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a Pyrrhic victory, and then marched home. Sixty‐two days later the Athenians returned and defeated the BOEOTIANS at Oenophyta, securing Athenian control over the region for the next decade (Thuc. 1.108).

      The second half of the 450s saw a surge in dissatisfaction among Athens’ Delian League allies. In 454, the Athenians moved the League treasury from Delos to Athens, and declared that 1/60th of the tribute should be paid to the goddess Athena as “FIRST FRUITS.” Shortly after this, Pericles began using League funds to instigate an ambitious building program, which included the Parthenon, the great temple to Athena on the Acropolis; the Propylaea, the monumental gateway at the entrance to the Acropolis; the Temple of Athena NIKE, and the Erechtheum, a temple dedicated to both Athena and POSEIDON (Camp 2001, 74–99; Hurwit 1999, 157–221; Wycherly 1978, 105–41). Scholars sometimes use 454 as a turning point for referring to the Delian League as the ATHENIAN EMPIRE.

      Pericles further radicalized the democracy in several ways. In 451/0, he passed a law decreeing that all Athenian citizens must have two citizen parents (Boegehold 1994). Previously only one’s father had to be an Athenian; this may have been a measure aimed to decrease the power of the great aristocratic clans, who often formed MARRIAGE alliances with foreigners (Sealey 1976, 299). Around the same time, Pericles introduced pay for jury service. ARISTOTLE tells us that, since Pericles lacked the WEALTH to compete with the famously generous Cimon, he bribed the dēmos using the state’s money ([Arist.] Ath. pol. 27.4; cf. Plut. Cim. 10). Pericles also expanded eligibility for holding public office, and introduced traveling JUDGES chosen by LOT.

      In 451, the Athenians recalled Cimon from exile, and he brokered a five‐year peace treaty with the Spartans (Plut. Cim. 17.4–8; cf. Thuc. 1.112; Sealey 1976, 272–73). Immediately upon his return, Cimon led a large expedition to CYPRUS to support a rebellion against the Persian Empire, where he died while besieging the town of Citium. Nevertheless, the League won a major battle against Persian forces at Cypriot SALAMIS, after which open hostilities with the Persian Empire ceased entirely. Based on references from fourth‐century sources, many modern historians believe that an Athenian named Callias negotiated a formal peace treaty with Persia at this time. But neither Herodotus nor Thucydides mention such a peace, which leads to serious doubts about its historicity (Stockton 1959; Wade‐Gery 1958).

       THE PELOPONNESIAN WAR

      In the winter of 447/6, Athens and Sparta negotiated a thirty‐year peace treaty. During the Thirty Years’ Peace, the power of Athens continued to grow. In fact, Thucydides says (1.23.6) that it was Sparta’s fear of the growing power of Athens that sparked the PELOPONNESIAN WAR, which lasted from 431–404.

      In 421, after a series of setbacks on both sides, the Athenians and Spartans struck an uneasy truce, known as the Peace of Nicias after the Athenian general who negotiated it. The peace was meant to last fifty years, but broke down by 415, when Alcibiades convinced the Athenians to launch an expedition to SICILY. Ostensibly, the purpose was to aid their allies at EGESTA in their conflict with SYRACUSE. Upon reaching Sicily, Alcibiades was almost immediately recalled to stand trial for SACRILEGE. Rather than face prosecution, Alcibiades defected to Sparta, where he began advising the Spartans on how to defeat the Athenians, including sending a Spartan general to Sicily to lead the Syracusan forces. Despite reinforcements from Athens almost totaling the numbers of the original expedition, the Spartan‐led Syracusans destroyed the entire Athenian force in 413. All told, Athens lost half her fleet and more than 40,000 men (Thuc. 6.1–53, 6.61–7.87; Hornblower 2011, 168–78).

      Despite this disaster, Athens managed to rebuild an effective fleet, and launched several successful expeditions in the eastern Aegean (Thuc. 8.1–11; Xen. Hell. 1.1.11–16, 1.2.1–1.3.22). The Spartans, now backed by Persian money, expanded their own fleet and harassed the Athenians in the Hellespont, which was a vital trade route for maintaining the grain supply for Attica. During 411, the conflict in the eastern Aegean reached a stalemate. Alcibiades, who had taken refuge in Persia after being driven out of Sparta, convinced the Athenians that he could secure desperately‐needed Persian funding if the Athenians would overthrow the democracy and recall Alcibiades himself from exile (Thuc. 8.47). Prominent oligarchs then passed measures restricting voting rights to 5,000 citizens, but before this could take effect, revolutionaries in Athens suspended the democracy and instituted a more limited Council of Four Hundred. The Four Hundred ruled by terror, assassinating opponents and exiling and imprisoning political enemies. Within four months the Four Hundred were deposed, and by 410 full democracy was restored (Thuc. 8.65–69; [Arist.] Ath. pol. 29–34).

      Despite his failure to secure the promised Persian money, the Athenian fleet appointed Alcibiades general, and over the next several years he won victory after victory for the Athenians (Xen. Hell. 1.4.10–23). He once more fell out of favor in 406, when his forces suffered a major defeat at Notium, after which he took refuge in Persia (1.5.11–17).

      In 405, the Spartan commander Lysander sailed to the Hellespont, with the intention of capturing the straits and cutting the Athenians off from their EUXINE (Black) Sea trade routes. The Spartan fleet attacked and defeated the Athenians at AEGOSPOTAMI, utterly destroying the Athenian navy (Xen. Hell. 2.1.28). Lysander then sailed to Peiraeus and blockaded the harbor. In 404, after four months of starvation, the Athenians surrendered. The Spartans forced the Athenians to dismantle the Long Walls, give up their empire and fleet, and form an offensive and defensive alliance with Sparta (Xen. Hell. 2.2.20). Additionally, the Spartans installed a board of thirty men to oversee affairs and to reform the constitution. These so‐called Thirty TYRANTS began a pogrom, executing 1,500 political rivals and confiscating their property (Xen. Hell. 2.3.11–23, 2.4.1; [Arist.] Ath. pol. 35–37; cf. Lysias 12). In 403, exiled Athenian democrats, led by Thrasybulus, defeated the forces of the Thirty in battle at Peiraeus, and democracy was once more restored, though Athens never again regained its former power and influence (Xen. Hell. 2.4.2–28; [Arist.] Ath. pol. 38).

      SEE ALSO: Archaic Age; archē; Athens and Herodotus; Autochthony; Callias (2) son of Hipponicus; Date of Composition; Harmodius and Aristogeiton; Naval Warfare; Persian Wars

      REFERENCES

      1 Boegehold, A. L. 1994. “Perikles’ Citizenship Law of 451/0 BC.” In Athenian Identity and Civic Ideology, edited by A. L. Boegehold and Adele Scafuro, 57–66. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

      2 Camp, John M. 2001. The Archaeology of Athens. New Haven: Yale University Press.

      3 Conwell, David. 2008. Connecting a City to the Sea: The History of the Athenian Long Walls. Leiden: Brill.

      4 Fornara, Charles W., and Loren J. Samons II. 1991. Athens from Cleisthenes to Pericles. Berkeley: University of California Press.

      5 Gagarin, Michael. 1981. Drakon and Early Athenian Homicide Law. New Haven: Yale University Press.

      6 Hall, Jonathan M. 2014. A History of the Archaic Greek World, ca. 1200–479 BCE. 2nd edition. Malden, MA: Wiley‐Blackwell.

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