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Athens and the Greek States. From Alliance to Empire. Delian League. Bust of Pericles. Thucydides on Early Greek History.
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Athens and the Greek States From Alliance to Empire
Thucydides on Early Greek History • Thucydides-born of Athenian aristocratic family from Haliartus ca. 460 BCE; failed as stratēgos (general) to relieve Spartan siege of Amphipolis in 424 BCE; writes History in exile (cf. Histories 4.103-106; 5.26) • Thucydides on insignificance of earlier Greek powers (Histories 1.21): Trojan War (1.9-11); Tyrants (1.17); Persian Wars (1.23)
Thucydides and the “Realists” • Competitive Struggle for Security and Supremacy • “Zero-Sum” Competition • Power Ultimately the Final Arbiter • International “System” of Anarchy the Rule • “The problem is this: how to conceive of an order without an orderer and of organizational effects where formal organization is lacking.” (Kenneth Waltz, Theory of International Politics (89))
PentekontaitiaDefensive Alliance to Athenian Empire (Thuc. 1.89-117) • Athens rebuilt and fortified; Piraeus (Thuc. 1.90-93) • The Pausanias affair and Athenian allied leadership (Thuc. 1.126-138) • Delian Confederacy and the First Assessment • Aristides’ First Assessment (460 talents); treasury at Delos (Thuc. 1.96) • Allied contributions: money or ships • Hellenotamiae (“Hellenic treasurers”)
PentekontaitiaDefensive Alliance to Athenian Empire (Thuc. 1.89-117) • Allied Military Actions • Persia--470s: Eion (Persian stronghold); Scyros (pirate lair); Carystus (medizer) • Cimon’s Eurymedon campaign in Pamphylia (469/8? 466?): Destruction of 200 Phoenician war-ships • Expedition to Egypt (ends in disaster): 459-454 • Internal Policing: Naxos, 470; Thasos, 465
First Peloponnesian Warca. 460-455 BCE • Revolt of Thasos (465); Helot Revolt and Mt. Ithome (465); Athenian Settlement of Refugees at Naupactus • Alignment of Greek States-Sparta or Athens • Athenian Alliance with Argos, traditional Spartan enemy (461/460) • Athenian Assistance to Megara (Megarian revolt cripples Corinth, an important member of the Peloponnesian League headed by Sparta) • Tightening of Athenian control over Allies. Fortification of Athens and the “Long Walls” (459-442) • Allied treasury moved from Delos to Athens (454); Building Program (Propylaea, Parthenon)
Cimon, Pericles, and the Reorientation of Athenian Foreign Policy • Cimon’s Outmoded Policy (Sparta and Athens as the “yoke-fellows” of Greece against Persia) • Ephialtic Reforms of 462/1 BCE (archons by lot, pay for jury duty, stripping of Areopagus) • Ostracism of Cimon (ca. 462); obsolescence of Cimonian policy; “Peace of Callias” in 449? • Pericles and Sparta
Thucydides’ View on the War’s Causes (1.23) “What made war inevitable was the growth of Athenian power and the fear which this caused in Sparta.”