<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XVI </h2>
<p><i>Feeling against Sparta in Peloponnese—League of the Mantineans,
Eleans, Argives, and Athenians—Battle of Mantinea and breaking up of
the League</i></p>
<p>After the treaty and the alliance between the Lacedaemonians and
Athenians, concluded after the ten years' war, in the ephorate of
Pleistolas at Lacedaemon, and the archonship of Alcaeus at Athens, the
states which had accepted them were at peace; but the Corinthians and some
of the cities in Peloponnese trying to disturb the settlement, a fresh
agitation was instantly commenced by the allies against Lacedaemon.
Further, the Lacedaemonians, as time went on, became suspected by the
Athenians through their not performing some of the provisions in the
treaty; and though for six years and ten months they abstained from
invasion of each other's territory, yet abroad an unstable armistice did
not prevent either party doing the other the most effectual injury, until
they were finally obliged to break the treaty made after the ten years'
war and to have recourse to open hostilities.</p>
<p>The history of this period has been also written by the same Thucydides,
an Athenian, in the chronological order of events by summers and winters,
to the time when the Lacedaemonians and their allies put an end to the
Athenian empire, and took the Long Walls and Piraeus. The war had then
lasted for twenty-seven years in all. Only a mistaken judgment can object
to including the interval of treaty in the war. Looked at by the light of
facts it cannot, it will be found, be rationally considered a state of
peace, where neither party either gave or got back all that they had
agreed, apart from the violations of it which occurred on both sides in
the Mantinean and Epidaurian wars and other instances, and the fact that
the allies in the direction of Thrace were in as open hostility as ever,
while the Boeotians had only a truce renewed every ten days. So that the
first ten years' war, the treacherous armistice that followed it, and the
subsequent war will, calculating by the seasons, be found to make up the
number of years which I have mentioned, with the difference of a few days,
and to afford an instance of faith in oracles being for once justified by
the event. I certainly all along remember from the beginning to the end of
the war its being commonly declared that it would last thrice nine years.
I lived through the whole of it, being of an age to comprehend events, and
giving my attention to them in order to know the exact truth about them.
It was also my fate to be an exile from my country for twenty years after
my command at Amphipolis; and being present with both parties, and more
especially with the Peloponnesians by reason of my exile, I had leisure to
observe affairs somewhat particularly. I will accordingly now relate the
differences that arose after the ten years' war, the breach of the treaty,
and the hostilities that followed.</p>
<p>After the conclusion of the fifty years' truce and of the subsequent
alliance, the embassies from Peloponnese which had been summoned for this
business returned from Lacedaemon. The rest went straight home, but the
Corinthians first turned aside to Argos and opened negotiations with some
of the men in office there, pointing out that Lacedaemon could have no
good end in view, but only the subjugation of Peloponnese, or she would
never have entered into treaty and alliance with the once detested
Athenians, and that the duty of consulting for the safety of Peloponnese
had now fallen upon Argos, who should immediately pass a decree inviting
any Hellenic state that chose, such state being independent and accustomed
to meet fellow powers upon the fair and equal ground of law and justice,
to make a defensive alliance with the Argives; appointing a few
individuals with plenipotentiary powers, instead of making the people the
medium of negotiation, in order that, in the case of an applicant being
rejected, the fact of his overtures might not be made public. They said
that many would come over from hatred of the Lacedaemonians. After this
explanation of their views, the Corinthians returned home.</p>
<p>The persons with whom they had communicated reported the proposal to their
government and people, and the Argives passed the decree and chose twelve
men to negotiate an alliance for any Hellenic state that wished it, except
Athens and Lacedaemon, neither of which should be able to join without
reference to the Argive people. Argos came into the plan the more readily
because she saw that war with Lacedaemon was inevitable, the truce being
on the point of expiring; and also because she hoped to gain the supremacy
of Peloponnese. For at this time Lacedaemon had sunk very low in public
estimation because of her disasters, while the Argives were in a most
flourishing condition, having taken no part in the Attic war, but having
on the contrary profited largely by their neutrality. The Argives
accordingly prepared to receive into alliance any of the Hellenes that
desired it.</p>
<p>The Mantineans and their allies were the first to come over through fear
of the Lacedaemonians. Having taken advantage of the war against Athens to
reduce a large part of Arcadia into subjection, they thought that
Lacedaemon would not leave them undisturbed in their conquests, now that
she had leisure to interfere, and consequently gladly turned to a powerful
city like Argos, the historical enemy of the Lacedaemonians, and a sister
democracy. Upon the defection of Mantinea, the rest of Peloponnese at once
began to agitate the propriety of following her example, conceiving that
the Mantineans not have changed sides without good reason; besides which
they were angry with Lacedaemon among other reasons for having inserted in
the treaty with Athens that it should be consistent with their oaths for
both parties, Lacedaemonians and Athenians, to add to or take away from it
according to their discretion. It was this clause that was the real origin
of the panic in Peloponnese, by exciting suspicions of a Lacedaemonian and
Athenian combination against their liberties: any alteration should
properly have been made conditional upon the consent of the whole body of
the allies. With these apprehensions there was a very general desire in
each state to place itself in alliance with Argos.</p>
<p>In the meantime the Lacedaemonians perceiving the agitation going on in
Peloponnese, and that Corinth was the author of it and was herself about
to enter into alliance with the Argives, sent ambassadors thither in the
hope of preventing what was in contemplation. They accused her of having
brought it all about, and told her that she could not desert Lacedaemon
and become the ally of Argos, without adding violation of her oaths to the
crime which she had already committed in not accepting the treaty with
Athens, when it had been expressly agreed that the decision of the
majority of the allies should be binding, unless the gods or heroes stood
in the way. Corinth in her answer, delivered before those of her allies
who had like her refused to accept the treaty, and whom she had previously
invited to attend, refrained from openly stating the injuries she
complained of, such as the non-recovery of Sollium or Anactorium from the
Athenians, or any other point in which she thought she had been
prejudiced, but took shelter under the pretext that she could not give up
her Thracian allies, to whom her separate individual security had been
given, when they first rebelled with Potidaea, as well as upon subsequent
occasions. She denied, therefore, that she committed any violation of her
oaths to the allies in not entering into the treaty with Athens; having
sworn upon the faith of the gods to her Thracian friends, she could not
honestly give them up. Besides, the expression was, "unless the gods or
heroes stand in the way." Now here, as it appeared to her, the gods stood
in the way. This was what she said on the subject of her former oaths. As
to the Argive alliance, she would confer with her friends and do whatever
was right. The Lacedaemonian envoys returning home, some Argive
ambassadors who happened to be in Corinth pressed her to conclude the
alliance without further delay, but were told to attend at the next
congress to be held at Corinth.</p>
<p>Immediately afterwards an Elean embassy arrived, and first making an
alliance with Corinth went on from thence to Argos, according to their
instructions, and became allies of the Argives, their country being just
then at enmity with Lacedaemon and Lepreum. Some time back there had been
a war between the Lepreans and some of the Arcadians; and the Eleans being
called in by the former with the offer of half their lands, had put an end
to the war, and leaving the land in the hands of its Leprean occupiers had
imposed upon them the tribute of a talent to the Olympian Zeus. Till the
Attic war this tribute was paid by the Lepreans, who then took the war as
an excuse for no longer doing so, and upon the Eleans using force appealed
to Lacedaemon. The case was thus submitted to her arbitrament; but the
Eleans, suspecting the fairness of the tribunal, renounced the reference
and laid waste the Leprean territory. The Lacedaemonians nevertheless
decided that the Lepreans were independent and the Eleans aggressors, and
as the latter did not abide by the arbitration, sent a garrison of heavy
infantry into Lepreum. Upon this the Eleans, holding that Lacedaemon had
received one of their rebel subjects, put forward the convention providing
that each confederate should come out of the Attic war in possession of
what he had when he went into it, and considering that justice had not
been done them went over to the Argives, and now made the alliance through
their ambassadors, who had been instructed for that purpose. Immediately
after them the Corinthians and the Thracian Chalcidians became allies of
Argos. Meanwhile the Boeotians and Megarians, who acted together, remained
quiet, being left to do as they pleased by Lacedaemon, and thinking that
the Argive democracy would not suit so well with their aristocratic
government as the Lacedaemonian constitution.</p>
<p>About the same time in this summer Athens succeeded in reducing Scione,
put the adult males to death, and, making slaves of the women and
children, gave the land for the Plataeans to live in. She also brought
back the Delians to Delos, moved by her misfortunes in the field and by
the commands of the god at Delphi. Meanwhile the Phocians and Locrians
commenced hostilities. The Corinthians and Argives, being now in alliance,
went to Tegea to bring about its defection from Lacedaemon, seeing that,
if so considerable a state could be persuaded to join, all Peloponnese
would be with them. But when the Tegeans said that they would do nothing
against Lacedaemon, the hitherto zealous Corinthians relaxed their
activity, and began to fear that none of the rest would now come over.
Still they went to the Boeotians and tried to persuade them to alliance
and a common action generally with Argos and themselves, and also begged
them to go with them to Athens and obtain for them a ten days' truce
similar to that made between the Athenians and Boeotians not long after
the fifty years' treaty, and, in the event of the Athenians refusing, to
throw up the armistice, and not make any truce in future without Corinth.
These were the requests of the Corinthians. The Boeotians stopped them on
the subject of the Argive alliance, but went with them to Athens, where
however they failed to obtain the ten days' truce; the Athenian answer
being that the Corinthians had truce already, as being allies of
Lacedaemon. Nevertheless the Boeotians did not throw up their ten days'
truce, in spite of the prayers and reproaches of the Corinthians for their
breach of faith; and these last had to content themselves with a de facto
armistice with Athens.</p>
<p>The same summer the Lacedaemonians marched into Arcadia with their whole
levy under Pleistoanax, son of Pausanias, king of Lacedaemon, against the
Parrhasians, who were subjects of Mantinea, and a faction of whom had
invited their aid. They also meant to demolish, if possible, the fort of
Cypsela which the Mantineans had built and garrisoned in the Parrhasian
territory, to annoy the district of Sciritis in Laconia. The
Lacedaemonians accordingly laid waste the Parrhasian country, and the
Mantineans, placing their town in the hands of an Argive garrison,
addressed themselves to the defence of their confederacy, but being unable
to save Cypsela or the Parrhasian towns went back to Mantinea. Meanwhile
the Lacedaemonians made the Parrhasians independent, razed the fortress,
and returned home.</p>
<p>The same summer the soldiers from Thrace who had gone out with Brasidas
came back, having been brought from thence after the treaty by Clearidas;
and the Lacedaemonians decreed that the Helots who had fought with
Brasidas should be free and allowed to live where they liked, and not long
afterwards settled them with the Neodamodes at Lepreum, which is situated
on the Laconian and Elean border; Lacedaemon being at this time at enmity
with Elis. Those however of the Spartans who had been taken prisoners on
the island and had surrendered their arms might, it was feared, suppose
that they were to be subjected to some degradation in consequence of their
misfortune, and so make some attempt at revolution, if left in possession
of their franchise. These were therefore at once disfranchised, although
some of them were in office at the time, and thus placed under a
disability to take office, or buy and sell anything. After some time,
however, the franchise was restored to them.</p>
<p>The same summer the Dians took Thyssus, a town on Acte by Athos in
alliance with Athens. During the whole of this summer intercourse between
the Athenians and Peloponnesians continued, although each party began to
suspect the other directly after the treaty, because of the places
specified in it not being restored. Lacedaemon, to whose lot it had fallen
to begin by restoring Amphipolis and the other towns, had not done so. She
had equally failed to get the treaty accepted by her Thracian allies, or
by the Boeotians or the Corinthians; although she was continually
promising to unite with Athens in compelling their compliance, if it were
longer refused. She also kept fixing a time at which those who still
refused to come in were to be declared enemies to both parties, but took
care not to bind herself by any written agreement. Meanwhile the
Athenians, seeing none of these professions performed in fact, began to
suspect the honesty of her intentions, and consequently not only refused
to comply with her demands for Pylos, but also repented having given up
the prisoners from the island, and kept tight hold of the other places,
until Lacedaemon's part of the treaty should be fulfilled. Lacedaemon, on
the other hand, said she had done what she could, having given up the
Athenian prisoners of war in her possession, evacuated Thrace, and
performed everything else in her power. Amphipolis it was out of her
ability to restore; but she would endeavour to bring the Boeotians and
Corinthians into the treaty, to recover Panactum, and send home all the
Athenian prisoners of war in Boeotia. Meanwhile she required that Pylos
should be restored, or at all events that the Messenians and Helots should
be withdrawn, as her troops had been from Thrace, and the place
garrisoned, if necessary, by the Athenians themselves. After a number of
different conferences held during the summer, she succeeded in persuading
Athens to withdraw from Pylos the Messenians and the rest of the Helots
and deserters from Laconia, who were accordingly settled by her at Cranii
in Cephallenia. Thus during this summer there was peace and intercourse
between the two peoples.</p>
<p>Next winter, however, the ephors under whom the treaty had been made were
no longer in office, and some of their successors were directly opposed to
it. Embassies now arrived from the Lacedaemonian confederacy, and the
Athenians, Boeotians, and Corinthians also presented themselves at
Lacedaemon, and after much discussion and no agreement between them,
separated for their several homes; when Cleobulus and Xenares, the two
ephors who were the most anxious to break off the treaty, took advantage
of this opportunity to communicate privately with the Boeotians and
Corinthians, and, advising them to act as much as possible together,
instructed the former first to enter into alliance with Argos, and then
try and bring themselves and the Argives into alliance with Lacedaemon.
The Boeotians would so be least likely to be compelled to come into the
Attic treaty; and the Lacedaemonians would prefer gaining the friendship
and alliance of Argos even at the price of the hostility of Athens and the
rupture of the treaty. The Boeotians knew that an honourable friendship
with Argos had been long the desire of Lacedaemon; for the Lacedaemonians
believed that this would considerably facilitate the conduct of the war
outside Peloponnese. Meanwhile they begged the Boeotians to place Panactum
in her hands in order that she might, if possible, obtain Pylos in
exchange for it, and so be more in a position to resume hostilities with
Athens.</p>
<p>After receiving these instructions for their governments from Xenares and
Cleobulus and their friends at Lacedaemon, the Boeotians and Corinthians
departed. On their way home they were joined by two persons high in office
at Argos, who had waited for them on the road, and who now sounded them
upon the possibility of the Boeotians joining the Corinthians, Eleans, and
Mantineans in becoming the allies of Argos, in the idea that if this could
be effected they would be able, thus united, to make peace or war as they
pleased either against Lacedaemon or any other power. The Boeotian envoys
were were pleased at thus hearing themselves accidentally asked to do what
their friends at Lacedaemon had told them; and the two Argives perceiving
that their proposal was agreeable, departed with a promise to send
ambassadors to the Boeotians. On their arrival the Boeotians reported to
the Boeotarchs what had been said to them at Lacedaemon and also by the
Argives who had met them, and the Boeotarchs, pleased with the idea,
embraced it with the more eagerness from the lucky coincidence of Argos
soliciting the very thing wanted by their friends at Lacedaemon. Shortly
afterwards ambassadors appeared from Argos with the proposals indicated;
and the Boeotarchs approved of the terms and dismissed the ambassadors
with a promise to send envoys to Argos to negotiate the alliance.</p>
<p>In the meantime it was decided by the Boeotarchs, the Corinthians, the
Megarians, and the envoys from Thrace first to interchange oaths together
to give help to each other whenever it was required and not to make war or
peace except in common; after which the Boeotians and Megarians, who acted
together, should make the alliance with Argos. But before the oaths were
taken the Boeotarchs communicated these proposals to the four councils of
the Boeotians, in whom the supreme power resides, and advised them to
interchange oaths with all such cities as should be willing to enter into
a defensive league with the Boeotians. But the members of the Boeotian
councils refused their assent to the proposal, being afraid of offending
Lacedaemon by entering into a league with the deserter Corinth; the
Boeotarchs not having acquainted them with what had passed at Lacedaemon
and with the advice given by Cleobulus and Xenares and the Boeotian
partisans there, namely, that they should become allies of Corinth and
Argos as a preliminary to a junction with Lacedaemon; fancying that, even
if they should say nothing about this, the councils would not vote against
what had been decided and advised by the Boeotarchs. This difficulty
arising, the Corinthians and the envoys from Thrace departed without
anything having been concluded; and the Boeotarchs, who had previously
intended after carrying this to try and effect the alliance with Argos,
now omitted to bring the Argive question before the councils, or to send
to Argos the envoys whom they had promised; and a general coldness and
delay ensued in the matter.</p>
<p>In this same winter Mecyberna was assaulted and taken by the Olynthians,
having an Athenian garrison inside it.</p>
<p>All this while negotiations had been going on between the Athenians and
Lacedaemonians about the conquests still retained by each, and Lacedaemon,
hoping that if Athens were to get back Panactum from the Boeotians she
might herself recover Pylos, now sent an embassy to the Boeotians, and
begged them to place Panactum and their Athenian prisoners in her hands,
in order that she might exchange them for Pylos. This the Boeotians
refused to do, unless Lacedaemon made a separate alliance with them as she
had done with Athens. Lacedaemon knew that this would be a breach of faith
to Athens, as it had been agreed that neither of them should make peace or
war without the other; yet wishing to obtain Panactum which she hoped to
exchange for Pylos, and the party who pressed for the dissolution of the
treaty strongly affecting the Boeotian connection, she at length concluded
the alliance just as winter gave way to spring; and Panactum was instantly
razed. And so the eleventh year of the war ended.</p>
<p>In the first days of the summer following, the Argives, seeing that the
promised ambassadors from Boeotia did not arrive, and that Panactum was
being demolished, and that a separate alliance had been concluded between
the Boeotians and Lacedaemonians, began to be afraid that Argos might be
left alone, and all the confederacy go over to Lacedaemon. They fancied
that the Boeotians had been persuaded by the Lacedaemonians to raze
Panactum and to enter into the treaty with the Athenians, and that Athens
was privy to this arrangement, and even her alliance, therefore, no longer
open to them—a resource which they had always counted upon, by
reason of the dissensions existing, in the event of the noncontinuance of
their treaty with Lacedaemon. In this strait the Argives, afraid that, as
the result of refusing to renew the treaty with Lacedaemon and of aspiring
to the supremacy in Peloponnese, they would have the Lacedaemonians,
Tegeans, Boeotians, and Athenians on their hands all at once, now hastily
sent off Eustrophus and Aeson, who seemed the persons most likely to be
acceptable, as envoys to Lacedaemon, with the view of making as good a
treaty as they could with the Lacedaemonians, upon such terms as could be
got, and being left in peace.</p>
<p>Having reached Lacedaemon, their ambassadors proceeded to negotiate the
terms of the proposed treaty. What the Argives first demanded was that
they might be allowed to refer to the arbitration of some state or private
person the question of the Cynurian land, a piece of frontier territory
about which they have always been disputing, and which contains the towns
of Thyrea and Anthene, and is occupied by the Lacedaemonians. The
Lacedaemonians at first said that they could not allow this point to be
discussed, but were ready to conclude upon the old terms. Eventually,
however, the Argive ambassadors succeeded in obtaining from them this
concession: For the present there was to be a truce for fifty years, but
it should be competent for either party, there being neither plague nor
war in Lacedaemon or Argos, to give a formal challenge and decide the
question of this territory by battle, as on a former occasion, when both
sides claimed the victory; pursuit not being allowed beyond the frontier
of Argos or Lacedaemon. The Lacedaemonians at first thought this mere
folly; but at last, anxious at any cost to have the friendship of Argos
they agreed to the terms demanded, and reduced them to writing. However,
before any of this should become binding, the ambassadors were to return
to Argos and communicate with their people and, in the event of their
approval, to come at the feast of the Hyacinthia and take the oaths.</p>
<p>The envoys returned accordingly. In the meantime, while the Argives were
engaged in these negotiations, the Lacedaemonian ambassadors—Andromedes,
Phaedimus, and Antimenidas—who were to receive the prisoners from
the Boeotians and restore them and Panactum to the Athenians, found that
the Boeotians had themselves razed Panactum, upon the plea that oaths had
been anciently exchanged between their people and the Athenians, after a
dispute on the subject to the effect that neither should inhabit the
place, but that they should graze it in common. As for the Athenian
prisoners of war in the hands of the Boeotians, these were delivered over
to Andromedes and his colleagues, and by them conveyed to Athens and given
back. The envoys at the same time announced the razing of Panactum, which
to them seemed as good as its restitution, as it would no longer lodge an
enemy of Athens. This announcement was received with great indignation by
the Athenians, who thought that the Lacedaemonians had played them false,
both in the matter of the demolition of Panactum, which ought to have been
restored to them standing, and in having, as they now heard, made a
separate alliance with the Boeotians, in spite of their previous promise
to join Athens in compelling the adhesion of those who refused to accede
to the treaty. The Athenians also considered the other points in which
Lacedaemon had failed in her compact, and thinking that they had been
overreached, gave an angry answer to the ambassadors and sent them away.</p>
<p>The breach between the Lacedaemonians and Athenians having gone thus far,
the party at Athens, also, who wished to cancel the treaty, immediately
put themselves in motion. Foremost amongst these was Alcibiades, son of
Clinias, a man yet young in years for any other Hellenic city, but
distinguished by the splendour of his ancestry. Alcibiades thought the
Argive alliance really preferable, not that personal pique had not also a
great deal to do with his opposition; he being offended with the
Lacedaemonians for having negotiated the treaty through Nicias and Laches,
and having overlooked him on account of his youth, and also for not having
shown him the respect due to the ancient connection of his family with
them as their proxeni, which, renounced by his grandfather, he had lately
himself thought to renew by his attentions to their prisoners taken in the
island. Being thus, as he thought, slighted on all hands, he had in the
first instance spoken against the treaty, saying that the Lacedaemonians
were not to be trusted, but that they only treated, in order to be enabled
by this means to crush Argos, and afterwards to attack Athens alone; and
now, immediately upon the above occurring, he sent privately to the
Argives, telling them to come as quickly as possible to Athens,
accompanied by the Mantineans and Eleans, with proposals of alliance; as
the moment was propitious and he himself would do all he could to help
them.</p>
<p>Upon receiving this message and discovering that the Athenians, far from
being privy to the Boeotian alliance, were involved in a serious quarrel
with the Lacedaemonians, the Argives paid no further attention to the
embassy which they had just sent to Lacedaemon on the subject of the
treaty, and began to incline rather towards the Athenians, reflecting
that, in the event of war, they would thus have on their side a city that
was not only an ancient ally of Argos, but a sister democracy and very
powerful at sea. They accordingly at once sent ambassadors to Athens to
treat for an alliance, accompanied by others from Elis and Mantinea.</p>
<p>At the same time arrived in haste from Lacedaemon an embassy consisting of
persons reputed well disposed towards the Athenians—Philocharidas,
Leon, and Endius—for fear that the Athenians in their irritation
might conclude alliance with the Argives, and also to ask back Pylos in
exchange for Panactum, and in defence of the alliance with the Boeotians
to plead that it had not been made to hurt the Athenians. Upon the envoys
speaking in the senate upon these points, and stating that they had come
with full powers to settle all others at issue between them, Alcibiades
became afraid that, if they were to repeat these statements to the popular
assembly, they might gain the multitude, and the Argive alliance might be
rejected, and accordingly had recourse to the following stratagem. He
persuaded the Lacedaemonians by a solemn assurance that if they would say
nothing of their full powers in the assembly, he would give back Pylos to
them (himself, the present opponent of its restitution, engaging to obtain
this from the Athenians), and would settle the other points at issue. His
plan was to detach them from Nicias and to disgrace them before the
people, as being without sincerity in their intentions, or even common
consistency in their language, and so to get the Argives, Eleans, and
Mantineans taken into alliance. This plan proved successful. When the
envoys appeared before the people, and upon the question being put to
them, did not say as they had said in the senate, that they had come with
full powers, the Athenians lost all patience, and carried away by
Alcibiades, who thundered more loudly than ever against the
Lacedaemonians, were ready instantly to introduce the Argives and their
companions and to take them into alliance. An earthquake, however,
occurring, before anything definite had been done, this assembly was
adjourned.</p>
<p>In the assembly held the next day, Nicias, in spite of the Lacedaemonians
having been deceived themselves, and having allowed him to be deceived
also in not admitting that they had come with full powers, still
maintained that it was best to be friends with the Lacedaemonians, and,
letting the Argive proposals stand over, to send once more to Lacedaemon
and learn her intentions. The adjournment of the war could only increase
their own prestige and injure that of their rivals; the excellent state of
their affairs making it their interest to preserve this prosperity as long
as possible, while those of Lacedaemon were so desperate that the sooner
she could try her fortune again the better. He succeeded accordingly in
persuading them to send ambassadors, himself being among the number, to
invite the Lacedaemonians, if they were really sincere, to restore
Panactum intact with Amphipolis, and to abandon their alliance with the
Boeotians (unless they consented to accede to the treaty), agreeably to
the stipulation which forbade either to treat without the other. The
ambassadors were also directed to say that the Athenians, had they wished
to play false, might already have made alliance with the Argives, who were
indeed come to Athens for that very purpose, and went off furnished with
instructions as to any other complaints that the Athenians had to make.
Having reached Lacedaemon, they communicated their instructions, and
concluded by telling the Lacedaemonians that unless they gave up their
alliance with the Boeotians, in the event of their not acceding to the
treaty, the Athenians for their part would ally themselves with the
Argives and their friends. The Lacedaemonians, however, refused to give up
the Boeotian alliance—the party of Xenares the ephor, and such as
shared their view, carrying the day upon this point—but renewed the
oaths at the request of Nicias, who feared to return without having
accomplished anything and to be disgraced; as was indeed his fate, he
being held the author of the treaty with Lacedaemon. When he returned, and
the Athenians heard that nothing had been done at Lacedaemon, they flew
into a passion, and deciding that faith had not been kept with them, took
advantage of the presence of the Argives and their allies, who had been
introduced by Alcibiades, and made a treaty and alliance with them upon
the terms following:</p>
<p>The Athenians, Argives, Mantineans, and Eleans, acting for themselves and
the allies in their respective empires, made a treaty for a hundred years,
to be without fraud or hurt by land and by sea.</p>
<p>1. It shall not be lawful to carry on war, either for the Argives, Eleans,
Mantineans, and their allies, against the Athenians, or the allies in the
Athenian empire: or for the Athenians and their allies against the
Argives, Eleans, Mantineans, or their allies, in any way or means
whatsoever.</p>
<p>The Athenians, Argives, Eleans, and Mantineans shall be allies for a
hundred years upon the terms following:</p>
<p>2. If an enemy invade the country of the Athenians, the Argives, Eleans,
and Mantineans shall go to the relief of Athens, according as the
Athenians may require by message, in such way as they most effectually
can, to the best of their power. But if the invader be gone after
plundering the territory, the offending state shall be the enemy of the
Argives, Mantineans, Eleans, and Athenians, and war shall be made against
it by all these cities: and no one of the cities shall be able to make
peace with that state, except all the above cities agree to do so.</p>
<p>3. Likewise the Athenians shall go to the relief of Argos, Mantinea, and
Elis, if an enemy invade the country of Elis, Mantinea, or Argos,
according as the above cities may require by message, in such way as they
most effectually can, to the best of their power. But if the invader be
gone after plundering the territory, the state offending shall be the
enemy of the Athenians, Argives, Mantineans, and Eleans, and war shall be
made against it by all these cities, and peace may not be made with that
state except all the above cities agree to it.</p>
<p>4. No armed force shall be allowed to pass for hostile purposes through
the country of the powers contracting, or of the allies in their
respective empires, or to go by sea, except all the cities—that is
to say, Athens, Argos, Mantinea, and Elis—vote for such passage.</p>
<p>5. The relieving troops shall be maintained by the city sending them for
thirty days from their arrival in the city that has required them, and
upon their return in the same way: if their services be desired for a
longer period, the city that sent for them shall maintain them, at the
rate of three Aeginetan obols per day for a heavy-armed soldier, archer,
or light soldier, and an Aeginetan drachma for a trooper.</p>
<p>6. The city sending for the troops shall have the command when the war is
in its own country: but in case of the cities resolving upon a joint
expedition the command shall be equally divided among all the cities.</p>
<p>7. The treaty shall be sworn to by the Athenians for themselves and their
allies, by the Argives, Mantineans, Eleans, and their allies, by each
state individually. Each shall swear the oath most binding in his country
over full-grown victims: the oath being as follows:</p>
<p>"I STAND BY THE ALLIANCE AND ITS ARTICLES, JUSTLY, INNOCENTLY, AND
SINCERELY, AND I WILL NOT TRANSGRESS THE SAME IN ANY WAY OR MEANS
WHATSOEVER."</p>
<p>The oath shall be taken at Athens by the Senate and the magistrates, the
Prytanes administering it: at Argos by the Senate, the Eighty, and the
Artynae, the Eighty administering it: at Mantinea by the Demiurgi, the
Senate, and the other magistrates, the Theori and Polemarchs administering
it: at Elis by the Demiurgi, the magistrates, and the Six Hundred, the
Demiurgi and the Thesmophylaces administering it. The oaths shall be
renewed by the Athenians going to Elis, Mantinea, and Argos thirty days
before the Olympic games: by the Argives, Mantineans, and Eleans going to
Athens ten days before the great feast of the Panathenaea. The articles of
the treaty, the oaths, and the alliance shall be inscribed on a stone
pillar by the Athenians in the citadel, by the Argives in the
market-place, in the temple of Apollo: by the Mantineans in the temple of
Zeus, in the market-place: and a brazen pillar shall be erected jointly by
them at the Olympic games now at hand. Should the above cities see good to
make any addition in these articles, whatever all the above cities shall
agree upon, after consulting together, shall be binding.</p>
<p>Although the treaty and alliances were thus concluded, still the treaty
between the Lacedaemonians and Athenians was not renounced by either
party. Meanwhile Corinth, although the ally of the Argives, did not accede
to the new treaty, any more than she had done to the alliance, defensive
and offensive, formed before this between the Eleans, Argives, and
Mantineans, when she declared herself content with the first alliance,
which was defensive only, and which bound them to help each other, but not
to join in attacking any. The Corinthians thus stood aloof from their
allies, and again turned their thoughts towards Lacedaemon.</p>
<p>At the Olympic games which were held this summer, and in which the
Arcadian Androsthenes was victor the first time in the wrestling and
boxing, the Lacedaemonians were excluded from the temple by the Eleans,
and thus prevented from sacrificing or contending, for having refused to
pay the fine specified in the Olympic law imposed upon them by the Eleans,
who alleged that they had attacked Fort Phyrcus, and sent heavy infantry
of theirs into Lepreum during the Olympic truce. The amount of the fine
was two thousand minae, two for each heavy-armed soldier, as the law
prescribes. The Lacedaemonians sent envoys, and pleaded that the
imposition was unjust; saying that the truce had not yet been proclaimed
at Lacedaemon when the heavy infantry were sent off. But the Eleans
affirmed that the armistice with them had already begun (they proclaim it
first among themselves), and that the aggression of the Lacedaemonians had
taken them by surprise while they were living quietly as in time of peace,
and not expecting anything. Upon this the Lacedaemonians submitted, that
if the Eleans really believed that they had committed an aggression, it
was useless after that to proclaim the truce at Lacedaemon; but they had
proclaimed it notwithstanding, as believing nothing of the kind, and from
that moment the Lacedaemonians had made no attack upon their country.
Nevertheless the Eleans adhered to what they had said, that nothing would
persuade them that an aggression had not been committed; if, however, the
Lacedaemonians would restore Lepreum, they would give up their own share
of the money and pay that of the god for them.</p>
<p>As this proposal was not accepted, the Eleans tried a second. Instead of
restoring Lepreum, if this was objected to, the Lacedaemonians should
ascend the altar of the Olympian Zeus, as they were so anxious to have
access to the temple, and swear before the Hellenes that they would surely
pay the fine at a later day. This being also refused, the Lacedaemonians
were excluded from the temple, the sacrifice, and the games, and
sacrificed at home; the Lepreans being the only other Hellenes who did not
attend. Still the Eleans were afraid of the Lacedaemonians sacrificing by
force, and kept guard with a heavy-armed company of their young men; being
also joined by a thousand Argives, the same number of Mantineans, and by
some Athenian cavalry who stayed at Harpina during the feast. Great fears
were felt in the assembly of the Lacedaemonians coming in arms, especially
after Lichas, son of Arcesilaus, a Lacedaemonian, had been scourged on the
course by the umpires; because, upon his horses being the winners, and the
Boeotian people being proclaimed the victor on account of his having no
right to enter, he came forward on the course and crowned the charioteer,
in order to show that the chariot was his. After this incident all were
more afraid than ever, and firmly looked for a disturbance: the
Lacedaemonians, however, kept quiet, and let the feast pass by, as we have
seen. After the Olympic games, the Argives and the allies repaired to
Corinth to invite her to come over to them. There they found some
Lacedaemonian envoys; and a long discussion ensued, which after all ended
in nothing, as an earthquake occurred, and they dispersed to their
different homes.</p>
<p>Summer was now over. The winter following a battle took place between the
Heracleots in Trachinia and the Aenianians, Dolopians, Malians, and
certain of the Thessalians, all tribes bordering on and hostile to the
town, which directly menaced their country. Accordingly, after having
opposed and harassed it from its very foundation by every means in their
power, they now in this battle defeated the Heracleots, Xenares, son of
Cnidis, their Lacedaemonian commander, being among the slain. Thus the
winter ended and the twelfth year of this war ended also. After the
battle, Heraclea was so terribly reduced that in the first days of the
summer following the Boeotians occupied the place and sent away the
Lacedaemonian Agesippidas for misgovernment, fearing that the town might
be taken by the Athenians while the Lacedaemonians were distracted with
the affairs of Peloponnese. The Lacedaemonians, nevertheless, were
offended with them for what they had done.</p>
<p>The same summer Alcibiades, son of Clinias, now one of the generals at
Athens, in concert with the Argives and the allies, went into Peloponnese
with a few Athenian heavy infantry and archers and some of the allies in
those parts whom he took up as he passed, and with this army marched here
and there through Peloponnese, and settled various matters connected with
the alliance, and among other things induced the Patrians to carry their
walls down to the sea, intending himself also to build a fort near the
Achaean Rhium. However, the Corinthians and Sicyonians, and all others who
would have suffered by its being built, came up and hindered him.</p>
<p>The same summer war broke out between the Epidaurians and Argives. The
pretext was that the Epidaurians did not send an offering for their
pasture-land to Apollo Pythaeus, as they were bound to do, the Argives
having the chief management of the temple; but, apart from this pretext,
Alcibiades and the Argives were determined, if possible, to gain
possession of Epidaurus, and thus to ensure the neutrality of Corinth and
give the Athenians a shorter passage for their reinforcements from Aegina
than if they had to sail round Scyllaeum. The Argives accordingly prepared
to invade Epidaurus by themselves, to exact the offering.</p>
<p>About the same time the Lacedaemonians marched out with all their people
to Leuctra upon their frontier, opposite to Mount Lycaeum, under the
command of Agis, son of Archidamus, without any one knowing their
destination, not even the cities that sent the contingents. The
sacrifices, however, for crossing the frontier not proving propitious, the
Lacedaemonians returned home themselves, and sent word to the allies to be
ready to march after the month ensuing, which happened to be the month of
Carneus, a holy time for the Dorians. Upon the retreat of the
Lacedaemonians the Argives marched out on the last day but three of the
month before Carneus, and keeping this as the day during the whole time
that they were out, invaded and plundered Epidaurus. The Epidaurians
summoned their allies to their aid, some of whom pleaded the month as an
excuse; others came as far as the frontier of Epidaurus and there remained
inactive.</p>
<p>While the Argives were in Epidaurus embassies from the cities assembled at
Mantinea, upon the invitation of the Athenians. The conference having
begun, the Corinthian Euphamidas said that their actions did not agree
with their words; while they were sitting deliberating about peace, the
Epidaurians and their allies and the Argives were arrayed against each
other in arms; deputies from each party should first go and separate the
armies, and then the talk about peace might be resumed. In compliance with
this suggestion, they went and brought back the Argives from Epidaurus,
and afterwards reassembled, but without succeeding any better in coming to
a conclusion; and the Argives a second time invaded Epidaurus and
plundered the country. The Lacedaemonians also marched out to Caryae; but
the frontier sacrifices again proving unfavourable, they went back again,
and the Argives, after ravaging about a third of the Epidaurian territory,
returned home. Meanwhile a thousand Athenian heavy infantry had come to
their aid under the command of Alcibiades, but finding that the
Lacedaemonian expedition was at an end, and that they were no longer
wanted, went back again.</p>
<p>So passed the summer. The next winter the Lacedaemonians managed to elude
the vigilance of the Athenians, and sent in a garrison of three hundred
men to Epidaurus, under the command of Agesippidas. Upon this the Argives
went to the Athenians and complained of their having allowed an enemy to
pass by sea, in spite of the clause in the treaty by which the allies were
not to allow an enemy to pass through their country. Unless, therefore,
they now put the Messenians and Helots in Pylos to annoy the
Lacedaemonians, they, the Argives, should consider that faith had not been
kept with them. The Athenians were persuaded by Alcibiades to inscribe at
the bottom of the Laconian pillar that the Lacedaemonians had not kept
their oaths, and to convey the Helots at Cranii to Pylos to plunder the
country; but for the rest they remained quiet as before. During this
winter hostilities went on between the Argives and Epidaurians, without
any pitched battle taking place, but only forays and ambuscades, in which
the losses were small and fell now on one side and now on the other. At
the close of the winter, towards the beginning of spring, the Argives went
with scaling ladders to Epidaurus, expecting to find it left unguarded on
account of the war and to be able to take it by assault, but returned
unsuccessful. And the winter ended, and with it the thirteenth year of the
war ended also.</p>
<p>In the middle of the next summer the Lacedaemonians, seeing the
Epidaurians, their allies, in distress, and the rest of Peloponnese either
in revolt or disaffected, concluded that it was high time for them to
interfere if they wished to stop the progress of the evil, and accordingly
with their full force, the Helots included, took the field against Argos,
under the command of Agis, son of Archidamus, king of the Lacedaemonians.
The Tegeans and the other Arcadian allies of Lacedaemon joined in the
expedition. The allies from the rest of Peloponnese and from outside
mustered at Phlius; the Boeotians with five thousand heavy infantry and as
many light troops, and five hundred horse and the same number of
dismounted troopers; the Corinthians with two thousand heavy infantry; the
rest more or less as might happen; and the Phliasians with all their
forces, the army being in their country.</p>
<p>The preparations of the Lacedaemonians from the first had been known to
the Argives, who did not, however, take the field until the enemy was on
his road to join the rest at Phlius. Reinforced by the Mantineans with
their allies, and by three thousand Elean heavy infantry, they advanced
and fell in with the Lacedaemonians at Methydrium in Arcadia. Each party
took up its position upon a hill, and the Argives prepared to engage the
Lacedaemonians while they were alone; but Agis eluded them by breaking up
his camp in the night, and proceeded to join the rest of the allies at
Phlius. The Argives discovering this at daybreak, marched first to Argos
and then to the Nemean road, by which they expected the Lacedaemonians and
their allies would come down. However, Agis, instead of taking this road
as they expected, gave the Lacedaemonians, Arcadians, and Epidaurians
their orders, and went along another difficult road, and descended into
the plain of Argos. The Corinthians, Pellenians, and Phliasians marched by
another steep road; while the Boeotians, Megarians, and Sicyonians had
instructions to come down by the Nemean road where the Argives were
posted, in order that, if the enemy advanced into the plain against the
troops of Agis, they might fall upon his rear with their cavalry. These
dispositions concluded, Agis invaded the plain and began to ravage
Saminthus and other places.</p>
<p>Discovering this, the Argives came up from Nemea, day having now dawned.
On their way they fell in with the troops of the Phliasians and
Corinthians, and killed a few of the Phliasians and had perhaps a few more
of their own men killed by the Corinthians. Meanwhile the Boeotians,
Megarians, and Sicyonians, advancing upon Nemea according to their
instructions, found the Argives no longer there, as they had gone down on
seeing their property ravaged, and were now forming for battle, the
Lacedaemonians imitating their example. The Argives were now completely
surrounded; from the plain the Lacedaemonians and their allies shut them
off from their city; above them were the Corinthians, Phliasians, and
Pellenians; and on the side of Nemea the Boeotians, Sicyonians, and
Megarians. Meanwhile their army was without cavalry, the Athenians alone
among the allies not having yet arrived. Now the bulk of the Argives and
their allies did not see the danger of their position, but thought that
they could not have a fairer field, having intercepted the Lacedaemonians
in their own country and close to the city. Two men, however, in the
Argive army, Thrasylus, one of the five generals, and Alciphron, the
Lacedaemonian proxenus, just as the armies were upon the point of
engaging, went and held a parley with Agis and urged him not to bring on a
battle, as the Argives were ready to refer to fair and equal arbitration
whatever complaints the Lacedaemonians might have against them, and to
make a treaty and live in peace in future.</p>
<p>The Argives who made these statements did so upon their own authority, not
by order of the people, and Agis on his accepted their proposals, and
without himself either consulting the majority, simply communicated the
matter to a single individual, one of the high officers accompanying the
expedition, and granted the Argives a truce for four months, in which to
fulfil their promises; after which he immediately led off the army without
giving any explanation to any of the other allies. The Lacedaemonians and
allies followed their general out of respect for the law, but amongst
themselves loudly blamed Agis for going away from so fair a field (the
enemy being hemmed in on every side by infantry and cavalry) without
having done anything worthy of their strength. Indeed this was by far the
finest Hellenic army ever yet brought together; and it should have been
seen while it was still united at Nemea, with the Lacedaemonians in full
force, the Arcadians, Boeotians, Corinthians, Sicyonians, Pellenians,
Phliasians and Megarians, and all these the flower of their respective
populations, thinking themselves a match not merely for the Argive
confederacy, but for another such added to it. The army thus retired
blaming Agis, and returned every man to his home. The Argives however
blamed still more loudly the persons who had concluded the truce without
consulting the people, themselves thinking that they had let escape with
the Lacedaemonians an opportunity such as they should never see again; as
the struggle would have been under the walls of their city, and by the
side of many and brave allies. On their return accordingly they began to
stone Thrasylus in the bed of the Charadrus, where they try all military
causes before entering the city. Thrasylus fled to the altar, and so saved
his life; his property however they confiscated.</p>
<p>After this arrived a thousand Athenian heavy infantry and three hundred
horse, under the command of Laches and Nicostratus; whom the Argives,
being nevertheless loath to break the truce with the Lacedaemonians,
begged to depart, and refused to bring before the people, to whom they had
a communication to make, until compelled to do so by the entreaties of the
Mantineans and Eleans, who were still at Argos. The Athenians, by the
mouth of Alcibiades their ambassador there present, told the Argives and
the allies that they had no right to make a truce at all without the
consent of their fellow confederates, and now that the Athenians had
arrived so opportunely the war ought to be resumed. These arguments
proving successful with the allies, they immediately marched upon
Orchomenos, all except the Argives, who, although they had consented like
the rest, stayed behind at first, but eventually joined the others. They
now all sat down and besieged Orchomenos, and made assaults upon it; one
of their reasons for desiring to gain this place being that hostages from
Arcadia had been lodged there by the Lacedaemonians. The Orchomenians,
alarmed at the weakness of their wall and the numbers of the enemy, and at
the risk they ran of perishing before relief arrived, capitulated upon
condition of joining the league, of giving hostages of their own to the
Mantineans, and giving up those lodged with them by the Lacedaemonians.
Orchomenos thus secured, the allies now consulted as to which of the
remaining places they should attack next. The Eleans were urgent for
Lepreum; the Mantineans for Tegea; and the Argives and Athenians giving
their support to the Mantineans, the Eleans went home in a rage at their
not having voted for Lepreum; while the rest of the allies made ready at
Mantinea for going against Tegea, which a party inside had arranged to put
into their hands.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the Lacedaemonians, upon their return from Argos after
concluding the four months' truce, vehemently blamed Agis for not having
subdued Argos, after an opportunity such as they thought they had never
had before; for it was no easy matter to bring so many and so good allies
together. But when the news arrived of the capture of Orchomenos, they
became more angry than ever, and, departing from all precedent, in the
heat of the moment had almost decided to raze his house, and to fine him
ten thousand drachmae. Agis however entreated them to do none of these
things, promising to atone for his fault by good service in the field,
failing which they might then do to him whatever they pleased; and they
accordingly abstained from razing his house or fining him as they had
threatened to do, and now made a law, hitherto unknown at Lacedaemon,
attaching to him ten Spartans as counsellors, without whose consent he
should have no power to lead an army out of the city.</p>
<p>At this juncture arrived word from their friends in Tegea that, unless
they speedily appeared, Tegea would go over from them to the Argives and
their allies, if it had not gone over already. Upon this news a force
marched out from Lacedaemon, of the Spartans and Helots and all their
people, and that instantly and upon a scale never before witnessed.
Advancing to Orestheum in Maenalia, they directed the Arcadians in their
league to follow close after them to Tegea, and, going on themselves as
far as Orestheum, from thence sent back the sixth part of the Spartans,
consisting of the oldest and youngest men, to guard their homes, and with
the rest of their army arrived at Tegea; where their Arcadian allies soon
after joined them. Meanwhile they sent to Corinth, to the Boeotians, the
Phocians, and Locrians, with orders to come up as quickly as possible to
Mantinea. These had but short notice; and it was not easy except all
together, and after waiting for each other, to pass through the enemy's
country, which lay right across and blocked up the line of communication.
Nevertheless they made what haste they could. Meanwhile the Lacedaemonians
with the Arcadian allies that had joined them, entered the territory of
Mantinea, and encamping near the temple of Heracles began to plunder the
country.</p>
<p>Here they were seen by the Argives and their allies, who immediately took
up a strong and difficult position, and formed in order of battle. The
Lacedaemonians at once advanced against them, and came on within a stone's
throw or javelin's cast, when one of the older men, seeing the enemy's
position to be a strong one, hallooed to Agis that he was minded to cure
one evil with another; meaning that he wished to make amends for his
retreat, which had been so much blamed, from Argos, by his present
untimely precipitation. Meanwhile Agis, whether in consequence of this
halloo or of some sudden new idea of his own, quickly led back his army
without engaging, and entering the Tegean territory, began to turn off
into that of Mantinea the water about which the Mantineans and Tegeans are
always fighting, on account of the extensive damage it does to whichever
of the two countries it falls into. His object in this was to make the
Argives and their allies come down from the hill, to resist the diversion
of the water, as they would be sure to do when they knew of it, and thus
to fight the battle in the plain. He accordingly stayed that day where he
was, engaged in turning off the water. The Argives and their allies were
at first amazed at the sudden retreat of the enemy after advancing so
near, and did not know what to make of it; but when he had gone away and
disappeared, without their having stirred to pursue him, they began anew
to find fault with their generals, who had not only let the Lacedaemonians
get off before, when they were so happily intercepted before Argos, but
who now again allowed them to run away, without any one pursuing them, and
to escape at their leisure while the Argive army was leisurely betrayed.
The generals, half-stunned for the moment, afterwards led them down from
the hill, and went forward and encamped in the plain, with the intention
of attacking the enemy.</p>
<p>The next day the Argives and their allies formed in the order in which
they meant to fight, if they chanced to encounter the enemy; and the
Lacedaemonians returning from the water to their old encampment by the
temple of Heracles, suddenly saw their adversaries close in front of them,
all in complete order, and advanced from the hill. A shock like that of
the present moment the Lacedaemonians do not ever remember to have
experienced: there was scant time for preparation, as they instantly and
hastily fell into their ranks, Agis, their king, directing everything,
agreeably to the law. For when a king is in the field all commands proceed
from him: he gives the word to the Polemarchs; they to the Lochages; these
to the Pentecostyes; these again to the Enomotarchs, and these last to the
Enomoties. In short all orders required pass in the same way and quickly
reach the troops; as almost the whole Lacedaemonian army, save for a small
part, consists of officers under officers, and the care of what is to be
done falls upon many.</p>
<p>In this battle the left wing was composed of the Sciritae, who in a
Lacedaemonian army have always that post to themselves alone; next to
these were the soldiers of Brasidas from Thrace, and the Neodamodes with
them; then came the Lacedaemonians themselves, company after company, with
the Arcadians of Heraea at their side. After these were the Maenalians,
and on the right wing the Tegeans with a few of the Lacedaemonians at the
extremity; their cavalry being posted upon the two wings. Such was the
Lacedaemonian formation. That of their opponents was as follows: On the
right were the Mantineans, the action taking place in their country; next
to them the allies from Arcadia; after whom came the thousand picked men
of the Argives, to whom the state had given a long course of military
training at the public expense; next to them the rest of the Argives, and
after them their allies, the Cleonaeans and Orneans, and lastly the
Athenians on the extreme left, and lastly the Athenians on the extreme
left, and their own cavalry with them.</p>
<p>Such were the order and the forces of the two combatants. The
Lacedaemonian army looked the largest; though as to putting down the
numbers of either host, or of the contingents composing it, I could not do
so with any accuracy. Owing to the secrecy of their government the number
of the Lacedaemonians was not known, and men are so apt to brag about the
forces of their country that the estimate of their opponents was not
trusted. The following calculation, however, makes it possible to estimate
the numbers of the Lacedaemonians present upon this occasion. There were
seven companies in the field without counting the Sciritae, who numbered
six hundred men: in each company there were four Pentecostyes, and in the
Pentecosty four Enomoties. The first rank of the Enomoty was composed of
four soldiers: as to the depth, although they had not been all drawn up
alike, but as each captain chose, they were generally ranged eight deep;
the first rank along the whole line, exclusive of the Sciritae, consisted
of four hundred and forty-eight men.</p>
<p>The armies being now on the eve of engaging, each contingent received some
words of encouragement from its own commander. The Mantineans were,
reminded that they were going to fight for their country and to avoid
returning to the experience of servitude after having tasted that of
empire; the Argives, that they would contend for their ancient supremacy,
to regain their once equal share of Peloponnese of which they had been so
long deprived, and to punish an enemy and a neighbour for a thousand
wrongs; the Athenians, of the glory of gaining the honours of the day with
so many and brave allies in arms, and that a victory over the
Lacedaemonians in Peloponnese would cement and extend their empire, and
would besides preserve Attica from all invasions in future. These were the
incitements addressed to the Argives and their allies. The Lacedaemonians
meanwhile, man to man, and with their war-songs in the ranks, exhorted
each brave comrade to remember what he had learnt before; well aware that
the long training of action was of more saving virtue than any brief
verbal exhortation, though never so well delivered.</p>
<p>After this they joined battle, the Argives and their allies advancing with
haste and fury, the Lacedaemonians slowly and to the music of many
flute-players—a standing institution in their army, that has nothing
to do with religion, but is meant to make them advance evenly, stepping in
time, without break their order, as large armies are apt to do in the
moment of engaging.</p>
<p>Just before the battle joined, King Agis resolved upon the following
manoeuvre. All armies are alike in this: on going into action they get
forced out rather on their right wing, and one and the other overlap with
this adversary's left; because fear makes each man do his best to shelter
his unarmed side with the shield of the man next him on the right,
thinking that the closer the shields are locked together the better will
he be protected. The man primarily responsible for this is the first upon
the right wing, who is always striving to withdraw from the enemy his
unarmed side; and the same apprehension makes the rest follow him. On the
present occasion the Mantineans reached with their wing far beyond the
Sciritae, and the Lacedaemonians and Tegeans still farther beyond the
Athenians, as their army was the largest. Agis, afraid of his left being
surrounded, and thinking that the Mantineans outflanked it too far,
ordered the Sciritae and Brasideans to move out from their place in the
ranks and make the line even with the Mantineans, and told the Polemarchs
Hipponoidas and Aristocles to fill up the gap thus formed, by throwing
themselves into it with two companies taken from the right wing; thinking
that his right would still be strong enough and to spare, and that the
line fronting the Mantineans would gain in solidity.</p>
<p>However, as he gave these orders in the moment of the onset, and at short
notice, it so happened that Aristocles and Hipponoidas would not move
over, for which offence they were afterwards banished from Sparta, as
having been guilty of cowardice; and the enemy meanwhile closed before the
Sciritae (whom Agis on seeing that the two companies did not move over
ordered to return to their place) had time to fill up the breach in
question. Now it was, however, that the Lacedaemonians, utterly worsted in
respect of skill, showed themselves as superior in point of courage. As
soon as they came to close quarters with the enemy, the Mantinean right
broke their Sciritae and Brasideans, and, bursting in with their allies
and the thousand picked Argives into the unclosed breach in their line,
cut up and surrounded the Lacedaemonians, and drove them in full rout to
the wagons, slaying some of the older men on guard there. But the
Lacedaemonians, worsted in this part of the field, with the rest of their
army, and especially the centre, where the three hundred knights, as they
are called, fought round King Agis, fell on the older men of the Argives
and the five companies so named, and on the Cleonaeans, the Orneans, and
the Athenians next them, and instantly routed them; the greater number not
even waiting to strike a blow, but giving way the moment that they came
on, some even being trodden under foot, in their fear of being overtaken
by their assailants.</p>
<p>The army of the Argives and their allies, having given way in this
quarter, was now completely cut in two, and the Lacedaemonian and Tegean
right simultaneously closing round the Athenians with the troops that
outflanked them, these last found themselves placed between two fires,
being surrounded on one side and already defeated on the other. Indeed
they would have suffered more severely than any other part of the army,
but for the services of the cavalry which they had with them. Agis also on
perceiving the distress of his left opposed to the Mantineans and the
thousand Argives, ordered all the army to advance to the support of the
defeated wing; and while this took place, as the enemy moved past and
slanted away from them, the Athenians escaped at their leisure, and with
them the beaten Argive division. Meanwhile the Mantineans and their allies
and the picked body of the Argives ceased to press the enemy, and seeing
their friends defeated and the Lacedaemonians in full advance upon them,
took to flight. Many of the Mantineans perished; but the bulk of the
picked body of the Argives made good their escape. The flight and retreat,
however, were neither hurried nor long; the Lacedaemonians fighting long
and stubbornly until the rout of their enemy, but that once effected,
pursuing for a short time and not far.</p>
<p>Such was the battle, as nearly as possible as I have described it; the
greatest that had occurred for a very long while among the Hellenes, and
joined by the most considerable states. The Lacedaemonians took up a
position in front of the enemy's dead, and immediately set up a trophy and
stripped the slain; they took up their own dead and carried them back to
Tegea, where they buried them, and restored those of the enemy under
truce. The Argives, Orneans, and Cleonaeans had seven hundred killed; the
Mantineans two hundred, and the Athenians and Aeginetans also two hundred,
with both their generals. On the side of the Lacedaemonians, the allies
did not suffer any loss worth speaking of: as to the Lacedaemonians
themselves it was difficult to learn the truth; it is said, however, that
there were slain about three hundred of them.</p>
<p>While the battle was impending, Pleistoanax, the other king, set out with
a reinforcement composed of the oldest and youngest men, and got as far as
Tegea, where he heard of the victory and went back again. The
Lacedaemonians also sent and turned back the allies from Corinth and from
beyond the Isthmus, and returning themselves dismissed their allies, and
kept the Carnean holidays, which happened to be at that time. The
imputations cast upon them by the Hellenes at the time, whether of
cowardice on account of the disaster in the island, or of mismanagement
and slowness generally, were all wiped out by this single action: fortune,
it was thought, might have humbled them, but the men themselves were the
same as ever.</p>
<p>The day before this battle, the Epidaurians with all their forces invaded
the deserted Argive territory, and cut off many of the guards left there
in the absence of the Argive army. After the battle three thousand Elean
heavy infantry arriving to aid the Mantineans, and a reinforcement of one
thousand Athenians, all these allies marched at once against Epidaurus,
while the Lacedaemonians were keeping the Carnea, and dividing the work
among them began to build a wall round the city. The rest left off; but
the Athenians finished at once the part assigned to them round Cape
Heraeum; and having all joined in leaving a garrison in the fortification
in question, they returned to their respective cities.</p>
<p>Summer now came to an end. In the first days of the next winter, when the
Carnean holidays were over, the Lacedaemonians took the field, and
arriving at Tegea sent on to Argos proposals of accommodation. They had
before had a party in the town desirous of overthrowing the democracy; and
after the battle that had been fought, these were now far more in a
position to persuade the people to listen to terms. Their plan was first
to make a treaty with the Lacedaemonians, to be followed by an alliance,
and after this to fall upon the commons. Lichas, son of Arcesilaus, the
Argive proxenus, accordingly arrived at Argos with two proposals from
Lacedaemon, to regulate the conditions of war or peace, according as they
preferred the one or the other. After much discussion, Alcibiades
happening to be in the town, the Lacedaemonian party, who now ventured to
act openly, persuaded the Argives to accept the proposal for
accommodation; which ran as follows:</p>
<p>The assembly of the Lacedaemonians agrees to treat with the Argives upon
the terms following:</p>
<p>1. The Argives shall restore to the Orchomenians their children, and to
the Maenalians their men, and shall restore the men they have in Mantinea
to the Lacedaemonians.</p>
<p>2. They shall evacuate Epidaurus, and raze the fortification there. If the
Athenians refuse to withdraw from Epidaurus, they shall be declared
enemies of the Argives and of the Lacedaemonians, and of the allies of the
Lacedaemonians and the allies of the Argives.</p>
<p>3. If the Lacedaemonians have any children in their custody, they shall
restore them every one to his city.</p>
<p>4. As to the offering to the god, the Argives, if they wish, shall impose
an oath upon the Epidaurians, but, if not, they shall swear it themselves.</p>
<p>5. All the cities in Peloponnese, both small and great, shall be
independent according to the customs of their country.</p>
<p>6. If any of the powers outside Peloponnese invade Peloponnesian
territory, the parties contracting shall unite to repel them, on such
terms as they may agree upon, as being most fair for the Peloponnesians.</p>
<p>7. All allies of the Lacedaemonians outside Peloponnese shall be on the
same footing as the Lacedaemonians, and the allies of the Argives shall be
on the same footing as the Argives, being left in enjoyment of their own
possessions.</p>
<p>8. This treaty shall be shown to the allies, and shall be concluded, if
they approve; if the allies think fit, they may send the treaty to be
considered at home.</p>
<p>The Argives began by accepting this proposal, and the Lacedaemonian army
returned home from Tegea. After this intercourse was renewed between them,
and not long afterwards the same party contrived that the Argives should
give up the league with the Mantineans, Eleans, and Athenians, and should
make a treaty and alliance with the Lacedaemonians; which was consequently
done upon the terms following:</p>
<p>The Lacedaemonians and Argives agree to a treaty and alliance for fifty
years upon the terms following:</p>
<p>1. All disputes shall be decided by fair and impartial arbitration,
agreeably to the customs of the two countries.</p>
<p>2. The rest of the cities in Peloponnese may be included in this treaty
and alliance, as independent and sovereign, in full enjoyment of what they
possess, all disputes being decided by fair and impartial arbitration,
agreeably to the customs of the said cities.</p>
<p>3. All allies of the Lacedaemonians outside Peloponnese shall be upon the
same footing as the Lacedaemonians themselves, and the allies of the
Argives shall be upon the same footing as the Argives themselves,
continuing to enjoy what they possess.</p>
<p>4. If it shall be anywhere necessary to make an expedition in common, the
Lacedaemonians and Argives shall consult upon it and decide, as may be
most fair for the allies.</p>
<p>5. If any of the cities, whether inside or outside Peloponnese, have a
question whether of frontiers or otherwise, it must be settled, but if one
allied city should have a quarrel with another allied city, it must be
referred to some third city thought impartial by both parties. Private
citizens shall have their disputes decided according to the laws of their
several countries.</p>
<p>The treaty and above alliance concluded, each party at once released
everything whether acquired by war or otherwise, and thenceforth acting in
common voted to receive neither herald nor embassy from the Athenians
unless they evacuated their forts and withdrew from Peloponnese, and also
to make neither peace nor war with any, except jointly. Zeal was not
wanting: both parties sent envoys to the Thracian places and to Perdiccas,
and persuaded the latter to join their league. Still he did not at once
break off from Athens, although minded to do so upon seeing the way shown
him by Argos, the original home of his family. They also renewed their old
oaths with the Chalcidians and took new ones: the Argives, besides, sent
ambassadors to the Athenians, bidding them evacuate the fort at Epidaurus.
The Athenians, seeing their own men outnumbered by the rest of the
garrison, sent Demosthenes to bring them out. This general, under colour
of a gymnastic contest which he arranged on his arrival, got the rest of
the garrison out of the place, and shut the gates behind them. Afterwards
the Athenians renewed their treaty with the Epidaurians, and by themselves
gave up the fortress.</p>
<p>After the defection of Argos from the league, the Mantineans, though they
held out at first, in the end finding themselves powerless without the
Argives, themselves too came to terms with Lacedaemon, and gave up their
sovereignty over the towns. The Lacedaemonians and Argives, each a
thousand strong, now took the field together, and the former first went by
themselves to Sicyon and made the government there more oligarchical than
before, and then both, uniting, put down the democracy at Argos and set up
an oligarchy favourable to Lacedaemon. These events occurred at the close
of the winter, just before spring; and the fourteenth year of the war
ended. The next summer the people of Dium, in Athos, revolted from the
Athenians to the Chalcidians, and the Lacedaemonians settled affairs in
Achaea in a way more agreeable to the interests of their country.
Meanwhile the popular party at Argos little by little gathered new
consistency and courage, and waited for the moment of the Gymnopaedic
festival at Lacedaemon, and then fell upon the oligarchs. After a fight in
the city, victory declared for the commons, who slew some of their
opponents and banished others. The Lacedaemonians for a long while let the
messages of their friends at Argos remain without effect. At last they put
off the Gymnopaediae and marched to their succour, but learning at Tegea
the defeat of the oligarchs, refused to go any further in spite of the
entreaties of those who had escaped, and returned home and kept the
festival. Later on, envoys arrived with messages from the Argives in the
town and from the exiles, when the allies were also at Sparta; and after
much had been said on both sides, the Lacedaemonians decided that the
party in the town had done wrong, and resolved to march against Argos, but
kept delaying and putting off the matter. Meanwhile the commons at Argos,
in fear of the Lacedaemonians, began again to court the Athenian alliance,
which they were convinced would be of the greatest service to them; and
accordingly proceeded to build long walls to the sea, in order that in
case of a blockade by land; with the help of the Athenians they might have
the advantage of importing what they wanted by sea. Some of the cities in
Peloponnese were also privy to the building of these walls; and the
Argives with all their people, women and slaves not excepted, addressed
themselves to the work, while carpenters and masons came to them from
Athens.</p>
<p>Summer was now over. The winter following the Lacedaemonians, hearing of
the walls that were building, marched against Argos with their allies, the
Corinthians excepted, being also not without intelligence in the city
itself; Agis, son of Archidamus, their king, was in command. The
intelligence which they counted upon within the town came to nothing; they
however took and razed the walls which were being built, and after
capturing the Argive town Hysiae and killing all the freemen that fell
into their hands, went back and dispersed every man to his city. After
this the Argives marched into Phlius and plundered it for harbouring their
exiles, most of whom had settled there, and so returned home. The same
winter the Athenians blockaded Macedonia, on the score of the league
entered into by Perdiccas with the Argives and Lacedaemonians, and also of
his breach of his engagements on the occasion of the expedition prepared
by Athens against the Chalcidians in the direction of Thrace and against
Amphipolis, under the command of Nicias, son of Niceratus, which had to be
broken up mainly because of his desertion. He was therefore proclaimed an
enemy. And thus the winter ended, and the fifteenth year of the war ended
with it.</p>
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