear, about the period when Xerxes was repulsed from Greece (480-479 B.C.). It
            was the centre of a dominion including Phanagoria,
            Kepi, Hermonassa, and other Greek cities on the
            Asiatic side of the strait; and is said to have been governed by what seems to
            have been an oligarchy—called the Archaeanaktidse,
            for forty-two years (480-438).
             After them we have a series of princes standing out
            individually by name, and succeeding each other in the same family. Spartokus I was succeeded by Seleucus; next comes Spartokus II; then Satyrus I (407-393); Leukon (393353) ; Spartokus III (353-348); Parisades I. (348310 b.c.) ;
            Satyrus I, Prytanis, Eumelus (310-304); Spartokus IV (304-284); Parisades II. During the reigns of these princes, a connexion of some intimacy subsisted
            between Athens and Bosporus; a connexion not political, since the Bosporanic princes had little interest in the contentions
            about Hellenic hegemony—but of private intercourse, commercial interchange, and
            reciprocal good offices. The eastern corner of the Tauric Chersonesus, between Pantikapaeum and Theodosia, was
            well suited for the production of corn; while plenty of fish, as well as salt,
            was to be had in or near the Palus Maeotis. Corn, salted fish and meat, hides,
            and barbaric slaves in considerable numbers, were in demand among all the Greeks
            round the Aegean, and not least at Athens, where Scythian slaves were numerous;
            while oil and wine, with other products of more southern regions, were
            acceptable in Bosporus and the other Pontic ports. This important traffic seems
            to have been mainly carried on in ships and by capital belonging to Athens and
            other Aegean maritime towns; and must have been greatly under the protection
            and regulation of the Athenians, so long as their maritime empire subsisted.
            Enterprising citizens of Athens went to Bosporus (as to Thrace and the Thracian
            Chersonesus) to push their fortunes; merchants from other cities found it
            advantageous to settle as resident strangers or metics at Athens, where they were more in contact with the protecting authority, and
            obtained readier access to the judicial tribunals. It was probably during the
            period preceding the great disaster at Syracuse in 413 B.C., that Athens first
            acquired her position as a mercantile centre for the trade with the Euxine;
            which we afterwards find her retaining, even with reduced power, in the time of
            Demosthenes.
             How strong was the position enjoyed by Athens in
            Bosporus, during her unimpaired empire, we may judge from the fact, that
            Nymphaeum (south of Pantikapaeum, between that town
            and Theodosia) was among her tributary towns, and paid a talent annually. Not
            until the misfortunes of Athens in the closing years of the Peloponnesian war,
            did Nymphaeum pass into the hands of the Bosporanic princes; betrayed (according to Aeschines) by the maternal grandfather of
            Demosthenes, the Athenian Gylon; who however probably
            did nothing more than obey a necessity rendered unavoidable by the fallen
            condition of Athens. We thus see that Nymphaeum, in the midst of the Bosporanic dominion, was not only a member of the Athenian
            empire, but also contained influential Athenian citizens, engaged in the corn-trade. Gylon was rewarded by a large grant of land at
            Kepi—probably other Athenians of Nymphaeum were rewarded also—by the Bosporanic prince; who did not grudge a good price for such
            an acquisition. We find also other instances,—both of Athenian citizens sent
            out to reside with the prince Satyrus,—and of Pontic Greeks who, already in
            correspondence and friendship with various individual Athenians, consign their
            sons to be initiated in the commerce, society, and refinements of Athens. Such
            facts attest the correspondence and intercourse of that city, during her
            imperial greatness, with Bosporus.
             The Bosporanic prince
            Satyrus was in the best relations with Athens, and even seems to have had
            authorised representatives there to enforce his requests, which met with very
            great attention. He treated the Athenian merchants at Bosporus with equity and
            even favour, granting to them a preference in the export of corn when there was
            not enough for all. His son Leukon not only continued
            the preference to Athenian exporting ships, but also granted to them remission
            of the export duty (of one-thirtieth part), which he exacted from all other
            traders. Such an exemption is reckoned as equivalent to an annual present of
            13,000 medimni of corn; the total quantity of corn
            brought from Bosporus to Athens in a full year being 400,000 medimni. It is easy to see moreover that such a premium
            must have thrown nearly the whole exporting trade into the hands of Athenian
            merchants. The Athenians requited this favour by public votes of gratitude and
            honour, conferring upon Leukon the citizenship,
            together with immunity from all the regular burthens attaching to property at
            Athens. There was lying in that city money belonging to Leukon;
            who was therefore open (under the proposition of Leptines) to that conditional
            summons for exchange of properties, technically termed Antidosis.
            In his time, moreover, the corn-trade of Bosporus appears to have been further
            extended; for we learn that he established an export from Theodosia as well as
            from Pantikapaeum. His successor Parisades I continuing to Athenian exporters of corn the same privilege of immunity from
            export duty, obtained from Athens still higher honours than Leukon;
            for we learn that his statue, together with those of two relatives, was erected
            in the agora, on the motion of Demosthenes. The connexion of Bosporus with
            Athens was durable as well as intimate; its corn-trade being of high importance
            to the subsistence of the people. Every Athenian exporter was bound by law to
            bring his cargo in the first instance to Athens. The freighting and navigating
            of ships for that purpose, together with the advance of money by rich
            capitalists (citizens and metics) upon interest and
            conditions enforced by the Athenian judicature, was a standing and profitable
            business. And we may appreciate the value of equitable treatment, not to say
            favour, from the kings of Bosporus—when we contrast it with the fraudulent and extortionate
            behaviour of Kleomenes, satrap of Egypt, in reference to the export of Egyptian
            corn.
             The political condition of the Greeks at Bosporus was
            somewhat peculiar. The hereditary princes (above enumerated), who ruled them
            substantially as despots, assumed no other title (in respect to the Greeks)
            than that of Archon. They paid tribute to the powerful Scythian tribes who
            bounded them on the European side, and even thought it necessary to carry a
            ditch across the narrow isthmus, from some point near Theodosia northward to
            the Palus Maeotis, as a protection against incursions. Their dominion did not
            extend farther west than Theodosia; this ditch was their extreme western
            boundary; and even for the land within it, they paid tribute. But on the
            Asiatic side of the strait, they were lords paramount for a considerable
            distance, over the feebler and less warlike tribes who pass under the common
            name of Maeotae or Maetae—the
            Sindi, Toreti, Dandarii, Thates, &c. Inscriptions, yet remaining, of Parisades I, record him as King of these various barbaric
            tribes, but as Archon of Bosporus and Theodosia. His dominion on the Asiatic
            side of the Cimmerian Bosporus, sustained by Grecian and Thracian mercenaries ,was
            of considerable (though to us unknown) extent, reaching to somewhere near the
            borders of Caucasus.
             Parisades I on his death left three sons—Satyrus, Prytanis, and Eumelus. Satyrus, as the eldest, succeeded; but Eumelus claimed the crown, sought aid without, and
            prevailed on various neighbours—among them a powerful Thracian king named Ariopharnes—to espouse his cause. At the head of an army
            said to consist of 20,000 horse and 22,000 foot, the two allies marched to
            attack the territories of Satyrus, who advanced to meet them, with 2000 Grecian
            mercenaries, and 2000 Thracians of his own, reinforced by a numerous body of
            Scythian allies—20,000 foot, and 10,000 horse, and carrying with him a
            plentiful supply of provisions in waggons. He gained a complete victory,
            compelling Eumelus and Ariopharnes to retreat and seek refuge in the regal residence of the latter, near the river Thapsis; a fortress built of timber, and surrounded
            with forest, river, marsh, and rock, so as to be very difficult of approach.
            Satyrus, having first plundered the country around, which supplied a rich booty
            of prisoners and cattle, proceeded to assail his enemies in their almost
            impracticable position. But though he, and Meniskus his general of mercenaries, made the most strenuous efforts, and even carried
            some of the outworks, they were repulsed from the fortress itself; and Satyrus,
            exposing himself forwardly to extricate Meniskus,
            received a wound of which he shortly died—after a reign of nine months. Meniskus, raising the siege, withdrew the army to Gargaza; from whence he conveyed back the regal corpse to Pantikapaeum.
             Prytanis, the next brother, rejecting an offer of
            partition tendered by Eumelus, assumed the sceptre,
            and marched forth to continue the struggle. But the tide of fortune now turned
            in favour of Eumelus; who took Gargaza with several other places, worsted his brother in battle, and so blocked him up
            in the isthmus near the Palus Maeotis, that he was forced to capitulate and
            resign his pretensions. Eumelus entered Pantikapaeum as conqueror. Nevertheless, the defeated
            Prytanis, in spite of his recent covenant, made a renewed attempt upon the
            crown; wherein he was again baffled, forced to escape to Kepi, and there slain.
            To assure himself of the throne, Eumelus put to death
            the wives and children of both his two brothers, Satyrus and Prytanis—together
            with all their principal friends. One youth alone—Parisades,
            son of Satyrus—escaped and found protection with the Scythian prince Agarus.
             Eumelus had now put down all rivals ; yet his recent cruelties had occasioned wrath and
            disgust among the Bosporanic citizens. He convoked
            them in assembly, to excuse his past conduct, and promised good government for
            the future; at the same time guaranteeing to them their full civic
            constitution, with such privileges and immunities as they had before enjoyed,
            and freedom from direct taxation. Such assurances, combined probably with an
            imposing mercenary force, appeased or at least silenced the prevailing disaffection. Eumelus kept his promises so far as to govern in a
            mild and popular spirit. While thus rendering himself acceptable at home, he
            maintained an energetic foreign policy, and made several conquests among the
            surrounding tribes. He constituted himself a sort of protector of the Euxine,
            repressing the piracies of the Heniochi and Achaei (among the Caucasian mountains to the east) as well
            as of the Tauri in the Chersonesus (Crimea); much to the satisfaction of the
            Byzantines, Sinopians, and other Pontic Greeks. He
            received a portion of the fugitives from Kallatis,
            when besieged by Lysimachus, and provided for them a settlement in his
            dominions. Having thus acquired great reputation, Eumelus was in the full career of conquest and aggrandisement, when an accident
            terminated his life, after a reign of rather more than five years. In returning
            from Scythia to Pantikapaeum, in a four-wheeled
            carriage (or waggon) and four with a tent upon it, his horses took fright and
            ran away. Perceiving that they were carrying him towards a precipice, he tried
            to jump out; but his sword becoming entangled in the wheel, he was killed on
            the spot. He was succeeded by his son Spartokus IV,
            who reigned twenty years (304-284); afterwards came the son of Spartokus, Parisades II; with
            whose name our information breaks off.
             This dynasty, the Spartokidae,
            though they ruled the Greeks of Bosporus as despots by means of a foreign
            mercenary force—yet seem to have exercised power with equity and moderation.
            Had Eumelus lived, he might probably have established
            an extensive empire over the barbaric tribes on all sides of him. But empire
            over such subjects was seldom permanent; nor did his successors long maintain
            even as much as he left. We have no means of following their fortunes in
            detail; but we know that about a century B.C. the then reigning prince, Parisades IV, found himself so pressed and squeezed by the
            Scythians, that he was forced (like Olbia and the Pentapolis) to forego his
            independence; and to call in, as auxiliary or master, the formidable
            Mithridates Eupator of Pontus; from whom a new
            dynasty of Bosporanic kings began—subject however,
            after no long interval, to the dominion and interference of Rome.
             These Mithridatic princes lie beyond our period; but
            the cities of Bosporus under the Spartokid princes,
            in the fourth century B.C., deserve to be ranked among the conspicuous features
            of the living Hellenic world. They were not indeed purely Hellenic, but
            presented a considerable admixture of Scythian or Oriental manners; analogous
            to the mixture of the Hellenic and Libyan elements at Kyrene with its Battiad princes. Among the facts attesting the wealth and
            power of these Spartokid princes, and of the Bosporanic community, we may number the imposing groups of
            mighty sepulchral tumuli near Kertch (Pantikapaeum); some of which have been recently examined,
            while the greater part still remain unopened. These spacious chambers of
            stone—enclosed in vast hillocks (Kurgans), cyclopian works piled up with prodigious labour and cost—have been found to contain not
            only a profusion of ornaments of the precious metals (gold, silver, and
            electron, or a mixture of four parts of gold to one of silver), but also
            numerous vases, implements, and works of art, illustrating the life and ideas
            of the Bosporanic population. “The contents of the
            tumuli already opened are so multifarious, that from the sepulchres of Pantikapaeum alone, we might become acquainted with
            everything which served the Greeks either for necessary use, or for the
            decoration of domestic life.”1 Statues, reliefs, and frescoes on the walls,
            have been found, on varied subjects both of war and peace, and often of very
            fine execution; besides these, numerous carvings in wood, and vessels of bronze
            or terra cotta; with necklaces, armlets, bracelets, rings, drinking cups,
            &c., of precious metal—several with coloured beads attached. The costumes,
            equipment, and physiognomy represented, are indeed a mixture of Hellenic and
            barbaric; moreover, even the profusion of gold chains and other precious
            ornaments, indicates a tone of sentiment partially orientalised, in those for
            whom they were destined. But the design as well as the execution comes clearly
            out of the Hellenic workshop; and there is good ground for believing, that in
            the fourth century B.C., Pantikapaeum was the seat,
            not only of enterprising and wealthy citizens, but also of strenuous and
            well-directed artistic genius. Such manifestations of the refinements of
            Hellenism, in this remote and little-noticed city, form an important addition
            to the picture of Hellas as a whole,—prior to its days of subjection,—which it
            has been the purpose of this History to present.
             ----------------------------------------------
                 I have now brought down the History of Greece to the
            point of time marked out in the Preface to my First Volume—the close of the
            generation contemporary with Alexander—the epoch, from whence dates not only
            the extinction of Grecian political freedom and self-action, but also the decay
            of productive genius, and the debasement of that consummate literary and
            rhetorical excellence which the fourth century B.C. had seen exhibited in Plato
            and Demosthenes. The contents of this last Volume indicate but too clearly that
            Greece as a separate subject of history no longer exists; for one full half of
            it is employed in depicting Alexander and his conquests that non-Hellenic conqueror into whose vast
              possessions the Greeks are absorbed, with their intellectual brightness bedimmed,
              their spirit broken, and half their virtue taken away by Zeus—the melancholy
              emasculation inflicted (according to Homer) upon victims overtaken by the day
              of slavery.
               One branch of intellectual energy there was, and one
            alone, which continued to flourish, comparatively little impaired, under the
            preponderance of the Macedonian sword—the spirit of speculation and philosophy.
            During the century which we have just gone through, this spirit was embodied in
            several eminent persons, whose names have been scarcely adverted to in this
            History. Among these names, indeed, there are two, of peculiar grandeur, whom I
            have brought partially before the reader, because both of them belong to
            general history as well as to philosophy; Plato, as citizen of Athens,
            companion of Sokrates at his trial, and counsellor of Dionysius in his
            glory—Aristotle, as the teacher of Alexander. I had at one time hoped to
            include in my present work a record of them as philosophers also, and an
            estimate of their speculative characteristics; but I find the subject far too
            vast to be compressed into such a space as this volume would afford. The
            exposition of the tenets of distinguished thinkers is not now numbered by
            historians, either ancient or modern, among the duties incumbent upon them,
            nor yet among the natural expectations of their readers; but is reserved for
            the special historian of philosophy. Accordingly, I have brought my History of
            Greece to a close, without attempting to do justice either to Plato or to
            Aristotle. I hope to contribute something towards supplying this defect, the
            magnitude of which I fully appreciate, in a separate work, devoted specially to
            an account of Greek speculative philosophy in the fourth century B.C.
               
             
             
 
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