Of the early
history of Sparta we rely on very few legends. It is said to have been
founded by Lacedaemon, the son of Zeus and Taygete,
who married Sparta, the daughter of Eurotas.
From Homer we also know that the "koili Lacedaemon"
(hollow Lacedaemon), the territory between the mount Taygetos and Parnon, had as king Menelaos, the
younger brother of Agamemnon and husband of Helen,
which was abducted by Paris to Troy and thus starting the long
and painful famous war.
Around 1200 BC, by the marriage of the daughter of Menelaos Ermione
with the son of Agamemnon Orestes, the kingdoms of Argos and
Sparta were united. The findings from excavations testify that at this
time, unlike the later Sparta, a rich culture had developed here.
Around 1100 BC, the Dorians came and conquered the territory
(Archaeology favors a date for Dorian settling around 950 BC).
Tradition has it,
that the Heraclidae brothers, descendants of the hero Hercules, Kresphontes,
Temenos and Aristodemos tried to conquer Peloponnesos.
Aristodemos was hit by lighting and died at Naupactos, leaving behind
his twin sons Eyresthenes and Prokles. His brothers crossed the gulf and
landed at Achaia. There was a battle with the forces of the monarch of
Peloponnesos, Tisamenes, and they were victorious. When the Dorian
phalanx came in the territory of Lakonia and Messene, it was guided by Kresphontes,
who inhabited the rich plain of Pamesos. There was a constant
quarrel between the Dorian chiefs, Kresphontes and Theras, to share the
territory.
Theras, the brother of Aristodemos wife, who was guardian to
her twin children after the death of her husband, wanted to take the
rich Messene, but Kresphontes and his brother Temenos, who was
ruling Argos, played a trick on him. They arranged to throw in
the water two small tiles, with the names of Kresphontes and Theras
written on them and the one which would surface in the water, would win
Messene, the other the less rich Laconia.
Kresphontes tile was baked in the fire, while Theras was left in the sun
and when both were thrown into the water, Theras tile went to the bottom
and Kresphontes tile floated and thus he took Messene.
During Sparta's history, the habitation center in the Eurotas valley had
changed many times, but the Dorian city which was comprised from five
villages, occupied the territory of today's city of Sparta. We know only
the names of the four, Pitane, Limnai, Mesoa, Kinosoura.
The fifth was probably the conglomeration of the villages, which
Spartans conquered later, Pilane, Selacia, Aigitida,
Phari, Amikles.
Sparta in the 8th and 7th century BC was open to foreigners. She had
good relations with Samos, which helped her in the war with Messenia,
and also with Cyprus, Rhodes, Cyrene, etc. She was a highly
cultured city, with her own architects, who build the famous temple, the
brazen house of Athena. The arts were highly developed with
celebrated sculptors in wood, potters, metal workers, weavers, leather
workers, many of them foreigners. Spartan musicians, dancers and singers
were renowned. Sparta was also famous for the purple dyed clothes. From
720 BC to 576 BC, she had 46 Olympic winners out of 81 total victors.
But during the 6th century the arts progressively started to decline.
Lykurgos laws eventually strained Sparta.
Lykurgos
776 BC
Lykurgos was the son of the king Eumenos.
After the death of his father, his older brother Polydektes took
the throne. Not much later, he also died and Lykurgos became king. The
widow of his brother, an ambitious and unhesitating woman, offered him
to marry her and kill her unborn child. Lykurgos, knowing her character
and being afraid for the life of the child, pretended to accept her
offer. He said to her to bear the child and he would disappear it, as
soon as the child was born. But when the time came, he took the infant
boy at the Agora, proclaimed him king of the Spartans and gave him
the name Charilaos (Joy of the people). When the window learned
what happened, she started plotting against Lykurgos, who left Sparta in
order to avoid bloodshed.
He first went to Crete and then to Asia and Egypt and later to Libya,
Spain and India. In every country that he visited, he studied their
civilization, history and constitutions.
After many years Lykurgos returned to Greece and visited Delphi to
question the oracle, if the constitution he had prepared to apply in
Sparta was good and received approval with the answer that "he
was more God than man". He then returned home and found
his nephew Charilaos, a grown man and king of Sparta.
In order to persuade the Spartans to accept his laws, which demanded a
lot of sacrifices, he bred two small puppies, the one indoors with a
variety of foods and the other he trained it for hunting. He then
gathered the people and showed them that the untrained dog was
completely useless.
But if Lykurgos succeeded to persuade the poor people, he did little for
the rich, who tried everything to oppose him. One of them, a youth
named Alkander, in the Agora tried to hit him with his stuff and
when Lykurgos turned his head, he was hit in the eye and lost it.
Lykurgos did not prosecute him, but took him as his servant, giving him
the opportunity to discover his character. Indeed Alkander became later
a devoted disciple.
When his laws were accepted, he made Spartans swear that they would not
be changed until he returns and left again.
He never came back, making sure that his laws would not change. He
died at Delphi and according to some in Crete and it is said that before
his death, he asked his body to be burned and the remains to be
scattered in the wind. Lykurgos thus did not permit even his dead body
to return.
The Constitution
The hard fought Messenian wars would not have been won,
without the legislation of Lykurgos, which most of all targeted the
discipline and inuring to hardships of the citizens.
According to the rettra or combact, which Lykurgos brought
from Delphi, the Spartan Senate (Gerousia) was consisted from
twenty eight men, at least 60 years old, elected for life and the two
kings. A hundred years later, when the Gerousia became tyrannical, was
dismantled and they were replaced by five Ephors (overseers).
He also arranged for periodical assemblies of the Spartan people (Apella),
for people over 30 years old, in the area between the river Knakion and
the bridge Babyka, though they did not vote, nor were permitted to
discuss the issues, but only accept or reject them loudly.
Lykurgos, in order to avoid strife in the city, he managed to persuade
the people to give their land property and then he divided it in equal
shares. He also assigned equal lots of land to the Perioikoi.
In other laws, he forbade the use of money in gold and silver and in
their place issued iron money, too heavy and of very little value. Also
Spartans were not permitted to build their houses with other tools,
except the axe and the saw.
The unwritten laws of Lykurgos most of all targeted eunomia (good
application of the laws), but at the same time they had the seeds of
aggressiveness. In a period of few years after they came in use, Sparta
conquered almost all of Laconia. The important city of Amyklai,
after a long desperate siege was captured around 750 BC, but its people
were treated well.
First
Messenian War
743 - 724 BC
The causes of the Messenian wars were two incidents, as
Pausanias tells us, although there is no doubt that the real
reason was the rich and fertile plains of Messenia, that Spartans wanted
to conquer.
The first incident occurred in the borders of Laconia and Messene, where
there was a temple of Artemis Limnatis, in which both Spartans and
Messenians were celebrating. In the midst of the dance of Spartan
virgins, Messenians rushed and took the women. King Teleklos of
Sparta, who tried to hinder them, was killed. It was said later that all
the Spartan women committed suicide.
But according to the Messenian version, king Teleklos had dressed up
young men as virgins, with concealed daggers. When their plot was
discovered, Messenians after a fight killed Teleklos. Anyway the war did
not start immediately after this event.
The second incident happened with the Spartan Euphaenos and the
Messenian Polychares, a distinguished citizen and an Olympic
victor in Stadium, 764 BC. Euphaenos, who had been trusted with the care
of Polychares cows, sold them and later killed his son who came to
inquire. Polychares, who was unable to find justice in Sparta,
started to kill every Lacedaemonian who passed the borders.
After these incidents, Spartans demanded from Messenians to deliver
Polychares, but in vain and so the war started.
Alcamenes, the son of the king Teleklos of Sparta, in a dark
night surprised the Messenians and entered the city of Ampheia,
killing everybody. From Ampheia, the Spartans were making constants
raids, but they did not succeed to conquer any other cities.
The king of Messenia, Euphaes, fought them with vigor, but for
four years no progress had been made, by either side. During the fifth
year, a big battle took place, which ended indecisive, but after this
the Messenians retired to the fortified mountain of Ithome. In
the meantime an epidemic fell in Messene, killing many people and
Messenians in their distress sent a citizen named Tese at Delphi,
to ask about the outcome of the war. The oracle told them to sacrifice a
maiden chosen by lot, from the house of Apetidae. The lot fell to
the daughter of Lyciskos, who refused to obey and went to Sparta. A
leading citizen then named Aristodemos, offered his own daughter,
but the youth who was in love with her, declared that she was carrying
his child. Aristodemos killed his daughter, opened her body and showed
to everyone that this was a lie. After the sacrifice Messenians
took courage and attacked the disheartened by the event Spartans, who
for six years postponed any invasion.
During the thirteen year of the war, the Spartan king Theopompos
marched against Ithome and another battle took place, but again without
a victor. When king Euphaes was killed in action, Aristodemos took his
place.
Five years later another battle took place, in which Corinth took the
side of Spartans and Arcadians and Sikyonians the side of Messenians.
King Aristodemos won a decisive victory over the Lacedaemonians, who
were driven back in their territories. Later things turned against
Messenians. Aristodemos after a dream, in which his daughter appeared
showing to him her wounds, slew himself at her tomb. Shortly afterwards
and during the twentieth year of the war, Messenians abandoned Ithome,
which was raised to the ground by the Spartans. The defeated Messenians
were punished severely and took an oath, that they would never revolt
and they would deliver to Sparta every year half of their agricultural
products. Many families fled to Arcadia and the priestly to Eleusis.
Those who stayed in the country became helots. This was the end of the
first Messenian war.
Not long after the annexation of Messenia (708 BC), Sparta founded a
colony at Tarentum in South Italy and it seems that the motive was
political. A group called themselves Partheniai (children of
unmarried mothers), who were not recognized as citizens, attempted
revolution and Sparta deemed necessary that the best solution was to
send them away.
Second
Messenian War
685 - 668 BC
Some years later Messenians revolted and their leader Aristomenes
in a daring move entered Sparta at night and offered a shield in the
temple of Athena. Spartans after this event went to the oracle of
Delphi, which gave them the answer "to take an Athenian adviser".
Spartans asked from the Athenians a general and they sent them Tyrtaeos,
who was poet and lame from the one leg. Tyrtaeos with his poems
encouraged Spartans and helped them to win the war.
During the war the leader of Messenians, Aristomenes, was made a
great hero and many stories talk about him.
According to the legend three times Aristomenes sacrificed to Zeus
Ithomatis, the so-called Hecatophonia, reserved only to the
warrior who had killed with his own hands one hundred enemies. Three
times he was captured by the Spartans but he managed to escape. His last
capture occurred in a battle between him and many Spartans, in
which he was wounded all over his body, but he was still fighting, until
a stone found him on the head and fell. He was captured along with fifty
others and for punishment were thrown into the deep pit Kaeadas,
of the mount Taygetos. All the others were killed, but
Aristomenes fell upon the wings of an eagle and survived. When he
realized, that there was no way to get out from this abyss, he laid down
and covered himself with his cloak, waiting to die. Three days later,
during the night he heard a soft sound and in the darkness show a fox
eating the corpses. He managed to catch the fox from the tail and he was
guided by her to a small hole, which he opened further and passed
through.
Immediately he went to the city of Eira, which was besieged by
Spartans. Passing from their camp, he killed many of them in their sleep
and plundered the tents of the generals.
Some time later, in a stormy night and with the help of an informer, the
Spartans entered Eira. There was a hard battle, Messenians fought
desperately, the women too, throwing tiles to Spartan soldiers, but at
the end they were defeated.
Aristomenes with many others managed to brake the Spartan lines
and took the women and children in Arcadia. Immediately he chose five
hundred men from Messenian volunteers and with the help of three hundred
Arcadians decided to take Sparta by surprise, now that most of its army
was away. They were ready to move, when they discovered that the king of
Arcadia, Aristocrates, had sent a messenger to the Ephors,
informing them about their plan. The treacherous king was killed in the
square of the city by the Arcadian people with stones and his corpse was
thrown out of Arcadia.
The Messenians moved then to Kyllene and from there to lower Italy,
where they founded the new city of Messene. Aristomenes did not follow
them and went to his brother in Rhodes, where he died from bitterness.
The Messenians who did not leave, became Helots and thus ended
the second Messenian war.
Argos
The war of six hundred
Around 720 BC the Spartan army under the king Nikadros
with the help of township Asine, ravaged Argolis. Argives did not
forget this and not much later took revenge destroying totally Asine.
In their turn the Spartans annexed Kynouria, which formed part of the
dominion of Argos.
In 547 BC, the Argives attempted to recover the territory, but instead
of a full combat they agreed with the Lacedaemonians, to decide the
outcome of the war and the annexation of Kynouria, with three hundred
men each. The conflict of the six hundred chosen soldiers was so fierce,
that only two Argives survived and one wounded Spartan. The
two Argive hoplites, Alcenor and Chromios, left to give
the news of their victory, but the Spartan Othryades managed to
spoil the dead bodies of the enemy and then killed himself, being
ashamed to return to Sparta. Both sides claimed the victory and a full
battle took place not much later, in which the Argives were defeated.
Wars with Tegea
Spartans attempted various expeditions against Arcadia
and after a long struggle managed to occupy the southern part of her.
But they were totally unsuccessful in the wars, with the city of Tegea.
They were loosing battle after battle and in the reign of the Spartan
kings Leon and Agesikles (580 BC), they carried pompously
chains in order to enslave the Tegeans. They met though with disaster,
loosing totally the battle and their soldiers were putted in the very
chains, they had brought.
Spartans in their distress asked the help of the Delphi oracle, which
advised them to obtain the bones of Orestes (son of Agamemnon).
The oracle even directed them to find the remains of the hero at Tegea
and Spartans with a skillful stratagem succeeded to carry the holy
remains home. When that happened the tide of the war turned. The proud
Tegeans lost every battle and finally acknowledged the supremacy of
Sparta, but they were never reduced to subjection and continued to be
masters of their city, becoming only dependant allies.
Kleomenes I
Kleomenes came to the throne of Sparta around 520 BC. In
a rivalry between Kleisthenes of Athens and Isagoras,
he was called by Isagoras to help. Indeed Kleomenes forced
Kleisthenes and his family to leave the country, but when he expelled
five hundred more families and tried to revive the constitution, the
Athenians revolted and besieged Kleomenes in the Acropolis, who
immediately surrendered and left from Attica. He then assembled an army
from Sparta and with allies marched toward Athens, without telling
them that he wanted to install Isagoras as tyrant in Athens. But when
the army came to Attica, the Corinthians learned the purpose of the
expedition and abandoned the enterprise. The second king of Sparta, king
Demaratos, who had joined the expedition refused also to go
further and returned home and thus the expedition collapsed.
This gave the opportunity to Athens to attack the Thebans and
Chalkidaeans, who were ravaging Attica and defeated them both.
In Sparta, after the kings quarrel, a new law was passed that in the
future only one king would command an expedition. They also summoned the
League and proposed to restore Hippias in Athens, who had been a
friend of Sparta and had come from Asia for the meeting. Again
Corinthians and other allies rejected the plan.
Around 505 BC, a war between Sparta and Argos took place, but the
reasons are unknown.
In 499 BC, the Ionian leader Aristagoras came to Sparta to ask
help in their revolt against Persia. Kleomenes refused and ordered him
out of the city.
Kleomenes advanced into Argolis, but he failed to take Argos. He then
asked ships from Sikyon and Aigina which unwillingly gave them and
landed near Tyrinth. There he found, at a place called Sepea,
which was between Argos and the sea, the Argive army. By gross
carelessness of the Argives, he surprised them and defeated them. The
Argives then tried to find refuge in the sacred grove of the Hero Argos.
Kleomenes surrounded them and in a unthinkable for the Greek customs
action, he set fire to the grove. Six thousand Argives lost their lives
at that day, almost two thirds of the whole army (494 BC).
Kleomenes instigated Leotychides, the next heir in the Prokleid line of
kings, to question the legitimacy of king Demaratos. To resolve the
problem the Spartans went to the Delphi oracle, which declared Demaratos
as an illegitimate king.
When later was known, that Kleomenes had bribed the oracle, they ordered
him home, but he fled first to Thessaly and later to Arkadia, where he
worked for a Pan-Arkadian alliance.
The Spartans called him again with promises, but when he arrived, he was
attacked by the people, who following their old habit, they were hitting
him in his head. The Ephors pronounced him insane. He committed suicide,
having mutilated himself with a knife (488 BC).
The Persian Wars
After the suppression of the Ionic revolt, king Darius
started preparing an army to attack Greece.
The Persian expedition that followed under Mardonius ended in
disaster, loosing his fleet in a terrible storm in the promontory of
mount Athos. Darius was not disheartened and having in his court the
tyrant Hippias, keeping alive his resentment against Athens, he started
preparing a second expedition and on a larger scale. He first sent
heralds to ask earth and water from the various Greek cities. The
Athenians threw them in the barathron pit and the Spartans in a well, to
find there their "earth and water".
For the first time the Greek cities, in the face of the imminent danger
were all united, recognizing Sparta as the leader of Greece. Sparta
refused to send an army to help Athens in Marathon and only arrived
after the battle to find in their amazement that the Athenians had won a
complete victory (490 BC). Greece was fortunate that the next invasion
was led by the son of Darius, Xerxes, a much inferior man than
his father.
Battle of
Thermopylae
480 BC
On the arrival of Xerxes at Thermopylae,
he found that the place was defended by a body of three hundred Spartans
and about seven thousand hoplites from other states, commanded by the
Spartan king Leonidas.
Xerxes learning about the small number of Greek forces and that several
Spartans outside the walls were exercising and combing their hairs, in
his perplexity, immediately called Demaratos to explain him the meaning
of all these. Demaratos told him that the Spartans will defend the place
to the death and it was custom to wash and dress their hairs with
special care when they intended to put their lives in great danger.
Xerxes who did not believe Demaratos, delayed his attack for four days,
thinking that the Greeks as soon as they would realize his great forces
will disperse.
He sent also heralds asking to deliver up their arms. The answer from
Leonidas was "come and take them" (Μολών
λαβέ).
A Spartan, who was told about the great number of Persian soldiers, who
with their arrows will conceal the sun, he answered: "so
much the better, we will fight in the shade".
At the fifth day Xerxes attacked but without any results and with heavy
losses, though the Medes fought bravely. He then ordered his personal
guard the "Immortals", a body of ten thousand
consisting from the best Persian soldiers, to advance. They also failed
and Xerxes was observed to jump from his throne three times in anger and
agony. The following day they attacked, but again made no progress.
Xerxes was desperate but his luck changed when a Malian named Ephialtes
told him about a secret path across the mountain. Immediately a strong
Persian force was sent, guided by the traitor. At day's break they
reached the summit, where the Phokian army was stationed and who upon
seeing the Persians fled.
When Leonidas learned all these incidents, he ordered the council of war
to be summoned. Many were of the opinion that they should retire and
find a better defendable place, but Leonidas, who was bound by the laws
of Sparta and from an oracle, which had declared that either Sparta or a
Spartan king must perish, refused. Three hundred Spartans and seven
hundred Thespians took the decision to stay and fight. The rest were
permitted to leave, with the exception of four hundred Boeotians, which
were retained as hostages.
Leonidas did not wait the Persian attack, which was being delayed by
Xerxes and advanced in the path, he fell upon the Persians. Thousands of
them were slain, the rest were driven near the sea, but when the Spartan
spears broke, they started having losses and one of the first that fell
was king Leonidas. Around his body one of the fiercest battles took
place. Four times the Persians attacked to obtain it and four times they
were repulsed. At the end, the Spartans exhausted and wounded, carrying
the body of Leonidas, retired behind the wall, but they were surrounded
by the enemy, who killed them with arrows.
On the spot, a marble lion was set by the Greeks in honor of Leonidas
and his men, together with two other monuments near by. On one of them,
the memorable words were written:
"Ω
ξείν αγγέλλειν Λακεδαιμονίοις, ότι
τήδε κείμεθα,
τοις
κείνων ρήμασι πειθόμενοι".
"Oh
stranger tell the Lacedaemonians, that we lie here,
obedient to their laws".
Battle of Plataea
479 BC
The reluctance, which Sparta showed after the battle of
Thermopylae until a little before the battle of Plataea, did not help
the Greek cause. But when finally she took the decision to engage
seriously herself in the war, it did it in a great manner.
Five thousand citizens, each one attended by seven Helots, together with
five thousand Lacedaemonian Perioikoi (each one attended by one light
armed Helot) marched toward the Isthmos. This was a very large army and
never in the past Sparta had sent such a big force in the field. At
Isthmos, she was joined with the Peloponnesian allies and marched
towards Megara. The army was joined there by three thousand Megarians
and finally at Plataea with eight thousand Athenian hoplites. The city
of Plataea also contributed six hundred hoplites, who came from Salamis,
under the command of Aristeides. The number of Greek army were now
thirty eight thousand hoplites, who with light armed troops and the
Helots reached one hundred and ten thousand men. This number includes
the eighteen hundred badly armed Thespians. There was no cavalry and the
bow men were very few.
When Mardonius learned the approach of Lacedaemonians, he left
Attica and by way of Dekeleia crossed the mount Parnes and entered
Boeotia. Marching two days along the Asopos river, he encamped near the
town of Plataea.
The Greeks after consulting the Gods with sacrifices at Eleusis marched
over the ridge of Kithairon mountain and descending from the northern
side they saw the encamped Persian army in the valley of Asopos. King Pausanias
who was waiting good omens from sacrifices held his troops from the
attacks of the Persian cavalry, near Erythrae, where the ground is
ragged and uneven, but even this did not prevent the commander Masistios
to attack the Greeks. When the Megarians were in great danger suffering
many losses, three hundred Athenian hoplites succeeded in repulsing the
Persians, killing the tall and brave Masistios. His body was paraded in
triumph, in a cart. This event encouraged Pausanias, who positioned the
army on the plain, in a line at the right bank of Asopos.
When Mardonius learned the change in the position of the Greeks he
ordered his army to be placed opposite to them on the other side of
Asopos. Himself took the post in the left wing, facing the
Lacedaemonians. The rest of his army consisting from Medized Greeks,
fifty thousand strong, were opposite to Athenians. The center of
Mardonius composed from Bactrians Sacae and Indians. The whole army was
numbering three hundred thousand men.
For eight days the attack was delayed from both sides by unfavorable
sacrifices. On the eight day Mardonius by the advice of the Theban
leader Timagenidas cut off the supplies of the Greeks and captured a big
supply in one of the passes of Kithaeron. Artabazos too, advised him to
continue this line of harassing and wearing but Mardonius was impatient
and ordered his cavalry to attack, which obtained possession of the
fountain of Gargapheia.
Pausanias summoned the council of war and took the decision to retreat,
to a place called the Island, which was two kilometers further and
halfway between it and the town of Plataea. When Pausanias at
night gave the order of retreat, some Spartans refused to move. Threats
did nothing to persuade the Spartan captain Amomferatus, who took a huge
rock and threw it at the feet of Pausanias, with the words: "with
this pebble I give my vote not to fly".
Pausanias who had no time to loose since daybreak was near, he left
Amompheratus and his lochos behind and hurried to the island. Mardonius
ordered attack when he learned that the Greeks had retreated. His army
passing the waters of Asopos started to throw arrows to the Greeks, who
did not engage, even in this moment, in battle until they received a
good omen from the sacrifices. Mardonius at the head of his one thousand
bodyguards was in the front line fighting bravely, until he was struck
down by the Spartan Aimnestos. When Mardonius fell the Persian army fled
to their fortified camp. But this did not save them, the Greeks managed
to enter and a great massacre took place. Only three thousand Persians
who escaped, from the three hundred thousand, survived. The Greeks lost
only one thousand and three hundred men.
In 464 BC, during the night, a powerful earthquake shook Sparta and the
rest of Lacedaemon. The earth opened and the summits of mount Taygetos
were torn. All the houses of Sparta fell down except five. This
catastrophe continued for five days. At least twenty thousand
Lacedaemonians lost their lives.
The Peloponnesian
war I
431 - 421 BC
The unavoidable clash between Sparta and Athens came
with an incident at the friendly to Athens city of Plataea. Archidamos
invaded Attica in the spring of 431 BC without opposition, since Athens
had taken the decision not to engage to a land battle with Sparta and
thus started the Peloponnesian war who lasted for 28 years.
On the side of Lacedaemonians were all the Peloponnesian states with the
exception of Argos and Achaea which entered the war joining Sparta
later. They were also the Boeotians, Megarians, Lokrians, Phokaeans,
Leukadians, Ambrakiotes and Anaktorians. The coast states supplied
ships, the Boeotians, Locrians and Phokians with cavarly.
On the side of Athens were the Plataeans, Chians, Lesbians, Messenians,
Corkyraeans, Zakynthians, Akarnanians as well as the towns of the coast
of Asia and Thrace and all the isles of Aegean, except Melos and Thera.
The Athenian troops were 29,000 hoplites, 1200 horsemen and 1600 archers
and her navy was 300 triremes without counting those of her allies. The
Chians, Corkyraeans and Lesbians supplied shipping.
Archidamos forces which entered Attica consisted from about 60,000 to
100,000 men and at the beginning he tried unsuccessful attacks upon the
fortress of Oenoe. He then marched towards Eleusis where he arrived at
the middle of June 431 BC. After ravaging the Thracian plain he
encamped at Acharnae, seven miles from Athens. In the meantime the
Athenians had collected the population within the walls and had sent all
animals in Euboea. Archidamos evacuated Attica at the end of July and
his army was dismantled immediately. Upon his departure the Athenians at
the end of September, attacked Megara which they ravaged totally.
At the spring of 430 BC, Archidamos again invaded Attica, but in the
meantime the plague had broken out in Athens. The Lacedaemonians
with greater force ravaged all the neighborhood of Athens marching
as far as the mines of Laurium. In their turn Athenians with 100
triremes under the command of Knemos devastated the island of Zakynthos.
At the third year of the war (429 BC) Archidamos marched towards the
city of Plataea and demanded to hand him over the city and their land
properties, promising that after the war everything would be restored to
them. The majority of Plataeans were in favor of the proposal, but
Athenians exhorted them to hold out promising them assistance. After
their refusal, Archidamos surrounded the small city of Plataea and the
famous siege of Plataea started. For three months Spartans tried
everything to conquer the city but without success. They then decided to
blockade and starve the population. For this they surrounded Plataea
with a double wall, but even this had no success. After two years when
provisions started to run short, 212 men escaped in a stormy December
night. The rest of the population surrendered in 427 BC. They were put
in trial before five Spartan judges and executed.
The town of Plataea was transferred to Thebes, who after a few months
destroyed all the private houses to the ground.
In the fourth and fifth year of the war Spartans again invaded
Attica. In the sixth year of the war (426 BC) the Spartans did not
invade Attica. A series of severe earthquakes and floods occurred in
various parts of Greece. At Athens the plaque reappeared.
During the seventh year of the war the Lacedaemonian army under the
command of Agis invaded Attica, but only for the sort time of fifteen
days. Agis was recalled and marched towards Pylos, because the Athenians
had established a military post at Pylos in Messenia. The
Peloponnesian fleet that was in Corkyra under the command of
Thrasymelidas, was also ordered to sail to Pylos. Thrasymelidas on
arriving at Pylos with his fleet, he occupied the small but densely
wooded island of Sfacteria with four hundred and twenty hoplites and
their helots. Part of these men, two hundred and ninety-two, among them
many belonging to chief families, were later captured by the Athenian
Kleon and brought to Athens in chains, the rest had been killed after a
severe conflict on the islet. The event surprised the Hellenic world who
knew that Spartans never surrendered. Sparta was now in a bad position.
The Messenians from Pylos together with the runaway helots were able to
plunder the country, also Sparta could not invade Attica, knowing that
the captured men would put immediately to death.
The eighth year of the war (424 BC) was disastrous for Athens. They
defeated at the battle of Delium, by the Thebans. They also lost Thrace.
After all these Athenians seriously considered the proposals for peace
by Sparta.
At the same year one of the biggest crimes, committed in ancient Greece,
occurred. Sparta pretending to give liberty to the most worthy Helots,
who had fought bravely, selected two thousand of the best men and after
honoring them and crowning them with garlands at a ceremony, slain them
by secret orders from the Ephors. The reason being, that Sparta felt
threatened from their increased power.
In the ninth year of the war (423 BC) a truce was signed for a year, on
which a permanent peace would be prepared. But the negotiations were
interrupted two days after the signing of the truce, when Athenians
learned that Scione had revolted and was under the command of Brasidas.
In August, an Athenian force by the command of Kleon was sent to Scione.
At the battle that followed, both Kleon and Brasidas were killed and
thus the obstacles for permanent peace seized to exist.
The Spartan king Pleistoanax and general Nikias of Athens, in the spring
of 421 BC, signed a peace treaty for fifty years, the so-called peace
of Nikias. The Spartan prisoners were returned and Athens was
allowed to keep the cities of Anactorium, Sollium and Nisae. Not
everybody was satisfied by the peace and the allies of Sparta, Corinth,
Thebes, Megara and Eleans refused to ratify it.
During the peace between Sparta and Athens matters were far from being
satisfactory. Her allies, Boeotians and Corinthians never accepted the
peace and Athens refused to evacuate Pylos. Alkibiades of Athens
persuaded both Achaea and Patrae to ally with Athens and helped Argos in
the attack upon Epidauros, which they ravaged. Spartans could not accept
all these and assembling a large army in which her allies were
participating, invaded Argos and surrounded the Argive army. A battle
was ready to start when two Argive oligarch leaders came to king Agis of
Sparta and persuaded him to sign a truce for four months. A little later
Alkibiades leading a force of one thousand hoplites and four hundred
cavalry came to assist Argives and persuaded them to attack the city of
Orchomenos in Arcadia. After they conquered Orchomenos they marched
against Tegea. In the meantime king Agis, who had being blamed for the
truce with the Argives, marched with a large force in the territory of
Mantinea and positioned himself near the temple of Hercules. The Argives
and their allies left the city of Mantinea and in a well chosen
ground offered battle. King Agis was ready to attack them at this
advantageous for the Argives ground, but when the Spartans came close,
an old Spartan warrior told him, that with his act was trying "to
heal one mischief by another". These words made him to withdraw
his men. After this, the Argives took position in the plain and
tried to attack them by surprise. The right section of the Argive army,
which was consisted from the flower of aristocracy, a permanent body of
one thousand chosen soldiers drilled and maintained by the city of
Argos, were successful to route the Lacedaemonians, but Agis with the
rest of his army which was more successful, he managed to win the battle
(June 418 BC). Athenians lost two hundred hoplites included the generals
Laches and Nikostratos, the Argives and their allies lost another nine
hundred men. From the Lacedaemonian army only three hundred men lost.
Even after all these, the peace of Nikias typically was still in
existence.
The Peloponnesian
war II
415 - 404 BC
In 415 BC, in the expedition of Athenians in Syracuse,
the Spartan general Gylippos with four ships came to the assistance of
Syracuse. Though his force was small, he helped greatly Syracuse to win
the war. He firstly captured the Athenian fort at Labdalum, that made
him master of Epipolae and build fortifications. He then constructed a
counter wall to intersect the Athenian lines at the north side. A little
later he was reinforced by the arrival of thirty triremes. This small
participation of Sparta in the war was of the outmost importance.
After the Athenian disaster in Syracuse, the war between Athens and
Sparta became maritime. Lacedaemonians gave a better
attention on their naval power. A new office, that of Navarchia, was
risen. The Navarchos (Admiral) was even superior to the Ephors.
In the beginning though Sparta had not much success.
In August of 411 BC, the Peloponnesian fleet commanded by Mindaros lost
the naval battle at Kynossema. The Athenian fleet though smaller in
force, in the straits of Sestos and Abydos, gained a complete victory.
In 410 BC, Alkibiades managed to capture the whole Peloponnesian fleet
at Kyzicos. Mindaros was killed and the second in command Spartan sent a
letter to the Ephors in Laconic form: "Ships gone;
Mindaros dead; men starving; no idea what to do."
Spartans were so discouraged, that they sent the Ephor Endius to
Athens for a peace agreement but the Athenians, who were influenced by
the demagogue Kleophon, rejected the offer.
Spartans now appointed a new navarchos, the able man Lysander. When his
turn of command expired, he was succeeded by Kallicratidas, who
increased the number of ships of the Spartan fleet. There was a
naval battle at the harbor of Mytelene with the Athenian fleet under
Konon. The Athenians, who were outnumbered, lost the battle and thirty
ships. Another forty ships were saved by bringing them ashore, near the
walls of the town.
Kallicratidas then blockade the island. When the news arrived at Athens
they sent a fleet of one hundred and ten triremes and they were
reinforced with another forty later. The number of ships of
Kallicratidas were one hundred and twenty. At the small island of Arginusae,
the Athenian fleet met the Spartan and after a hard struggle defeated
them (406 BC). The Lacedaemonians lost seventy seven ships and the rest
were retreated at Chios and Phocaea. Kallicratidas was thrown overboard,
when his ship was hit by another and perished. The Athenians lost only
twenty five ships.
Though it was illegal for an admiral to have a second term, Lysander,
with the title of Epistoleus (bearer of letters), took the
command of the Spartan fleet. He immediately obtained large sums of
money from Kyros, king of Persia, to rebuild the fleet and made siege on
Lampsacus.
The Athenians, who came to help, arrived too late to save the city and
took post at Aegospotamoi (Goat's river) close to the city of Lampsacus.
Lysander who systematically avoided a naval battle, since his ships were
outnumbered, he managed to capture the enemy fleet after treachery or
negligence of the Athenians. All 4000 Athenian prisoners were put to
death. This event substantially marked the end of Athens.
Expedition
in Asia
After the fall of Athens, Sparta became the undisputed
leader of Greece for 34 years. Her first move was to punish the
Eleans, who along with Argos and Mantinea had taken the arms against
them, during the war with Athens and also for the insults they had
received when they excluded them from the games of Olympia. They
demanded from Eleans to pay for the expenses of the war and resign their
authority over the dependent townships in Trifylia. Eleans of course did
not accept these demands and in 402 BC king Agis entered in their
territory but unfavorable omens and an earthquake forced the Spartans to
return home.
In the following year they invaded Elean again. After ravaging and
plundering the territory, they forced them to a humiliating peace.
At 400 BC, king Agis died and he was succeeded by Agesilaos, who
led an army into Asia.
It was the first time, that a Greek army had entered Asia, from the
times of Agamemnon.
In 396 BC, he arrived and took command of the city of Ephesos.
When the satrap Tissaphernes ordered him to quit Asia, Agesilaos
fooled him and instead of attacking Caria, as was expected, he moved
towards Phrygia, the satrapy of Arnavazos and reached Daskylium,
where he was repulsed by the Persian cavalry. He then returned to
Ephesos, where he prepared a cavalry.
Shortly later he again fooled Tissaphernes, making known that he would
march toward Sardis. Tissaphernes who thought that this was
another trick, dispersed his cavalry elsewhere and Agesilaos unopposed,
he arrived at the river Pactolos, where a battle took place and
the Persians were defeated.
In the meantime, Tissaphernes was assassinated and Tithrastes took his
place, who persuaded Agesilaos to quit his satrapy for the sum of thirty
talents. Agesilaos then moved to the satrapy of Artavazos now, whose
magnanimity he appreciated and left his territory also and entered the
plains of Thebes, close to the gulf of Eleus.
In 394 BC, during his preparations for a big expedition in the interior
of Asia Minor, he was recalled home, because Sparta felt threatened.
Agesilaos during his expedition in Asia had been appointed Navarchos
(admiral). He was the first man in Sparta to acquire so much power. He
immediately started to prepare a new fleet of 120 triremes and put to
the command his brother in law Pisander. In the beginning of August of
the same year, half of Sparta's fleet was captured or destroyed by the
Athenian fleet under Konon, in the peninsula of Knidos in Caria.
Pisander who fought gallantry perished in the battle.
About the same time with the naval battle at Knidos there was another
battle of Sparta against the joining forces of Thebes, Athens, Corinth
and Argos fought in the territory of Corinth which Sparta won (battle of
Corinth 394 BC).
Battle of
Koronea
In August of 394 BC, king Agesilaos returned from the
expedition in Asia and brought his army in the valley Koronea of
Boeotia. From the other side Thebans, Athenians and their allies were
ready for battle.
The two armies came silently close to each other. When they reached a
distance of two hundred meters, the Thebans raised their usual paeans
and started to run towards the Spartan army, who moved only when the
Thebans came about one hundred meters close. Thebans quickly overpowered
the opposite of them soldiers of Orchomenos, in the left wing, but
Agesilaos, who had also success on the other side cut the Thebans from
the rest of the army. Now Thebans were forced to attack the Spartans, in
order to join with their allies. It was such the force of the impact of
the two armies, that the spears broke. Pushing with shields each other,
they only could use their daggers. Both armies fought desperately but
Thebans made their way through braking the Spartan lines. King
Agesilaos, though many times wounded was at the front ranks and fought
with valor. The outcome of the battle though indecisive ended with
victory of Sparta.
A few years later, the disgraceful peace of Antalkidas (387
BC) took place, in which Sparta was permitting the Persians to interfere
in the affairs of Hellas. In the remark of someone, who said that
Spartans were Medizing, Agesilaos replied "say rather
that the Medes are Laconizing".
Occupation
of Thebes
The city of Thebes, which had not taken any serious part
in the Peloponnesian war, was prospering but as was usual with all the
Greek cities, was torn inside from the fights of oligarchs and
democrats.
That was the case, when Leontiades a prominent oligarch, asked
for help from the near Thebes encamped Spartan army, under general Phoebidas
(382 BC). Leontiades, in order to expel the democrats from Thebes,
proposed to the general to take over Kadmeia, something which was
accepted eagerly.
All these were happening during the celebration of Thesmophoria,
when women alone were performing ceremonies to honor the founder of the
city, Kadmos, and they were no males on the citadel. Phoebidas
and his army entered Kadmeia, without any difficulties.
Ismenias, the leader of the democratic party was tried and
executed. The oligarchs, with the help of the Spartan garrison, started
confiscating and executing the democrats. Many of them found refuge at
Athens. From there they started thinking how to free their city.
At first, they tried to get help especially from Athens, but
soon they despaired and started designing various plots to liberate
Thebes by themselves. Among the exiles they were many belonging to
wealthy and noble families, such as Pelopidas, Damokleidas,
Melon and others. They were in constant communication with other
members which were still in Thebes, the most prominent of them being Phyllidas
the secretary of the polemarch Archias and Charon.
Upon arrival of Phyllidas in Athens for official
business it was arranged to provide the opportunity for the exiles to
struck. Charon would provide shelter in his home. Phyllidas arranged a
banquet for Archias and Philippus and promised them beautiful women for
company.
In December of 379 BC, Pelopidas, Melon and five companions left Athens
and disguised as rustics and hunters, entered the city of Thebes at
night fall and hid in Charon's house. Together with other conspirators
from Thebes, they totaled 48 persons. A spy of Archias, reported to him
that they were rumors that some of the exiles were in town. Archias
called Charon to give some answers. Charon though worried, went quickly
to him and from his questions understood that he had no facts but only
suspicions. He promised to look upon the matter and left.
Soon after a messenger from Athens came with a letter in which the full
conspiracy was revealed. Archias, who by now was drunk, threw it
aside, saying the famous words "Urgent business for tomorrow".
Immediately after, the conspirators disguised as women entered the room
and killed Archias and Philippus and everyone else who was there.
Phyllidas then sent Pelopidas, Kephisodorus and Damokleidas to
Leontiades house. There was a hard fight in which Leontiades, a strong
man, mortally wounded in the throat Kephisodorus. Pelopidas, after a
long struggle in the narrow hall of his house, killed Leontiades. With
the death of the two tyrants, the exiles from Athens returned.
Epaminondas with some of the young men broke open the armorer's
shops and called the citizens to fight for their freedom. After all
these, the Spartan garrison of 1500 men, left Thebes for Sparta (378
BC).
In 375 BC, near Tegyra, Pelopidas with the Theban Sacred
Band defeated the Spartan army, though his troops were half in
number. Being informed that the Spartan garrison in Orchomenos were
visiting Lokris, he marched with the Sacred Band in order to give
battle. He met them at Tegyra and thanks to his encouragement in a
narrow pass he defeated them, killing both of the Lacedaemonian
commanders. The rest of the Spartan army dispersed and fled. This was a
heroic achievement by Pelopidas, taking in consideration the smaller
number of his troops and the Spartan valor. It was this battle that gave
confidence to Thebans to meet Spartans four years later in Leuctra.
In 372 BC, Antalkidas dispatched again in Persia asking them to
intervene, when Thebes violated the peace by re-establishing the
Boeotian confederation. Athens too was dissatisfied with Thebes, who
recently had destroyed the city of Plataea. Negotiations for peace
between Athens and Sparta started and in the congress which took place
in 371 BC, in the city of Sparta, Thebes was invited too.
The Thebans, who wanted to take the oath for the treaty as head of the
confederacy, refused to take it for their city alone and only the threat
of war persuade them to consent. After that incident Sparta's first
priority was to weaken Thebes, by breaking the Theban confederacy.
In the dissatisfied from the confederacy cities of Orchomenos and
Thespiae, they installed a garrison.
To the city of Mantinea, who had helped Argos in the war with Sparta,
they sent a messenger demanding to raze their walls. In their
hesitation, Agesipolis did not wait and bringing an army he took
Mantinea. Spartans demolished their fortification and reduced the city
in the five villages, as it was in the past.
The battle
of Leuctra
371 BC
In 371 BC, on the plain of Leuctra, Spartans were
defeated again from the Theban Sacred Band, this
time under the leadership of General Epaminondas, though the
Theban forces were outnumbered by the Lacedaemonians, Epaminondas with a
series of ingenious tactics and with the help of his supreme trained men
of the Sacred Band defeated the invincible Spartan army. He arrayed the
best men of his troops, fifty shields deep, opposite to the opponent
right wing occupied by the Spartans, which were twelve shields deep,
leaving his center and left wing weak and ordering them to stay
momentarily out of action. The battle started with the engagement of
Spartan and Theban cavalries, which ended quickly with the defeat of
Spartans. Pelopidas leading the Sacred Band fell upon the Spartans with
irresistible force but the Spartans fought bravely and at first were
victorious. It was only when leading Spartans fell that the Spartan
lines pushed and broke carrying away the rest of the army and driving
them to the camp. King Cleombrotos of Sparta and many of his
officers were killed. The rest of the army hardly had any serious
fighting. From the 700 Spartans who took part in the battle, only 300
survived. The whole Hellas was in sock from the event, understanding
that a new power had risen. At Argos, there was a revolution and the
people put to death many of the upper class pro-spartan.
After the battle they sent heralds to Athens proclaiming their victory
over the Spartans, but Athenians were not satisfied with the turn of
events. Now they had a new superpower a few miles from Athens. They also
sent a herald to Jason of Pherae in Thessaly. Jason upon hearing the
news said he would come quickly in Thebes with triremes, but instead
with great speed and passing through enemy territory he arrived in
Boeotia. There the Theban leaders proposed him to attack the encamped
Spartans and her allies. Jason and Epaminondas refused and managed to
persuade them to let them go and thus saving Spartans from a bigger
catastrophe. Spartans indeed soon left and at Aigosthena they met with
Archidamos who was marching to help them. From there they returned home.
With the battle of Leuctra, the Hegemony of Greece passed from Sparta to
Thebes, but for the short time of ten years. It did no good and as that
of Sparta it hurt Greece greatly. Thebes had no experienced and
knowledgeable men, nor her economy could withstand this. It failed as
Sparta did, to unite the Greek cities and stop the blood bath of Greece.
There was turmoil all over Peloponnese. The inhabitants of Mantinea in
Arcadia, which had been broken in several villages, took back their
capital and build new walls. In Tegea of Arcadia, the people formed an
Arcadian federation. In two years time a powerful confederation was born
that was including except the old alliances, Phokis, Locris, Aitolia and
Euboea. After the battle of Leuctra, Thebes made again peace with Athens
and wanted to destroy Orchomenos for being in alliance with the
Spartans. The city was saved thanks to the great efforts of Epaminondas,
but not for long. A few years later when Epaminondas was at an
expedition in Byzantium, the city was razed, its male citizens were
killed and the rest were sold in slavery. That, it was another big
blunder by the Thebans.
Thebes
invades Laconia
In Arcadia, an ally of Thebes, king Agesilaos of Sparta
was ravaging its territories. In reply to this, Thebes sent an army
under Epaminondas. When Agesilaos heard the news, he evacuated Arcadia
and returned to Sparta, to protect her.
Upon Epaminondas arrival in Arcadia, he joined forces with members of
the confederation from Arcadia, Argos and Ellis. The total number of the
army force was amounted to about fifty thousand men. The confederation
pressed strongly Epaminondas, to invade Laconia, explaining to him that
there was a general discontent and by this time many Perioikoi had
revolted.
He was finally persuaded and in the autumn of 370 BC, invaded Laconia
from four different routes, marching towards Sparta.
Only the Arcadians encountered serious resistance, by the Spartan Ischolaos
at Ium, in the district Skiritis. Ischolaos and his divisions
fell to the last man.
Finally, they all met at Sellasia, which they destroyed and
burned and from there, they marched towards Sparta, which was saved from
king Agesilaos, who had taken a series of defenses to protect the
unwalled city.
Epaminondas who understood the danger of an attack towards the city in
human loss, abandoned any further attempts to conquer the city. From
there, burning and plundering villages, he marched towards the port and
arsenal of Sparta, Gythium, which he attempted to conquer for
three days, without success.
Epaminondas then returned to Arcadia and under his supervision a new
city was built at the banks of the river Helisson, as the capital of the
Arcadian confederation and it was named Megalopolis (the big
city). In Megalopolis, a synod of deputies from all the towns of the
confederation, was to meet periodically, to manage their affairs.
After this Epaminondas entered Messenia, in order to liberate her from
the Spartans. In the mean time defection among the Perioikoi and Helots
had already started. Epaminondas re founded Messene and in the hills of
mount Ithome built excellent fortifications stretched for four
miles, which are still preserved today. All of these had a devastating
effect in the economy of Sparta, which lost half of its territory for
ever and had no more the people to provide for its military.
In the meantime, Sparta had asked help from Athens. Iphicrates with an
Athenian army of twenty thousand men, marched to Arcadia. Epaminondas
hearing the news evacuated Laconia quickly and headed to Arcadia. The
two armies, though close, did not engage in full battle. Iphicrates, who
decided that his mission had been accomplished, returned to Athens.
Epaminondas too, returned to Thebes and he was put to a trial, because
he extended the time of his expedition and also for being pacific and
inactive. He defended himself successfully, increasing even more his
popularity.
The accomplishments of his expedition were great. He weakened and
humiliated Sparta and at the same time he increased the reputation of
his army.
Because it was essential to communicate with her allies, in the spring
of 369 BC, Epaminondas again tried to invade Peloponnesos, but this time
Athenians, Spartans and their allies were occupying the line of mount
Onean and Kenchreae, in order to prevent him to enter Peloponnesos.
Epaminondas arrived and tried without success to make them fight in
battle, even though his army was smaller. He encamped and a few hours
before day break surprised them, by attacking and defeating the Spartan
and Pellenian line. He was thus enabled to enter Peloponnesos and join
with his allies Arcadians, Elians and Argians. Sikyon deserted Sparta,
after a vote taken by its people and admitted an harmost and a Theban
garrison into its Acropolis. The same did Pellene. After the army
ravaged the territories of Epidauros and Phleious, he tried by surprise
to take the town of Corinth, but they defeated by the Athenian general
Gavrias, who resisted with great skill. After this unsuccessful attempt,
the Theban army returned home.
During the year of 368 BC, Epaminondas did not undertake any expedition
into Peloponnesos, instead Pelopidas with an army Theban force entered
Thessaly, to protect Larissa from king Alexander of Macedonia.
Pelopidas forced him to solicit peace, taking among the fifty hostages
the future king of Macedonia, the son of Amyntas, Philip, who stayed for
some years at the city of Thebes.
In 366 BC, Thebes enlarged the confederation by including cities of the
Corinthian gulf and Achaia, but lost them again, when demanded that
their oligarchic government ought to be deposed. That was a great
mistake, showing the luck of experienced men.
In 364 BC, after insistence of Epaminondas, a large number of war ships
were constructed and sailing them towards Hellispond. Epaminondas
succeeded to win over Byzantium. Financial difficulties as well as luck
of experience in maritime, put an end in the ambitions of Thebes.
The battle
of Mantinea
362 BC
In 363 BC, in a surprising move Arcadians seized Olympia
and stole their treasury. War broke with Ellis but with the intervention
of Thebes, Olympia was returned and peace followed. During the
negotiations the Theban representative tried to arrest certain
anti-Thebans. That had as result Mantinea and the rest of northern
Arcadians, except Tegea, to turn over to Sparta. Athens which was
monitoring the situation joined together with Ellis. Thebes had no
option but to send quickly Epaminondas with a big army who headed to
reduced Mantinea. At Tegea about ten miles distance from Mantinea, he
joined army with them but in unexpected move instead of Mantinea he
marched towards Sparta. Unlike the first time this move would have taken
by surprise Agesilaos who by this time was marching in a circular root
to support Mantinea. But a Kretan spy in the Theban camp, trained in
long distance running, informed Agesilaos who turned back. When
Epaminondas reached Sparta and found out what had happened he moved
quickly towards Mantinea before her allies arrival. It was probably
really this his object and not of course to attack Sparta ,but not
everything went according to his plan. By this time the Athenian army
had just arrived. Now Epaminondas had no option but to engage himself in
a pitched battle.
The two armies met before Mantinea in 362 BC. The Theban army,
comprising from Thebans and Boeotians moved forward. The rest of the
army was left behind in echelon formation with the exception of troops
that kept a high ground in order to prevent out flagging from the right.
As the army moved, Epaminondas turned quickly leftwards and near the
slopes of the mountain and then he gave order to the soldiers to leave
the arms down and rest. The Spartans and Mantineans thinking that
Epaminondas had no intention to fight a battle, they broke lines.
Epaminondas, who was awaiting for this, ordered a quick attack. The
massive Theban body fell upon Spartans and Mantineans with irresistible
force breaking their lines and bringing confusion and chaos to the rest
of the army.
The battle had been almost won when Epaminondas fell pierced by a spear
in the breast. They lied him on a hill, waiting for the final outcome of
the battle. Though the battle was won by Thebans, on Epaminondas order
they made peace, when he learned that all his favorite generals had been
perished in the battle.
The end of
Sparta
After the battle of
Chaeronea (338 BC) Phillip of Macedon marched through the Peloponnese,
welcomed by all the cities but when he reached Sparta they refused him
to enter. Phillip did not try to take by force the city and left.
Sparta was the only Greek city that did not take part in the League of
Corinth, which was formed in 337 BC, under Macedonian control.
In 331 BC, king Agis, the grandson of Agesilaos, raised a revolt
against Macedonia, but he was defeated and killed.
In the end of the 4th century BC, Sparta build a wall for the first time
in her history, which was enclosing its four central villages and
Acropolis.
When in 280 BC, the Celts invaded from the north overrunning Macedon,
king Areus of Sparta, who had tried to unite the cities of
Peloponnese, led an army into central Greece. During his reign the first
coins of Sparta was issued, three hundred years later from the rest of
Greece.
In 272 BC, king Pyrrhos of Epeiros could easily have taken the city
after defeating the Spartans. Sparta became a dependency of Macedon,
regained independence under the tyrants Machanidas (207 BC) and Nabis
(195 - 192 BC).
In 265 BC again, having formed an alliance with Athens, Achaea and Ellis
and some Arcadian cities, gave battle against Macedon but lost it and in
his retreat was killed (Chremonidean war).
The son of Areus, Acrotatos, in 260 BC leading the Spartan army
against Megalopolitans, he was defeated and himself killed.
In 244 BC, Agis IV came to the throne and starting a series of
changes. He proposed all debts to be cancelled, and to redistribute all
land, in parts of 4500 citizens and 15000 Perioikoi. He also insisted on
strict Lykurgian training in the citizens for the remained 700 equals
(omioi) and 2000 hypomeiones and selected perioikoi. He found in
his proposals strong resistance and Agis was put in trial and executed
in 241 BC.
The next king of Sparta Kleomenes III, began to reign in 236 BC.
He married the widow of king Agis and also tried to impose his ideas. In
227 BC, in a revolt he killed four ephors and exiled eighty of his
opponents. That it was the first time the ephorate was abolished in
Sparta. He then redistributed the land into 4000 lots and perioikoi as
well as hypomeiones occupied them. He also started to enforce the
Lykurgos training and habits, under the guidance of his friend
philosopher Sphairos. All these changes brought results and Kleomenes
had many military successes. Argos and most of Argolid and eastern
Arcadia was conquered.
The Achaean league under Aratos of Sikyon, with the promise of giving
him back Corinth, allied with king Antigonos of Macedon and recovered
Argos and several Arcadian cities. In his turn Kleomenes captured and
destroyed Megalopolis (223 BC).
In 222 BC, at Sellacia, between Sparta and Tegea, a battle took
place. The Spartan army was numbering 10,000 and that of Antigonos and
his allies 30,000. At this long and horrid battle, Spartans fought
bravely. The whole Spartan army fell, except 200 men. King Kleomenes
fled to Egypt.
The following years, a series of revolts started at Sparta, king's
ephors were killed or exiled.
In 206 BC, the tyrant Nabis, a descendant of Demaratos, who
had fled in Persia in 490 BC, took the throne. An able but ruthless man,
he confiscated the properties of the wealthy and gave them to the poor.
By setting free slaves, he managed to acquire an army of 10,000 men and
he also extended his social reforms to Argos. It was Nabis who
foreseeing the incoming dangers fortified Sparta for the first
time in her history.
When the Roman commander Flamininus invaded Laconia and laid siege to
Sparta, after a few days of fighting a non honorable truce was accepted
by Sparta, in which was loosing all the Perioikic cities on the coasts
and her fleet.
Later with the pretence of helping Sparta, the Aitolians sent a thousand
soldiers to kill Nabis and secure Sparta. They managed to
kill him but they all were massacred from the Spartans. After Nabis
assassination, Sparta was forced by Philopoemen to become a member of
the Achaean league. Her walls were razed and the laws of Lykurgos
repealed.
Under the Romans in the 2nd century AD, Laconia as a province of Achaea
was allowed to revert to a Lykurgian regime.
In 396 AD, the city was destroyed by Alaric.
In the 9th century AD, the Slavs invaded and the population was forced
to migrate to Mani.
The Byzantines refound a town and named her Lacedaemonia but her
importance had been lost by 1248 AD and disappeared from history
totally, by 1834 AD.
Today the city of modern Sparta occupies the very same territory of the
ancient city. |