First Peloponnesian War
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First Peloponnesian War | |||||||||
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Combatants | |||||||||
Delian League led by Athens, Argos | Peloponnesian League led by Sparta, Thebes | ||||||||
Commanders | |||||||||
Pericles Cimon Leosthenes Tolmides Myronides |
Pleistoanax Nicodemes |
The First Peloponnesian War began in 460 BC and lasted circa 15 years. This war constituted a series of conflicts and minor wars, such as the Second Sacred War, featuring Athens and her allies on one side and Sparta and her allies on the other. All these battles were the prelude of the Second or Great Peloponnesian War (431 BC-404 BC). The First Peloponnesian War ended in an arrangement between Sparta and Athens, which was ratified by the Thirty Years' Peace (winter of 446 BC–445 BC). According to the provisions of this Peace Treaty both sides maintained their primary empires: for Athens the sea and for Sparta the land. The second war ended with the defeat of Athens and Sparta the dominant force in the region.
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[edit] Origins and Causes
A mere twenty years before the First Peloponnesian War broke out, Athens and Sparta had fought alongside each other in the Greco-Persian Wars; in that war, Sparta had held the hegemony of what modern scholars call the Hellenic League and the overall command in the crucial victories of 480 and 479 BC. Over the next several years, however, Spartan leadership bred resentment among the Greek naval powers that took the lead in carrying the war against Persian territories in Asia and the Aegean, and after 478 BC the Spartans abandoned their leadership of this campaign.[1] Athens, meanwhile, had been asserting itself on the international scene, and was eager to take the lead in the Aegean. The Athenians had already rebuilt their walls, against the express wishes of Sparta,[2] and in 479 and 478 BC had taken a much more active role in the Aegean campaigning. In the winter of 479/8 BC they accepted the leadership of a new league, the Delian League, in a conference of Ionian and Aegean states at Delos. At this time, one of the first hints of animosity between Athens and Sparta emerges in an anecdote reported by Diodorus Siculus, who says that the Spartans in 475/4 BC considered reclaiming the hegemony of the campaign against Persia by force;[3] modern scholars, although uncertain of the dating and reliability of this story, have generally cited it as evidence of the existence even at this early date of a "war party" in Sparta.[4]
For some time, however, friendly relations prevailed between Athens and Sparta. Themistocles, the Athenian of the period most associated with an anti-Spartan policy, was ostracized at some point in the early 470s BC, and was later forced to flee to Persia.[5] In his place in Athens rose Cimon, who advocated a policy of cooperation between the two states. Cimon was Sparta's proxenos at Athens, and so fond was he of that city that he named one of his sons Lakedaemonios.[6] Still, hints of conflict emerged; Thucydides reports that in the mid 460s BC, Sparta actually decided to invade Attica during the Thasian rebellion, and was only prevented from doing so by an earthquake, which triggered a revolt among the helots.[7]
It was that helot revolt which would eventually bring on the crisis that precipitated the war. Unable to quell the revolt themselves, the Spartans summoned all their allies to assist them, invoking the old Hellenic League ties. Athens responded to the call, sending out 4,000 men with Cimon at their head.[8] Once an assault on the helots' fortifications had failed, the Spartans, suspicious of the Athenians, dismissed them, alone of all their allies. This action destroyed the political credibility of Cimon; he had already been under assault by opponents at Athens led by Ephialtes, and shortly after this embarassment he was ostracized. The demonstration of Spartan hostility was unmistakable, and as Athens responded events spiralled rapidly into war. Athens concluded several alliances in quick succession: one with Thessaly, a powerful state in the north; one with Argos, Sparta's traditional enemy for centuries; and one with Megara, a former ally of Sparta's which was faring badly in a border war with Sparta's more powerful ally Corinth. At about the same time, Athens settled the helots exiled after the defeat of their revolt at Naupactus on the Corinthian gulf. By 460 BC, Athens found itself openly at war with Corinth and several other Peloponnesian states, and a larger war was clearly imminent.
[edit] Early battles
As this war was beginning Athenians also took on a serious military commitment in another part of the Aegean when they sent a force to assist Inaros, a Libyan king who had led almost all of Egypt in revolt from the Persian king Artaxerxes.[9] Athens and her allies sent a fleet of 200 ships to assist Inaros—a substantial investment of resources.[10] Thus, Athens entered the war with her forces spread across several theaters of conflict.
In either 460 or 459 BC, Athens fought several major battles with the combined forces of several Peloponnesian states. On land, the Athenians were defeated by the armies of Corinth and Epidaurus at Halieis, but at sea they were victorious at Cecryphaleia.[11] Alarmed by this Athenian aggressiveness in the Saronic gulf, Aegina entered into the war against Athens, combining its powerful fleet with that of the Peloponnesian Allies.[12] In the resulting sea battle, the Athenians won a devastating victory, capturing seventy Aeginetan and Peloponnesian ships; they then landed on Aegina and laid siege to the city itself.[13]}
With substantial Athenian detachments tied down in Egypt and Aegina, Corinth invaded the Megarid, attempting to force the Athenians to withdraw their forces from Aegina to meet this new threat.[14] Instead, the Athenians scraped together a force of men too old and boys too young for ordinary military service and sent this force, under the command of Myronides, to relieve Megara. The resulting battle was indecisive, but the Athenians held the field at the end of the day and were thus able to set up a trophy of victory. About twelve days later the Corinthians attempted to return to the site to set up a trophy of their own, but the Athenians issued forth from Megara and routed them; during the retreat after the battle a large section of the Corinthian army blundered into a ditch-ringed enclosure on a farm, where they were trapped and massacred.
[edit] Athenian successes
[edit] Tanagra
For several years at the beginning of the war, Sparta remained largely inert; Spartan troops may have been involved in some of the early battles of the war, but if so they are not specifically mentioned in any sources.[15] In 458 BC or 457 BC,[16] Sparta at last made a move, but not directly at Athens. A war had broken out between Athens' ally Phocis and Doris, across the Corinthian gulf from the Peloponnese.[17] Doris was traditionally identified as the homeland of the Dorians, and the Spartans, being Dorians, had an alliance of longstanding with that state. Accordingly, a Spartan army under the command of the general Nicomedes, acting as deputy for the underage king Pleistonax was dispatched across the Corinthian gulf to assist. This army forced the Phocians to accept terms, but while it was in Doris an Athenian fleet moved into position to block its return across the Corinthian gulf.
At this point Nicomedes led his army south into Boeotia. Several factors may have influenced his decision to make this move. First, secret negotiations had been underway with a party at Athens which was willing to betray the city to the Spartans in order to overthrow the democracy. Furthermore, Donald Kagan has suggested that Nicomedes had been in contact with the government of Thebes and planned to unify Boeotia under Theban leadership; which, upon his arrival, he seems to have done.[18]
With a strong Spartan army in Boeotia and the threat of treason in the air, the Athenians marched out with as many troops, both Athenian and allied, as they could muster to challenge the Peloponnesians. The two armies met at the Battle of Tanagra. Before the battle, the exiled Athenian politician Cimon], armored for battle, approached the Athenian lines to offer his services, but was ordered to depart; before going, he ordered his friends to prove their loyalty through their bravery.[19] This they did, but the Athenians were defeated in the battle, although both sides suffered heavy losses. The Spartans, rather than invading Attica, marched home across the isthmus, and Donald Kagan believes that at this point Cimon was recalled from exile and negotiated a four month truce between the sides.[20]
[edit] Athens conquers
Athens rebounded quickly from the defeat at Tanagra. The long walls, construction of which had commenced several years before, were completed in the aftermath of that battle, giving Athens an unbreakable link to the port of Piraeus.[21] Meanwhile, 62 days after the defeat at Tanagra the Athenians dispatched an army to attack Boeotia; at the Battle of Oenophyta the Athenians smashed a Boeotian force and quickly subjugated all the cities of Boeotia, save perhaps Thebes, as well as Phocis and Locris.[22] Shortly after this, Aegina surrendered and became a tribute-paying member of the Delian League, completing what Donald Kagan has called an annus mirabilis for the Athenians.[23] Athenian good fortune continued in the next year, when a fleet under Tolmides circumnavigated the Peloponnese, burned the Spartan dockyards at Gytheum, raided Laconia, and captured Chalcis in the Corinthian gulf.[24] In about 454 BC, Pericles sailed out of Pegae, the port of Megara, raided the northern coast of the Peloponnese, routed a Sicyonian force, and attacked Acarnania.[25]
[edit] The importance of Megara
Modern scholars have emphasized the critical significance of Athenian control of Megara in enabling the early Athenian successes in the war. Megara provided a convenient port on the Corinthian gulf, to which Athenian rowers could be transported overland, and a significant number of ships were probably kept at Megara's port of Nisaea throughout the war.[26] Moreover, while early modern scholars were skeptical of Athens' ability to prevent a Spartan army from moving through the Megarid, recent scholarship has concluded that the pass of Geraneia could have been held by a relatively small force;[27] thus, with the isthmus of Corinth closed and Athenian fleets in both the Corinthian and Saronic gulfs, Attica was unassailable from the Peloponnese.
[edit] Athenian crisis and the truce
Athens' remarkable string of successes came to a sudden halt in 454 BC, when its Egyptian expedition was finally crushingly defeated. A massive Persian army under Megabazus had been sent overland against the rebels in Egypt some time earlier, and upon its arrival had quickly routed the rebel forces. The Greek contingent had been besieged on the island of Prosopitis in the Nile. In 454, after a siege of 18 months, the Egyptians captured the island, destroying the force almost entire.{{subst:User:Robth/1.109|-110}} Though the force thus obliterated was probably not as large as the 200 ships that had originally been sent, it was at least 40 ships with their full complements, a significant number of men.[28]
The disaster in Egypt severely shook Athens' control of the Aegean, and for some years afterwards the Athenians concentrated their attention on reorganizing the Delian League and restabilizing the region.[29] In 451 BC, therefore, when Cimon returned to the city, his ostracism over, the Athenians were willing to have him negotiate a truce with Sparta.[30] Cimon arranged a five year truce,[31] and over the next several years Athens concentrated its efforts in the Aegean.
[edit] After the truce
The years after the truce were eventful ones in Greek politics. The Peace of Callias, if it existed, was concluded in 449 BC; it was probably in that same year that Pericles passed the Congress decree, calling for a pan-Hellenic congress to discuss the future of Greece.[32] Modern scholars have debated extensively over the intent of that proposal; some regard it as a good faith effort to secure a lasting peace, while others view it as a propaganda tool.[33] In any event, Sparta derailed the Congress by refusing to attend.[34]
In the same year the Second Sacred War erupted, when Sparta detached Delphi from Phocis and rendered it independent. In 448 BC, Pericles led the Athenian army against Delphi, in order to reinstate Phocis in its former sovereign rights on the oracle of Delphi.[35]
In 446 BC a revolt broke out in Boeotia which was to spell the end of Athens's "continental empire" on the Greek mainland.[36] Boeotia broke out in revolt against Athens. Tolmides led an army out to challenge the Boeotians, but after some early successes was defeated at the Battle of Coronea; in the wake of this defeat, Pericles imposed a more moderate stance and Athens abandoned Boeotia, Phocis, and Locris.[37]
The defeat at Coronea, however, triggered a more dangerous disturbance, in which Euboea and Megara revolted. Pericles crossed over to Euboea with his troops to quash the rebellion there, but was forced to return when the Spartan army invaded Attica. Through negotiation and possibly bribery,[38] Pericles persuaded the Spartan king Pleistonax to lead his army home;[39] back in Sparta, Pleistonax would later be for failing to press his advantage, and fined so heavily that he was forced to flee into exile, unable to pay.[40] With the Spartan threat removed, Pericles crossed back to Euboea with 50 ships and 5,000 soldiers, cracking down any opposition. He then inflicted a stringent punishment on the landowners of Chalcis, who lost their properties. The residents of Istiaia, who had butchered the crew of an Athenian trireme, were chastised more harshly, since they were uprooted and replaced by 2,000 Athenian settlers.[39] The arrangement between Sparta and Athens was ratified by the second "Thirty Years' Peace" (winter of 446 BC–445 BC). According to this treaty, Megara was returned to the Peloponnesian League, Troezen and Achaea became independent, Aegina was to be a tributary to Athens but autonomous, and disputes were to be settled by arbitration. Each party agreed to respect the alliances of the other.[36]
[edit] Significance and aftermath
The middle years of the First Peloponnesian War marked the peak of Athenian power. Holding Boeotia and Megara on land and dominating the sea with its fleet, the city had stood utterly secure from attack.[41] The events of 447 and 446, however, destroyed this position, and although not all Athenians gave up their dreams of unipolar control of the Greek world, the peace treaty that ended the war laid out the framework for a bipolar Greece.[42] In return for abandoning her continental territories, Athens received recognition of her alliance by Sparta.[43] The peace concluded in 445, however, would last for less than half of its intended 30 years; in 431 BC, Athens and Sparta would go to war once again, with decidedly more conclusive results.
[edit] References
- de Ste. Croix, G.E.M., The Origins of the Peloponnesian War, (Duckworth and Co., 1972) ISBN 0715606409
- Diodorus Siculus, Library
- The Encyclopedia of World History (2001)
- Kagan, Donald. The Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War (Cornell, 1969). ISBN 0801495563
- Plutarch, Cimon
- Plutarch, Pericles
- Thucydides: History of the Peloponnesian War
[edit] Notes
- ^ Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, 1.95
- ^ Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, 1.89-93
- ^ Diodorus Siculus, Library 11.50
- ^ See Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 51-2, and de Ste. Croix, Origins of the Peloponnesian War, 171-2.
- ^ Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 53-5
- ^ de Ste Croix, Origins of the Peloponnesian War, 172
- ^ Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, 1.101
- ^ For the convoluted events of this period, see Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 73-82 and de Ste. Croix, Origins of the Peloponnesian War, 180-3.
- ^ Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, 1.104
- ^ Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, 1.104
- ^ Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, 1.105
- ^ Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 84
- ^ Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, 1.105
- ^ Unless otherwise noted, all details of this incident are drawn from Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, 1.105-106.
- ^ de Ste. Croix, Origins of the Peloponnesian War, 188
- ^ The date is unclear; Kagan places these events in 458, while de Ste. Croix is unsure; other scholars also differ.
- ^ Unless otherwise noted, all details of the Spartan expedition are drawn from Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, 1.107-108.
- ^ Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 90. See also Diodorus Siculus, Library, 11.81.
- ^ Plutarch, Cimon, 17.3-4
- ^ Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 91
- ^ Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 95
- ^ Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 50
- ^ Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 95
- ^ Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, 108
- ^ See de Ste. Croix, Origins of the Peloponnesian War, 187, Plutarch, Pericles, 19.2-3, and Diodorus Siculus, Library, 11.85.
- ^ de Ste. Croix, Origins of the Peloponnesian War, 186-7
- ^ See de Ste. Croix, Origins of the Peloponnesian War, 190-6 and Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 80.
- ^ Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 97
- ^ Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 98-102
- ^ Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 103
- ^ Diodorus Siculus, Library 11.86
- ^ Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 107-110
- ^ Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 111-112
- ^ Plutarch, Pericles, 17.3
- ^ Thucydides, I, 112 and Plutarch, Pericles, XXI
- ^ a b K. Kuhlmann, Historical Commentary on the Peloponnesian War
- ^ "Pericles". Encyclopaedic Dictionary The Helios. (1952).
- ^ Thucydides, II, 21 and Aristophanes, The Acharnians, 832
- ^ a b Plutarch, Pericles, XXIII
- ^ Plutarch, Pericles, 22.3
- ^ Meiggs, The Athenian Empire, 111-112
- ^ Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 128-30
- ^ Kagan, Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, 128