| 
       
        
      
      
       
      
       
      
       
      
       
      
       
      
       
      
       
      
        
      Greek History 
      
      Herodotus & Thucydides 
      
        
      
      
      1 
      Tradition & History 
      In 490bc Darius, ruler of a Persian Empire, invaded Greece, a consequence 
      of unrest in Ionian cities overseen by Persian satraps. Greek cities, 
      previously acting in relative isolation, joined to repel the Persians, 
      with Sparta and Athens playing leading roles. Chios, Samos and Miletos 
      were Greek colonies established from the 8th century, but they had come 
      under the control of Persian governors (satraps). In the 580s Ionian 
      cities revolted, and Darius sought to destroy Greek influences which 
      threatened insurrections in his territories. Differences between Greek and 
      Persian cultures led to war, but such differences fomented on the coast of 
      Asia minor and outlying islands rich exchanges not only of goods, but 
      also of ideas. Unlike traditional Greek societies, notably Sparta, Ionian 
      colonies explored new ways of governing thought and action, personally, 
      politically and philosophically. In 480bc Xerxes, the successor to Darius, 
      mounted a second invasion. Athenians and Spartans at Marathon opposed him, 
      but he continued on to Athens, firing the deserted city. Under Pericles, 
      retreating Athenians trusted to their ships. Eventually at Salamis 
      southwest of Athens the Athenian fleet destroyed the larger Persian fleet. 
      Greeks under Athenian and Spartan leadership formed the Delian League, 
      sharing conscripts, weapons and ships, and monies to resist further 
      incursions. Spartan military prowess followed traditional patterns of a 
      military state, but Athenian prowess resulted from a most unusual culture, 
      a democracy, where the contributions of numerous citizens, motivated by a 
      resistance to living under foreign control, established fighting prowess 
      equal to that of traditional Spartans.  Athenian ingenuity, moreover, 
      including innovations in shipbuilding and trade, together with a city open 
      to foreigners, spread a culture at odds with tradition. 
        
      
      
      2 
      
      Herodotus 
      
      Herodotus traveled extensively and inquisitively throughout Asia minor, 
      recording for his History a compendium of varied customs. Among his 
      interests was an exploration of the causes of the Trojan War, a conflict 
      he saw as a clash between Greek and Asian temperaments and governance. His 
      comparative interests appear in his noting the appearance of Solon, the 
      Athenian statesman, traveling in Asia minor after reconstituting Athenian 
      governance. Changes in state, Herodotus implies, always favor some and 
      disfavor others. To avoid the displeasure of antagonisms from those whose 
      power he had reduced, he wisely leaves Athens. Heodotus’ follower, the 
      first century ad historian Plutarch, follows his master's comparative interests by 
      comparing the Spartan reformer Lycurgus with the Athenian Solon. Differences 
      in Athenian and Spartan governance lead eventually to the Peloponnesian 
      War, with devastation sufficient to reduce Greece to Macedonian dependency 
      under Philip and then under his son Alexander the Great. 
      
      Without taking sides, Herodotus collected anecdotes concerning the practices of 
      alternative cultures. His accounts of Gyges and of Croesus offer exemplary 
      tales richly embellished with local customs. 
      
        
      
      Herodotus'Gyges
      
        
      Herodotus' Croesus
      
        
      
        
      
      Plutarch compares the 
      Spartan lawgiver Lycurgus and his Athenian counterpart Solon: 
      
        
      
      Plutarch’s Lycurgus
      
        
      Plutarch’s Solon 
        
        
      
      3 
      Thucydides 
      
      Sparta and Athens competed for influence in 
      Greece following the Persian invasions. Competition broke into open 
      warfare in 31 bc with the 
      invasion by the Spartan ally Thebes of the Athenian ally Plataea. 
      Thucydides  served as an Athenian general in 
      the ensuing war between Sparta and Athens. Relieved of his command after a retreat 
      abandoning fallen soldiers, he wrote in exile an account of the 
      Peloponnesian War. In contrast to the curious explorer of cultural 
      relativism Herodotus, Thucydides works to reveal the underlying forces 
      which govern events. He recalls with particular energy the performance of Pericles, the chosen speaker at a funeral for Athenians fallen in defense 
      of Athens against Spartan invaders. Refusing to follow tradition, choosing 
      not to praise the superior few who lead to death and fame, he praises 
      instead the Athenian institutions which distinguish it from traditional 
      states, in particular from Sparta. Athenians live with relative freedom, 
      replacing unthinking bravery and loyalty to kin with rational adaptations 
      suited to shifting circumstances, modified by contact with foreign 
      commerce and foreign visitors. 
      
      Tracing through Pericles an attention to how 
      Athenian customs arise and change, he invites consideration of why as well 
      as how customs work. Ten tents, he notes, house the remains of fallen 
      soldiers from ten tribes, and one additional tent houses the remains of 
      unknown soldiers. But facts for Pericles, as for Thucydides, invite 
      contextualization, the recollection of circumstances in which they are 
      embedded. Prior to Solon, Athenians featured kinship allegiances to four 
      tribes. When debilitating power struggles continued, Solon initiated a 
      division of Athenians into ten tribes, identified not by kin but by 
      geography. His audience would having just moved through a funeral tent to 
      pay respects to a fallen soldier can now recognize how Athenian boundaries 
      work, now favoring a collective enterprise. 
      
      Thucydides’ Pericles
      
        
        
      
      Thucydides account anticipates a force as 
      powerful as war to threaten life and liberty: plague. His account of 
      plague follows the same attention to specifics apparent in his account of 
      Pericles’ funeral oration. Beginning with consideration of possible 
      sources for plague, tracing then the course of plague in an individual, 
      and then chronicling the social consequences in changing attitudes and 
      actions of Athenian citizens, Thucydides invites his readers to join him 
      in piecing together ongoing adaptations adjusted for new credibilities. 
      Perhaps collective work may lead to defenses against plague or to 
      treatments. But even if such improvements fail, the understanding of how 
      events proceed offers attractions all the greater as chaos spreads. Facing 
      fate with clarity offers an alternative to desperate pleasures. 
      
      Thucydides on Plague
      
        
        
      
      Thucydides knew as he wrote that Pericles 
      himself would fall to plague, and with his death, Athenians would largely 
      abandon an empire based on shared wealth and power, an empire in which 
      Athens, rather than ruler, would be first among equals. Following the 
      ravages of war and plague, Athenians rescinded their claim that Greek 
      states could choose their allegiances. Melos, a colony off the coast near 
      Athens founded by Sparta, chose neutrality in the war. Adjacent to Athens, 
      but unwilling to fight descendents of common Spartan ancestors, the 
      Melians appealed to Athens to follow their stated policy of choice. But 
      Athenians, worn down by war and plague,  blockaded the island, 
      starved out its inhabitants, killed all Melian men, and enslaved the women 
      and children. Thucydides’ account of the Melian controversy takes the form 
      of a tragedy: he alternates speeches, MELIAN followed by ATHENIAN, noting 
      the unfolding action exactly as a tragedy would be notated. The reversal 
      he anticipates will occur when the Athenian fleet attacking Syracuse goes 
      down to defeat, Athenian survivors themselves discovering their reversal 
      in slavery. Recognition will be slow and painful for Athenians, but 
      readers of Thucydides anticipating the impending dissolution of the 
      Athenian empire, and with it Athenian liberties may discover the limits of 
      rational ingenuity. Thucydides, among the first of modern rational 
      thinkers, remains fundamentally a proponent of Homeric origins: in the 
      beginning is chaos. Aeschylus following the devastation at Melos mounted a 
      tragedy, The Trojan Women, in which a messenger from Odysseus must inform Andromache that her son, Astyonax (Lord of the City) will be thrown from 
      Troy’s wall to be devoured by kites and dogs, a lesson to surviving 
      Trojans to refrain from opposition. Athenian law prohibited the treatment 
      of current events in tragic performance, but Euripides’ audience could 
      hardly avoid recognizing Melian women as accompanying the laments of 
      Andromache, Hecuba and attendant women. 
        
      
      Thucydides on the tragedy of Melos
      
        
  
      
     
        
     |