<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII<br/> <span class="subhead">HISTIAEUS SHAVES THE HEAD OF HIS SLAVE</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">For</span> a few years after Histiaeus was summoned to Susa, the
Greek cities in Asia showed no disloyalty.</p>
<p>But about 500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> the people of Naxos, an island in the
Ægean Sea, rose and expelled the nobles from their city.
This was the beginning of a war between Greece and Asia,
known as the Ionian revolt.</p>
<p>The nobles, when they were turned out of Naxos, went to
Aristagoras, tyrant of Miletus, to beg him to help them to
punish the rebels and to gain possession of the island.</p>
<p>Aristagoras knew that alone he was not strong enough
to regain Naxos for the nobles, but he said that he would ask
Artaphernes, the Persian ruler in Sardis, to help him.</p>
<p>So Aristagoras went to Sardis and begged Artaphernes to
give him a hundred ships to sail against Naxos, promising if
he would do so to reward him with money and with gifts.</p>
<p>Artaphernes offered, if Darius would consent, to give not
only a hundred, but two hundred ships. The great king
bade his brother do as he thought well, so two hundred ships,
under the command of Megabates, were sent from Sardis to
join Aristagoras in his expedition against Naxos.</p>
<p>The two leaders, Aristagoras and Megabates, had not
sailed far together when they quarrelled, and it was because
of this quarrel that the plans of Aristagoras went awry.</p>
<p>One night Megabates found that no watch had been set
on one of the ships belonging to Aristagoras. He was so
angry with the captain for being careless that he ordered
his head to be placed in one of the oarholes in the side of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
vessel. When this was done the unhappy man could do
nothing to set himself free, but with hanging head he was
forced to gaze into the water.</p>
<p>When Aristagoras found what Megabates had done he
went at once to ask him to set the culprit free. This
Megabates refused to do, and the tyrant himself released the
captain.</p>
<p>To have his authority flouted in this way made Megabates
angry, but when he would have spoken, Aristagoras proudly
bade him be silent, saying, ‘Did not Artaphernes send you to
serve under me?’</p>
<p>Perhaps it would have been wiser to allow the Persian
to speak, for now his anger smouldered in his heart, and
he resolved to be revenged on Aristagoras. So he sent a
messenger to Naxos to warn the citizens that an enemy was
at hand.</p>
<p>The Naxians at once strengthened their walls and brought
provisions into their city, so that when Aristagoras arrived,
he found to his astonishment that the citizens had been
warned and were ready to resist an attack.</p>
<p>For four months the Greeks and Persians besieged Naxos,
but all their efforts to take the city were vain. Then, their
money and their provisions having come to an end, Aristagoras
was forced to order the fleets to withdraw.</p>
<p>The tyrant was now in great trouble. He had neither
gold nor gifts to give to Artaphernes as he had promised.
He had wasted Persian money on a useless expedition, and he
had made Megabates his enemy. What would Darius say
when he heard these things? Aristagoras was afraid that
the king would no longer allow him to be tyrant of Miletus.</p>
<p>It seemed to Aristagoras that the only way to save himself
from disgrace was to persuade the Greeks in Asia Minor
to revolt against Darius and himself to become their leader.</p>
<p>Now just at this time Histiaeus was more than ever
determined to escape from the court of Susa. He thought
if Aristagoras would but incite the Greeks to rebel, Darius<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span>
would send him back to Miletus to restore order to the
city.</p>
<p>So while Aristagoras was still hesitating about rousing the
citizens, a slave was shown into his presence. He came from
Histiaeus, and said that his master had bidden him tell
Aristagoras to shave off his hair and look at the message
that was branded on his head.</p>
<p>This was a strange way to send a message! But Histiaeus
had been unable to think of any other way to tell Aristagoras
what he wished him to do. So he had himself first shaved
the head of his slave, and branded on it certain signs which
meant that the tyrant was to revolt against the Persians.
He had waited only until the slave’s hair had grown again,
when he had at once sent him to Miletus.</p>
<p>When Aristagoras looked at the slave’s head and learned
that Histiaeus encouraged him to revolt, he hesitated no
longer. He determined to rouse the Ionian Greeks, and he
began with his own city Miletus. When he had assembled
the citizens he told them that the time had come to throw off
the Persian yoke. He then gave up his position as tyrant
that Miletus might be made into a democracy. The example
of Miletus was quickly followed by many other cities, and the
Greeks were soon in open rebellion against Darius.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span></p>
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