Everything about Classical Greece totally explained
In the context of the art, architecture, and culture of
Ancient Greece, the
classical period corresponds to most of the
5th and
4th centuries BCE (the most common dates being the fall of the last
Athenian tyrant in
510 BCE to the death of
Alexander the Great in
323 BCE).
5th century BCE
From the perspective of Athenian culture in classical Greece, the period generally referred to as the 5
th century BCE runs over into the 4
th a bit. This century is essentially studied from the Athenian outlook because Athens has left us more narratives, plays, and other written works than the other Greek states. In this context, one might consider that the first significant event of this century occurs in 510, with the fall of the Athenian tyrant and Cleisthenes’ reforms. However, a broader view of the whole Greek world might place its beginning at the Ionian revolt of 500, the event that provoked the Persian invasion of 492. The Persians (called "Medes") were finally defeated in 490. A second Persian attempt failed in 481-479. The
Delian League then formed, under Athenian hegemony and as Athens' instrument. Athens' excesses caused several revolts among the allied cities, all of which were put down by force, but Athenian dynamism finally awoke Sparta and brought about the Peloponnesian War in 431. After both forces were spent, a brief peace came about; then the war resumed to Sparta's advantage. Athens was definitively defeated in 404, and internal Athenian agitations mark the end of the 5
th century in Greece.
Cleisthenes
In 510, Spartan troops helped the Athenians overthrow their king, the tyrant
Hippias, son of
Peisistratos.
Cleomenes I, king of Sparta, put in place a pro-Spartan oligarchy headed by
Isagoras. But his rival
Cleisthenes, with the support of the middle class and aided by democrats, managed to take over. Cleomenes intervened in 508 and 506, but couldn't stop Cleisthenes, now supported by the Athenians. Through his reforms, the people endowed their city with
isonomic institutions (ie ones in which all have the same rights) and established
ostracism.
The isonomic and isegoric democracy was first organized into about 130
’’demes’’, which became the foundational civic element. The 10,000 citizens exercised their power via the assembly (the ecclesia, in Greek) of which they all were part, headed by a council of 500 citizens chosen at random.
The city's administrative geography was reworked, the goal being to have mixed political groups--not federated by local interests linked to the sea, to the city, or to farming--whose decisions (declaration of war, etc.) would depend on their geographical situation. Also, the territory of the city was divided into thirty
’’trittyes’’ as follows:
- ten trittyes in the coastal "Paralie"
- ten trittyes in "Asty", the urban centre
- ten trittyes in rural "Mesogia".
A tribe consisted of 3 trittyes, taken at random, one from each of the three groups. Each tribe therefore always acted in the interest of all 3 sectors.
This is this corpus of reforms that would in the end allow the emergence of a wider democracy in the 460s and 450s BC.
The Persian Wars
In
Ionia (the modern Aegean coast of
Turkey), the Greek cities, which included great centres such as
Miletus and
Halicarnassus, were unable to maintain their independence and came under the rule of the
Persian Empire in the mid 6
th century BC. In
499 BC that region’s Greeks rose in the
Ionian Revolt, and Athens and some other Greek cities went to their aid, though they were at first quickly forced to back down after defeat in
494 BC at the battle of Lade. Asia Minor returned to Persian control.
In
492 BC, the Persian generals
Mardonios and
Datis launched a naval assault on the Aegean islands, causing them to submit, then attempted a landing at Marthon in 490 to take Athens. In
490 BC,
Darius the Great, having suppressed the Ionian cities, sent a fleet to punish the Greeks. 100,000 Persians (historians are uncertain about the number; it varies from 18,000 to 100,000) landed in
Attica intending to take Athens, but were defeated at the
Battle of Marathon by a Greek army of 9,000 Athenian hoplites and 1,000 Plateans led by the Athenian general
Miltiades. The burial mound of the Athenian dead can still be seen at Marathon. The Persian fleet continued to Athens but, seeing it garrisoned, decided not to attempt an assault.
Ten years later, in 480 BC, Darius' successor
Xerxes I sent a much more powerful force of 300,000 by land, with 1,207 ships in support, across a double
pontoon bridge over the Hellespont. This army took Thrace, before descending on Thessaly and Boetia, whilst the Persian navy skirted the coast and resupplied the ground troops. The Greek fleet, meanwhile, dashed to block Cape
Artemision. After being delayed by the Spartan King
Leonidas I at Thermopylae, Xerxes advanced into Attica, where he captured and burned Athens. But the Athenians had evacuated the city by sea, and under
Themistocles they defeated the Persian fleet at the
Battle of Salamis. During peacetime in 483, a vein of silver ore had been discovered in the Laurion (a small mountain range near athens), and the hundreds of talents mined there had paid for the construction of 200 warships to combat
Aeginetan piracy. A year later, the Greeks, under the Spartan
Pausanius, defeated the Persian army at
Plataea.
The Athenian fleet then turned to chasing the Persians from the Aegean Sea, defeating their fleet decisively in the
battle of Cape Mycale; then in
478 BC the fleet captured
Byzantium. In the course of doing so Athens enrolled all the island states and some mainland ones into an alliance called the
Delian League, so named because its treasury was kept on the sacred island of
Delos. The Spartans, although they'd taken part in the war, withdrew into isolation afterward, allowing Athens to establish unchallenged naval and commercial power.
Dominance of Athens
The Persian Wars ushered in a century of Athenian dominance in Greek affairs. Athens was the unchallenged master of the sea, and also the leading commercial power, although Corinth remained a serious rival. The leading statesman of this time was
Pericles, who used the tribute paid by the members of the Delian League to build the
Parthenon and other great monuments of classical Athens. By the mid 5
th century the League had become an
Athenian Empire, as demonstrated by the transfer of the League's treasury from Delos to the Parthenon in
454 BC.
The wealth of Athens attracted talented people from all over Greece, and also created a wealthy leisure class who became patrons of the arts. The Athenian state sponsored learning and the arts, particularly architecture. Athens became the centre of Greek literature, philosophy (see
Greek philosophy), and the arts (see
Greek theatre). Some of the greatest figures of Western cultural and intellectual history lived in Athens during this period: the dramatists
Aeschylus,
Aristophanes,
Euripides, and
Sophocles; the philosophers
Aristotle,
Plato, and
Socrates; the historians
Herodotus,
Thucydides, and
Xenophon; the poet
Simonides; and the sculptor
Pheidias. The city became, in Pericles' words, "the school of Hellas".
The other Greek states at first accepted Athenian leadership in the continuing war against the Persians, but after the fall of the conservative politician
Cimon in
461 BC, Athens became increasingly open in its imperialist ambitions. After the Greek victory at the
Battle of the Eurymedon in
466 BC, the Persians were no longer a threat, and some states, such as
Naxos, tried to secede from the League, but were forced to remain members. The new Athenian leaders,
Pericles and
Ephialtes, let relations between Athens and Sparta deteriorate, and in
458 BC war broke out. After some years of inconclusive war, a 30-year peace was signed between the
Delian League and the
Peloponnesian League (Sparta and her allies). This coincided with the last battle between the Greeks and the Persians, a sea battle off
Salamis in
Cyprus, followed by the
Peace of Callias (
450 BC) between the Greeks and Persians.
The Peloponnesian War
In 431 BCE war broke out again between Athens and Sparta and its allies. The immediate causes of the Peloponnesian War vary from account to account. However three causes are fairly consistent among the ancient historians, namely
Thucydides and
Plutarch. Prior to the war, Corinth and one of its colonies,
Corcyra (modern-day
Corfu), got into a dispute in which Athens intervened. Soon after, Corinth and Athens argued over control of
Potidaea (near modern-day
Nea Potidaia), eventually leading to an Athenian siege of Potidaea. Finally, Athens issued the
"Megarian Decrees", a series of economic decrees that placed economic sanctions on the Megarian people. Athens was accused by the Peloponnesian allies of violating the
Thirty Years Peace through all of the aforementioned actions, and Sparta formally declared war on Athens.
It should be noted that many historians consider these to be merely the immediate causes of the war. They would argue that the underlying cause was the growing resentment on the part of Sparta and its allies at the dominance of Athens over Greek affairs. The war lasted 27 years, partly because Athens (a naval power) and Sparta (a land-based military power) found it difficult to come to grips with each other.
Sparta's initial strategy was to invade
Attica, but the Athenians were able to retreat behind their walls. An outbreak of
plague in the city during the siege caused heavy losses, including that of
Pericles. At the same time the Athenian fleet landed troops in the Peloponnese, winning battles at
Naupactus (429 BC) and
Pylos (425 BC). But these tactics could bring neither side a decisive victory. After several years of inconclusive campaigning, the moderate Athenian leader
Nicias concluded the
Peace of Nicias (421 BC).
In 418 BC, however, hostility between Sparta and the Athenian ally
Argos led to a resumption of hostilities. At
Mantinea Sparta defeated the combined armies of Athens and her allies. The new fighting brought the military party, led by
Alcibiades, back to power in Athens. In 415 BC Alcibiades persuaded the Athenian Assembly to launch a major expedition against
Syracuse, a Peloponnesian ally in
Sicily. Though Nicias was a skeptic about the
Sicilian Expedition, he was appointed along with Alcibiades to lead the expedition. Due to accusations against him, Alcibiades fled to Sparta where he persuaded Sparta to send aid to Syracuse. As a result, the expedition was a complete disaster and the entire expeditionary force was lost. Nicias was executed by his captors.
Sparta had now built a fleet (with the help of the Persians) to challenge Athenian naval supremacy, and had found a brilliant military leader in
Lysander, who seized the strategic initiative by occupying the
Hellespont, the source of Athens' grain imports. Threatened with starvation, Athens sent its last remaining fleet to confront Lysander, who decisively defeated them at
Aegospotami (405 BC). The loss of her fleet threatened Athens with bankruptcy. In 404 BC Athens sued for peace, and Sparta dictated a predictably stern settlement: Athens lost her city walls, her fleet, and all of her overseas possessions. Lysander abolished the democracy and appointed in its place a council of thirty to govern Athens.
4th century BC
» Related articles: Spartan hegemony and Theban hegemony
The end of the Peloponnesian War left Sparta the master of Greece, but the narrow outlook of the Spartan warrior elite didn't suit them to this role. Within a few years the democratic party regained power in Athens and in other cities. In
395 BC the Spartan rulers removed Lysander from office, and Sparta lost her naval supremacy.
Athens,
Argos,
Thebes, and
Corinth, the latter two former Spartan allies, challenged Sparta’s dominance in the
Corinthian War, which ended inconclusively in
387 BC. That same year Sparta shocked the Greeks by concluding the
Treaty of Antalcidas with Persia. The agreement turned over the Greek cities of Ionia and Cyprus, reversing a hundred years of Greek victories against Persia. Sparta then tried to further weaken the power of Thebes, which led to a war in which Thebes formed an alliance with its old enemy Athens.
Then the Theban generals
Epaminondas and
Pelopidas won a decisive victory at
Leuctra (
371 BC). The result of this battle was the end of Spartan supremacy and the establishment of Theban dominance, but Athens herself recovered much of her former power because the supremacy of Thebes was short-lived. With the death of Epaminondas at
Mantinea (
362 BC) the city lost its greatest leader and his successors blundered into an ineffectual ten-year war with
Phocis. In
346 BC the Thebans appealed to
Philip II of Macedon to help them against the Phocians, thus drawing
Macedon into Greek affairs for the first time.
The Peloponnesian War was a radical turning point for the Greek world. Before 403 BC, the situation was more defined, with Athens and its allies (a zone of domination and stability, with a number of island cities benefiting from Athens’ maritime protection), and other states outside this Athenian Empire. The sources denounce this Athenian supremacy (or
hegemony) as smothering and disadvantageous.
After 403 BC, things became more complicated, with a number of cities trying to create similar empires over others, all of which proved short-lived. The first of these turnarounds was managed by Athens as early as 390 BC, allowing it to re-establish itself as a major power without regaining its former glory.
The Fall of Sparta
This empire was powerful but short-lived. In 405 BC, the Spartans were masters of all - of Athens’ allies and of Athens itself - and their power was undivided. By the end of the century, they couldn't even defend their own city.
Foundation of a Spartan empire
On this subject, there had been a heated debate among Sparta's full citizens. The admiral
Lysander felt that the Spartans should rebuild the Athenian empire in such a way that Sparta profited from it. Prior to this, Spartan law forbade the use of all precious metals by private citizens, with transactions being carried out with cumbersome iron ingots (which generally discouraged their accumulation) and all precious metals obtained by the city becoming state property. Without the Spartans' support, Lysander's innovations came into effect and brought a great deal of profit for him - on Samos, for example, festivals known as Lysandreia were organized in his honour. He was recalled to Sparta, and once there didn't attend to any important matters.
Sparta refused to see Lysander or his successors dominate. Not wanting to establish a hegemony, they decided after 403 BC not to support the directives that he'd set up.
Agesilas came to power by accident at the start of the 4
th century BC. This accidental accession meant that, unlike the other Spartan kings, he'd the advantage of a Spartan education. The Spartans at this date discovered a conspiracy against the laws of the city conducted by
Cinadon and as a result concluded there were too many dangerous worldly elements at work in the Spartan state.
Agesilas employed a political dynamic that played on a feeling of pan-Hellenic sentiment, launching a successful campaign against the Persian empire. However, the Persian empire reacted and - with access to Persian gold - changed from backing Sparta to backing the Athenians, who used Persian subsidies to rebuild their walls (destroyed in
404 BC) as well as to reconstruct their fleet and win a number of victories, notably at Cnidus.
In 394, the Spartan authorities decided to force Agesilas to return to mainland Greece. For six years, Sparta fought Corinth, with Corinth partly drawing on Athenian support. This war had descended into guerilla tactics and Sparta decided that it couldn't fight on two fronts and so chose to ally with Persia.
The peace of Antalcidas
An edict was promulgated by the Persian king, preserving the Greek cities of Asia Minor and Cyprus as well as the independence of the Greek Aegean cities, except for Lymnos, Imbros and Skyros, which were given over to Athens. It dissolved existing alliances and federations and forbade the formation of new ones. This is an ultimatum that benefitted both Athens, which held onto three islands, and Sparta, chosen as the guarantor of the peace.
Spartan interventionism
On the other hand, this peace had unexpected consequences. In accordance with it, the Boeotian confederacy was dissolved in
386 BC. This confederacy was dominated by Thebes, a city hostile to the Spartan hegemony. Sparta carried out large-scale operations and peripheral interventions in Epirus and in the north of Greece, resulting in the capture of the fortress of Thebes, the Cadmea, after an expedition in
the Chalcidice and the capture of Olynthos. It was a Theban politician who suggested to the Spartan general Phoibidas that Sparta should seize Thebes itself. This act was sharply condemned, though Sparta eagerly ratified this unilateral move by Phoibidas.
Clash with Thebes
In 378 BC, Sphodrias, another Spartan general, tried to carry out a surprise attack on the
Piraeus, whose gates were no longer fortified, but was driven off 10km before the Piraeus. He was acquitted by the Spartan court, but the attempted attack triggered an alliance between Athens and Thebes. Sparta would now have to fight them both together, with Athens trying to recover from the disaster of 404 BC and the Thebans attempting to restore the former Boeotian confederacy with Epaminondas.
In the 370s, Sparta fought Thebes. Athens came to mistrust the growing Theban power, particularly due to Thebes’ razing in
375 BC of the city of
Platea, and so negotiated an alliance with Sparta against Thebes in 375 BC. In 371, however, Sparta suffered a bloody defeat at Leuctra, losing a large part of its army and 400 of its 2,000 citizen-troops. Sparta’s hegemony was over, replaced by that of Athens.
The rise of Athens
Return to the 5th century BC
The Athenians forbade themselves any return to the situation in the 5
th century. In Aristoteles’ decree, Athens claimed its goal was to prevent Spartan hegemony, with the Spartans clearly denounced as "warmongers". Athens’ hegemony was no longer a centralized system but an alliance in which the allies had a voice. The Athenians didn't sit on the council of the allies, nor was this council headed by an Athenian. It met regularly and served as a political and military counterweight to Athens. This new league was a quite moderate and much looser organisation.
Financing the league
It was important to erase the bad memories of the former league. Its financial system wasn't adopted, with no tribute being paid. Instead,
syntaxeis were used, irregular contributions as and when Athens and its allies needed troops, collected for a precise reason and spent as quickly as possible. These contributions were not taken to Athens--unlike the 5
th century BC system, there was no central exchequer for the league--but to the Athenian generals themselves.
The Athenians had to make their own contribution to the alliance, the
eisphora. They reformed how this tax was paid, creating a system in advance, the
Proseiphora, in which the richest individuals had to pay the whole sum of the tax then be reimbursed by other contributors. This system was quickly assimilated into a
liturgy.
Athenian hegemony halted
This league responded to a real and present need. On the ground, however, the situation within the league proved to have changed little from that of the 5
th century BC, with Athenian generals doing what they wanted and able to extort funds from the league. Alliance with Athens again looked unattractive and the allies complained.
The main reasons for the eventual failure were structural. This alliance was only valued out of fear of Sparta, which evaporated after Sparta's fall in
371 BC, losing the alliance its sole raison d'etre. The Athenians no longer had the means the fulfil their ambitions, and found it difficult merely to finance their own navy, let alone that of an entire alliance, and so couldn't properly defend their allies. Thus, the tyrant of Pherae was able to destroy a number of cities with impunity. From 360, Athens lost its reputation for invincibility and a number of allies (such as
Byzantium and
Naxos in
364) decided to secede.
In
357 BC the revolt against the league spread, and between 357 and 355, Athens had to face war against its allies, a war whose issue was marked by a decisive intervention by the king of Persia in the form of an ultimatum to Athens, demanding that Athens recognise its allies' independence under penalty of Persia's sending 200
triremes against Athens. Athens had to renounce the war and leave the confederacy to weaken itself more and more. The Athenians had failed in all their plans and were unable to propose a durable alliance.
Theban hegemony - tentative and with no future
5th century BC Boeotian confederacy (447 – 386)
This wasn't Thebes’ first attempt at hegemony. It had been the most important city of
Boeotia and the centre of the previous Boeotian confederacy of 447, resurrected since 386.
That confederacy is well known to us from a papyrus found at
Oxyrhyncus and known as "The Anonyme of Thebes". Thebes headed it and set up a system under which charges were divided up between the different cities of the confederacy. Citizenship was defined according to wealth, and Thebes counted 11,000 active citizens.
It was divided up into 11 districts, each providing a federal magistrate called a "Boeotarch", a certain number of council members, 1,000 hoplites and 100 horsemen. From the 5
th century BC the alliance could field an infantry force of 11,000 men, in addition to an elite corps and a light infantry numbering 10,000; but its real power derived from its cavalry force of 1,100, commanded by a federal magistrate independent of local commanders. It also had a small fleet which played a part in the Peloponnesian War by providing 25 triremes for the Spartans At the end of the conflict, the fleet consisted of 50 triremes and was commanded by a "navarch".
All this constituted a significant enough force that the Spartans were happy to see the Boeotian confederacy dissolved by the king's peace. This dissolution, however, didn't last, and in the 370s there was nothing to stop the Thebans (who had lost the Cadmea to Sparta in 382 BC) from reforming this confederacy.
Theban reconstruction
Pelopidas and Epaminondas endowed Thebes with democratic institutions similar to those of Athens, the Thebans revived the title of "Boetarch" lost in the Persian king's peace and - with victory at Leuctra and the destruction of Spartan power - the pair achieved their stated objective of renewing the confederacy. Epaminondas rid the Peloponnesus of pro-Spartan oligarchies, replacing them with pro-Theban democracies, constructed cities, and rebuilt a number of those destroyed by Sparta. He equally supported the reconstruction of the city of
Messene thanks to an invasion of Laconia that also allowed him to liberate the
helots and give them Messene as a capital.
He decided in the end to constitute small confederacies all round the Peloponnessus, forming an Arcadian confederacy (The king's peace had destroyed a previous Arcadian confederacy and put Messene under Spartan control.)
Confrontation between Athens and Thebes
All this explains Athens’ problems with her allies in the second league. Epaminondas succeeded in convincing his countrymen to build a fleet of 100 triremes to pressure cities into leaving the Athenian league and joining a Boeotian maritime league. This ended in
362 BC with the result of the
battle of Mantinea - a battle caused by the Thebans' difficulty with implementing confederations.
Sparta remained an important power and some cities continued to turn against her. The confederal framework was an artificial one, since it attempted to bring together cities that had never been able to agree. Such was the case with the cities of
Tegea and
Mantinea, which re-allied in the Arcardian confederacy. The Mantineans received the support of the Athenians and the Tegeans that of the Thebans. The Thebans prevailed, but this triumph was short-lived, for Epaminondas died in the battle, stating that "I bequeath to Thebes two daughters, the victory of Leuctra and the victory at Mantinea".
In the end, the Thebans abandoned their policy of intervention in the Peloponnesus. Xenophon thus concludes his history of the Greek world in 362 BC.
The end of this period was even more confused than its beginning. Greece had failed and, according to Xenophon, the history of the Greek world was no longer intelligible.
The idea of hegemony disappeared. From
362 BC onward, there was no longer a single city that could exert hegemonic power - the Spartans were greatly weakened; the Athenians were in no condition to operate their navy, and after 365 no longer had any allies; Thebes could only exert an ephemeral dominance, and had the means to defeat Sparta and Athens but not to be a major power in Asia Minor.
Other forces also intervened, such as the Persian king, who was appointed as arbitrator between the Greek cities by the cities themselves. This situation reinforced the conflicts and there was a proliferation of civil wars, with the confederal framework a repeated trigger for wars. One war led to another, each longer and more bloody, and the cycle couldn't be broken. Hostilities even took place during winter for the first time, with the 370 invasion of Laconia.
Rise of Macedon
Thebes sought to maintain its position until finally eclipsed by the rising power of
Macedon in
346 BC.
Under
Philip II, (
359–
336 BC), Macedon expanded into the territory of the
Paionians,
Thracians, and
Illyrians. The Macedonians became more politically involved with the south-central city-states of Greece, but also retained more archaic aspects harking back to the
palace culture, first at Aegae (modern Vergina) then at
Pella, resembling
Mycenaean culture more than that of the classical city-states.
Philip's son
Alexander the Great (
356–
323 BC) managed to briefly extend Macedonian power not only over the central Greek city-states, but also to the
Persian empire, including
Egypt and lands as far east as the fringes of
India.
The classical period conventionally ends at the death of Alexander in 323 BC and the fragmentation of his empire, divided among the
Diadochi.
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