The front of the Temple faces the spectator, and looks to the
north. The reason for the unusual orientation is evident from the
conformation of the ground. The Temple is, in fact, built upon a ridge, and
very extensive sub-structures would have been necessary if the
usual orientation had been followed.]
on account of a slight offered
to her in sacrifice. Whether genuine or not, the relics of the boar, in the
form of a great hide, and tusks three feet long, were exhibited for centuries
in the temple of Athena Alea, and a sculptured head of the boar has recently
been found among the ruins, from the size of which it is calculated that the
animal was six and a half feet long. The tusks were carried off to Rome by
the Emperor Augustus, along with an ivory image of the goddess, but
the well-worn skin was shown to Pausanias when he visited Tegea. He also
saw a relief executed by the great sculptor Scopas, representing the
famous hunt, on the pediment of the temple, which was rebuilt of marble after
a fire, in 394 B.C., and was considered the most beautiful building of
the kind in the Peloponnesus.
Echemus was another illustrious Tegean
of prehistoric times, married, according to Hesiod, to a sister of
Clytemnestra. He commanded the contingent of troops raised by the city to
join the allied forces, Arcadian, Achæan, and Ionian, which came forth to
repel the Heracleids when they were crossing the Isthmus for the purpose of
invading the country. Instead of a general engagement it was agreed to settle
the question by a single combat between Echemus and Hyllus, the eldest
son of Heracles, from whom the challenge had come. In the encounter
Hyllus was overcome and put to death, whereupon the Dorian invaders
retraced their steps, and, in accordance with an agreement come to, did not
again attempt the conquest of the Peloponnesus for three generations.
Even when victorious they left Arcadia alone, and it continued to retain
its independence for many centuries afterwards.
The Arcadians, as
known to us in history, have generally been distinguished by the rude
simplicity of their manners and the sturdy vigour of their physique.
Intensely conservative in their ways, they were always ready to do their duty
bravely when called upon to defend their country; and, like the Swiss, whom
they resembled in some other points, they supplied many neighbouring states
with mercenary soldiers, who were always looked upon as a valuable force. It
was one of the ambitions of the Spartans to reduce them to subjection. With
this view they are said to have once consulted the Delphian oracle, which
gave them an unfavourable answer as regards Arcadia generally, telling
them that there were many acorn-eating men there, but appeared to
encourage them to try their strength against Tegea, foretelling that they
would dance there and measure out the plain with a rope. Taking this in
a favourable sense they advanced against Tegea, but were utterly
defeated, and many of them were taken prisoners and compelled to work in
the fields, wearing the very chains which, with undue confidence, they
had carried with them from Sparta for the purpose of securing their
expected captives. Both Herodotus and Pausanias mention having seen these
chains in the temple of Athena. In the same sanctuary there was also
deposited the horse’s manger, made of brass, which was found in the tent of
the Persian general Mardonius by the Tegean troops who took part in
the battle of Platæa, and who on that occasion claimed the place of
honour next to the Lacedæmonians, on account of the signal services which
had been rendered by their ancestor Echemus.
In his history (i. 67-8)
Herodotus tells a curious story of the way in which the Spartans succeeded at
a later time in getting the better of the Tegeans, with the help of the
friendly oracle at Delphi. They were directed to bring back to Sparta the
bones of Orestes, the son of Agamemnon, whose resting-place was enigmatically
described. By the combined sagacity and good luck of a Spartan, named Lichas,
the body, contained in a coffin measuring about seven cubits in length,
was discovered in a blacksmith’s premises at Tegea, and was brought back
to Sparta and buried there. The consequence was that the Spartans
soon proved the stronger, compelling the Tegeans to become their allies
for nearly two centuries, to which they were less averse than the rest
of the Arcadians, owing to their liking for an oligarchic form
of government. They still remained faithful to the general cause of
Greek independence and sent 500 men to fight at Thermopylæ. For
centuries after the loss of Greek liberty Tegea continued to be a place
of importance. Strabo, writing in the first century A.D., speaks of it
as the only city in Arcadia worth mentioning, and when Pausanias visited
it he found it in a flourishing condition. There is now little to mark
its site, save the scanty ruins of its famous temple and its theatre.
The foundations of the temple were discovered in 1879, buried
deep underground, to the west of the Church of St. Nicholas, where
many fragments of Doric columns of marble had long been lying exposed
to view. The inner columns were Ionic and Corinthian. The workmanship,
so far as any specimens of it exist, fully justifies the
admiration expressed by Pausanias.
Thirteen or fourteen miles north of
Tegea, on a somewhat lower level of the same great central plain, stood the
city of Mantinea, long a rival to Tegea, and possessing more of a commercial
character, with a consequent leaning to the democratic form of government.
Originally built on the top of a low conical hill (Gourtsouli, or Ptolis),
rather less than a mile to the north, it was constituted on its later site
by the union of five villages, which were amalgamated by the Argives
(who dwelt only a day’s journey to the east) for the purpose of
counteracting the Spartan sympathies of Tegea. It was the scene of two
great battles--the one fought and gained by the Spartans under King Agis,
with the help of Bœotian and Corinthian troops, the other by
Epaminondas at the head of the Theban confederacy. On the former occasion a
striking proof was given of the value of Spartan discipline. Though taken
by surprise when he found the enemy drawn up and ready for the
conflict, Agis succeeded in gaining such a victory as went far to restore
the prestige of his country, which had been tarnished by recent events
in the Peloponnesian war. About thirty years later
[Illustration: SITE
OF MEGALOPOLIS IN ARCADIA
The west arm of the Theatre shows to the left,
and the foreground is occupied by the remains of the Thersilion or Town Hall.
The river Helisson sparkles in the distance, which is closed by the mountains
of Arcadia. Sunset.]
(386 B.C.) Mantinea again incurred the hostility
of Sparta and experienced its military skill. The river Ophis (so called from
its circuitous windings farther north), which at that time ran through
the city, was diverted from its course by the Spartan general
Agesipolis, and so dammed up that its waters overflowed the brick-built
walls, which soon gave way, compelling the inhabitants to surrender. The
community was then dissolved into the five villages of which it had been
composed, a high-handed act on the part of Sparta, which was characteristic
of its policy when it thought its ascendency to be in danger. One of the
first results of the great Theban victory achieved by Epaminondas at
Leuctra (371 B.C.) was the reunion of the scattered population. But though
the Mantineans were at first in sympathy with the policy of that
great soldier and statesman in seeking to create an Arcadian federation
for the defence of the country against Spartan aggression, the rise of a
new capital at Megalopolis excited their jealousy, and it was partly
owing to their defection that Epaminondas had to undertake his last
campaign in the Peloponnesus. It was in a great battle fought in the
immediate vicinity of Mantinea that he met his death. Never was there a
more striking proof of the influence that may be exerted by a
master-mind upon an army, than when Epaminondas was suddenly struck down
while fighting with heroic energy at the head of his men. As soon as they
knew that he had fallen, their victorious advance ceased, and the enemy
were allowed to retire without suffering the usual penalties of defeat.
He was carried out of the field with a lance sticking in his breast; and
a rising-ground is still pointed out (Scopas) from which he is said
to have watched the close of the battle. He named two men to succeed him
in the command of the forces; but, on learning that they had both
fallen, he advised that peace should be concluded with the enemy.
Having ascertained that his shield was safe, he ordered the javelin to
be extracted, and as the blood rushed out he breathed his last. He
was buried on the spot, and a monument was erected over his grave, of
which no trace has yet been found.
Even if there were no such names in
Greek history as Hesiod, Pindar, Pelopidas, and Plutarch, the memory of
Epaminondas would be sufficient to redeem Bœotia from the reproach so often
cast upon it as a land of dullards. He was not only a consummate general,
whose name will always be associated with the irresistible phalanx which
anticipated that of Macedonia,[2] but was in every respect a great man--the
greatest of the Greeks, according to Cicero. Distinguished in music and
philosophy, he was also a good speaker, and if he had had more opportunities
for the practice of eloquence, he would probably have been found a match for
the greatest orators of his day. We may judge of his readiness in
debate from the answer he gave to Callistratus, the renowned Athenian
orator, when the latter, pleading with the Arcadians to form an alliance
with Athens rather than with Thebes and Argos, sought to excite
prejudice against these states by asking, “Were not Orestes and Alcmæon, who
were both murderers of their mothers, natives of Argos? Was not
Œdipus, who slew his father and married his mother, a native of Thebes?”
“Yes, they were,” said Epaminondas, in his reply, “but Callistratus
has forgotten to tell you that these men, while they lived at home,
were innocent or were reputed to be so. As soon as their crimes became
known they were banished; and then it was that Athens received them,
stained with blood.” On another occasion, when he was accused by a demagogue
of trying to emulate the glories of Agamemnon at the risk of his
country, by sailing from Aulis to the Hellespont at the head of a great
fleet, he replied, “By the help of Thebes I have already done more than
Agamemnon. He with the forces of Sparta and all Greece besides, was ten years
in taking a single city; while I, with the single force of Thebes and
on the single day of Leuctra, have crushed the power of the
Agamemnonian Sparta.” This was answering a fool according to his folly; but,
in general, he was as remarkable for his modesty as for his great
powers. It was said of him by one who had been in early life a companion
of Socrates that he had never known any one who understood so much
and spoke so little; and when he was reduced in rank, even after the
great battle which deprived Sparta of its military supremacy, he did
not disdain to serve his country for a time in a comparatively
humble position. That the Spartans knew how formidable he was as an
adversary is evident from the honours which, as Plutarch tells us, they
heaped on the man who slew him, even ordaining that his descendants in all
time coming should be exempted from the payment of taxes. Like Aristides
the “Just” and Delyannis, the recently-assassinated Premier of
Greece, Epaminondas was so free from the love of money that he did not
leave enough even to pay his funeral expenses.
Very few remains of the
ancient city of Mantinea are to be seen, but the lower courses of the
encircling walls, measuring more than two and a half miles in circumference,
are plainly visible, with eight different gates and more than 120 towers,
separated by intervals of fully 80 feet, while the course of the Ophis can
also be traced, which served apparently as a moat, with its two arms running
round the city. In 1887 three marble slabs were discovered in the floor of a
Byzantine church within the walls, with reliefs representing the musical
contest between Marsyas and Apollo, which have been identified with those
mentioned by Pausanias as adorning a pedestal supporting images of Latona and
her children, by Praxiteles. In the present aspect of the place, which
is very much of the nature of a swamp, there is little to justify
its ancient reputation as the “lovely city” mentioned in Homer.
Tegea
and Mantinea and another ancient city in the neighbourhood (Pallantion) are
commemorated in the city of Tripoliza (or Tripolis, the threefold city),
which was founded by the Turks about two hundred
years ago.
[Illustration: MEGALOPOLIS IN ARCADIA
The east ramp
of the Theatre is in the foreground to the left, from which we see remains of
the proscenium and colonnade. Beyond are a few drums of columns, probably
belonging to the Thersilion or Town Hall. The river Helisson shows in the
distance. Sunset.]
Tripoliza is the only large town in Arcadia, having a
population of more than 10,000, with a thriving trade. It is also the seat of
a bishopric, and contains one of the handsomest modern churches in Greece,
built of marble, with a lofty tower recently added. The elevation of the
city, like that of the plain generally, is fully 2000 feet above the
sea.
In the western plain of Arcadia, separated from that of Tegea
and Mantinea by the Mænalus range, stood the “great city,”
Megalopolis, which owed its existence to the genius and the determination
of Epaminondas. He saw that Arcadia would never be secure against
Spartan invasion until means could be found to unite its forces. The
jealousy between Tegea and Mantinea rendered it impossible for either of
these cities to be chosen as the capital, and another site was found by
the banks of the Helisson, a tributary of the Alpheus. No fewer than
forty small townships were merged in the new city, which was
founded immediately after the battle of Leuctra. Several refused to join,
and the inhabitants of one of them, called Trapezus, a very old
settlement, rather than give up their independence, preferred to be put to
the sword, those who escaped emigrating to their daughter-city of the
same name, on the southern shore of the Black Sea. The name Megalopolis
was not unsuitable, considering that the walls of the city were more
than five and a half miles in circumference, and that the territory
attached to it extended twenty-four miles on the north. Its stability was
at various times endangered by internal discord, and nothing but
the watchful eye and strong arm of Thebes could have saved the union from
a speedy dissolution.
Like most of the Greek cities, Megalopolis did
not realise till too late what the gradual advance of the Macedonian power
was to mean for Greece. In 347 B.C. the Athenian orator Æschines paid it a
visit and spoke in its national assembly, the “Ten Thousand,” urging them to
combine with other Powers against Philip; but without much effect, as might
have been expected, considering that Æschines himself was soon to prove a
traitor. Seventeen years later the city was delivered out of the hands of
its Peloponnesian enemies by Antipater, the lieutenant of Alexander
the Great; but it had to submit, like Argos and Athens, to the
remodelling of its constitution, in order that its new master might put some
of his own partisans into power to form an oligarchy. A hundred years later
it fell into the hands of the Spartans under Cleomenes, who took it by
a stratagem and levelled it to the ground. Most of the citizens escaped
to Messene under the leadership of the brave Philopœmen, and the city was
afterwards rebuilt, taking a leading part in the Achæan League, until the
supremacy of Roman arms could no longer be disputed. Among its citizens at
the beginning of the second century B.C., Megalopolis could boast of two of
the greatest Greeks of their time, the gallant soldier just mentioned, who
humbled the pride of Sparta and extorted the admiration of his Roman
adversaries, and his young friend Polybius, the famous historian. The latter
carried the urn containing the ashes of the mighty dead in the imposing
funeral procession described by Plutarch--the precursor of still higher
honours, amounting to divine worship, that were afterwards to be paid to
Philopœmen, whom Pausanias describes as the last benefactor of the
Greeks.
To the modern traveller Megalopolis still presents features of
interest. Its wide and open landscape embraces fertile plains and wooded
hills and refreshing streams, which present a pleasing contrast to the
dreary stretch of country on the eastern side of Arcadia. There are also
some interesting ruins (excavated by the British School of Archæology
in 1890-93), the best preserved of which is the theatre, described
by Pausanias as the largest in Greece, and supposed to have been capable
of accommodating nearly 20,000 persons. There is a distance of about
500 feet between the stage and the top of the hill, in the hollow of
which the semicircular banks of stone benches are fixed; but such is
the clearness of the atmosphere and the form of the enclosure that
words spoken from the actor’s place can be distinctly heard by any
one listening above. Another ruin of great interest is the _Thersilium_,
a hall covering an area of 35,000 square yards, in which the
Arcadian assembly held their meetings and carried on their fierce debates. It
is connected with the theatre by a portico, which was at one time
mistaken for a stage, but is now regarded as of an earlier date and built for
a different purpose. If Dr. Dorpfeld’s theory be correct that until
a comparatively late period the Greek actors spoke from the floor of
the orchestra, the only purpose which the portico could have served, so
far as the theatre was concerned, was to form a background. Many old
coins and vases have been picked up on the site of the ancient city by
the inhabitants of the modern village of Sinanou, a little way to
the south-east, and are preserved in their houses. Large fragments of
marble are also to be seen scattered about.
The road from Megalopolis
to Bassæ, by way of Andritsæna, takes the traveller through some of the
finest hill-scenery in Arcadia, along one of those modern carriage-roads
which are felt to be luxurious, compared with the mule-tracks by which many
journeys have still to be taken in the Peloponnesus, as in the days of old,
when there was comparatively little communication between the different parts
of Greece except by sea. One of the most striking objects to be seen on the
way is the village of Karytæna, with its mediæval fortress on the top of a
hill nearly 2000 feet high. The castle is only approachable by a
narrow passage, and even the town, now reduced to a population of about
1400, can only be reached from one side of the mountain, standing as it
does in a corner between the summit crowned with the fortress and
the neighbouring hill of St. Elias,[3] on which may be seen two
Greek churches of Byzantine-Frankish architecture. Karytæna was the home
of Kolokotronis, the highland chieftain who carried on guerilla
operations with so much success during the War of Liberation.
His
[Illustration: ANDRITSÆNA: THE RESTING-PLACE FOR THE TEMPLE OF APOLLO
AT BASSÆ.
A giant plane-tree stands in the space opposite the church
door, and supports the bells of the church.]
great achievement was the
capture of Tripoliza in 1821, but his cruelty in putting to death nearly the
whole Turkish population, and his self-seeking spirit generally, detracted
greatly from his reputation. After the independence of Greece had been
secured he was found guilty of conspiracy against the Government, and was
sentenced to death; but the penalty was remitted and he was allowed to end
his days in his castle at Karytæna. A prominent object in the neighbourhood,
as the traveller’s carriage winds round the hill, is a handsome bridge with
six arches, which recalls the wealth and importance of the place in former
times.
Still more attractive, although less interesting from a historical
point of view, is the little town of Andritsæna, with upwards of
2000 inhabitants, which is reached after crossing Mount Lycæus. It is
built on the two sides of a mountain stream embroidered with trees; and in
the main street, beside the village fountain, there is a
wide-spreading plane-tree, under which the people gather for a friendly talk,
giving the place a most genial aspect. From the top of an adjoining hill
a magnificent view can be obtained, extending to Erymanthus on the
north and even including a glimpse of some of the Ionian Islands, under
a favourable evening light.
From Andritsæna to Olympia is a long day’s
ride over a very bad road, and is not a journey to be undertaken by any one
who is deficient either in nerve or physical endurance. But the rich and
varied scenery through which you pass, as you traverse mountain sides
bordering on precipitous gorges, and thread your way through umbrageous
forests and flowery though often thorny thickets, and ford rivers, and skirt
vineyards and cornfields, with an occasional view of far-away summits white
with snow glistening in the sun--makes the experience an interesting and
vivid recollection.
The journey to Bassæ from Andritsæna is very
similar, though too short to be laborious. It conducts to a scene of the most
impressive solitude, at an elevation of nearly 4000 feet, commanding a
magnificent view both of land and sea, including Mt. Ithome and the great
Messenian plain. In the Temple of Bassæ, dedicated to Apollo in this secluded
spot by the people of Phigalia, which was six miles distant, the beauty of
art seems to vie with the grandeur of nature. The ruin is acknowledged by
general consent to be the finest in the Peloponnesus, though for centuries
it was known only to the shepherds in the neighbourhood. Designed
by Ictinus, one of the architects of the Parthenon, the structure
has weathered the storms of more than twenty-three centuries. Of
the thirty-eight Doric columns which surrounded the temple only three
are now wanting, and their architraves are almost intact. The frieze of
the _cella_ or inner chamber was discovered in 1812, and was purchased
two years afterwards by the British Government for £19,000--to be
preserved in the British Museum. On it are represented the battle between
the Greeks and the Amazons, and the fight between the Lapiths and
the Centaurs. The design is admirable, but the execution is so poor as
to suggest that the work was done by local sculptors. Though the frieze
is of marble, the temple generally was built of grey limestone quarried
in the neighbourhood. Unlike other Greek temples, which look to the east
to greet the rising sun, that of Bassæ faces the north. This is
accounted for by the fact that it was built over an older shrine, which, from
the nature of the rocky ledge on which it stood, could not be extended
any farther east and west. The old entrance, however, was still
preserved, and the image of the god still faced to the east. Pausanias tells
us of a bronze statue of Apollo, twelve feet high, which was removed from
the temple to Megalopolis and set up in the market-place, but it has
long since disappeared. The same writer conjectures that the temple
was erected in honour of Apollo Epicourios for having averted from
Phigalia the plague with which Athens was visited during the Peloponnesian
War. But it is considered more likely to have been a general tribute to
the god on account of the health-giving breezes which play over the
spot, and which no doubt made it a favourite resort for the invalids of
the district.
According to the ancient traveller just mentioned, the
civilisation of Arcadia dates from the time of Arcas, who introduced cereal
crops and taught his subjects to spin wool and weave cloth. Here, as
elsewhere in Greece, it is no uncommon thing to see women spinning thread and
herding sheep or goats at the same time, while indoors you may find them busy
at the loom weaving cloth for family use, following the good example set
of old both by Helen and Penelope. Unfortunately, women are also much
in evidence in the fields and on the country roads, doing work which
in this country would be left to men--even such heavy work as
breaking stones. The men seem to be much fonder of taking their ease than
the other sex, and show more vanity in their dress. The Albanian
costume, which is the uniform worn by the eight battalions of Riflemen,
called Evzoni, who guard the frontier, is much affected by those who can
afford it in the country towns. Its most conspicuous features are
the fustanella kilt, made of a white linen of incredible length
when stretched out to its full extent, the embroidered vest, and the
red shoes with turned-up toes. The shepherds wear a sheepskin cloak
without any pretensions to elegance, but they trim their hair with great
care, ringlets frequently hanging over their brow. They wear a broad
leathern belt with innumerable receptacles, and one of the first things they
will show to a stranger who is curious to know what they carry about
with them is a small hand-mirror. They often amuse themselves and
their flocks by playing on the pipe, which they can make in a few minutes
from a bamboo cut in the field or plucked out of the roofing of their
hut.
[Illustration: THE CASTLE OF KARYTÆNA, IN ARCADIA
This is one
of the most romantic scenes in the Peloponnesus, and is aptly quoted by
Curtius as no less characteristic of mediæval Greece than Tiryns and Mycenæ
are of the prehistoric age. The Castle covers the summit of a free-standing
mass of rock, rising up into the air (almost like the central tower of a
great English Cathedral) above a gorge with precipitous red cliffs. To the
right of the Castle lies the modern town.]
CHAPTER
V
SPARTA AND ITS DISCIPLINE
For centuries Sparta was the first
military power in Greece. This position it owed partly to the Dorian vigour
of its inhabitants, and partly to the strict discipline introduced by
Lycurgus at a time when the other Greek states had not yet awakened to the
importance of that military drill which was to contribute so largely to their
influence. Of these two sources of Spartan greatness we seem to have a
recognition in the fact mentioned by Pausanias that at the two bridges, on
either side of the place where the youths were in the habit of engaging in
their athletic contests, there was an image of Heracles and a statue
of Lycurgus, the one being the emblem of bodily strength, the other
of authority and rule.
Besides Sparta there were two other states
whose ruling families could claim to be descended from Heracles, namely Argos
and Messenia. For a long time Argos would admit no superiority on the part of
any other Greek state, and at no time was it reduced to subjection to any;
but within two hundred years after the Lycurgean _regime_ had
been established at Sparta, Messenia had been virtually annexed
to Lacedæmonian territory, and the bulk of its inhabitants reduced to
a state of serfdom scarcely distinguishable from that of the helots
who had been subjugated at the time of the Dorian invasion. From the
first the Dorian conquerors of Messenia seem to have been on more
friendly terms with their subjects than was the case with their kindred
who settled in Argos and Laconia. Their racial characteristics were
thus impaired, while their moral fibre was relaxed by the wealth of
the country which fell to their lot; but it was not till after a number
of severe struggles that Sparta obtained the mastery.
The condition of
the Messenians after the first war (743-724) is thus described by Tyrtæus the
poet, who took part in the second war (645-628):--
Like asses
galled with heavy loads To their masters bringing, by doleful
necessity, Half of all the fruit that the tilled land
yields, Themselves and their wives alike bewailing their
masters Whene’er death’s baneful lot has fallen on any.
The
reference in the last two lines is to the fact that when Spartan kings or
nobles died, men and women had to come from Messenia to attend their funeral,
dressed in black. Their greatest warrior was Aristomenes, who is said to have
twice offered to Zeus Ithomates the sacrifice called _hekatomphonia_, which
could only be offered by any one after slaying a hundred of his enemies in
battle. Rather than submit to the loss of their liberty many of the
Messenians abandoned
[Illustration: INTERIOR OF THE TEMPLE OF APOLLO AT
BASSÆ IN ARCADIA
On the left of the picture are shown some of the columns
of the eastern side of the Temple, together with the attached columns of the
_cella_, a peculiar architectural feature of this Temple. The front (north)
part of the _cella_ was hypæthral, so the floor below the opening in the
roof was slightly hollowed out--as shown in the drawing--to collect
the rain-water. Mount Ithome appears between the columns of the southern
end of the Temple.]
their native land and settled at Naupactus,
Cephallenia, and elsewhere, with the sympathy and help of the Athenians. But
even from these places of refuge they were driven by the Spartans long
afterwards, when the latter had recovered their ascendency, and were forced
to seek new homes in Sicily and Italy (where they founded Messene and
Rhegium) and in North Africa. In 464 B.C. a general rising of the subject
population took place not only in Messenia but in the greater part of
Laconia, partly occasioned by a destructive earthquake, which was regarded as
a judgment of heaven on the Spartans for their sacrilegious cruelty
to some slaves who had taken refuge in a temple of Poseidon on the
coast. In this struggle, as at the close of the first war, the chief
stronghold and rallying-point of the oppressed nationality was Mount Ithome,
which rises to a height of 2600 feet, and was described at a later time as
one of the horns of the Peloponnesus, Acro-Corinthus being the other.
Nearly a hundred years afterwards the Messenians found a deliverer
in Epaminondas. The great Theban not only invited the exiles to return,
but also restored their enslaved countrymen at home to the enjoyment
of their political rights and liberties. In order to secure their unity
and independence he resolved to build a great city in the immediate
vicinity of Ithome, with the summit for an acropolis. After elaborate
sacrifices and solemn prayers, invoking the presence and protection of
their ancient heroes, especially the valiant Aristomenes, the city was
laid out and built with the help of some of the best architects and masons
of the day, the labourers being cheered in their work by the rival
strains of the Bœotian and Argive flutes. Fortifications were erected,
so strong, and planned on such scientific principles, that the remains
of them, in the form of walls and towers and gates, are still
the admiration and astonishment of military men. The territory
which Epaminondas annexed to the city was by far the most fertile part
of Greece, including the plain of Stenyclerus on the north and the
still richer and more extensive plain watered by the river Pamisus on
the south, to which the name of Macaria (“Blessed”) was
given.
Notwithstanding these advantages, and although the returned exiles
had preserved unimpaired their Dorian speech and sentiment, the new city
was not destined to play any great part in the annals of Greece. The fear
of its old enemy made it too ready to submit to the subtle encroachments
of Philip, in spite of the warnings which Demosthenes, the great
Athenian orator, on one occasion addressed in person to its assembly. A few
years later the city fell into the hands of Alexander the Great and
his subordinates, who robbed it of its liberties and paved the way for
the dominion of Rome. The site is now almost uninhabited, and overgrown
with vineyards and corn-fields. Excavations have brought to light
the foundations of a theatre, a stadium, a market-place, and a
fountain; but, apart from the fortifications, there are few remains of any
great interest. The view from the top of the mountain is one of the finest
in the Peloponnesus, commanding the Taygetus range of mountains on the
east and the sea on the south
[Illustration: THE LACONIAN GATE OF
MESSENE
The roadway coming up from the monastery of Vourkano to the
village of Mavromati divides the foreground of the scene. In the middle
distance we have before us the luxuriant valley of the Pamisus, and, in the
far distance, the lofty upper ranges of Taygetus covered with snow.
Under the boughs of the graceful olive, which flanks the finely
squared masonry of the ruined gateway, we catch a glimpse of the gulf
of Messene. The freshness and purity of colour of an April day in
Southern Peloponnesus has here been happily caught.]
and west.
Standing on the summit one has a sense of elevation and aloofness; and one
can understand how it should have been chosen as a retreat by a wealthy
citizen of Athens, who devoted himself to a life of prayer and meditation,
only descending once a fortnight for a supply of necessary food--an
illustration, in a new form, as Prof. Mahaffy remarks, of the tendency to
human sacrifice which was early associated with the altar of Zeus Ithomates.
There is a ruined chapel on the top, also traces of very ancient foundations,
some of them probably connected with the defence of the fortress, others with
the worship of Zeus. Nearly half-way up the mountain the traveller passes a
Greek convent (Vourkano)--a quadrangle with an interesting little church in
the centre, where he will meet with a kind reception if he pay a visit
to the monks and partake of their simple hospitality.
The ascent of
Mount Ithome is in some places rather difficult, and requires careful riding.
Before he start, perhaps the traveller may witness a controversy between his
dragoman and the natives who have been engaged to bring horses or mules for
the journey. An excited crowd will gather, which will not be complete without
the presence and peace-making counsels of the parish priest--usually a very
sociable person, in close touch with the interests of his parishioners, and
conspicuous for his long black beard, his tall rimless hat, and his long
loose coat, lined with fur. Perhaps the traveller may have a servant told off
to guide his beast, who rejoices in the illustrious name of Leonidas, and
is entrusted with a big leather bottle containing the copious supply
of resinated wine intended not only for himself but for
his fellow-servants. To refresh himself in his long climb under the rays
of the sun pouring down upon him from a cloudless sky, Leonidas may
help himself so liberally as to get excited and break out into song
and story, imperilling the rider’s life, perhaps, by going off the
main track and having to turn where the horse has difficulty in keeping
its hind feet from slipping down the side of a precipice; or, perhaps,
in descending the mountain he may pull the rope attached to the
animal’s head with such force as to compel it to take a leap downwards,
which might easily project the rider down the hill if he were not on the
watch and determined to keep his seat under all circumstances. But Leonidas
is an exceptional man, and the animals are so sure-footed that
accidents very seldom occur.
About fifteen miles south-east of
Messene, at the head of the gulf, is the thriving little town of Kalamata,
with some silk manufactories and a large trade in currants and figs and other
fruits. To the south-west, on the coast, about twenty-five miles from
Messene, lies the traditional capital of Nestor’s kingdom, still retaining
its old Homeric name of (sandy) Pylos. Kalamata is supposed to be the ancient
Pheræ at which Telemachus and Nestor’s son, Peisistratus, halted for the
night on their way to Sparta to visit Menelaus. The distances suit well
enough for a two-days’ ride, but it has been pointed out by V. Berard that
there is no road
[Illustration: KALAMATA, ON THE GULF OF MESSENE A
well in the market-place.]
across the Taygetus mountains by which
travellers could have driven in a chariot to Sparta, as Homer represents the
two young men to have done; and he concludes (as Strabo did) that the Pylos
referred to must have been the place of the same name much farther north,
from which a journey on wheels could be made all the way to Sparta. Even
apart from the interest attaching to it as the supposed city of Nestor,
Pylos, with the adjacent island of Sphacteria, has had an important place in
Greek history, both in ancient and in modern times. In the seventh year of
the Pelopennesian war it was the scene of one of the most memorable
defeats ever sustained by the Spartans at the hands of the Athenians.
Twenty-two centuries afterwards (1770 A.D.) its garrison of Greek insurgents
was massacred by the Turks, who, in turn, suffered a similar calamity
in 1821 at the outbreak of the War of Liberation, as the Greeks again
did at the hands of the Egyptians in 1825; while in 1827 the naval battle
of Navarino took place in its bay, resulting in the destruction of
the Turkish fleet, with a loss of 6000 lives, in less than two hours, by
the combined British, French, and Russian forces.
Sparta was the only
Greek state that retained the regal form of government all through the period
of Hellenic glory. Its government was not, strictly speaking, a monarchy,
however, as there were two royal dynasties, descended from the twin sons of
the Heracleid Aristodemus, which had continued unbroken in the male line for
500 years, forming a direct connection with the heroic age. The two kings
served as a check on one another’s ambition, preventing the growth of such
tyranny as had been found intolerable in other states, and had there led to
the adoption of an oligarchic or democratic form of government. The
rights of the community were further conserved by the modification of
two public bodies, dating from the heroic age, of which we often hear
in Homer, namely, the _Boule_ or Senate and the _Ecclesia_ or
General Assembly. In Sparta the former received the name of _Gerousia_,
and consisted of twenty-eight members above sixty years of age,
presided over by the two kings; the latter was called _Apella_, and
was periodically convened to consider any proposals submitted to it, and
had the right to fill up vacancies in the Gerousia. But the most
effectual safeguard against tyranny was found in the annual election, by
the Apella, of five officials, named ephors, who came into existence
about 750 B.C. and gradually acquired such control of public affairs both
at home and abroad that the royal prerogative was virtually reduced to
the command of the army in the field, the offering of public sacrifices,
the charge of communications with the Delphian oracle, and some
other matters of a ceremonial kind. Even in their capacity
as commanders-in-chief the kings became subject to the decision of
the Assembly as to the making of peace or war, and ultimately had even
to take their directions from the ephors in the conduct of a
campaign. Every month the kings and the ephors took an oath of fidelity,
the former promising to rule in accordance with the constitution,
the latter to be loyal in their obedience, on the condition just
mentioned. As in our own country, there was a continual tendency to make
royalty a position of honour rather than of power, which was the more
remarkable in Sparta, as the office was universally regarded as held by
divine right, and as lying at the foundation of the nation’s tide to
its territorial inheritance derived from Heracles.
The social system
introduced by Lycurgus about the beginning of the eighth century B.C., under
the direction, as was believed, of the Delphian oracle, was founded upon a
species of communism to which only those were admitted who were full citizens
of Sparta, and had sufficient property to contribute their appointed quota to
the expenses of the common mess. All the citizens without exception had to
conform with the utmost regularity to a rigorous code of discipline, which
was fitted to produce habits of courage, strength, endurance, self-denial,
and simplicity of life. The training of the boys for military service,
to which citizens were liable from their twentieth to their sixtieth
year, began when they were seven years old. They were not only trained
to athletic exercises and feats of strength, but they had also to
content themselves with the plainest food and the scantiest clothing. As
they approached manhood it was considered to be in the interests of
religion, and pleasing to the goddess Artemis Orthia in particular, that
they should be severely scourged, and it was no uncommon thing for young
lads to die under the operation without betraying any sign of suffering.
To be able to bear pain without flinching, and to become inured to
the severest hardships and privations, was looked on as the chief end of
a manly education.
The young women were also trained in gymnastic
exercises, and enjoyed more freedom than in any other part of Greece. They
boxed and wrestled, and ran races, sometimes even with the young men. The
object of their education was to train them to be mothers of brave men, and
their martial spirit comes out in some of the sayings addressed by
Spartan mothers to their sons--“Return with your shield or upon it,” “If
your sword is too short add a pace to it.” As a rule the women held
a position of honour in the community and were frequently possessed
of property, so much so that in the fourth century B.C. more than half
the land in Laconia belonged to them. They were trained to suppress
all emotions of tenderness and compassion, and to reserve their
admiration and affection for the brave and strong. Nothing could have been
more humiliating than the reception given to defeated soldiers who
survived their comrades and returned home. No one would speak to them
or associate with them in any way, and if they did not bear themselves
with the greatest humility they were liable to be struck and insulted by
any one who met them. Cowardice was the one sin for which there was
no forgiveness. It is told of one of the men serving under Leonidas,
who had allowed some complaint in his eyes to prevent him from joining
his comrades at Thermopylæ, that when he went home to Sparta he was
treated with the utmost scorn; no
[Illustration: MOUNT ITHOME FROM THE
STADION OF MESSENE
At the base of the mountain, part of the village of
Mavromati may be seen. The architectural fragments in the foreground lie near
the entrance to the Stadion. Only the western side of the Stadion
appears. Its site is indicated by two figures seated under a
tree.]
one would give him even a light for his fire. A year afterwards
the same man was foremost in the fight at the battle of Platæa, which
completed the discomfiture of Persia. He thought by his heroic defiance of
danger to wipe out the reproach which rested on him, and he perished nobly
on the field. But for all that he was not considered worthy of the
funeral honours that were bestowed upon his fallen comrades, who had been
less reckless in the fight but had always done their duty.
In harmony
with this contempt for cowardice was the deportment of soldiers’ relatives
when news of battle reached them. The friends of those who had fallen,
instead of being cast down with grief, went about with a proud and glad mien,
as if they knew they were entitled to honour and respect, while the relatives
of those who had allowed themselves to be taken prisoners or had made their
escape were depressed and sad, as if they had reason to be ashamed in the
presence of their neighbours. When tidings of the terrible disaster at
Leuctra arrived at Sparta the whole community were engaged in the celebration
of the festival of _gymnopædia_, and the chorus of grown men was at the
moment performing in the theatre. But no suspension or interruption of the
proceedings took place. The only thing done was to send information of
their bereavement to those whose friends were reported as killed, and
to enjoin the women to make no noise. Historians have contrasted
this self-control of the Spartans with the weeping and wailing of
the Athenians on the night on which the news arrived of the destruction
of their fleet at Ægospotami, which put an end for ever to their
naval empire. But they also relate an incident which shows that Athenian
women could be as fierce in their indignation as their Spartan sisters. In
an expedition against Ægina the whole of the Athenian citizens engaged
in it, except one, lost their lives. On his return the survivor was
beset by the widows of his slain comrades, each demanding to know what
had become of her husband; and before he could make his escape from
the infuriate crowd he was pricked to death with their brooch-pins.
In
contrast to the wonderful calmness shown by the Spartans in time of calamity
was the demonstration of feeling which took place on one occasion when they
received unexpected news of a great victory over the combined Arcadian and
Argive forces, without the loss of a single Lacedæmonian. For some time they
had been so accustomed to defeat that all who heard the news burst into
tears, Agesilaus and the Ephors setting the example--so much more difficult
is it to repress violent feelings of joy than of sorrow.
It was
another peculiarity of Spartan training that to take advantage of people in
the matter of property was regarded as a merit, if the dishonesty was not
detected, and if it was not a breach of some special law or custom. In
Xenophon’s _Anabasis_ (iv. 6) there is a curious allusion to this trait of
the Spartan character. The Greek army had come to a pass occupied by a
hostile force. Instead of trying to carry it by direct assault Xenophon
suggested that soldiers should be sent up the shoulder of the hill to turn
the position. “But,” he said, addressing his Spartan colleague Cheirisophus,
“stealing a march upon the enemy is more in your line than mine. For I
understand that you, the full citizens and peers of Sparta, practise stealing
from your boyhood upwards, and that it is held no way base, but even
honourable, to steal such things as the law does not distinctly forbid. And
in order that you may steal with the greatest effect and take pains to do it
in secret, the custom is to flog you if you are found out. Here, then, you
have an excellent opportunity of displaying your skill. Take good care that
we be not found out in stealing possession of the mountain now before
us, for if we are found out we shall be well beaten.” To this
pleasantry Cheirisophus rejoined: “Why, as for that, you Athenians also, as
I learn, are capital hands at stealing the public money, and that, too,
in spite of prodigious peril to the thief. Nay, your most powerful
men steal most of all--at least if it be the most powerful men among
you that are raised to official command. So that this is a time for you
to exhibit your training as well as for me to exhibit mine.”
There was
no place where the love of money was more prevalent than in Sparta, and that
in spite of the fact that till a comparatively late period the possession of
gold and silver by private individuals was forbidden. For a long time the
only metal in circulation was iron, in such heavy pieces that it was
impossible for any one to carry much money with him, or even to store it in
his house. When Lysander brought home what was left of the large amount of
gold and silver he had received from Cyrus for the prosecution of his
schemes, strong objection was taken to its admission by some of the Ephors,
as being at variance with the principles laid down by Lycurgus. It was only
on the understanding that the treasure was to be the property of the state,
and not of any private individual, that their objections were overruled,
though their scruples about accepting the money did not prevent them from
withholding from their allies any share of the spoil. The Lycurgean system
was doomed, owing to the change which had come over the views of the
leading men, as the result of foreign travel, and the bribery to which they
had become habituated, especially in their relations with Persia. The
wealth and magnificence of their famous general, Lysander, who was the
first Greek to receive divine honours in historic times, and who is the
most typical representative of imperial Sparta, present a striking
contrast to the severe simplicity of his forefathers. Even a greater evil
than the personal self-seeking which began to prevail was the
collective selfishness by which the Spartans had long been distinguished. As
a rule, they were comparatively indifferent to the general interests
of the Hellenic race, and on more than one occasion they showed that
they were ready to sacrifice these interests for their own
immediate advantage, currying favour with the Persians at the cost of
the liberties of the Asiatic Greeks, and envying and grieving at the
naval empire of Athens, while they failed to take advantage of their
own opportunities
[Illustration: TRIPLE BRIDGE OVER THE MAVRO-ZOUMENOS
RIVER
Near the village of Neochori, on the road from Ithome to
Meligula.]
for building up an empire on land, in which they could have
retained their supremacy without trampling on the rights and liberties of
other Greek states. If Sparta had possessed a few more men of the type
of Brasidas--men of a generous and catholic spirit as well as of
consummate ability in war--its own life and the life of ancient Greece might
have been indefinitely prolonged.
It was one of the penalties of the
narrow discipline of Sparta that it produced so few really great men. The
body was cultivated at the expense of the mind, and little or no importance
was attached to intellectual pursuits. Music was almost the only form of art
generally cultivated, and that chiefly because of its connection with
military drill. The victory of Agis at Mantinea in 418 B.C., when he was
taken by surprise, was largely due to the inspiring and regulative influence
of the fifes and war-songs (which were as cheering and not so exciting as
the speeches delivered on the other side), as well as to the superior
mode of transmitting orders from the general, through the various
gradations of rank (down to the _enomotarch_ in charge of some twenty-five
men), as compared with the public proclamation by a herald, which was
customary elsewhere. Even for their music they are said to have been indebted
to foreign teachers--to Tyrtæus, whose stirring strains raised
their spirits at a most trying crisis in their history; to Terpander,
who added three strings to the lyre, completing the octave; and to
Alcman, the last to train a popular and voluntary chorus. Not only in
their military drill, but also in their public processions and choral
dances, music played a great part in their civilisation. People of all ranks
and classes (not excepting even the kings) and of all ages, were expected
to undergo training at the hands of the chorus-master and take
their allotted place in the public celebrations. To this day you may
sometimes see on festive occasions well-dressed men and women joining with the
children in a choral dance on the public
road. |
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