After Thermopylae
After Thermopylae
After Thermopylae
emblems of antiquity
Font of Life
Ambrose, Augustine, and the Mystery of Baptism
G A R RY W I L L S
Medusas Gaze
The Extraordinary Journey of the Tazza Farnese
M A R I N A B E L O Z E R S K AYA
After Thermopylae
The Oath of Plataea and the End of the
Graeco-Persian Wars
PAU L C A RT L E D G E
After
Thermopylae
T H E O AT H O F P L ATA E A A N D T H E E N D
O F T H E G R A E C O P E R S I A N WA R S
PAUL CARTLED GE
1 3 5 7 9 8 6 4 2
Printed in the United States of America
on acid-free paper
Contents
Chapter One
INTRODUCTION: ARMS AND THE MEN 3
C h a p t e r Tw o
T H E O AT H O F P L ATA E A : T E X T S A N D
CONTEXTS 12
Chapter Three
T H E P L ATA E A O AT H A S A D O C U M E N T O F
ANCIENT GREEK RELIGION 41
C h a p t e r Fo u r
T H E P E R S I A N WA R S : M A K I N G H I S T O R Y O N
OAT H W I T H H E R O D O T U S 5 9
Chapter Five
T H E FA C E O F T H E B AT T L E O F P L ATA E A 8 8
Chapter Six
T H E G R E E K S I N V E N T T H E P E R S I A N WA R S : T H E
M Y T H O L O G Y A N D C O M M E M O R AT I O N O F
P L ATA E A 1 2 2
Chapter Seven
C O N C L U S I O N : T H E L E G A C Y O F P L ATA E A 1 6 2
Furthe r Reading 1 6 9
Bibliog raphy 1 8 1
In d e x 1 8 9
CONTENTS
viii
Map 1.
Map 2.
Map 3.
Map 4.
Fig. 1.1.
Fig. 4.1.
Fig. 4.2.
Fig. 5.1.
Fig. 5.2.
Fig. 5.3.
Fig. 5.4.
Fig. 6.1.
Fig. 6.2.
The Persian Wars, as they are widely known, because typically they
are looked at from a Greek viewpoint, are famous enough not to
need any special attention. The names of Marathon, Thermopylae,
and Salamis are as celebrated in their way as those of Hastings,
Blenheim, and Waterloo in the annals of English (or British) military history. Indeed, the classically educated Victorian political philosopher and activist John Stuart Mill was once famously moved
to claim that Marathon was more important than Hastings, even as
an event in English history! That claim may seem extraordinary,
almost outlandish, but it chimed with his high-Victorian readerships view that the ancient Greeks and especially the ancient Athenians were their cultural ancestors, and that there was at least an
PREFACE
xii
history. This book, like the series as a whole, is the brainchild of the
ever-inventive Stefan Vranka, and it has been a pleasure as well as a
stimulating learning experience to work, again, with him and his
colleagues in New York. In accordance with the aims and objectives
of the series, this book is addressed to a wide general readership, but
yet it has some academic scaolding and infrastructure too, and
through its Epameinondas-like (oblique, slantwise) manner of approach to the battle via the Oath of Plataea (rather than more headon, via the so-called Serpent Column victory monument, say) it is
hoped that some new or newer light may be shed on the topic in
general, and not just for general readers but even perhaps for some
of my ancient historian colleagues in the eld too.
The position I held from 2006 to 2010 of (visiting) Global
Distinguished Professor in the excellent Department of Classics at
New York University greatly facilitated the negotiations leading to
the contracting of the book. At N.Y.U. I have also to thank most
warmly President John Sexton, former Deans Dick Foley and Matthew Santirocco, Associate Dean Jonathan Friedman, and colleagues in the Classics Departmenttoo many to name them all,
though I absolutely must name Phillip Mitsis, Joan Connelly, and
Mike Peachin. Likewise, various collaborations with the marvelous
Director of the NYC-based Onassis Cultural Foundation (USA),
Ambassador Loukas Tsilas, and his right-hand woman Amalia
Cosmetatou have been both a constant encouragement and a
constant reminder that it was a key part of my N.Y.U. Global
Distinguished Professorship remit to reach out to the Hellenic
community in New York City and environs. For their unstinting
philoxenia I thank them most warmly. I must also warmly thank the
PREFACE
xiii
xiv
PREFACE
xv
Mt.
Oeta
Thermopylae
DORIS
AEGEAN
SEA
O
Mt.
Parnassus
Delphi
Crisa
Gulf
of Co
r
BOEOTIA
Thebes
Plataea
inth
Mt. Cithaeron
Eleusis
Megara
PELOPONNESE
Corinth
EN
MES
S
Sparta
20
10
LA
C
M
AE
Helos
Gythion
20
Troezen
ED
.
MTS
TUS
YGE
TA
IA
Tegea
Caryae
10
ATTICA
Athens
Mycenae
ARGOLID
Argos
Sepeia
Olympia
Chalcis
Eretria
30 Miles
30 Kilometers
Highlands
MEDITERRANEAN SEA
Map 3. The Persian Empire. From Bang and Scheidel, The Oxford
Handbook of the State in the Ancient Near East and Mediterranean (2013).
to Thebes
to Thebes
to Thebes
to Thebes
Persian
Fort
Skolos
E
As
s
opu
Asopus
2
3
Asopus
Pyros Ridge
Rid
Gargaphia
Spring
Oeroe
M
olo
eis
ge
Erythrae
Temple of
Demeter
Island
Temple
of Hera
Hysiae
Plataea
Supply
train
Rocky base
of Cithaeron
to Attica
N
0
to Attica
Map 4. Sketch Map of the Plataea Battle, Middle Phase. After Shepherd,
Plataea 479 bc (2012).
1 Mile
1 Kilometer
Persian Forces
A Persians, 40,000
B Medes, 20,000
C Bactrians, Indians, and Sacae, 20,000
D Medizing Greeks (hoplites and light-armed), 20,000
E Cavalry (total), 5,000
Greek Forces (hoplites and light-armed)
1 Right: Spartans, Lacedaemonians, Tegeans, Thespians, 20,000
2 Right-Center: Corinthians, Potidaeans, Arcadians of Orchomenus,
Sicyonians, 15,000
3 Left-Center: Epidaurians, Troezenians, Lepreans, Mycenaeans and
Tirynthians, Phleiasians, Hermionians, Eretrians and Styrians,
Chalcidians, Ambraciots, Anactorians and Leucadians, Paleans,
Aeginetans, 15,000
4 Left: Megarians, Plataeans, Athenians, 20,000
Timeline
776
750
700
700/650
600
Thales of Miletus
550
546
539
530
525
522
521
510
508/7
TIMELINE
xxvi
505
494
490
481
480
480
479
xxvii
462
449
447
446 /5
Peace of Nicias
404
TIMELINE
xxviii
399
386
378
371
366
362
359
xxix
346
338
336
335
334
331
330
323
(ce) 1932
1938
TIMELINE
xxx
AFTER THERMOPYL AE
I N T RODUC TION
sanctions to be visited upon any violators of the Oath. Formally speaking, our document is part of a religious oering or
dedication made on the communitys behalf to Ares, god of
War, by his chief priest at Acharnae, Dion son of Dion. This is
in itself quite noteworthy. Despite his prominence in the ctional world of Homers Iliad, the foundational text of all
ancient Greek culture, Ares was conspicuous in the real ancient
Greek world by the very scarcity of cult-places or sanctuarysites, let alone temples, that were consecrated specially to him.
His cult-site and temple at Acharnae in Attica (see Map 2)
thus stand out in high relief. In terms of its genre, the Oath of
Plataea is a religious manifestation. It was sworn in the name
of the gods (so addressed), which category included goddesses, and reinforced by a following curse invoking those
same god(desse)s who would punish the transgressors horribly if the terms of what the Oath prescribed should in any
way be breached (see further chapter 3). The text will be further examined both for its own sake and on its own terms, as
an epigraphic document, in chapter 2.
Dion and those of his fellow citizens and worshippers of
Acharnae who had the document inscribed, rather lavishly, in
the third quarter of the fourth century bce believedor
wanted viewers and readers to believethat the Plataea Oath
was authentic. That is to say, it was represented to and by them
as a literally faithful transcription of a genuine text or document originating from the Graeco-Persian Wars, that is, some
150 years or ve to six generations earlier (chapter 4). More
precisely, its alleged historical moment of enactment fell quite
soon before the Battle of Plataea, which took place in the
AFTER THER MOPYLAE
And, judging from the fact that the mainly Athenian victories
at Marathon (490) and Salamis (480) have overshadowed to
the point of oblivion the essentially Spartan victory at Plataea,
we may fairly claim that it was Athens that won this propaganda waras indeed most others besides. The Oath of Plataea thus both vividly illuminates Greek anxieties over historical
memory and reects the Atheno-Spartan rivalry that erupted
in little under fty years after the Battle of Plataeain what
we usually refer to as the Peloponnesian War (431404 bce).
Indeed, hostilities actually commenced by proxy at Plataea
itself, where (in the words of the Wars great historian, Thucydides of Athens) a treaty sworn between Athens and Sparta
and their respective allies in 445 bce and ostensibly destined
to last for thirty years had overtly been broken by an invasion
of Plataea launched by the Thebans in spring 431.
The Oath also provides us with a golden opportunity to
discuss anew a host of interesting subjects. These include the
Oaths contested and indeed highly dubious authenticity; its reception in Greek antiquity, that is, the references to it and uses
made of it by subsequent classical and post-classical individuals
and cultures; the precise, on-the-ground nature of the Greeks
military victory over the Persian invaders; the fraught symbolic
issue of what counted as a Greek identity vis--vis the barbarism of the Persians; the nature of religion in ancient Greece
and its role in ancient Greek politics; and, last but not least, the
meaning or meanings that the Plataea conict may still bear for
us, as we look back over two-and-a-half millennia (ad 2011
was the 2500th anniversary of the Marathon battle, the 2500th
of Plataea will fall in 2022) and reect upon both our Hellenic
PAU L CARTLEDGE
10
inheritance and the appropriate ways to commemorate the victors and victims of warfarea mode of human interaction that
is still all too endemic and apparently considered indispensable.
Put dierently, I shall be exploring the Oaths signicance
in the following main manifestations: as a possible source for
part of what actually happened immediately before and during the Battle of Plataea; as an artifact of Greek, specically
Athenian, mentality and culture in the mid-fourth century
bcewhich can be further broken down into, on one hand,
what mid-fourth-century Athenians believed or wanted to
believe their ancestors and other loyalist (anti-Persian, proHellenic) Greeks really had thought and done in the summer
of 479, at a climactic moment in the history of classical Greece
as a whole and in the history of Athenian democratic politics
and culture in particular, and, on the other, what mid-to-late
fourth-century Athenians contemporary cultural preoccupations and anxieties were; and nally, but not least, as an artifact
of ancient Athenian religion, a very dierent one from any of
those with which most of us will be at all intimately familiar.
In short, After Thermopylae will aim both to provide a
deeply contextualized history of the crucially important but
too often neglected Battle of Plataea and to oer a rich portrait
of the ancient Greeks cultural ethos during one of the most
critical periods in all ancient (not just ancient Greek) history
and its subsequent reception.
11
T H E OAT H O F P L ATA E A
INTRODUCTION
13
TEXTS
Gods
(lines 14) The priest of Ares and Athena Areia,
Dion son of Dion of [the deme] Acharnae, has dedicated this. [space]
PAU L CARTLEDGE
14
15
16
17
18
19
Athenian audience, precisely to that one known and conspicuously odd, out-of-national-character Spartan act? But
that may well be thought hypercritical and hyper-suspicious.
Moving on ...
And I shall bury in the same spot the dead of those who
have fought as my allies, and shall leave behind none of them
unburied. Rituals of burial were vitally important to all
Greeks at all times and in all circumstances. When Herodotus
wanted to illustrate extreme dierences of cultural norms
between dierent peoples (in this case Greeks and an Indian
people), he selected their radically opposed burial customs
(book 3, chapter 38). Failure to provide due burial to a kinsman
could result, it was generally believed, in serious damage to the
living inicted by the dead persons deeply oended spiritual
avatars. Failure to provide or refusal to allow due post-battle
burial, as the Thebans insisted upon in the case of the Athenian corpses after the battle of Delium in 424 bce, was an
extreme instance of highly unusual and irregular outing of
this general religious taboo. It is this same concern for proper
burial that explains, for example, the utter ferocity with which
the Spartans fought at Thermopylae to recover the corpse of
Leonidasto no avail, ultimately; though whether one be lieves that the Persians really did mutilate it, as Herodotus
vividly describes, depends on whether one attributes the no
doubt sincere Spartan belief in and report of that alleged
decapitation to mere cultural prejudice.
In practice, in Greek summer conditions and in the absence of mummication, burialwhether by inhumation or by
cremationhad to take place as soon as possible postmortem.
PAU L CARTLEDGE
20
At any rate by the 460s bce, it was the Athenians normal practice to cremate on the spot their dead warriors who died abroad
and to bring their ashes home from the battleeld for public ceremonial interment in Athenss major civic cemetery, that located
in the citys Potters Quarter (the Kerameikos). How early that
ritual practice goes back is, however, unknown, so we cannot say
for certain how exceptional or unexceptional was the Athenians
treatment of the 192 dead ghters of Marathon in 490. These
magnicent Few were buried, possibly after cremation, under a
huge funerary and memorial mound that was erected on or near
the battle site and still to this day survives, like the plain itself, in
notably altered form (it has been excavated over the years both
scientically and very much unscientically). At this holy mound
the battle dead were worshipped in after times as heroes (demigods, one rung only below the gods themselves). Spartans, on
the other hand, one assumes were regularly buriedlike most
Greeks and for the obvious reasonswhere they died ghting
on foreign soil. There is just one, admittedly massive, type of
exception to that rule on the record. That is, if a king died abroad
in battle or for any other reason, and if his corpse could be recovered, he was rst mummied in either wax or honey and then
brought home to Sparta for the conduct of an elaborate, dayslong funerary ritual that involved the entire population (unfree
as well as free, citizen and noncitizen) and the extensive territory
of the Spartan state in Laconia and Messenia.
Next, After winning victory over the barbarians in battle,
I shall tithe the city of the Thebans; and I shall not destroy
Athens or Sparta or Plataea or any of the cities which have
fought as our allies. Tithing in such a context was literal: it
AFTER THER MOPYLAE
21
22
occasions. On the rst, in 427, when it was Sparta that did the
deed at Thebes imploring, and then again in 373, when Thebes
managed it by and for itself, the victim city was none other
than Plataea. (Plataeas crime in Theban eyes was that, though
it was ethnically a Boeotian town, it preferred alliance with
non-Boeotian Athens to active membership of the Boeotian
federal statedominated by Thebes. In 364 Thebes took its
domination to what it considered a logical conclusionby
destroying its main Boeotian rival city, Orchomenus.) That
may indeed account for the next sentence of the Oath, which is
very oddly phrased indeed: and I shall not destroy Athens or
Sparta or Plataea or any of the cities which have fought as our
allies. In 479, and immediately after, surely it would hardly
have been necessary to include such a prohibition as that, since
it would not have easily been even contemplated or envisaged
at that time. On the other hand, in 373, as mentioned, Plataea
was actually destroyed by Thebes, as it had been in 426 by
Sparta at Thebes vehement urging.
Nor is that, by any means, the end of this story of interGreek violent reprisal and destruction. In 404 Athens, the
loser in the Peloponnesian War, was seriously threatened with
extinction by the allies of Sparta, led by Thebes, which had
proted from the War greatly, and not least at the expense of
its near neighbor Athens. So it was a reversal of fortune (what
the Greeks called a peripeteia) that all too many ancient Greeks
would have relished when in 335 Thebes was itself eventually
annihilated, if only temporarilyat the behest of Greeces
conqueror, Alexander the Great. How could he have justied
such a drastic measure? Such was the continuing potency of
AFTER THER MOPYLAE
23
24
25
26
27
So, does the Acharnae stele reproduce a text that is a substantially accurate transmission of an oath originally formulated
and sworn in the summer of 479? Argument will continue to
ebb and ow both pro and con. There mayin some moods
Im inclined to believe that there musthave been some sort
of oath binding together (or papering over the cracks between)
the wavering allies of the Hellenic-loyalist anti-Persian alliance
sworn either in 481 or at latest spring 480. Indeed, insofar as
there was a formal, quasi-legally instituted Hellenic league, as
modern scholars are fond of calling an alliance that the allies
may themselves have referred to simply as the Hellenes, that
would indeed have been constituted precisely by the religiously
PAU L CARTLEDGE
28
binding mutual oath(s) sworn by the alliesrst at the Isthmus of Corinth in early summer 481, and then again at the
same venue, sacred to Poseidon, a year or so later. But would
that oath or those oaths have been sucient to harness, guide,
and guarantee cooperation between them for the rest of the
war against the Persians? The one collective Hellenic oath
that is mentioned by Herodotus (7.132), one that was allegedly sworn not before Plataea but before Thermopylae in
summer 480, suggests not. So in principle, since even after the
tremendous victory by sea at Salamis the alliance showed large
and growing ssures, its not at all implausible to me that there
should have been felt the need for more sealant to be applied,
in the shape of a new or renewed oath. And this latter could
well have been sworn, conveniently and opportunely enough,
at the marshalling ground of Eleusisanother sacred and
Panhellenic siteimmediately prior to the joint advance
northwards to confront Mardonius and his Persian forces in
Boeotia. And Eleusis, though the Mysteries celebrated there
were Panhellenic, lay on the soil of Attica, politically within the
bounds of the citizen-state of Athens. Athenians would thus
have had a special reason to want to remember the swearing of
an oath precisely there.
However, it is an almost entirely dierent matter to decide
whether the terms of the alleged oath as recorded on the stone
at Acharnae and as reported divergently in the literary sources
do in any particular accurately reect the terms of such an oath
as may originallyputativelyhave been sworn. On that
latter point, I remain adamantly sceptical. Overall, I believe
that the weight of argument rmly tips the balance in the
AFTER THER MOPYLAE
29
30
the very start set on a collision course not only with its ostensible object, the mighty Persian empire, but also with Sparta
and its mainly Peloponnesian, mainly land-based alliance. A
desultory series of clashes between Athens and Sparta and
their respective allies between 460 and 445 was concluded
with a supposedly thirty-year truce, but which in practice
lasted only fourteen and gave way to a full-blown ancient
Greek equivalent of a world war.
This Atheno-Peloponnesian War lasted on and o for
twenty-seven years, a full generation, and ranged all over the
Aegean, up into the Hellespont (Dardanelles), and as far west
as Sicily. The rst phase of the War lasted for a full decade and
was rounded o with a peace conventionally named after its
chief Athenian negotiator, Nicias. Since the Spartans had started the War with the express aim of terminating the Athenian empire, and since it had failed by a long way to achieve
this goal, the peace represented a win on points for Athens.
Conversely, when the War resumed in 413, the Athenians, who
had restarted it, were in very bad shape militarily after a major
defeat in Sicily, and soon in very bad shape politically, as civil
war convulsed the city and a vicious oligarchy replaced the democracy in 411. Eventually, after a further seven years of
ghting, the Athenians paid a heavy price for their resolute
anti-Persianism of the decades from the early 470s on, as
Sparta, swallowing its supposed Hellenic love of political liberty, got into bed with the Great King of Persia and received in
return the nancial wherewithal to construct the victorious
eet that nally brought a starving Athens to its knees in the
late winter/early spring of 4054.
AFTER THER MOPYLAE
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32
33
34
was surely not acting o his own bat. The scene sculpted in
relief at the head of this other stele depicts Athena, who is
shown wearing her dening military garb of aegis (goatskin
breastplate), helmet, and shield, and in the act of crowning a
gure of Ares accoutred as a hoplite infantryman. This militarism was both sharply localized at Acharnae and at the same
time given a deliberately all-Athenian spin.
Most Greeks, it has been claimed, shuddered when they
thought of Ares (see further the next chapter), but for the
Athenians of Acharnae at least there seems to have been no
such ambivalence about worshipping him, at any rate not outwardly so. Their templenot located, be it noted, in the city of
Athens itselfwas not only the sole temple of Ares within the
Athenian citizen-state but also one of the very few devoted to
Ares anywhere in the extensive Greek world at any time.
(Strictly, one should write that it was not located originally in
the city of Athens, that is, when it was rst constructed in the
third quarter of the fth century, roughly contemporaneously
with the Parthenon and other major Attic temples. At the end
of the rst century bce, however, the temple was actually
moved from Acharnae to the center of Athens, piece by piece,
and re-erected on newly built foundations just north of the
Odeum. This was in the very dierent political circumstances
of the rule over Greece of the Roman emperor Augustus
between 27 bce and 14 ce, for which see chapter 6.) The
Acharnians arguably were always keen to exploit this singular
local connection, of which the Athenians collectively were very
well aware. To explain what I mean by that, lets look briey at
the overall structure of the Athenian democratic state.
AFTER THER MOPYLAE
35
Institutionally and legally, since the founding of the democracy in 508/7, acquisition and maintenance of the citizenship of
Athens had been made dependent on membership in a deme.
That is to say, for a legitimate Athenian adult male to qualify as
a citizen he had to be inscribed at the age of majority (eighteen)
on the register of one of the 139 or 140 demes (parishes, wards,
villages) which together constituted the polis or citizen-state of
the Athenians. By a complicated and signicantly articial procedure these 139 or 140 were grouped into thirty trittues or
thirdings, which in turn were so combined as to produce ten
political tribes. These demes and tribes were the basis of democratic Athens political organizationboth civilian and military.
Each deme had its own assembly, its own property, its own religious cults, and chose ocials from among its members, usually
by lot and on an annual basis, to administer them all. Each tribe
provided 50 councilors, chosen by lot annually, to the central
Council of 500, which acted both as the central Assemblys
steering committee (at the time of our stele the Assembly met at
least 40 times a year, or every nine or so days on average), and
also as the permanent executive of the Athenian state. Each
tribe, moreover, provided annually one of the board of ten Generals, whose chief executive oce covered naval as well as land
warfare and had a political as well as purely battleeld function.
Generals, exceptionally (like the chief nancial ocials), were
elected rather than chosen by the usual democratic method of
appointment to public oce, the lot. Each tribe, moreover, furnished one of the ten regiments into which Athens infantry
armies were disposed. Finally, each tribe had a distinct religious
identity, celebrating and recording its own cults and festivals.
PAU L CARTLEDGE
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37
PAU L CARTLEDGE
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39
PAU L CARTLEDGE
40
T H E P L ATA E A OAT H A S A D O C U M E N T
OF ANCIENT GR EEK R ELIGION
The same oath is not equal for the impious and the
pious
Xenophanes of Colophon, sixthfth century bce
o read the Oath of Plataea as an item of quasinationalistic propaganda is only one of the many possible interpretations of the meanings of this multivalent Oath
when it is studied as a document of its own time. The other
main interpretative avenue that I shall now explore in particular is the religious.
The ancient pagan (pre-Christian) world was full of religious oaths. So much so that the practice provoked the sharpest possible retort and rebuke from Christianitys titular
42
43
today, but they are particularly so among certain sworn brotherhoods that set themselves apart from and, indeed, are in violent opposition to mainstream society. Conversely, to track
back to the European Middle Ages, there we nd that oathswearing was rather a common, mainstream method of seeking
to obtain or to ensure legal justice. That was preeminently true
in the case of mediaeval Englands compact between King John
and his barons sworn at Runnymede near Windsor in 1215, a
compact known commonly as the Magna Carta (and still not
without political-legal relevance today). I quote from Article
60 (in a translation that aims to capture the sense rather than
the precise wording of the original Latin):
Any man who so desires may take an oath to obey
the commands of the twenty-ve [newly elected]
barons for the achievement of these ends, and to join
with them in assailing us [King John] to the utmost
of his power. We give public and free permission to
take this oath to any man who so desires... . Indeed,
we will compel any of our subjects who are unwilling
to take it to swear it at our command.
None of the signatories (swearers) to the supposed Oath of
Plataea was under any such royal compulsion. Au contraire: the
swearer states had all, ex hypothesi, united willingly and voluntarily to resist a foreign barbarian monarch, the sort who did
not scruple to send his envoys into Hellenic territory with a
regal and indeed imperious Persian-style demand for earth
and water. Yet the Plataea Oath was no less sworn in the sight
PAU L CARTLEDGE
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45
46
the same mighty father Zeus who carried the title Horkios. He
presided at Olympia over games that were by denition Panhellenic: that is, all and only Greeks might compete in them,
and the judges of the contestsalways drawn solely from the
nearby city of Eliswere entitled Hellanodikai or Judges of
the Greeks. The Battle of Plataea and its Oath, whatever the
historicity of the latter might have been, were also quintessentially Panhellenic matters.
Finally, so far as oaths and oath-taking are concerned, one
interesting religious aspect of the Plataea battle and its aftermath that deserves mention here is the one that has been discussed very well by Deborah Boedeker (2007). She noticed
that in Herodotus all canonical victories over Persians, including the Battle of Plataea, have an Eleusinian connection.
In Boeotia, the sanctuary of Demeter near Plataea (9.57.2,
62.2) had indeed a specically Spartan connection, but the
famous Panhellenic sanctuary of Demeter and her daughter
(Kore/Persephone), the site of the Eleusinian Mysteries, was
located at Eleusis in Attica. If the hunch is correct that some
sort of authentic ancestor of the Acharnae Oath was indeed
sworn before the battle of Plataea, then the site of Eleusis,
where the Spartan-led forces under Pausanias joined up with
the Athenians under Aristeides, would indeed have carried the
requisitely sanctied and Panhellenic aura.
Let us look next at the various gods and other divine
powers invoked by name in the Acharnae stele oaths. Ares was
the religious personication of war, as auditors or readers of
Homer needed no reminding. Yet, given that he was both a
fully-edged and regular member of the pantheon of both
AFTER THER MOPYLAE
47
male and female immortals who were supposed to dwell eternally together on the peak of Mt. Olympus (the highest mountain in Greece), and given moreover that he was the war-god of
a culture seemingly devoted to endemic warfare, it is rather
surprising to say the least to nd that ancient Greeks appreciation of Ares was marked by an abiding ambivalence.
In Homers Iliad, one of the ancient Greeks foundational
cultural artifacts, Ares is dubbed most hateful . . . of all the
gods who hold Olympus (book 5, line 890). This hatred might
be explained by his unfortunate tendency to sanction the
deaths of ones friends and loved ones as much as those of ones
deadly enemies, but all the same one would have expected to
nd him a little loved, however toughly, as well as hated. Even
for the notably martial, indeed bellicose national poet of the
Spartans, Tyrtaeus (mid-seventh century), he was lamentable
Ares (Tyrt. 11.7, cf. 12.34, 19.4), which echoes a sentiment
expressed not much earlier by the other Greek national poet
beside Homer, Hesiod from Ascra in Boeotia (c. 700 bce). He
too ascribed to Ares lamentable works and deeds of violence
(hubris: Works and Days line 145), very much the sorts of
things to be associated with an Iron Age of the seemingly interminable present that in Hesiods notably pessimistic worldview had irrevocably replaced an irretrievably lost Golden Age.
The goddess Athena (in Greek, Athene) came with no
such negative baggage. Of course, there was not just one homogeneous, all-purpose Athena, but rather many dierent Athenas, many of them worshipped ocially within and by the
state of Athens. The most important of them all, politically
speaking, was the Athena surnamed Polias, literally of the
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49
50
prolonged Atheno-Peloponnesian War of the later fth century (431404, especially 413404). Since then, as a direct
response, the Athenians had put a lot more eort into constructing what one modern historian has called Fortress
Attica (Ober 1985), concentrating at rst on land boundaries
both at the limits of and within Attica, the territory of the
Athenian city-state. Moreover, frontiers were often deemed to
be sacred in Greece, even if it was only the minutely pious
Spartans who are known to have devised specic frontiercrossing religious rituals (diabatria). Thus frontiers had to
be sanctied as well as patrolled in a secular way. Moreover,
it is not impossible that one particularly impressive frontier
vallationthe Dema Wall extending between Mount Aigaleos and Mount Parnes in the pass between the plain of Eleusis and the plain of Athenswas constructed precisely in the
immediate aftermath of Chaeroneanotionally the very moment that provoked also our emblematic monument.
Of the remaining elements, however, one, the rst to be
listed, was not just appropriate but indeed inevitable. In myth
Aglaurus was the daughter of one of Athens very rst kings,
Cecrops, who had thrown herself from the (very high) Acropolis as a symbolic sacrice in order to save the city from a hostile invasion. The real-life Athenian ephebes were called upon,
likewise, to save the city, and it was in the holy sanctuary of
Aglaurus on the slope below the east end of the Acropolis that
the ephebesas an admittedly much later source reports
swore their collective and communal oath.
In short, the Oath of Plataea, like the collocated ephebic
oath, is a religious oath, sworn by the Athenians in the name of
AFTER THER MOPYLAE
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52
personally had suered from this in his home city of Halicarnassus, and in his own voice he issued a loud and memorable
protest against it:
Division within a kindred people (stasis emphulios) is
as much worse than a united war against an external
enemy as war is worse than peace. (8.3.1)
In about 491 the Aiginetans civil strife had taken the form of
a struggle between the ordinary poor citizens and the elite few
rich citizens who controlled and ran the wealthy island city.
The rich captured 700 of the poor and were preparing a mass
execution of them when one of the prisoners broke free and
sought sanctuaryasylumin a temple of Demeter the Lawgiver (Thesmophoros). He managed to grab the latch of the
temple door but couldnt open it and get to safety inside in
time before the elite were upon him. Failing to pry his ngers
away, they simply cut o his hands and carried him o with
what were formerly his hands still sticking to the latch. Demeter, however, was not amused or pleased. Pollution (agos) was
visited not just upon the immediate perpetrators but upon all
Aiginetans for a very long time to come, since they were not
able to expiate the curse by performing sacrice, even though
they tried all sorts of ways of eliminating it. Indeed, they were
still under a curse sixty years later, when their Athenian enemies evicted them from the island and resettled them in the
eastern Peloponnese. Pollution in ancient Greece could take
many formsthere was even more than one term for the condition, the most common being miasma. In a state of religious
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54
55
56
57
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T H E P E R S I A N WA R S
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61
62
Herodotus very greatest merits as an interested but largely objective reporter and analyst that, so far from writing ocial
history or mere propaganda, he does nothing to disguise the
internal conicts that constantly threatened to undermine the
far from wholehearted as well as perilously thinly spread Greek
resistance.
If history is proverbially written by the victors, in this present case that is all too literally true. The Achaemenid Persians
seem never to have written history in anything like a Herodotean sense. Although their many subjects included Jews, and a
few books of the Hebrew and later Bibles (Esther, Nehemiah,
Ezra) do refer to events and processes directly related to the
management of the Persian empire, these too do not constitute
history, even in the loose sense of the word that might be applied to the theologically loaded biblical narrative books of
Kings and Chronicles. What the Persians did produce in written
and fortunately enduring form, and in considerable quantities,
were bureaucratic documents incised on clay in several languages, including Greekso that we thereby know a good
deal about the workings of Persian imperial administration
and, yet more important, we gain access to the very arcanum of
the Achaemenid Persian empire, namely that at its heart it was
a bureaucrats dream. Besides such written testimony, the Achaemenids left behindto be retrieved by archaeologists from
the nineteenth century up to the present daya formidable
repertoire of artworks in multiple media, not least nely
crafted vessels in gold and silver and a distinctively powerful
imperial style of architecture that drew creatively upon the traditions of several ancient and conquered peoples, foremost the
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64
65
66
67
68
69
Figure 4.2. The Great King of Persia (Darius I) enthroned at his palace
of Persepolis, Iran, c. 515 bce The Trustees of the British Museum.
Romans, this is expressed in terms of a divinely appointed mission. In other cases, material greed, or the prestige of the emperor, or a genuine concern for the empires security especially
at the margins operate as the impulsive factor or factors. Dariuss rule was no exception. Having quelled wide-scale unrest
and dissidence in order to establish himself as emperor, and
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72
was this revolt just a minor blip: it lasted for six whole annual
campaigning seasons until it was nally crushed in the summer
of 494, in a major naval battle fought not far from Miletus
itself. The revolted Greek cities as a whole were treated perhaps with unpredictable leniency, but the ringleader Miletus
was destroyed and its surviving inhabitants deported to the
Persian Gulf. Moreover, a Persian task force under one of Darius sons-in-law, the son of one of his closest advisers, was
instructed to reassert Persias interest in Europe on the far side
of the Dardanelles (Hellespont to the Greeks), and he did so
with such success that the northern coast of the Aegean became
a vassal territory of the empire as far west as the ssiparous
kingdom of Macedon. That Persian general was Mardonius,
who was destined to breathe his last a decade and a half later
in a corner of the foreign eld of Plataea.
But Dariuss eyes continued to rove after 492, and in 490 he
entrusted a naval expedition to the joint command of a brother
of his, Artaphernes, and a high-ranking Mede with special naval
experience, Datis. The nal objective of the expedition was left
vague. But war aims included, at the least, revenge, restoration of
prestige, enhanced security, and the delivery of a warning. Revenge was reserved for the two non-Asiatic Greek cities which
had boldly but perhaps unwisely given material aid to the Ionians and others in revolt against Persia between 499 and 494:
namely, Athens and Eretria (on the island of Euboea adjacent to
Athens territory of Attica). Eretria was duly attened in an echo
of the fate of Miletus, and many of its surviving inhabitants were
likewise transported far away to the east of the Persian empire.
But Athensfamously, notoriouslyturned the tables on the
AFTER THER MOPYLAE
73
aggressor and, with noteworthy help from its little ally Plataea,
won the Battle of Marathon. That defeat in its turn became a
major casus belli for Persias next military intervention on the
Greek mainland, in 480.
Or at least that was how it was seen from a dominant
Greek point of view, that of the Athenianswhose view
Herodotus was able to canvass and chose to represent a couple
of generations later. Since we lack direct contemporary Persian
testimony of any sort, ocial or unocial, it may always be
suggested that to the Great King seated in majesty upon his
thrones at Susa and Persepolis in the Iranian south the faraway
Greeks seemed as mere ies to wanton boys, or pinpricks on
the hide of a rhinoceros. But my own view is that there was
more to it than mere self-congratulatory Greek propaganda.
Darius had not fared brilliantly in his one far northwestern expedition, in which Greek quisling rulers (tyrants) had been
intimately involved. Greeks were employed in the building of
Darius massive palaces toward the end of the sixth century,
when his son Xerxes (not his eldest) was born. Xerxes himself
will not have been utterly unacquainted with Greeks and Greek
matters, nor utterly unmoved by a revolt that his own principal
commander in 480, Mardonius, had been instrumental in
putting down just four years before the Marathon debacle.
Marathon, whose 2500th anniversary was widely celebrated as well as commemorated in 2010/1, was for Greeks
and Greece a truly remarkable and quite unpredictable success.
Unfortunately, the only really usable ancient account comes
from just the one source, Herodotus in the sixth book of his
Histories; and there will always therefore remain large question
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77
78
79
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themselves as Eupatrids (aristocrats) or as citizens of a particular deme (village, ward, parish) such as Acharnae rather than
as Athenians. In a culture thus fissile, getting Greeks to cooperate with each other as Greeks, even in the face of a massive
non-Greek invasion threatening their very existence, was by no
means easyas is amply proved by the fact that only a little
over 30 or so Greek communities out of a potential 700 or
thereabouts actually managed to do so for any length of time
during the Graeco-Persian Wars of 480479.
In overall chronological perspective what is most striking
about that cooperation is that it involved Sparta and Athens
beingand ghtingon the same side. Both before and more
especially after the Persian Wars they adopted the Greek
default posture of intense rivalry, aggravated in their case not so
much by geographical proximity and so direct competition for
scarce economic resources but by fundamental cultural dissimilarity, even outright polar opposition. Both cities were in a
sense the outcome of conquest, but whereas the Athenians,
once united, boasted of being autochthonous, that is of not
having immigrated from elsewhere, the Spartans made no
secret of the fact that their city had rst come into being
through immigration and had then been massively expanded
by the conquest and enslavement of local populations who
were no less Greek than they. Thus, whereas typically in the
historical period slaves in Greek citiesof whom there were
many thousandswere outsiders in the fullest sense (natally
alienated, non-Greek foreigners), and usually bought and sold
in slave-markets, the slaves of the Spartans (they used the
common Greek term, douloi) suered hereditary enslavement,
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contradicted their own hierarchical, top-down, militaryminded worldview, and was deeply at odds with the continued
existence in Sparta of not just an old-world aristocracy but even
a unique hereditary dual kingship.
Consistently, the disciplinarian Spartans were also the
rstindeed, for centuries the onlyGreek city to devise and
impose a centrally organized and controlled system for educating their male (and, to a smaller extent, their female) young in
the dominant values of the adult community. This was education of a military cast, both practically and symbolically. However, it should not be inferred from this that the Spartans were
therefore in a negative sense militaristic, always spoiling for a
ght, on inappropriate or inadequate grounds; at least, that was
not the case as regards any external enemy, Greek or non-Greek,
at any rate not after 550 bce or so. Rather, their educational
system of communal socialization was devised primarily to
ensure the internal harmony and cohesion and the automatic
feeling for cooperation that were necessary to enable them to
cope with the threat constantly posed by the enemy within, the
Helots. Non-Spartans too often failed to realize just what a constraint this eternal, homegrown factor of a many times larger
and by no means entirely reconciled subject population placed
on all Spartan foreign as well as domestic policy. Sometimes, but
only very rarely, the threat was translated into open Helot revolt,
as in 464. It was to guard against that eventuality that in 421,
when the Spartans and Athenians made a separate peace treaty,
the Spartans insisted on inserting a very striking clause, unreciprocated on the Athenians side, compelling the Athenians to
come to their aid if the slave class should revolt.
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T H E FAC E O F T H E B AT T L E
O F P L ATA E A
that it was essentially a Spartan (and Peloponnesian), not Athenian, victory, and the Athenians have been far more vocal, far
more inuential over the surviving tradition of the Wars, than
the Spartans (chapter 6). Another is that Plataea was a small
statein the shadow rst of Thebes, then of Athens, and physically destroyed more than once, rst by the Persians in 480,
then by the Spartans in 426, then again by the Thebans in 373.
It did come into its own later, as the site of an annual commemoration of the Persian Wars, a freedom festival (Eleutheria). But
that was at a time well after 300 bce, and by then individual
Greek city-states had lost any genuine autonomy and formed
part of large territorial kingdoms, such as the one ruled from
Macedon by the Antigonids (a successor dynasty to that of
Philip II and Alexander the Great). These kingdoms were in
turn superseded by the greatest ancient empire of them all, that
of Rome. Yet a third reason for the battles lack of its due meed
of celebrity is more technical, and due to the nature of the surviving evidence for it. Herodotus account is not just the best that
we have, but really the only usable onein the sense that the
others are more or less derivative from it rather than independently grounded and valuable. Yet Herodotus is both quite brief
and lacunose, leaving a number of puzzles hanging. By that I
dont mean to imply that it is surprisingly poor. As Noah Whatley long ago pointed out (1964), there are very good reasons why
no battle before a relatively modern eranot just no ancient
Greek battleis very well documented. That is also one, if only
one, explanation for the large variability in modern attempted
reconstructions of it too. But before we add our own, we must
rst briey set the military scene.
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Figure 5.1. An Athenian lady with her oriental servant surmounts the
molded head of a bearded Persian warrior; Attic red-gure jug c. 410400,
from Nola, Italy, now British Museum. The Trustees of the British
Museum.
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98
where the latters natural and learned advantages were eectively rendered null. Other loyalist Greek cities contributed
mightily, the island state of Aegina and the twin-harbor state
of Corinth to the fore; even little and landlocked Plataea heroically contributed its share of oarsmen. But the Greek victory
was essentially due to the Athenians 180 to 200 ships, the ecacy of which was owed to a largely unpredictable combination
of factors. There had been an exceptionally lucky strike of silver in the state-owned mines just two years before, and the
democratic Athenians were persuaded by the rhetoric of the
brilliantly foresighted and improvisatory Themistocles, against
their initial more mercenary inclinations, to devote this handy
surplus to the construction of a 200-strong eet of trireme
warships. The three-banked, 170-oared trireme had been the
ship-of-the-line in the most advanced Greek naval warfare for
over forty years by then, but still many Greek states lagged in
adopting it, simply because it was such an expensive and risky
investment: it cost about 1 talentor 6,000 days of a skilled
craftsmans laborto build, and could be permanently disabled with just one piercing thrust below the waterline by an
enemy ships bronze-sheathed ram. The Athenians in 483/2,
inspired by Themistocles, took the plunge, and in 480 Athenian oarsmen and supernumerary crew passed over from being
naval nonentities to the status of naval heroes in a trice.
So major indeed was the impact of the Salamis victory,
and so successful were the Athenians in trumpeting it, that
even the normally sober Herodotus was convinced that it was
the most decisive battle of the entire Graeco-Persian Wars,
prompting him to dub the Athenians the saviours of Hellas
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101
102
(or not) as they had been at the end of the preceding summer
and autumn of 480.
In June 479, having stocked up on freshly harvested Thessalian grain and other supplies, Mardonius moved his forces
south, forcing again the evacuation of Athens; and once again
he both occupied all Attica and dealt further destruction to the
chief citys holiest places. Yet still the Spartans delayed marching north to oppose force with force. Why? The rigid closeness
of that oligarchic government [Sparta] kept ... its motives and
its policy no less a secret to contemporaneous nations than to
modern inquirers was well said in 1837 by Edward Bulwer
Lytton, echoing Thucydides famous comment (5.68) on the
secrecy of the Spartan regime in the context of the AthenoSpartan Peloponnesian War some six decades later. But it has
to be said that Herodotus account of 479 does not go out of its
way to enlighten the gloom; indeed, it reveals all too clearly the
contradictory nature of his Greek sources. On the one hand,
there were those informants who told Herodotus that the Spartans had never really intended to ght the Persians north of the
Isthmus of Corinth in any event, and that that was why they
allegedly spent more time and energy in trying to build a wall
across the Isthmus than in preparing to send signicant forces
north of it. On the other hand, Herodotus does also seem to
have accepted that the Spartans were indeed genuinely an extraordinarily pious people and so given credence to their own
claim that it was one of their major annual religious festivals
the Hyacinthia, held annually in high summer in honor of
Apollo and Hyacinthusthat had prevented their marching
out until after it had been duly celebrated.
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104
105
106
107
Figure 5.2. The Immortals, as the Greeks knew a Persian Kings elite
guard on campaign, depicted on glazed bricks from the Palace of Susa, Iran.
Erich Lessing/Art Resource, NY.
108
109
110
111
Figure 5.4. Bronze helmet of the Corinthian (all-over) type, of the period of
the Battle of Plataea; British Museum. The Trustees of the British Museum.
112
the hilly and broken nature of the terrain would probably have
rendered standard phalanx tacticswhatever they now standardly were (another point of scholarly dispute)dicult if
not impossible. Moreover, the scale and nature of the opposition and the unprecedented duration of the confrontation are
good further arguments in favor of the employment of tactics
that were more opportunistic than orthodox.
It was perhaps such narrowly military factors and considerations that partially account for theto some observers
unaccountabledelay of some eleven days in bringing matters
to a head and then a conclusion. Within that timespan what may
have been the most signicant eventto call it a tipping-point is
probably excessivewas the killing of the huge and unwieldy
Persian cavalry commander Masistius. This was accomplished
by a crack Athenian hoplite task force supported by archers (and
was later made much of by the Athenians, see chapter 6). But
the delay itself is not by any means inexplicable; political considerations and diculties other than military ones must also be
factored in. On the one hand, Pausanias could still have been
hoping for yet more troops to arrive, so that he might feel there
was safety in numbers if nothing else; on the other hand, he was
totally inexperienced as a general, the size and composition of
his allied army were in any case unprecedented, and general
morale cannot have been exceptionally high, if indeed there was
not a considerable mood of despaira mood which would not
have been relieved by a series of allegedly negative omens produced by seers (manteis) from the entrails of sacriced animals.
What triggered the nal evolutions was another, unfortunate consequence of the delayan increasingly critical shortage
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when the games were not on, had something to do with it, as
the Spartans were always especially interested in the Games
and always especially keen to keep on good terms with Zeus of
Mount Olympus, the most powerful single divinity in the
entire Greek pantheon. The Battle of Plataea thus became the
rst of the ve victories that Teisamenus would win for his
new fellow-citizens. Revealingly, in the same sense, it was for
the Spartans habit of paying minute attention to the niceties
of discerning the views of the gods and giving them their due
that a later commentator, Xenophon of Athens who knew
Sparta well from the inside, would hail them as craftsmen of
Ares.
Another striking post-Plataea oddity worthy of special
mentionconcerning the Plataean citizen Euchidaswill
be told elsewhere, in the context of the competitive intercity
commemoration that forms the essence of the next chapter.
Here, though, we must rst wrap up the military narrative of
479. The Battle of Plataea was decisive militarily; never again
did a Persian king think to invade and conquer any part of
mainland Greece by land. But it was not actually the very last
battle of the Graeco-Persian Wars. That, to rub Attic salt in
Xerxes wounds, was the amphibious land-sea engagement
fought on and o the Asiatic coast by the loyalist Greek
alliance, which was by then represented chiey by the Athenians and led by Pericless father Xanthippus, at Cape Mycale
near the eastern end of the island of Samos. Patriotic Greek
tradition indeed held that Mycale was fought and won on the
very same day as Plataea. But though its regularly referred to
as a battle, such little evidence as survives for how it was
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Erected originally at Marathon itself, the tribal monument of Erechthes was transported some six and a half centuries later to the eastern Peloponnese, to the estate of a
very distinguished and seriously rich Athenian, Herodes
Atticus. Here is how the text begins (in the translation of
Peter Thonemann):
ERECHTHES
Fame, as it reaches the furthest limits of the sunlit
earth,
Shall learn the valour of these men: how they died
In battle with the Medes, and how they garlanded
Athens,
The few who undertook the war of many.
There then follows a list of names, twenty-two in all
just names, but no pack drill as it were, in the egalitarian, democratic Athenian way; in particular, no mention was made of
their patronymics (fathers names) because that might have
been thought socially divisive, and Athens liked to maintain
the glorious ction that at least in death, especially if they had
died ghting valiantly for their city, all Athenians were equal.
Likewise treating all dead citizens who died in war alike,
and all alike as heroes, Athenian democratic oratory developed
over the fth century the genre known as the Epitaphios Logos
or Funeral Speech, invented probably in the mid-460s.
Absolutely standard and required, at least so far as the few
extant real and ctitious examples of the genre attest, was a
central and favorable mention of the Marathon victory and/or
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128
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132
It was typically outside Sparta, however, that the Spartans preferred to make their commemorative splashes, and
particularly at the two major Panhellenic shrines. Thus, at
some point in the second quarter of the fth century they both
added a golden shield to the pediment of the newly built
Temple of Olympian Zeus at Olympia and dedicated in that
same shrine a large bronze image of Zeus, with the accompanying message inscribed on its base:
Receive, O lord Cronos son Olympian Zeus, [this]
beautiful agalma
With propitious spirit, from the Lacedaemonians.
An agalma was literally a thing in which Zeus was
expected to take delight; it was one of the regular Greek words
for statue. It rather takes the breath away, though, to think
that what the Spartans may have been thanking him for in this
instance was his aid in putting down yet another rebellion of
their own domestic slave population of Greek Helots.
With some relief we turn to the victory monument of all
victory monuments, the so-called Serpent Column set up at
Delphi (see Fig. 6.1). As mentioned above, on a stone base was set
an upright coil of bronze issuing in three snake heads upon which
rested a gleaming gold cauldron. Across the coils there was
inscribed in the local Delphian alphabet a very spare text listing at
any rate most of the Greek loyalist allies, in groups of three and in
some sort of order of priority. We cant say how tall the whole
monument originally was because it does not survive intact. Some
of the base has been excavated at Delphi, and perhaps part of one
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of the snakes, but whatever else is extant was found and can mostly
still be seen, not at Delphi but in todays Istanbul. That city was
called originally Byzantium (Byzantion in Greek spelling), but its
name had been changed to Constantinople by the very Roman
emperor, Constantine I, who had the remaining monument transported there, to his Hippodrome, to enhance his new eponymous
world capital. I say remaining monument because already in
about 350 bce the local Phocians, then engaged in a erce war
with King Philip II of Macedon for control of Delphi, had had the
golden cauldron melted down to provide funds to pay (foreign but
Greek) mercenaries. At all events, the Serpent Column would
originally have been mightily impressive, and its striking appearance would have been enhanced by its precise location within
the sanctuary in relation to the Temple of Apollo and to other,
competing monuments (see further below).
The text on the coil began laconically: These fought the
war. The list of 31 names that follows also began laconically in
another sense: it was headed by Lacedaemonians (Spartans).
Immediately after them came Athenians, but to the ancient
Greek way of thinking that meant, symbolically, a long way
after. There were no second prizes, no silver medals, at the
ancient Olympic or Pythian Games.
OTHER PANHELLENIC OFFERINGS
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136
turn up for Marathon in time and probably will not have been
amused by the implicit reference. As for the battle of Plataea,
that was commemorated by a communally dedicated statue of
Zeus facing east near the entrance to the Bouleuterion
(Council-chamber). Its base survives with an inscription, but
so too does an oriental helmet with an inscribed ocial dedication by the Athenians. Panhellenism was an ideal that was
very rarely attained in lived practice. Just consider further the
other two major Panhellenic shrines, Isthmia (in honor of
Poseidon) and Nemea (another devoted to Zeus). They, together with Olympia and Delphi, had been locked for competitive athletic purposes into an eternally recurring, outwardly
harmonious cycle of athletic festivals for almost a century, since
the 570s. Yet although a commemorative statue of Zeus was
set up for Plataea at the Isthmia sanctuary, as at Olympia,
commemorationslet alone celebrationsof any kind were
conspicuous only by their absence from Nemea. The explanation lies in Greek festival politics. Whereas Olympia was managed by a second-rate city, Elis, Nemea was in the hands of the
ultra-ambitious and potentially much more powerful city of
Argosalways Spartas deadliest rival for Peloponnesian hegemony, and a city that de facto if not quite formally had taken
the path of medism in 480479.
REGENT PAUSANIAS
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138
Pride of place and pole position in the Spartans race for patriotic self-advertisement went to the leading poet-propagandist
Simonides, who apart from his almost peerless praise-singing
was famed in after times as a pioneer of mnemotechnics. Anne
Carson, the brilliantly original poet-classicist of our own day,
has acutely written, in a special study setting o Simonides
against another, far more tragic poet-memorialist, Paul Celan
(Carson 1999): As a poet who wrote on stone, Simonides had
reason to concern himself with the processes of excision,
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from the Spartans, though what catches the eye above all is
the exceptional prominence it accords to Spartan Regent
Pausanias.
Within the past twenty years, seven fragments of this
long poem have been identied and published. They were
written on a Roman-period papyrus found a century ago at
what was the ancient southern Egyptian town of Oxyrhynchus (roughly Sharp-nosed Fishville, named after a type of
sh considered sacred by the native Egyptians; that was
before the town was swollen by Mediterranean incomers
under the successive Greek and Roman occupations). The
longest known fragment of the poem, itself incompletely
preserved, musters over 40 lines and begins with an invocation of the death of Achilles at Troy and a celebration of the
role of Homer as poet in commemorating his fame. But
within only a few more lines Simonides is referring to himself as collaborator of the Muse and to Pausanias son of
Cleombrotus, overall commander-in-chief at Plataea, as the
best man, who led the Spartans to undying glory. Clearly,
Simonides objective is to elevate the mundane Spartans of
479 bce to parity of esteem or at least of mention with the
greatest Greek heroes of yore, and by implication to place
the Graeco-Persian Wars, and specically the battle of Plataea, alongside and on the same plane as the Trojan War,
therebynot incidentallyranking himself with Homer.
Necessarily, elevation of the Spartans collectively and of
Pausanias individually could be achieved only at the cost of
relatively diminishing the achievements of other loyalist
Greeks.
PAU L CARTLEDGE
142
143
144
HERODOTUS
145
146
147
148
theme of stasis, which he says (3.82) broke out more and more
widely in the Greek world as the War progressedor
regressed, he both analyzes particular instances of stasis within
individual Greek cities, and treats the War as a whole as one
gigantic intra-Hellenic stasis.
The War actually broke out overand physically at
Plataea, in the spring of 431, when Spartas then ally, Thebes,
attacked Athens longstanding ally, Plataea, in peacetime. Two
years later, in the summer of 429, the Spartans began a siege of
Plataea. In Thucydides narrative of the siege there is mention
of an oath regarding Plataea that had been sworn in 479; but
this turns out to refer not to any alleged pre-battle oath but to
an oath allegedly sworn after the battlean oath not to violate
Plataeas autonomy. Which is precisely what the Spartans were
then doing. After an eventually successful two-year siege, and a
mock-trial of the Plataean survivors, the Spartans in 426 again
ignored or rather trampled violently all over any such notionally pledged autonomy-oath, when they wiped Plataea o the
map, literally. They were unforgiving of the Plataeans, in
Thucydides severely pragmatic view, because they were treating the dispute between the Thebans and the Plataeans in a
purely utilitarian way, considering that the Thebans could be
useful to them in the ongoing war with Athens.
The Athenians in reply attempted, with considerable justice, to cast Sparta as a traitor to the cause of the Hellenic unity
that had been exemplied by the joint and common accomplishment at Plataea. They even went to the extreme lengths of
granting collectively a new kind of Athenian citizenship specifically to those refugee Plataeans who took up residence in exile
AFTER THER MOPYLAE
149
150
151
152
153
As the power of Athens diminished to vanishing point, however, especially around the turn of the fth to fourth century
bce, and again under pressure from the new kid on the block,
Macedon, in the third quarter of the fourth century, so the
Athenians recollections of their ancestors heroic deeds became
more and more strident, and more and more recovered rather
than authentic memories. There was no more strident or
self-justifying native Athenian genre than that of the Epitaphios
(Funeral Speech). This was a public, democratic institution
PAU L CARTLEDGE
154
155
156
157
Roman periods of Greek history viewed Herodotus as favorably as did his fellow Halicarnassians by any means. Notably,
or notoriously, one ornament of the Greek literary movement
sometimes labeled the Second Sophistic very rmly did not.
This was the biographer, philosopher, and essayist Plutarch,
who hailed from Chaeronea in Boeotia, not all that far from
Plataea, and lived from c. ce 46 to 120.
Although it was one of the essential leitmotifs of the Second Sophistic movement (rst century bce to third century
ce) to celebrate and recuperate the glories of classical Hellas,
Plutarch in the years around 100 ce wrote a largelynot
entirelyexcoriating attack upon what he alleged to be the
mean-spiritedness or malignity of Herodotus (its title in
Latin is De malignitate Herodoti). Not the least of his complaints was directed against the monstrously biased (as Plutarch saw it) attitude adopted by Herodotus both to the
barbarian Persian aggressors (palpably too favorable) and to
the various Greek combatants. This was not, alas, Plutarchs
nest intellectual hour. In hurling the derogatory epithet philobarbaros at Herodotus he came close to calling him the ancient
Greek equivalent of a wog-lover. As regards Herodotus treatment of the various Greek cities and peoples involved, he was
in Plutarchs warped view wildly too favorable to the Athenians, and grossly unjust to the Thebans. Plutarch was not
himself from Thebes, but coming as he did from the relatively
humble town of Chaeronea (the site of a number of major battles, including that of 338 bce) he was a member of the ethnic
grouping that called itself the Boeotians. And he took up the
intellectual cudgels on behalf of his fellow Boeotians of Thebes.
PAU L CARTLEDGE
158
159
160
shrine of Olympia that named the contributing cities in a similar way to the Serpent Column at Delphi; at Plataea itself he
hailed the graves of the men who fought against the Persians;
but not least of all he trumpeted, as mentioned, the fact that to
this day they still hold a contest in every fth year that is called
the Freedom games... . This was a freedom whose meaning
and symbolism had not lost all of its salience, but which had,
alas, been voided of almost all of its practical content.
CONSTANTINE
161
CONCLUSION
163
164
165
all cultural receptions, this one says a good deal more about
the state of the world in ce 2011, with its intensely renewed
wars of religion on both the intellectual and the all too savagely practical planes, than it does about 479, or 350, Before
the Common Era.
All the same, Professor Grayling does stand in an honorable tradition, which is indeed an unimpeachably ancient Greek
one. As one of its founding fathers (Socrates) put it, or at least
as he is said by his disciple Plato to have put it, the unexamined
life is not worth living for a human being. That clarion call is
included in Platos Apology, his version of Socrates defense
speech (in Greek apologia) at his trial in 399 bce for improper
religious observance (not duly worshipping the gods recognized by the city of Athens, and inventing new, unrecognized
divinities of his own) and corrupting the young through his
(anti-democratic as well as possibly impious) teachings. It failed
to sway the 501 democratically selected jurors, who found
Socrates guilty as chargedcorrectly, according to their own
democratic lights (as I have argued in Cartledge 2009)and
condemned him, much more questionably, to death. There can
be few aspects of life more worthy of our constant critical reexamination than our debt to our Hellenic cultural ancestorsas
we, following the lead of the Romans and many others over the
intervening centuries, have chosen to position and see them.
If I may therefore be permitted one concluding reection
of my own, as anachronistic no doubt as Plutarchs condemnation of Herodotus for mean-spiritedness, it would be this. Karl
Marx, a classicist before he was a marxist, in a series of theses
on the thought of Ludwig Feuerbach (1845) once famously
PAU L CARTLEDGE
166
167
Further Reading
I. Primary Sources
authenticity
In 1972 the distinguished Oxford ancient historian Russell Meiggs nally
brought out his massive, epigraphically informed treatment of the Athenian
empire of the fth century bce (Meiggs 1972). In an important Appendix
he also discussed, penetratingly, Some controversial documents (50418).
These included our Acharnae text (5047, with Add. 597), which he considered almost certainly a fabrication (156).
Scholarship on the authenticity of the transcribed Oath was coincidentally and signicantly renewed in that same year by Peter Siewert, in a book
in German based on his 1970 Munich thesis (1972, cf. Siewert 1977 on the
Ephebic Oath, both on and elsewhere than on the Acharnae stele). Siewert,
implausibly to my mind, is for the texts original authenticity.
The elderly Louis Robert (in a review in his famous Bulletin pigraphique,
a supplement to Revue des tudes Grecques, for 1973) re-articulated, specically
against Siewert, his original, sceptical line of 35 years earlier; and that is, I believe,
the majority view still today, as represented for example in the latest edition of the
document known to me: Rhodes & Osborne 2003: no. 88. But there are highly
reputable scholars who share Siewerts view, most notably van Wees 2006, who
FURTHER READING
170
argues that behind the Athenian or Athenian-inspired versions of the Oath lies
an authenticSpartanoriginal, an oath sworn regularly back home in Sparta
(and not only exceptionally in a foreign context such as that of the Plataea battle)
by the Spartanssworn bands (131). An awful lot of heft, however, far too much,
as it seems to me, is supposed to be wielded by the use in the Acharnae epigraphic
text of the one certain piece of Spartan technical terminology, enomotarch
captain of a platoon (enmotia, literally an under-oath entity). The attempt by
Krentz 2007 to show that behind the Acharnae stele text lies ultimately a real,
authentic oath that was sworn before the battle, not of Plataea, but of Marathon,
is, for all its imaginative ingenuity, also excessively speculative if not fanciful; but
it fails to convince (me) principally because it does not take the fourth-century
bce ideological-commemorative context suciently into account.
For, much the most important, Rhodes & Osborne were able to raise the
authenticity question in a new way, one that even Siewert signicantly had not
followed: that is, as an issue of collective cultural-historical memory. This is also
the line taken in Jung 2006 (rev. by A. Petrovic Journal of Hellenic Studies 2009:
19799, and by J. Dayton, Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2006.11.24), and the
one that my book is primarily concerned to address and to explore still further.
In short, I have concluded, ultimately, that the Oath of Plataeain whatever
formis properly to be included and interpreted among a whole series of post
Persian Wars texts and documents, which commences round about 380 bce
and the authenticity of which has been intensively reexamined (e.g., by Bertrand
2005) in the light of the so-called Themistocles Decree discovered at Troezen
in the 1950s by Michael Jameson, and published by him in the 1960s (Meiggs
& Lewis 1969/1988: no. 23). If most of these are certainly inauthentic, at least
in part, this makes the authenticity of the Oath of Plataea all the harder, if not
impossible, to sustain. Can documents lie? They can indeed, and do: Habichts
falsche Urkunden (false or fake documents: Habicht 1961) gets it right.
persia
The ancient Achaemenid Persian empire (c. 550330 bce) is a sensitive
subject, even or perhaps especially today: Farrokh 2008. Curtis & Tallis
2005 rather surprisingly described it as a forgotten empire, when labeling
FURTHER READING
171
FURTHER READING
172
now Harrison 2011 (ch. 2 is entitled The Persian version) for a brilliant short
appreciation of the revolution in ancient Persian historical studies over the past
thirty years or so, pioneered by Amlie Kuhrt and the sadly late Dutch scholar,
Heleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg. Brosius 2006 is a very useful introduction (note
especially the Excursus, pp. 7678, entitled The Creation of The Other: The
Persians and the Greek-Persian Wars, in which she claims provocatively that
what truly turned Marathon, Salamis and Plataea into world-historical events
was the philosophy and historiography of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, beginning with Hegel). Also extremely helpful is Allen 2005, who observes moderately that The events in the reigns of Darius and Xerxes forged a
new identity for Persian imperial rule (p. 57) and rather less temperately, like
Kuhrt, that a continuing stability and productivity during Xerxes reign conict
with Herodotus dynastic soap opera (ibid.; cf. p. 83). For a brief survey, from
the military point of view, see Briant 1999; at greater length, Farrokh 2007.
It is to the Persians that we owe the name if not exactly the notion of
Paradise: Allen 2005: 72 (Old Persian paradayadam and Avestan pairidaeza
produced Greek paradeisos). That is just one of the inuences that traveled
West from Persia as others traveled in the opposite direction, all brilliantly
tracked and discussed in Boardman 2000. For Achaemenid art, on which we
are much better informed, see also Frankfort 1970: 33378; and, through the
lens of the composite Oxus Treasure (also now in the B.M.), Curtis 2012.
greece
It would not be possible to write any sort of properly historical account of the
Graeco-Persian Wars without Herodotus; that is one reason why Tom Holland and I are preparing a brand-new, annotated translation for the Penguin
Press (forthcoming, it is expected, in 2013). There is a ton of specialist scholarship on Herodotus, as may be seen from the recently translated Commentary on the rst four Books by a formidable Italian team: Asheri et al. 2007.
Marozzi 2008 is a gentler but possibly even more stimulating introduction and
vade mecum to the man who invented history. Specically on Herodotus on
Plataea, see Nyland 1992 (at pp. 9395 he argues that his sources included
medizing Greeks who fought with the Persians).
Peter Green (1996: 289n.4) has commented on Herodotuss literary skill: just how vast and well-organised a canvas . . . how masterfully
FURTHER READING
173
architectonic his overall aim. Pelling 2007: 14950 makes this telling comment on his apparent lack of bias as between (loyalist) Greeks and Persians:
By the end of book 9 we may ... be wondering how dierent Greeks and
Persians really are.... But it is necessary at the same time to keep perspective and balance. His shortcomings as a military historian are palpable, and
that does not exclude his account of the Plataea battle, on which see the
next section.
On the other hand, it is not necessary to be excessively sensitive to
the distorting effect of Herodotuss celebration of Greek victories, as is
Kuhrt, who for example counts it against him that there was no disruption in production or major building activities throughout Xerxes reign
(2007: 23839). As early as 1963 Frye (1963: 147) was rightly resisting
what he even then considered the fashion of downplaying the significance
of the Persian defeats at Marathon, Salamis, and Plataiawhich entailed
the loss of all Darius European conquests, a serious challenge to Persian
hegemony in Western Asia, and, above all, a loss of prestige throughout
the empire.
Most ancient Greek writers, including Herodotus, bought the Athenian line on the preeminent importance of Salamis. But one ancient Greek
who did in my view correctly estimate the signicance of Plataea within the
context of the Graeco-Persian Wars as a whole is one of whom normally I
would advise students of history to be very wary indeedPlato! In his last
dialogue, Laws (707), the Athenian Stranger (a surrogate for Plato himself )
observes that it was Marathon and Plataea that saved Greece, not Salamis ... ;
Marathon rst got the Greeks out of danger, but it was Plataea that nally
made them really safe. Cawkwell 2005 oers a useful conspectus of the postHerodotean Greek sources on Persias failure.
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176
5 (397400). The related deme decree of Acharnae (Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum xxi.519): Whitehead 1985, Index, p. 473. On religion in the
Attic demes generally, Mikalson 1977.
So far as the study of oaths in particular is concerned, Homann 2005
is a good brief dictionary article, which quotes the Ephebes Oath; he rather
nicely characterizes the oath-swearer as placing himself at the centre of the
social and cosmic order with which the gods were solidary. Lateiner 2012 is a
useful conspectus of oaths and practices of oath-taking, non-Greek as well as
Greek, in both Herodotus and Thucydides. At greater length, on curses, see
Eidinow 2007. For oaths in Homer, the Greeks foundational author, see Kitts
2005 (those who violate oaths are doomed to suer the same punishments as
those who violate bonds of friendship and family). Plescia 1970 is an older
general study; cf. Karavites 1982 (with special reference to treaty-making). We
are fortunate now in that Alan Sommerstein has recently been the Principal
Investigator for a wide-ranging project on ancient oath-taking based at Nottingham University in the UK. His rst collective publication (Sommerstein
& Fletcher eds 2007) unfortunately does rather minimize our Oath (there
is a small image of the Acharnae stele on the cover but barely a notice of its
texts inside), but the contributors between them discuss intelligently a wide
range of representative examples, many of them taken from Athenian history.
There is also, as an outcome of the project, a new online database of the oath
in Archaic and Classical Greece:
http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/classics/oaths/database/index.php.
The Acharnae document is there classied as ID 338.
For political oaths, see esp. Rhodes 2007. That Aristophanes gives a
comic parody of a political oath in his Ecclesiazusae of c. 392 (lines 4145) indicates their serious importance in real Athenian life. Other discussions of oaths
at Athens include Mirhady 1991 and Herman 2007: at p. 141. Outside Athens one might draw special attention to the oath (horkion, horkia) attributed
probably anachronistically to the original founders of Cyrene in c. 630 (Meiggs
& Lewis 1969/1988: no. 5); this too includes curses (arai), as likewise does a
Sacred Law from Chios of c. 335 bc, where the curses are deemed to aict the
oenders preemptively. Spartans were supposed to be rigidly pious, so when a
Spartan was unconventional, he was likely to beor thought to bea perjurer:
King Cleomenes I (in 494, against the Argives) and Lysander, of set purpose at
all times (one tricks boys with knucklebones, men with oaths: Plutarch Life
of Lysander 8.5, Moralia 229B (4)), both tted that bill.
FURTHER READING
177
V. Commemorations
Holland 2010 is a recent study of propaganda issued during the GraecoPersian Wars. Barron 1988: 61920 oers a brief conspectus of post-War
commemorations. Jung 2006 focuses specically on Marathon and Plataea as sites of memory. Pritchard ed. 2011 is an outstanding collection
of essays on war, democracy, and culture in Classical Athens. Low 2003
considers forms of commemoration of war in fth-century Greece outside
Athens; Day 2010 concentrates on epigrams and dedications down to the
early fth century. Scott 2010 is a comprehensive account of the spatial politics of commemoration at the two major Panhellenic sanctuaries of Delphi
and Olympia. For the Serpent Column commemoration of the Battle of
Plataea at Delphi, placed in the widest context of art as plunder, see Miles
2008: 39 and g. 5. On ancient Greek panhellenism, an ideal to which lip
service was more often paid than proper respect, it often seems, see also
Mitchell 2007.
On Simonides, especially the new Simonides, see Boedeker & Sider
eds. 2001, which includes Shaw 2001 (on the possible place of performance);
note also Kowerski 2003.
On the Athenian Epitaphios (sc. Logos) or Funeral Oration, see the marvelously original monograph of Loraux 1986.
Spawforth 2012 is a splendid, original account of the place of Greece
within what the author calls the Augustan cultural revolution; in a chapter
that has tried to show that the reign of Augustus marked a decisive new stage
in the long-standing Greek tradition of commemorating the Persian Wars
(p. 138) a special section is devoted to Plataea (13038), which adds significantly to the perception already registered by Alcock (2002: 80) that an incredibly dense network of ritual activity had evolved there over the centuries
from the Classical Greek to the Roman Imperial era.
On Constantines Hippodrome in Constantinople (formerly Byzantion,
later Istanbul), site of the relocated Serpent Column, see now Eastmond
2012 (with evocative illustrations of the Ottoman-period as well late Antique
Hippodrome). On Byzantion-Constantinople, see further Cartledge 2011:
chapter 12.
Bridges et al. eds. 2007 is a splendid compilation of studies of cultural responses to the Wars down to our own day. Therein McGregor-Morris 2007: 235
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178
VI . Clash of Civilizations?
Thompson 1921 is a clear statement of the once standard triumphalist view of
East is East and West is Westand We are West and They are East: it would
be strange ingratitude on our part to forget that it was this very urgency for
the sane, for the rational, which ensured that our civilization was founded on
hard realistic thinking, and not on a mere drift of emotionality (pp. 15758).
More unusually, the Cambridge scholar T. R. Glover (1917: 198) had attempted to strike a balance between East and West: Persia has contributed
to the progress of mankind both by what she has done and by what she failed
to do. Said 1978/1995 is the classic modern riposte to what he identied as
orientalism in a pejorative sense. Farrokh 2008 (accessed 03/09/2009) likewise decries what he calls nordicism (a version of orientalism). The debate
continues, taking various more and less scholarly forms.
Harrison, T. ed. 2002 is a very useful collection of reprinted essays;
in his general introduction the editor rightly notes (p. 4) that The Persian
Wars organized such stereotypes of the east, sharpening the focus, for example, of the contrasts between eastern luxury and Greek simplicity, despotism
and democracy, and emphasizing (if not initiating) an assumption of Greek
superiority. Included in the Harrison collection is one of the very best essays on what its author calls The problem of Greek nationality: Walbank
1951/2002; Walbank uses the citizen-state of Plataea as an illustration of
the vigour with which the member of the polis maintained his own political identityas a citizen-member of Plataea, note, not of Greece. Tom
Holland plays a variation on a theme by Benedetto Croce, that all history is
contemporary history: The Persian Wars may be ancient history, but they are
FURTHER READING
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also ... contemporary history, tooand in a new and urgent way since 2001
(2005: xxiixxiii). Adib-Moghaddam 2010 somehow thinks there was not
ever a clash of civilizations, but that seems wildly over-optimisticand is a
view taken not from an ancient but a post-Islam(ist) perspective. Other relevant works are cited in the main chapter text above.
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180
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BIBLIOGR APHY
185
BIBLIOGR APHY
186
BIBLIOGR APHY
187
BIBLIOGR APHY
188
Index
INDEX
190
INDEX
191
Battle of Thermopylae
and Atheno-Spartan rivalry, 147
and burial customs, 20
commemoration of, 14041
cultural inuence of, 165
described, 9498
oath sworn at, 22, 26, 29, 62
and the Persian Wars, xixii
scholarly focus on, xixii, 88
Simonides on, 13941
and Spartan pride, 9
and text of Oath of Plataea, 17
Bible, 42, 63
Boedeker, Deborah, 47
Boeotia
and Battle of Plataea, 1057, 116
and city destruction, 23
and commemorative competition,
13031
and culture of Plataea, 127
hoplite forces, 107
and Plutarch, 15859
sanctuary of Demeter, 47
Boreas, 97
Bouleuterion, at Olympia, 137
boundaries, 5051
Brasidas, 56
Bulwer-Lytton, Edward, 138
bureaucratic administration, Persian,
63, 67
burial customs, 15, 2021, 77
Byzantion, 161
Byzantium, 9293, 135, 138, 144
Callias, 3334
Cambyses, 66
Cape Mycale, 12021
INDEX
192
INDEX
193
Delphi
and the Amphictyonic League, 24
Apollo sanctuary, 127, 131
and commemorative competition,
13031
and the Serpent Column, 129,
13335, 144, 161
Dema Wall, 51
demes, 6, 13, 3637, 81, 105, 148
Demeter, 47, 5354, 105
democracy
and the Achaemenid Empire,
6566
and Athenian identity, 3536,
12427
and the Battle of Marathon, 75,
84
and epigraphic habit, 56
and Funeral Speech genre,
15455
and Hellenic identity, 82
ideology of, 56
and jurors oath, 46
and stasis, 55
Demosthenes, 155
diabatria (frontier-crossing
rituals), 51
dictatorship, 5455. See also tyranny
Diodorus, 13, 26, 140, 15354
Dion son of Dion, 7, 14, 3435, 40
divine authority, 45, 46
douloi, 8182
dual kingship, 83
East-West conict, 60, 16366
Ecbatana, 67
Egypt, 64, 72, 78, 79
INDEX
194
INDEX
195
Herodotus (continued)
on the Battle of Plataea, 88, 89,
9193, 9596, 100103,
1067, 10910, 11415,
11719
on the Battle of Salamis, 99100
on burial customs, 20
and commemoration of battles,
14041, 14344, 14547
and commemoration of Plataea,
138
and Ctesiass account of Plataea,
153
on curses, 54
on Hellenic identity, 102, 109,
146
and historical inscriptions, 5
Histories preface, 59
on Mardonius, 100
on oath-taking, 29, 47
on Phocians, 87
Plutarch on, 15859
reception, 15759
and religious curses, 5254
on Scythians, 71
on Spartan piety, 103
and Thucydides, 14849
Hesiod, 48
Hestia, 15, 50
Himera, 154
Hippias, 75, 84
Hippodrome, Constantinople, 134,
135, 161
historical inscriptions, 5
historical memory, 10, 5960
Histories (Herodotus), 5964, 61,
7476
INDEX
196
Lysias, 155
Lytton, Edward Bulwer, 103
Jesus (Yeshua), 68
Jews, 63, 66, 72
John, King of England, 44
Kerkyra, 86
King James Bible, 42
Kings Peace, 3233
Kore, 47, 105
Kyriazis, Nikolaos, 11516
Lacedaemonians, 80, 9596. See also
Sparta
Laconia, 21, 106, 115, 132
Lane Fox, Robin, 145
legacy of Plataea, 16267
Leocrates, 2627, 156
Leonidas, 17, 20, 9596, 139
Lesbos, 22
Lewis, John, 67
Library of History (Diodorus), 13,
140, 15354
Life of Aristeides (Plutarch), 115,
159
literary versions of oaths, 13, 17,
2528, 29
logistical issues of warfare,
11314
loyalty of Greeks, 2930
Lycurgus of Athens
and Leocrates, 15557
and literary versions of the Oath
of Plataea, 13, 27
and military training, 38
and text of Oath, 2628
Lycurgus of Sparta, 141
Lydia, 7172
Lysander, 57
INDEX
197
militarism
and Acharnae, 35
and Ephebes, 3738
and legacy of Plataea, 163
military titles, 18, 19, 36
and Spartan civic structure,
3839
Mill, John Stuart, xi
Miller, Frank, 165
Miltiades, 76, 98, 136
Mount Kithairon, 1056
Mount Olympus, 4647, 48
myth-making, 14546
naval power and warfare
and the Achaemenid Empire, 73, 79
and Athenian democracy, 84
and Atheno-Spartan rivalry,
3031
Battle of Artemisium, 62, 88,
9798
Battle of Marathon, 75
Battle of Mycale, 12021
and the Ionian Revolt, 73
and the Peace of Callias, 3334
See also Battle of Salamis
Nemea, 137
Nicias, 31, 33
nomads, 71
The Oath (2010), 43
Oath of Plataea
and Athenian identity, 58
authenticity of, 34, 7, 10, 1314,
2830, 1045
context of, 3039, 4247
dedication of, 1415
discovery of, 6, 12
and divine authority, 4445, 5152
epigraphic nature of, 13, 25
purpose and function of, 4, 30, 41
sanction for violation of, 67
text of, 16, 26, 34
See also Battle of Plataea; Ephebic
Oath; stele with Oath of Plataea
inscription
oaths and oath-taking
and Athens, 5458
autonomy oaths, 149
cultural context of Oath of
Plataea, 4247
Ephebic Oath, 6, 1516, 26,
3839, 50, 157
and Greek religion, 4345
oath of Amnesty, 5758
oaths of alliance, 93
Olympic, 4647
and polytheism, 50
religious signicance of, 7, 9,
5152
See also Oath of Plataea
Oeneus, 37
ocial histories, 63
Oineis, 37
Old Persian (language), 67
oligarchic rule, 5657, 82, 84, 103
Olympia, 47, 133, 13637, 161
Olympic Games, 4647, 80,
11920, 16263
omens, 113, 116
Orchomenus, 23
orientalism, 164
ostracism, 55
Oxyrhynchus, 142
INDEX
198
INDEX
199
INDEX
200
silver, 84
Simonides, 13944
Sites of Memory, Sites of Mourning
(Winter), 141
Skias, 132
slavery, 8182, 8384. See also
Helots
Snow, Nicholas. See Kyriazis,
Nikolaos
Socrates, 166
Solon, 5455, 84
Sparta
and accounts of Plataea battle,
115
and the Achaemenid Empire, 64
and The Acharnians, 37
arms and armor, 111
and Atheno-Peloponnesian
War, 3132
and Battle of Marathon, 9
and Battle of Thermopylae, 17,
9596
and burial customs, 21
casualties of Plataea, 117
and city destruction, 23
competition with Athens, 9
and cooperation against
Persians, 30
and the Covenant of Plataea,
12728
and curses, 52
and democracy, 82
destruction of Plataea, 15960
and diplomatic envoys, 1012
and frontier-crossing rituals, 51
and Hellenic identity, 8087, 122
and the Hellenic League, 9394
INDEX
201
Tall-e Takht, 64
taxation, 68
taxiarch, 18, 19
Tegea, 109, 116, 117
Teisamenus, 119, 143
Tempe, 94
Temple of Olympian Zeus, 133
Ten Thousand mercenaries, 9293
Thales, 14, 72
Thallo, 15, 50
Theater of Dionysus, 156
Thebes
alliance with Sparta, 149
and the Battle of Plataea, 8
and burial customs, 20
and city destruction, 2224
and the Covenant of Plataea,
12728, 130
forces at Plataea, 116
and Hellenic loyalism, 109
Herodotus on, 158
hoplite forces, 107
and Lycurguss version of the
Oath, 2627
Plutarch on, 15859
and tithes, 16, 2122
Themistocles, 84, 9899, 114
Thespiae, 17, 9698
Thessaly, 87, 101, 116
300 (2006 lm), 165
Thucydides
and Acharnae, 37
on Atheno-Spartan rivalry, 10
and commemoration of Plataea,
14752
and Funeral Speech genre, 126
and historical inscriptions, 5
INDEX
202
Zeus
and the Ephebic Oath, 15, 50
and oath-taking, 4647
and the Olympic Games,
11920
shrines and temples of, 40, 43,
133, 13637, 16061
Zeus Lycaeus, 46
Zoroastrianism, 66
INDEX
203