The Persian Wars by Herodotus
Translated by: George Rawlinson 1942
Edited by: Bruce J. Butterfield
Book 6 - ERATO
[6.1] Aristagoras, the author of the
Ionian revolt, perished in the way which I have described. Meanwhile Histiaeus,
tyrant of Miletus, who had been allowed by Darius to leave Susa, came down
to Sardis. On his arrival, being asked by Artaphernes, the Sardian satrap,
what he thought was the reason that the Ionians had rebelled, he made answer
that he could not conceive, and it had astonished him greatly, pretending
to be quite unconscious of the whole business. Artaphernes, however, who
perceived that he was dealing dishonestly, and who had in fact full knowledge
of the whole history of the outbreak, said to him, "I will tell thee
how the case stands, Histiaeus: this shoe is of thy stitching; Aristagoras
has but put it on."
[6.2] Such was the remark made by Artaphernes
concerning the rebellion. Histiaeus, alarmed at the knowledge which he
displayed, so soon as night fell, fled away to the coast. Thus he forfeited
his word to Darius; for though he had pledged himself to bring Sardinia,
the biggest island in the whole world, under the Persian yoke, he in reality
sought to obtain the direction of the war against the king. Crossing over
to Chios, he was there laid in bonds by the inhabitants, who accused him
of intending some mischief against them in the interest of Darius. However,
when the whole truth was laid before them, and they found that Histiaeus
was in reality a foe to the king, they forthwith set him at large again.
[6.3] After this the Ionians inquired
of him for what reason he had so strongly urged Aristagoras to revolt from
the king, thereby doing their nation so ill a service. In reply, he took
good care not to disclose to them the real cause, but told them that King
Darius had intended to remove the Phoenicians from their own country, and
place them in Ionia, while he planted the Ionians in Phoenicia, and that
it was for this reason he sent Aristagoras the order. Now it was not true
that the king had entertained any such intention, but Histiaeus succeeded
hereby in arousing the fears of the Ionians.
[6.4] After this, Histiaeus, by means
of a certain Hermippus, a native of Atarneus, sent letters to many of the
Persians in Sardis, who had before held some discourse with him concerning
a revolt. Hermippus, however, instead of conveying them to the persons
to whom they were addressed, delivered them into the hands of Artaphernes,
who, perceiving what was on foot, commanded Hermippus to deliver the letters
according to their addresses, and then bring him back the answers which
were sent to Histiaeus. The traitors being in this way discovered, Artaphernes
put a number of Persians to death, and caused a commotion in Sardis.
[6.5] As for Histiaeus, when his hopes
in this matter were disappointed, he persuaded the Chians to carry him
back to Miletus; but the Milesians were too well pleased at having got
quit of Aristagoras to be anxious to receive another tyrant into their
country; besides which they had now tasted liberty. They therefore opposed
his return; and when he endeavoured to force an entrance during the night,
one of the inhabitants even wounded him in the thigh. Having been thus
rejected from his country, he went back to Chios; whence, after failing
in an attempt to induce the Chians to give him ships, he crossed over to
Mytilene, where he succeeded in obtaining vessels from the Lesbians. They
fitted out a squadron of eight triremes, and sailed with him to the Hellespont,
where they took up their station, and proceeded to seize all the vessels
which passed out from the Euxine, unless the crews declared themselves
ready to obey his orders.
[6.6] While Histiaeus and the Mytilenaeans
were thus employed, Miletus was expecting an attack from a vast armament,
which comprised both a fleet and also a land force. The Persian captains
had drawn their several detachments together, and formed them into a single
army; and had resolved to pass over all the other cities, which they regarded
as of lesser account, and to march straight on Miletus. Of the naval states,
Phoenicia showed the greatest zeal; but the fleet was composed likewise
of the Cyprians (who had so lately been brought under), the Cilicians,
and also the Egyptians.
[6.7] While the Persians were thus
making preparations against Miletus and Ionia, the Ionians, informed of
their intent, sent their deputies to the Panionium, and held a council
upon the posture of their affairs. Hereat it was determined that no land
force should be collected to oppose the Persians, but that the Milesians
should be left to defend their own walls as they could; at the same time
they agreed that the whole naval force of the states, not excepting a single
ship, should be equipped, and should muster at Lade, a small island lying
off Miletus - to give battle on behalf of the place.
[6.8] Presently the Ionians began to
assemble in their ships, and with them came the Aeolians of Lesbos; and
in this way they marshalled their line:- The wing towards the east was
formed of the Milesians themselves, who furnished eighty ships; next to
them came the Prienians with twelve, and the Myusians with three ships;
after the Myusians were stationed the Teians, whose ships were seventeen;
then the Chians, who furnished a hundred. The Erythraeans and Phocaeans
followed, the former with eight, the latter with three ships; beyond the
Phocaeans were the Lesbians, furnishing seventy; last of all came the Samians,
forming the western wing, and furnishing sixty vessels. The fleet amounted
in all to three hundred and fifty-three triremes. Such was the number on
the Ionian side.
[6.9] On the side of the barbarians
the number of vessels was six hundred. These assembled off the coast of
Milesia, while the land army collected upon the shore; but the leaders,
learning the strength of the Ionian fleet, began to fear lest they might
fail to defeat them, in which case, not having the mastery at sea, they
would be unable to reduce Miletus, and might in consequence receive rough
treatment at the hands of Darius. So when they thought of all these things,
they resolved on the following course:- Calling together the Ionian tyrants,
who had fled to the Medes for refuge when Aristagoras deposed them from
their governments, and who were now in camp, having joined in the expedition
against Miletus, the Persians addressed them thus: "Men of Ionia,
now is the fit time to show your zeal for the house of the king. Use your
best efforts, every one of you, to detach your fellow-countrymen from the
general body. Hold forth to them the promise that, if they submit, no harm
shall happen to them on account of their rebellion; their temples shall
not be burnt, nor any of their private buildings; neither shall they be
treated with greater harshness than before the outbreak. But if they refuse
to yield, and determine to try the chance of a battle, threaten them with
the fate which shall assuredly overtake them in that case. Tell them, when
they are vanquished in fight, they shall be enslaved; their boys shall
be made eunuchs, and their maidens transported to Bactra; while their country
shall be delivered into the hands of foreigners."
[6.10] Thus spake the Persians. The
Ionian tyrants sent accordingly by night to their respective citizens,
and reported the words of the Persians; but the people were all staunch,
and refused to betray their countrymen, those of each state thinking that
they alone had had made to them. Now these events happened on the first
appearance of the Persians before Miletus.
[6.11] Afterwards, while the Ionian
fleet was still assembled at Lade, councils were held, and speeches made
by divers persons - among the rest by Dionysius, the Phocaean captain,
who thus expressed himself:- "Our affairs hang on the razor's edge,
men of Ionia, either to be free or to be slaves; and slaves, too, who have
shown themselves runaways. Now then you have to choose whether you will
endure hardships, and so for the present lead a life of toil, but thereby
gain ability to overcome your enemies and establish your own freedom; or
whether you will persist in this slothfulness and disorder, in which case
I see no hope of your escaping the king's vengeance for your rebellion.
I beseech you, be persuaded by me, and trust yourselves to my guidance.
Then, if the gods only hold the balance fairly between us, I undertake
to say that our foes will either decline a battle, or, if they fight, suffer
complete discomfiture."
[6.12] These words prevailed with
the Ionians, and forthwith they committed themselves to Dionysius; whereupon
he proceeded every day to make the ships move in column, and the rowers
ply their oars, and exercise themselves in breaking the line; while the
marines were held under arms, and the vessels were kept, till evening fell,
upon their anchors, so that the men had nothing but toil from morning even
to night. Seven days did the Ionians continue obedient, and do whatsoever
he bade them; but on the eighth day, worn out by the hardness of the work
and the heat of the sun, and quite unaccustomed to such fatigues, they
began to confer together, and to say one to another, "What god have
we offended to bring upon ourselves such a punishment as this? Fools and
distracted that we were, to put ourselves into the hands of this Phocaean
braggart, who does but furnish three ships to the fleet! He, now that he
has got us, plagues us in the most desperate fashion; many of us, in consequence,
have fallen sick already - many more expect to follow. We had better suffer
anything rather than these hardships; even the slavery with which we are
threatened, however harsh, can be no worse than our present thraldom. Come,
let us refuse him obedience." So saying, they forthwith ceased to
obey his orders, and pitched their tents, as if they had been soldiers,
upon the island, where they reposed under the shade all day, and refused
to go aboard the ships and train themselves.
[6.13] Now when the Samian captains
perceived what was taking place, they were more inclined than before to
accept the terms which Aeaces, the son of Syloson, had been authorised
by the Persians to offer them, on condition of their deserting from the
confederacy. For they saw that all was disorder among the Ionians, and
they felt also that it was hopeless to contend with the power of the king;
since if they defeated the fleet which had been sent against them, they
knew that another would come five times as great. So they took advantage
of the occasion which now offered, and as soon as ever they saw the Ionians
refuse to work, hastened gladly to provide for the safety of their temples
and their properties. This Aeaces, who made the overtures to the Samians,
was the son of Syloson, and grandson of the earlier Aeaces. He had formerly
been tyrant of Samos, but was ousted from his government by Aristagoras
the Milesian, at the same time with the other tyrants of the Ionians.
[6.14] The Phoenicians soon afterwards
sailed to the attack; and the Ionians likewise put themselves in line,
and went out to meet them. When they had now neared one another, and joined
battle, which of the Ionians fought like brave men and which like cowards,
I cannot declare with any certainty, for charges are brought on all sides;
but the tale goes that the Samians, according to the agreement which they
had made with Aeaces, hoisted sail, and quitting their post bore away for
Samos, except eleven ships, whose captains gave no heed to the orders of
the commanders, but remained and took part in the battle. The state of
Samos, in consideration of this action, granted to these men, as an acknowledgment
if their bravery, the honour of having their names, and the names of their
fathers, inscribed upon a pillar, which still stands in the market-place.
The Lesbians also, when they saw the Samians, who were drawn up next them,
begin to flee, themselves did the like; and the example, once set, was
followed by the greater number of the Ionians.
[6.15] Of those who remained and fought,
none were so rudely handled as the Chians, who displayed prodigies of valour,
and disdained to play the part of cowards. They furnished to the common
fleet, as I mentioned above, one hundred ships, having each of them forty
armed citizens, and those picked men, on board; and when they saw the greater
portion of the allies betraying the common cause, they for their part,
scorning to imitate the base conduct of these traitors, although they were
left almost alone and unsupported, a very few friends continuing to stand
by them, notwithstanding went on with the fight, and ofttimes cut the line
of the enemy, until at last, after they had taken very many of their adversaries'
ships, they ended by losing more than half of their own. Hereupon, with
the remainder of their vessels, the Chians fled away to their own country.
[6.16] As for such of their ships
as were damaged and disabled, these, being pursued by the enemy, made straight
for Mycale, where the crews ran them ashore, and abandoning them began
their march along the continent. Happening in their way upon the territory
of Ephesus, they essayed to cross it; but here a dire misfortune befell
them. It was night, and the Ephesian women chanced to be engaged in celebrating
the Thesmophoria - the previous calamity of the Chians had not been heard
of - so when the Ephesians saw their country invaded by an armed band,
they made no question of the new-comers being robbers who purposed to carry
off their women; and accordingly they marched out against them in full
force, and slew them all. Such were the misfortunes which befell them of
Chios.
[6.17] Dionysius, the Phocaean, when
he perceived that all was lost, having first captured three ships from
the enemy, himself took to flight. He would not, however, return to Phocaea,
which he well knew must fall again, like the rest of Ionia, under the Persian
yoke; but straightway, as he was, he set sail for Phoenicia, and there
sunk a number of merchantmen, and gained a great booty; after which he
directed his course to Sicily, where he established himself as a corsair,
and plundered the Carthaginians and Tyrrhenians, but did no harm to the
Greeks.
[6.18] The Persians, when they had
vanquished the Ionians in the sea-fight, besieged Miletus both by land
and sea, driving mines under the walls, and making use of every known device,
until at length they took both the citadel and the town, six years from
the time when the revolt first broke out under Aristagoras. All the inhabitants
of the city they reduced to slavery, and thus the event tallied with the
announcement which had been made by the oracle.
[6.19] For once upon a time, when
the Argives had sent to Delphi to consult the god about the safety of their
own city, a prophecy was given them, in which others besides themselves
were interested; for while it bore in part upon the fortunes of Argos,
it touched in a by-clause the fate of the men of Miletus. I shall set down
the portion which concerned the Argives when I come to that part of my
History, mentioning at present only the passage in which the absent Milesians
were spoken of. This passage was as follows:-
Then shalt thou, Miletus, so oft the contriver of evil,
Be, thyself, to many a least and an excellent booty:
Then shall thy matrons wash the feet of long-haired masters -
Others shall then possess our lov'd Didymian temple.
Such a fate now befell the Milesians; for the Persians, who wore their
hair long, after killing most of the men, made the women and children slaves;
and the sanctuary at Didyma, the oracle no less than the temple was plundered
and burnt; of the riches whereof I have made frequent mention in other
parts of my History.
[6.20] Those of the Milesians whose
lives were spared, being carried prisoners to Susa, received no ill treatment
at the hands of King Darius, but were established by him in Ampe, a city
on the shores of the Erythraean sea, near the spot where the Tigris flows
into it. Miletus itself, and the plain about the city, were kept by the
Persians for themselves, while the hill-country was assigned to the Carians
of Pedasus.
[6.21] And now the Sybarites, who
after the loss of their city occupied Laus and Scidrus, failed duly to
return the former kindness of the Milesians. For these last, when Sybaris
was taken by the Crotoniats, made a great mourning, all of them, youths
as well as men, shaving their heads; since Miletus and Sybaris were, of
all the cities whereof we have any knowledge, the two most closely united
to one another. The Athenians, on the other hand, showed themselves beyond
measure afflicted at the fall of Miletus, in many ways expressing their
sympathy, and especially by their treatment of Phrynichus. For when this
poet brought out upon the stage his drama of the Capture of Miletus,
the whole theatre burst into tears; and the people sentenced him to pay
a fine of a thousand drachmas, for recalling to them their own misfortunes.
They likewise made a law that no one should ever again exhibit that piece.
[6.22] Thus was Miletus bereft of
its inhabitants. In Samos the people of the richer sort were much displeased
with the doings of the captains, and the dealings they had had the Medes;
they therefore held a council, very shortly after the sea-fight, and resolved
that they would not remain to become the slaves of Aeaces and the Persians,
but before the tyrant set foot in their country, would sail away and found
a colony in another land. Now it chanced that about this time the Zanclaeans
of Sicily had sent ambassadors to the Ionians, and invited them to Kale-Acte
where they wished an Ionian city to be founded. This place, Kale-Acte (or
the Fair Strand) as it is called, is in the country of the Sicilians, and
is situated in the part of Sicily which looks towards Tyrrhenia. The offer
thus made to all the Ionians was embraced only by the Samians, and by such
of the Milesians as had contrived to effect their escape.
[6.23] Hereupon this is what ensued.
The Samians on their voyage reached the country of the Epizephyrian Locrians,
at a time when the Zanclaeans and their king Scythas were engaged in the
siege of a Sicilian town which they hoped to take. Anaxilaus, tyrant of
Rhegium, who was on ill terms with the Zanclaeans knowing how matters stood,
made application to the Samians, and persuaded them to give up the thought
of Kale-Acte the place to which they were bound, and to seize Zancle itself,
which was left without men. The Samians followed this counsel and possessed
themselves of the town; which the Zanclaeans no sooner heard than they
hurried to the rescue, calling to their aid Hippocrates, tyrant of Gela,
who was one of their allies. Hippocrates came with his army to their assistance;
but on his arrival he seized Scythas, the Zanclaean king, who had just
lost his city, and sent him away in chains, together with his brother Pythogenes,
to the town of Inycus; after which he came to an understanding with the
Samians, exchanged oaths with them, and agreed to betray the people of
Zancle. The reward of his treachery was to be one-half of the goods and
chattels, including slaves, which the town contained, and all that he could
find in the open country. Upon this Hippocrates seized and bound the greater
number of the Zanclaeans as slaves; delivering, however, into the hands
of the Samians three hundred of the principal citizens, to be slaughtered;
but the Samians spared the lives of these persons.
[6.24] Scythas, the king of the Zanclaeans,
made his escape from Inycus, and fled to Himera; whence he passed into
Asia, and went up to the court of Darius. Darius thought him the most upright
of all the Greeks to whom he afforded a refuge; for with the king's leave
he paid a visit to Sicily, and thence returned back to Persia, where he
lived in great comfort, and died by a natural death at an advanced age.
[6.25] Thus did the Samians escape
the yoke of the Medes, and possess themselves without any trouble of Zancle,
a most beautiful city. At Samos itself the Phoenicians, after the fight
which had Miletus for its prize was over, re-established Aeaces, the son
of Syloson, upon his throne. This they did by the command of the Persians,
who looked upon Aeaces as one who had rendered them a high service and
therefore deserved well at their hands. They likewise spared the Samians,
on account of the desertion of their vessels, and did not burn either their
city or their temples, as they did those of the other rebels. Immediately
after the fall of Miletus the Persians recovered Caria, bringing some of
the cities over by force, while others submitted of their own accord.
[6.26] Meanwhile tidings of what had
befallen Miletus reached Histiaeus the Milesian, who was still at Byzantium,
employed in intercepting the Ionian merchantmen as they issued from the
Euxine. Histiaeus had no sooner heard the news than he gave the Hellespont
in charge to Bisaltes, son of Apollophanes, a native of Abydos, and himself,
at the head of his Lesbians, set sail for Chios. One of the Chian garrisons
which opposed him he engaged at a place called "The Hollows,"
situated in the Chian territory, and of these he slaughtered a vast number;
afterwards, by the help of his Lesbians, he reduced all the rest of the
Chians, who were weakened by their losses in the sea-fight, Polichne, a
city of Chios, serving him as head-quarters.
[6.27] It mostly happens that there
is some warning when great misfortunes are about to befall a state or nation;
and so it was in this instance, for the Chians had previously had some
strange tokens sent to them. A choir of a hundred of their youths had been
despatched to Delphi; and of these only two had returned; the remaining
ninety-eight having been carried off by a pestilence. Likewise, about the
same time, and very shortly before the sea-fight, the roof of a school-house
had fallen in upon a number of their boys, who were at lessons; and out
of a hundred and twenty children there was but one left alive. Such were
the signs which God sent to warn them. It was very shortly afterwards that
the sea-fight happened, which brought the city down upon its knees; and
after the sea-fight came the attack of Histiaeus and his Lesbians, to whom
the Chians, weakened as they were, furnished an easy conquest.
[6.28] Histiaeus now led a numerous
army, composed of Ionians and Aelians, against Thasos, and had laid siege
to the place when news arrived that the Phoenicians were about to quit
Miletus and attack the other cities of Ionia. On hearing this, Histiaeus
raised the siege of Thasos, and hastened to Lesbos with all his forces.
There his army was in great straits for want of food; whereupon Histiaeus
left Lesbos and went across to the mainland, intending to cut the crops
which were growing in the Atarnean territory, and likewise in the plain
of the Caicus, which belonged to Mysia. Now it chanced that a certain Persian
named Harpagus was in these regions at the head of an army of no little
strength. He, when Histiaeus landed, marched out to meet him, and engaging
with his forces destroyed the greater number of them, and took Histiaeus
himself prisoner.
[6.29] Histiaeus fell into the hands
of the Persians in the following manner. The Greeks and Persians engaged
at Malena, in the region of Atarneus; and the battle was for a long time
stoutly contested, till at length the cavalry came up, and, charging the
Greeks, decided the conflict. The Greeks fled; and Histiaeus, who thought
that Darius would not punish his fault with death, showed how he loved
his life by the following conduct. Overtaken in his flight by one of the
Persians, who was about to run him through, he cried aloud in the Persian
tongue that he was Histiaeus the Milesian.
[6.30] Now, had he been taken straightway
before King Darius, I verily believe that he would have received no hurt,
but the king would have freely forgiven him. Artaphernes, however, satrap
of Sardis, and his captor Harpagus, on this very account - because they
were afraid that, if he escaped, he would be again received into high favour
by the king - put him to death as soon as he arrived at Sardis. His body
they impaled at that place, while they embalmed his head and sent it up
to Susa to the king. Darius, when he learnt what had taken place, found
great fault with the men engaged in this business for not bringing Histiaeus
alive into his presence, and commanded his servants to wash and dress the
head with all care, and then bury it, as the head of a man who had been
a great benefactor to himself and the Persians. Such was the sequel of
the history of Histiaeus.
[6.31] The naval armament of the Persians
wintered at Miletus, and in the following year proceeded to attack the
islands off the coast, Chios, Lesbos, and Tenedos, which were reduced without
difficulty. Whenever they became masters of an island, the barbarians,
in every single instance, netted the inhabitants. Now the mode in which
they practise this netting is the following. Men join hands, so as to form
a line across from the north coast to the south, and then march through
the island from end to end and hunt out the inhabitants. In like manner
the Persians took also the Ionian towns upon the mainland, not however
netting the inhabitants, as it was not possible.
[6.32] And now their generals made
good all the threats wherewith they had menaced the Ionians before the
battle. For no sooner did they get possession of the towns than they choose
out all the best favoured boys and made them eunuchs, while the most beautiful
of the girls they tore from their homes and sent as presents to the king,
at the same time burning the cities themselves, with their temples. Thus
were the Ionians for the third time reduced to slavery; once by the Lydians,
and a second, and now a third time, by the Persians.
[6.33] The sea force, after quitting
Ionia, proceeded to the Hellespont, and took all the towns which lie on
the left shore as one sails into the straits. For the cities on the right
bank had already been reduced by the land force of the Persians. Now these
are the places which border the Hellespont on the European side; the Chersonese,
which contains a number of cities, Perinthus, the forts in Thrace, Selybria,
and Byzantium. The Byzantines at this time, and their opposite neighbours,
the Chalcedonians, instead of awaiting the coming of the Phoenicians, quitted
their country, and sailing into the Euxine, took up their abode at the
city of Mesembria. The Phoenicians, after burning all the places above
mentioned, proceeded to Proconnresus and Artaca, which they likewise delivered
to the flames; this done, they returned to the Chersonese, being minded
to reduce those cities which they had not ravaged in their former cruise.
Upon Cyzicus they made no attack at all, as before their coming the inhabitants
had made terms with Oebares, the son of Megabazus, and satrap of Dascyleium,
and had submitted themselves to the king. In the Chersonese the Phoenicians
subdued all the cities, excepting Cardia.
[6.34] Up to this time the cities
of the Chersonese had been under the government of Miltiades, the son of
Cimon, and grandson of Stesagoras, to whom they had descended from Miltiades,
the son of Cypselus, who obtained possession of them in the following manner.
The Dolonci, a Thracian tribe, to whom the Chersonese at that time belonged,
being harassed by a war in which they were engaged with the Apsinthians,
sent their princes to Delphi to consult the oracle about the matter. The
reply of the Pythoness bade them "take back with them as a colonist
into their country the man who should first offer them hospitality after
they quitted the temple." The Dolonci, following the Sacred Road,
passed through the regions of Phocis and Boeotia; after which, as still
no one invited them in, they turned aside, and travelled to Athens.
[6.35] Now Pisistratus was at this
time sole lord of Athens; but Miltiades, the son of Cypselus, was likewise
a person of much distinction. He belonged to a family which was wont to
contend in the four-horse-chariot races, and traced its descent to Aeacus
and Egina, but which, from the time of Philaeas, the son of Ajax, who was
the first Athenian citizen of the house, had been naturalised at Athens.
It happened that as the Dolonci passed his door Miltiades was sitting in
his vestibule, which caused him to remark them, dressed as they were in
outlandish garments, and armed moreover with lances. He therefore called
to them, and, on their approach, invited them in, offering them lodging
and entertainment. The strangers accepted his hospitality, and, after the
banquet was over, they laid before him in full the directions of the oracle
and besought him on their own part to yield obedience to the god. Miltiades
was persuaded ere they had done speaking; for the government of Pisistratus
was irksome to him, and he wanted to be beyond the tyrant's reach. He therefore
went straightway to Delphi, and inquired of the oracle whether he should
do as the Dolonci desired.
[6.36] As the Pythoness backed their
request, Miltiades, son of Cypselus who had already won the four-horse
chariot-race at Olympia, left Athens, taking with him as many of the Athenians
as liked to join in the enterprise, and sailed away with the Dolonci. On
his arrival at the Chersonese, he was made king by those who had invited
him. After this his first act was to build a wall across the neck of the
Chersonese from the city of Cardia to Pactya, to protect the country from
the incursions and ravages of the Apsinthians. The breadth of the isthmus
at this part is thirty-six furlongs, the whole length of the peninsula
within the isthmus being four hundred and twenty furlongs.
[6.37] When he had finished carrying
the wall across the isthmus, and had thus secured the Chersonese against
the Apsinthians, Miltiades proceeded to engage in other wars, and first
of all attacked the Lampsacenians; but falling into an ambush which they
had laid he had the misfortune to be taken prisoner. Now it happened that
Miltiades stood high in the favour of Croesus, king of Lydia. When Croesus
therefore heard of his calamity, he sent and commanded the men of Lampsacus
to give Miltiades his freedom; "if they refused," he said, "he
would destroy them like a fir." Then the Lampsacenians were somewhile
in doubt about this speech of Croesus, and could not tell how to construe
his threat "that he would destroy them like a fir"; but at last
one of their elders divined the true sense, and told them that the fir
is the only tree which, when cut down, makes no fresh shoots, but forthwith
dies outright. So the Lampsacenians, being greatly afraid of Croesus, released
Miltiades, and let him go free.
[6.38] Thus did Miltiades, by the
help of Croesus, escape this danger. Some time afterwards he died childless,
leaving his kingdom and his riches to Stesagoras, who was the son of Cimon,
his half-brother. Ever since his death the people of the Chersonese have
offered him the customary sacrifices of a founder; and they have further
established in his honour a gymnic contest and a chariot-race, in neither
of which is it lawful for any Lampsacenian to contend. Before the war with
Lampsacus was ended Stesagoras too died childless: he was sitting in the
hall of justice when he was struck upon the head with a hatchet by a man
who pretended to be a deserter, but was in good sooth an enemy, and a bitter
one.
[6.39] Thus died Stesagoras; and upon
his death the Pisistratidae fitted out a trireme, and sent Miltiades, the
son of Cimon, and brother of the deceased, to the Chersonese, that he might
undertake the management of affairs in that quarter. They had already shown
him much favour at Athens, as if, forsooth, they had been no parties to
the death of his father Cimon - a matter whereof I will give an account
in another place. He upon his arrival remained shut up within the house,
pretending to do honour to the memory of his dead brother; whereupon the
chief people of the Chersonese gathered themselves together from all the
cities of the land, and came in a procession to the place where Miltiades
was, to condole with him upon his misfortune. Miltiades commanded them
to be seized and thrown into prison; after which he made himself master
of the Chersonese, maintained a body of five hundred mercenaries, and married
Hegesipyla, daughter of the Thracian king Olorus.
[6.40] This Miltiades, the son of
Cimon, had not been long in the country when a calamity befell him yet
more grievous than those in which he was now involved: for three years
earlier he had had to fly before an incursion of the Scyths. These nomads,
angered by the attack of Darius, collected in a body and marched as far
as the Chersonese. Miltiades did not await their coming, but fled, and
remained away until the Scyths retired, when the Dolonci sent and fetched
him back. All this happened three years before the events which befell
Miltiades at the present time.
[6.41] He now no sooner heard that
the Phoenicians were attacking Tenedos than he loaded five triremes with
his goods and chattels, and set sail for Athens. Cardia was the point from
which he took his departure; and as he sailed down the gulf of Melas, along
the shore of the Chersonese, he came suddenly upon the whole Phoenician
fleet. However he himself escaped, with four of his vessels, and got into
Imbrus, one trireme only falling into the hands of his pursuers. This vessel
was under the command of his eldest son Metiochus, whose mother was not
the daughter of the Thracian king Olorus, but a different woman. Metiochus
and his ship were taken; and when the Phoenicians found out that he was
a son of Miltiades they resolved to convey him to the king, expecting thereby
to rise high in the royal favour. For they remembered that it was Miltiades
who counselled the Ionians to hearken when the Scyths prayed them to break
up the bridge and return home. Darius, however, when the Phoenicians brought
Metiochus into his presence, was so far from doing him any hurt, that he
loaded him with benefits. He gave him a house and estate, and also a Persian
wife, by whom there were children born to him who were accounted Persians.
As for Miltiades himself, from Imbrus he made his way in safety to Athens.
[6.42] At this time the Persians did
no more hurt to the Ionians; but on the contrary, before the year was out,
they carried into effect the following measures, which were greatly to
their advantage. Artaphernes, satrap of Sardis, summoned deputies from
all the Ionian cities, and forced them to enter into agreements with one
another, not to harass each other by force of arms, but to settle their
disputes by reference. He likewise took the measurement of their whole
country in parasangs - such is the name which the Persians give to a distance
of thirty furlongs - and settled the tributes which the several cities
were to pay, at a rate that has continued unaltered from the time when
Artaphernes fixed it down to the present day. The rate was very nearly
the same as that which had been paid before the revolt. Such were the peaceful
dealings of the Persians with the Ionians.
[6.43] The next spring Darius superseded
all the other generals, and sent down Mardonius, the son of Gobryas, to
the coast, and with him a vast body of men, some fit for sea, others for
land service. Mardonius was a youth at this time, and had only lately married
Artazostra, the king's daughter. When Mardonius, accompanied by this numerous
host, reached Cilicia, he took ship and proceeded along shore with his
fleet, while the land army marched under other leaders towards the Hellespont.
In the course of his voyage along the coast of Asia he came to Ionia; and
here I have a marvel to relate which will greatly surprise those Greeks
who cannot believe that Otanes advised the seven conspirators to make Persia
a commonwealth. Mardonius put down all the despots throughout Ionia, and
in lieu of them established democracies. Having so done, he hastened to
the Hellespont, and when a vast multitude of ships had been brought together,
and likewise a powerful land force, he conveyed his troops across the strait
by means of his vessels, and proceeded through Europe against Eretria and
Athens.
[6.44] At least these towns served
as a pretext for the expedition, the real purpose of which was to subjugate
as great a number as possible of the Grecian cities; and this became plain
when the Thasians, who did not even lift a hand in their defence, were
reduced by the sea force, while the land army added the Macedonians to
the former slaves of the king. All the tribes on the hither side of Macedonia
had been reduced previously. From Thasos the fleet stood across to the
mainland, and sailed along shore to Acanthus, whence an attempt was made
to double Mount Athos. But here a violent north wind sprang up, against
which nothing could contend, and handled a large number of the ships with
much rudeness, shattering them and driving them aground upon Athos. 'Tis
said the number of the ships destroyed was little short of three hundred;
and the men who perished were more than twenty thousand. For the sea about
Athos abounds in monsters beyond all others; and so a portion were seized
and devoured by these animals, while others were dashed violently against
the rocks; some, who did not know how to swim, were engulfed; and some
died of the cold.
[6.45] While thus it fared with the
fleet, on land Mardonius and his army were attacked in their camp during
the night by the Brygi, a tribe of Thracians; and here vast numbers of
the Persians were slain, and even Mardonius himself received a wound. The
Brygi, nevertheless, did not succeed in maintaining their own freedom:
for Mardonius would not leave the country till he had subdued them and
made them subjects of Persia. Still, though he brought them under the yoke,
the blow which his land force had received at their hands, and the great
damage done to his fleet off Athos, induced him to set out upon his retreat;
and so this armament, having failed disgracefully, returned to Asia.
[6.46] The year after these events,
Darius received information from certain neighbours of the Thasians that
those islanders were making preparations for revolt; he therefore sent
a herald, and bade them dismantle their walls, and bring all their ships
to Abdera. The Thasians, at the time when Histiaeus the Milesian made his
attack upon them, had resolved that, as their income was very great, they
would apply their wealth to building ships of war, and surrounding their
city with another and a stronger wall. Their revenue was derived partly
from their possessions upon the mainland, partly from the mines which they
owned. They were masters of the gold mines at Scapte-Hyle, the yearly produce
of which amounted in all to eighty talents. Their mines in Thasos yielded
less, but still were so far prolific that, besides being entirely free
from land-tax, they had a surplus income, derived from the two sources
of their territory on the main and their mines, in common years of two
hundred, and in the best years of three hundred talents.
[6.47] I myself have seen the mines
in question: by far the most curious of them are those which the Phoenicians
discovered at the time when they went with Thasus and colonised the island,
which afterwards took its name from him. These Phoenician workings are
in Thasos itself, between Coenyra and a place called Aenyra, over against
Samothrace: a huge mountain has been turned upside down in the search for
ores. Such then was the source of their wealth. On this occasion no sooner
did the Great King issue his commands than straightway the Thasians dismantled
their wall, and took their whole fleet to Abdera.
[6.48] After this Darius resolved
to prove the Greeks, and try the bent of their minds, whether they were
inclined to resist him in arms or prepared to make their submission. He
therefore sent out heralds in divers directions round about Greece, with
orders to demand everywhere earth and water for the king. At the same time
he sent other heralds to the various seaport towns which paid him tribute,
and required them to provide a number of ships of war and horse-transports.
[6.49] These towns accordingly began
their preparations; and the heralds who had been sent into Greece obtained
what the king had bid them ask from a large number of the states upon the
mainland, and likewise from all the islanders whom they visited. Among
these last were included the Eginetans, who, equally with the rest, consented
to give earth and water to the Persian king.
When the Athenians heard what the Eginetans had done, believing that
it was from enmity to themselves that they had given consent, and that
the Eginetans intended to join the Persian in his attack upon Athens, they
straightway took the matter in hand. In good truth it greatly rejoiced
them to have so fair a pretext; and accordingly they sent frequent embassies
to Sparta, and made it a charge against the Eginetans that their conduct
in this matter proved them to be traitors to Greece.
[6.50] Hereupon Cleomenes, the son
of Anaxandridas, who was then king of the Spartans, went in person to Egina,
intending to seize those whose guilt was the greatest. As soon however
as he tried to arrest them, a number of the Eginetins made resistance;
a certain Crius, son of Polycritus, being the foremost in violence. This
person told him "he should not carry off a single Eginetan without
it costing him dear - the Athenians had bribed him to make this attack,
for which he had no warrant from his own government - otherwise both the
kings would have come together to make the seizure." This he said
in consequence of instructions which he had received from Demaratus. Hereupon
Cleomenes, finding that he must quit Egina, asked Crius his name; and when
Crius told him, "Get thy horns tipped with brass with all speed, O
Crius!" he said, "for thou wilt have to struggle with a great
danger."
[6.51] Meanwhile Demaratus, son of
Ariston, was bringing charges against Cleomenes at Sparta. He too, like
Cleomenes, was king of the Spartans, but he belonged to the lower house
- not indeed that his house was of any lower origin than the other, for
both houses are of one blood - but the house of Eurysthenes is the more
honoured of the two, inasmuch as it is the elder branch.
[6.52] The Lacedaemonians declare,
contradicting therein all the poets, that it was king Aristodemus himself,
son of Aristomachus, grandson of Cleodaeus, and great-grandson of Hyllus,
who conducted them to the land which they now possess, and not the sons
of Aristodemus. The wife of Aristodemus, whose name (they say) was Argeia,
and who was daughter of Autesion, son of Tisamenus, grandson of Thersander,
and great-grandson of Polynices, within a little while after their coming
into the country, gave birth to twins. Aristodemus just lived to see his
children, but died soon afterwards of a disease. The Lacedaemonians of
that day determined, according to custom, to take for their king the elder
of the two children; but they were so alike, and so exactly of one size,
that they could not possibly tell which of the two to choose: so when they
found themselves unable to make a choice, or haply even earlier, they went
to the mother and asked her to tell them which was the elder, whereupon
she declared that "she herself did not know the children apart";
although in good truth she knew them very well, and only feigned ignorance
in order that, if it were possible, both of them might be made kings of
Sparta. The Lacedaemonians were now in a great strait; so they sent to
Delphi and inquired of the oracle how they should deal with the matter.
The Pythoness made answer, "Let both be taken to be kings; but let
the elder have the greater honour." So the Lacedaemonians were in
as great a strait as before, and could not conceive how they were to discover
which was the first-born, till at length a certain Messenian, by name Panites,
suggested to them to watch and see which of the two the mother washed and
fed first; if they found she always gave one the preference, that fact
would tell them all they wanted to know; if, on the contrary, she herself
varied, and sometimes took the one first, sometimes the other, it would
be plain that she knew as little as they; in which case they must try some
other plan. The Lacedaemonians did according to the advice of the Messenian,
and, without letting her know why, kept a watch upon the mother; by which
means they discovered that, whenever she either washed or fed her children,
she always gave the same child the preference. So they took the boy whom
the mother honoured the most, and regarding him as the first-born, brought
him up in the palace; and the name which they gave to the elder boy was
Eurysthenes, while his brother they called Procles. When the brothers grew
up, there was always, so long as they lived, enmity between them; and the
houses sprung from their loins have continued the feud to this day.
[6.53] Thus much is related by the
Lacedaemonians, but not by any of the other Greeks; in what follows I give
the tradition of the Greeks generally. The kings of the Dorians (they say)
- counting up to Perseus, son of Danae, and so omitting the god - are rightly
given in the common Greek lists, and rightly considered to have been Greeks
themselves; for even at this early time they ranked among that people.
I say "up to Perseus," and not further, because Perseus has no
mortal father by whose name he is called, as Hercules has in Amphitryon;
whereby it appears that I have reason on my side, and am right in saying,
"up to Perseus." If we follow the line of Danad, daughter of
Acrisius, and trace her progenitors, we shall find that the chiefs of the
Dorians are really genuine Egyptians. In the genealogies here given I have
followed the common Greek accounts.
[6.54] According to the Persian story,
Perseus was an Assyrian who became a Greek; his ancestors, therefore, according
to them, were not Greeks. They do not admit that the forefathers of Acrisius
were in any way related to Perseus, but say they were Egyptians, as the
Greeks likewise testify.
[6.55] Enough however of this subject.
How it came to pass that Egyptians obtained the kingdoms of the Dorians,
and what they did to raise themselves to such a position, these are questions
concerning which, as they have been treated by others, I shall say nothing.
I proceed to speak of points on which no other writer has touched.
[6.56] The prerogatives which the
Spartans have allowed their kings are the following. In the first place,
two priesthoods, those (namely) of Lacedaemonian and of Celestial Jupiter;
also the right of making war on what country soever they please, without
hindrance from any of the other Spartans, under pain of outlawry; on service
the privilege of marching first in the advance and last in the retreat,
and of having a hundred picked men for their body guard while with the
army; likewise the liberty of sacrificing as many cattle in their expeditions
as it seems them good, and the right of having the skins and the chines
of the slaughtered animals for their own use.
[6.57] Such are their privileges in
war; in peace their rights are as follows. When a citizen makes a public
sacrifice the kings are given the first seats at the banquet; they are
served before any of the other guests, and have a double portion of everything;
they take the lead in the libations; and the hides of the sacrificed beasts
belong to them. Every month, on the first day, and again on the seventh
of the first decade, each king receives a beast without blemish at the
public cost, which he offers up to Apollo; likewise a medimnus of meal,
and of wine a Laconian quart. In the contests of the Games they have always
the seat of honour; they appoint the citizens who have to entertain foreigners;
they also nominate, each of them, two of the Pythians, officers whose business
it is to consult the oracle at Delphi, who eat with the kings, and, like
them, live at the public charge. If the kings do not come to the public
supper, each of them must have two choenixes of meal and a cotyle of wine
sent home to him at his house; if they come, they are given a double quantity
of each, and the same when any private man invites them to his table. They
have the custody of all the oracles which are pronounced; but the Pythians
must likewise have knowledge of them. They have the whole decision of certain
causes, which are these, and these only:- When a maiden is left the heiress
of her father's estate, and has not been betrothed by him to any one, they
decide who is to marry her; in all matters concerning the public highways
they judge; and if a person wants to adopt a child, he must do it before
the kings. They likewise have the right of sitting in council with the
eight-and-twenty senators; and if they are not present, then the senators
nearest of kin to them have their privileges, and give two votes as the
royal proxies, besides a third vote, which is their own.
[6.58] Such are the honours which
the Spartan people have allowed their kings during their lifetime; after
they are dead other honours await them. Horsemen carry the news of their
death through all Laconia, while in the city the women go hither and thither
drumming upon a kettle. At this signal, in every house two free persons,
a man and a woman, must put on mourning, or else be subject to a heavy
fine. The Lacedaemonians have likewise a custom at the demise of their
kings which is common to them with the barbarians of Asia - indeed with
the greater number of the barbarians everywhere - namely, that when one
of their kings dies, not only the Spartans, but a certain number of the
country people from every part of Laconia are forced, whether they will
or no, to attend the funeral. So these persons and the helots, and likewise
the Spartans themselves, flock together to the number of several thousands,
men and women intermingled; and all of them smite their foreheads violently,
and weep and wall without stint, saying always that their last king was
the best. If a king dies in battle, then they make a statue of him, and
placing it upon a couch right bravely decked, so carry it to the grave.
After the burial, by the space of ten days there is no assembly, nor do
they elect magistrates, but continue mourning the whole time.
[6.59] They hold with the Persians
also in another custom. When a king dies, and another comes to the throne,
the newly-made monarch forgives all the Spartans the debts which they owe
either to the king or to the public treasury. And in like manner among
the Persians each king when he begins to reign remits the tribute due from
the provinces.
[6.60] In one respect the Lacedaemonians
resemble the Egyptians. Their heralds and flute-players, and likewise their
cooks, take their trades by succession from their fathers. A flute-player
must be the son of a flute-player, a cook of a cook, a herald of a herald;
and other people cannot take advantage of the loudness of their voice to
come into the profession and shut out the heralds' sons; but each follows
his father's business. Such are the customs of the Lacedaemonians.
[6.61] At the time of which we are
speaking, while Cleomenes in Egina was labouring for the general good of
Greece, Demaratus at Sparta continued to bring charges against him, moved
not so much by love of the Eginetans as by jealousy and hatred of his colleague.
Cleomenes therefore was no sooner returned from Egina than he considered
with himself how he might deprive Demaratus of his kingly office; and here
the following circumstance furnished a ground for him to proceed upon.
Ariston, king of Sparta, had been married to two wives, but neither of
them had borne him any children; as however he still thought it was possible
he might have offspring, he resolved to wed a third; and this was how the
wedding was brought about. He had a certain friend, a Spartan, with whom
he was more intimate than with any other citizen. This friend was married
to a wife whose beauty far surpassed that of all the other women in Sparta;
and what was still more strange, she had once been as ugly as she now was
beautiful. For her nurse, seeing how ill-favoured she was, and how sadly
her parents, who were wealthy people, took her bad looks to heart, bethought
herself of a plan, which was to carry the child every day to the temple
of Helen at Therapna, which stands above the Phoebeum, and there to place
her before the image, and beseech the goddess to take away the child's
ugliness. One day, as she left the temple, a woman appeared to her, and
begged to know what it was she held in her arms. The nurse told her it
was a child, on which she asked to see it; but the nurse refused; the parents,
she said, had forbidden her to show the child to any one. However the woman
would not take a denial; and the nurse, seeing how highly she prized a
look, at last let her see the child. Then the woman gently stroked its
head, and said, "One day this child shall be the fairest dame in Sparta."
And her looks began to change from that very day. When she was of marriageable
age, Agetus, son of Alcides, the same whom I have mentioned above as the
friend of Ariston, made her his wife.
[6.62] Now it chanced that Ariston
fell in love with this person; and his love so preyed upon his mind that
at last he devised as follows. He went to his friend, the lady's husband,
and proposed to him that they should exchange gifts, each taking that which
pleased him best out of all the possessions of the other. His friend, who
felt no alarm about his wife, since Ariston was also married, consented
readily; and so the matter was confirmed between them by an oath. Then
Ariston gave Agetus the present, whatever it was, of which he had made
choice, and when it came to his turn to name the present which he was to
receive in exchange, required to be allowed to carry home with him Agetus's
wife. But the other demurred, and said, "except his wife, he might
have anything else": however, as he could not resist the oath which
he had sworn, or the trickery which had been practised on him, at last
he suffered Ariston to carry her away to his house.
[6.63] Ariston hereupon put away his
second wife and took for his third this woman; and she, in less than the
due time - when she had not yet reached her full term of ten months - gave
birth to a child, the Demaratus of whom we have spoken. Then one of his
servants came and told him the news, as he sat in council with the Ephors;
whereat, remembering when it was that the woman became his wife, he counted
the months upon his fingers, and having so done, cried out with an oath,
"The boy cannot be mine." This was said in the hearing of the
Ephors; but they made no account of it at the time. The boy grew up; and
Ariston repented of what he had said; for he became altogether convinced
that Demaratus was truly his son. The reason why he named him Demaratus
was the following. Some time before these events the whole Spartan people,
looking upon Ariston as a man of mark beyond all the kings that had reigned
at Sparta before him, had offered up a prayer that he might have a son.
On this account, therefore, the name Demaratus was given.
[6.64] In course of time Ariston died;
and Demaratus received the kingdom: but it was fated, as it seems, that
these words, when bruited abroad, should strip him of his sovereignty.
This was brought about by means of Cleomenes, whom he had twice sorely
vexed, once when he led the army home from Eleusis, and a second time when
Cleomenes was gone across to Egina against such as had espoused the side
of the Medes.
[6.65] Cleomenes now, being resolved
to have his revenge upon Demaratus, went to Leotychides, the son of Menares,
and grandson of Agis, who was of the same family as Demaratus, and made
agreement with him to this tenor following. Cleomenes was to lend his aid
to make Leotychides king in the room of Demaratus; and then Leotychides
was to take part with Cleomenes against the Eginetans. Now Leotychides
hated Demaratus chiefly on account of Percalus, the daughter of Chilon,
son of Demarmenus: this lady had been betrothed to Leotychides; but Demaratus
laid a plot, and robbed him of his bride, forestalling him in carrying
her off, and marrying her. Such was the origin of the enmity. At the time
of which we speak, Leotychides was prevailed upon by the earnest desire
of Cleomenes to come forward against Demaratus and make oath "that
Demaratus was not rightful king of Sparta, since he was not the true son
of Ariston." After he had thus sworn, Leotychides sued Demaratus,
and brought up against him the phrase which Ariston had let drop when,
on the coming of his servant to announce to him the birth of his son, he
counted the months, and cried out with an oath that the child was not his.
It was on this speech of Ariston's that Leotychides relied to prove that
Demaratus was not his son, and therefore not rightful king of Sparta; and
he produced as witnesses the Ephors who were sitting with Ariston at the
time and heard what he said.
[6.66] At last, as there came to be
much strife concerning this matter, the Spartans made a decree that the
Delphic oracle should be asked to say whether Demaratus were Ariston's
son or no. Cleomenes set them upon this plan; and no sooner was the decree
passed than he made a friend of Cobon, the son of Aristophantus, a man
of the greatest weight among the Delphians; and this Cobon prevailed upon
Perialla, the prophetess, to give the answer which Cleomenes wished. Accordingly,
when the sacred messengers came and put their question, the Pythoness returned
for answer "that Demaratus was not Ariston's son." Some time
afterwards all this became known; and Cobon was forced to fly from Delphi;
while Perialla the prophetess was deprived of her office.
[6.67] Such were the means whereby
the deposition of Demaratus was brought about; but his flying from Sparta
to the Medes was by reason of an affront which was put upon him. On losing
his kingdom he had been made a magistrate; and in that office soon afterwards,
when the feast of the Gymnopaediae came around, he took his station among
the lookers-on; whereupon Leotychides, who was now king in his room, sent
a servant to him and asked him, by way of insult and mockery, "how
it felt to be a magistrate after one had been a king?" Demaratus,
who was hurt at the question, made answer - "Tell him I have tried
them both, but he has not. Howbeit this speech will be the cause to Sparta
of infinite blessings or else of infinite woes." Having thus spoken
he wrapped his head in his robe, and, leaving the theatre, went home to
his own house, where he prepared an ox for sacrifice, and offered it to
Jupiter, after which he called for his mother.
[6.68] When she appeared, he took
of the entrails, and placing them in her hand, besought her in these words
following:-
"Dear mother, I beseech you, by all the gods, and chiefly by our
own hearth-god Jupiter, tell me the very truth, who was really my father.
For Leotychides, in the suit which we had together, declared that when
thou becamest Ariston's wife thou didst already bear in thy womb a child
by thy former husband, and others repeat a yet more disgraceful tale, that
our groom found favour in thine eyes, and that I am his son. I entreat
thee therefore by the gods to tell me the truth. For if thou hast gone
astray, thou hast done no more than many a woman; and the Spartans remark
it as strange, if I am Ariston's son, that he had no children by his other
wives."
[6.69] Thus spake Demaratus; and his
mother replied as follows: "Dear son, since thou entreatest so earnestly
for the truth, it shall indeed be fully told to thee. When Ariston brought
me to his house, on the third night after my coming, there appeared to
me one like to Ariston, who, after staying with me a while, rose, and taking
the garlands from his own brows placed them upon my head, and so went away.
Presently after Ariston entered, and when he saw the garlands which I still
wore, asked me who gave them to me. I said, 'twas he; but this he stoutly
denied; whereupon I solemnly swore that it was none other, and told him
he did not do well to dissemble when he had so lately risen from my side
and left the garlands with me. Then Ariston, when he heard my oath, understood
that there was something beyond nature in what had taken place. And indeed
it appeared that the garlands had come from the hero-temple which stands
by our court gates - the temple of him they call Astrabacus - and the soothsayers,
moreover, declared that the apparition was that very person. And now, my
son, I have told thee all thou wouldest fain know. Either thou art the
son of that hero - either thou mayest call Astrabacus sire; or else Ariston
was thy father. As for that matter which they who hate thee urge the most,
the words of Ariston, who, when the messenger told him of thy birth, declared
before many witnesses that 'thou wert not his son, forasmuch as the ten
months were not fully out,' it was a random speech, uttered from mere ignorance.
The truth is, children are born not only at ten months, but at nine, and
even at seven. Thou wert thyself, my son, a seven months' child. Ariston
acknowledged, no long time afterwards, that his speech sprang from thoughtlessness.
Hearken not then to other tales concerning thy birth, my son: for be assured
thou hast the whole truth. As for grooms, pray Heaven Leotychides and all
who speak as he does may suffer wrong from them!" Such was the mother's
answer.
[6.70] Demaratus, having learnt all
that he wished to know, took with him provision for the journey, and went
into Elis, pretending that he purposed to proceed to Delphi, and there
consult the oracle. The Lacedaemonians, however, suspecting that he meant
to fly his country, sent men in pursuit of him; but Demaratus hastened,
and leaving Elis before they arrived, sailed across to Zacynthus. The Lacedaemonians
followed, and sought to lay hands upon him, and to separate him from his
retinue; but the Zacynthians would not give him up to them: so he escaping,
made his way afterwards by sea to Asia, and presented himself before King
Darius, who received him generously, and gave him both lands and cities.
Such was the chance which drove Demaratus to Asia, a man distinguished
among the Lacedaemonians for many noble deeds and wise counsels, and who
alone of all the Spartan kings brought honour to his country by winning
at Olympia the prize in the four-horse chariot-race.
[6.71] After Demaratus was deposed,
Leotychides, the son of Menares, received the kingdom. He had a son, Zeuxidamus,
called Cyniscus by many of the Spartans. This Zeuxidamus did not reign
at Sparta, but died before his father, leaving a son, Archidamus. Leotychides,
when Zeuxidamus was taken from him, married a second wife, named Eurydame,
the sister of Menius and daughter of Diactorides. By her he had no male
offspring, but only a daughter called Lampito, whom he gave in marriage
to Archidamus, Zeuxidamus' son.
[6.72] Even Leotychides, however,
did not spend his old age in Sparta, but suffered a punishment whereby
Demaratus was fully avenged. He commanded the Lacedaemonians when they
made war against Thessaly, and might have conquered the whole of it, but
was bribed by a large sum of money. It chanced that he was caught in the
fact, being found sitting in his tent on a gauntlet, quite full of silver.
Upon this he was brought to trial and banished from Sparta; his house was
razed to the ground; and he himself fled to Tegea, where he ended his days.
But these events took place long afterwards.
[6.73] At the time of which we are
speaking, Cleomenes, having carried his proceedings in the matter of Demaratus
to a prosperous issue, forthwith took Leotychides with him, and crossed
over to attack the Eginetans; for his anger was hot against them on account
of the affront which they had formerly put upon him. Hereupon the Eginetans,
seeing that both the kings were come against them, thought it best to make
no further resistance. So the two kings picked out from all Egina the ten
men who for wealth and birth stood the highest, among whom were Crius,
son of Polycritus, and Casambus, son of Aristocrates, who wielded the chief
power; and these men they carried with them to Attica, and there deposited
them in the hands of the Athenians, the great enemies of the Eginetans.
[6.74] Afterwards, when it came to
be known what evil arts had been used against Demaratus, Cleomenes was
seized with fear of his own countrymen, and fled into Thessaly. From thence
he passed into Arcadia, where he began to stir up troubles, and endeavoured
to unite the Arcadians against Sparta. He bound them by various oaths to
follow him whithersoever he should lead, and was even desirous of taking
their chief leaders with him to the city of Nonacris, that he might swear
them to his cause by the waters of the Styx. For the waters of Styx, as
the Arcadians say, are in that city, and this is the appearance they present:
you see a little water, dripping from a rock into a basin, which is fenced
round by a low wall. Nonacris, where this fountain is to be seen, is a
city of Arcadia near Pheneus.
[6.75] When the Lacedaemonians heard
how Cleomenes was engaged, they were afraid, and agreed with him that he
should come back to Sparta and be king as before. So Cleomenes came back;
but had no sooner returned than he, who had never been altogether of sound
mind, was smitten with downright madness. This he showed by striking every
Spartan he met upon the face with his sceptre. On his behaving thus, and
showing that he was gone quite out of his mind, his kindred imprisoned
him, and even put his feet in the stocks. While so bound, finding himself
left alone with a single keeper, he asked the man for a knife. The keeper
at first refused, whereupon Cleomenes began to threaten him, until at last
he was afraid, being only a helot, and gave him what he required. Cleomenes
had no sooner got the steel than, beginning at his legs, he horribly disfigured
himself, cutting gashes in his flesh, along his legs, thighs, hips, and
loins, until at last he reached his belly, which he likewise began to gash,
whereupon in a little time he died. The Greeks generally think that this
fate came upon him because he induced the Pythoness to pronounce against
Demaratus; the Athenians differ from all others in saying that it was because
he cut down the sacred grove of the goddesses when he made his invasion
by Eleusis; while the Argives ascribe it to his having taken from their
refuge and cut to pieces certain argives who had fled from battle into
a precinct sacred to Argus, where Cleomenes slew them, burning likewise
at the same time, through irreverence, the grove itself.
[6.76] For once, when Cleomenes had
sent to Delphi to consult the oracle, it was prophesied to him that he
should take Argos; upon which he went out at the head of the Spartans,
and led them to the river Erasinus. This stream is reported to flow from
the Stymphalian lake, the waters of which empty themselves into a pitch-dark
chasm, and then (as they say) reappear in Argos, where the Argives call
them the Erasinus. Cleomenes, having arrived upon the banks of this river,
proceeded to offer sacrifice to it, but, in spite of all that he could
do, the victims were not favourable to his crossing. So he said that he
admired the god for refusing to betray his countrymen, but still the Argives
should not escape him for all that. He then withdrew his troops, and led
them down to Thyrea, where he sacrificed a bull to the sea, and conveyed
his men on shipboard to Nauplia in the Tirynthian territory.
[6.77] The Argives, when they heard
of this, marched down to the sea to defend their country; and arriving
in the neighbourhood of Tiryns, at the place which bears the name of Sepeia,
they pitched their camp opposite to the Lacedaemonians, leaving no great
space between the hosts. And now their fear was not so much lest they should
be worsted in open fight as lest some trick should be practised on them;
for such was the danger which the oracle given to them in common with the
Milesians seemed to intimate. The oracle ran as follows:-
Time shall be when the female shall conquer the male, and shall chase
him
Far away - gaining so great praise and honour in Argos;
Then full many an Argive woman her cheeks shall mangle
Hence, in the times to come 'twill be said by the men who are unborn,
"Tamed by the spear expired the coiled terrible serpent."
At the coincidence of all these things the Argives were greatly cast
down; and so they resolved that they would follow the signals of the enemy's
herald. Having made this resolve, they proceeded to act as follows: whenever
the herald of the Lacedaemonians gave an order to the soldiers of his own
army, the Argives did the like on their side.
[6.78] Now when Cleomenes heard that
the Argives were acting thus, he commanded his troops that, so soon as
the herald gave the word for the soldiers to go to dinner, they should
instantly seize their arms and charge the host of the enemy. Which the
Lacedaemonians did accordingly, and fell upon the Argives just as, following
the signal, they had begun their repast; whereby it came to pass that vast
numbers of the Argives were slain, while the rest, who were more than they
which died in the fight, were driven to take refuge in the grove of Argus
hard by, where they were surrounded, and watch kept upon them.
[6.79] When things were at this pass
Cleomenes acted as follows: Having learnt the names of the Argives who
were shut up in the sacred precinct from certain deserters who had come
over to him, he sent a herald to summon them one by one, on pretence of
having received their ransoms. Now the ransom of prisoners among the Peloponnesians
is fixed at two minae the man. So Cleomenes had these persons called forth
severally, to the number of fifty, or thereabouts, and massacred them.
All this while they who remained in the enclosure knew nothing of what
was happening; for the grove was so thick that the people inside were unable
to see what was taking place without. But at last one of their number climbed
up into a tree and spied the treachery; after which none of those who were
summoned would go forth.
[6.80] Then Cleomenes ordered all
the helots to bring brushwood, and heap it around the grove; which was
done accordingly; and Cleomenes set the grove on fire. As the flames spread
he asked a deserter "Who was the god of the grove?" whereto the
other made answer, "Argus." So he, when he heard that, uttered
a loud groan, and said:-
"Greatly hast thou deceived me, Apollo, god of prophecy, in saying
that I should take Argos. I fear me thy oracle has now got its accomplishment."
[6.81] Cleomenes now sent home the
greater part of his army, while with a thousand of his best troops he proceeded
to the temple of Juno, to offer sacrifice. When however he would have slain
the victim on the altar himself, the priest forbade him, as it was not
lawful (he said) for a foreigner to sacrifice in that temple. At this Cleomenes
ordered his helots to drag the priest from the altar and scourge him, while
he performed the sacrifice himself, after which he went back to Sparta.
[6.82] Thereupon his enemies brought
him up before the Ephors, and made it a charge against him that he had
allowed himself to be bribed, and on that account had not taken Argos when
he might have captured it easily. To this he answered - whether truly or
falsely I cannot say with certainty - but at any rate his answer to the
charge was that "so soon as he discovered the sacred precinct which
he had taken to belong to Argos, he directly imagined that the oracle had
received its accomplishment; he therefore thought it not good to attempt
the town, at the least until he had inquired by sacrifice, and ascertained
if the god meant to grant him the place, or was determined to oppose his
taking it. So he offered in the temple of Juno, and when the omens were
propitious, immediately there flashed forth a flame of fire from the breast
of the image; whereby he knew of a surety that he was not to take Argos.
For if the flash had come from the head, he would have gained the town,
citadel and all; but as it shone from the breast, he had done so much as
the god intended." And his words seemed to the Spartans so true and
reasonable, that he came clear off from his adversaries.
[6.83] Argos however was left so bare
of men that the slaves managed the state, filled the offices, and administered
everything until the sons of those who were slain by Cleomenes grew up.
Then these latter cast out the slaves, and got the city back under their
own rule; while the slaves who had been driven out fought a battle and
won Tiryns. After this for a time there was peace between the two; but
a certain man, a soothsayer, named Cleander, who was by race a Phigalean
from Arcadia, joined himself to the slaves, and stirred them up to make
a fresh attack upon their lords. Then were they at war with one another
by the space of many years; but at length the Argives with much trouble
gained the upper hand.
[6.84] The Argives say that Cleomenes
lost his senses, and died so miserably, on account of these doings. But
his own countrymen declare that his madness proceeded not from any supernatural
cause whatever, but only from the habit of drinking wine unmixed with water,
which he learnt of the Scyths. These nomads, from the time that Darius
made his inroad into their country, had always had a wish for revenge.
They therefore sent ambassadors to Sparta to conclude a league, proposing
to endeavour themselves to enter Media by the Phasis, while the Spartans
should march inland from Ephesus, and then the two armies should join together
in one. When the Scyths came to Sparta on this errand Cleomenes was with
them continually; and growing somewhat too familiar, learnt of them to
drink his wine without water, a practice which is thought by the Spartans
to have caused his madness. From this distance of time the Spartans, according
to their own account, have been accustomed, when they want to drink purer
wine than common, to give the order to fill "Scythian fashion."
The Spartans then speak thus concerning Cleomenes; but for my own part
I think his death was a judgment on him for wronging Demaratus.
[6.85] No sooner did the news of Cleomenes'
death reach Egina than straightway the Eginetans sent ambassadors to Sparta
to complain of the conduct of Leotychides in respect of their hostages,
who were still kept at Athens. So they of Lacedaemon assembled a court
of justice and gave sentence upon Leotychides, that whereas he had grossly
affronted the people of Egina, he should be given up to the ambassadors,
to be led away in place of the men whom the Athenians had in their keeping.
Then the ambassadors were about to lead him away; but Theasides, the son
of Leoprepes, who was a man greatly esteemed in Sparta, interfered, and
said to them:-
"What are ye minded to do, ye men of Egina? To lead away captive
the king of the Spartans, whom his countrymen have given into your hands?
Though now in their anger they have passed this sentence, yet belike the
time will come when they will punish you, if you act thus, by bringing
utter destruction upon your country."
The Eginetans, when they heard this, changed their plan, and, instead
of leading Leotychides away captive, agreed with him that he should come
with them to Athens, and give them back their men.
[6.86] When however he reached that
city, and demanded the restoration of his pledge, the Athenians, being
unwilling to comply, proceeded to make excuses, saying "that two kings
had come and left the men with them, and they did not think it right to
give them back to the one without the other." So when the Athenians
refused plainly to restore the men, Leotychides said to them:-
"Men of Athens, act which way you choose - give me up the hostages,
and be righteous, or keep them, and be the contrary. I wish, however, to
tell you what happened once in Sparta about a pledge. The story goes among
us that three generations back there lived in Lacedaemon one Glaucus, the
son of Epicydes, a man who in every other respect was on a par with the
first in the kingdom, and whose character for justice was such as to place
him above all the other Spartans. Now to this man at the appointed season
the following events happened. A certain Milesian came to Sparta and, having
desired to speak with him, said - 'I am of Miletus, and I have come hither,
Glaucus, in the hope of profiting by thy honesty. For when I heard much
talk thereof in Ionia and through all the rest of Greece, and when I observed
that whereas Ionia is always insecure, the Peloponnese stands firm and
unshaken, and noted likewise how wealth is continually changing hands in
our country, I took counsel with myself and resolved to turn one-half of
my substance into money, and place it in thy hands, since I am well assured
that it will be safe in thy keeping. Here then is the silver - take it
- and take likewise these tallies, and be careful of them; remember thou
art to give back the money to the person who shall bring you their fellows.'
Such were the words of the Milesian stranger; and Glaucus took the deposit
on the terms expressed to him. Many years had gone by when the sons of
the man by whom the money was left came to Sparta, and had an interview
with Glaucus, whereat they produced the tallies, and asked to have the
money returned to them. But Glaucus sought to refuse, and answered them:
'I have no recollection of the matter; nor can I bring to mind any of those
particulars whereof ye speak. When I remember, I will certainly do what
is just. If I had the money, you have a right to receive it back; but if
it was never given to me, I shall put the Greek law in force against you.
For the present I give you no answer; but four months hence I will settle
the business.' So the Milesians went away sorrowful, considering that their
money was utterly lost to them. As for Glaucus, he made a journey to Delphi,
and there consulted the oracle. To his question if he should swear, and
so make prize of the money, the Pythoness returned for answer these lines
following:-
Best for the present it were, O Glaucus, to do as thou wishest,
Swearing an oath to prevail, and so to make prize of the money.
Swear then - death is the lot e'en of those who never swear falsely.
Yet hath the Oath-God a son who is nameless, footless, and handless;
Mighty in strength he approaches to vengeance, and whelms in destruction,
All who belong to the race, or the house of the man who is perjured.
But oath-keeping men leave behind them a flourishing offspring.
Glaucus when he heard these words earnestly besought the god to pardon
his question; but the Pythoness replied that it was as bad to have tempted
the god as it would have been to have done the deed. Glaucus, however,
sent for the Milesian strangers, and gave them back their money. And now
I will tell you, Athenians, what my purpose has been in recounting to you
this history. Glaucus at the present time has not a single descendant;
nor is there any family known as his - root and branch has he been removed
from Sparta. It is a good thing, therefore, when a pledge has been left
with one, not even in thought to doubt about restoring it."
Thus spake Leotychides; but, as he found that the Athenians would not
hearken to him, he left them and went his way.
[6.87] The Eginetans had never been
punished for the wrongs which, to pleasure the Thebans, they had committed
upon Athens. Now, however, conceiving that they were themselves wronged,
and had a fair ground of complaint against the Athenians, they instantly
prepared to revenge themselves. As it chanced that the Athenian theoris,
which was a vessel of five banks of oars, lay at Sunium, the Eginetans
contrived an ambush, and made themselves masters of the holy vessel, on
board of which were a number of Athenians of the highest rank, whom they
took and threw into prison.
[6.88] At this outrage the Athenians
no longer delayed, but set to work to scheme their worst against the Eginetans;
and, as there was in Egina at that time a man of mark, Nicodromus by name,
the son of Cnoethus, who was on ill terms with his countrymen because on
a former occasion they had driven him into banishment, they listened to
overtures from this man, who had heard how determined they were to do the
Eginetans a mischief, and agreed with him that on a certain day he should
be ready to betray the island into their hands, and they would come with
a body of troops to his assistance. And Nicodromus, some time after, holding
to the agreement, made himself master of what is called the old town.
[6.89] The Athenians, however, did
not come to the day; for their own fleet was not of force sufficient to
engage the Eginetans, and while they were begging the Corinthians to lend
them some ships, the failure of the enterprise took place. In those days
the Corinthians were on the best of terms with the Athenians; and accordingly
they now yielded to their request, and furnished them with twenty ships;
but, as their law did not allow the ships to be given for nothing, they
sold them to the Athenians for five drachms apiece. As soon then as the
Athenians had obtained this aid, and, by manning also their own ships,
had equipped a fleet of seventy sail, they crossed over to Egina, but arrived
a day later than the time agreed upon.
[6.90] Meanwhile Nicodromus, when
he found the Athenians did not come to the time appointed, took ship and
made his escape from the island. The Eginetans who accompanied him were
settled by the Athenians at Sunium, whence they were wont to issue forth
and plunder the Eginetans of the island. But this took place at a later
date.
[6.91] When the wealthier Eginetans
had thus obtained the victory over the common people who had revolted with
Nicodromus, they laid hands on a certain number of them, and led them out
to death. But here they were guilty of a sacrilege, which, notwithstanding
all their efforts, they were never able to atone, being driven from the
island before they had appeased the goddess whom they now provoked. Seven
hundred of the common people had fallen alive into their hands; and they
were all being led out to death, when one of them escaped from his chains,
and flying to the gateway of the temple of Ceres the Lawgiver, laid hold
of the doorhandles, and clung to them. The others sought to drag him from
his refuge; but, finding themselves unable to tear him away, they cut off
his hands, and so took him, leaving the hands still tightly grasping the
handles.
[6.92] Such were the doings of the
Eginetans among themselves. When the Athenians arrived, they went out to
meet them with seventy ships; and a battle took place, wherein the Eginetans
suffered a defeat. Hereupon they had recourse again to their old allies,
the Argives; but these latter refused now to lend them any aid, being angry
because some Eginetan ships, which Cleomenes had taken by force, accompanied
him in his invasion of Argolis, and joined in the disembarkation. The same
thing had happened at the same time With certain vessels of the Sicyonians;
and the Argives had laid a fine of a thousand talents upon the misdoers,
five hundred upon each: whereupon they of Sicyon acknowledged themselves
to have sinned, and agreed with the Argives to pay them a hundred talents,
and so be quit of the debt; but the Eginetans would make no acknowledgment
at all, and showed themselves proud and stiffnecked. For this reason, when
they now prayed the Argives for aid, the state refused to send them a single
soldier. Notwithstanding, volunteers joined them from Argos to the number
of a thousand, under a captain, Eurybates, a man skilled in the pentathlic
contests. Of these men the greater part never returned, but were slain
by the Athenians in Egina. Eurybates, their captain, fought a number of
single combats, and, after killing three men in this way, was himself slain
by the fourth, who was a Decelean, named Sophanes.
[6.93] Afterwards the Eginetans fell
upon the Athenian fleet when it was in some disorder and beat it, capturing
four ships with their crews.
[6.94] Thus did war rage between the
Eginetans and Athenians. Meantime the Persian pursued his own design, from
day to day exhorted by his servant to "remember the Athenians,"
and likewise urged continually by the Pisistratidae, who were ever accusing
their countrymen. Moreover it pleased him well to have a pretext for carrying
war into Greece, that so he might reduce all those who had refused to give
him earth and water. As for Mardonius, since his expedition had succeeded
so ill, Darius took the command of the troops from him, and appointed other
generals in his stead, who were to lead the host against Eretria and Athens;
to wit, Datis, who was by descent a Mede, and Artaphernes, the son of Artaphernes,
his own nephew. These men received orders to carry Athens and Eretria away
captive, and to bring the prisoners into his presence.
[6.95] So the new commanders took
their departure from the court and went down to Cilicia, to the Aleian
plain, having with them a numerous and wellappointed land army. Encamping
here, they were joined by the sea force which had been required of the
several states, and at the same time by the horsetransports which Darius
had, the year before, commanded his tributaries to make ready. Aboard these
the horses were embarked; and the troops were received by the ships of
war; after which the whole fleet, amounting in all to six hundred triremes,
made sail for Ionia. Thence, instead of proceeding with a straight course
along the shore to the Hellespont and to Thrace, they loosed from Samos
and voyaged across the Icarian sea through the midst of the islands; mainly,
as I believe, because they feared the danger of doubling Mount Athos, where
the year before they had suffered so grievously on their passage; but a
constraining cause also was their former failure to take Naxos.
[6.96] When the Persians, therefore,
approaching from the Icarian Sea, cast anchor at Naxos, which, recollecting
what there befell them formerly, they had determined to attack before any
other state, the Naxians, instead of encountering them, took to flight,
and hurried off to the hills. The Persians however succeeded in laying
hands on some, and them they carried away captive, while at the same time
they burnt all the temples together with the town. This done, they left
Naxos, and sailed away to the other islands.
[6.97] While the Persians were thus
employed, the Delians likewise quitted Delos, and took refuge in Tenos.
And now the expedition drew near, when Datis sailed forward in advance
of the other ships; commanding them, instead of anchoring at Delos, to
rendezvous at Rhenea, over against Delos, while he himself proceeded to
discover whither the Delians had fled; after which he sent a herald to
them with this message:
"Why are ye fled, O holy men? Why have ye judged me so harshly
and so wrongfully? I have surely sense enough, even had not the king so
ordered, to spare the country which gave birth to the two gods - to spare,
I say, both the country and its inhabitants. Come back therefore to your
dwellings; and once more inhabit your island."
Such was the message which Datis sent by his herald to the Delians.
He likewise placed upon the altar three hundred talents' weight of frankincense,
and offered it.
[6.98] After this he sailed with his
whole host against Eretria, taking with him both Ionians and Aeolians.
When he was departed, Delos (as the Delians told me) was shaken by an earthquake,
the first and last shock that has been felt to this day. And truly this
was a prodigy whereby the god warned men of the evils that were coming
upon them. For in the three following generations of Darius the son of
Hystaspes, Xerxes the son of Darius, and Artaxerxes the son of Xerxes,
more woes befell Greece than in the twenty generations preceding Darius
- woes caused in part by the Persians, but in part arising from the contentions
among their own chief men respecting the supreme power. Wherefore it is
not surprising that Delos, though it had never before been shaken, should
at that time have felt the shock of an earthquake. And indeed there was
an oracle, which said of Delos -
Delos' self will I shake, which never yet has been shaken
Of the above names Darius may be rendered "Worker," Xerxes
"Warrior," and Artaxerxes "Great Warrior." And so might
we call these kings in our own language with propriety.
[6.99] The barbarians, after loosing
from Delos, proceeded to touch at the other islands, and took troops from
each, and likewise carried off a number of the children as hostages. Going
thus from one to another, they came at last to Carystus; but here the hostages
were refused by the Carystians, who said they would neither give any, nor
consent to bear arms against the cities of their neighbours, meaning Athens
and Eretria. Hereupon the Persians laid siege to Carystus, and wasted the
country round, until at length the inhabitants were brought over and agreed
to do what was required of them.
[6.100] Meanwhile the Eretrians,
understanding that the Persian armament was coming against them, besought
the Athenians for assistance. Nor did the Athenians refuse their aid, but
assigned to them as auxiliaries the four thousand landholders to whom they
had allotted the estates of the Chalcidean Hippobatae. At Eretria, however,
things were in no healthy state; for though they had called in the aid
of the Athenians, yet they were not agreed among themselves how they should
act; some of them were minded to leave the city and to take refuge in the
heights of Euboea, while others, who looked to receiving a reward from
the Persians, were making ready to betray their country. So when these
things came to the ears of Aeschines, the son of Nothon, one of the first
men in Eretria, he made known the whole state of affairs to the Athenians
who were already arrived, and besought them to return home to their own
land, and not perish with his countrymen. And the Athenians hearkened to
his counsel, and, crossing over to Oropus, in this way escaped the danger.
[6.101] The Persian fleet now drew
near and anchored at Tamynae, Choereae, and Aegilia, three places in the
territory of Eretria. Once masters of these posts, they proceeded forthwith
to disembark their horses, and made ready to attack the enemy. But the
Eretrians were not minded to sally forth and offer battle; their only care,
after it had been resolved not to quit the city, was, if possible, to defend
their walls. And now the fortress was assaulted in good earnest, and for
six days there fell on both sides vast numbers, but on the seventh day
Euphorbus, the son of Alcimachus, and Philagrus, the son of Cyneas, who
were both citizens of good repute, betrayed the place to the Persians.
These were no sooner entered within the walls than they plundered and burnt
all the temples that there were in the town, in revenge for the burning
of their own temples at Sardis; moreover, they did according to the orders
of Darius, and carried away captive all the inhabitants.
[6.102] The Persians, having thus
brought Eretria into subjection after waiting a few days, made sail for
Attica, greatly straitening the Athenians as they approached, and thinking
to deal with them as they had dealt with the people of Eretria. And, because
there was no Place in all Attica so convenient for their horse as Marathon,
and it lay moreover quite close to Eretria, therefore Hippias, the son
of Pisistratus, conducted them thither.
[6.103] When intelligence of this
reached the Athenians, they likewise marched their troops to Marathon,
and there stood on the defensive, having at their head ten generals, of
whom one was Miltiades.
Now this man's father, Cimon, the son of Stesagoras, was banished from
Athens by Pisistratus, the son of Hippocrates. In his banishment it was
his fortune to win the four-horse chariot-race at Olympia, whereby he gained
the very same honour which had before been carried off by Miltiades, his
half-brother on the mother's side. At the next Olympiad he won the prize
again with the same mares; upon which he caused Pisistratus to be proclaimed
the winner, having made an agreement with him that on yielding him this
honour he should be allowed to come back to his country. Afterwards, still
with the same mares, he won the prize a third time; whereupon he was put
to death by the sons of Pisistratus, whose father was no longer living.
They set men to lie in wait for him secretly; and these men slew him near
the government-house in the night-time. He was buried outside the city,
beyond what is called the Valley Road; and right opposite his tomb were
buried the mares which had won the three prizes. The same success had likewise
been achieved once previously, to wit, by the mares of Evagoras the Lacedaemonian,
but never except by them. At the time of Cimon's death Stesagoras, the
elder of his two sons, was in the Chersonese, where he lived with Miltiades
his uncle; the younger, who was called Miltiades after the founder of the
Chersonesite colony, was with his father in Athens.
[6.104] It was this Miltiades who
now commanded the Athenians, after escaping from the Chersonese, and twice
nearly losing his life. First he was chased as far as Imbrus by the Phoenicians,
who had a great desire to take him and carry him up to the king; and when
he had avoided this danger, and, having reached his own country, thought
himself to be altogether in safety, he found his enemies waiting for him,
and was cited by them before a court and impeached for his tyranny in the
Chersonese. But he came off victorious here likewise, and was thereupon
made general of the Athenians by the free choice of the people.
[6.105] And first, before they left
the city, the generals sent off to Sparta a herald, one Pheidippides, who
was by birth an Athenian, and by profession and practice a trained runner.
This man, according to the account which he gave to the Athenians on his
return, when he was near Mount Parthenium, above Tegea, fell in with the
god Pan, who called him by his name, and bade him ask the Athenians "wherefore
they neglected him so entirely, when he was kindly disposed towards them,
and had often helped them in times past, and would do so again in time
to come?" The Athenians, entirely believing in the truth of this report,
as soon as their affairs were once more in good order, set up a temple
to Pan under the Acropolis, and, in return for the message which I have
recorded, established in his honour yearly sacrifices and a torch-race.
[6.106] On the occasion of which
we speak when Pheidippides was sent by the Athenian generals, and, according
to his own account, saw Pan on his journey, he reached Sparta on the very
next day after quitting the city of Athens - Upon his arrival he went before
the rulers, and said to them:-
"Men of Lacedaemon, the Athenians beseech you to hasten to their
aid, and not allow that state, which is the most ancient in all Greece,
to be enslaved by the barbarians. Eretria, look you, is already carried
away captive; and Greece weakened by the loss of no mean city."
Thus did Pheidippides deliver the message committed to him. And the
Spartans wished to help the Athenians, but were unable to give them any
present succour, as they did not like to break their established law. It
was then the ninth day of the first decade; and they could not march out
of Sparta on the ninth, when the moon had not reached the full. So they
waited for the full of the moon.
[6.107] The barbarians were conducted
to Marathon by Hippias. the son of Pisistratus, who the night before had
seen a strange vision in his sleep. He dreamt of lying in his mother's
arms, and conjectured the dream to mean that he would be restored to Athens,
recover the power which he had lost, and afterwards live to a good old
age in his native country. Such was the sense in which he interpreted the
vision. He now proceeded to act as guide to the Persians; and, in the first
place, he landed the prisoners taken from Eretria upon the island that
is called Aegileia, a tract belonging to the Styreans, after which he brought
the fleet to anchor off Marathon, and marshalled the bands of the barbarians
as they disembarked. As he was thus employed it chanced that he sneezed
and at the same time coughed with more violence than was his wont. Now,
as he was a man advanced in years, and the greater number of his teeth
were loose, it so happened that one of them was driven out with the force
of the cough, and fell down into the sand. Hippias took all the pains he
could to find it; but the tooth was nowhere to be seen: whereupon he fetched
a deep sigh, and said to the bystanders:-
"After all, the land is not ours; and we shall never be able to
bring it under. All my share in it is the portion of which my tooth has
possession."
So Hippias believed that in this way his dream was fulfilled.
[6.108] The Athenians were drawn
up in order of battle in a sacred close belonging to Hercules, when they
were joined by the Plataeans, who came in full force to their aid. Some
time before, the Plataeans had put themselves under the rule of the Athenians;
and these last had already undertaken many labours on their behalf. The
occasion of the surrender was the following. The Plataeans suffered grievous
things at the hands of the men of Thebes; so, as it chanced that Cleomenes,
the son of Anaxandridas, and the Lacedaemonians were in their neighbourhood,
they first of all offered to surrender themselves to them. But the Lacedaemonians
refused to receive them, and said:-
"We dwell too far off from you, and ours would be but chill succour.
Ye might oftentimes be carried into slavery before one of us heard of it.
We counsel you rather to give yourselves up to the Athenians, who are your
next neighbours, and well able to shelter you."
This they said, not so much out of good will towards the Plataeans as
because they wished to involve the Athenians in trouble by engaging them
in wars with the Boeotians. The Plataeans, however, when the Lacedaemonians
gave them this counsel, complied at once; and when the sacrifice to the
Twelve Gods was being offered at Athens, they came and sat as suppliants
about the altar, and gave themselves up to the Athenians. The Thebans no
sooner learnt what the Plataeans had done than instantly they marched out
against them, while the Athenians sent troops to their aid. As the two
armies were about to join battle, the Corinthians, who chanced to be at
hand, would not allow them to engage; both sides consented to take them
for arbitrators, whereupon they made up the quarrel, and fixed the boundary-line
between the two states upon this condition: to wit, that if any of the
Boeotians wished no longer to belong to Boeotia, the Thebans should allow
them to follow their own inclinations. The Corinthians, when they had thus
decreed, forthwith departed to their homes: the Athenians likewise set
off on their return; but the Boeotians fell upon them during the march,
and a battle was fought wherein they were worsted by the Athenians. Hereupon
these last would not be bound by the line which the Corinthians had fixed,
but advanced beyond those limits, and made the Asopus the boundary-line
between the country of the Thebans and that of the Plataeans and Hysians.
Under such circumstances did the Plataeans give themselves up to Athens;
and now they were come to Marathon to bear the Athenians aid.
[6.109] The Athenian generals were
divided in their opinions; and some advised not to risk a battle, because
they were too few to engage such a host as that of the Medes, while others
were for fighting at once; and among these last was Miltiades. He therefore,
seeing that opinions were thus divided, and that the less worthy counsel
appeared likely to prevail, resolved to go to the Polemarch, and have a
conference with him. For the man on whom the lot fell to be Polemarch at
Athens was entitled to give his vote with the ten generals, since anciently
the Athenians allowed him an equal right of voting with them. The Polemarch
at this juncture was Callimachus of Aphidnae; to him therefore Miltiades
went, and said:-
"With thee it rests, Callimachus, either to bring Athens to slavery,
or, by securing her freedom, to leave behind thee to all future generations
a memory beyond even Harmodius and Aristogeiton. For never since the time
that the Athenians became a people were they in so great a danger as now.
If they bow their necks beneath the yoke of the Medes, the woes which they
will have to suffer when given into the power of Hippias are already determined
on; if, on the other hand, they fight and overcome, Athens may rise to
be the very first city in Greece. How it comes to pass that these things
are likely to happen, and how the determining of them in some sort rests
with thee, I will now proceed to make clear. We generals are ten in number,
and our votes are divided; half of us wish to engage, half to avoid a combat.
Now, if we do not fight, I look to see a great disturbance at Athens which
will shake men's resolutions, and then I fear they will submit themselves;
but if we fight the battle before any unsoundness show itself among our
citizens, let the gods but give us fair play, and we are well able to overcome
the enemy. On thee therefore we depend in this matter, which lies wholly
in thine own power. Thou hast only to add thy vote to my side and thy country
will be free, and not free only, but the first state in Greece. Or, if
thou preferrest to give thy vote to them who would decline the combat,
then the reverse will follow."
[6.110] Miltiades by these words
gained Callimachus; and the addition of the Polemarch's vote caused the
decision to be in favour of fighting. Hereupon all those generals who had
been desirous of hazarding a battle, when their turn came to command the
army, gave up their right to Miltiades. He however, though he accepted
their offers, nevertheless waited, and would not fight until his own day
of command arrived in due course.
[6.111] Then at length, when his
own turn was come, the Athenian battle was set in array, and this was the
order of it. Callimachus the Polemarch led the right wing; for it was at
that time a rule with the Athenians to give the right wing to the Polemarch.
After this followed the tribes, according as they were numbered, in an
unbroken line; while last of all came the Plataeans, forming the left wing.
And ever since that day it has been a custom with the Athenians, in the
sacrifices and assemblies held each fifth year at Athens, for the Athenian
herald to implore the blessing of the gods on the Plataeans conjointly
with the Athenians. Now, as they marshalled the host upon the field of
Marathon, in order that the Athenian front might he of equal length with
the Median, the ranks of the centre were diminished, and it became the
weakest part of the line, while the wings were both made strong with a
depth of many ranks.
[6.112] So when the battle was set
in array, and the victims showed themselves favourable, instantly the Athenians,
so soon as they were let go, charged the barbarians at a run. Now the distance
between the two armies was little short of eight furlongs. The Persians,
therefore, when they saw the Greeks coming on at speed, made ready to receive
them, although it seemed to them that the Athenians were bereft of their
senses, and bent upon their own destruction; for they saw a mere handful
of men coming on at a run without either horsemen or archers. Such was
the opinion of the barbarians; but the Athenians in close array fell upon
them, and fought in a manner worthy of being recorded. They were the first
of the Greeks, so far as I know, who introduced the custom of charging
the enemy at a run, and they were likewise the first who dared to look
upon the Median garb, and to face men clad in that fashion. Until this
time the very name of the Medes had been a terror to the Greeks to hear.
[6.113] The two armies fought together
on the plain of Marathon for a length of time; and in the mid battle, where
the Persians themselves and the Sacae had their place, the barbarians were
victorious, and broke and pursued the Greeks into the inner country; but
on the two wings the Athenians and the Plataeans defeated the enemy. Having
so done, they suffered the routed barbarians to fly at their ease, and
joining the two wings in one, fell upon those who had broken their own
centre, and fought and conquered them. These likewise fled, and now the
Athenians hung upon the runaways and cut them down, chasing them all the
way to the shore, on reaching which they laid hold of the ships and called
aloud for fire.
[6.114] It was in the struggle here
that Callimachus the Polemarch, after greatly distinguishing himself, lost
his life; Stesilaus too, the son of Thrasilaus, one of the generals, was
slain; and Cynaegirus, the son of Euphorion, having seized on a vessel
of the enemy's by the ornament at the stern, had his hand cut off by the
blow of an axe, and so perished; as likewise did many other Athenians of
note and name.
[6.115] Nevertheless the Athenians
secured in this way seven of the vessels; while with the remainder the
barbarians pushed off, and taking aboard their Eretrian prisoners from
the island where they had left them, doubled Cape Sunium, hoping to reach
Athens before the return of the Athenians. The Alcmaeonidae were accused
by their countrymen of suggesting this course to them; they had, it was
said, an understanding with the Persians, and made a signal to them, by
raising a shield, after they were embarked in their ships.
[6.116] The Persians accordingly
sailed round Sunium. But the Athenians with all possible speed marched
away to the defence of their city, and succeeded in reaching Athens before
the appearance of the barbarians: and as their camp at Marathon had been
pitched in a precinct of Hercules, so now they encamped in another precinct
of the same god at Cynosarges. The barbarian fleet arrived, and lay to
off Phalerum, which was at that time the haven of Athens; but after resting
awhile upon their oars, they departed and sailed away to Asia.
[6.117] There fell in this battle
of Marathon, on the side of the barbarians, about six thousand and four
hundred men; on that of the Athenians, one hundred and ninety-two. Such
was the number of the slain on the one side and the other. A strange prodigy
likewise happened at this fight. Epizelus, the son of Cuphagoras, an Athenian,
was in the thick of the fray, and behaving himself as a brave man should,
when suddenly he was stricken with blindness, without blow of sword or
dart; and this blindness continued thenceforth during the whole of his
after life. The following is the account which he himself, as I have heard,
gave of the matter: he said that a gigantic warrior, with a huge beard,
which shaded all his shield, stood over against him; but the ghostly semblance
passed him by, and slew the man at his side. Such, as I understand, was
the tale which Epizelus told.
[6.118] Datis meanwhile was on his
way back to Asia, and had reached Myconus, when he saw in his sleep a vision.
What it was is not known; but no sooner was day come than he caused strict
search to be made throughout the whole fleet, and finding on board a Phoenician
vessel an image of Apollo overlaid with gold, he inquired from whence it
had been taken, and learning to what temple it belonged, he took it with
him in his own ship to Delos, and placed it in the temple there, enjoining
the Delians, who had now come back to their island, to restore the image
to the Theban Delium, which lies on the coast over against Chalcis. Having
left these injunctions, he sailed away; but the Delians failed to restore
the statue; and it was not till twenty years afterwards that the Thebans,
warned by an oracle, themselves brought it back to Delium.
[6.119] As for the Eretrians, whom
Datis and Artaphernes had carried away captive, when the fleet reached
Asia, they were taken up to Susa. Now King Darius, before they were made
his prisoners, nourished a fierce anger against these men for having injured
him without provocation; but now that he saw them brought into his presence,
and become his subjects, he did them no other harm, but only settled them
at one of his own stations in Cissia - a place called Ardericea - two hundred
and ten furlongs distant from Susa, and forty from the well which yields
produce of three different kinds. For from this well they get bitumen,
salt, and oil, procuring it in the way that I will now describe: they draw
with a swipe, and instead of a bucket make use of the half of a wine-skin;
with this the man dips, and after drawing, pours the liquid into a reservoir,
wherefrom it passes into another, and there takes three different shapes.
The salt and the bitumen forthwith collect and harden, while the oil is
drawn off into casks. It is called by the Persians "rhadinace,"
is black, and has an unpleasant smell. Here then King Darius established
the Eretrians; and here they continued to my time, and still spoke their
old language. So thus it fared with the Eretrians.
[6.120] After the full of the moon
two thousand Lacedaemonians came to Athens. So eager had they been to arrive
in time, that they took but three days to reach Attica from Sparta. They
came, however, too late for the battle; yet, as they had a longing to behold
the Medes, they continued their march to Marathon and there viewed the
slain. Then, after giving the Athenians all praise for their achievement,
they departed and returned home.
[6.121] But it fills me with wonderment,
and I can in no wise believe the report, that the Alcmaeonidae had an understanding
with the Persians, and held them up a shield as a signal, wishing Athens
to be brought under the yoke of the barbarians and of Hippias - the Alcmaeonidae,
who have shown themselves at least as bitter haters of tyrants as was Callias,
the son of Phaenippus, and father of Hipponicus. This Callias was the only
person at Athens who, when the Pisistratidae were driven out, and their
goods were exposed for sale by the vote of the people, had the courage
to make purchases, and likewise in many other ways to display the strongest
hostility.
[6.122] He was a man very worthy
to be had in remembrance by all, on several accounts. For not only did
he thus distinguish himself beyond others in the cause of his country's
freedom; but likewise, by the honours which he gained at the Olympic Games,
where he carried off the prize in the horse-race, and was second in the
four-horse chariot-race, and by his victory at an earlier period in the
Pythian Games, he showed himself in the eyes of all the Greeks a man most
unsparing in his expenditure. He was remarkable too for his conduct in
respect of his daughters, three in number; for when they came to be of
marriageable age, he gave to each of them a most ample dowry, and placed
it at their own disposal, allowing them to choose their husbands from among
all the citizens of Athens, and giving each in marriage to the man of her
own choice.
[6.123] Now the Alcmaeonidae fell
not a whit short of this person in their hatred of tyrants, so that I am
astonished at the charge made against them, and cannot bring myself to
believe that they held up a shield; for they were men who had remained
in exile during the whole time that the tyranny lasted, and they even contrived
the trick by which the Pisistratidae were deprived of their throne. Indeed
I look upon them as the persons who in good truth gave Athens her freedom
far more than Harmodius and Aristogeiton. For these last did but exasperate
the other Pisistratidae by slaying Hipparchus, and were far from doing
anything towards putting down the tyranny: whereas the Alcmaeonidae were
manifestly the actual deliverers of Athens, if at least it be true that
the Pythoness was prevailed upon by them to bid the Lacedaemonians set
Athens free, as I have already related.
[6.124] But perhaps they were offended
with the people of Athens; and therefore betrayed their country. Nay, but
on the contrary there were none of the Athenians who were held in such
general esteem, or who were so laden with honours. So that it is not even
reasonable to suppose that a shield was held up by them on this account.
A shield was shown, no doubt; that cannot be gainsaid; but who it was that
showed it I cannot any further determine.
[6.125] Now the Alcmaeonidae were,
even in days of yore, a family of note at Athens; but from the time of
Alcmaeon, and again of Megacles, they rose to special eminence. The former
of these two personages, to wit, Alcmaeon, the son of Megacles, when Croesus
the Lydian sent men from Sardis to consult the Delphic oracle, gave aid
gladly to his messengers, assisted them to accomplish their task. Croesus,
informed of Alcmaeon's kindnesses by the Lydians who from time to time
conveyed his messages to the god, sent for him to Sardis, and when he arrived,
made him a present of as much gold as he should be able to carry at one
time about his person. Finding that this was the gift assigned him, Alcmaeon
took his measures, and prepared himself to receive it in the following
way. He clothed himself in a loose tunic, which he made to bag greatly
at the waist, and placing upon his feet the widest buskins that he could
anywhere find, followed his guides into the treasure-house. Here he fell
to upon a heap of gold-dust, and in the first place packed as much as he
could inside his buskins, between them and his legs; after which he filled
the breast of his tunic quite full of gold, and then sprinkling some among
his hair, and taking some likewise in his mouth, he came forth from the
treasure-house, scarcely able to drag his legs along, like anything rather
than a man, with his mouth crammed full, and his bulk increased every way.
On seeing him, Croesus burst into a laugh, and not only let him have all
that he had taken, but gave him presents besides of fully equal worth.
Thus this house became one of great wealth; and Alcmaeon was able to keep
horses for the chariot-race, and won the prize at Olympia.
[6.126] Afterwards, in the generation
which followed, Clisthenes, king of Sicyon, raised the family to still
greater eminence among the Greeks than even that to which it had attained
before. For this Clisthenes, who was the son of Aristonymus, the grandson
of Myron, and the great-grandson of Andreas, had a daughter, called Agarista,
whom he wished to marry to the best husband that he could find in the whole
of Greece. At the Olympic Games, therefore, having gained the prize in
the chariot race, he caused public proclamation to be made to the following
effect:- "Whoever among the Greeks deems himself worthy to become
the son-in-law of Clisthenes, let him come, sixty days hence, or, if he
will, sooner, to Sicyon; for within a year's time, counting from the end
of the sixty days, Clisthenes will decide on the man to whom he shall contract
his daughter." So all the Greeks who were proud of their own merit
or of their country flocked to Sicyon as suitors; and Clisthenes had a
foot-course and a wrestling-ground made ready, to try their powers.
[6.127] From Italy there came Smindyrides,
the son of Hippocrates, a native of Sybaris - which city about that time
was at the very height of its prosperity. He was a man who in luxuriousness
of living exceeded all other persons. Likewise there came Damasus, the
son of Amyris, surnamed the Wise, a native of Siris. These two were the
only suitors from Italy. From the Ionian Gulf appeared Amphimnestus, the
son of Epistrophus, an Epidamnian; from Aetolia, Males, the brother of
that Titormus who excelled all the Greeks in strength, and who wishing
to avoid his fellow-men, withdrew himself into the remotest parts of the
Aetolian territory. From the Peloponnese came several - Leocedes, son of
that Pheidon, king of the Argives, who established weights and measures
throughout the Peloponnese, and was the most insolent of all the Grecians
- the same who drove out the Elean directors of the Games, and himself
presided over the contests at Olympia - Leocedes, I say, appeared, this
Pheidon's son; and likewise Amiantus, son of Lycurgus, an Arcadian of the
city of Trapezus; Laphanes, an Azenian of Paeus, whose father, Euphorion,
as the story goes in Arcadia, entertained the Dioscuri at his residence,
and thenceforth kept open house for all comers; and lastly, Onomastus,
the son of Agaeus, a native of Elis. These four came from the Peloponnese.
From Athens there arrived Megacles, the son of that Alcmaeon who visited
Croesus, and Tisander's son, Hippoclides, the wealthiest and handsomest
of the Athenians. There was likewise one Euboean, Lysanias, who came from
Eretria, then a flourishing city. From Thessaly came Diactorides, a Cranonian,
of the race of the Scopadae; and Alcon arrived from the Molossians. This
was the list of the suitors.
[6.128] Now when they were all come,
and the day appointed had arrived, Clisthenes first of all inquired of
each concerning his country and his family; after which he kept them with
him a year, and made trial of their manly bearing, their temper, their
accomplishments, and their disposition, sometimes drawing them apart for
converse, sometimes bringing them all together. Such as were still youths
he took with him from time to time to the gymnasia; but the greatest trial
of all was at the banquettable. During the whole period of their stay he
lived with them as I have said; and, further, from first to last he entertained
them sumptuously. Somehow or other the suitors who came from Athens pleased
him the best of all; and of these Hippoclides, Tisander's son, was specially
in favour, partly on account of his manly bearing, and partly also because
his ancestors were of kin to the Corinthian Cypselids.
[6.129] When at length the day arrived
which had been fixed for the espousals, and Clisthenes had to speak out
and declare his choice, he first of all made a sacrifice of a hundred oxen,
and held a banquet, whereat he entertained all the suitors and the whole
people of Sicyon. After the feast was ended, the suitors vied with each
other in music and in speaking on a given subject. Presently, as the drinking
advanced, Hippoclides, who quite dumbfoundered the rest, called aloud to
the flute-player, and bade him strike up a dance; which the man did, and
Hippoclides danced to it. And he fancied that he was dancing excellently
well; but Clisthenes, who was observing him, began to misdoubt the whole
business. Then Hippoclides, after a pause, told an attendant to bring in
a table; and when it was brought, he mounted upon it and danced first of
all some Laconian figures, then some Attic ones; after which he stood on
his head upon the table, and began to toss his legs about. Clisthenes,
notwithstanding that he now loathed Hippoclides for a son-in-law, by reason
of his dancing and his shamelessness, still, as he wished to avoid an outbreak,
had restrained himself during the first and likewise during the second
dance; when, however, he saw him tossing his legs in the air, he could
no longer contain himself, but cried out, "Son of Tisander, thou hast
danced thy wife away!" "What does Hippoclides care?" was
the other's answer. And hence the proverb arose.
[6.130] Then Clisthenes commanded
silence, and spake thus before the assembled company:-
"Suitors of my daughter, well pleased am I with you all; and right
willingly, if it were possible, would I content you all, and not by making
choice of one appear to put a slight upon the rest. But as it is out of
my power, seeing that I have but one daughter, to grant to all their wishes,
I will present to each of you whom I must needs dismiss a talent of silver,
for the honour that you have done me in seeking to ally yourselves with
my house, and for your long absence from your homes. But my daughter, Agarista,
I betroth to Megacles, the son of Alcmaeon, to be his wife, according to
the usage and wont of Athens."
Then Megacles expressed his readiness; and Clisthenes had the marriage
solemnised.
[6.131] Thus ended the affair of
the suitors; and thus the Alcmaeonidae came to be famous throughout the
whole of Greece. The issue of this marriage was the Clisthenes named after
his grandfather the Sicyonian - who made the tribes at Athens, and set
up the popular government. Megacles had likewise another son, called Hippocrates,
whose children were a Megacles and an Agarista, the latter named after
Agarista the daughter of Clisthenes. She married Xanthippus, the son of
Ariphron; and when she was with child by him had a dream, wherein she fancied
that she was delivered of a lion; after which, within a few days, she bore
Xanthippus a son, to wit, Pericles.
[6.132] After the blow struck at
Marathon, Miltiades, who was previously held in high esteem by his countrymen,
increased yet more in influence. Hence, when he told them that he wanted
a fleet of seventy ships, with an armed force, and money, without informing
them what country he was going to attack, but only promising to enrich
them if they would accompany him, seeing that it was a right wealthy land,
where they might easily get as much gold as they cared to have - when he
told them this, they were quite carried away, and gave him the whole armament
which he required.
[6.133] So Miltiades, having got
the armament, sailed against Paros, with the object, as he alleged, of
punishing the Parians for having gone to war with Athens, inasmuch as a
trireme of theirs had come with the Persian fleet to Marathon. This, however,
was a mere pretence; the truth was, that Miltiades owed the Parians a grudge,
because Lysagoras, the son of Tisias, who was a Parian by birth, had told
tales against him to Hydarnes the Persian. Arrived before the place against
which his expedition was designed, he drove the Parians within their walls,
and forthwith laid siege to the city. At the same time he sent a herald
to the inhabitants, and required of them a hundred talents, threatening
that, if they refused, he would press the siege, and never give it over
till the town was taken. But the Parians, without giving his demand a thought,
proceeded to use every means that they could devise for the defence of
their city, and even invented new plans for the purpose, one of which was,
by working at night, to raise such parts of the wall as were likely to
be carried by assault to double their former height.
[6.134] Thus far all the Greeks agree
in their accounts of this business; what follows is related upon the testimony
of the Parians only. Miltiades had come to his wit's end, when one of the
prisoners, a woman named Timo, who was by birth a Parian, and had held
the office of under-priestess in the temple of the infernal goddesses,
came and conferred with him. This woman, they say, being introduced into
the presence of Miltiades, advised him, if he set great store by the capture
of the place, to do something which she could suggest to him. When therefore
she had told him what it was she meant, he betook himself to the hill which
lies in front of the city, and there leapt the fence enclosing the precinct
of Ceres Thesmophorus, since he was not able to open the door. After leaping
into the place he went straight to the sanctuary, intending to do something
within it - either to remove some of the holy things which it was not lawful
to stir, or to perform some act or other, I cannot say what - and had just
reached the door, when suddenly a feeling of horror came upon him, and
he returned back the way he had come; but in jumping down from the outer
wall, he strained his thigh, or, as some say, struck the ground with his
knee.
[6.135] So Miltiades returned home
sick, without bringing the Athenians any money, and without conquering
Paros, having done no more than to besiege the town for six-and-twenty
days, and ravage the remainder of the island. The Parians, however, when
it came to their knowledge that Timo, the under-priestess of the goddesses,
had advised Miltiades what he should do, were minded to punish her for
her crime; they therefore sent messengers to Delphi, as soon as the siege
was at an end, and asked the god if they should put the under-priestess
to death. "She had discovered," they said, "to the enemies
of her country how they might bring it into subjection, and had exhibited
to Miltiades mysteries which it was not lawful for a man to know."
But the Pythoness forbade them, and said, "Timo was not in fault;
'twas decreed that Miltiades should come to an unhappy end; and she was
sent to lure him to his destruction." Such was the answer given to
the Parians by the Pythoness.
[6.136] The Athenians, upon the return
of Miltiades from Paros, had much debate concerning him; and Xanthippus,
the son of Ariphron, who spoke more freely against him than all the rest,
impleaded him before the people, and brought him to trial for his life,
on the charge of having dealt deceitfully with the Athenians. Miltiades,
though he was present in court, did not speak in his own defence; for his
thigh had begun to mortify, and disabled him from pleading his cause. He
was forced to lie on a couch while his defence was made by his friends,
who dwelt at most length on the fight at Marathon, while they made mention
also of the capture of Lemnos, telling how Miltiades took the island, and,
after executing vengeance on the Pelasgians, gave up his conquest to Athens.
The judgment of the people was in his favour so far as to spare his life;
but for the wrong he had done them they fined him fifty talents. Soon afterwards
his thigh completely gangrened and mortified: and so Miltiades died; and
the fifty talents were paid by his son Cimon.
[6.137] Now the way in which Miltiades
had made himself master of Lemnos was the following. There were certain
Pelasgians whom the Athenians once drove out of Attica; whether they did
it - justly or unjustly I cannot say, since I only know what is reported
concerning it, which is the following: Hecataeus, the son of Hegesander,
says in his History that it was unjustly. "The Athenians," according
to him, "had given to the Pelasgi a tract of land at the foot of Hymettus
as payment for the wall with which the Pelasgians had surrounded their
citadel. This land was barren, and little worth at the time; but the Pelasgians
brought it into good condition; whereupon the Athenians begrudged them
the tract, and desired to recover it. And so, without any better excuse,
they took arms and drove out the Pelasgians." But the Athenians maintain
that they were justified in what they did. "The Pelasgians,"
they say, "while they lived at the foot of Hymettus, were wont to
sally forth from that region and commit outrages on their children. For
the Athenians used at that time to send their sons and daughters to draw
water at the fountain called 'the Nine Springs,' inasmuch as neither they
nor the other Greeks had any household slaves in those days; and the maidens,
whenever they came, were used rudely and insolently by the Pelasgians.
Nor were they even content thus; but at the last they laid a plot, and
were caught by the Athenians in the act of making an attempt upon their
city. Then did the Athenians give a proof how much better men they were
than the Pelasgians; for whereas they might justly have killed them all,
having caught them in the very act of rebelling, the; spared their lives,
and only required that they should leave the country. Hereupon the Pelasgians
quitted Attica, and settled in Lemnos and other places." Such are
the accounts respectively of Hecataeus and the Athenians.
[6.138] These same Pelasgians, after
they were settled in Lemnos, conceived the wish to be revenged on the Athenians.
So, as they were well acquainted with the Athenian festivals, they manned
some penteconters, and having laid an ambush to catch the Athenian women
as they kept the festival of Diana at Brauron, they succeeded in carrying
off a large number, whom they took to Lemnos and there kept as concubines.
After a while the women bore children, whom they taught to speak the language
of Attica and observe the manners of the Athenians. These boys refused
to have any commerce with the sons of the Pelasgian women; and if a Pelasgian
boy struck one of their number, they all made common cause, and joined
in avenging their comrade; nay, the Greek boys even set up a claim to exercise
lordship over the others, and succeeded in gaining the upper hand. When
these things came to the ears of the Pelasgians, they took counsel together,
and, on considering the matter, they grew frightened, and said one to another,
"If these boys even now are resolved to make common cause against
the sons of our lawful wives, and seek to exercise lordship over them,
what may we expect when they grow up to be men?" Then it seemed good
to the Pelasgians to kill all the sons of the Attic women; which they did
accordingly, and at the same time slew likewise their mothers. From this
deed, and that former crime of the Lemnian women, when they slew their
husbands in the days of Thoas, it has come to be usual throughout Greece
to call wicked actions by the name of "Lemnian deeds."
[6.139] When the Pelasgians had thus
slain their children and their women, the earth refused to bring forth
its fruits for them, and their wives bore fewer children, and their flocks
and herds increased more slowly than before, till at last, sore pressed
by famine and bereavement, they sent men to Delphi, and begged the god
to tell them how they might obtain deliverance from their sufferings. The
Pythoness answered that "they must give the Athenians whatever satisfaction
they might demand." Then the Pelasgians went to Athens and declared
their wish to give the Athenians satisfaction for the wrong which they
had done to them. So the Athenians had a couch prepared in their townhall,
and adorned it with the fairest coverlets, and set by its side a table
laden with all manner of good things, and then told the Pelasgians they
must deliver up their country to them in a similar condition. The Pelasgians
answered and said, "When a ship comes with a north wind from your
country to ours in a single day, then will we give it up to you."
This they said because they knew that what they required was impossible,
for Attica lies a long way to the south of Lemnos.
[6.140] No more passed at that time.
But very many years afterwards, when the Hellespontian Chersonese had been
brought under the power of Athens, Miltiades, the son of Cimon, sailed,
during the prevalence of the Etesian winds, from Elaeus in the Chersonese
to Lemnos, and called on the Pelasgians to quit their island, reminding
them of the prophecy which they had supposed it impossible to fulfil. The
people of Hephaestia obeyed the call; but they of Myrina, not acknowledging
the Chersonese to be any part of Attica, refused and were besieged and
brought over by force. Thus was Lemnos gained by the Athenians and Miltiades.
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