Anaxibius

Anaxibius (Ancient Greek: Ἀναξίβιος), was the Spartan admiral stationed at Byzantium, to whom the Greek troops of Cyrus the Younger, on their arrival at Trapezus on the Euxine, sent their general, Cheirisophus, to obtain a sufficient number of ships to transport them to Europe.[1] When however Cheirisophus met them again at Sinope, he brought back nothing from Anaxibius but civil words and a promise of employment and pay as soon as they came out of the Euxine.[2] On their arrival at Chrysopolis, on the Asiatic shore of the Bosporus, Anaxibius, being bribed by Pharnabazus with great promises to withdraw them from his satrapy, again engaged to furnish them with pay, and brought them over to Byzantium. Here he attempted to get rid of them, and to send them forward on their march without fulfilling his agreement. A fight ensued, in which Anaxibius was compelled to flee for refuge to the Acropolis, and which was quelled only by the remonstrances of Xenophon.[3]

Soon after this the Greeks left the town under the command of the adventurer Coeratades, and Anaxibius issued a proclamation, subsequently acted on by the harmost Aristarchus, that all of Cyrus's soldiers found in Byzantium should be sold as slaves.[4] Being however soon after superseded in command, and finding himself neglected by Pharnabazus, he attempted to revenge himself by persuading Xenophon to lead the army to invade the country of the satrap; but the enterprise was stopped by the threats of Aristarchus.[5] In the year 389 BCE, Anaxibius was sent out from Sparta to supersede Dercyllidas in the command at Abydus, and to check the rising fortunes of Athens in the Hellespont. Here he met at first with some success, till at length Iphicrates, who had been sent against him by the Athenians, contrived to intercept him on his return from Antandrus, which had promised to revolt to him, and of which he had gone to take possession. Anaxibius, coming suddenly on the Athenian ambush, and foreseeing the certainty of his own defeat, told his men to save themselves and flee. His own duty, he said, required him to die there; and, with a small body of comrades, he remained on the spot, fighting till he fell, in 388 BCE.[6]

Notes

  1. Xenophon, Anabasis v. 1. ~ 4
  2. Xenophon, Anabasis vi. 1. ~ 16
  3. Xenophon, Anabasis vii. 1. ~ 1-32
  4. Xenophon, Anabasis vii. 1. ~ 36, 2. ~ 6
  5. Xenophon, Anabasis vii. 2. ~ 5-14
  6. Xenophon, Hellenica Hell. iv. 8. ~ 32-39

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Edward Elder (1870). "Anaxibius". In Smith, William. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology 1. p. 164.