CHAPTER I.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III macedon
and hellas at philip's accession
CHAPTER IV.
THE MACEDONIAN
EMPIRE.
CHAPTER I.
geography AND inhabitants of macedonia.
The history of a
nation is by no means to be regarded solely as a consequence of the natural
condition of its local habitations.' So writes one of the latest of Effects of Greek historians in the midst of a graphic description of the climate and physical charac- characteris- teristics of the shores of the Egean. But
the Greece stress which he lays on these characteristics, £re"k?e and
the inferences which he draws from them, ree show that he considers
them to have been a strongly determining cause of the history of the peoples
who dwelt upon those shores. It is indeed impossible to suppose that, had the
Greeks been inhabitants of a level inland country, they would have remained so
long disunited, or would have shown (as they did) the restless activity
characteristic of the seaman; and we shall have evidence in the following pages
of the extraordinary endurance of Greeks amid sudden changes of climate, as
well as of their superiority to Asiatics in bodily not less than mental vigour.
That some part of this vigour was owing to the country in which they lived will
hardly be denied.
In its physical characteristics Greece was a land
of
singular
contrasts. A remarkable similarity of conditions Contrasts in
between the eastern and western shores of characteris-
Egean was matched by a remarkable tics. difference of conditions between the
eastern
and western
coasts of Greece itself, and still more between its southern and northern
provinces. The Egean was a highway between two halves of one country—a sea
exceptionally suitable for commerce. The air is clear. Islands—that is,
landmarks—are frequent. Bays and safe anchorages are innumerable. During a
great part of the summer there are regular winds which blow daily from the
north, so regularly indeed that Demosthenes counted it among Philip's
advantages that he lived at the back of the north wind. On the other hand,
while the eastern side of Greece is rich in fertile lowlands and has a deeply
indented though accessible coastline, the western side consists of little but
rocky ridges skirting a savage shore with few harbours. But the contrast
between south and north is yet more striking than this. There is not on the
entire surface of the globe, it has been said, any other region in which the
different zones of climate and flora meet one another in so rapid a succession.
The semi-tropical products of the Cyclades and the Peloponnesos have vanished
in Boiotia. The olives of Attica are not seen in Thessaly. Even the myrtle disappears
on the northern shores of the Egean.
If we go farther
north, we only heighten the contrast; for the climate and products of Macedon
resemble those Contrasts of central Germany. It is a
land of broad Hellas and rivers and great plains,
far superior to Illyria Macedon. across the mountains
in fertility, and boasting a seacoast of great extent. Yet seacoast and inland
were strangely cut off the one from the other, so that the inhabitants of the
interior until Philip's time were to a great extent a highland population secluded
from the world. The reason of this lay in the peculiar conforma- lion of the
mountain system of the country. It we were to use the language of a cultivated
Athenian, we should say that the range of the Kambounian (Cambunian) mountains,
stretching from the lofty mass of Olympos in the east to Lakmon in the west,
formed a natural barrier between Hellenes and Barbarians, between pure-breeds
and half-breeds. This range was indeed of no great height, yet it formed,
roughly speaking, a sort of division between one kind of country and another,
one kind ot people and another. The Hellenes to the south reached a high degree
of civilisation, and emigrating from home and mingling with their neighbours in
all directions, powerfully affected the history of surrounding nations. The
Macedonians remained for a long while a half- barbarous people, because they
were shut off not only from the outside world, but from mutual intercourse by
lofty and numerous mountain chains. These mountains, in fact, were so lofty and
difficult, that at most points they were higher than the Kambounian range, at
many points even higher than Pindos itself. It was easier on the whole to pass
from the adjacent lowlands into Thessaly or the valley of the Istros (Danube)
than from one Macedonian valley to another. On the other hand, the rivers that
rise in these mountain ranges gradually converge before falling into the sea
after long and devious wanderings. The first outward expansion of these highland
tribes would needs follow the natural line marked out for them by their rivers
flowing seaward, and their first natural meeting-points would be Aigai (^g£e)
and Pella in the valley of the Axios, the successive capitals of Macedonian
kings.
In the widest
extent of the name, Macedon included five tracts or provinces, singularly
different from one another. Three of these were basins of large rivers, while
a fourth (Emathia) was almost as directly a ' gift' of the
united rivers as
Egypt was of the Nile, being formed, it would seem, out of the alluvial deposit
brought down by them in the course of centuries from the lofty mountains of the
interior.
The valley
watered by the Haliakmon was a narrow district, enclosed between the Kambounian
and Skardos Valley of ranges on the south and
west, and Mounts Haliakmon Barnos and Bermios on
the north and east. andmeia Although it was not remarkable for
fertility, o rest is) tjjC p0ssessi0n 0f
this valley was yet a matter of importance to the kings of Macedon. At"its
northern end there was a remarkable gorge, cleaving the mountains from east to
west, the only rent in the great mass of Skardos for more than 200 miles,
through which a tributary of the Apsos flows from its source in Mount Barnos on
its way to the Adriatic. The Roman road of later days (Via Egnatia) was carried
over a pass some thirty miles to the north ; but before the Roman conquest of
Macedon, this gorge of the Eordaikos must have formed the main line of
communication between Illyria and Macedon, whether for commerce or invasion,
and lent therefore an exceptional importance to the upper valley of the
Haliakmon.
To the north of
Orestis lay the fertile uplands, watered by the river Erigon, as it pursues a
winding course to Valley of J0"1
Axios. Though averaging a height of (iT nkr.'stis
I,500 ^eet ab°ve
the sea, the district boasted and'peta-5 ' a fat rich soil/ capable
of maintaining a large gonia)- population.
The Axios was
the chief river in Macedon, and its Valley of
pastern boundary prior to the reign of Philip, <Paraxia a
™ver t0° a different character to the pre- and Amph- ceding. In its upper course it flows through axms.) a narr0w cultivated plain, receiving
the waters of the Erigon from Pelagonia. Presently it abruptly changes its
peaceful nature, forming at the so-called Iron Gates rapids for some
considerable distance, where its waters begin to slide to the lowlands of
Emathia. At the Gates the river cuts through the mountain range which joins
Skardos to Orbelos, and having cleft for itself a passage through a precipitous
gorge of more than 600 feet in height, gradually descends to the lower level,
and so falls at last into the sea, close to the joint mouths of the Haliakmon
and Lydias.
In the very centre of the country, and entirely enclosed
by mountains, lay the province of Eordaia—an almost circular basin, difficult
of access, and with no outlet except a couple of mountain Eordaia-
passes. The water from the hills appears to drain entirely into the Lake
Begorritis.
Lastly, there was the irregular strip of alluvial
land, stretching from Mount Olympos to the city of ThermS (Thessalonica), at
first a narrow plain, en- Emathia closed between sea and
mountains and called and pieria- Pieria, but widening out between
the Haliakmon and Therme into the fertile province of Emathia, watered by the
great river already mentioned, and containing the two capitals of Macedon,
Aigai (^Egae) and Pella. Aigai The former lay at the head of a valley of the
Lydias, on a plateau 200 feet above the plain, and dominated the whole of
Emathia as well as the passes from the seacoast to the interior. It was the '
portal of the highlands/ the dominant ' castle of the plain,' arid remained to
the last, as became its position and associations, the burial-place of the
Macedonian kings, the centre and hearth of the Macedonian tribes. Pella was a
city of a different type. Archelaos Pella* was the first of the
Macedonian kings to understand its value as a capital; but it remained
comparatively insignificant until it became associated with the glories of
Philip's reign.
It had two great merits. It was central and it was strong—as strong as Aigai,
far stronger thai? Pydna, and more central than either for a monarch whose long
arm reached from Amphipolis to Pagasai. It was also in direct communication
with the sea (distant about fifteen miles) by the marshes and the Lydias. In
short, with no claims to beauty, or grandeur, or healthiness, Pella formed a
strong central useful capita^ thoroughly characteristic of a common-sense
monarchy whose right was might.
So far we have
been dealing solely with Macedon But there were large districts and many cities
to the east The man- Axios, which had been founded or
districts colonised by Hellenes, and in which they were the
dominant, if not the more numerous part of the population. These colonies
fringed the whole coast of the Euxine Sea, the Chersonese, Thrace, and Chalki-
dikS: and as the extension of Macedonian power by Philip brought him into
collision with many of them, it will be well to give a short account of the
country lying between the Axios and Amphipolis.
The promontory of
ChalkidikS, with its three fingers or peninsulas, seemed formed by nature to be
the maritime province of the inland country be- ChalkidikS. Macedon might seem to have a
natural right to
it, and we can hardly wonder that Philip was not content until he had won it As
compared with the western shores of the same latitude it had marked
advantages. In place of a savage coast and precipitous cliffs, we have a broad
mass of land reaching far into the Southern Sea, whose three great spurs abound
in harbours, and were studded with flourishing colonies. The easternmost (Akt6)
runs forty miles into the sea, with an average breadth of four miles, and ends
in the grand limestone cone of Athos, towering more than 6,000 feet above the level of the Egean, and casting its
shadow even as far as Lemnos. The central and western peninsulas (Sithonia and
Pall£n6) are not so mountainous as Akte, but were far more densely populated.
Each was fringed with a numerous Hellenic belt of colonies.
Each boasted one city colonies, of first-rate
importance. On the west coast of Sithonia lay Tordnfi, the first home of the
emigrants from Euboian Chalkis, who colonised Chalkidik6 and gave it their own
name : while at the neck of land connecting PallSnS with the country to the
north was Potidaia, a colony from Dorian Corinth ; the near neighbour, rival,
and sometime subject of the Chalkidian Olynthos. Nor does the list of Hellenic
colonies end here. Besides a host of minor towns, there were Meth6ne, Therm£,
Olynthos, Akanthos, Amphipolis, all colonised by men of Dorian race, and two of
them occupying positions of first-rate importance. Amphipolis, strongly
situated in an angle of the Strymon, commanded the passage of the Amphipohs
river and the road from west to east. To be master of Amphipolis was to
be master also of Mount Pangaios and its valuable gold and silver mines. Nor
did ThermS occupy a less important site. Thcrm6- The gulf on which
it stands is a splendid sheet of water, running inland 100 miles in a general
direction fron south-east to north-west, and gradually narrowing at its
northern end. The town itself was of little consequence till Macedonian times;
but the moment that a great state arose on the northern shore of the Egean,
which swallowed up the pettier city-leagues of Chalkidik6, ThermS at once
assumed its natural importance as a great harbour, commanding and guarding the
approaches from the eastward. It lay close at hand to the plains of the Axios,
and communicated by a pass with the valley of the Strymon.
The difference
in the physical features of the countries lying to the north and south of the
Kambounian range Contrasts was not more
remarkable than that between Hellenes inhabitants of these countries.
Epeirots,
and Mace- Macedonians, Illyrians, and Paionians were domans. not genujne
Hellenes. Macedonians indeed were not the mere barbarians which cultivated
Greeks like Demosthenes affected to believe them: yet neither were they
Hellenes in the highest sense of the word. Their tivilisation was less
developed, their dress and fashion were different, and their language, though
similar, was yet not pure Greek. What we know of their government recalls the
heroic times of the Iliad. Their national life was not that of the city (woXtj)
but of the tribe. In Italy the kingship died out In Greece it survived at
Sparta alone, and even there was reduced by the Ephorate almost to a mere form.
But in Macedon it retained its essential character to historic times, though
limited, like the power of Agamemnon himself, by occasional assemblies of the
people in arms.
Whatever fnay
have been the precise relations of Macedonians and Hellenes, it is certain that
the civilisa- Divergence Macedon was kept stagnant or even
Hellenes deteriorated by intermixture with Illyrians. and Mace- Hence Greeks and Macedonians were ever domans. tending to become more and more estranged. The
higher the development of Hellenic civilisation in the south, the deeper was
the contempt felt by the genuine Hellene for the semi-barbarians of the north.
' Philip ! cries Demosthenes scornfully, ' Philip, who is not only no Hellene,
or in any way connected with Hellenes, but not even a barbarian from a
creditable country ! He is a worthless fellow from Macedon, whence in olden
time it was impossible to get even a decent slave !1 This was of
course the exagge- rated language of pride of birth, deepened by political
hatred, and it was hardly true in any sense of the Macedonian royal family :
yet it expresses a partial truth, and it was only from Hellas itself that the
influence came which made a national life on a large scale possible to these
rude highlanders.
Hellenic
colonies, it must be remembered, were not confined to the shores of the Egean.
There were also important settlements on the Ionian Sea, on Hellenic the coasts of which the Dorian Corinthians
ponan) had founded several colonies, and through imo^pcr them opened up a
mercantile connexion with Maceaoma- the interior. Nor
were the Corinthians alone in their adventurous pursuit of fortune
north-eastwards. Other Dorians also, exiles from Peloponnesian Argos, followed
in their track, and by the end of the eighth century had established themselves
in the upper valley of the Haliak- mon. Among these wanderers, Herodotus tell
us, were three brothers, of the royal family of Argos. After many adventures
and hair-breadth escapes, they gradually won a leading position among the
Macedonians in the midst of whom they were settled : and from this to kingship
and conquest was an easy step. But the youngest brother, Perdikkas, was the
most intelligent, or the most favoured by fortune. King in Orestis, with a new
Argos for his capital, he pushed his victorious arms almost to the mouth of
the Haliakmon, and finally transferred the headquarters of his growing power
to a more convenient capital in Aigai. Thus was founded the dynasty of the
Argeads ; and thus were laid the foundations of that Macedonian empire which
conquered Greece and overthrew the might of Persia.
CHAPTER II.
kings of macedonia to the death of amyntas ii., father of philip (700-369).
The first two
centuries of the Macedonian monarchy, covered by the reigns of six kings, were
a period shrouded Dorian obscurity,
during which the rising king-
Macedon <*om ^^ enlarged itself
at the expense of its Perdikkas neighbours, and
crossing the Axios had even Amyntas I., reached the
Strymon. This career of conquest 700- had been scarcely arrested by the Persian
invasions of Europe. Indeed Alexander I., M498-er son Amyntas, was
cunning enough to bow 454)- to the storm, and while
cautiously doing his
utmost to
befriend the Greeks, affected to fall in with Persian ideas as to Macedon being
the centre of a great vassal state, and thankfully accepted any extension of
territory which the Great King might be pleased to give him. By these means he
gained a footing among the Thracian tribes as far as Mount Haemus, while he
attained an object by which he set even greater store as a true- blooded
Hellene ; for his claims to that title were publicly acknowledged at Olympia,
and his victories in the Stadium celebrated by the Hellenic Pindar. Yet the
difficulties of Alexander did not cease, but rather increased when danger no
longer threatened Greece from the side of Persia. He had removed his capital
from Aigai to Pydna, a step nearer to the Hellenes whom he admired so much. But
close to Pydna lay MethonS, an independent Greek city ; while to the eastward
in Chalkidik£, and as far as the Strymon, were numerous Hellenic colonies whose
sympathies drew them naturally to the south rather than the west—to Hellas, not
to Macedon— and which, after the Persian wars, recognised in the maritime
Athens their natural leader and protectress. It was a difficult position; and
for a century it tried to the utmost the skill of the Macedonian kings. On the
one hand the expansion of the kingdom had outrun its internal consolidation,
and there were latent elements of discontent which more than once brought it to
the verge *of ruin. On the other hand, if the Macedonian monarchs were to be
anything more than petty lords of half-barba- rous tribes, they could hardly
put up with the permanent dependence of what was practically their own seacoast
on a far distant and hostile power, any more than with its permanent
independence. The kings of Macedon were forced by their position to choose between
two alternatives, to make good their claim to Meth6ne and Potidaia, Chalkidike
and Amphipolis, and to win their way to the coast, or else to submit to a
humiliating exclusion from the political affairs of Hellas. In such a case no
able man hesitates in the choice of his alternative; and we thus strike the
key-note of the discords and jealousies, which for so many years troubled
Northern Greece. Even before the Peloponnesian war, in the time of Perdikkas
II. (454-413), Athens and Macedon Perdikkag were face to face,
conscious of divergent 11. (454- interests. 4I3>
The colonisation
of Amphipolis had been the crowning stroke of the policy by which Perikles
sought to keep a firm hold of Chalkidike and the Thracian coast, and so of the
Egean. Perdikkas on the other hand, threatened at once by discontented
neighbours in the west, by the formidable empire of the Thracian Sitalkes in
the east, and by Athenian jealousy in Chalkidike, was forced to pursue a
tortuous policy. Adroitly observant of the current of affairs, and quite devoid
of scruples, he made treaties and broke them, he waged war or bowed to the
storm, with equal facility. In the field of diplomacy he must have been an
exceptionally able man ; for every neighbour in turn was utilised to serve his
purpose, and was neglected or attacked when the object of the moment was
attained. Brasidas the Spartan he made use of against his private enemies the
Illyrians. He skilfully fomented the revolt of the Chalkidic towns against
Athens in 432 ; while in the next year we find him allied with his old enemies
the Athenians, and showing his gratitude by attacking his old friends the
Chalkidians Two years later—once more allied with Chalkidians and at war with
Athens—he was attacked by Sitalkds, and was within a little of being ruined.
Yet from these and similar perils he escaped with unimpaired strength, or
rather the stronger, in that the brilliant campaigns of Brasidas had undermined
the power of Athens in the north. Nor was Athens ever again as formidable to
Macedon as she had been; for the disastrous issue of the Sicilian expedition
(413) paralysed her influence everywhere, and probably Macedon reaped more
advantage from the victor}' of Syracuse than Syracuse did herself.
The policy of
Perdikkas was continued with success by his illegitimate son Archelaos. He
climbed to Archelaos power by a series of violent
deeds, with which (4*3-399)- most barbarous
societies are only too familiar: for he assassinated his brother, as well as
his uncle and his uncle's son. Such were his crimes. His merits were not less
marked as the great civiliser of Macedon. Thucydides goes out of his way to
insist that Archelaos benefited his country more than all his eight predecessors
put together, not only in his military improvements, but in building roads and
founding cities. He transferred the capital from Pydna to Pella, while he
pacified Pieria by the foundation of a new city, Dion, dedicated to Zeus and
the Muses, and reserved for festival celebrations. He gathered round him some
of the most brilliant Greeks of the day—not sorry perhaps to exchange the
insecurity of their native cities for the lettered ease and secure patronage of
a court. But these efforts, though praiseworthy, were not altogether successful.
His clients seem to have been corrupted by the atmosphere around them ; and the
premature attempt at artistic development was cut short by the forty years of
disorder which followed his murder. It is an illustration of the assertion
that the history of Macedonia is the history of its kings, that this effort
should have been thus fruitless, and that to the last the people should
apparently have retained so many characteristics of barbarism. Hard fighters
and hard drinkers, they were fine soldiers but indifferent citizens, and seem to
have received only faint impressions from the civilisation for which they prepared
the way in Asia.
The murder of
Archelaos was the signal for six years of bloodshed and disorder, until
Amyntas, the father ot the great Philip, murdered his predecessor Yearsof and
seized the throne. Amyntas was nominal anarchy
till king for twenty-four years, but it was a reign n?^^- full of romantic
reverses of fortune. Ten 369)- years of anarchy had given to the
native nobility a long-coveted opportunity of revolt, against a culture and
ordered peace which in their hearts they disliked, as well as against the
tightening reins of despotism. It is a phenomenon often seen in political
history, that the substitution of one strong will for a hundred conflicting
wills is a slow process, subject to ebb and flow, and often desperately opposed
by those who have a personal interest in a time of license. What Normandy
suffered in the ninth and tenth centuries A.D.,
and
Erfgland in the
twelfth, and France in the fifteenth, that Macedonia suffered in the fourth
century B.C., until Philip gained the throne.
The nobility were insubordinate. Authority was set at nought. Each man fought
for his own hand. Murder was rife ; and the anarchy was only temporarily
allayed by a politic marriage. The union of Amyntas with Eurydike, a daughter
of a leading family among the Lynkestai, was intended, like the marriage of
Henry the Fifth of England with Katharine of France, to put an end to a series
of exhausting struggles.
But the marriage
failed in its object and only secured him a temporary respite from trouble. The
Lynkestai rhe mar- were not nullified
by the union of a daughter riage of of their house with
the royal family; and the feUsTnks neighbours of Amyntas were eager to bcne- object. fit by his difficulties. Illyrians,
Thracians, Thessalians, in turn or in concert, poured into Maeedon. He was even
obliged to surrender the coast of the Thermaiq gulf to the Chalkidians of
Olynthos. We might almost say that he was elbowed out of his own country by
encroaching friends and powerful enemies, and for nearly two years was a king
without a kingdom.
JBut he was a
dexterous diplomatist, who in the school of ddversity seems to have learnt the
art of playing off one foe against another, and of exciting them thianCon- to mutual jealousy. If the Olynthians gained andditsCTela. ^rom him
more than they gave, it would seem tion to its
that they checked the further advance of the neighbours,
jllyrians. Against Olyntlios itself, which was too near and powerful not to be
disliked, a happy combination of circumstances gave him an irresistible ally in
Sparta. For Olynthos also had enemies, whose enmity had arisen in the following
way. Favoured by accident, Olynthos had become head of a considerable league of
cities in and near Chalkidike. Indeed, the terms of confederation (as described
by Xenophon, an unwilling witness) were so fair and generous, that it is hardly
strange that the smaller and more exposed Hellenic cities in those parts
gladly exchanged precarious independence for safety even if combined with
partial dependence; or that Macedonian cities, although as important as Pella,
preferred comparative security within the hardly felt restraints of a fairly
constituted confederacy to being subjects of a despot who could not protect
them from even the attacks of Ulyrians. In the year 383 envoys appeared before
the Spartan assembly from King Amyntas and the city of Akanthos—men who
recounted to a sympathetic audience the political troubles which vexed
themselves and their friends. A careful reading of the speech delivered on that
occasion by the Akanthian envoy throws a flood of light on the feelings of the
day, and the prejudices (to call them by no worse name) which blinded the eyes
and tied the hands of free Greeks. For what was it they feared ? Not yet the
tyranny of a Macedonian king, not now the inroads of Illyrian savages, but the
aggression of a great city, which invited all to combine for self-defence and
to agree to adopt such singular notions as common laws and mutual citizenship,
and intermarriage, and common rights of property ! To Amyntas it was only
natural that such far-sighted justice should seem as dangerous as it was
strange—a precedent to be if possible never repeated. But Greek cities also of
size and importance, and notably Akanthos, sympathised with the king rather
than the 'free city, and passionately tenacious of their narrow town life,
actually joined Amyntas in petitioning Sparta to save them from their friends.
For Olynthos by the offer of manifest advantages had gathered into its confederation
city after city, until but a few in ChalkidikS were left independent Of these
the largest were
Akanthos and
Apollonia. Being invited to join the league, they declined. Being threatened
with compulsion if they persisted in refusal, they appealed to Sparta, and
their appeal was backed by Amyntas. * You seem not to be aware, O Spartans,'
said the envoys,' of the great power growing up in Greece. City after city,
Greek and Macedonian, has been won over or freed' (the word must have slipped
from their lips almost involuntarily), ' by Olynthos. We have been invited to
join, and unless some help reach us we shall have to do so against our wishes.
They are already strong. They are opening negotiations with both Thebes and
Athens. If these succeed, think of the strength of such a coalition ! Olynthos
is strong by sea as well as land, having mines and forests and money. But as
yet she is vulnerable, for her allies are not all reconciled to her rule.
Therefore strike hard and strike soon.' This appeal was only too successful.
The Spartan Eudamidas was despatched at once with 2,000 men to the scene of
action, and his mere presence induced Potidaia to revolt from the league, and
relieved Akanthos and Apollonia from all danger of absorption. Eudamidas was
to be followed by his brother Phoibidas with the residue of 10,000 men.
It would be
alien to the subject of this book to narrate the rash seizure of the citadel of
Thebes by Phoibidas on Coalition ^is northward march ;
though it will be neces- against sary to
explain its unexpected effect. Suffice it an5 break-
to say, that Phoibidas never reached Macedon. Confe-he
The reinforcements for Eudamidas, who as deracy,
yet was only strong enough to maintain the B'c" a83'
status quo, were led by Teleutias, a brother of King Agesilaos, and comprised a
considerable force of Thebans. Amyntas was urged to do his utmost in the way of
getting mercenaries and money. And thus the storm broke on the devoted city.
The defence was little short of heroic. For at this time (b.c.
382), Sparta was at the height of her power, and her will was law in almost
every part of Greece. The Olynthians at first fully held their own, though with
varying fortune. In 381 they even defeated Teleutias in a pitched battle under
their own walls, slew him and a large part of his force, and drove the rest to
seek safety in Potidaia or whatever nearest city they could reach. For the
moment the star of Olyn- thos was in the ascendant. For the moment Amyntas seemed
farther from his throne than ever. But, whatever a city with less prestige
might have done, Sparta had far too much at stake to acquiesce quietly in so
rude a repulse. A second and more imposing force was despatched at once under
King Agesipolis; and once more the hopes of Amyntas rose when he saw the
Olynthian territory ravaged, the city itself besieged, and its ally Tor6n6
taken by storm. Agesipolis indeed did not live to see the fruits of his
vigorous attack, for he was carried off by fever. But his successor succeeded
both to his throne and to his tactics. The siege became a blockade, more and
more stringent. Corn was not to be obtained either by land or sea. At last, the
sufferings of the people constrained a surrender, and the Olynthian
confederacy was at an end, sacrificed to the fears of some and the jealousies
of others. Each member of the confederacy, Olynthos included, was enrolled as a
member of the Spartan league, and sworn to an offensive and defensive alliance.
But Olynthos was no longer formidable. The neighbouring cities were
independent and jealously watchful: while her maritime allies in Macedon were
restored by Sparta to Amyntas.
Amyntas indeed was the only
one of the confederates who benefited in the long run. Sparta gained little but
obloquy. The cities of Chalkidik£ won a short-lived independence at the price
of eventual subjection. To a.h, g
Greece in
general the result was little short of ruin, by which
Had Olynthos been allowed to consolidate a pro£smore
confederacy in the north Egean, it would have than other*,
formed a natural outwork for the defence of Greece against Macedonian
encroachment. There might even have been no Macedon to encroach, confronted,
as it would have been, by a compact league of cities, and cut off from all
access to the sea. As it was, the same Sparta which had given up the Greeks of
Asia to Persia, gave up the Greeks of the Egean to Macedon —a political blunder
repeated afterwards by Athens, when she left Olynthos to the tender mercies of
Philip.
Amyntas was once
more king in his own country. His difficulties, however, were not removed but
only ^ . shifted from one quarter to another. If Olyn-
Decreasing . , , . . _
influence of thos was no longer a danger, yet the influence
flSthem his good
friends the Spartans began to Greece's- wane, and before long he was so far
shut off from communication with them as to be obliged to look for new allies.
In Greece the balance of power was perpetually shifting. With the fall of Olynthos
Sparta might have seemed supreme ; but in fact it was the beginning of the end
of her supremacy. Her haughtiness and high-handedness led to a revulsion of
feeling which armed Athens and Thebes and their allies against her (378), and
made many a good Greek rejoice in the humiliation of this tyrant city, the
friend of the Great King, of the despot of Syracuse, and of the King of
Macedon. With the defeat of Leuktra (371), her influence in the north was at an
end; new combinations brought other powers to the front, and to Amyntas fresh
troubles.
The contest of
seven years (378 371) between Sparta on the one .hand and Athens and Thebes on
the. other, left the field in northern Greece open to adventurers;
and it was from
Thessaly that Amyntas was next beset with danger. This vast plain—the largest
^^ and most fertile in Greece—was from time Thess&lUn immemorial
as notorious for its political in- tyrannic** stability as for the
excellence of its horses, the luxury of its rich men, and the badness of its
coinage. According to the old proverb,1 there was no relying upon
anything in Thessaly;' and history confirms the proverb. The country was
divided into four districts, sometimes united, more often the reverse: but when
united truly formidable, being able to place in the field 6,000 cavalry and
10,000 infantry. But this was a rare event. More often the three or four
leading cities—Larissa, Krannon, Pharsalos—held their immediate neighbours in
subjection, and were at more or less open war with one another, their government
being either a close oligarchy or a despotism in the hands of a single man.
Towards the end of the Peloponnesian war (about 407), Pherai was added to the
list of leading cities by the energy of a man called Lykophron, who made
himself Tyrant and did his best, though without success, to subject all
Thessaly to himself.
Iason succeeded where Lykophron failed. He was
strong and active, bold and prudent. He knew how to ensure the discipline and
to secure the Iasonof devotion of soldiers. His head was full pherai of magnificent ideas. With all Thessaly
(374-370)- at his back, and elected Tagos or generalissimo in 374, his dreams
extended to a wide empire, based upon the subjection of Epeiros, Boiotia,
Attica, and perhaps Lacedaemon, and lastly of Macedon: and the object of this
great power was to be the humiliation of no less a potentate than the Great
King himself—a far easier task, as he professed to think, than the subjugation
of Greece. These ideas of Iason were no secret: and c 2
as might have
been expected, his immediate neighbours began to be uneasy. Boiotia, no doubt,
had littie to fear while Epameinondas and Pelopidas were at the head of affairs
at Thebes : and Athens was too far off to be in immediate danger. But with
Amyntas the case was very different. Restored only recently to his throne, and
that by foreign help, he was too weak to resist much pressure, although he did
his best to balance matters and to strengthen himself by keeping up friendly
relations with Athens and individual Athenians. Thus in 378 he adopted as his
son IphikratSs, who was one of the ablest soldiers at Athens, and had great
influence in the north Egean. He sent deputies to the regular meetings of the
Confederacy at Athens: and in the extraordinary meeting held at that city in
the autumn of 371, he even publicly acknowledged the right 01 Athens to the
possession of Amphipolis, her own colony. The city was not indeed his to give;
but however little trouble the Athenians may have taken to secure it, they were
always eager that no one else should have it. This public recognition
therefore of their right was highly gratifying, and no doubt was regarded as
deserving of reward.
All these
schemes were, however, cut short by the unexpected deaths (370) of both
Amyntas and Iason. The Assassina. latter had announced his intention
of being iasonf present at the Pythian games at Delphoi, and had further issued
orders to his troops to hold themselves ready for service. The political world
of Greece was thoroughly uneasy, for he had recently seized and dismantled
Herakleia, a fortified town near Thermopylai, fearing, as he alleged, that it
might hereafter bar the pass against him at some time when he was wishing to
march into Greece. Was it that he meant to seize the presidency of the games ?
Could it be that he meditated laying haqds on the treasures pf
Delphoi? And, if
so, what next? Immense therefovs was the relief universally felt, when (as the
Delphic oracle had promised) * the God did take care for himself Iason was
murdered, while reviewing his troops, by a band of seven youths, two of whom
were overtaken and slain ; while the remaining five escaped, and were received
everywhere with special honour, as those who had relieved the Greek world from
a haunting fear. Thessaly was no more a danger to Greece. Of the two brothers
who succeeded Iason as Tagos, one was murdered by the other: and the latter in
his turn was slain by a third brother, Alexander, a brutal and unscrupulous
tyrant Once more the old proverb had come true, and in Thessaly all was
uncertainty.
CHAPTER III.
macedon and hellas at philip's accession.
Amyntas died in the same year as
Iason, and at the time of his death Macedon was undoubtedly in a stronger
condition than she had ever been. Yet ten troubled years were still to pass,
before Philip's succeeded strong arm could beat down
opposition at
s<J, aJcx. home and make her formidable abroad,
an<fer. Alexander, son of Amyntas, had an uneasy * ' reign of only two
years. After the murder of Iason, many nobles of Thessaly, especially from
Larissa, crossed the border to escape death or imprisonment, and took refuge in
Macedon. Alexander espoused their cause, invaded Thessaly, and seized Larissa
and Krannon. But it was a premature step, taken without due consideration of
consequences. Macedon was as yet weak; and Thebes, at this time in the very
heyday of prosperity,
was too strong
and too ambitious to brook interference with her cherished influence in the
north- Pelopidas at once marched into Thessaly, and occupied Larissa and other
cities in force. A year later (368J he was in Macedon itself, and on a graver
errand. Alexander had Murder of heen assassinated by
a certain Ptolemaios, and smd^UtT another competitor for power soon
appeared cal confu- on the scene in the person of
Pausanias, who Mon* v had royal blood in his veins. Then
began the scramble for power which was so common in those scenes. Besides the
men, there was EurydikG, widow ot Amyntas, with her young children, to be
reckoned with or to be set aside: and the latter was no easy task, backed as
she was by the support of the Athenian IphikratSs, whom her late husband had
adopted. There was yet a further complication in Theban jealousy of Athenian or
indeed of any interference, save their own, in northern matters. Of these
various competitors, Ptolemaios and Eurydike made common cause; while
IphikratSs, moved by Eurydike's pressing entreaties, Pelo idas
attacked and drove Pausanias out of Mace- irfwface^8 don. But at
this juncture Pelopidas ap- don* peared
upon the scene, compelled Ptolemaios
to bow to Theban
dictation, appointed him regent, and guardian of Eurydikfi and her sons, and
carried off thirty Philip, son hostages for his good behavour to Thebes, one of Amyntas, 0f whom was Philip, son of
EurydikS and at The&s. Amyntas. It is
imperative to remember this (368-365). three years' exile of Philip at Thebes, for it was the beginning of a
new era in his own life and in that of his country, similar to that which
resulted to Russia in the last century from the voluntary exile
of the Tsar Peter. It was the development of the provincial into the man of the
world. He enjoyed in Thebes, and Warned how to
use, all the advantages of a liberal educa- tion and of good society. He became
familiar with all the intricacies of Greek politics, and alive to the strong
and weak points of Greek city life. He was intimate with Epameinondas, the
ablest organiser and most scientific tactician of his day. In short, Philip
left Macedon a boy, and he returned a man, full of energy and new ideas. Even
Russia hardly made greater advances during the twenty-six years of Tsar Peter's
reign than did Macedon under Philip's vigorous rule of twenty-three years, and
his son's thirteen years of unbroken victory.
Philip returned
to Macedon in 365, and found the state of affairs considerably altered. His
brother Perdikkas had overthrown Ptolemaios, in spite Perdikkas of the Theban settlement, and in order to mLS^ maintain
himself against actual or possible (365-360). enemies, had once more made
advances to Athens. To play off one enemy against another, until strong enough
to cope with all at once, was the traditional policy of his house. Timotheos
had superseded IphikratSs in the north Egean (365-4). He had reconquered Samos,
had obtained a footing in the Chersonese, and was in high favour at Athens. To
him therefore Perdikkas turned ac a useful ally upon the spot; and in concert
with him he stripped Olynthos once more of a great part of the dominion which
she had recovered since the fatal blow of 383, and finally ruined all hopes
that a Chalkidic Confederacy could ever curb successfully the power of Macedon.
On the other hand, nothing could have suited Perdikkas better than that
Timotheos, while helping him to humble Chalkidike, should fail to master Amphipolis.
Amyntas, it is true, had recognised the right of Athens to the city ; but that
Athens should waste men and money in vainly trying to conquer an unwilling
subject, could not byt be a satisfaction to a Perdikkas and a Philip. In this
state of affairs, moreover, the young Philip was of great service to his
brother. Perdikkas gave him a district to govern; and there he raised and
trained according to the newest tactics a small army, the nucleus and origin of
that which for nearly two centuries was the model army and best fighting
machine in the world.
In 360 Perdikkas
also passed away—whether killed in battle or murdered is uncertain. Once more
the unhappy Confusion country was plunged into a
vortex of con- oodeathof an(*
war* There were no less
CH. III.
Philip.
Perdikkas than
seven candidates for the throne, the last k60* but not the least of
whom was Philip—Philip, with all the advantages of a base of operations in his
own province, and of an army trained and paid by himself. To Philip the mere
number of the pretenders was an advantage, and all the best men, tired of
anarchy, rallied round him. He first assumed the guardianship of the young
Amyntas, and then quietly set him aside. Of his half-brothers, one was put to
death, while the other two succeeded in escaping to Olynthos. Pausanias was
rendered harmless by a dexterous bribe to his supporters the Thracians; while
to detach the Athenians from the cause of Argaios Philip not only recognised
the justice of their claim to Amphipolis, but withdrew the garrison which
Perdikkas had posted there. Then suddenly attacking Argaios near Aigai, he
seized and put to death him and his Macedonian followers, but sent all his non-Macedonian allies to their homes with a politic
generosity, that gained for him, if not the alliance, at least the
non-intervention of the most powerful of his neighbours. There remained only
two enemies to reckon with. The Paionians in the north were easily reduced. But
the Illyrians, who had seized a large part of western Macedon, were more
obstinate enemies. They even ventured to risk a battle, which they contested
obstinately and lost without dishonour. Its result was to fix once more the
central chain of Pindos as the boundary between Illyrians and Macedonians.
Thus Philip was
king without a rival; but king of a comparatively petty kingdom, almost wholly
shut off from the sea. Look forward little more than twenty years, and the King
of Macedon's word was king!P law almost
from the Propontis to the Ionian <359-330- Sea, an extension of power which
is itself a test of Philip's force of character. His good fortune was
proverbial, it is true; but, as Demosthenes reminds us, the proverb which he
best exemplified was that which says that the gods help those who help
themselves. It was notorious that he freely used bribery and corruption as a
means to an end, and was as reckless in swearing as in breaking his oaths. On
occasion also, the barbarian in him would break through the crust of Greek
civilisation and lead him to brutal intemperance and savagery. Yet he was a
marvellous man. He had force of brain sufficient to gauge the possibilities of
the world in which he was thrown, force of will sufficient to command success.
It is not every king who is at once the boldest rider and swimmer, the best educated
man of the world, the most versatile diplomatist, the greatest military
organiser of his time and country.' Philip was all these; and by this untiring
energy on every side of life he overbore opposition and commanded admiration
and devotion, if not affection and respect.
But before describing the political struggles of
Philip's reign, it is necessary to dwell briefly on the condition of Greece at
the time when Macedon tanceofthe began to be a real
danger to her freedom. fourthf For the success of Philip was due
hardly century less to the apathy and mutual
jealousies of the Hellenic cities than to his own genius. The last half
of the fourth
century B.C. was indeed as critical a period
in the history of Greece as the last half of the third century jn that of Rome.
It was marked by two struggles which scarcely admit of comparison in any single
point except in the greatness of their results and in the fact that the one was
made possible t>y the successful result of the other. No one would compare in
importance the conquest of Greece by Macedon with her conquest of Asia; and yet
to conquer Asia it was necessary first to conquer Greece. The latter was, if
not conquered in the usual sense of the word, at least reduced to such a state
of dependence and weakness, that Alexander could safely vanish from view in the
far depths of Asia for eleven years, and a military force of 12,000 men was
found enough to maintain obedience in his absence. During these eleven years
(it has been said) the history of Greece is almost a blank—a remark
sufficiently true, if we remember at the same time that Greeks, in Alexander's
train, were during those years laying the foundations of the history of ages
to come.
In the last half
of the fourth century Greece was called upon, for the first lime since the
invasion ot __ , . Xerxes, to face an enemy from without:
Macedonian , ' _ ' e _
conquest while her power of resistance was far less of Greece. than it had been 130 years before. Macedon was
more formidable than Persia had been, and Macedonian tactics and diplomacy
achieved a success unknown to the multitudinous forces of a Xerxes. On the
other hand, no single city in Greece was in a position to take the lead as
Athens had taken it then. Peloponnesos was utterly disorganised by the
victories and anti-Spartan policy of Epameinondas. Elis and Sparta on the one
hand, Messenia and Arkadia on the other, were jealously on the watch—the former
to regain lost power, the latter to keep hardly won liberties. Areos \t this epoch a satellite of Thebes, was herself too
wealc to interfere. Corinth was but just rid of a tyrant. Even north of the
Isthmus, there was scarcely more of organisation or unity. Thebes, it is true,
was mistress of Boiotia, and had a considerable empire over Phokians and Lokrians
and Thessalians. But she had a jealous neighbour in .Athens. The Phokians were
such unwilling subjects that they seized the first opportunity of revolt. And
her treatment of the once free cities of Boiotia had deeply offended the public
opinion of Hellas. Even Athens herself, with a large revenue and numerous
allies, had the semblance ot power rather than the reality, and had lost the
secret of imperial energy which had held together the Confederacy of Delos.
Thus disorganised, Hellas fell an easy prey to the diplomacy and arms of
Macedon.
An overwhelming
calamity was brought upon Greece by the result of the battle of Chaironeia.
Republics once great and free became subject to the Macedon will of a king, or
the caprices of a king's and Greece deputy. Yet
although it was a calamity for conquer Greece, it was a gain to the world at
large. AsUL For if the Macedonian conquest did in a sense extinguish
the liberties of Hellas, it opened afterwards a wider field for Hellenic empire
and influence by the conquest of Asia which followed it The victories of
Alexander did far more than satisfy a sentimental desire of vengeance upon
Persia. They put an end to whatever fear may have been felt of Persian
interference in Hellenic politics. They spread broadcast over half Asia the
Greek language, Greek ideas, even Greek civilisation in a more or less perfect
form. They deeply affected the history of Western Asia, and therefore of
Asiatic Christianity. Viewed as an episode in the history of Greece, few things
seem more lamentable than the rise of the Macedonian monarchy, because it rose
upon the ruins of free Greek republics. Viewed as an episode in the history of
the world, it assumes its due relation in the sequence oft events, and is seen
to have been in reality a transference of power fraught with advantage to
multitudes of mankind.
The Hellas of
350 B.C. was singularly different from
the Hellas of a century before : and this difference is Contrast traceable in great measure to the untimely stateofthe fatture a grand political development ; Greece in which indeed was within a little of being rea- ofthefifth lised and the success of which, while render-
andiiTtiie a Macedonian
kingdom impossible, might
middle of have rendered unnecessary the struggles of century111
many generations. It was a fatal defect in Greek political ideas, that barely
one or two men in all Greek history rose superior to the petty notion that life
within the compass of city walls was theoretically the perfection of political
existence. Man (says Aristotle) is a political animal, or a being with political
instincts, and a city is the highest and most perfect organisation which
satisfies those instincts. Nothing less than a city (such as village
communities), and nothing more than a city (such as a nation), seemed to
satisfy the average Greek mind. This was indeed an advance upon the primitive
Aryan custom of the isolation of the family—it was an advance upon the
half-civilised village life of Arkadia or ^Etolia : but it fell lamentably
short of the grand possibilities of national unity, wherein many cities combine
together for common political ends. Now, in the middle of the fifth century,
circumstances threw such power and influence into the hands of Athens, that she
became the president of a great confederacy of Greeks, and drove the Persian
fleet out of Egean waters, and Persian satraps out of the Hellenised lowlands
of Asia Minor. For nine years (456-447), she was even a continental power, and
mistress of a territory reaching from Megara to Thermopylai, from Sunium to
Phokis. It might have seemed not impossible that round this nucleus other
Greeks would gather (as the even less homogeneous inhabitants of mediaeval Gaul
gathered round the royal city of Paris) and that by slow degrees a Greek nation
would arise, of which Athens would be the political and intellectual capital.
This might have been. In reality, the facts of the case are better illustrated
by the analogy of mediaeval Italy. The mutual jealousies of Florence and Milan,
of Genoa and Pisa, were only a repetition of the jealousies of Thebes and
Athens and Sparta. But the Peloponnesian war scattered to the winds the fair
but delusive dream of Hellenic unity. The comparatively tolerant hegemony of
Athens was exchanged for the wanton and intolerant oppression of Sparta.
Happily for Greece, it lasted only thirty years : but they were thirty years
fraught with evil, when the seeds were sown of a selfishness and corruption
that bore fruit only too soon in humiliation and foreign conquest. It was not
merely the policy of Sparta in Asia, and at Olynthos, that was demoralising ;
but the acts of individual Spartans, like Phoibidas at Thebes, or Sphodrias at
Athens, spread a general spirit of suspicion which made national union
impossible and the triumph of Macedon comparatively easy. In the middle of the
fourth century Greece had fallen back into its normal state of petty jealous
cities, whose strongest feeling was suspicion of the nearest neighbour city,
and their one object to keep that neighbour weak.
The evils of
separatism are bad enough. They are worse when aggravated by that personal
corruption and decay of public spirit which often follow upon political
despair. The speeches of Demosthenes are so precise and severe in the charges
which he brings against his countrymen, that we cannot help believing that a
great
C rru tion w^at says ls true> more
particularly
31
en. hi. and Hellas.
prevaKitfa when
we observe that the actual course of sho^by* events corresponded exactly to the
character Demos- assigned to the actors who took part in them, ' Athenians
(says the orator) are indolent, selfish, suspicious, corrupt. The festivals
they celebrate with great regularity, and there is money in plenty for them ;
but their wars they starve. So enamoured are they of the comfortable
refinements of home, that they hate to lift a finger, even in self-defence, and
are like raw boxers, who parry but never return a blow.' The cause of it all
lies in the word, so often on Demosthenes' lips, paGvpia, or the art of taking
things easily. This it was, he adds, which led them to adopt the newfangled
system of mercenaries, which made the city ridiculous and the city's allies
quake with fear. No force was less to be trusted, for they regarded only their
own interest, not that of their employers. Nor could anything exceed the
shortsightedness of Thessalians and Thebans and Peloponnesians (unless it were
that of the Athenians themselves) whom he compares to men in a hailstorm,
praying earnestly that it may do them no injury, but taking no steps to prevent
it! Nor was this all That Greeks should be selfishly supine and shortsighted in
the face of a great danger was bad; but it was far worse that they should have
publicly sold off and disposed of a principle once valued—that it was shameful
to take a bribe for the ruin of one's country, and to sympathise with her
enemies. Such men he compares to sprains and fractures in the body, which make
their presence felt as soon as anything goes wrong. Pure and old- fashioned
patriotism was at a discount, and in its place had come in a vulgar importation
'jealousy, if a man gained any advantage ; ridicule, if he confessed it; hatred
of any man who blamed such doings'—feelings quite incompatible with a lofty
tone and with spirited action. In short, public opinion and public spirit in
Greece and Athens were very different from what they had been a hundred years
before. There was money and material strength in abundance ; but it was
rendered useless by corruption. What they needed was less talking and more
acting. Again and again he appeals to the Athenians in the Olynthiacs and
Philippics to awake to the realities of the case, no longer to fold their hands
and sit still, above all to cease their perpetual jealousies and
recriminations. As for decrees and votes,' decrees' he cries ' are worth
nothing without action.' Again, he appeals to their legitimate pride in the
grand deeds of their ancestors, who were right to run the risks they did fa
defence of Greece against Persia. They died indeed, but what of that ? ' Death
comes to every man, even though he shut himself in a dovecote ;' and it is for
brave men to do and dare ! He contrasts the forbearance and devotion of the
Athenians of old with the blind selfishness of his own contemporaries, who
allowed themselves to be hoodwinked by fawning demagogues, who grew rich on the
state's misfortunes, while they cried peace when there was no peace. Their
ancestors did not seek for a general or an orator who would manage that they should
live in comfortable servitude. In short, Athens had no policy save that of
leaving things alone; and this fatal want of policy was no new thing. Nothing
could have looked more hopeful than the new Naval Confederation which arose in
378 under the primacy of Athens. Its material power was very considerable. Its
object was simply to curb the power of Sparta ; its rules were framed to guard
the Interests of each and all against oppression from within and aggression
from without. Yet not only did Athens before long begin to trim between Thebes
and
Sparta, acting
the great power, and professing to hold Reasons of
the balance, but individual Athenians were failure allowed abroad on a sort of
roving com- second mission, and by high-handed
exploits won Confedera- popularity at home, and
perhaps extended the tion of 378. Athenian empire,
but none the less laid the foundations of subsequent revolt against such stupid
ambition. Tactics like these only too surely quenched all enthusiasm for Athens
in the minds of the confederates, and occasioned a revolt which left her to
cope almost single-handed with the able and unscrupulous Philip. The conditions
of the struggle meanwhile were anything but equal 'We on our side* (says Demosthenes,
reviewing their relative resources)' had only the weakest of the islands; but
neither Chios nor Rhodes nor Korkyra. Our revenue amounted to forty-five
talents, but even that was raised before it was due. We had not a single
cavalry or infantry soldier beyond our own force. Worst of all, our own policy
had made our neighbours more hostile than friendly. Philip, on the other hand,
was not hampered by colleagues, or decrees, or want of money, or fear of
indictment in case of failure. He could do what he thought best, without
publicly advertising his intentions, being in brief, in his own person, Despot,
Lord, and Master of all'
That under such
circumstances, and notwithstanding innumerable follies and blunders, Athens
maintained a twenty years' struggle against the ever-growing empire of Philip
is a proof of the real greatness of Athenian power (which nevertheless
Athenians frittered away), as well as of the courage and resources of the one
man who seems never to have despaired of his country, Demosthenes.
CHAPTER IV.
from the accession of philip to his interven* tion in the sacred war.
Once more Macedon
was united under a single hand, and able to present a solid front to enemies
without But it was strong now with a strength un- known before. Of the means
indeed whereby Philip, a loose group of mountain cantons was converted into a
powerful empire we know but little. One thing only is clear. Philip himself was
Macedon, and Philip's character the clamp that bound all Macedonians,
willingly or unwillingly, into one compact whole. Philip, moreover, was aware
of a fact, which in his day seemed new, but has often since then been proved to
be true—that there is hardly any tie so strong as military service, which
fosters identity of development and feeling, and accustoms men to live and act
together. Hence ^ Mace_ he threw himself heart and soul into the re- donian organization of the army, utilising the ex-
phiiTp'^1 perience he had gained at Thebes. In the reforms-
half-barbarous days before Philip's time the cavalry of Macedon had been almost
as good as that of Thessaly, the infantry worth little—the former, as in feudal
times, being the landed proprietors, the latter the rural population of
shepherds or ploughmen. Even in Greece (speaking broadly) a battle had meant a
struggle • of hoplites against hoplites, all armed alike, in which light-armed
troops and cavalry were quite subsidiary to the main issue. But when
Epameinondas won battles by manoeuvring with infantry and light-armed troops
and cavalry at once, and by massing unexpectedly a superior force on a single A, if, ' d point of the enemy's line, the old style of
fighting was doomed. Victory was secured beforehand for the man who knew how to
use the new tactics. And that man was Philip. Demosthenes, amongst others,
notes that of all the various sides of public life, none within his knowledge
had shown such progress and development as the art of war. He is almost
pathetic over the way in which Philip actually disregarded the old-fashioned
seasons, and made no difference in campaigning between summer and winter! But
this was comparatively a small matter. The fighting instrument itself, the
actual army, was what he and his son brought to perfection. The principle of
Epameinondas, to strike the enemy always in superior force, he so far improved
upon that his main line of battle was always and everywhere superior in weight
to that of the enemy: and the success of his application of it is seen in the
fact that the Macedonian formation remained in vogue as the fighting system of
the world until superseded by the Roman legion.
The object
proposed was so to strengthen the main line of infantry as to enable them to
withstand and break any attacking force which they were likely to meet in the
field. The ordinary depth of Greek battle array seems to have been from eight
to twelve files ; while the battle of Leuktra was won by the Theban left wing
of fifty files crashing through the Spartans, only twelve files deep, and
sweeping all before it. Now Thebans were of all others most likely to meet
Philip in the field, and the problem was how to resist such a charge, how to
meet the weight of a mass of men fifty deep. It was solved by the introduction
of a new weapon, and by a change of tactics adapted to its use. The weapon was
the sarissa; and the new formation was the phalanx. The sarissa was a huge
lance, held in both hands (unlike the Greek pike) and twenty-one feet in
length; the infantry soldier wearing besides a short Sword, a round shield, a
breastplate, and a sort of broad-brimmed helmet. But such a weapon as this
lance was clearly fitted not for independent fighting or single action but for
close array. Hence arose the peculiar formation of the phalanx with its 4,096
men. Its smallest unit was the lochos, made up of sixteen men standing one
behind the other at intervals of 3 feet, the front rank man, or lochagos, being
the most distinguished for experience and strength. Now the sarissa was held 6
feet from the butt, and projected therefore 15 feet before the body of its
holder. It follows that the front man of each lochos was protected by a
bristling mass of five pikes—his own projecting 15 feet before him, and the
next 12, and the next 9, and the fourth and fifth respectively 6 and 3 feet.
The remaining files added weight to the mass, but carried their lances sloping
over their comrades' shoulders. Now let us take the more complete unit of the
phalanx, the syntagma, numbering sixteen lochi—i.e. numbering sixteen men each
way, or 256 in all. Two things are clear at once. Such a unit was capable of
indefinite multiplication; and indeed, a quadruple phalanx of 64 syntagmata, or
16,384 men was no uncommon thing. On the other hand, while a direct attack in
front on such a dense mass of pikemen might well seem hopeless* a charge on
their dank or rear, if left exposed by the accident of battle, was fatal. It
was even possible, if the phalanx became unsteady, whether from inequalities of
the ground or from the necessity of changing front, to get inside the rows of
projecting lances, as the Romans found out at Pydna (b.c. 168), when the phalanx became at
once a huddling mass of helpless wretches doomed to slaughter. Such cases,
however, were quite exceptional. As against Greek hoplites and ordinary modes
ot fighting the phalanx was irresistible, the moral effect of awe and
intimidation d
2 which it produced in an enemy predisposing men to recoil before its impact.
We know that at the battle of Chaironeia the front ranks of Theban soldiers
fell transfixed before they could touch their enemies, in spite of desperate courage.
We know that before the battle of Pydna even a Roman consul was struck with
mingled admiration and alarm at the sight of the dense array and the ' rampart
of bristling spears/ and that he never forgot the impression. .We know further
that at Pydna the Roman legion succeeded in destroying the Macedonian phalanx,
but not before the wavering of the long line of pikes permitted the legionary
to use his sword—not before, as Livy says, the impregnable mass was broken up
into an infinite series of minute struggles.
This, then, was
the wonderful machine which Philip organized, and which was gradually perfected
by himself and his son. In combination with and supported by light infantry
(hypaspistai), armed like Greek hoplites, by irregular troops and cavalry both
heavy and light, as well as by a large and effective siege train, they speedily
became irresistible. Nor was this all. For the right of
bearing arms, which is common in all free half-bar- barous tribes, was now
substituted the obligation of military service.
Townsmen and countrymen, noble and peasant, all were passed through a great
machine, so to speak, of assimilation, where all learned to feel as members of
one body and to obey a single wilL Macedon in fact became nothing but a
well-drilled military machine; and half-civilized Macedonians, led by the
ablest of living generals, were superior not only to Asiatic hordes but even to
free Athenians or Thebans.
But in this we
are somewhat anticipating. In 359 Philip had but just driven Paionians and Illyrians
beyond his borders, and the Greek world knew little beyond the fact that a
young man of more than common energy and ability had seated himself on the
throne of Macedon. Amphipolis, though claimed by Athens and occupied at
intervals by Macedonian garrisons, was _ ..
•11 • 11 • i 1 ^11 Ml Position of
still virtually
independent. Olynthos was still Philip at his the first city
in ChalkidikS. Potidaia, Pydna, accession- Meth6n£, and the shores
of the Thermaic Gulf were subject to Athenian influence. Philip was strong in
Macedon and undisputed king; but he had no access to the sea, and did not seem
likely to have. We may even say more than this. Had Amphipolis and Olynthos
and Athens been able to sink their common jealousies and to unite loyally
against their common foe, Philip would never have had scope for his great
abilities, or emerged from the comparative obscurity of his predecessors.
Nothing could exceed the diplomatic skill with
which Philip managed his adversaries, whether individuals or cities. His
earliest efforts, while securing Po]icy of Macedon. were directed
towards anticipating Philip in
^ c i_ * ^i
the matter
any movement for
co-operation between the of Amphi- three cities just
named. For the moment this p®118, was no very difficult matter, the
Athenians being greatly vexed at their repulse before Amphipolis in 364, and
ready to pay almost any price for revenge. Since that time the city had
admitted Macedonian troops as a protection against Athens (362), and indeed
was being held at this very time by a Macedonian garrison. Philip saw his
opportunity of soothing Athens and gratifying Amphipolis at the same time. Like
his father Amyntas before him, he voluntarily recognised the right of Athens to
Amphipolis, and as an earnest of goodwill withdrew his troops, leaving the city
for a while to itself (359). Amphipolis and Athens were equally flattered by so
gracious an act. The former was relieved of a foreign garrison, the latter was
freed from a nervous fear that
Philip meant to
keep the city himself. But even now the Athenians could not rouse themselves to
the necessary sacrifices for securing what was all but in their grasp; and
actually hoping to play with Philip, began to cherish ideas of exchanging Pydna
for Amphipolis, and so of gaining the coveted town by Macedonian help. Philip,
however, was alive to Athenian failings, and saw through the motive which
prompted their wish for negotiations. He had no mind to be a^lt's-paw. If they
were loth to act, he was not. Having settled matters with the Paionians and
Illyrians (358), he resolved to take the first step towards expansion by
seizing Amphipolis, which commanded the communications between Thrace and
Macedon, and dominated the gold mines of Pangaios. To the dismay of the deluded
inhabitants, it became suddenly clear that they had been beguiling themselves
with fond hopes, and that Philip was rapidly advancing to attack them. Then at
last, but all too late, a hurried embassy was despatched to Athens, imploring
forgiveness for the past and immediate help. Athens at the moment was at the
height of her power. Apart from the ordinary members of the Naval Confederation
of 378 she had in this year succeeded in wresting Euboia from Theban influence
and in adding the Chersonese to her empire (358). But she was also on the verge
of the serious struggle of the Social War. To Athens, therefore, in spite of
pride and power, it was of prime importance to maintain for the present peace
and alliance with Philip.
Simultaneously
with the ambassadors from Amphipolis an embassy arrived from Macedon, to
assure the Athenians once more of Philip's regard for them, and to state that,
although he was besieging Amphipolis, it was really in their interest, for that
when he had taken it he should hand it over to them. Blinded by dislike of the
obstinate city, which had so long held them at arm's length, and
predisposed in Philip's favour by his politic withdrawal of troops from the
place in the previous year, the Athenians were unwilling to offend a valuable
ally merely to save an ungrateful colony from merited humiliation, especially
as it was to be theirs in any case. The ambassadors from Amphipolis were
dismissed with a refusal, and the city was left to itsJate. Thus the Athenians
imagined they had tided over a difficulty and gratified a legitimate feeling;
whereas they had really struck a blow at their own prosperity and sown the seed
of future ruin. Philip laid siege to Amphipolis, which fell before the energy
of his attack combined with the treachery of his partisans within; and once
master of the place, he was too well aware of its value to dream of giving it
up even to Athens. Nevertheless he continued to hold out delusive hopes, with
which the Athenians were fain to content themselves under the circumstances,
though uneasily conscious that they had been tricked.
For, indeed,
circumstances were very much against them. By their own act they had just
thrown away Amphipolis: and now, in consequence of 0ulbreakof their
own acts, four of their most important the Social subject
allies—Rhodes, Kos, Chios, and difficulties Byzantion—renounced their
allegiance and of Athens revolted. They accused
Athens of having 5 broken the treaty of 378 by appropriating her
later acquisitions—Samos, the Thermaic Gulf, and the Chersonese—to the
exclusive benefit of her own citizens. They complained loudly of the exactions
and want of discipline of the mercenaries, whom Athenian indolence was content
to use but Athenian parsimony forgot to pay. The burden was aj. theirs, while
Athens reaped all the advantage. They therefore formally seceded from the
league (358).
As if this were
not enough to inspire uneasiness, an embassy arrived shortly afterwards from
Olynthos. That Policy of city was thoroughly alarmed
by the Macedon- Sematter ^ conquest of Amphipolis; for with a Mace- of Olynthos. donian garrison in that city she was between
two fires, and Philip's ambition was seen to be growing. In the crisis Olynthos
turned naturally to Athens, Ionian like herself, and, as mistress of the Egean,
able to help if she would. But now, as before, Philip was alive to every move
in the game, and the Olynthian deputies were met at Athens by an embassy from
Macedon—were met and checkmated. As before, so now, the Athenians were assured
of Philip's unchanging goodwill, and of his intention to cede Amphipolis even
yet. He had indeed, it was hinted, ground of complaint, in that they still held
Pydna, Which was more certainly Macedonian than Amphipolis was Athenian. He did
not wish, however, to be hard on them, and was ready to negotiate for the
exchange of one against the other. But the negotiations were too delicate for
the rough treatment of a public assembly, especially as the people of Pydna
would probably object to the transfer. The ambassadors therefore insisted upon
secrecy. It was a trying dilemma for the unfortunate Athenians. They could not
help distrusting Philip. They could not avoid fearing for and with Olynthos.
Yet open distrust or precipitate action might now disappoint them of
Amphipolis; and to offend Philip, when they were at war with their allies,
would be nothing short of madness. The ambassadors of Olynthos, therefore, like
those of Amphipolis, could obtain neither promise nor prospect of support
Athens had saddled herself with another enemy, and Philip had gained another
advantage. For the present, at any rate, Olynthos and Athens were at daggers
drawn.
Meanwhile, the
mistress of the Egean was in great straits. The revolt of Byzantion threatened
to stop not only the corn-tax levied on ships passing west- ,^ ^^ wards from
the Euxine but even the corn-ships War themselves.
Chios was the head-quarters of ksS-sX this inconvenient secession, and an
Athenian attack on the island was repulsed with loss and the admira1,
Chabrias, slain. For some months Chios was supreme in the Egean. Even when the
Athenian commanders had raised a considerable fleet, and, in order to divert an
attack of the confederates from Samos, affected to threaten Byzantion, their
disagreement was fatal to success : and failure in battle was followed by
indictment at home. Iphikrat£s was virtually cashiered, Timotheos was fined,
and withdrew from Athens. Charts alone was left ; a thorough soldier but no
general. It was in the midst of this trying series of failures and losses that
the last ray of hope in the northern Egean was rudely and finally extinguished.
The difficulties of Philip's Athens were Philip's opportunities. While
aggressions, the former was struggling to avert defeat, the latter was making
overtures of alliance to Olynthos, seeking to widen the breach between her and
Athens. Feeling sure that the Athenians had their hands quite full and would
endure anything rather than a rupture of the peace, he advanced without
compunction and seized Pydna (357) which he kept for himself. Thence he
proceded to attack Potidaia, which together with Anthemous was handed over to
Olynthos as an earnest of Philip's goodwill. But if the Olynthians were not
blinded by resentment against Athens, they must have trembled at such a gift,
even while they accepted it. How long would it be before their turn came!
Meanwhile they were hopelessly estranged from their real ally, Athens, as
receivers of stolen goods in accepting Potidaia!
Thus Philip stood out before the eyes of Greeks as
a
disturbing element
in their political relations—a man of energy, who wielded great resources and
showed but few scruples in using them. His position has been compared to that
of the Lydian Croesus towards the Ionians of Asia Minor, or of Iason of Pherai
towards the surrounding tribes. In fact his position was a far stronger one. He
was a genuine Hellene ; and Croesus was not. He was a legitimate king; and
Iason was not. He had at command greater resources than either. All that he
needed in order to attain the goal of a not ignoble ambition, the leadership of
Hellas, was a fair opening for interference in the affairs of Hellas. And this
his proverbial good- fortune soon threw in his way.
In 357 a war
broke out in central Greece which is known in history as the Second Sacred War.
On the Outbreak surface it looked like a
struggle between the Second Phokians and their
neighbours for the pos- Sacred session of the town and
oracle of Delphoi; in its^aiTses reality, its cause lay far deeper in national
<357)- antipathy. The Delphians
were Dorians, the
Phokians were
not. The Delphians moreover were an intruding, if not a conquering, race, in
occupation of what Phokians would regard as their own territory. More than once
in Greek history this precious strip of land had been transferred to its
rightful owners ; more than once it had been retransferred to the Delphians by
some hateful Dorian intervention. The Phokians therefore nourished a
traditional hatred against Delphians in particular, and Dorians in general. The
privileges and wealth attaching to the most famous oracle in the world,
situated on Phokian soil, were in the hands of aliens, and the political
sympathies of its priesthood were notoriously Dorian. But perhaps the strongest
antipathy of the Phokians was reserved for Thebes, whose subjects they had been
during the Theban hege- mony (371-362), just as they maintained a warm regard
for Athens, who had often stood their friend. These feelings of dislike were
brought to a head, when the Thebans sndeavoured to compel the Phokians to
submit once more to their rule. They tried, however, to attain their object
indirectly by bringing to bear the antiquated machinery of the Amphiktyonic
Council, in which at this time they were virtually supreme. On their motion the
Phokians were condemned to pay a heavy fine on the pretext that they had
cultivated some of the consecrated ground at Kirrha. This fine they refused to
pay, and the council passed a resolution to oust them from their land and to
consecrate it to the Dorian Apollo.
But this was not
so easily done as voted. The Phokians had friends as well as enemies. Their
enemies were slow to move, and they themselves found Successes of an
able leader in Philomelos. Delphoi was thePho- seized
and held; and under the pressure of pjXStoT circumstances a finger was laid for
the first andOno- time on the vast accumulated treasure which had been silently
growing for generations in the secret chambers of the temple. This money
purchased mercenaries ; but its seizure forfeited what was much more valuable,
the goodwill of Greeks, and compelled the Phokians as they became more and more
isolated to lean more and more upon mercenaries. Hence it was necessary to make
further requisitions on the treasury of the god, and what was at first decently
styled a loan soon ended in naked spoliation. At first the Phokians more than
held their own. In spite of the remissness of Sparta and Athens in sending the
aid they had promised—the former as embittered enemies of Thebes, the latter as
anti- Dorian sympathisers—Philomelos and his mercenaries defeated the Lokrians,
and gained some advantages over the Thebans and Thessalians. Even when
PhilomSlos was defeated and slain (354), Onomarchos his colleague was equal to
the occasion. It was too late for any hesitation as to the right or wrong of
appropriating the Delphic treasure. He increased his military force. He bribed
far and near, enemies no less than friends. He overran Doris, invaded Boiotia,
and actually made himself master of Thermopylai, opening negotiations with the
Thessalian despots of Pherai.
It was this last
step which brought Philip on the scene and led to his taking part in the Sacred
War. He The Pho successively reduced Amphipolis, Pydna,
kians and and Potidaia. In 354 he attacked MethdnS, tofaceinCe
which> unaided by Athens till it was too late, Thessaiy struggled vainly against its fate, but was
taken. Thus, master of Macedon and secure of the neutrality of Olynthos in his
rear, he advanced in force into Thessaiy (353) to help the ruling family of Larissa
against the encroachments of the tyrant of Pherai, who in his turn appealed to
Onomarchos. It was a fatal day for the liberties of Hellas !
CHAPTER V.
from philip's intervention in thessaly to the fall of olynthos.
The Phokian
intervention in the affairs of Thessaiy brought Philip upon the scene of
Grecian politics. Even Philip genuine Hellenes would
in a sense condone intervenes, Macedonian
intervention in such a cause, when its object was to repress the tyrant of Pherai
and to resist the sacrilegious mercenaries of upstart Phokians ! Religious
scruples and political jealousies were alike enlisted in his favour.
At first,
however, Lykophron and Onomarchos got the better of Philip (353). Whether it
was that he was careless and underrated his opponents, or that his great
military machine had not acquired the precision which it attained under
Alexander, or that, as Diodoros says, he was outnumbered, he was certainly
worsted in two battles, and was obliged to evacuate Thessaly for a time. But
for a man like Philip to acquiesce in defeat was impossible. He returned to
Thessaly in force (352), induced the Thessalians to make common cause with him
against the tyrant Lykophron, took the field with 23,000 troops, and inflicted
a crushing defeat upon the allies. Indeed, had it not been for an accident,
many more than the* 6,000 slain and 3,000 prisoners would have been lost to the
Phokian cause. Charts the Athenian was cruising off the coast at the time, and
many of the fugitives swam off to his ships. Onomarchos himself was slain or
drowned.
With the downfall of
Lykophron Thessaly became practically Macedonian, especially when Philip
proceeded to reduce its great seaport Pagasai. It was a b€COmes base
of operations for Philip hardly less im- of
portant than
Amphipolis. Lying at the head and seizes of a land-locked
gulf, and the only harbour on Paga4a1' the Thessalian coast, it
boasted a considerable fleet of its own, and the export and import duties were
valuable. Nor was this all. It was a standing menace to Euboia, and through
Euboia to Athens, as was seen before three years were over. From the Gulf of
Pagasai issued flying squadrons which were for ever harassing Athenian
commerce, and on one occasion even ventured to show themselves at Marathon and
carry off the sacred trireme. The* fall of Pagasai, too, could not fail to
remind the Athenians how Philip had successively deprived them of Amphipolis
and Pydna and Potidaia and MethdnS, and it was the more alarming because it was
so much nearer.
But the alarm
passed into downright panic at Athens, when news suddenly reached the city that
Philip was but is actually marching to attack the
Phokians at foiled Thermopylai,
of which they were then in pos-
Athenians session. Thermopylai was the gate from at Thermo- northern to southern Greece, and it was felt
at Athens that Philip south of Thermopylai meant the ruin of their Phokian
allies, a great accession of strength to their Theban enemies, and imminent
danger to themselves. For once the Athenians roused themselves. A considerable
force was despatched without delay, and reaching the place before Philip
fortified the pass with Phokian aid so strongly that the king declined to
attack it and returned to the north. The state of feeling in Greece, however,
as to the case of the Phokians is clearly marked by the fact that the
Macedonian Philip rose in public esteem by taking the right side, while Athens
lost caste by espousing the Phokian cause ; although each acted palpably from Sketch of purely selfish motives. For the moment the
affairs^ danger to Greece was postponed : but it was 347- only postponed. During the next five years
(352-347)
Phokian affairs went from bad to worse. Each Phokian leader became less and
less scrupulous. Fresh requisitions were made on the holy treasures on the plea
of political necessity, but in reality for personal purposes, until it was
found (348) that more than 2,000,000/. sterling had been squandered and that
the spring was running low. Then followed discontent among the mercenaries,
dissensions among the Phokjans themselves ; until the Thebans, half ruined by
nine years of desultory warfare, took a step of which they little foresaw the
results. In the name of the Arophiktyonic Council
Ihey appealed to
Philip to come and help the god of Delphoi and themselves against their
sacrilegious enemies the Phokians (347).
When Philip was thus invited by the Thebans to
interfere directly in Greek affairs, he was in a far stronger position than he
had been five years before, phiiip's One more rival had been swept away from position in
QS2 and
before him. In
352 the Confederation of 347 con- Olynthos
was Philip's friend and ally, pros- trasted- perous and strong. In
347 the Confederation was a thing of the past. Olynthos had been sacked and the
site thereof knew it no more. Philip breathed more easily; for nevermore could
Athens and Olynthos be leagued together against him.
The delivery of
this startling lesson to upstart cities was in Philip's most characteristic
manner. He had succeeded in estranging Olynthos from Growing Athens.
He had lulled Olynthian suspicions by an ostentation of friendship. He had Philip and robbed Athens to pay Olynthos, and had OIynthos-
added to the Confederation Potidaia and Anthemous. He had won over individual
Olynthians by gifts and concessions, and had allowed their capitalists to grow
rich by shares in his mines. There was apparently everything to gain by working
harmoniously with Philip, everything to lose by making oneself disagreeable.
For a while the pleasant delusion lasted. But when in 352 Philip was master of
Thessaly, and when, returning thence, he was next heard of as pushing his
conquests in Thrace to the very verge of Athenian possessions in the
Chersonese, then indeed the Olynthians must have felt that Philip was gradually
encircling them, as the hunter draws his nets closer and closer round his prey.
Before this, however, a feeling of sympathy seems to have arisen between
Olynthos and Athens, which led to a formal peace between them, and to very
strained relations between Olynthos and Philip. The latter indeed affected to
think that it was impossible any longer for him and the Olynthians to live
quietly side by side. Either he or they must go ; and he resolved that it
should be they. His tactics were of the familiar kind. Even so early as the
First Philippic (351) we find Demosthenes referring to sudden raids made upon
the Chalkidic Confederation ; while, if accused of hostility, Philip was ready
with specious apologies. It was neither peace nor war, but it combined the
disadvantages of both. Olynthos now, like Athens seven years before, saw
herself stripped of dependent allies, one by one, yet unable to prevent it
except at the price of instant attack; while Macedonian gold and Macedonian
compliments had won even in Olynthos partisans whose interest it was to defer a
rupture.
At this juncture
it happened that two of Philip's half- brothers who had incurred his wrath took
refuge in the Occasion of city. Glad of the pretext,
he demanded their the rupture, surrender. The
answer to that demand was an embassy from Olynthos to Athens, proposing an
alliance offensive and defensive against Macedonian aggression—an appeal
strongly seconded by Demosthenes.
The place
occupied by this orator at Athens was so strange, and his influence in after
days so remarkable, Rise and that it will be well
to explain, before going influence of further, some of
the causes of his singular thenesTat character and exceptional position. For in
Athens. talking of the struggle between Macedon and
Athens, we involuntarily think of Philip and of Demosthenes, and of no others.
Of what Philip was, we have already some notion: let us try and imagine his
great antagonist, and that, not as he was in the prime of his powers, when
Athens recognised at last her greatest citizen, but rather as when he rose for
the first time to address the Athenian Ekklesia. We read his speeches, and
perhaps wonder how such an audience could fail to be c'onvinced by them—simple,
terse, polished, and instinct with suppressed passion. Yet he often failed to
convince. The truth is, we forget the state of parties at Athens: still more do
we forget the difficulties to be overcome by the orator himself. In a city
where Philip had some sympathisers and many partisans — where there was much
vapouring about the glory of Athens, but little zeal to maintain that
glory—where there was a government of peace at any price, headed by men as
narrow as they were honest—where there were politicians in abundance, but few
statesmen—in such a city it was no easy matter, but the task of years, for a
man like Demosthenes to gain the ear of the Assembly. He was only half an
Athenian, as his enemies seldom forgot to remind him. His grandmother (if we
may believe •iEschines) had been a barbarian of the Tauric Chersonese
(Crimea); but the advantages of a strain of new blood are too well known to
allow us to think worse of Demosthenes for that. We may even infer that more
intermarriages of a similar kind might have served to invigorate the exhausted
Athenian stock, as in after days Gothic and Vandal blood invigorated the
comparatively effete Romans. Be that as it may, to the foreign blood in his
veins we may reasonably ascribe much of the vigour and broad sympathies of the
Athenian orator. Moreover, partly from nature, partly from circumstances, he
was singularly un-Athenian. He was a pale, shy, awkward young man, with a thin
voice, and faulty intonation—very poor company for gay Athenian gentlemen.
Hence, he was in youth a solitary — and a solitary soured by ill-treatment: for
his father died when A. //. £ he was only seven years
old, and his guardians squandered his property. But misfortune proved a good
schoolmistress. From an early age he set himself to correct the faults of nature,
that he might be able, when the time came, to bring the law to bear upon' the
guardians who had ruined him. He mastered the ideas of Solon and Plato. He knew
Thucydides almost by heart, and is said to have written out his history eight
times. He studied under Isaios and watched and imitated Isokratcs. He
condescended to learn dignity, action, and even play of features from actors on
the stage. He declaimed aloud, it is said, with pebbles in his mouth or amid
the roar of waves upon the shore, to improve and strengthen his voice. He
would march uphill while repeating some speech, to open and fortify his lungs.
In short, no trouble was too great if he might attain the. great object of his
ambition, the power of persuasive speaking. And by dint of perseverance he did
slowly but surely attain it; at first speaking against the whole current of
Athenian feeling, and to almost unsympathetic ears, but little by little
commanding attention, respect, admiration, and finally enthusiastic assent. At
last, though unhappily too late, the policy of Demosthenes became the policy
of Athens.
Of the details
of the war of Philip against Olynthos we know next to nothing : but the
speeches of Demos- Oiynthos thenes enable us to
infer the progress of \PtEensSfor
events almost certainly. The proffer of alli- heip. De- ance was welcomed at Athens, until the mosthenes question arose as to what was to be done; Olynthiac. and then the traditional caution of Athenian
politicians led (as usual) to words and nothing else. ( Olynthos, it
was argued, was still a formidable power : and Philip's strength (as
Demosthenes himself had pointed out) was more apparent than real No state could
rest permanently on a basis of force, injustice, and perjury. No king could
find permanent support in corrupt partisans, forced allies, and dissolute
officers, or could safely ostracise all that was noble and of good* report.
Philip was not strong, and therefore to the Athenians he ought not to be a
source of fear.' Unfortunately from the same premises the orator and his
audience drew different conclusions. To the former it seemed almost providential
that Athens should have the opportunity of cooperating with Olynthos against
an enemy thus intrinsically weak. The latter were only too happy to perceive
that immediate action was not a necessity. Accordingly the alliance was
contracted, but nothing further was done.
The results of
this fatal policy were soon apparent. Philip, interpreting aright this masterly
inactivity, concluded that for the present he need fear Second nothing from Athens. His agents within and Olynthiac. without Olynthos became doubly active, even
turning Athenian abstention to their master's advantage. At last the pressure
became so stringent that further and more urgent appeals for aid were made to
Athens ; and again Demosthenes stood forward to second the call But this time
his speech was at once more pointed and more earnest. It was a crisis, as he
puts it, almost calling on them with articulate voice to act at once. The road
to Athens lay through Olynthos. ' If we leave these men to their fate, who is
so simple (he asks) as not to know that the war will be transferred from thence
to us ? Fight Philip we must, either there or here: and .Philip's difficulty is
our opportunity.' His inference was practical. They must prepare at once and
without delay a double expedition—the one to preserve the confederation, the
other to attack Macedon. But, to be of use, these expeditions must be
simultaneous : and, above £ 2 all, it must be a genuine Athenian
army and fleet, not a mere mercenary force without interest in the result.
Shortly after
the delivery of this speech some foreign mercenaries were sent by Athens to
ChalkidikS, but no Third Athenian soldiers, and no
money. However, oiynthiac. tjiey were so far
successful that there was quite an excitement at Athens, and a good deal
of talk of taking vengeance on Philip. Then Demosthenes for the third time came
forward with the warning that as yet nothing was done, and that it was too
soon, or rather much too late, to talk of vengeance. What was still at stake
was the safety first of Olynthos, then of Athens. Their only hope of securing
that safety lay in readiness to fight, and to provide adequate ways and means.
They must act—and act at once. But Demosthenes was still a young man (only
thirty-one), and Athenian fears were too easily set at rest by the influence of
older and as yet more trusted politicians. It was some months before any real
aid was sent to Olynthos.
In the meanwhile
Philip became alive to the trouble brewing at Athens, and tried to anticipate
their inter- Troubles in vention by providing them
with pressing fostered by business nearer home
(349). We have al- Phiiip. ready seen him in
possession of Pagasai : and from Pagasai was but a few hours' sail to Euboia.
Trouble in Euboia might banish Olynthos from Athenian thoughts. For many years
this unhappy island had been the centre of intrigues and conflicts. Stretching
along the coast for 100 miles from Attica to Thessaly, never able from first to
last to form a united state, it was, by whomsoever held, a standing menace to
some one else. Philip's intrigues in the island had begun even before the
delivery of the First Philippic (351): and now he stirred up a war between
Chalkis and Eretria, in which Athens became involved. This struggle led to a
large expenditure, a considerable expedition, a barren victory, and, as its
only result, political exasperation; the very things which best served Philip's
purpose, as causing embarrassment at Athens.
But at last even
Athens seemed aware of her danger. In 349 she not only intervened in Euboia,
but actually sent a citizen force to Olynthos, which had LaSt days
some success, and averted the ruin of the city °f
Olynthos. for another year. But it was only for a time. In spite
of the efforts which, all too late, the Athenians were now ready to make (and
we know from Demosthenes that Athens helped Olynthos, first and last, with as
many as 4,000 citizens, 10,000 mercenaries, and 50 triremes)—in spite of all,
Philip, by force of arms or corruption, gained step by step first one city,
then another, until Olynthos, the last hope of Hellenic freedom in the north,
stood quite alone, and prepared to fight her last battle for independence with
fruitless despair. Even Athens could now do little to help. The north wind, as
usual, befriended Philip ; and when the reinforcements from the south arrived
it was too late. Olynthos herself had fallen. The gold of Macedon completed
what Athenian remissness had begun. Two cavalry officers betrayed a large part
of their force to the enemy. All heart was taken out of the besieged by the
treason of the Philippizers within. Further resistance was impossible. And then
Conse_ there fell upon Hellas a blow perhaps more <juences of awful than anything in her previous
history. us ^ . A free city of 10,000 inhabitants and thirty-two of
her free allies were so ruthlessly destroyed, that a chance traveller would not
even have been aware of the ruins beneath his feet. They vanished from the
Hellenic world as though they had never been. Still worse was the fate which
befell the inhabitants. They were exiled, or sold into slavery It is pathetic
even now to read of the scene which moved ./Eschines himself to tears, when ' he met a
certain Atrestidas coming from Macedon, and in his train were marching some
thirty women and children; and when he asked in astonishment who the man was,
and the people with him, one of the passers-by answered that they were slaves
from Olynthos, whom Philip had given as a present to his friend Atrestidas.' If
we think of the change for these poor creatures, from the life of free and
happy liberty to slavery and all that slavery involves, we shall realise
better the awful shock which the sack of Olynthos gave to the Hellenic world.
It was not so much that Philip became at once lord of an empire reaching from
the Chersonese to Thermopylai, dominating men's imaginations as Russia
dominates them now j but that it suddenly changed, as it were, the balance of
men's minds (as Russia's conquest of Constantinople might change it now),
blinded their eyes, disturbed their judgment, and turned even honourable
politicians into timid, if not corrupt, worshippers of the rising sun.
Subsequent events can only be read aright in the light of the fall of Olynthos.
CHAPTER VI.
THE PEACE OF PHILOKRATES. FALSA LEGATIO*
THERMOPYLAI IN PHILIP'S HANDS.
In the same year
in which Olynthos fell (347) Thebans called in Philip to help them against
the The Phokians, and to save the
Delphian land from
invite"*
further sacrilege. It is probably true that Philip's in-
they did not realise the result of such an invi- agdnst'the
tation ; but it is also true that they thus took Phokians.
the first step towards the ruin of their own city and the enslavement of
Hellas. Nothing could better have seconded Philip's fast-growing ambition; and
ambition in Philip was ably served by Policy ot diplomatic tact. To divide and
so to engage PhUiP« his enemies singly
was the key to all his policy. His present object was Thermopylai. But in order
to gain Thermopylai it was essential to throw dust in Athenian eyes, and so to
prevent their helping the Phokians to hold the pass against him. Accordingly
all his efforts were bent towards raising possible hopes at Athens, soothing
offended susceptibilities, hinting at possible dangers, gaining possible
friends—in short, towards paralysing Athenian resistance, until resistance
would be useless. What the terror of his name and of the dreadful fate of
Olynthos failed to effect, courteous receptions, winning manners, a magnificent
court, splendid promises, and even more vulgar bribes succeeded in
accomplishing. Secret agents and open friends worked for his cause in every
city in Greece—and not least in Athens. _
■wr A 1 , , * J State of
If we turn to
Athens, on the other hand, we feeling at observe a
marvellous blindness to facts. Of Athens- the Athenians it might be
said with singular truth, i Populus vult decipi; decipiatur ;'
deceived they were by Philip, deceived yet more by their own leaders, and in
each case willingly deceived. They declined to spend money. They declined to
serve in person. They eagerly caught at every pretext for postponing the evil
day, when Philip must be faced and fought.
Troubles seldom
come singly. In 347 the disquieting news of the Theban appeal to Philip reached
Athens, and almost simultaneously envoys appeared Athenian from
Phokis requesting instant aid at Ther- heiprudely mopylai against an expected
Macedonian p^lllfko^ attack. Now Thermopylai was in Athenian at Thermo- eyes what Strasburg is in German or Antwerp py
u in English eyes—the door of the house, the gate of the castle, the
first outpost of defence. To look on at its seizure would be little short of
madness. As five years before, so now all Athens was alarmed, and the Athenian
commander at Oreos in Euboia was ordered to join Phalaikos at the pass without
delay, and to hold it at all risks. The alarm became a panic, when it was found
that Phalaikos, apparently from jealousy, refused to admit their troops, and
had even thrown into prison the Phokian envoys who had solicited aid. What
could it mean ? Was Phalaikos intending to give up the pass, and make terms
with Philip ? And if so, how could they prevent it ? Here was another reason,
if reasons were needed, for peaceful negotiation to avert so great a calamity
from Hellas.
As the idea of
peace was uppermost in Athenian minds, so the word ' peace' had already been
heard in Embassy Athenian Assembly, and the same Philo-
from Athens kratds, who had first dared to utter the word,
about1 ,p now carried a decree that ten envoys should v**0*-
ascertain from Philip's own lips the terms on which he would agree to peace.
-dEschines and Demosthenes were of the number ; and they were accompanied by
Aglaokreon, of Tenedos, representing their allies. Their business was to sound
Philip: and justice requires us to remember, that up to the date of this
embassy, so far as we can judge, each and all of the ambassadors were equally
sincere and equally patriotic. But the success of Philip was already casting a
spell over Hellenic minds : and of those who went to Pella more than one
returned to Athens not only deeply impressed with Philip's geniality and ready
wit, with his wide knowledge and powerful memory, but overawed by his
self-possession and display of strength, or corrupted by his attentions, his
promises, and even by his gold. Timidity and avarice in the ' Philippizers' at
Athens were
henceforth the main difficulty of Athenian patriots.
The envoys
returned about the 1st of March, 346; and at once laid the results of their
mission before the Assembly, together with a letter from Philip Their re- himself; while the synod of allies, having
heard the report of Aglaokreon, agreed to proposals, abide by whatever decision
the Athenians should adopt, recommending however that any Greek city, not there
represented, should have the option of declaring its adhesion within three
months. Philip's letter was couched in the true Philippic vein. He had favours,
he wrote, in store for Athens; indeedhe would have mentioned them
categorically, had he felt sure of the Athenian alliance. Meanwhile, he
proposed as a basis of negotiation that each side should retain all that it
then possessed—which was, in fact, a proposal that Athens should confess
herself defeated. Nevertheless, the highly- coloured reports of the Athenian
envoys disposed the Assembly in Philip's favour; and when the Macedonian
ambassadors arrived, they were received with more than ordinary cordiality, and
found the general current of public opinion running strongly in the direction
which their master wished. Two special meetings of Terms of the
Assembly were held without delay to the peace discuss
the whole question. At the first of {5® a^I? these PhilokratSs again took the
lead, and bi^b^^ proposed a decree only too characteristic of the Athens of the
day. It is no wonder that the charges of treason and corruption have clung to
the names of PhilokratSs and jEschines, when the former proposed and the latter
supported the proposition, that there should be peace and alliance between
Philip and his allies and Athens and her allies, but excluding the Phokians and
the town of Halos in Thessaly, Athenian allies! For what other reason could
this exclusion of long-standing allies have been suggested, save that Philip
wished to have it so ? And for what other reason could statesmen of Athens have
stooped to so base a desertion, save that Philip's wishes, for some strong
motive, outweighed in their minds the dictates of honour ? Demosthenes supported
the motion, but he protested against the exception ; and it appears that his
protest was effectual. The exception had not originated with the Macedonians.
It was not therefore essential to the peace. On the other hand there was no
alternative proposal before the Assembly; and if they were not prepared * to
march down straightway to Peiraieus and go on board ship, and pay war taxes,
and devote the Festival fund to war purposes,' they must vote for the peace as
proposed. The Assembly therefore voted for peace and alliance between Athens
and Philip, but silently struck out the rider about Phokis and Halos, thus
implicitly including them in the list of allies. Nothing was said concerning
the confederate allies and the three months of grace, mentioned above. Six days
afterwards another assembly was convened, that the Athenians might swear to the
treaty in the presence of Philip's ambassadors ; while it was arranged that the
same ten ambassadors who had before represented Athens at Pella, should return
to Macedon and take the oaths of Philip and his allies.
But at this
assembly a critical question at once arose : who were the allies of Athens ?
Was Halos, Difficulties Parmenion, the Macedonian, was be-
with regard sieging when the Athenian ambassadors had of AthensfS passed it on their way to Pella?
Was Ker- Who were soblept£s of the Thrakian
Chersonese, against whom King Philip was about to march in person when the
ambassadors were leaving Pella? Above all were the Phokians ? And to Athens, we must remember, the two last
meant positions of primary importance—the Hellespont, and safety of commerce:
Thermopylai, and safety from attack. Little objection was made to KersobleptSs.
About Halos nothing was said. But the Macedonian ambassadors, in accordance
with their instructions, positively refused to admit the Phokians as parties to
the treaty. And this in the face of the late vote of the Assembly, ruling them False
asser. to be allies ! Was this then to be the rock, on which the coveted
peace was to be wrecked ? and JEs- And what had Philokrates
and his friends to chines- -*lrge in defence of such a proposal ? It
was an embarrassing position, but they were equal to the occasion. It is not
easy to conceive of any motive save self-interest which could have prompted men
in their position, and on such an occasion, to deceive their fellow-countrymen
with assurances which they must have known to be false. Yet they did so,
trading on a presumed acquaintance with the king's real intentions, as men who
had been at Pella and seen him face to face. They declared that ' his present
relations with Thebes and Thessaly would make it ungraceful for him to accept
the Phokians at once as allies. At heart he was the friend of Phokis as of
Athens, and the enemy of Thebes; and when once he obtained peace and was free
to act as he chose, he meant to welcome the Phokians as his allies, and to
humble Thebes, and was even disposed to restore Euboia and, better still, the
lost Oropos (in Boiotia) to Athens.' Here was good news indeed, if true ; and
Athenians in their present mood were so eager to think it true that they did
not stop to think whether it was probable. In reality they were false, and
known to be false. The Assembly shut its eyes to probabilities, and, devoutly
hoping that all would yet be well in the matter of Phokis, agreed to the
Macedonian terms. The oaths were administered to the Athenians and their allies
; and it only remained now for the Athenian ambassadors on The Athe- t^eir t0
obtain Philip's oath as soon
nians swear as might be. It was indeed high time, for
to the peace . ? , .
ofphilo- alarming reports were even now reaching krates. Athens of Macedonian victories in Thrace, and
that Kersobleptes, her ally, was being rapidly stripped of his dominions. For
this again was a further complication. The peace was to date from the day of
its acceptance at Athens. Were these victories of Philip anterior to that date
? If not, was it at all probable that lie would restore what he had won ? or
that, if he refused, the Athenians would at the eleventh hour repudiate the
peace? It was of urgent importance, therefore, that Philip's adhesion should be
obtained with the least possible delay.
It is never an
easy matter to decide disputes as to questions of fact, especially after an
interval of three years. But when a man like Demosthenes delay of is precise in details and dates, and an envoysfin ^Eschines in his reply unmistakably slurs
administer- these precise details, it is hardly wrong to oaths to infer that the former is in the main a cred-
«!!caliedthe *kle witness. (Thesp venal envoys' (Demos- Fa lsa Le- thenes says) f were so dilatory, that
seven days after the vote of the Assembly they were still in Athens, and I had
to obtain a decree of the Senate, bidding us depart at once, and enjoining
Proxenos, the general in Euboia, to convey us wherever Philip might be. But
when—full sorely against their will—we reached Oreos, and had joined Proxenos,
they gave up all idea of a voyage, and made a circuitous journey by land,
taking three and twenty days to reach Macedon. And the whole of the rest of the
time, until Philip arrived' (i.e. twenty- seven days) 'we remained quietly at
Pella.' During these fifty precious days what was the king doing? Again
Demosthenes shall speak for himself. ' In this interval* (he says) 'Philip made
himself master of Doriskos, Thrace, and the castles on the Thracian coast/ in
other words, gained command of the sea-line from the Hebros to the Propontis,
and, in complete disregard of Athens, reduced Kersobleptes. At last he
returned to Pella, master of the situation. Envoys were awaiting him from
Athens, Sparta, Thebes, Euboia, and Phokis—awaiting, it might seem, his fiat as
to their destiny. Whatever were his will it could be done, for a Large army was
massed, ready to march at a moment's notice. His intervention was recfuested as
arbiter in Greek affairs. Thebans and their friends on one side, Phokians and
their allies on the other, clamoured in turn for his help. Even an Athenian
ambassador, in the person of jEschines, was not ashamed to refer to Macedonian
interference in central Greece as a foregone conclusion, and to try to enlist
his sympathies against Thebes. Philip meanwhile was bribing and cajoling,
playing off one against another, exciting hopes, refusing none—until all his
preparations were completed. He then set out on his southward march with a
formidable army, and carried in his train this jealous, bickering mob of
Grecian envoys. At last he reached Pherai and there the Athenian ambassadors
succeeded in administering the oath to Philip and his allies, not mentioning
Kersobleptes, and formally excluding the Phokians. They then returned to
Athens, after an absence of seventy days, bearing also an affectionate letter
from Philip, in which he took on himself all blame for the delay of the
ambassadors.
63
CH. VI.
King Philip was
within three days'march of Thermopylai, and Athens was still dreaming!
Demosthenes was able indeed to alarm the Senate; but the Assembly would not
listen to him, for they were beguiled by the siren promises of ^Eschines 'Don't
be alarmed' (he Ki philip said)c about Thermopylai.
Thebans, not atPherai; Phokians, will shortly feel
Philip's heavy pylaiTn hand. And it is you whom
Philip has pro- mised to befriend. . Euboia shall be yours, and—if I could
speak freely—more besides.' But Philip was playing a dangerous game, and was well
aware on what delicate ground he stood. Force was out of the question at
Thermopylai, for the mere suspicion of violent seizure would probably be the
one thing capable of uniting all Hellas against him. The pass must be won, if
at all, by diplomacy; and at this juncture once Proposal of
more Philokrates played into his hands. He Mtothe1*8
proposed a decree (and Phokians were pre- phokians.
sent, listening doubtless with despairing anxiety to a debate involving their
own fate) that if the Phokians still refused to give up Delphoi to its rightful
possessors, the Amphiktyonic Council, the Athenians should interfere to compel
them to do so. Now, up to this time, the Phokians might well have hoped even
against hope. They had heard repeated assurances, both at Pella and at Athens,
that the Macedonian arms were to be really turned not against them but against
Thebes their enemy. They might well believe that, if the worst came to the
worst, Athens would assuredly not throw them over. But now they could hardly cherish
any further illusion on either point. King Philip was at Phalaikos their doors, and had already summoned Pha- surrenders laikos to surrender Thermopylai; and at such
pviaUo a crisis it was that their old ally Athens pub- Phiiip.
lished what was equivalent to a declaration of war, just when their own
resources of men and money were exhausted. The Phokian envoys left Athens in
despair; and three days afterwards (June 23, 346), Pha- laikos with 10,000 men
had come to terms with Philip. Phalaikos and his troops, and any Phokians who
chose to accompany them, were at liberty to go where they pleased : Phokis and
Thermopylai were placed in Philip's hands. Thus, with no other weapons than a
courteous bearing, empty promises, abundant gold, and a show of force, the king
of Macedon was master of the key of Greece, henceforward a fortress of the
first order, and permanently occupied by a Macedonian garrison.
The immediate results of
Philip's bloodless victory were as stern a warning to Greece as the fate of
Olynthos had been. He at once identified him- Terrible self
with Theban policy. All Boiotia became t0
once more
dependent on Thebes, and even Phokis.. a part of Phokis was
added to her dominion. Phokis herself was irretrievably ruined. Not only was
she excluded from the Amphiktyonic Council and her place taken by King Philip,
but two-and-twenty Phokian towns were entirely dismantled, and their
inhabitants dispersed into petty villages—a disintegration of political unity
similar to that which Rome inflicted on Macedon herself after the fatal battle
of Pydna (B.C. 168). These Phokian villages
were in no case to number more than fifty houses, nor to be nearer to each
other than a furlong. An annual tribute of 50 talents (12,188/.) was to be
paid to the temple at Delphoi until the squandered treasure was fully replaced.
All horses were to be sold, all arms destroyed. Phokians who had taken any part
in the sacrilege became ipso facto accursed, and were
liable to arrest wherever found. Such was the sentence passed on the impious
Phokians by the Amphiktyonic Council, yet far less rigorous than some of its
members had wished to inflict. And of this rigorous sentence the execution was
still more rigorous. Thebans and Thes- salians were not likely to be tender in
their mercies to
Phokians, and
their cruelty was not the less cruel because veiled under the odious mask of
indignation at sacrilege. The wealthier and upper classes fled the country.
Those who could not flee had Theban and Macedonian soldiers quartered upon
them. Children were torn from their jparents, wives from their husbands. Three
years afterwards Demosthenes passed through the country, and declares that the
sight of its utter desolation was heart-rending—houses in ruins, walls
dismantled, the fields lying waste, and the only inhabitants a few old men,
women, and children. 'Our ancestors,' he cries in a burst of indignation,'
could they know what we have done in abandoning faithful allies to so dreadful
a fate, would, with their own hands, take up stones to cast at us!'
The revulsion of
feeling at Athens was proportioned Panic at
t0 greatness of the disappointment. On Athens.
the very day on which the motion of Philo- kratds had been carried, ten envoys
had been nominated to communicate its contents to Philip. But they got no
farther than Chalkis in Euboia. The news from Phokis was too grave to admit of
any further doubt as to his real policy. So one of their number returned with
all haste and laid before the people assembled in Peiraieus his unwelcome and
startling report. It was like the awaking from a pleasant dream to the stern
realities of life. They had been deceived, outwitted, checkmated ; and now they
had to act in the very face of a pressing danger. It was improbable that
Philip himself would wish to attack Athens ; and if he did, it was easy to
guard against a sudden blow (as was indeed done) by bringing in the women and
children from the country and by fortifying the city and Peiraieus; but there
was a serious risk that the various enemies of Athens in the Amphiktyonic body
might force Philip's hand, and compel him to break the newly-ratified peace.
And Athens was in no condition to resist such a combined attack. Great
diplomatic skill therefore was needed at such a juncture to avoid the extremes
of humiliating acquiescence on the one hand, or of imprudent brusqueness on
the other; and it was well for the Athenians that at such a juncture they could
fall back upon the practical wisdom of Demosthenes.
King Philip meanwhile was the central figure in a
scene of festivity and triumph. He had put Contiast an end to the
weary struggle of the Sacred between^ War. He was a leading member of the
f^eposUion Amphiktyonic Council. He was a king, in ®nd theP an age
when kings were becoming fashion- de^jdation able—a man who could will and act
while others were hesitating or quarrelling. He conducted the Pythian festival.
He celebrated his triumph with hecatombs, gorgeous processions, costly
offerings. Like Napoleon after Austerlitz or Jena, he was the observed of all observers,
whether friend or foe—the man who held in the palm of his hand the future and
the fortunes of Greece.
And if there was
one city in Greece more than another whose selfishness and cowardice had made
Philip's course an easy one, that city was Athens. Over the errors of her who
was once i eye' and€ mistress' of Greece we may well draw
the veil of pity and sorrow.
CHAPTER VII.
from the peace of philokrat13s to the battle of chaironeia (346-338).
From the capture of
Amphipolis to the peace of Philo- kratfis Athens had been half at peace and
half at war with King Philip. And now a sham war of ten years a. if. f
was followed by
seven years of a sham peace, the latter equally with the former being a time of
loss and humili- Altered ation to Athens. Philip was
already firmly ggfcion of planted in central Greece, president of the
Amphiktyonic league, and protector of Del- phoi; and as his power increased so
did his ambition expand. But as yet the most important part of Grecce was
independent of him—afraid of his power or only anxious for his aid ; and if he
was to be, as he hoped to be, leader and protector of an Hellenic
confederation, it must be by skilful diplomacy rather than brute force. Open
attack upon Hellenes—and specially upon Athens, the centre of Hellenic
life—must be delayed as long as possible.
Demosthenes
describes the peace of Philokrates as Fresh a Per*0(*
during which Philip was at war with
causes of Athens, but Athens was not at war with Setwsen
Philip—when he reaped at once the fruits of imdSe peace and war. His object
being to isolate" Athenian® Athens, wherever
there was uneasiness in (346-340). Greece, there were his agents and his gold
" secretly or openly at work. - By slow degrees indeed this never-ending
aggressiveness was arousing Athens to a keen sense of danger. Boiotia was now
Theban ; and Thebes was as yet in alliance with Macedon, and not unwilling to
see Athens in difficulties. . It became necessary therefore, however
unpleasant, to maintain permanent garrisons in the frontier forts of Drymos
and Panakton, to command the passes of Kithairon. And not only was the sense of
insidious danger on every frontier thus present to the Athenian mind, but petty
differences were perpetually arising on points where Athenian and Macedonian
interests diverged. A dispute for instance arose with regard to the island of
Halon- nesos, to the N.E. of Euboia, an irritating dispute about
words. Philip
had chastised a certain pirate, whose headquarters were in the island, and with
some show ot • justice had then placed a garrison there, for Athens had clearly failed in her recognised duty of maintaining the
police of the sea. Athens called upon Philip to give back to her her
possession. Philip replied that he would give it gladly,
as a free gift, but could not properly give back what was his own. jEschines
professes to laugh at this quarrel about a word ; but none the less there was a
real question at issue. Again, in 342, Philip was unmasking dangerous designs
on a vital point of the Athenian empire, the Chersonese and Bosporos, as vital
to Athens as Sicily or Africa was in after days to Rome; for Athens was fed to
a great degree by the corn-growing countries of the Euxine. Demosthenes roundly
asserts that no people in the world consumed so much imported corn as the
Athenians; and it has been estimated that one-third of the annual consumption
of Attica, or 1,000,000 medimni (nearly a million and a half bushels) must have
come from outside, and a large proportion of it from the Euxine. It was as
essential therefore to Athens to hold, as it would be desirable in Philip's
eyes to win, the key of this trade—in other words to command the Hellespont and
Propontis. He had an excellent base of operations in the town of Kardia, which
lay within the Chersonese and was ill-affected to Athens; and from thence he
proceeded to encroach upon and appropriate lands belonging to Athenian
settlers. A force of mercenaries was at once sent out by Athens, who executed
reprisals in Thrace, while Philip's troops were engaged in the interior. Angry
remonstrances followed on each side; and matters began to look so serious, that
in 340 Demosthenes was sent as ambassador to Byzantion to counteract Philip's
intrigues, and bring about an alliance equally necessary to each city.
F 2
A sense of
common danger obliterated the memory of the grievances of the Social War (358);
and Byzantion and Perinthos concluded an alliance with Athens. This step was a
grievous disappointment to Philip, which he tried to counterbalance by a sudden
seizure of the two cities ; but in each case he was foiled, and his failure
brought into relief the danger which they had barely escaped.
The bitter
feelings aroused on both sides by this state of things found expression in
contemporary documents. Proof of An extant letter
Philip's 'to the Athenian embittered Senate and people'
sets forth nine indictments feeling. against them, partly
frivolous and partly embarrassing, whose collective weight however might seem
to justify action on his part, if Athens still persisted in refusing
reparation, or (as he suggested) arbitration. Gn the other hand a reference to
the third Philippic of Demosthenes, delivered in 342, or to his so-called
answer to Philip's letter in 340, will show that Philip's policy was diplomatic
in a sense of the word which has often been illustrated in history, since the
fable of the Wolf and Lamb was written. Demosthenes protested against further
delay in preparing for the inevitable struggle for liberty. But it was useless
to hope for energy in others—useless to expect Chalkidians or Megarians to move
in defence of Greece, unless Athenians set the example of self-sacrifice.
Shortly after
midsummer, 340, Athens at last declared war against King Philip. A short
respite was allowed her for preparation by a raid of the king into lions and the country between Mount Haimos and the of
waTby11 Danube in the spring of 339, whence he was Athens returning with many slaves and cattle when
suddenly attacked by a tribe of Thracians, by whom he was defeated, stripped of
his plunder, and himself wounded. The respite was wisely used—thanks to
Demosthenes—in reforming the navy ; a reform, the details of which belong to
Athenian rather than to Macedonian history, but the success of which was so
marked, that, speaking nine years later, when Athens was humbled to the dust by
Philip's greater son, Demosthenes could boast thati under his law no
trierarch had ever been obliged to appeal to the State for relief, or been
thrown into prison by the Naval Board—no trireme had been lost to the city at
sea, or left behind in harbour unable to put out.' Such a boast, made in public
and therefore open to contradiction, speaks well for the efficiency both of
ships and captains ; while it implies that such events were common enough under
the older and less equitable system. About the same time Demosthenes, in
concert with friends like-minded to himself, at iast persuaded the Athenians to
set aside the noxious law which had decreed that all the surplus of the State
income should go to the Theorikon (Festival fund), and that anyone who moved a
different application of it should be put to death. The new law provided that
any surplus should accumulate as a war fund. In this way, and not a moment too
soon, the sinews of war were provided for the fast-approaching struggle. Yet
the difficulties of the position were not so easily removed. There compara- was
still a Macedonian party in Athens, as t^ive diffi-^ in most other Greek
cities—silenced for the Athensand moment, but
watchful, bitter, audacious. There PhUiP* were no experienced
generals to pit against Philip, and it was difficult to find a weak point for
attack in Philip's empire. For a blockade goes but a little way towards ending
a war ; and landings on the coast, without some base of operations, would be
mere temporary inconveniences. Philip, on the other hand, had also
difficulties of his own, in that he could not afford to stir up an
Hellenic war;
while his allies, especially the Thebans, were not
altogether trustworthy, and a direct attack upon Athens would probablyat once
bring about thatvery league which he feared. One coign of vantage, however, he
had. If direct attack was to be avoided, intrigue was always possible. He was
president of the Amphiktyons, and thereby guardian of the national sanctuary.
His agents were everywhere. It was to be their business to find an opportunity
for him to appear in central Greece at the head of an army, so that he might
seem to come as a defender of the god Apollo rather than for aggressive
purposes. Then whoever opposed him would have to • bear the odious part of
seeming to oppose the god. This was the occasion of the Third Sacred War.
At the head of a
deeply-sunk bay in the Corinthian Gtilf lay a small fortified town, Kirrha, the
port of Krissa Causes of and of Delphoi, distant
about seven miles. A Sacred War large
number of Delphian pilgrims came by (.339)' water, and of course landed at Kirrha, which
was therefore
prosperous and wealthy, and an object of envy to its neighbours. So early as
the sixth century B.C. this jealousy had shown itself on
the occasion of the First Sacred War, when Kirrha had been destroyed, and the
whole plain as far as Delphoi had been consecrated to the god—in other words,
pronounced ' incapable for ever of being tilled, planted, or occupied by man,'
But natural laws presently vindicated themselves. Men must eat and have the necessaries
of life, even though land has been consecrated ; and as pilgrims did not cease
to resort to Delphoi, and to come as heretofore by sea, it was found as
impossible to maintain the desolation of Kirrha as it would be to leave in
ruins Djidda, the port of Mecca. Kirrha was rebuilt and reoccupied by Lokrians
of Amphissa—a usurpation which from its convenience was tolerated, if not
condoned. During the Second Sacred
War (356-347)
these Lokrians had been staunch allies ot the Delphians and Thebans against the
Phokians, and had suffered many things at the hands of Philom£los ; it follows
that they were no friends to Athens, the friend ot Phokis and enemy of Thebes.
It was on these longstanding feuds and secret jealousies that Philip worked by
means of his agents.
The Philippizers
in Athens, for the moment defeated, were still dangerous. The war party were
busy with preparations, and, while keeping vigilant watch intrigues in on
Philip's movements,forgot or despisedpos- the Am-^ sible intriguers at Delphoi or
in the Amphik- meeting at tyonic Council Hence their opponents stole ^^ an easy
march upon them, when they succeeded in carrying at Athens the election of
Philippizing representatives to the annual meeting of the council at Delphoi in
339, ./Eschines being one of the four. The Amphiktyons met in February; and
immediately, instigated by the Thebans, the Amphissians made a violent attack
upon the Athenians for impiety in having dedicated afresh at Delphoi, before
the temple was purified, a memorial of the battle of Plataia, in the shape of
shields bearing the names of Persians and Thebans conjointly as defeated there.
Nothing could have suited Philip's purpose better, for it seemed to make
alliance between Athens and Thebes less possible than ever. It happened that
the chairman of the Athenian envoys at Delphoi was taken suddenly ill, and his
duties devolved upon jEschines, who has left us his account of what happened.
The Amphissian speaker (he tells us) was a violent and uneducated fellow, who
not only made this sudden onslaught upon Athens, but vehemently declared that
had the Greeks been wise they would have shut out the Athenians from the temple
itself, as accursed for their alliance with the Phokians. ' I was more angry'
(says iEschines) 'than ever before in
my life . . .
and standing up where I was (for the whole plain of Kirrha lay stretched at our
feet) I pointed out to the Amphiktyons the cultivated plains, the buildings,
the sacred harbour fortified, and asked them how they could hope to pray and sacrifice
acceptably to the gods, when they were forgetting their oaths and conniving Second de- at sacrilege.' The indignation of the council
Ktoha^and was at once diverted from the offending counter- Athenians against the yet more guilty Am-
A^phis-th° phissians ; and next day the whole population sians. 0f
Delphoi, with the sanction of the council,
trooped down to
the sea to burn the accursed buildings . and fill up the harbour. The deed was
done, and the god perhaps appeased. But as they returned the Am- phissians fell
upon them and drove them homewards in undisguised rout. Here was a further
complication, calling for prompt and signal punishment. A second and
extraordinary meeting of the council was summoned at Thermopylai to discuss
this new phase of affairs, and to arrange for the punishment of the now doubly
guilty Amphissians. Meanwhile the deputies were to return to their several
cities, to recount what had happened, and to receive instructions for the
future.
The first
feeling at Athens was one of satisfaction at the vindication of the city by
^Eschines, and a resolve to Extraordi- senc* envoys to extraordinary meeting.
But nary meet- before long, at Athens no
less than at Thebes, Amphikty- there followed a
sense of lurking danger, and omc Council. at e3ich. resolutions
were passed to take no part in the coming meeting. Nevertheless the Amphiktyons
met in the summer of 339 under the presidency of a Thessalian; but it was
practically a packed meeting of Macedonian partisans only. The president was
charged with the duty of punishing the Amphissians. But the half-heartedness of
some and the
corrupt
abstention of others appear to have so effectually prevented success, that by
the time of the usual autumnal meeting nothing had been done, and the council
was obliged to discuss this burning question under a new phase. It was just for
this crisis that Philip's agents had been working and were now prepared. When
the alternative was boldly stated, that the league must either itself take up
the matter more earnestly, or must appoint Philip their general, and let him do
it for them, little hesitation was shown; and the King of Macedon was formally
invited into the heart of Greece to settle Greek affairs by those who were in
reality most interested in keeping him out. Philip, on his part, gladly
accepted an invitation which gave him a legitimate footing south of
Thermopylai, and brought him nearer to his newly- declared enemies the
Athenians (autumn, 339).
He at once collected his forces and marched upon
Thermopylai, as though to punish the wicked Amphis- sians. All Greece was
expectant, and was not long kept in suspense. From the corner of the M general of Maliac Gulf three main roads led
to the interior of Greece; one running due south from Hera- seues kleia to Amphissa
through the defiles between a em* Mounts Parnassus and Korax—the
direct route therefore for Philip, if he desired to carry out honestly the duty
imposed on him. The other two ran at first together through the pass as far as
Skarpheia, and then diverged southeastward along the coast and southward over
Mount Kalli- dromos to Elateia. Philip passed Thermopylai, seized and
garrisoned Nikaia close to Skarpheia, having previously detached a small part
of his army by the first-mentioned road ; and then advancing rapidly through
the mountains halted and formed an intrenched camp at Elateia. It was a strong
position on the southern slope of the mountain side, commanding the plain of
the Kephissos, and
favourable,
therefore, for cavalry—commanding also the road to Boiotia, Thebes, and Athens.
At the same time he could communicate by his right flank with the division
operating against Amphissa, while his retreat in case of need was completely
secured.
This sudden blow
fell like a thunderbolt both at Athens and at Thebes. The long-dissembled war
was Panic at at ^^ doors, and
Philip's intentions stood Athens and confessed. ' It was
evening' (says Demos- ihebes. thenes) 'when the news
arrived of the occupation of Elateia. Hereupon some of the prytaneis arose at once
from supper and began turning out the occupants of the booths in the
market-place, and setting fire to the barriers ; others sent for the generals,
and the whole city was full of confusion.' Next morning at break of day there
was a special session of both Senate and Assembly; yet such was the general
panic that no one had a word of advice to offer. Demosthenes at this moment was
the sheet-anchor of Athenian hopes, and all eyes were turned on him. The most
urgent question was as to the loyalty of Thebes. Was she in league with Philip
? Demosthenes strenuously denied it. Had she been so, Philip would have been
not in Elateia but already on the frontiers of Attica. He was, where he was,
because he wished to embolden his friends and overawe his enemies in Thebes.
The Athenians, therefore, must follow Philip's example, and encourage their
friends in Thebes by a show of force upon the frontiers. They must further send
ten envoys to Thebes, not to haggle about conditions, but to promise nelp
whenever and wherever it might be required.
This advice was
followed, but it was a delicate negotiation for the envoys to conduct. Thebes
was nearer to the danger than was Athens ; and Macedonian envoys were already
on the spot, reminding the Thebans of favours in the past, and hinting at
favours to come.
Thebes, too, had
no special love for Athens. Thanks, however, to the eloquence of Demosthenes,
the offered alliance was accepted. The major part of the An;ance
0f Athenian army joined the Thebans on the Athens and Boiotian
frontier; the rest remained in garrison against at Thebes, which was to be the
base of opera- tions. The command was shared equally by the two allies. Of the
expenses Athens undertook two-thirds. To Philip, on the other hand, the
alliance was seriously embarrassing. He had two foes before him instead of
one—an enemy in Thebes where he had expected an ally.
During the
winter the allies held their own with considerable success. They were
victorious yigourof in two minor engagements, and they achieved the
allies a masterly stroke of policy in restoring the winter e Phokian
emigrants to their homes, and in for- (339-8). tifying some of their towns. Nor
was the alliance against Philip confined to the two cities. The activity of
Demosthenes secured further aid from various allies, amounting (including
Thebans) to an auxiliary force of 15,000 infantry and 2,000 horsemen. But
soldiers without generals are little worth, and, as Phokion was in the
Hellespont, neither Athens nor Thebes had a general worth the name to oppose to
Philip. Manoeuvres The decisive struggle took place in August, Jhefr 338.
Philip was in position at Elateia with object. 30,000
infantry, and not less than 2,000 cavalry. He had already fixed upon his field
of battle, and his immediate tactics were directed to securing it. The allies
lay before him with about equal numbers, occupying the pass through the hills
between the towns of Parapotamii and Chaironeia, which led into Boiotia. His
first object was to gain this pass. Passing along their front, his vanguard
crossed the border, more to the east, plundered some villages, and threatened
the whole country south and east
of the Lake
Kopais. In short their flank was turned, and * Thebes in danger. The allies
were obliged therefore, against their wish, to leave a small garrison in the
pass, and to fall back toward Thebes. This was exactly what the king desired.
His chosen battle-field was the plain of Chaironeia; and to gain it he must
gain the pass. Returning by forced marches, he overpowered the garrison, passed
the defile, and stood master of the Battle of
situation on his chosen ground, the grave, as Marathon was the cradle, of
Hellenic liberty. 338). ' The allies returned
also, and faced him in front of Chaironeia.
The right wing
was held by the Thebans; in the centre were the allied contingents and
mercenaries; on the left and nearest to Chaironeia were the Athenians. Opposite
to them Philip commanded in person ; Philip's son, Alexander, was to attack the
Theban right. The battle began hopefully for the allied forces. While the
Thebans sturdily held their ground against Alexander's vehement charges,
Philip, whether from weakness or design, fell back before the vigour of the
Athenians. ' Let us pursue them' (shouted one of the generals)'even to Macedon
!9 But this boasting was premature. After fighting all the morning,
the brave Thebans were at last overpowered by the superior training and
endurance of their enemies, and died where they fought. Charging over their
bodies Alexander fiercely fell upon the flank of the centre, which gave way at
once ; and having disposed of these he turned yet once more upon the flanks and
rear of the Athenians, who after a too hasty advance were now slowly retreating
before Philip's renewed attack. All indeed was lost save honour. For a short
while making head against overpowering odds, the brave left wing at last broke
and fled, leaving 1,000 dead upon the field, and 2,000 prisoners in the enemy's
hands. The Theban
loss must have
been even greater. Nor was the moral effect of the victory less imposing. It
was a conquest rather than a victory. The army of the allies ceased to exist
There was no thought of any further resistance; and Athens and Thebes must
prepare for the worst—for attack and siege—possibly for ruin.
CHAPTER VIII.
FROM THE BATTLE OF CHAIRONEIA TO THE BEGINNING OF
ALEXANDER'S ASIATIC CAMPAIGNS.
In spite of the
collapse of all their hopes, energetic preparations for defence were made both
at Thebes and at Athens. But there was no more possibility Behjlvjollr
of common action. The latter, indeed, was of Philip
to better off than the former, for she was not a Athens after faithless
ally but an open enemy ; while her £j^ictory prestige was too great
to admit of harsh treatment, and her power (at any rate at sea) still too
formidable to make it safe to drive her to extremities. It was not strange,
therefore, that Philip should have treated Athens with marked leniency, and
Thebes with great harshness—selling his Theban prisoners as slaves, indulging
freely in banishment and confiscations, filling the Kadmeia with Macedonian
troops, establishing a packed oligarchy of 300 of his own partisans, and restoring
npminal autonomy to the smaller Boiotian towns. In his relations to Athens Polybius
insists that Philip's conduct was marked by extraordinary moderation, humanity,
and gentlemanly courtesy. Diodoros tells us, in a very different strain, that
Philip's head was turned by his success, and that he grossly insulted his
Athenian prisoners, until rebuked by one of them, named De- madfis, for playing
the part of Thersites, when fortune had allotted him that of Agamemnon.
Whichever account be true, his final treatment of Athens was unquestionably
lenient.
DemadSs had been
released by Philip—perhaps in compliment to his plain-speaking—and shortly
after his The Peace return home an embassy
(including himself of Demad6s. and ^schines,
and probably Phokion) was sent to the king, to sound his intentions. They found
him, now at any rate, full of courtesy, and ready to make peace on terms, with
one exception, both easy and welcome. He agreed to restore his prisoners, and
to transfer the border town of Oropos from Thebes to Athens. But one condition
was humiliating : Athens must acknowledge the Hegemony of the King of Macedon
m Hellas. In other words, henceforth not Thebes, nor Sparta, nor Athens was to
be recognised chief of Greece, but a barbarous, half-Hellenic king at Pella! It
has been said—and rightly—that the peace of Demades was a renunciation of a
proud historical past, and that with it the connected history of Greece is at
an end. Nevertheless Athens had but little choice in the matter. The terms
were accepted, and the peace concluded. And here we may observe once more the
astuteness of Philip. Not only had he bought his own recognition as the leader
of Greece from the necessities of Athens, but by the price paid—the cession of
Oropos—he had also secured perpetual jealousy between Thebes and Athens.
The progress of
the king's arms was now rapid and
easy. He reduced
Akarnania, and placed a garrison in
„... . Ambrakia.
In the Peloponnesos he had so Philip m _
. , , r, , . . ,
Peiopon- many friends, who counted on his aid against
nesos. Sparta, that he met with little or no resistance. It does not appear
that he actually attacked Sparta itself; but he gratified Messen6, Megalopolis,
Arkadia, and
Argos, by lestoring to them severally the lands which had been torn from them
by Spartan aggression; while he served his own purposes by thus constituting
a number of small communities, all jealous of each other and all equally
feeble. This com- The Con- manding position was further
assured at a g^rinSx general congress of Greek cities held at (337)- Corinth
(337). The king there publicly announced his intention of invading Persia, with
the double purpose of freeing the Asiatic Greeks, and of avenging the invasion
of Xerxes, and was formally accepted by a general vote as Commander-in-chief:
but to some, and most of all to Athens, it must have been gall and wormwood to
find themselves, not only stripped of subject allies, but enrolled along with
them in the common herd of contributory appendages to King Philip. Sparta
alone held aloof, and was spared this humiliation. Preparations were at once
begun, and cairied on throughout the year, for the projected invasion of Asia ;
and in the spring of 336 the first division crossed the Hellespont, under the
command of Parmenion and Attalos, father of Philip's last wife, Kleopatra.
Philip himself was to follow with the main body.
But the king was
destined never to set foot in Asia. In the apparently unchecked career of this
man of strong passions, who had led a joyous, active, master- Assass;na.
ful existence, there was an element of discord tion of and
unhappiness only too common in the pausSniL courts of despots. Philip had
married tofy several wives in succession : and the same jealousies and
intrigues which distract the harem of an eastern sultan, or haunted the court
of a Louis XIV., disturbed also the palace of King Philip. The last favourite
was Kleopatra, and at her solicitation it was that Philip was said to have
repudiated Olympias, the mother of Alexander, who withdrew to her brother's
court in Epeiros. Furious quarrels ensued between father and son, even at the
marriage feast of Kleopatra. Cabals arose within the palace. So uneasy, indeed,
did Philip feel at the prospect of leaving this hotbed of intrigue behind him,
when he went to Asia, that he gave his own daughter in marriage to the brother
of Olympias, to disarm if possible his hostility. This marriage as well as the
birth of a son to Kleopatra were celebrated at Aigai in August, 336, with the
utmost magnificence. It was hoped that banquets and games, and scenic
representations, might not only dazzle the minds of Greek deputies, but
reconcile the jarring feuds of court cliques. But it was a vain hope. There was
present at the feast a young man, Pausanias by name, who had a deadly insult to
avenge upon Attalos, Kleopatra's father, or (in the absence of Attalos) on any
connected with him; for Pausanias had complained to Philip, and with no result
but ridicule. He had already resolved, therefore, to divert his vengeance from
Attalos, who was in Asia, to Philip who had refused redress, when he fell into
the hands of Olympias and her partisans, who artfully whetted his thirst for
revenge, and instigated the deed of blood. On the festal day, by Philip's
express invitation, hundreds were present from all parts of Greece, and so
great was the crush that many flocked to the theatre before daylight to secure
places. There were dubious rumours and curious oracles afloat, as on the fatal
Ides of March, when Caesar fell before the daggers of the Liberators: but
Philip, absorbed in his own greatness, or perhaps careless of danger, proceeded
to the theatre on foot, and even bade his guards fall back, that all might see
how safely he was defended by Hellenic goodwill and affection. At this moment
Pausanias rushed forward, and, drawing out a hidden Keltic sword, plunged it
into the king's side, who fell dead upon the
spot. His guards
and friends were so paralysed with horror, that the assassin almost escaped
their vengeance; but was presently overtaken and slain. It was a moment of
tumult and confusion, when, but for one man's presence of mind, Macedon might
have been plunged into the horrors of civil war. Philip was no sooner seen to
be dead than one of those who had been privy to the plot hastened to salute the
young Alexander as king, helped him to arm, and accompanied him to the palace
—a promptness which anticipated any action on the part of Kleopatra and her
friends. From that moment Alexander was king of Macedon, and the successor to
all his father's power and ambitious plans.
So perished one
of the world's great conquerors, in the 47th year of his age, and the 24th of
his reign— great beyond question, if greatness consists Estimate of in having grand and definite aims, and in
^erand* successfully adapting means to ends. To reign. Macedon,
the reign of Philip was the passage from obscurity to empire, from barbarism to
at least semi- • civilisation. Arrian puts into the lips of Alexander a glowing
eulogy on his father's benefits to his country. From mountain-shepherds clad in
skins, hard pressed by warlike neighbours, he turned them, he said, into
dwellers in cities, with laws and civilised habits. Illyrians, Thra- cians,
Thessalians, he reduced to subjection. He added to the kingdom seaports and
mines. Phokians, Thebans, Athenians he humbled, and set in order the affairs
of the Peloponnese. Lastly, ' he was appointed Supreme Commander of United
Greece for the invasion of Persia, and thus attached glory not so much to
himself as to the whole of the Macedonian people.' Philip was great, but by no
means of a fine or heroic nature. Judged by the moral standard of Greecc, he
was not so much immoral as devoid of moral sense altogether. To
A. If. G
gain his ends
all means were alike—bribery, flattery, cruelty, reckless promises, audacious
perjury. He had wives and mistresses on an almost Eastern scale. His court was
the resort of good-for-nothing adventurers; his bodyguard was a corps in which
no decent man could live. And yet it was something that a character &o un-
governed should have been willing to endure so much for glory and power, and
have been capable of even winning sympathy and admiration—that a man so violent
should have preferred mild measures to strong, and have been sometimes (as in
the case of Athens) generous and forbearing. He was pre-eminently fortunate both
in his life and in his death. He fell upon times of confusion in Greece, when
there was no able general, no leading city, no patriot army to oppose him. He
died at a moment apparently premature, but in reality peculiarly happy, when
the difficulties had been overcome with which his genius was most fitted to
cope. To gain diplomatic triumphs, by fair means or by foul, was as congenial
to Philip's character as the forced march or the din of battle was to
Alexander's.
A great man was
succeeded by a yet greater son— one who ascended the throne before he was
twenty, and Early yean died at the age of
thirty-two. The history of t£n UCa~ heroes is the history of youth,
it has been Alexander, said, and Alexander
displayed not a few of the qualities which the world agrees to call heroic. It
would be premature to dwell at length upon the character and exploits which are
to develope themselves in the following pages ; yet as Alexander resembled
Napoleon and many another great man in the fact, that extraordinary success
spoiled a really great character, it will be well to touch briefly on some of
the stories which have come down to us of his early years, his habits, and his
education. He was the son of the impetuous, fanatical Olympias, ch. viii. Childhood of A lexander. 83
a fact which
itself explains half the eccentricities and violent deeds of which he was
guilty when his head was turned by adulation. Three successive messengers on
one day (it was said) brought his father Philip the good news, that Parmenion
had defeated the Illyrians, that his horse had been victorious at Olympia, and
that his wife had given birth to a son. From early years the boy showed signs
of a marked individuality, which was trained and cultivated by the best
teachers of the day—notably, from the age of thirteen to sixteen, by the famous
Aristotle, from whom he gained a special taste for medical science and natural
history, and a general liking for knowledge of all sorts. He was an adept in
music, and when only eleven years old played the lyre in public before the
Athenian ambassadors, who were at Pella in 346. Of books he loved the Iliad
best, even keeping a copy by his side at night with his sword, and of all the
characters he admired most that of Achilles. If he surpassed his compeers in general
intelligence, he was not less manly than they, but loved hunting and fencing,
and was so bold a rider as to manage even the spirited Boukephalos (Bucephalus)
whom no man before had dared to ride. Indeed he had the tenderness for animals
characteristic of all fine natures, loving dog and horse as faithful friends.
Plutarch even asserts that when Boukephalos once fell into the hands of a tribe
on the shores of the Caspian, Alexander was inconsolable, threatening fire and
sword and utter extermination unless his favourite were restored; and that he
called a city by his name, when he died of fatigue after the battle with Poros.
In person Alexander was of a fair and ruddy complexion, and of middle height;
he had bright, expressive eyes, and a strange trick of holding his head on one
side, which his generals and courtiers imitated. His temper, if hot, was
generous, and found expression in g 2 remarks and
repartees—often wise, sometimes witty, always frank. It is perhaps more
remarkable that, considering who he was and the atmosphere in which he lived,
his life was singularly pure and simple, and that in circumstances of more than
ordinary temptation his treatment of women was considerate and even chivalrous.
To those around him he was, with rare exceptions, a constant and liberal
friend; and many a story is told of his magnanimous self-control both towards
his enemies and his soldiers, graphic enough to account for the admiring
affection which they often showed. On the whole we gather the idea of a young
man, superior to his father both in character and abilities, frank, passionate,
ambitious, yet singularly self-restrained; and all the more shall we lament,
therefore, the downward progress of such a youth into a manhood disfigured by
acts of cruelty and by excessive vanity.
On his
proclamation, as king Alexander's first act was to issue an address to his
Macedonian subjects, Alexander promising to maintain
the dignity of the king- poSi w dom and to follow, out the Asiatic plans of his
ting, father Philip. This was necessary,
to satisfy
the statesmen
and soldiers, who might be contrasting the youth and inexperience of the son
with the experience and long success of the father. His next step may have
appeared not less necessary, from the point of view of a successor to a
disputed inheritance, whose mother had been repudiated, and whose half-brother
and male relations either had better claims than himself to the throne, or
thought to make them appear better. Not only were all the associates of
Pausanias in his father's murder but two put to death, but Amyntas, his first
cousin, and Kleopatra, his stepmother, with her infant son and Attalos her
father, were by Alexander's orders or with his connivancy put out of the wayr
ch. vm. Royal progress. 85
His position as
king being thus assured, Alexander set out three months after his father's
murder with an army of 30,000 men to make a progress through ^ then Greece,
and to assert his supremacy there, makes a Indeed
the loyalty of Hellas was more than through doubtful. Thanksgiving had been
openly Grecce* offered at Athens for the death of Philip. Anti-
Macedonian sentiments were everywhere heard in Pelo- ponnesos. All such
expressions, however, were discreetly hushed as soon as the king appeared. The
Amphiktyonic League named him, as they had named his father before him, leader
of Greece; and a conciliatory embassy from Athens endeavoured by apologies to
dispel the memory of recent indiscretions. After this a second congress was
held at Corinth, at which all Greek states again were represented, excepting
Sparta. A second time a king of Macedon was recognised as head of Greece, whom
each city was bound to obey, while the cities were severally to be independent
each of the other, and each was to retain its existing constitution. On paper
it was a fair enough arrangement; but beneath the smooth exterior a deep
irritation was smouldering, which it needed but a spark to set in a blaze.
At this juncture it was (March, 335) that Alexander
was lost to the sight of the Greek world for five months. He was anxious to
secure the submission of HJs ^^ his restless neighbours on the north
and west— oaign in the Thracians, Triballians,
Illyrians—before setting (m^ t0 out on his distant
march to the East; and to August secure it he must show
himself in force among 335 ' them. It was an expedition which fully
served its purpose, and at the same time brought into relief the military
genius of the great conqueror—specially his dashing audacity, his fertility of
resource, his rapidity of movement. Starting from Amphipolis, he forced a
difficult
pass of Mount
Haimos, and attacked and defeated the Triballians. He crossed the Istros
(Danube) almost out of bravado; and, recrossing it, executed a rapid march to
the westward through Paionia and by the rivers Axios and Erigon into the
country of the Illyrians, whom in the face of superior numbers he
out-manoeuvred, surprised, and defeated. If originality may be defined as the
power of striking out new thoughts at the right moment, nothing could have been
more original than his device for baffling the Thracians of Mount Haimos. They
had collected a number of chariots, or waggons, intending to launch them into
the dense mass of the Macedonian phalanx as it approached, and so to make their
own attack easier. Alexander ordered his men to open out their ranks wherever
it was possible and let the waggons through, but if not, to lie flat upon the
ground with their shields interlaced and slanted over their bodies, so that the
chariots should run over and bound off them. Thus not a single Macedonian was
killed. It was a piece of audacity to cross the greatest of rivers without a
bridge and in the face of an enemy, the Getai, 4,000 strong: yet he
accomplished it under cover of night by aid of canoes and rafts, and without
the loss of a man. It showed not a little fertility of resource to extricate an
army from a narrow gorge, where in some places only four men could march
abreast, in the teeth of superior numbers, and then to turn upon them in the
dead of night and inflict a crushing defeat And the general who displayed this
audacity, resource, and originality was only twenty years old.
Meanwhile no
news of Alexander reached Greece. No one knew where he was or what he was
doing. Presently rumours were rife of disasters and reverses; improved before
long into authoritative statements that he was dead. In truth, the wish was
father to the thought. Nevertheless such rumours were highly dangerous to
Macedonian interests amid the general discontent of Greece. Of all Greeks, Revolt of perhaps, the Thebans were the most ill-dis-
J!uing his posed to Macedon, suffering, as they did, from absence, the constant surveillance of a foreign garrison
in the Kad- meia. As, forty-four years before, when a Spartan force had seized
the citadel, so now there were exiles from Thebes in Athens, where they were
encouraged by Athenian orators and subsidised by Athenian money. When reports
of Alexander's death were bruited about and generally believed, these exiles
conceived the design, which Pelopidas had devised and carried out, of recovering
Thebes and of ejecting the Macedonian garrison—a design warmly seconded by
Demosthenes and his friends. Accordingly they marched unexpectedly, and being
welcomed by their partisans, seized the town, and summoned the garrison in the
Kadmeia to surrender—a demand scornfully refused. Simultaneously they sent
deputies to Peloponnesos, imploring immediate help both in men and money for
what was essentially the cause of Hellas. But Greeks had almost forgotten how
to act in concert. Sympathy was to be had in abundance. Promises might be
bought not to help the Macedonians. The Arkadians actually sent troops as far
as the Isthmua Even the Athenians were over-persuaded by Demadgs and Phokion to
wait until rumour was confirmed before they committed themselves. Thus the
favourable moment was again let slip, when the passes into Greece might have
been barred against the invader; and the Thebans were left to shift for
themselves. Nothing daunted, they proclaimed themselves independent of Macedon,
and drew lines of circumvallation round the garrison in the citadel, hoping to
starve them out. Suddenly, like a thunderbolt, while they were yet dreaming of
fair weather and recovered freedom, Alexander was upon them. Hurried news had
reached him of the Theban rising, while he Sudden was
west Mount Skardos; and, aware return of
of the gravity of the crisis, without a thought Alexander. of
rest for himself or his troops, or of returning
first to Pella, he started at once on a forced march of thirteen days for
Boiotia. Following the valley of the river Haliakmon, he crossed the Kambounian
ridge on the seventh day and reached the town of Pelinna; thence in six days he
traversed Thessaly, passed Thermopylai, hurried by Elateia, and was first heard
of by the astounded Greeks as present in force at Onchestos, a few miles from
Thebes. He moved up at once to the city and established his camp to the
southward, in order to cut off all access to or from Athens, and to open communications
with the Kadmeian garrison. After waiting a day or two, in hopes of their
submission, he issued a proclamation demanding the surrender of the anti-
Macedonian leaders, and inviting any Thebans who pleased to join him. The
Thebans rejoined with a counter-proclamation, demanding the surrender of two of
his generals, and inviting all who would assist the Great King and the Thebans
in freeing the Greeks, and overthrowing the Tyrant of Greece, to join them at
once. This was in fact to draw the sword and throw away the scabbard. Nothing
remained but to fight it out to the bitter end. The city was assaulted and at
last taken, after a desperate resistance which contested every inch of ground.
Five hundred Macedonians were said to have fallen and 6000 Thebans, while no
less than 30,000 men, women, and children were taken prisoners. The question at
once arose as to what was to be done with the city and the captives. Nominally
the decision was left by Alexander to the Phokians, Plataians, and other Greek
auxiliaries, the bitterest foes of the Theban name. But it is obvious that in
reality it must have been known to coincide with Alexander's wishes, and that
his wish was to bring home to the mind of every Fall and Greek
citizen a terrible example of the conse- J^J^11 quences of
disloyalty to Macedon. That de- (335X cision was a fearful one. Thebes was to
be razed to the ground; her territory was to be distributed among the Boiotian
towns ; the prisoners were to be sold as slaves, excepting only priests and
priestesses and personal friends of Macedonians ; and all Theban fugitives were
to be outlawed. It was an unimportant addition that Orchomenos and Plataia
were to be rebuilt; that a Macedonian garrison was to be permanently quartered
in the Kad- meia; and that the house of Pindar was to be spared. Arrian's
account, the tone of which is certainly truthful, represents the whole
transaction from first to last as unexpected, the result of accident rather
than calculation, and makes the revengeful fury of Phokians and Boiotians more
responsible for the tragedy than the policy of Alexander. Taken at the worst,
and viewed merely as an act of policy, we may set it side by side with the
massacres of Drogheda and Wexford (1649), or the devastation of the
Palatinate (1688), and say that Alexander's was a venial deed compared with
the deliberate cruelties of a Cromwell and a Louis XIV.
All further
opposition at once collapsed. Arkadians, Eleians, jEtolians, vied in their
protestations of loyalty; while Athens which three short years before
Submission had fought for freedom at Chaironeia, now ofGreccc- sank
so low as to congratulate a king of Macedon on his safe return from the north
and on his destruction of Thebes; and she owed it to the intervention of a
Demad6s that she was excused from the necessity of giving up ten of her most
prominent citizens to the vengeance of Alexander.
From Thebes the
victorious king repaired to Corinth to preside over another synod, and to fix
the contingents Prepare- vari°us cities for his Asiatic campaign
;
tjonsfor and thence returned by way of D&phoi to campaign Pella, never to set foot again in Hellas. The (315-4)- winter (335-4) was spent in preparations, the
army for Asia being massed in early spring, in the district between Pella and
Amphipolis. Antipater was left as governor of Macedon during the king's
absence, with a force of 12,000 infantry and 1,500 cavalry, to maintain order
there, and to keep down, if necessary, the cities of Greece,
CHAPTER IX.
alexander in asia minor.
The empire, which
Alexander was about to attack, was the greatest in the world—the greatest which
the Contrast world had ever seen. Hellas itself to the
extenfsuS* sout^ Kambounian
range was but
the weak- little larger than Portugal; while the empire
Pereianhe Danus Codomannus did not fall far short empire. 0f the extent of modern Europe. From
the Sahara to the Indus, from the Caspian Sea to the Persian Gulf, all nations
were subject to the Great King, who could place a million of men in the field,
and had often overrun provinces larger than Greece in a single campaign. To
resist his will, and much more to invade his kingdom, might seem like madness.
But the appearance of strength belied the reality. From the days of the first
Darius to those of the third luxury and corruption, bloodshed and revolt, had
been sapping the strength of the empire. The sinews of war were still abundant;
and, among the multitude of subject races, in- dividual nations were brave, and
even formidable. But the organization was defective, and the tactics and arms
were antiquated; while the natural leader of the army was too often a spoiled
child, with a spirit softened in the harem and a judgment blinded by adulation.
Of course no one could have foreseen the issue of the campaign ; yet it is
certain that some Greeks had already formed a shrewd estimate of the real
strength of the empire; and even seventy years before, Xenophon had observed
that the vast distances, and the consequent isolation, of the imperial forces
were a source of weakness.
There was hardly a corner of this vast dominion to
which Alexander did not penetrate: its capitals, with their rock-hewn tombs and
marvellous palaces; Iu its wide plateaus, its fertilising rivers,
its ggjjjkj^ loftiest mountain passes. It will be well, chauac- therefore, at the outset to gain a general idea tcristics'
of the countries whose inhabitants he visited or reduced, and so to apprehend
more clearly the objects at which he aimed, and the difficulties in die way of
his attaining them.
The first thing
to observe in the physical configuration of the empire is the relatively great
extent of desert and plateau, and the way in which they split piateau of it up into thin strips and isolated patches
of Iran- population. The teeming thousands of the Nile valley, and
the Euphrates, and the Indus, were sundered from each other by vast tracts of
uninhabitable rock and sand, and by a journey of several months' duration. The
most remarkable of these plateaus was the table-land of Aria (Iran), rising
more than 3,000 feet above the sea, and forming one link in the great chain of
desert which runs from the west of Africa to the frontiers of China. It is
itself only the southern portion of a yet vaster desert, arid and barren, which
stretches in unbroken monotony from the Indian Ocean far to the north of the
Sea of Aral—unbroken save by the narrow strip of valley and mountain which cuts
it at right angles in the middle. For at this point Mount Tauros (Elburz),
after skirting the Caspian, runs eastward to meet the Paropanisan mountains
(Hindu Kiish) in three or four parallel ranges, which average 200 miles in
breadth, while the fertile plains which lie between them form the natural route
of traveller or army from west to east. To the northeast of this plateau, as
well as between it and the Indus, lay a considerable population (in modern
Afghanistan and Turkestan), who were Persian subjects, but whose connexion with
the empire must have always been precarious.
Again, we may
change our point of view, and regard this plateau in a way altogether
different. Its general Continuous direction is from
south-east to north-west, grBSS where the greatest length is 1,100 miles; the Egean. but at both the north-eastern and northwestern
corners it communicates immediately, in the former case with the higher
table-land bf Central Asia, in the latter with the lower plateau of Asia Minor
through the mountains and uplands of Armenia. From the western borders of
Phrygia, where the uplands sink into the fertile valleys of Ionia, to the
tangled mountain systems of Arachosia (Afghanistan), there is continuous
highland, whose fertility varies inversely with its elevation above the sea,
from the abundant corn and flocks of Kappadokia to the utter absence of all
life, whether animal or vegetable, in the loose red sands of Aria, or
Khorasmia,' a country the image of death.' From end to end, moreover, this
plateau, whether elevated or low, has one pervading characteristic. It is
bordered on every side by mountain ranges, in Pontus as in Karmania, in Kilikia
as in Hyrkania, which slope more or less abruptly on the outer side, and have a
comparatively narrow fringe of habitable country at their base.
Once more we may
change our point of view, and remark that, rich as was the empire in every
sort of produce, this richness was confined within narrow and The four well-defined
limits, especially to the valleys great river of the four great rivers. Take
out of the empire the upper waters of the Oxus and the Indus, and the basins of
the Euphrates and the Nile, and a glance at the map will show that we have
taken away its fairest and most prolific regions. In the ^^ higher courses of
both the Indus and the Oxus irrigation still produces great fertility; but in
the case of the latter there is satisfactory evidence to show, not only that
the valley was fertile enough to support a large population, as it does now,
but also that a valuable trade was carried on by that route between India and
the Euxine, the goods passing down the river, and by its western mouth now dry,
ihto the Caspian, and thence by way of the river Cyrus (Kur) to Phasis. The ^ Indu^
valley of the Indus resembles that of the Oxus, not only in the fact of the two
rivers being almost exactly of the same length, 1,860 miles, but because the
upper course of each is made up of numerous tributaries that help to fertilise
a wide district. On the other hand, there is no comparison between the
tributaries of the Oxus and the five rivers whicn make the beauty and the
fertility of the Punjab. The desert, it is true, is near at hand; but the
bounteous rivers and laborious irrigation make the plain rich, wherever the
rivers flow, with corn, and rice, and fruits; and the people are among the
noblest of India.
But, though the
valleys of the Indus and Oxus were sufficiently rich, they were as nothing
compared to Babylonia or Egypt, the 'gifts' of the Euphrates and the Nile.
Herodotus tells of the rare barley crops of Babylonia, never returning less
than two hundredfold. The Eu- date palms were unparalleled elsewhere,
phrates # And this fertility was due to the abounding
and Tigns. streams 0f Euphrates and Tigris,
converging slowly through more than 1,000 miles of level country, and diffusing
their superabundant waters by innumerable canals. Nor is this less true of the
Nile ■n*®1**1*- valley.
Hardly more than 600 miles of the river's course was within the limits of the
Persian empire, but that was the richest part. The annual inundations and
subsequent irrigation secured a marvellous' return, so that three crops in a
year were not uncommon; and the river itself was in those days, as it still is,
the high road of a great commerce with central Africa, These four great river
basins were sources of vast wealth and power to the ruler who controlled them,
whoever he might be; and we have probably here a satisfactory clue to
Alexander's seemingly erratic course. He would make himself master of the great
centres of life in the empire, one by one—first the Nile, then the Euphrates,
then the Oxus, and last the Indus—reducing all alike to subjection first, that
he might afterwards concentrate, regulate, and combine. The route which he
followed from one river basin to another will find its explanation in the
description given above of the deserts and plateaus in his way.
Lastly, the
resources of the empire were as. various Resources aS *tS PeoP*es
^^ climate, and so boundless of the
in both men and money, that had there empire.
been an organizing brain, or a strong will at the head of affairs, its powers
of offence and defence would have been equally irresistible. As it was, the
vigour was gone; and the vast fabric, Externally so formidable, was ready to
fall to pieces at a touch.
The Great King
was for the most part a tyrant or a cipher. The satraps were either too strong
or not strong enough—too strong to be loyal to the central government; too weak
to offer successful resistance to an invader. In the field the Persian tactics
were altogether out of date, for by these numbers were always presumed to be
more than a match for discipline. Strategy there was none, the game of war
consisting merely in finding the enemy and trampling him under foot. Moreover,
a Persian army was ill-assorted : some nations were warlike, others were
cowards; some were well-armed, others the reverse. Even the best were armed
less well than the enemy whom they were about to meet The rifled gun is not
more superior to the un- rifled than was the Greek spear to the Persian, the
latter having only seven feet of length against the ten, or in the sarissa, the
twenty, feet of the former. In short, the component parts of the Persian host
were armed according to local habits or ancient tradition, not with a view to
efficiency; and a Persian army was little better than a fortuitous concourse of
atoms. A Macedonian army, on the other hand, was a finished machine, each part
devised to supplement another, each arm equipped with a view to its special
purpose. Hence disparity of numbers ceased to be of any importance ; and we are
the less surprised to read of the calmness with which a Macedonian army would
march to attack a Persian host ten times its own size, and of the terrible
carnage among the latter which always followed defeat
With this
immense empire Greeks had been repeatedly in contact since the days of Xerxes,
especially in Asia Minor and Egypt. Greeks had helped Cyrus the Younger to
fight the battle of Cunaxa (B.C. 401), and had been
strong enough to make a treaty with the Great King(B.c
387). Greeks had been mixed up with the revolt of Egypt from Persia, and had
fought on both sides when it was reduced to subjection (B.C.
346). A Greek Contid of of Rhodes, Memnon by name, for his services Greeks with on that occasion, had been rewarded with a Persians. satrapy in Asia Minor. In short, Greeks were
admitted behind the scenes, and were awaking to a sense of their own strength
and of the weakness of Persia. At this crisis it was that a man of genius and
energy arose on the horizon of Greek politics, who had the means at his
disposal for attacking Persia, as well as the will to use them. That
Alexander's career changed the whole current of subsequent history is certain :
but it is impossible not to regret, in his case as in Hannibal's, the silence
and stupidity of some who accompanied him all the way from the Hellespont to
Babylon, and who might have told us how far that career was shaped or foreseen
by Alexander himself, what opinions he expressed beforehand on the chances of
the conflict, and what end precisely he had in view, as opposition ceased and
half Asia was at his feet Gossip has handed down to us isolated expressions,
and a few chance conversations ; but our judgment of the man rests only on his
deeds, uninterrupted by any thought or word of his own.
Alexander
crossed the Hellespont in the spring of 334, just eleven years before his
death, with a force of Alexander 30,000 infantry and 5,000 cavalry ; leaving crosses the Antipater to maintain the peace of Hellas and
IT _ 11 •mAnt
and vwts Macedonia in his absence. The actual cross- iiion.
jng was superintended by Parmenion; while the king with a
few companions crossed lower down the strait for the purpose of visiting Ilion.
To his susceptible mind, familiar with Homer from his earliest days, such a
visit would be a pilgrimage at once of duty and of pleasure; and when he took
down the arms hanging in the temple of Athene, or visited the barrow of the
Hellenic
Achilles, it was probably with feelings of exaltation, which may have been
confused, but were certainly genuine. This pious duty fulfilled, he joined the
army once more at ArisbS, and directed its march towards Priapos, along the
lowlands lying between the mountains and the sea, throwing out light cavalry as
he advanced to feel for the enemy.
Meanwhile the
Persian leaders were divided as to what was best to be done. They were three in
council: SpithridatSs, satrap of Lydia, Arsites, satrap Counsels of Phrygia, and Memnon the Rhodian, high ^Jhteactics
in favour at court for his services in the Egyp- Persians, tian war twelve years before. The counsel of
the latter was bold and original. He proposed to avoid giving battle as long as
possible, retreating and ravaging the country; while the fleet in superior
force should make a diversion in the rear, land troops in Macedon, and open
communications with disaffected Greek cities. The plan might have saved the
Persian Empire, and was easy of execution ; but it was overruled. The two
satraps were jealous of Memnon ; and, having the command of some 20,000 Greek
mercenaries and 20,000 Asiatic cavalry, they believed themselves a match for
Alexander, and desired to end the struggle at once. They resolved, therefore,
to occupy the right bank of the Granikos and to dispute the passage of the
river, being aware of its extreme difficulty from the depth of the water here
and there, from the numerous holes, and from the height and steepness of the
banks. The crossing in itself was clearly no easy task, or Alexander's best
general Parmenion would not have advised that it should be deferred for a day.
But the king's judgment was against him. Delay before such a tiny brook would
only discourage his own troops and encourage the Persians. Immediate action was
the right thing; an4 the event proved that it was sg.
K * p
Alexander, as
usual, commanded the right wing, and Parmenion the left—an arrangement which
was speedily Battle of observed by the enemy across
the river, from the Grani- the splendour of the king's
armour and the kos* respectful
courtesy of his suite. Accordingly
they at once
increased the depth of the squadrons on their left flank. For a while there was
silence as the two armies on either bank stood confronting one another, dimly
conscious perhaps of the great issues staked upon that day's battle. Then
Alexander leaped upon his horse, and calling on those around him to show their'
courage, bade Ptolemy lead the advance with a squadron of cavalry and a
division of the phalanx, while he himself, at the head of the extreme right,
plunged into the river, the men shouting, and the trumpets sounding the charge.
Both the left and right wings appear to have crossed the river obliquely to the
course of the main body, partly to avoid the holes in the river bed, partly to
reach the * opposite bank as much as possible in line, and so escape exposing
the flanks of columns to the charge of the enemy's swarms of cavalry. As they
neared the opposite bank the Macedonians met with a warm reception. Where the
ground was higher than the river, the Persian cavalry kept up a constant shower
of javelins from above ; where it was on the river level, there they advanced
even into the river itself and barred the way in superior numbers, so that many
of the Macedonians were cut down at once on coming within sword's reach, and
all were for the moment confused, being annoyed by the enemy's missiles and
finding great difficulty in keeping their own footing. But when they came to
close quarters the action became a trial of strength, each side pushing
desperately against the other; and ere long weight and physical strength,
discipline and tenacity, won the victory, even on these unequal terms, over men
of
light frame and
inferior resolution, less stoutly armed. Hence it was not long before the whole
Macedonian line had emerged from the river, and was establishing itself in the
teeth of obstinate resistance on the banks above. But the fiercest fighting was
round the king himself, on the .ving where the best of the Persian troops were
posted, and where most of the leaders had gathered, as if to the turning point
of the battle. The reckless courage of Alexander often led him into peril and
hair-breadth escapes; but never perhaps but once was he in such instant peril
of death as in this cavalry skirmish, which opened his campaigns in Asia. His
spear broke in his hand at the first onset Turning to a groom he asked for
another; but this man was already in the same plight as the king, and was
reduced to fightingas best he could with the butt At last a Corinthian supplied
him with another. At this moment Mithridatfis, a son-in-law of Darius, was
advancing to the charge at the head of a wedge-shaped squadron of cavalry.
Alexander dashed out from his own line to meet him, smote him in the face, and
brought him to the ground. At the same instant he was assailed by another
general, who aimed a sweeping blow with his scimitar at the king's head, and
broke off a piece of his helmet. Alexander retaliated with a javelin thrust,
which pierced corslet and breastbone, and laid his assailant low ; but, while
thus engaged in front, he was himself in imminent danger from behind ; for
Spithridates, at the instant of his friend's fall, had raised his sword to aim
a blow at the king's now only half-defended head. But there were quick eyes and
strong arms around. A timely and dexterous sabre-cut from Kleitos, Alexander's
foster-brother, averted the danger, severing the Persian's sword-arm at the
shoulder. Every moment brought to the king's side a fresh accession of strength
from those who had succeeded in forcing the passage, so that the enemy
H 2
were more and
more hardly pressed on their left flank and centre, until they broke before the
pressure, and gave way at all points, in a headlong rout, leaving 1,000 dead
upon the field. Their loss was comparatively trifling; for there was but little
pursuit of the broken cavalry, Alexander recalling his troops to join in the
attack upon the mercenaries. The battle so far had apparently been as short as
it was brilliant: for these mercenaries were still in the position which they
had occupied at first, and were now paralysed with astonishment at the
unexpected turn of events, and rapidly becoming demoralised by the sight of
their comrades' defeat. Thus, troubled and irresolute, they found themselves
suddenly surrounded, and that by foes whose prowess was known to them not only
from the witness of their own eyes, but from their memory of what Macedonians
had done in recent times. They were defeated even before they were attacked.
Assailed in front and flank and rear, they speedily became a mere huddling
mass of men with arms in their hands, and were butchered where they stood, only
2,000 being made prisoners, and of the rest not a man escaping, save a few
lucky ones who were overlooked among the Results
of dead bodies. It was a brilliant victory, and the battle. won at slight cost The
Persians had lost not only half their force of 40,000 men, and an extraordinary
proportion of superior officers, but prestige as well. There were no more
troops in Asia Minor to bring into the field—indeed no force existed except
some isolated garrisons, and after the fall of Halikarnassos resistance in that
quarter ceased. On the other hand the Macedonian losses are said to have been
so slight as to amount to no more than twenty-five of the Companion cavalry,
who fell at the first onset, about sixty of the other cavalry and thirty
infantry soldiers, or less than 120 in all: a small price to pay for such
immense results. They were buried with all military honours, the twenty-five
Companions even receiving the extraordinary compliment of brazen statues,
carved by Lysippos, and set up in their honour at Dion.
The wives and
children of those who had fallen received the substantial boon of a remission
of all taxation and of personal service. The wounded Alexander's were treated with signal
marks of favour, the ^ hisprl-
king visiting them in person, and in kindly soners. conversation giving each
man the flattering opportunity of telling his own story and recounting his own
deeds. All his Greek prisoners Alexander sent in chains to Macedon, to be kept
to hard labour. In his eyes they were guilty of treason for taking up arms
against their rightful leader. On the other hand he strove to gain increased
interest and sympathy for his cause in Greece by
sending to Athens 300 suits of armour as an offering to AthgnS, with an
inscription stating that they were taken by Alexander, son of Philip, and by
the Greeks (excepting the Lakedaimonians) from the barbarians who dwell in
Asia.
The effects of
the victory of the Granikos were seen at once in the surrender of Sardis and
Ephesus, as soon as the king appeared before them—a submis- Reduction sion of great value while
the Persians were masters of the Egean; for at present his main Asia Minor, danger arose from the
possible acceptance of Memnon's plan, and from insurrection and invasion across
the sea. 11 was, therefore, of primary importance to secure the adhesion of the
Asiatic Greeks, and by so doing to shut out the Persians from the harbours of
Asia Minor. Mil£tos indeed attempted a brief resistance, being encouraged by
the presence of a Persian fleet of 400 sail at Mykalfc. Alexander, however, had
seized the island of Lad6; moored his fleet of 160 ships so as to bar ingress
and egress; and, having made a practicable breach in the wall, stormed the town
in the face of a languid resistance. There remained one strong fortress in
those parts, Hali- karnassos, where the Persians had collected all their forces
for a serious defence, and where Memnon was in chief command. Alexander
therefore resolved to send away his fleet, which was at once expensive and
numerically weak, and to direct all his efforts to the capture of that city,
as a step to driving the Persians from Asia Minor.
CHAPTER X.
FROM THE SIEGE OF HALIKARNASSOS TO THE BATTLE OF
ISSOS.
103
CH. X.
11ALIKARNASSOS was the strongest city of Karia. Built on the side
of a precipitous rock sloping steeply to the Prepara- southward and to the sea,
it was doubly de- HaTiuirnas- ^ensible from the possession of two
citadels, sos for the chief one
lying at the northern and defence. highest point
of the city. On the eastern face of the hill can still be traced remains of the
famous tomb built by Queen Artemisia in memory of her husband Mausolos. There
were two good harbours, the larger and safer lying to the north, its entrance
being at once sheltered and protected by a fortified island. The whole city was
surrounded with walls, and strengthened further by a ditch, 45 feet broad and
more than 20 feet deep. Moreover the preparations for defence were on a scale
adequate to the strength and importance of the place. The Persian fleet had
been brought up from MykalS. Besides native troops, there was a considerable
garrison of Greek mercenaries under an Athenian, Ephialtes; and the guiding
spirit of the defence was Memnon, a man as versatile as he was brave.
A.
The citadel, Salmakis. C. Great Harbour.
B.
Citadel No. 2. D.
Gate of Mylasa.
E. Mausoleum.
The siege of
Halikarnassos was the most arduous task which Alexander had as yet had to face.
Before he
actually began the operations of the siege, he took care to render the attack
as easy as possible, and to secure his communications by conciliat- siege and ing the nearer Greek towns
with freedom Jh£dty°f and special immunities; while he won the
(334)- goodwill of the Karians by restoring the kingdom to Ada, the popular
representative of their ancient line of kings. He then sat down before the
city, about half a mile from the walls. At first the proceedings on both sides
were desultory. One or two sallies of the besieged were repulsed with ease; and
a night attack of Alexander's on the neighbouring town of Myndos was foiled.
But
thenceforward both the attack and defence became serious. To get at the walls
with battering engines, it was first necessary to fill up the ditch; and this
was done by the soldiers under cover of three movable penthouses. The rams were
then brought up, and ere long two towers with the intermediate extent of wall
had yielded to the incessant shocks, and were in ruins. Meanwhile the besieged
made repeated sallies, and busied themselves in raising a thick wall of brick
in the shape of a crescent behind the city wall, and abutting on it at each
end, 4n case, as actually happened, a breach were made. Before the wall was
finished, however, the breach was practicable; and an attack was inadvertently
brought on by the drunken frolic of two Macedonian soldiers, who, to settle a
disputed question as to their comparative valour, donned their armour, and
boldly set out to storm the town alone. A few who saw them coming ran out to
attack them; but these they slew, and proceeded to throw their javelins at
others more distant Presently the first amazement of either side gave place to
excitement; and hurried reinforcements, two or three at a time, joined the two
reckless Macedonians as well as their opponents. The fight became general. The
besiegers after a struggle drove back the besieged behind their walls, and (so
great was the confusion) might probably have captured the city, then and
there, had the assault been intentional and well-supported. As it was, the
half-moon was finished before Alexander was ready to deliver the attack.
Moreover, when the engines were moved up, the troops, being thus as it were
within the circle of the city walls, were exposed to a harassing cross fire in
front and on both flanks, while the sallies of the enemy became more desperate
and impetuous. Gradually, however, the attack, directed by Alexander in person,
began to overpower the defence, and the Persian commanders held a council ol war.
The end was clearly approaching. What was to be done? Ephialt£s was urgent that
they should not tamely surrender but at least make one more effort for
victory, and by persistence obtained the consent of Memnon to his heading one
more desperate sally. Two thousand men were chosen. Half he armed with torches
to set fire to the engines; half he drew up in a deep column to charge the
enemy. At daybreak all the gates were thrown open, and the sallying parties
dashed out Some of the engines were soon in flames, while EphialtSs and his
column steadily pressed onwards, overpowering all resistance and even putting
some of the younger soldiers to flight But the efforts of Alexander presently
rallied them; and yet more the disciplined courage of the veteran reserves,
who, taunting them with cowardice, fell into the ranks of their own accord with
a coolness learnt on many a battle-field, and soon checked and eventually swept
back again their already triumphant assailants, EphialtSs being one of the
first to fall. The loss of the besieged in this sally was heavy; and Memnon and
his colleagues, aware that they could not hold out much longer, resolved to
evacuate the city. Under cover of night they set fire to the engines and
magazines, and carried off the stores and troops and some of the inhabitants,
partly to the upper citadel, partly to adjacent islands. Alexander razed the
city to the ground; and left 3,000 infantry and 200 cavalry with Queen Ada to
blockade and reduce the citadel while he himself pursued his march eastward.
Having detached
Parmenion with the cavalry and baggage to meet him in the spring in Phrygia, he
himself led the rest of his army through Lykia and Pam- phylia, Pisidia and
Phryeia. to Gordion in Bithynia. At first sight this seems a strangely circuitous
route for a
man whose next
object was to reach Syria; nor is it Alexander's
likely that a man like Alexander would go so
circuitous far out 0f his way merely
to reach better route to 33 ,
Gordion, winter-quarters, or to escape the difficulties of reasons for western
Kilikia. Two things were of primary .
importance at
this time. To protect the Greeks
of the coast
from annoyance in his absence at the hands
of the satraps
of the interior, and to secure his own
communications
with Macedon. It was a wise step,
therefore, to
make a display of his power, and to exact
if it were only
a passing submission in the highlands of
Phrygia and
Kappadokia; while the position of Gordion
would facilitate
rapid overland communication with the
west, as well as
a ready control of the satraps to the
north and east.
Here he was joined once more by
Parmenion and by
reinforcements from Greece, to the
number of 3,000
infantry and 650 cavalry. Here, too,
The cutting before he turned his face southward, he cut the
of the Gor- famous Gordian knot. In the citadel of the dian knot. , - , v
town (so runs
the tale) was a waggon, m which, once upon a time, when the people were at
strife, a certain Midas with his father and mother had entered the place. Now
it had been revealed to the Gordians that a waggon would bring them a king, who
should allay their strife. So they laid hands on Midas and made him king ; the
waggon was dedicated in the Akro- polis, and a further oracle declared that
whoever should loose the pole from the yoke was destined to be lord of Asia.
Now the knot that tied it was of cornel bark, and had seemingly neither end nor
beginning. But for the omen's sake, and for the comfort of his friends, it was
needful that Alexander should do the deed ; so he went to the citadel and
loosed the pole, either cutting the knot with his sword, or pulling out the
peg. At any rate the conditions of the oracle were satisfied, and a thunder-
storm the following night rendered assurance doubly sure.
From Gordion he
marched to Ankyra, and then straight for Mount Tauros and the Kilikian Gates.
The folly of the Persians in disregarding Mem- The march non's
advice, and in neglecting to occupy in J?®t^or' force so
defensible a pass, is incredible, es- Tarsos. pecially
when we remember that, not seventy years before, Cyrus the Younger had
traversed it on an errand similar to Alexander's, and that Xenophon, who was in
his train, calls it a carriage-road, impassable in the face of an opposing force.
In one place there was no more room than for four armed men abreast A
resistance, possibly successful, might there have been made to invasion, which
was attempted to no purpose at Issos, especially as Alexander had not, like
Cyrus, a fleet with which to make a diversion in the rear. As it was, the
Persians in their supineness seem hardly to have been aware of the king's
approach. The scanty garrison of the pass fled at once without a blow. Scarcely
able to credit his good fortune, Alexander marched without a day's delay into
Kilikia, only to find that the satrap Arsam6s also had fled, and that Tarsos
was his—a place then important as a great commercial centre, and since famous
as the home of the Apostle Paul, and the burial-place of the Emperor Julian. It
was near being famous also as the burial- place of Alexander himself. Having
bathed Alexander's incautiously in the cold waters of the Kydnos magnani- when his blood was heated by his recent ment of exertions and forced marches, he was seized PhiliPP0S- with fever, and
presently was dangerously ilL The physicians were quite baffled. One alone, an
Akarnanian named Philippos, undertook to give the king a medicine which would
certainly cure him. Meanwhile a letter reached Alexander from Parmenion, warning
him to .
beware of
Philippos; as a rumour was abroad that he had been bribed by Darius to poison
him. As yet the hero was untainted by success, and was as generously above
suspicion as he was chivalrously above fear. Having read the letter, he held it
in his hand ; and when Philippos appeared, gave it to him as he handed him the
cup. Then, as Philippos read, he drained the cup to the dregs.
It is difficult
to conceive of a more apt illustration of the virtue of high-mindedness, as
conceived by the Greeks and described by Aristotle, which indeed (he says) is
impossible without goodness and beauty of character.
After
celebrating his recovery by solemn sacrifices and games to Asklepios
(^Esculapius), the king set out on The
Pass of his eastward march to find Darius, of whose K^kiaet30
approach with a vast hosthe had already heard. SyriaeX The Macedonian army
converged by different ioutes upon Issos, where the sick and wounded were left
behind; and then marched southward through the Kilikian Gates, reaching Myriandros
on the third day after leaving Issos. The bay and plain, called after the
last-named place, are formed by the two diverging arms of Mount Amanos, a
southern offshoot of Mount Tauros ; the bay running some 50 miles inland and
having an average breadth of 25 miles. Its importance has been recognised from
very early times, for the best and most natural route from Asia Minor to Syria
and Mesopotamia runs round the head of the bay, and then passes along the
narrow defile between the mountains and the sea, turning near Myriandros to the
south-east, and passing over Mount Amanos by the Syrian Gates (or Beilan pass)
to Antioch on the south, and to Thapsakos, the ford of the Euphrates, on the
east In parts the mountains approach very closely to the sea ; hence the pass
is very easily defensible, and is the exact spot which a general would choose
who had to contend with an enemy superior in numbers, but inferior in
discipline and courage. On the other hand the folly of Darius in not defending
so strong a position, which, like the Kilikian Gates of Mount Tauros, might
have been made practically impregnable, was as fatal as the pride
which led him
and others to slight the advice of Memnon while he was alive, and to exchange
his policy of defence for offence as soon as he was dead. The Great King had
collected a vast host of 400,000 infantry, and 100,000 cavalry ; but the
Athenian Charidemos (like Demaratos, the Spartan, in the days of Xerxes),
warned him that these numbers were delusive, and worthless against the enemy
whom he was marching to attack The warning cost Chari- demos his life, and the
neglect of it cost Darius his throne.
While Alexander
was in the defile of Issos, Darius was encamped in the Syrian plain, about two
days' Darius march from
Mount Amanos. He had brought ftfount his vast army, his courtiers, his harem,
as for Amanos to a triumphal
progress : and now that his rash issos. enemy, as he vainly imagined, was
skulking
behind the
mountains, or lying sick at Tarsos, he would go and find him out So the huge
array, which had taken five days to cross the Euphrates, slowly made its way by
the Amanian Gates over the mountain ridge (the heavy baggage and treasure being
sent to Damascus), and came down upon Issos only two days after Alexander had
left it on his southward march. It was a singular chance which thus led two
enemies, each in search of the other, to march on nearly parallel lines but in
opposite directions, and to be so near without knowing it. At Issos were found
the sick and wounded of the Macedonian army, whom Darius was persuaded by his
courtiers to torture and put to death; after which he turned south- Prepara- ward in pursuit of his
foe, and encamped on
both sides ^ "ver Pinaros, where
the
for the e plain is only from two to three miles in
breadth, battle. Darius therefore could bring
no more than 90,000 troops into line of battle. The king would scarcely believe
the good news, when told that the Persians were actually within reach; and sent
off some of the Companions in a fifty-oared galley to reconnoitre and bring
him back word. They soon returned with the tidings that Darius was close at
hand. Alexander at once assembled his officers, and addressed them in words
which were clearly intended to serve as the text for each officer's address to
his own division. They had every reason (he urged) for good hope. They and he
had fought together before, and always with success. They were about to fight
now with men whom they had conquered, and to whom they were as superior as
warrior freemen always must be to unwarlike slaves. Moreover, it was Alexander
pitted against Darius; and the prize was the empire of Asia. He reminded each
man by name of his former brilliant deeds—of the rewards now within his grasp—of
the great things which Xenophon had done on a similar scene, but with vastly
inferior means—and at last roused them to such enthusiasm that they begged him
to advance at once. Sending forward a few cavalry and bowmen to feel for the
enemy, and having offered sacrifice, he set out after the evening meal, and by
midnight reached the narrowest part of the pass—the Kilikian Gates—where he
halted for the night At dawn he advanced once more, in column, until the pass
widened as the mountains receded from the sea; here he deployed his troops into
line of battle, and again moved forward in the usual order into the plain of
the river Pinaros. Darius, meanwhile, had made his preparations, and they were
such as by no means to encourage his men ; being rather those of one who
expects not to attack but to be attacked, and who has a lurking distrust of
himself. He posted 20,000 men in the mountains in the rear of Alexander's right
flank. These, had they been worth anything, might have paralysed the Macedonian
advance, or charged at a decisive moment on his rear. As it was, their real
merit was soon discovered; for at the first charge of some troops whom
Alexander detached for the service, they retired to higher ground and were
actually held in check during the rest of the battle by a mere handful of 300
horsemen. The interval of about two miles between the mountains and the sea
Darius occupied with a continuous mass of heavy-armed infantry—30,000 Greek
mercenaries in the centre, and on their flanks troops called Kardakes (or
Asiatics armed as hoplites) to the number of 60,000. The line of troops
followed the line of the river bank, which in parts was precipitous and, where
it was not so steep, was defended by intrenchments. The mass of the Persian
cavalry was on the right wing in advance of the Kardakes. Of the actual 500,000
men present, there was thus room for no more than 120,000 to fight, the residue
being massed on the plain in the rear, by tribes and nations. Well might
Alexander exclaim that heaven itself was fighting on his side, when Darius had
been prompted to entangle his overwhelming numbers in so narrow a space! Well
might he believe the Persians to be cowed in spirit, and already as good as
defeated, when he saw their preparations, not so much tor delivering a blow, or
trampling the audacious invader under foot, as for resisting his attack as best
they might.
He advanced with
the phalanx in six divisions, with the Hypaspists and Macedonian cavalry on the
right Battle of wing under his
own command, and the Pelo- (November ponnesian and
Thessalian cavalry on the left 333). under Parmenion. His idea of the battle
was,
as actually
happened, that the right wing under his command should charge the Persian
left, and drive it off the field, and then fall upon the flank of the centre,
which would be occupied in front with resisting the impact of the phalanx. The
approach to the river was conducted slowly, so as to maintain the order of the
ranks, the king all the while riding up and down along the lines and encouraging
both officers and men, who answered him with cheers. Presently they came within
bowshot of the enemy, and the Persian arrows began to fall among them thickly.
Like Miltiades at Marathon, Alexander gave immediate orders for the charge at
the double, that his men might be
exposed to the galling fire for a? short a time as possible; and setting spurs
to his horse dashed into the river at the head of the Hypaspists, charging
furiously into the Asiatic troops opposite to him. Ill prepared and little
accustomed to such stress of war as this, they began to falter and give ground
almost from the moment of attack ; and presently, overborne by the tremendous
energy of their assailants, they yielded to the pressure, broke, and fled.
Alexander pursued them far enough to ensure their utter rout, and then returned
to the relief of his centre, against which the Greek mercenaries of the
Persian host were maintaining a fierce and not wholly unsuccessful struggle.
Alexander's own rapid advance had made a gap in his array, and left his phalanx
a little behind him ; and as they pressed hurriedly into the water and surged
up against the opposite bank, it was with ill-dressed ranks and a wavering
line, while their right flank was open to attack. Such disorderly advance was fatal
to the full efficiency of the phalanx; and the Greeks opposed to them were
quite aware of it, and were eager to win the honour of defeating them in fair
fight for the first time. A desperate struggle ensued for the possession of the
bank ; while on the flank between them and the sea an encounter no less
desperate was going on between the Thessalian cavalry and the main body of the
Persian horse, who had crossed the river to attack them. At this juncture
Alexander, having driven the Persian left wing off the field, fell suddenly and
furiously on the left flank of the Greeks, who were already engaged with the
phalanx in front, and threw them into utter confusion. Even then the
resistance might have been stouter than it was, had not Darius himself despaired
of success, and with craven timidity set the example of flight. As soon as his
left wing was broken and scattered, fearing that his own sacred person in the
centre was no longer safe, he leaped on his chariot, just as he was, and fled A. //. I away along the plain with a
few of his suite. To an army like the Persian such an example was disastrous,
and the flight of the Great King became the signal that all was lost And all
was lost, indeed, beyond recall. The Greeks, attacked on two sides at once,
wavered and then gave ground, and at last broke up into a seething mass of
struggling men; while the cavalry beyond the river, seeing what was going on
behind them, hastily recrossed it, hotly pursued by the Thessalians, and strove
to make good their own retreat, jostling and trampling on one another in their
panic, and even riding down their own infantry. The whole length of the narrow
plain from the Pinaros to Issos was now one scene of indescribable horror and
confusion, the great multitude that had never struck a blow helping to swell
the vast tide of terror-stricken fugitives. The slaughter was prodigious, and
not only by the sword. The plain was in some places narrower than others, and
here and there were watercourses, where the crush and pressure were so terrific
that hundreds appear to have been suffocated, and Ptolemy, who himself took
part in the pursuit, avers that he crossed a ravine by aid of the dead bodies
with which it was choked. Of the cavalry 10,000 are said to have perished, and
100,000 of the infantry; 4,000 fugitives succeeded in reaching Thapsakos and
crossing the Euphrates ; 8,000 of the Greeks actually fought their way through
the Macedonian army, and marching down to Tripolis seized some Phoenician
transports, and crossed the sea first to Cyprus and eventually to Egypt. But
with these trifling exceptions the rest of the vast host disappears from sight.
Only after the lapse of two years could Darius gather another army wherewith to
meet his enemy, and that was raised almost wholly from countries east of the
Euphrates. The Macedonian loss was returned c.t 300 foot and 150 horse soldiers
slain, and about 500 wounded. Alexander himself was slightly injured in the
thigh by a sword thrust.
The pursuit was
continued as long as the brief light of a November day allowed. Darius himself
escaped; but his wife and sister and mother, his young ^^ son and two
daughters, his tent and chariot, quences of his
shield and bow, together with 3,000 talents ^ victory- of money,
fell into the conqueror's hands. If we remember what the ideas of those days
were with regard to prisoners of war, it will seem to be no small part of
Alexander's glory that he treated these ladies from first to last with
unvarying courtesy and respect.
When he returned
from the pursuit, the king found that the Persian camp had already been
plundered by his soldiers; but the royal tent, and perfumed bath, and the royal
banquet had been carefully reserved for his use—luxuries to which hitherto he
had been a stranger, and which possibly occasioned the sarcastic remark, quoted
by Plutarch, that this apparently was what was meant by being a king. The next
day he celebrated his victory on the spot, erecting altars on the Pinaros to
Zeus, Heraklgs, and Athen6; and sent Parmenion forward, with some Thessalian
cavalry, to seize whatever treasure was to be found in Damascus. Its amount and
varied character must have been almost embarrassing, for we are told that he
became master not only of the military chest, but of a great number of Persian
nobles and ladies of the highest rank, and of camp followers of every sort and
description to the amazing number of 30,000. Such it was, it seems, to be a
conqueror.
IS
CHAPTER XI.
FROM THE BATTLE OF ISSOS TO THE BATTLE OF
GAUGAMELA.
The victory of
Issos not only gave Alexander practically the command of Asia west of the
Euphrates, but Reasons for relieved him of
much anxiety as to any al- ofVhanida ^ance between Greeks and
Persians in his and Egypt, rear. That alliance
had been a possible and even threatening danger, and it was with a view to
guard against its recurrence in the future that Alexander directed his next
attack against Phoenicia and Egypt, the homes and recruiting-ground of the
Persian fleet, rather than against Babylon or Persepolis.
From the
Pinaros, Alexander retraced his steps as far as Myriandros, and then, crossing
the Syrian Gates, followed the valley of the Orontes to Arados and Marathos,
which, like Byblos and Sidon immediately afterwards, welcomed with acclamation
the conqueror of Persia.
At Marathos the
king gave audience to two envoys from Darius himself. They were bearers of a
letter of Alexander remonstrance at Alexander's
unprovoked gives audi- attack, and of a request
that he would send voy^ from" back his wife, mother, and children. The Danus. king's answer was characteristic, and revealed
the larger views that were now occupying his mind. After adducing a number of
grievances, of which Greeks in general and he himself in particular had to
complain, he repeated in other words what he had already said to the mother of
Darius, that the contest between them was for the empire of Asia. He bade the
Great King come to his presence, as to one who was master of all Asia. (And
in future' (he adds),(when thou sendest to me, send as to the King
of Asia, and write not as an equal, and speak, if thou requirest aught, as to
one who is lord of all thy possessions. If not, I will take counsel against
thee as a wrongdoer. And if thou hast aught to object in the matter of the
royal power, await my coming and do not flee, but try the issue of battle. I
will come to thee wherever thou art.' These lofty words have to our ears an
arrogant ring, but they defined exactly the relative position of the two men.
From Sidon
Alexander proceeded towards Tyre, hoping to find as cordial a welcome as he had
just experienced in the northern cities. He was considera- met
by an embassy with valuable presents, and with promises on the part of their
city to treatment of do all that the king
desired. The king's theTyrians. answer was that he desired to enter Tyre, and
to sacrifice to the Tyrian Herakles. The ambassadors replied, in the name of
the city, that they would gladly accede to whatever else the king might wish,
but that they could not admit any man, whether Persian or Macedonian, within
their walls. But the king (they added) could sacrifice equally well at Palai
Tyros, the old town, on the mainland, where was a temple of HeraklSs, more
ancient and more venerable than their own. Alexander was deeply offended by
their refusal, and at once called a council of war, at which it was resolved
that, however difficult the siege might be, it was a task which could not
safely be declined. It has been said that impatient pride on the king's part
prompted this resolution ; but his own speech to his officers in council
suggests three or four weighty reasons for the step, which amply justify it The
wording of the Tyrian refusal gave the impression of * trimming/ and of their
wishing to remain neutral in a contest which seemed as yet undecided. Could
Alexander safely leave behind him, unreduced, those who were either secret
enemies, or at best lukewarm friends ? The Phoenician fleet in Egean waters was
his greatest source of danger; but if Phoenicia were reduced, that fleet would
be his. In that case the submission of Cyprus would be certain ; and, with
Cyprus and Phoenicia as the base of operations, the conquest of Egypt would be
no less certain. Then, and not till then, would it be possible to feel secure
of Greece, and to turn his face resolutely towards Babylon. But everything
depended on that first link in the chain— the complete reduction of Phoenicia.
So great a military genius as Alexander, living amid his own ideas and not
ours, could hardly be expected to admit such considerations as that Tyrians
wished to remain neutral, or were ' an ancient and intelligent community,' or
fancied their position impregnable. It was an essential part of his policy that
Phoenicia and Egypt should be wrested from Persia, and completely subdued.
119
CH. XL
The city of Tyre
(Tsur, Stir, the Rock) was built partly on the mainland, partly on a rocky
island, twenty-four miles Description south of Sidon.
This island was nearly three of Tyre.
miles in circumference, and separated from the continent by an arm of the sea
seven-tenths of a mile in breadth, which was comparatively shallow near the
mainland, but three fathoms deep off the island. The line of coast seems to
have altered considerably from time to time, owing to the silting of sand and
to volcanic agencies; so that part of the island on the western side is now
submerged, ruins of columns being still visible below the water, while the
channel between it and the mainland, which is now one-third of a mile across,
was in Strabo's time (about the Christian era) entirely blocked by an isthmus
of sand, resting on the ruins of Alexander's mole. The city had two harbours,
to the north and south of the island respectively, protected by sea-walls ; and
the southern which was the more exposed was defended further by an immense
breakwater, thirty-five feet thick, and now covered with six or eight feet of
water. These harbours were connected by a canal running across the island, the
outline of which is still traceable. All round the city ran a wall, which
opposite the mainland rose to the stupendous height of 150 feet. Within this
comparatively limited area, it has been supposed that the population must in
Alexander's day have amounted to nearly 50,000; but the narrowness of the area
was compensated by the immense number of stories in which the houses
A.
North (Sidonian) harbour.
B.
South (Egyptian) harbour.
C.
Supposed extent of north har
bour.
D.
Canal connecting harbours.
E.
Submarine breakwater.
F.
Double sea-wall, too feet apart.
G.
Ruins of harbour-wall, 25 feet
broad.
H.
Alexander's mole
a.
Line of coast in Strabo's day.
b.
Old Tyre.
were built,
reminding us of the ' insulae' at Rome or of the vast piles crowded within the
fortifications of some foreign town.
The Tyrians were
masters of the sea, and Alexander had no fleet. It was necessary, therefore, in
order to reach the city at all, to run a mole across the channel, by which the
engines might be brought to bear upon the walL At first the work was easy
enough. There were stones in plenty at Old Tyre, abundance of timber was Siege of t0 be had on Lebanon, and the piles were Tyro sunk without difficulty in the soft sand
and
December mud. But the further the
work was carried the to
July). more difficult it became : for the water grew deeper, and the Tyrian
men-of-war could sail up from either harbour and molest the men at work, who
ere long came also within range from the walls. When the Macedonian engineers
erected mantlets and two wooden towers on the mole to protect their workers,
the Tyrians were equal to this emergency also. They prepared a fire-ship, and
having waited for a wind steered her skilfully, so as to set alight the towers
and everything inflammable within reach; the men on board the ships meanwhile
kept up an incessant shower of darts and arrows, while volunteers from the
city, pushing off in any boat that came to hand, eagerly joined in the work of
destruction, pulling up palisades and helping to spread the fire. Most of the
engines and a large part of the mole were thus destroyed, and the destruction
was completed by a storm. Alexander, however, nothing daunted, at once set to
work to construct more engines, and to build another mole, broader than the
first, and carried obliquely across the channel in a south-west direction to
escape the force of the waves. At the same time it was clear that his task was
doubly difficult while the Tyrians were masters of the sea. Accordingly,
leaving his engineers to cany on the mole, he took some picked troops and marched
to Sidon, to collect as large a fleet as possible. Here the wisdom of his
policy in first reducing Phoenicia became evident at once, for he found there
the fleets of Sidon and Byblos and Arados, which had left the Persian side as
soon as they heard of the adhesion of
their native towns to Alexander, as well as ships from Rhodes, and Lykia, and
Cyprus, and 4,000 mercenaries from Peloponnesos.
He thus returned to Tyre with a fleet of more than 200 sail, and so formidable
from its equipment and the skill of the sailors, that the Tyrians gave up all
idea of fighting them, and merely blocked the entrances of the ports with a
tightly-packed row of triremes. The fleet, however, was useful to Alexander,
not more from giving him the command of the sea, than because the larger ships
could carry engines and so multiply his means of offence. But even this was at
first useless, for the Tyrians had thrown great stones into the sea to bar the
approach, and their divers cut the cables of any ships that were moored there
to pick them up. Next they organized and cleverly carried out a surprise, which
was near proving fatal to the Cyprian ships on the north side of the mole.
Getting ready a squadron of thirteen vessels behind a screen of sails set up
for the purpose, at mid-day, when the Cyprian crews were ashore reposing in the
shade, they sent them out silently and suddenly in single file to charge and
destroy whatever they could reach. The surprise was complete. Alexander hastily
manned a few ships, which he sent off at once to stop more from sailing out of
the north harbour, and pushed off himself, with some half-dozen others, to
round the island and help the Cyprians. The scene soon became exciting.
Alexander's little squadron was straining every nerve to reach the scene of
action, while the inhabitants, who were lining the walls of their city,
suddenly became aware of the danger of their own vessels, now busily engaged in
the work of destruction. At first they shouted to attract their attention, but
the din on shore drowned the shouts. Then they signalled them to come back, but
it was too late, for, as they strove to regain the harbour, Alexander was upon
them ; a few ships escaped, but the majority were damaged and waterlogged,
while two were captured at the very mouth of the harbour.
The failure of
this gallant effort was the beginning of the end. The strength of the wall
indeed resisted the Fail of the engines
for awhile, and the struggle became city. daily
more bitter, the inhabitants even going
so far as to
kill some prisoners on the walls in the sight of the besiegers, and toss their
bodies into the sea. But at last a breach was battered in the wall on the south
side of the city, and three days afterwards Alexander took advantage of a calm
to deliver the assault, which he led in person, while a simultaneous attack was
made on both harbours. The resistance was desperate, but vain. The assaulting
party made good their footing at the breach, and gradually fought their way to
the king's palace, while the harbours were forced and the ships sunk or driven
ashore. The slaughter was merciless, for the Macedonians were exasperated by
the length of the siege, and the slaughter of their comrades on the wall; so
that 8,000 perished in the struggle at the breach and in the streets, while
30,000 are said to have been captured and sold as slaves. One author asserts
that several thousand were carried off into safety by Sidonian triremes, of
course with Alexander's connivance. The Macedonian losses during the siege are
stated at the quite impossible total of 400, considering that it lasted nine
months, and that there was very severe fighting from first to last Be that as
it may, there can be no doubt that the fall of the first city of Phoenicia was
worth to Alexander whatever time, or money, or lives it may have cost.
Before the siege
was concluded the king had already second
em rece*ved a second embassy from
Darius, offer- bassy
from" ing such splendid terms of alliance that, at Danus. the council where they
were discussed, Par- menion declared that if he were Alexander he should accept
them. ' So should I,' rejoined Alexander, ' if I were Parmenion.' These terms
were, the payment of 10,000 talents as the ransom for his family, the cession
of all provinces west of the Euphrates, and the hand of his daughter in
marriage. But, however tempting these offers might be to the older man, who
would not perhaps be sorry to return home, they had no attraction for the
younger, who had schemes of an ever-widening ambition in his head, and was
brimful of restless energy. Alexander replied almost exactly as before. These
things which Darius offered were his already. Let Darius come and see him if he
had anything to ask. Then the Great King (we are told) abandoned embassies as
useless, and set about preparing for war. It was indeed time ; for during the
summer of 332, and while Alexander was besieging Tyre, his admirals in the
Egean, relieved by the sudden withdrawal of the Phoenician contingents, had
driven the Persian fleet from those waters, had recovered Chios and the other
islands, and had taken prisoner Pharnabazos, the Persian, with all his forces.
Thus Persian influence in the Egean was destroyed ; and when Alexander had
reduced Egypt (as he would clearly do with ease) he would at once be free to
attack the heart of the empire.
From Tyre the
king marched southward towards Egypt; but he did not actually reach that
country until quite the end of the year, being detained Alexander more
than three months before the fortress of at Gaza and Gaza. It is needless to dwell on the details
Jerusalem- of a siege, where operations were carried out similar to
those at Tyre and Halikarnassos. The place was exceptionally strong from the
height of the artificial mound on which it stood, and of the walls which
surrounded it, and it was under the command of a man of exceptional resolution.
But Alexander was resolute also. In spite of a desperate resistance the place
was taken, every man falling where he stood, and the women and children were
sold as slaves. At this point it was, if we may believe Josephus, that the king
retraced his steps, and visited Jerusalem, intending to punish the Jews for
refusing him aid in the siege of Tyre; but was moved from his purpose by the
high-priest, Jaddua, who, being warned of God in a dream, went boldly with the
priests to meet the king outside the city. Like Attila before Leo the Roman
pontiff, Alexander was awestruck before Jaddua, and bowed down before him ; and
when Parmenion asked him why he did so, he declared that he had seen in a dream
in Macedon, before he started, a figure like Jaddua's, which had promised to go
before his army, and to give him dominion over the Persians. Then he entered
the city and the temple, and offered sacrifice under Jaddua's direction,
bestowing both on priests and people whatever favours they chose to ask.
At last the king
was able to pu/sue his way to Egypt, and seven days after passing Gaza reached
Pelusium. He arrives A willing submission awaited
him on the part in Egypt. 0f the
Egyptians, who had suffered many things from their Persian masters. From
Pelusium he marched to Memphis, and was there joined by the fleet; and thence,
after sacrificing to the god Apis and celebrating gymnastic games, he dropped
down the river to the mouth of the western arm of the Delta, and, after sailing
round the Mareotic lake, landed on the narrow neck of land separating it from
the Mediterranean, Foundation w^iere
stooc* a little village called Rhakotis. cf°Aiiexan0-n The place had long
been a haunt of Greek drm (332X and Phoenician
pirates, particularly because the roadstead was sheltered from the Etesian
winds by the island of Pharos, and was the only refuge along the coast for many
miles. Alexander's eye seems to have been caught at once by the possibilities
of the place, and he began surveying and drawing plans without delay. The first
and most important thing was to take advantage of the shelter of the island for
constructing a harbour at once safe and large ; and this was done by means of a
mole or causeway seven stades (Heptastadion) or three- quarters of a mile in
length, which ran from mainland to island, and formed on either side a spacious
harbour,
along whose
sides were presently built numerous quays and docks. The city of Alexandria
itself—the first and greatest of that name—was laid out between the ports and
the Mareotic lake in the shape of an irregular parallelogram, with broad
streets crossing at right angles; but although, no doubt, it rose at once even
in Alexander's day to the rank of a fine and important city, its beauty and
grandeur date from later days, when a succession of Ptolemies vied with each
other in adorning it Water in abundance was supplied by an artificial canal
from the Nile; the soil was dry and the air healthy; and the annual inundation
of the river, which was connected with the Mareotic lake at the back, prevented
it from degenerating into a lagoon. Indeed much of the commerce of Alexandria
reached the city by the Canopic branch of the Nile, and by the various canals
which led into the lake. The population of the place, thus favoured by
position, climate, and royal patronage, like that of Constantinople six
centuries later, increased rapidly; and we know that 250 years afterwards it
was estimated at 600,000 souls. It was certainly not the least of the glories
of Alexander to have founded Alexandria, the granary first of imperial Rome and
then of imperial Constantinople, the rival of Athens in intellectual life, the
focus and highway of the commerce of the Middle Ages.
It is hard to
determine the motives which led Alexander's steps westward from Alexandria. His
mind Visit of was at once Practical
and romantic, and he Alexander may possibly have
wished to emulate the Syr" deeds of a Heraklgs or a Perseus, while satis- Ammon. fying at the same time his thirst for knowledge
and adventure. He set out on the march along the coast, intending to follow the
southward caravan route which led to the oasis of Ammon from Paraitonion, where
he was met by a deputation from KyrSn6, bringing presents, and wisely inviting
a visit which they had certainly no power to prevent. But his mind was bent on
other objects. A march of six days across the desert from Paraitonion brought
him to the oasis—a march whose dangers only divine interposition (it was
believed) enabled the army to surmount. At last they reached their goal, the
most northerly of those wonderful' resting- places 9 in the barren,
sandy desert, whose green fertility is the more striking from contrast with the
endless stretch of red sand around, and which alone make travelling possible.
Being dips or depressions in the limestone bed of the desert they catch and
retain in theii spongy clay the moisture wpich runs from the limestone rim around
or percolates through the sand, and which is the cause of their beautiful
vegetation. The oasis of Zeus-Ammon is six miles in length and three in
breadth, abounding in springs, and producing in profusion wheat, millet, and
dates ; while the only animal which cannot flourish, probably because' of the
moisture of the soil, is the camel. The present population is 8,000; but in
Alexander's day it must have been larger, when the oasis was not only a focus
of commerce but the seat of a famous oracle as well, and therefore visited by
numerous pilgrims. But never before had the shrine of Zeus been visited by so
famous a pilgrim, or one to whom the god and his priests were more zealous to
do honour. A grand procession of priests and virgins met the king and his army
on the confines of the oasis, *nd the answers returned by the god to the
enquiring hero were (it is said) all that he wished. The purport of these
answers he does not seem to have made public till a later period ; but we can
perhaps imagine how, even after Issos, and before Gaugamela, Alexander must
have seemed both to himself and to others one of the greatest of earth's
conquerors, almost more than human, and how the cunning suggestion of a priest
or an oracle might give rise to the astonishing belief in his divine birth, or
might at least inflame the vanity which gradually clouded the great qualities
of a great genius.
From the oasis the return was made to Memphis by
the direct route; and a short time was spent He returns there
in settling the future government of the to Egypt» province of Egypt, its loyalty being secured by letting
well alone, and
by leaving the reins as far as possible in the hands of native rulers, while
garrisons were placed in Memphis and Pelusium, with a small naval and military
force to support them. Then at last the course was clear for that march to the
east, which was to end in such unparalleled results. It is, perhaps, as useless
as it is fascinating to speculate on the feelings with which men have entered
on any course of action, which has definitely shaped and changed the thoughts,
or habits, or political history of other men ; and, perhaps, Alexander's vision
of the future, when he set his face towards the Euphrates, was not more defined
than Caesar's when he crossed the Rubicon, or than Luther's when he stood
before the Diet of the Empire at Worms. Yet the exaltation of feeling, which at
the entrance of a great task fires the imagination and kindles enthusiasm,
amounts in some men to prescience of success; and what was true of Columbus may
well have been true also of Alexander. In action, the genius is the man who
gauges difficulties most correctly.
K
AM.
Leaving Memphis
in the spring of 331, and passing a short time at Tyre, the king there left the
sea-coast, and, and ad- marching to the
eastward of Anti-Libanus, toiheS reached the river Euphrates about
the middle Euphrates, of August at Thapsakos, the
same ford which Darius had crossed in pursuit of Alexander himself two years
before, and by which Cyrus and his army had passed to the eastward in 401. Two
bridges of boats were already being built, and only not finished because a body
of 3,000 cavalry was posted on the further bank; but when the Macedonians
appeared in force from the westward these retired precipitately, and the
crossing was effected without opposition. From Thapsakos the army marched to
the north-eastward, and crossed the Tigris likewise without difficultv, some
dis- tance above Nineveh, and then halted for a few days1 rest prior to the impending struggle. Impending it clearly was, for
some Persian scouts had been taken prisoners, who announced that Darius was
close at hand with an army far larger than andD^ua that which had fought and
been routed at at
Gauga- Issos, and more formidable because levied mela-
from the more warlike tribes of Parthia and Baktria. Alexander rode forward in
person with a few squadrons of cavalry to reconnoitre, and, having had a smart
skirmish with some outposts of the enemy, ascertained that Darius was
immediately before him, encamped in the broad plain between the Tigris and the
mountains of Kurdistan, at a place called Gaugamela (or the Camel's House),
with a force estimated at the lowest at 200,000 infantry and 40,000 cavalry, with
200 scythe chariots and 15 elephants. Every endeavour, moreover, had been made
that the fight should be fought under circumstances favourable to the Persian
arms. There was ample room in the vast plain to deploy all the host. There was
neither sea nor mountain, as at Issos, to protect the enemy's flank and to
prevent his being overlapped ; and a part of the field had been carefully
levelled and cleared to facilitate the charge of cavalry and chariots. It was
indeed a critical moment for the invading army. In point of numbers they were
at most as one to six, and defeat would probably mean utter destruction. Yet
defeat was not dreamed of. The king himself slept soundly the night before the
battle, and remarked to Parmenion, who woke him in the morning, that it was as
good as a victory to have overtaken the enemy ! To a man of such a spirit, at
the head of veteran and disciplined troops, victory was assured before a blow
was struck.
CHAPTER XII.
from the battle of gaugamela to the sack of persepolis.
Once more Darius and
Alexander were face to face, and this time the conditions were all in favour of
the former. Conditions overwhelming numbers of the bravest
of the battle troops which
the empire could furnish.
They had been
newly armed and equipped. The field of battle had been chosen by themselves. If
they could not conquer now they would never conquer. Alexander, on the other
hand, had no more than 40,000 infantry and 7,000 cavalry ; and were it not that
fighting men must be weighed as well as counted, they might have seemed doomed
to certain destruction from combined attacks in front and flank and rear.
After four days'
rest, and having fortified a camp to contain his invalids, prisoners, and
baggage, Alexander Alexander's advanced boldly to
find his enemy. Starting prepara- shortly before
midnight, he timed his march over the seven or eight miles that intervened
between himself and the Persians so as to reach them at the early dawn of a
September day. Immediately in his front were a few low hills, entirely
concealing each army from the other; but, as he breasted the slight ascent and
halted on the top, there in the broad plain below were marshalled, already in
order of battle, the tens of thousands whom Darius had levied during the
previous two years from every corner of his vast empire. At a distance of
little more than three miles from the enemy Alexander halted, and called a
council of war. It was a critical moment, and opinions were divided; the
majority of generals voting for instant attack with tacit reference probably to
the king's supposed wishes. Not so Parme- nion, who was cautious as well as
able, and who urged that on such ground and against such odds, it was necessary
to reconnoitre the field before engaging the enemy. His advice was adopted, and
the rest of that day was spent by the king in riding about and carefully
examining
tive. Then
he.dismissed them to their quarters to get supper and rest.
But Parmenion
was not yet satisfied that the right course had been adopted. It was well not
to ^
...... , . . , Question of
risk all in impetuously giving battle at once ; a night was it equally well to risk
all in fighting attack' K2
when and where
the enemy pleased ? So he returned to the king's tent and proposed to him a
night-attack, when the foe would be off their guard, and easily panic-
stricken. There were others present, and perhaps for their sakes the king's
refusal was emphatic. ' It would be disgraceful' (he cried)' to steal a
victory; and the success of an Alexander must be 'manifest and beyond cavil.'
These were brave words, but there was also doubtless present to his mind the
reflexion which Arrian makes, that night attacks are hazardous things, in which
science is often checkmated by accident; while, if Darius were to be defeated,
it were well that he should' recognise that his victor was really abler and
stronger, not merely more lucky than himself. Accordingly, Alexander adhered to
his original purpose.
Strangely
enough, Darius had expected the very thing which Parmenion proposed, and had
kept his troops Persian under arms all night in consequence. When order of morning dawned, they were in battle array battle. an(j ready ; but it was the readiness
of men who have waited till they are weary, and in whom the excitement of
expectation is apt to pass into despondency. They were massed by nations all
across the plain: the Baktrians on the extreme left under their satrap, Bessos
; the Syrians on the extreme right; while Darius himself was as usual in the
centre, with the Persian horse and foot guards and the Greek mercenaries.
Behind, and supporting the main line, were dense columns of Babylonians, and
other central nations of the empire. Resting on the left wing were the Scythian
and 1,000 Baktrian cavalry, with 100 scythe chariots, designed, it would seem,
to overlap and turn Alexander's right flank. Immediately opposite the place
where Alexander himself usually took up his position were stationed fifty
chariots, and the fifteen elephants, to serve doubtless as ramparts and
bastions in the fierce stress oi battle to be there expected. On the right wing
were posted the remaining cavalry and chariots.
In the face of
such a multitude of men, Alexander's tactics were of necessity slightly
modified. As usual, indeed, the flower of the cavalry was on his __ . .
Macedonian
right flank,
commanded by Parmenion's son order of Philotas, while the
six divisions of the pha- battIe- lanx were in the centre, and the
allied cavalry on the left under Parmenion ; but in order to guard against the
special risk of being outflanked and surrounded, he held a second line in
reserve, ready either to support the phalanx, or to wheel round and resist an
attack in flank or rear. A few squadrons of light cavalry and bowmen were
thrown forward in advance, to deal by anticipation with the scythe chariots,
and under special orders to watch the enemy's cavalry on their right, and if
they attempted to ride round and overlap the Macedonian right, to charge them
in flank at once. So great, however, was the disparity of numbers on the two
sides, that at the outset Alexander, in command of his own right wing, found
himself exactly opposite the Persian centre and Darius in person, while the
Persian left stretched far beyond him, and was ready at once to swing round
and envelope his flank and rear. To obviate this pressing clanger, which was
even greater than he had anticipated, he appears to have opened out the ranks
of his right wing, deploying columns into line, and throwing his right back, so
that the Companion cavalry might advance obliquely, and somewhat repair the
inequality. But it was clear to Darius that, if this movement were not stopped,
it would soon be impossible for the Persians either to outflank the Macedonian
right, or even to use against them the chariots, for which the ground had been
artificially levelled. He therefore ordered the Scythian and Bak- trian cavalry
to stop the advancing Macedonians by riding round and charging them in flank,
while at the same time the chariots were to dash in upon the front. Charge of It was a well-conceived, even possibly a de- Persian cisive movement, had scythe chariots been theftiace- really the terrible weapon which our imagina- flanifandfof tion conceives them ; but in
reality they had chariots on no terrors for
disciplined troops. As at Kunaxa, C1 ron ' so now the Macedonian
skirmishers wounded the drivers and killed the horses, or seized the reins and
turned the chariots round ; while if any succeeded in getting through, it was
but a few here and there, and their attack was rendered harmless by the
coolness ot the veterans of the phalanx, who opened their ranks and let them
pass, or, striking spear upon shield, scared the horses into charging back upon
their own line. In the meantime a far more desperate struggle had been raging
on the extreme right, where the Baktrian cavalry had been met by some Greek
squadrons, whom they drove in, and by reinforcements of both horse and foot which
Alexander sent up in haste. It was of the first importance to check this flank
movement; and presently, by reason of the superior training and precision of
the Greeks, the Baktrians and Scythians were stopped, pushed back, and at last
swept off the field. Still the Persian left overlapped the Macedonian right ;
and, as the main bodies of the two armies were on the point of coming into
action, first one division of Persian cavalry and presently another, nearer to
the centre, _ .. moved by their left with the apparent inten-
Decisive . - . - . ,
charge of tion of
repeating the manoeuvre attempted by A1 wreonon the
Baktrians at the beginning of the battle, the Persian
and of charging the Macedonian right flank and reai. But the movement left a
gap in the line, of which Alexander was not slow to make use.
Ordering up the
light horse in reserve to engage and occupy these cavalry, he formed his own
squadrons of Companions into a pointed column or wedge, and charged boldly into
the opening, the men shouting as they charged. Almost at the same moment the
phalanx crossed spears with the enemy in the centre, and at the first contact
bore back with irresistible weight even the Greek mercenaries opposed to them.
Meanwhile, the Macedonian left had been outflanked, and was being hard pressed
by the cavalry on the Persian right. But a temporary repulse on either flank
was of little moment now, when Alexander and his cavalry, and four divisions of
the terrible phalanx with its bristling hedge of spears, were battling vehemently
on the front and flank of the Greeks and Persians in the centre, step by step
and by dint of sheer "(determination forcing a way into their very midst.
The Persian left and centre, in spite of their vast numbers, reeled before the
shock, and the Rout of
disorder had begun which presages a panic ; {Jg ^J™ when the timid
Darius, seeing the press of centre,
battle drawing nearer to himself, and remembering only too well all the
horrors of Issos, set a shameful example of cowardice, and hastily exchanging his
chariot for horseback rode off the field to Arbela. Darius himself says Arrian,
was the very first to turn and flee. Immediately, all in that part of the
field was panic and con- fusionv Many of the. officers followed the
king. The troops rapidly lost cohesion, having no centre or commander to rally
round, and presently became a mere mob, whose first object was personal safety.
Thus the left wing and main body were soon in hopeless rout, nothing saving
Darius himself from the relentless pursuit of Alexander's light horse, but the
dense clouds of dust which went up from beneath the feet of the flying host.
The destruction of life was immense; it would have been yet greater, had not
Alexander been obliged to return in haste to the battle-field.
It appears that
the attempt to overlap the Macedonian flank with superior numbers, which had
been foiled on „ . . the Persian left wing, had been made on their
Furious and . ,
. , ' , ^ , _ .
evenly con- right with success. The Greek cavalry of
Struggle on a^ies
had been outflanked, and nearly
donUm left, surrounded by the Armenian and Kappado- kian
horse. Two of the Six divisions of the phalanx were brought up to their
fct»pport; yet even so Farmenion had much ado to hold his ground, while a gap
was thus left in the phalanx itself. Into this gap the generals of the Persian
and Indian cavalry on the Persian right centre led a furious charge, passing
right through the Macedonian double line, and emerging in the rear of the whole
army; but, instead of wheeling round and falling upon Parmenion's rear, they
galloped on to assault the camp, where the Thracian troops were wholly off
their guard. Then it was that Parmenion sent a hasty message to recall
Alexander from the pursuit ; and the king was obliged to return with some of
the cavalry to the aid of his own hard-pressed left As he was riding hastily
thither, he suddenly met the flying squadrons of Persians and Indians, who had
been driven out of the camp by the reserves, and were now in full retreat. A
furious combat ensued; and only a handful succeeded in cutting their way out,
while sixty of the Macedonians were slain, and Hephaistion and two other
generals fell wounded. When the king at last reached the scene of fighting on
the left the battle was practically over, the gallant efforts of the Thessalian
horse having The pursuit extricated Parmenion from
his danger. The Persian right, now broken and routed, and aware of the issue of
the day in other parts of the field, were following their companions in
headlong flight.
Then Alexander
at once turned upon his steps, and started again in pursuit of his unhappy
rival. He halted on the banks of the Lykos till midnight, and then rode on once
more, hoping to overtake Darius at Arbela. How hot was the pursuit, and how
exhausting the strain, we may judge from the fact that during the day, partly
from wounds, partly from fatigue, 1,000 horses were lost, 500 of which belonged
to Alexander's own division. But at Arbela the bird had flown ; and the spoils
were but a shield, a bow, and a chariot, money and baggage. The royal fugitive
was far on his way, with a small escort, over the mountains to Agbatana.
The battle of
Gaugamela was decisive of the struggle between Greece and Persia—between
Alexander and Darius. It was a battle as conclusive as that Final result at Issos in its immediate, and far more so
in of^ug-a-11* its wider and final results. It gave to Alex- mek.
ander not merely the command of western Asia, but the dominion of all Asia. It
seated him on the throne of the Great King, and gave him that dubious,
undefined position, half king of a free and warlike people, half despot of a
subject world, in which he lost the regard of the best of the Macedonians,
without welding the diverse nations of his empire into one homogeneous people.
Henceforward no such levy was any more possible as that of whose fighting
powers Darius had made so poor a use. Contingents and detachments only were
met with afterwards, who waged purely local and useless struggles. The oracle
of Gordion was proved to have spoken truly, and Alexander was Lord of Asia.
Nor were the immediate results less striking in
their way. Other battles have been fought between Immediate Europeans
and Asiatics, in which the disparity results of of
numbers was greater, or the disproportion ^ batfle> of losses was
more startling. Clive won the battle
of
PIassy(a.d.
1757), and laid the foundations of our Indian empire, with a force of 3,000, of
whom only 900 were Europeans, against 55,000; but his enemy, whom he routed,
lost no more than 500 men. The Romans at Magnesia (b.c. 190), where Antiochus, king of
Syria, was irreparably defeated, were as one to two, but they destroyed 50,000
out of 92,000 men, with a loss to themselves of only 324. At Gaugamela the
numbers were not so disproportioned as at Plassy, nor the disparity of losses
so overwhelming as at Magnesia. The forces of Alexander were as one to six
instead of one to two: and at the lowest estimate 40,000 Persians were left hors de combat, while the Macedonian loss was 500. Nor
were the fruits of victory confined to the destruction of an army. Babylon and
Susa opened their gates a y on. tQ j^g without
resistance, who thus became master of almost fabulous treasures. Babylon,
indeed, like Sidon and Egypt, had suffered under Persian rule. It was the less
surprising, therefore, that Alexander was welcomed in the capital, and that his
entry was in the manner of a triumph, amid songs and flowers and smoking
altars. In this most splendid of Eastern cities the army was permitted to
reward itself for past toils and dangers for nearly a month ; while the king
was regulating the government of his new provinces, utilising his vast
treasures, or devising schemes for the improvement of Babylon as the destined
capital of his new empire.
At Susa, which
was reached in twenty days, and which had already surrendered, were found
treasures yet vaster—50,000 talents of silver (equal to 11,500,000/. sterling)
; the rest of the royal baggage; and various spoils which Xerxes had brought
away with him from Greece, especially certain bronze statues of Harmodios and
Aristogeiton, the Athenian ' liberators/ which Alexander sent back to Athens,
and which were
139
CH. XII.
Been by Arrian in the Kerameikos. At Susa he received reinforcements from
Greece—13,500 infantry, and 1,500 cavalry, as well as fifty young Macedonian
nobles who had come out to serve in his personal suite. Then, after celebrating
games and distributing promotions and donatives, he set out on the difficult
march from Susa to the more ancient and hereditary capital of __
, . , _ T March from
the Persian
monarchs, Persepolis. It was Susa to a district of rugged
mountains and narrow I>erseP°,ls- passes,
occupied by a fierce tribe called Uxians—so fierce that the Great King on his
passage through the country had been always wont to pay them black-mail, which
he disguised under the name of largess. At one point of the district, moreover,
the Susian Gates, all roads converged, and in this almost impregnable pass the
satrap of the province intrenched himself with 40,000 troops to bar the way.
But the Uxians were soon taught the rough lesson that times were changed; while
the satrap's position was turned, as that of Leonidas is said to have been at
Thermopylai. For Alexander, with some picked troops, was guided by a shepherd
over a precipitous path, which brought him into the Persian rear and flank.
Resistance was hopeless, and the Persians, abandoning their intrenchments, fled
or were cut to pieces. Persepolis, like Susa and Babylon, fell into the
conqueror's hands, with treasure amounting (it was said) to 120,000 talents or
nearly 28,000,000/.—a sum not wholly incredible if we remember the Eastern
passion for hoarding coin, and the love of Eastern potentates for amassing
precious stones, and for displaying gold and silver ornaments on their persons.
The glories of
Persepolis dated from the days of Darius I. The capital of Cyrus had been
Persagerd (Pasargadai), where the tomb of the great conqueror is 1 till to be
seen. But Persepolis was the centre and the
pride of the Persians,
grander than Persagerd, more national than Susa or Babylon—a Moscow rather than
a Petersburg. At this favoured capital were ersepois. temples and palaces, whose ruins still
suggest both
beauty and grandeur—vistas of columns, bright hangings, gorgeous colours ;
while the city lay at the base of the rock on which the ruins stand. This rock
ivas enclosed by a triple wall, the innermost and highest rising to 90 feet,
and each of its four sides having a gate of brass. On the eastern side of the
hill were the royal tombs and treasuries.
The city and all its wealth were delivered up
without
a blow. A sad sight, however, awaited the army, as
it
« „ drew near to
the capital. A miserable body rhe
800 _ _ _ . r /
mutilated of 800 Greeks
came out to meet them, m
Greeks. suppliant guise, and with shame and confusion of
face, every one mutilated in hand, or foot, or ear, or nose, and most of them
stricken in years—men who for various offences had been brought up long years
before to the capital and consigned to this wretched existence, in accordance
with that Eastern custom which, in our own days as in Xenophon's, looks on
mutilation as the natural punishment of crime. The whole army was deeply moved
at the hideous spectacle, and Alexander himself could not refrain from tears.
He offered to restore them to their homes and provide for them in the future ;
but to this they could not bring themselves for very shame, choosing rather to
stay on the spot and to receive their satisfaction in Persian land and Persian
money. This dreadful episode, however, helps to throw some light on an event,
the motives for which are singularly obscure, and which is generally regarded as
one of the greatest blots on Alexander's fair fame. That event was the sack of
Persepolis, and the burning of the royal palace. If we may believe Arrian and
Diodoros, it was an act of de- liberate state policy. The former asserts that
Alexander had resolved to exact a vengeance similar in kind to the sack and
burning of Athens by Xerxes, and that Sack of he carried it out in
spite of the remonstrances ^gjjjg; of Parmenion. When we remember that Alex- Sf
the1"*1"® ander's imagination was singularly
open to such
p*1*0* half-poetical, half-superstitious
ideas (leading him, for instance, to visit I lion and Ammon and Gordion) it
seems probable that their account is correct, and that the sack of Persepolis
was a deliberate act of political vengeance, embittered and aggravated by the
dreadful sight of the mutilated captives, and occasioned by the drunken revel
which Plutarch and Diodoros describe. At a great banquet (they say), given by
the king before leaving the city, when the revel was at its height, one of the
women present, an Athenian, remarked that it would be one of Alexander's most
notable deeds if he should burn the palace, and if women's hands should destroy
as in a moment the boasted glories of the Persians. The idle words were caught
up by young blood, heated with wine. Torches were lit. Shouts were heard for
'revenge for the Greek temples !' and cries that Alexander alone ought to do
the deed; until, carried away by the mad excitement, and led on by a crowd of
reckless women, he cast the first torch among the cedar columns, others
following his example, until the venerable building, witness of so many
glories, was in a blaze, and the ruin of Athens was avenged by the counsel and
the deed of an Athenian woman. The city itself also was sacked. The men were
slain and the women sold as slaves; and, amid the wild and unrestrained
pillage, an amount past reckoning of robes and plate was wasted or destroyed.
We are told that the king repented before the work of destruction was half
accomplished, and sought to arrest it; but from any point of view it was a
deplorable mistake and politically a blunder. It was an act at once cruel,
wanton, and useless—a sad episode, whose incidents develop themselves
naturally from the first romantic conception of revenge down to its brutal
realisation in drunken revels and burning temples, in wasted property and
ruined lives.
CHAPTER Xllf.
the death of darius.—reduction of parthia— execution of philotas and
parmenion.
Darius, meanwhile, who
had fled through the mountains to the eastward, was resting at Agbatana. There
were run s of 30)000 infantry and. 3,000 cavalry with
iwiujJafter him
; he had still the support of satraps, un- Gaugamela.
daunted as Bessos and loyql as Artabazos : but all heart was gone from his resistance,
and his one thought was to flee from Alexander's face to the farthest corner of
his empire. With this view the heavy baggage and the harem had been sent
forward some days'journey in advance; and when he learnt that his restless
enemy, not content with being master of his finest capitals and of the fairest
parts of his empire, was bent on having possession of his person also, he
delayed no more but set out eastwards at once, intending to pass through
Hyrkania and Parthia, and to hinder his pursuers' march by ravaging as he went
(July, 330).
Eight days
afterwards Alexander was in Agbatana. At three days' march from the capital he
was met by the ai andcr news
^st Darius had set out five days before, at Agba-
and taken with him all his treasures. When tana. the
Macedonians, therefore, entered the city,
it was only to make hurried preparations for a
forced march in pursuit. At the same time a short delay was
inevitable, for
some of his Greek troops were anxious to return home after their four years' service,
and it was necessary to remodel the military organisation, which had so far
served its purpose perfectly. Henceforth he was to deal not with regular
araiies, but with provincial levies; and still more with vast distances, with
mountains and deserts, where rapidity of movement might mean not victory only
but life. Hence he needed archers, light troops, and flying columns, more than
the massive weight of the phalanx. Lastly, he had to provide for the safe
custody of the extraordinary amount of treasure which had fallen into his hands
during the previous nine months. This was lodged in the citadel of Agbatana,
and entrusted to the care of Harpalos.
Then once more
he started in pursuit of the Great King. In eleven days he traversed 300 miles
of the broken, difficult ground lying between the Alexander desert
and Mount Tauros to the north. paSSing pursues near
the site of the modern Teheran and Darius, almost at the foot of the splendid
peak of Demavend, rising 20,000 feet into the air. On the eleventh day he
reached Rhagai, but only to learn that Darius had already passed the Caspian
Gates, fifty miles to the eastward, and to find that a short rest was
indispensable for his jaded men and horses. In five days he was again in the
saddle. Before him were the Caspian Gates, a long and difficult series of
defiles, where he had vainly hoped to intercept the fugitive. A day's march
beyond the pass he heard the alarming tidings that Bessos and his friends had
laid hands on Darius, and that his life was in danger. Headlong as had been the
speed of the pursuit so far, there was clearly need of yet greater efforts. The
eastern satraps, it appears, had resolved to seize Darius and surrender him to
Alexander if it were necessary, but if possible to push on across Parthia,
outstripping pursuit, and to organize a resistance on their own behalf in
Baktria and Sogdiana. But Alexander was determined to cut them off. Taking with
him only the Companion cavalry, the light horse, and some picked infantry, and
leaving Koinos to bring on the rest by slower marches, he rode on all that
night and the next day till midday* After a short rest they started again, and
again rode all the night through, in the morning coming on traces of a camp
recently occupied. Here further tidings reached them, to the effect that Bessos
had actually superseded Darius, and that Artabazos and the Greek mercenaries,
unable to prevent what they disapproved, had parted company with the others and
turned off into the mountains. Darius, in short, was utterly in his enemy's
hands. So fagged were both horses and men, that another forced march of a night
and half a day only brought Alexander to a village where Bessos and his party
had encamped the day before ; and, just when all reserve of energy in his own
men seemed gone, he learned that the fugitives also were resolved to make a
forced march all the next night To overtake them was out of the question ; was
it possible to intercept them ? Death of
At this juncture, when his prey seemed about Darius.
to slip from his grasp, some of the natives informed him of a route, shorter
indeed but waste and waterless. Difficulties, however, were no bar to the impetuous
Alexander. Picking out the strongest and freshest both of horses and men, again
he set out in the afternoon, and actually accomplished nearly fifty miles in
the course of the night, coming suddenly about dawn upon the weary and
bewildered fugitives, the majority of whom fled at once on sight of Alexander.
Bessos and his friends tried vainly for a while to induce Darius to mount a
horse and flee with them ; and as he again and again refused, they cast their
javelins at their unhappy victim and rode off, leaving him in his chariot
mortally wounded, where, though presently found and recognised by a Macedonian
soldier, he breathed his last before his indefatigable enemy could come up.
So died Darius,
the last of the Achaemenids, at the age of fifty, after a troubled reign of
barely six years— hurled in that short time from the height of Consequent human grandeur to the depths of misfortune—
AiSander's a man who might have adorned more peaceful position, times with the gentler graces of a benevolent
despot, but too feeble and apathetic to cope with so tremendous a crisis—a king
who would have been happier had he never reigned. More fortunate in death than
in life, he was honoured with the burial of a king in the sepulchre of his
ancestors ; while his conqueror married his daughter, and provided for the
education of his other children. But that Alexander was mortified at the result
of his march cannot be doubted ; for the death of Darius left the hands of the
Eastern satraps free, and forced him to pursue them if he meant to complete the
subjection of the empire. It further changed Alexander's position entirely. The
king of Macedon became transformed into the Great King. Pella ceased to be the
first city of a petty kingdom, and became a second-rate town in a vast empire,
whose capital was the splendid Babylon. But it was a special difficulty of this
new position that, though perfect success was scarcely possible, an effort at
least had to be made to unite two incompatible things—Alexander was forced to
endeavour to be king ot Asia and king of Macedon; to rule Macedonian freemen
and Persian slaves at the same time and in the same way. It is to be regretted
indeed that his premature ofthat le* death
cut short the plans which he initiated p0*"*011-
for the amalgamation of his diverse subjects; but an Alexander usually forms
juster conceptions, and has
aih. l
loftier aims
than the courtiers and generals around him. We can perceive that he started
from the sound basis of universal equality, which was so great a source of
strength in after days to Rome ; and it seems probable that his adoption of
Persian habits, and his plans for associating Persians and Macedonians in the
army and elsewhere, were due to a desire to harmonise discordant elements,
rather than to vanity. Without such harmony the government of so vast an empire
was impossible. On the other hand it is certain that Macedonians had begun to
be jealous of Asiatics even before Alexander's death, and were seriously
annoyed by his assumption of Eastern customs and a state ceremonial, which he
himself deemed to be only advisable
concessions to prevalent ideas.
147
nr. xiii.
And now Alexander was in Parthia—the Atak or '
Skirt' of the desert—the beautiful tract of 300 miles of Alexander mountain, stream, and
valley, which parts the in
Parthia. desert uplands of Iran from the still more awful desert of Chorasmia
(Kharesm or Khiva), where the traveller may wander for weeks without finding a
drop of sweet water, the home of a Tatar population encamped amidst alien
Aryans, as Basques amid Teutons or Magyars amid Slaves, who less than a century
Later issued forth to subvert the conquests of Alexander's successors, and
founded an empire which lasted for 500 years. From Hekatompylos, the capital,
he crossed Mount Tauros in three columns into Hyrkania. There were barbarous
tribes in that happy district (as Strabo calls it) too fierce and independent
to be safely left unvisited ; the Greek mercenaries were there who had
abandoned Darius, and who must be dealt with ; lastly, it was important to
secure the connexion between the provinces of the south and the Caspian.
Hyrkania itself was speedily reduced, and the Mardians were taught a bitter
lesson. The Greek mercenaries also, 1,500 in number, came in and made their
submission. As after the battles of Granikos and Issos, so now Alexander
appealed to the resolutions of the Synod of Corinth as a test of their loyalty
or treason. All who had taken arms in the service of Darius prior to the Synod
he set free at once; they had been within their rights in so doing. To the rest
he used the language which he always held. They were traitors to the common
cause of Greece against the barbarians, and might therefore think themselves
happy to have no worse fate than to enter his service on their former pay.
Alexander now
set his face steadily eastwards for Baktra (Balkh), and it seemed as if it
would be none too soon. For news met him on the way to the Episode of effect that Bessos had assumed the tiara of
^jJ^a. royalty, together with the name of Artaxerxes, trap of Aria, that he had a large Persian and Baktrian
force under arms, and that he was expecting Scythian auxiliaries from Central
Asia. In fact his position on the upper waters of the Oxus and JaxartSs gave
him the simultaneous advantages of inexhaustible reinforcements from the
tribes of the steppes and of inaccessible retreat in case of need. A rapid
attack, therefore, seemed beyond all things necessary. And yet Bessos was
fated to enjoy his ill-gotten power for another year. Alexander had passed the
modern Meshed, the frontier town of Persia, and had crossed the Margus, the
river of clear green waters, which further to the north creates the oasis of
Merv (Margia) and then is lost in the sands, when he heard that the satrap of
Aria, Satibarzanis, to whom he had committed the government of that province,
had murdered the forty lancers whom he had attached to his suite, was gathering
troops and money in his capital of Artakoara, eighty miles to the southward,
and intended to join Bessos in attacking the Macedonians wherever they might
be found. Alexander did not hesitate. A variety of motives would lead Bessos to
await an attack; but the treachery of a pardoned satrap could not be
overlooked. Turning sharply to the south, and leaving the main body under
Krateros to a more leisurely advance, he reached Arta- koana with some picked
troops by a forced march in two days. But Satibarzan£s had heard and fled. With
a small body of horsemen he rode for his life, leaving the hapless villagers of
his satrapy, whom he had beguiled, to the vengeance of the king and his flying
column. Still Alexander was not satisfied, and he resolved, before turning
northwards, to face a circuitous march of 800 miles and to teach the wild
tribes of Drangiana and Arachosia—true forefathers of the restless
Affghans—that they had better acquiesce in the will of the stronger.
Speaking
generally, these provinces are the southern slopes of a huge mountain bastion,
thrown out from the Description towering
Paropanisos towards the lower level Drangiana Arian plateau. From time immemorial,
andAra- ' and in spite of the
perpetual barbarism of the AfS£Ss-d' population, this country has
been of first-rate tanj. importance as the
easiest approach to India
from the west.
The climate is fine, though severe. Snow falls heavily throughout the mountain
district in winter, and is even seen in the plains ; and in summer the heat in
the lower lands, though oppressive in parts, is less intense than in India. The
irrigation, which alone tarns the parched country into a garden, diminishes the
volume of the rivers, which are rarely full except after the melting of the
winter snows.
In Affghanistan
there are four cities which boast of Alexander, if not as their founder, at
least as the originator of their greatness. Kandahar (Alexandria) even tries to
trace its name to the great Iskandar (Alexander). That
149
ch. xiii. Foundation of Herat.
Alexander passed
through both Kabul (Ortospana) and Kandahar is certain, as also that he spent
some time at Furrah (Prophthasia). It is far from improbable that he actually
founded the now important city of Herat (Alexandria in Ariis), which for ages
has been the centre of commercial intercourse between India, Persia, and
Tartary. The mere site of this Gate of Central Asia marks it out as an object
of contention to its neighbours, a prize for which Persians and Affghans fight,
and which Russia desires to have. It lies in an immense plain on the
north-eastern edge of the desert, destitute indeed of trees, but fertile and
beautifuL There are numerous canals and scattered villages, watered and
fertilised by the Heri-rood (Arius) and on all sides are ruins attesting former
greatness. To the traveller fresh from the steppes of the north and the desert
of the west, the plain of Herat is, as the Eastern proverb says, like Paradise.
Its climate is one of the most delightful in Asia, and its products as
plentiful as they are various. It would not be strange, therefore, that a man
of keen and rapid judgment like Alexander should have fixed upon Herat as a
link in his long chain of fortress-colonies, to reach from Babylon to the
Indus; or that he who stands there as a victorious invader from the north or
west should be said to hold the key of India in his hand.
From Herat
Alexander marched southward to Prophthasia (Furrah) a place of sinister influence
on his good name and character. For it was there that the
Discovery
terrible tragedy was enacted which ended in of a sup- the deaths of Philotas and his father Parme-
nion,—' the first cloud that casts a shadow Alexander'! over Alexander's heroic
character—the first calamity that embittered his hitherto uninterrupted prosperity.'
It is difficult
to ascertain exactly the precise share of guilt attaching to each actor in this
tragedy, when the Difficulty of most
trustworthy of our authorities, Arrian, ascertaining
gives only a brief and guarded account, and
the truth. the
fuller details are added by men like the
Roman Curtius or
the gossip Plutarch; yet, granting this, it is certain that of all who were
concerned in it, not one save, perhaps, the aged Parmenion himself, was wholly
guiltless, while the conduct of some of the Macedonian generals was atrocious.
The inherent difficulties of the king's position have already been briefly
noticed. His great officers were strongly averse to his adoption of Persian
customs, and Philotas, no less than others, was apt to ridicule in private his
growing vanity ; they were also more spoiled than he by their marvellous
successes, and were furiously jealous of each other. And if Krateros or
Perdikkas were envious of the influence and wealth of Parmenion and his family,
Philotas himself was unguarded in his language and insatiable in his claims.
Ii we wouFl understand by what kind of men Alexander was surrounded, and how
baleful an influence they might possibly exert on his susceptible mind, we have
only to look forward a few short years, and to observe how, when his strong
hand was removed, his generals fought for the power which they were neither
worthy to gain nor able to retain.
Philotas was the
commander of the Companion cavalry, and therefore in daily, almost hourly,
communi- Character cation with Alexander
himself. He was the afpam^0n s°k surv*vor
^ree brothers, sons of that nion'and" Parmenion of
whom Philip once said, that the Philotas.
Athenians were lucky indeed to find ten generals every year, for he in the
course of many years had never found but one. Next to the king himself, the
father and son were perhaps the most important men in the empire. But they were
not popular, nor even
% wholly trusted.
Parmenion, it is true, was left in chief command at Agbatana ; but he was
getting old, and was thought to have shown a want of energy and resource at the
battle of Gaugamela. Philotas also was in bad odour with both officers and
men—with the former for his arrogance and bluntness, and his very success; with
the latter for a supercilious selfishness, which showed itself in disregard for
their comfort as compared with his own, and a studied contempt of their wishes
and prejudices. Even with the king himself for the past eighteen months his
relations had been less cordial than before, owing to some disparagement of
Alexander, which he had let fall in conversation with his mistress, and which
had been betrayed by her to Krateros, and by Krateros— only too willingly—to the
king. In so perilous a position caution was needed; and caution was a virtue of
which Philotas was incapable.
Now it happened
at this time that a certain officer named Dimnos was accused by one of his
bosom friends of a design against Alexander's life. This Betrayal of friend had imparted the secret to his own
jjjgjjjjijj. brother; and the brother in turn disclosed suicide of ' the plot to Philotas, as to one who would
S5S°of: certainly provide against the danger. The philotas'
attempt was to be made on the next day but one. On that day and on the next
Philotas had long interviews with the king ; and on each occasion omitted to
mention what he had heard. On the third day his informant, finding that nothing
had been done, resolved to take the matter boldly into his own hands. He
demanded admission to the king's presence at once—even though he was in the
bath—and told him' all he knew. Orders were immediately issued for the arrest
of Dimnos, who, however, either slew himself or was slain in resisting; and
thus the most important witness in the matter was
removed by an
act that appeared to prove his guilt. It presently came out that Philotas also
had been aware of the plot two days before, and had said nothing. In so grave a
matter silence would in any man seem strange. In Philotas, not unnaturally, it
was taken to prove complicity ; while his defence, that the story seemed to
rest on insufficient authority, was looked upon as an afterthought.
The suspicions
aroused in Alexander's mind were artfully inflamed by Krateros and other
enemies of Phi- Trial and lotas. A council of officers
was held, and S^Sflna" they insisted that the only means of
arriving Philotas. at the truth was to arrest
and question Philotas. It needs but litde imagination to see how it all
happened; Alexander hurt, angry, suspicious; the gene- rals, one here and
another there, hinting, arguing, or openly accusing; the very absence of
Philotas, who was not present at the council, perhaps being turned against him.
That night the accused man was arrested; and on the next day, according to the
national custom, he was brought before an assembly of the Macedonian troops,
where the king himself stated the charge against him, though he retired before
the trial began. But there was little hope of an impartial hearing where the
accuser was the idol of the generals who envied the accused, and of the
soldiers who hated him. He was found guilty of the charge of being privy to the
act.
But this was not
enough. If the son were condemned on evidence so slight, what view would the
father take of He is tor
the whole affair ? And if he chose to resent tured,to"
it, or took up arms in self-defence, the revolt evidence s0 famous a man, master of all the
vast
against his treasure stored
at Agbatana, would be formidable even to Alexander. Parmenibn, therefore, must
be involved in the fate of Philotas. Evidence must
be gained
against the father as well; and that evidence must come from the lips of the son,
To us both the end and the means taken to achieve the end are equally odious.
Philotas was tortured. But we must Execution not
forget, if we wish to be just, that the false notion of torture being the
surest means menion. of eliciting truth has been
commQn in nearly every aga and nation, and was neither more nor less
disgraceful in Macedonian officers than in Roman slave-masters or Christian
inquisitors. However wicked the object may have been, we may be sure that the
means used for its attainment seemed natural and suitable. Philotas was
tortured, and confessed what was desired, that both his father and himself were
guilty of a design against the king's life, and that he himself had purposely
precipitated measures, lest death should remove his father, who was now
seventy, from the command of the treasures which were necessary to success—a
confession, the truth of which was said to be confirmed by the contents of a
letter from Parmenion, seized among the papers of Philotas. On the next day
this confession was read before the troops, and Philotas and others, his accomplices,
were executed; while a hurried messenger was sent off to Agbatana, eleven days'
march across the desert, with orders to Kleander, the second in command, to put
Parmenion instantly to death. The command was obeyed; and the old man was
killed while reading a forged letter purporting to come from his son.
An impartial
consideration of the story just narrated leads us to the conclusion, that of
all the persons concerned Krateros and his friends were the most guilty.
Whether we assume that Philotas was the^ffi0 really privy to the
plot, or without being privy qucstion* to it would not have been
ill-pleased to see it succeed, or was simply imprudent and forgot to speak —and
either of these assumptions is possible—it is clear that there was primA facie ground for
suspicion, and that the generals used it to ruin Philotas. They might have usea
their influence to pacify Alexander; they did in fact exasperate him against
their enemy. It is hardly strange that the king himself should have suspected
Philotas, when he knew that for two days he had been aware of a plot against
his life and said nothing about it, while the very first man implicated had
preferred death to facing investigation. Appearances were against Philotas. It
is equally clear that the charge was not proven, and that, if the accused had
had friends at court, there was much to be said in his defence; while the
actual way in which he was treated showed a passion, a suspiciousness, and a want
of generous forbearance, not unnatural perhaps in a son of Olympias, but
hitherto unexampled in Alexander. If we conclude, however, that it remains an
open question whether Philotas was innocent or guilty, the same cannot be said
of the fate of Parmenion. That the death of the son should have made the
father's death an apparent necessity both for Alexander and his generals may be
granted, but that is only saying that one false step often necessitates
another. No man who admires the genius or respects the noble qualities of
Alexander the Great can fail to deplore the odious crime which he allowed
himself to commit in assenting to the assassination of his oldest and ablest
general, or to condemn the wickedness of those who urged such a barbarous
judicial murder. Philotas may have been guilty. Parmenion was almost certainly
innocent.
CHAPTER XIV.
THE CAMPAIGNS IN BAKTRIA AND SOGDIANA.
In the autumn of
330 Alexander set out from Prophthasia on his long march of more than 600
miles to Ortospana (Kabul), which he did not reach _
, . m , March of
until early in
329. The weather was severe, Alexander
for snow had
fallen and was lying on all the phSsS^T highlands; the country was difficult,
es- ^^ pecially the latter part of it, where the route was intersected by lofty
ridges, deep gorges, and narrow passes. He met with no combined resistance from
the tribes through which he marched; although he was obliged to detach a
division to return to Aria, which the indefatigable SatibarzanSs had entered
once more with 2,000 horse and was rousing to rebellion. This was soon crushed;
and two more military colonies were planted at Alexandria (Kandahar) and
Ortospana to secure the peace of the province. But though his march was checked
by no serious resistance, the soldiers suffered terribly from the intense cold
and want of food, the snow (it would seem) being exceptionally deep. Yet, in
spite of hardships, Alexander pressed on, being anxious to cross the central
range before the melting of the snow. There are four passes over the
Paropanisos from the country of the Gandarians to Baktria ; and it is probable
that the army took the so-called Koushan Pass, 8,500 feet above the sea—a march
of extreme difficulty, which consumed sixteen days and cost the lives of many
both of the soldiers and the camp-followers. At the southern end of the pass,
and twenty-five miles north-east of Ortospana, a new city (Alexandria ad
Caucasum) was founded in a commanding position at or near the site of the
modern Beghram, where vast numbers of Greek coins are still to be found. Thence
the army struggled on its weary march, half-blinded by the dazzling brightness
of the snow, half-buried in the drifts; and all the more bitter was their
disappointment when, on emerging from the mountains at Adrapsa (Anderab), they
found the whole country lying between them and the Oxus laid waste by order of
Bessos; and men who had been battling with cold and fatigue had now to battle
with hunger also. It was not indeed a difficult country to ravage, for much of
it is barren and hilly where the spurs of Paropanisos run northwards to the
desert, and it is only the valleys of the tributaries of the Oxus that are
fertile. In spite of difficulties, however, Alexander pressed onwards, taking
at the first onset the two most important towns of Baktria; but Bessos himself
he did not find, for, shrinking at the last moment from the collision he had
provoked, he had fled with 7,000 of his native troops and a few of his
fellow-conspirators, and had placed the Oxus between himself and his pitiless
pursuer, burning the boats in which he had crossed. Disunion, however, was
already at work in the ranks of his adherents; for the Baktrian cavalry rather
than accompany him broke up, and dispersed in all directions.
Alexander left
garrisons in Aornos—a great hill-fort whose name, like that of another Aornos
in the Indus Pursuit and va^ey>
imports inaccessibility even to the birds capture of
of the air—and in Baktra or Zariaspa (the Bcssos" modern
Balkh), where ruins that cover five leagues of country remain to prove the
former greatness of what Orientals call the Mother of Cities, in the Middle
Ages the rival of Bokhara and Samarkand and the capital of Mohammedan
civilisation. Then he set out across the desert in pursuit of Bessos. The
foresight of Alexander in timing his march now received another confirmation.
The Oxus was before him, and he had no boats. Even then it was a deep and rapid
river, not far short of a mile in breadth. There was no wood near enough to
use, and the bottom was formed of shifting, loose sand. So great, indeed, is
the quantity of sand which its yellow waves hold in solution, that, although
the water is proverbially sweet and delicious to drink, it grits under the
teeth if taken straight from the river, and requires time for the sand to
settle. Had Alexander reached it in flood time, when the snows are melted in
the mountains, and when its breadth is so great that both banks cannot be sefen
at the same time, the passage would have been hardly practicable. Nor would he
have had an easy task, had Bessos chosen to dispute the passage. As it was,
Bessos was far away in Nautaka of the Sogdians ; and the army got across the
river safely in five days, on tent skins stuffed with straw. Had he been able
to seek safety in the boundless steppes of Scythia, Bessos, even if bereft of
his shadow of a crown, would have kept life and liberty. But it was not so to
be. Very soon after the king had crossed the great river, he received a message
from Spitamenes and an- ocher of the companions of Bessos, offering to seize
and give him up if a small force were sent to support them. He was already
their prisoner, they said, though not in chains. Alexander's resolution was at
once taken. Slackening his own pace, he ordered Ptolemy, son of Lagos, to take
a division consisting chiefly of cavalry and light- armed troops, and to come
up with Spitamenes by forced marches, and with as little delay as possible. In
four days Ptolemy was so close upon the fugitives that he readied the camp
where they had bivouacked the night before. There he heard that tne
conspirators were hesitating. He instantly started with the cavalry, leaving
the infantry to follow, and shortly reached a village where Bessos was resting,
with a few soldiers—SpitamenSs and his friends being ashamed (it would seem) at
the eleventh hour to play the traitor, and having retired to a distance.
Ptolemy posted his troops all round the village, which had walls and gates, and
then summoned the inhabitants to give up the stranger under a promise of
immunity from attack if they did so. They opened their gates to him, and
Ptolemy with his own hand arrested Bessos, and set out again to rejoin the
king. He sent, however, an officer before him to ask in what guise Alexander
would have Bessos brought into his presence. For a man who had murdered his
sovereign and usurped his place there was no room for mercy. The answer was
that Bessos was to be bound naked in chains, with a collar round his neck, and
placed at the side of the road by which the army would march. Then, as
Alexander drew near to the place, stopping his chariot, he sternly asked how it
was that he had dared to seize and bind and slay his master and benefactor,
Darius. Bessos answered that he had not acted alone, and that the deed was done
to propitiate Alexander. The king's only reply was to order the traitor to be
scourged, and sent back a close prisoner to Baktra—shortly to die.
The onward march
to Marakanda (Samarkand) and the Jaxart6s—undertaken, perhaps, in emulation of
the Episode of ^rst Cy™5—was
broken by a curious episode, the Bran-
At a certain village the army came unexpectedly upon an isolated Greek
population, said to be descendants of that priestly family of the Bran- chidai
of Mil6tos, who, being guardians and treasurers of the great temple of Apollo
near that city, had surrendered its treasures to King Xerxes 150 years before.
Covered with odium for this treachery, and obliged to abandon their old home,
they had been settled by Xerxes in Sog- dlana, and their descendants had continued
to occupy the same place. Now they came out to meet their victorious brethren
from Greece, doubtless with mingled feelings of pride and apprehension. They
were not long left in doubt as to their treatment. Alexander had a special
tenderness for the oracle, which had broken silence for the first time since
the days of Xerxes to pronounce that he was the son of Zeus ; and the sacrilege
of the Bran- •chidai against the god had involved treason against the
fatherland, far baser than that of any Greek mercenaries who had fought for
Persia since the Synod of Corinth. That the sins' of the fathers were to be
visited on their posterity was a common Greek belief; and it is Tiard to assign
any probable motive for the infliction of so awful a retribution as the
destruction of the village and of all its inhabitants, men, women, and
children, unless it were this belief, coupled with the desire to avenge the
treason and sacrilege of which the Branchidai had been guilty against Hellas
and the Hellenic god. If Alexander was not a conscious agent in what he
conceived to be a work of righteous retribution, he was a merciless savage.
Alexander was
now in the fertile district, midway between the Oxus and JaxartSs, watered by
the river Poly- timetos, or Zarafshan,' the scatterer of gold,' March to which
pours its waters into the Oxia Palus, or ^je^Jax- during the dry months is lost
in the sands. Having repaired the loss in horses which the army had sustained
in the march across the mountains and the desert, he advanced to Marakanda
(Samarkand). In Alexander's day it seems to have had little of the importance
which it gained in the fifteenth century as the capital and burial-place of
Timour, and which is recalled by the Persian proverb, that styles it the focus
of the whole globe. It is more truly said that it resembles Paradise, for no
lapse of time or change of circumstance can efface the contrast between the
terrible desert and its beautiful site, fine air and water, and luxuriant
vegetation, which even in those days marked it out as the capital of Sog-
diana. Here Alexander left a garrison, and it would appear from subsequent
events that SpitamenSs also retained at least a part of the power which he had
held under Bessos. But the king himself still set his face steadily northwards,
until he reached the left bank of the Jaxart&s. Here, too, he founded
another city or military colony, Alexandria (Khojend), the position being
suitable for making it Dangerous once &
frontier fortress and a base of opera- the^Mace^ t*ons a£ainst
Scythians of the right bank, donians at It was not long,
indeed, before the place be^ eSSS^"* came of vital importance in each character. (Khojend). For in this remote corner of the empire Alexander
was unexpectedly assailed by enemies in front and flank and rear, not acting in
combination though actuated by a common hostility. On the march from Marakanda
he had reduced without difficulty a chain of seven forts, standing near to one
another on the skirt of the hills and the desert, and intended probably as
outposts against Scythian inroads. The largest and most important bore the
ambitious name of Cyropolis. He now received tidings that the mountain tribes
in his rear had taken all these forts, and put their Macedonian garrisons to
the sword. And not only so; they had been reinforced and assisted by Sogdian
and Baktrian allies, only too certainly excited by the intrigues of SpitamenSs,
who, as he learned later, was even threatening Marakanda, while presently the
right bank of the river became lined with a host of Scythian horsemen, either
roused to action by the same intriguer, or fearing for an independence that
might seem threatened by the erection of the new fortress. It was a serious
crisis, exactly suited to try the king's judgment, and to call out his
determined energy. The first and most important thing was to recover the seven
forts.
Accordingly he
despatched Krateros to blockade the strongest, Cyropolis, which lay furthest
but one to the east, and was held by 15,000 men, while he himself hastened to
attack the westernmost, Gaza. It was carried by storm and burnt, and the
garrison was put to the sword. On the same day he stormed a second. On the next
day three more were carried ; and the garrisons in their attempt to flee to the
mountains fell into the hands of the Macedonian cavalry. The resistance at
Cyropolis was more desperate ; but the dry bed of a torrent gave admittance to
a forlorn hope headed by the king in person, while the attention of the
besieged was engrossed by a fierce attack on the other side. Even so, however,
with the gates open, and the enemy actually within the walls, the garrison
fought bravely; Alexander himself was wounded by a blow in the neck from a
stone; and it was not till 8,000 had fallen and the residue, shut up in the citadel,
were fainting for want of water, that they thought of submission. The seventh
and last fort surrendered at discretion.
By this time the new colony
of Alexandria was sufficiently advanced in building to sustain an attack; and
after leavingagarrisonthere of combined Greeksand Passa^e of natives,
and sending a force of 1,500 foot and the*jax-° 800 horse to the relief of
Marakanda, he crossed {£«?« the river under cover of showers of arrows from
jJjfJ^'" the engines on the bank, and at once attacked the Scythian
horsemen, who had defied him to come over, and boasted of the different sort of
enemy he would find in them. It was a new style of fighting, in which the
enemy, so to say, eluded the grasp, but hovered on the flanks of the army and
trusted to their missiles. Alexander's genius, however, was shown not least in
coping with strange emergencies, and few generals, it any, have rivalled his
rapidity of movement. Tha A. //. m
Scythians were
compelled to fight in his way and not their own, and were finally driven off
the field with a loss of 1,000 killed and 150 prisoners. A reverse so
unexpected speedily led to apologies, submission, and peace. Alexander at once
recrossed the river; and, spurred by the intelligence of disasters in his rear,
actually made the whole distance from the Jaxartds to Marakanda by a forced
march in less than four days. His presence was indeed needed. It appears that
on the approach of Exploits of the relieving force
already mentioned, Spita- Spitamen6s. men6s,
who was pressing the garrison of Marakanda hard, at once retired westward down
the valley of the PolytimStos in the direction of the modern Bokhara and passed
it to the very edge of the desert lying between Bokhara and Khiva. Here he was
joined by 600 Scythian cavalry; then, turning fiercely on the Macedonians, who
had been pursuing him, and using cunningly those very tactics which had almost
baffled Alexander himself, he harassed their advance with perpetual feints and
unceasing showers of missiles, until they were driven to a retreat At the river
the retreat became a rout and simple massacre, so that less than 400 escaped
to tell the tale. Then Spitamen6s marched a second time to Marakanda to renew
the siege. It was the first reverse of the Macedonian arms, the possible signal
for a general rising against the intruders in accordance with the usual habits
of barbarous tribes. Indeed it is in this light, and this light only, that a
word of extenuation can be said for the pitiless vengeance which fell upon the
inhabitants of this fertile valley; for if it was not an act of military
self-defence, it was an act of atrocious cruelty. Spitamen6s, on hearing of
Alexander's approach, a second time bowed befoie the storm and retreated
hastily in the same direction as before, this time Into the very desert itself.
Alexander followed as far as he dared ; but to enter the desert would have been
sheer madness. Baulked of his prey, he turned back up the valley, ravaging far
and near as he went, reducing every fort, and putting all alike to death. After
this he returned victorious into winter quarters at in winter Baktra
(329-8), where he received reinforce- ^?rearsat
ments from Greece and Syria. During the (329-8)- winter, moreover, the
unfortunate Bessos was brought before the assembled Macedonians to receive his
final sentence. If Arrian is correct in saying that Alexander ordered him to be
mutilated in nose and ears, and then sent him to Agbatana for execution, the
strictures are just which he passes on the king for this conformity to a
hideous Eastern custom. On the other hand, Diodoros avers that Bessos was given
over to the tender mercies of the brother and other kinsmen of Darius, as a
politic concession, and that they insulted and tortured and finally put him to
death, with ingenious refinements of cruelty only possible to Orientals.
The events of the campaigns of 328 and 327 are so
obscurely narrated that, while the results are intelligible, it is almost
impossible to understand the de- Measures tails. It will be
sufficient, therefore, to re- count briefly the steps which were taken to
the'two0 insure the subjection of Baktria and Sogdiana provinces*
and the defeat of Spitamenes. It became clear to Alexander during the winter
of 329-8 that his work in these provinces was as yet only half done. There were
many hill tribes still restless under the interference with their liberty.
There were many independent chiefs whose submission was secure only so long as
Macedonian troops were in their neighbourhood. There were several important
leaders at large, who might possibly become centres of formidable insurrection.
And there was more than one almost impregnable hill-fortress still unreduced,
M 2
where an
insurgent force might find shelter. He therefore organized a series of flying
columns, to act in several directions at once under himself and his lieutenants
in Sogdiana, with orders to rendezvous at Marakanda. Krateros was left with a
sufficient force to answer for order in Baktria. From the mountains of Nura in
the far west, lying to the north of Bagae (Bokhara), to Mar- ginia in the
north-east (Marginan in Ferghan), and Parcetaken* in the south-east, the whole
country seems to have been swept by these flying columns during the year 328, and the early part of 327.
Meanwhile Spit'amenSs in their rear, ever on the watch, fell upon isolated detachments,
and on one occasion boldly ravaged up to the very walls of Baktra. But it was
an unequal struggle ; End of and at last, after a
defeat at Bagae more crush- Spitamenes. jng than
usual, the Scythian allies, weary of the struggle and thinking the cause
desperate, first plundered the baggage and then cut off the head of SpitamenSs,
and sent it to Alexander. Thus fell the most obstinate, active, and courageous
enemy that the Macedonian troops had met in Asia, and his death unquestionably
relieved Alexander of a permanent source of .anxiety.
Of all the
military operations the king, as usual, reserved the most difficult for
himself. This was an attack Ca ture of on two a similar character, stand
ee SogdUin ing on high, insulated rocks, precipitous on all Rock*
sides, and surrounded by deep ravines—so lofty and apparently inaccessible that
the taunting question of one of the chiefs seemed not amiss, whether the
Macedonians had wings to fly with! The difficulty, moreover, of attacking the
first of these forts—the famous Sogdian Rock—was increased to all appearances
by the deep snow that lay on the ground at the time; though in the event it was
the means whereby the place was taken. A reward of twelve talents was offered
to the first man who mounted the rock, and less in proportion to those who
followed. Three hundred volunteers were soon forthcoming. Armed with ropes and
iron tent-pegs, they made for the steepest and least protected side of the rock
in the dead of night; and, fixing the pegs in the crevices of the rock where
possible, but chiefly in the snow, which was frozen so hard as to bear the
weight, slowly and with difficulty they made the dangerous ascent. Thirty of
the number slipped and perished in the attempt, and their bodies were buried so
deeply in the snowdrifts at the bottom that they were never recovered even for
burial. Nevetheless the deed was done; for the chieftain Oxyartds, being
summoned to surrender, ' as the Macedonians (he might see) had found their
wings/ was so confounded by the sight of the adventurous soldiers in actual
occupation of the highest point of the rock, that he at once gave up the
fortress and all the souls within it. Among the prisoners was his own daughter,
Marria ( Roxana, declared by Alexander's officers to Aicxan§er° have been the most beautiful woman they toRoxa,ia-
had seen in Asia next to the wife of Darius. Amid the violent acts which at
this time sullied the conqueror's fair fame it is just to remember that, as in
the case of Sisygambis, so now he treated his prisoner with honour and
generosity ; and we can hardly share in Arrian's hesitation whether to praise
or blame his hero for making Roxana his wife. After this exploit, the capture
of the second fort in the following year was comparatively easy ; and indeed,
when the ravine at the foot of the Capture of rock had been partly
filled, and the arrows of the Rock of the besiegers
could reach the battlements, chori€n**- the terror of Alexander's
name and energy seems to have done the rest, and the fort was surrendered with
vast stores of provisions.
Open resistance
was now at an end: SpitamenSs was dead, and the Macedonian fortress-colonies
were numer- Reasons for ous an(* stTOnS
enough to hold the two pro- a march into vinces in
subjection. Alexander was, therefore, in a position to turn his face towards
the one province of the Persian empire which he had not yet entirely reduced,
though he was master of all the western part of what the Persians called India.
His ambition and curiosity were both aroused. Stories of the wonders and riches
of India had been rife in Greece for generations. It was known that in the
days of the first Darius its tribute, even if not levied beyond the Indus, had
amounted to a third of the whole sum received. Among the adherents of Bessos,
moreover, had been an Indian chief, who had fallen into Alexander's hands ;
and, while the king's ardent imagination was all on fire with this man's
stories, making clear and precise what before was vague, a timely embassy
arrived from another chieftain, who ruled between the Indus and HydaspSs, and
whose capital was Taxila, asking Alexander's help against a powerful and
troublesome neighbour, named Poros. Thus the die was cast, and Alexander resolved
to march at once into India.
Before, however,
we follow his fortunes on the Indus, it is necessary to recount briefly two
miserable events, which a historian would gladly omit, but cannot, because they
are clearly true, and because they illustrate the change for the worse in the
character and position of the king.
It was in the
summer of 328, when the flying columns already mentioned had reunited at
Marakanda, that a E isodeof &reat
banquet was held on a day sacred to Kieitos0 ° Dionysos. Deep drinking
(says Arrian) was (3a8>* becoming
the fashion in camp ; and with the
deep drinking began loud talking about the heroes
of the
day, and their.
relationship to Zeus, and some of Alexander's more open flatterers began
disparaging the deeds even of Herakl£s, in comparison with those of the king.
There was one man present to whom these eulogies were specially distasteful.
This man was Kleitos, commander of one division of the Companion cavalry, who
had saved the king's life at the Granikos, and whose sister had been the king's
nurse. But, however intimate his relations were with Alexander, he had long
been secretly offended, like some others of the officers, by his adoption of
Persian habits, and by the adulation which was expected and given. Heated now
by wine, he protested aloud against this disparagement of old- world heroes.
The acts of Alexander, he cried, were not comparable to those of HeraklSs, nay,
not even to those of Philip. Philip's greatness was due to himself alone ;
Alexander's in part to others, to Philip's officers, to Parmenion. Then raising
his right hand on high,(This hand,' he exclaimed,i
Alexander, at the Granikos saved thy life.' The king started from his couch,
maddened by a conflict of feelings. In vain did his generals crowd around and
try to restrain him. He called aloud for the guard. He protested that he was a
second Darius in the hands of a second Bessos, and king only in name. At last,
exerting his vast personal strength, he broke from the group of officers, who
were doubtless afraid to use much physical force, and snatching a pike from one
of the soldiers slew Kleitos, who, after being once dragged from the room, had
been rash enough to return. It was a terrible deed, followed by terrible
remorse. Alexander hurried from the hall to his chamber, and for three days
neither ate nor drank, calling aloud with deep groans for Kleitos and for
Kleitos' sister, and reproaching himself as the murderer of his friends. It was
indeed too true. Parmenion was dead, and now Kleitos was dead, and each man
might wonder whose turn would be next. But the past could not be recalled ; and
soldiers and officers, seers and philosophers, one and all, feeling how
intimately their own safety at the ends of the worlc was bound up in the safety
of the king, rebuked, implored, and argued, until he was induced once more to
eat, and to return to that life of energy which would be the best solace for
his grief.
The second
episode yet to be related was even more significant of the unsound state of
things in the royal Episode of camp. In the spring
of 327 Alexander cele- KaiiUthenSs brated his marriage
with Roxana at Baktra. HennolaofC There was
as usual a banquet, and as usual (3«7). the
conversation turned for the most part on
the greatness of
Alexander. The king's love of adulation had not waned any more than the
servility of his flatterers; and the tragic scene at Marakanda of the previous
summer would be in every man's memory. When, therefore, some of those present
not only maintained the right of Alexander to divine honours during his
lifetime for his superhuman deeds, but proceeded to set the example of prostration
before the demigod, the veteran officers sat still, moody and dissentient; but
no one spoke. To speak might be to provoke the fate of Kleitos. To
Kallisthenes, of Olynthos, the nephew of Aristotle, belongs the honour of
possessing moral courage enough to protest against the unworthy act. The gods
would be as little pleased, he said, to see their proper honours assigned to a
mortal, as would Alexander himself be to see a private man claiming the honours
peculiar to a king. Let the king bethink him whether, on his return to Greece,
he could enforce prostration from all Greeks, and, if not, what distinctions he
would draw. Rather let him be content with whatever utmost honours mortal man
might rightly have. These words were so dearly in harmony with the feelings of
the majority, that, like Caesar when offered the crown by Antony, Alexander
abstained from pressing the point, but was, nevertheless, deeply offended with
KallisthenSs—a feeling which was not lessened when the philosopher pledged the
king in a goblet of wine like the rest, and offered him the usual kiss, but
without prostration. Alexander declined the kiss, and KallisthenSs turned on
his heel, with the remark that he was going away the poorer by a kiss ! But the
matter did not end here. KallisthenSs was intimate with Hermolaos, one of the
royal pages ; and Hermolaos was smarting under a recent injury. He had been
hunting with the king, who was suddenly charged by a wild boar; and the page,
fearing for the king's safety, launched his javelin and killed it. For this
offence the page was whipped, and deprived of his horse. But the injustice
rankled in his mind ; and, with a boy's impetuosity, he arranged a plot with
some of his fellow-pages to murder the king in his chamber, when they were on
guard. The plot was frustrated by accident, and presently divulged; and the
conspirators were arrested and tortured, but no confession was elicited
implicating others. They were therefore arraigned as conspirators before the
assembled army^and stoned to death by the soldiers. If this were all, it would
perhaps prove no more than that Alexander's arrogance was undermining his
popularity ; but it is only too clear that the friendship existing between
KallisthenSs and Hermolaos was made an excuse for the gratification of the
king's jealous dislike of the philosopher, who was arrested, put to the
torture, and hanged.
CHAPTER XV.
FROM the
oxus to the hyphasis.
It was the summer of 327 when
Alexander set out for India. He left Amyntas in chief command in Baktria, . .
with a force of 10,000 infantry, and 3,500
March from , ,
.
Baktria to cavalry. His own army numbered 120,000 theKophen. and l^QOO cavalry, of whom probably
at least half
were Asiatics, and mainly recruited from Baktria and Sogdiana, serving the
double purpose of reinforcements and hostages. The range of Paropanisos was
crossed by another and a shorter pass than the Koushan in ten days. At
Alexandria he appointed a new governor, and added some fresh colonists from the
less robust of his soldiers ; and then marched onwards to Nikaia, either a town
lying between Alexandria and Ortospana (Kabul) or a new name given on this
occasion to Ortospana itself. Then he turned his face eastwards, to pass the
grim defiles where a British army was destroyed in 1842. But he met with no
opposition which the historians think worthy of notice; and presently, dividing
his forces, he sent Hephaistion and Perdikkas with a strong division down the
valley of the Kophen to its junction with the Indus at Attok ('the forbidden,'
to the west of which no Hindoo may pass without losing caste), with orders to
prepare materials for a bridge ; while he himself struck north-east into the
mountains, partly to reduce the mountain tribes, and partly because supplies
were reported as more abundant in that district. It was several months before
the king rejoined Hephais- tion's corps, and a detailed record of those months
would be but a record of marches, sieges, and skirmishes without a single
reverse, and of endless booty and prisoners. But of all his successes in the
campaign, probably none was more gratifying to the king himself than The hill-fort the reduction of the hill-fort of Aornos,
so far of A°mos. stronger than the fort of the same name in Baktria
that a legend told how it had baffled even the mighty HeraklSs himself. As
described by Arrian (whose authority is irreproachable since it rests on the
witness of Ptolemy, a prominent actor in the storming of the place), it was a
huge rock or mountain plateau, rising eleven stades above the plain, and about
200 stades in circumference, with plenty of good spring water, abundance of
wood, and good soil enough to employ 1,000 men. Within a short distance lay a
town called Embolima. Now the identification of spots mentioned in Alexander's
campaigns in India is not easy; but the identity of Aornos with a table
mountain, called Mahabunn, on the right bank of the Indus, about sixty miles
above its confluence with the river Kophen, is almost certain. The description
of Aornos answers almost exactly to that of Mahabunn, allowing for the
exaggeration of height and size natural in a man who could not speak from
actual measurement. Mahabunn is 4,125 feet above the plain, and is fourteen
miles in circumference. It is spoken of as a mountain plateau, scarped on the
east by tremendous precipices, from which one long spur descends upon the
Indus, and as the natural refuge of the neighbouring tribes from the arms of a
conqueror. Nor can it be mere chance that the name Embolima seems to survive in
the names of two villages, Umand Balimah, lying respectively in the river
valley, and in the mountain immediately above it.
Leaving Krateros
at Embolima, to collect corn and other necessaries for a long blockade in case
the first assault were to fail, Alexander himself advanced towards the mountain
to reconnoitre. At first sight even he might well despair of success. There was
only one road Capture of leading to the top of the
plateau, made for Aornos- the purpose and difficult of access ; and
the steepness of the cliff walls may be inferred from the fact that in the
night attack, in which the defenders were chasetjl from their stronghold, great
numbers perished by falling from the rocks. But the manoeuvre which succeeded
against the Baktrian Aornos was successful here also. Some natives of the
district came into camp, and offered to act as guides to a commanding spot on
the weakest side of the plateau, from whence it might be possible to take it.
It is difficult to gather an exact idea from Arrian's somewhat confused
account; but it would seem that there was a hill separated from the rock itself
by a long though shallow depression, not occupied by the natives, and only to
be reached by a rough and difficult track. Its occupation would at once give
the assailants the advantage of attacking from above and not from below. The
operation was accomplished with success Ptolemy, led by the native guides, and
taking a considerable body of light troops, occupied the hill unperceived
under cover of darkness, and having hastily intrenched himself, set light to a
bonfire as a signal of success to his friends below. It was well that he had
succeeded; for Alexander, endeavouring the next day to fight his way to join
him, found the difficulties of the ground too much for him, and was rudely repulsed.
Then the natives, elated by success, made a dashing attempt to carry Ptolemy's
intrenchments ; but the conditions of success were here reversed, and after a
fierce struggle they were driven back at nightfall and obliged to retire. In
the night Alexander sent off an Indian with a dispatch to Ptolemy, ordering him
to watch for his own advance, and when he himself attacked to do the same, that
they might place the garrison between two fires. There was seldom much delay in
the Macedonian camp when there was work to be done, and by break of day the
army was in motion. Presently Ptolemy's troops also issued from their
intrenchments. A desperate battle followed, lasting from dawn to midday, in
which at last Alexander was victorious, and, having effected a junction with
Ptolemy, thus became master of a base of operations from which to attack the
plateau with some hope of success. As many times before, so now he began
carrying a mound across the depression already mentioned. Every man was set to
work ; and the king himself stood watching, ready to praise or blame as need
might be. The mound advanced a furlong a day; and by the fourth day had so
nearly reached the plateau, that a handful of Macedonian soldiers were able to
rush across the intervening space and to seize a small peak, which abutted on
the plateau, and where they were partially protected by the arrows and missiles
of their comrades on the mound. Every nerve was now strained to complete the
communication between the peak and the mound, and it became a question of hours
how soon the attack might be delivered. But by this time the garrison was
thoroughly cowed, having never before seen such resolute energy in an
assailant; and they sent an embassy to Alexander, offering to surrender on
terms. It seems that their real object was to gain time, and thus to steal away
on the following night, and to separate to their several homes. But Alexander
was as far-seeing as they. Aware of their design, he pretended to amuse them
with overtures for their surrender, but made ready meanwhile for attack; and
when it was dark, after allowing time for them to withdraw their sentinels and
to begin the stealthy evacuation, he put himself at the head of 700 heavy-armed
troops and rushed up into the plateau, being the first to set foot in it
himsel£ The rest of the army soon followed, and overtaking the panic-stricken
fugitives began cutting them down in all directions. Many were slain on the
spot, or pursued into the plain and slain there. Many were killed by falling
from the cliffs. When day broke Alexander was master of this important
fortress, and of the adjacent country which it commanded, and in a position to
rejoin Hephaistion and Perdikkas when he pleased, at the bridge over the Indus
which they had built near Attok.
In the course of
the campaign to the north of the Kophen the Macedonians are said, by Arrian, to
have TheGy- passed a city called Nysa,
which claimed roeansand Dionysos as its founder. It
is added by orSiony? Curtius, that in this country of the Gyrceans >08, they were struck by various sights and
names
among the
natives and in the products of the district, which reminded them of their own
legends of the same god; and that near to Nysa was Mount Meros, where grape
vines were to be seen as well as the ivy and laurel which he had planted. It is
easy to believe both that Alexander himself was nothing loth to be treading, as
it might seem, in the very steps of Dionysos, and that the natives were acute
enough, then as often since, to humour the whims of an invincible conqueror. On
the other hand we are in a position to go further than this, and even to infer
how the confusion arose. The most correct form of the ancient name of the
Hindukush appears to be Paropa-nisus (or nisas), so that the name Nysa or something
similar may have been heard and misunderstood by Macedonian ears. Moreover, if,
as is probable, the country of the Gyroeans answered to the modern Kafir-
istan, whose inhabitants, like those of Badakshan, have still floating
traditions about Alexander, it is worthy of note that grapes, both wild and
cultivated, grow in profusion in the valleys, and that the Kafirs
(unbelievers), as the Mohammedans of India call the people, are great
wine-drinkers, both men and women, and are given to dancing with much gesticulation,
and to the accompaniment of wild and rapid music. Certainly to any Greek such
customs would have seemed to be of a thoroughly Dionysiac character.
Alexander
crossed the Indus a little above Attok about March, 326. At this point, 950
miles from the mouth and 1,000 feet above the sea, the river is at all times
broad, deep, and rapid, averag- ^Indua* ing a speed of six miles an
hour, a depth of 60 feet, and a breadth of 800 feet; in the floods of August it
is sometimes 15 miles broad, when a large part of the 'doab' (land of two
rivers), or country between the Indus and Hydaspes, (Jhelum), is under water.
But the Indus like the Oxus and JaxartSs, owing partly to evaporation and
partly to irrigation, diminishes rather than increases as it approaches the
sea; while the Punjab resembles Baktria in so far as the desert is never far
off, and fertility depends on neighbourhood to a river.
On the eastern
bank Alexander offered solemn sacrifice, and then advanced to Taxila
(Takshachila 'the hewn rock'), the capital of the chief who had appealed for
his aid against Poros (Purusha, 'hero*). If it be true that the rainy season
set in before he left the city, he must have stayed there some two or three
months, improbable as it may seem; for the south-west monsoon seldom begins in
the Punjab before the end of June.
From Taxila two
roads diverge, one running nearly due south, past Jelalpoor and crossing the
Sutlej just below its junction with the Beas ; the other ^ ^ running more to
the eastward, and passing th^Hydas- through a more fertile and populous
district. ^ Alexander, however, had no choice as to which of the two he should
follow, as Poros had taken up his position
just opposite
Jelalpoor, on the eastern side of the HydaspSs, and posted scouts up and down
the river to watch for his enemy's coming. Having sent Koinos back to the Indus
with orders to have the vessels which had formed the bridge sawn in pieces, and
to bring them on waggons to the Hydaspes ready for use, the king himself
marched onwards to that river, then fully a mile broad, where he came in sight
of his enemy, who had 30,000 infantry and 200 elephants, with numerous chariots
and cavalry ready to dispute the passage. To force it in the face of such an
army was clearly impossible. It was necessary to wait, to distract attention,
to throw the enemy off his guard, to spread false intelligence; and then it
might be possible to deliver a sudden and rapid blow. Accordingly he gave out
that he was aware of the extraordinary difficulty of crossing so broad and
rapid a river in the teeth of such an army, and had made up his mind to defer
the attempt until the monsoon was over and the water lower. At the same time he
kept Poros always on the alert, by constantly moving his boats and showing
deceptive intentions of crossing. At other times he would send off large
divisions of troops up or 15 down the river, as though searching for
a ford, all of which movements were plainly visible from the other side. Then
for many nights in succession he posted on the banks squadrons of cavalry at
intervals who shouted to one another, and ever and anon raised the war-cry, as
though preparing to try the passage ; and at every such alarm of course Poros
made instant preparations for battle. At last, after many false alarms, and
since they always ended in noise and shouting, Poros was thrown completely off
his guard, and even ceased to take notice of such purposeless agitation. Then,
and not till then, Alexander resolved that the time was come for action. About
eighteen miles up the stream on the right bank there was
a remarkable
cliff, where the river takes a wide bend, turning from a south-easterly to a
south-westerly course, Opposite the cliff in mid river was an island, which, as
well as the bank, was densely covered with tamarisks. This was the point
decided upon for the passage. To keep up the illusion in the mind of his enemy,
the king posted sentinels along the whole distance from the camp to the cliff,
each man within sight and earshot of his neighbour, who during several nightf
kept up the shouting and noise already described, and lighted fires at
intervals. Poros was again completely deceived and took no notice, merely
lining his side of the river with scouts to give notice of any unusual
movement. At last a night was fixed upon for the attempt; and Alexander set out
in the afternoon with two divisions of the phalanx and the flower of the
cavalry and light troops, striking somewhat inland (perhaps by the Kandar '
nullah,' or rivulet), so as to be out of sight. Krateros was left in camp with
the rest of the phalanx and some cavalry; and his orders were to remain quiet
in case Poros detached only a part of his force against the king, but if he
saw that the whole of the elephants were withdrawn, which were the only real
difficulty where horses were concerned, he was to cross without loss of time.
Midway between the island and the camp were posted the mercenary foot and horse,
with orders to make the passage whenever they saw that fighting had begun.
Pontoons of skins had already been prepared, and the boats brought from the
Indus had been put together. It was a night made for the occasion, dark and
windy, with thunder and heavy rain ; so that the words of command and the noise
inseparable from the movement of large bodies of armed men were inaudible at a
distance. Just before dawn the wind and rain ceased, and the passage began. The
whole force was thrown across to the island, as silently and rapidly as a. h. N possible, in the
boats and pontoons. It would seem, however, from Arrian, that they had all
mistaken the island for a projection of the bank, and were taken aback at finding
that a rapid though narrow channel of the river still separated them from the
mainland. But there was no time to be lost in embarking the troops a second
time. The scouts had already sighted them, and galloped off to, raise the
alarm. At last they found a ford; but so heavy had been the rainfall that it
£ould hardly be called practicable, for the water was above the men's breasts
as they waded and up to the horses' necks. Nevertheless all got safely across;
and Alexander at once made his arrangements for the battle, which he intended
to bring on without delay. Pushing on himself at the fiead of the cavalry,
5,000 in number, in case the enemy should be panic-stricken and attempt to flee
without fighting, he ordered the archers and the 6,000 heavy infantry to follow
him as fast as they could.
But Poros was a
different man from Darius. As soon as he learnt that he had been outwitted, and
that the Tactics of Macedonians were actually
across the river, he Poros, scnt
forWard one of his sons with 2,000 cavalry
and 120
chariots, while he himself prepared to follow with the main body. These cavalry
were presently met by Alexander ; but recognising him, and seeing his superior
numbers, they faltered, broke, and fled, hardly waiting for his charge. All the
chariots which had stuck fast in the mud remained in his hands, and 400 of the
horsemen, including their leader, lay dead upon the field. Meanwhile Poros had
stationed a small force, with a few elephants, on the river-bank to hold
Krateros in check ; and having chosen his ground on sandy soil, where there was
firmer footing and ample room, was engaged in drawing up his troops in order of
battle. The 200 elephants were the mainstay of his line, standing forward, says Diodoros,1
like the bastions of a wall/ at intervals of 100 feet from one another : and
the heavy-armed infantry were 'like the curtain/ ranged in line immediately
behind the elephants. No horses, he thought, could be brought to face such a
line; no troops could be so rash as to venture within the spaces between the
elephants. On either flank were massed the cavalry; but his main reliance was
clearly placed in the centre of the line,1 that seemed like a city
to look at.' and of As usual
Alexander's tactics were suited to his Alexander, enemy. As at Issos and
Gaugamela, so here, he resolved that the cavalry of the right wing should bear
the brunt of the attack, and that he himself would lead it; while the phalanx
in the centre was to hold back for awhile, in readiness to deliver the decisive
blow. Koinos was on the left wing with about 1,500 cavalry, and was ordered to
watch the cavalry of the enemy's wing opposite, and if they should offer to
ride across to help their comrades on the left, to follow and charge them in
the rear.
The Indian
cavalry on their left wing were still deploying from column into line when the
Macedonian mounted archers rode forward to the attack, Battle of supported by the king himself with the Com-
daspf/ panion cavalry. The Indians moved forward (326). to meet the attack; but
so much superior were Alexander's numbers seen to be, that the horsemen from
every part of the field, including the light wing, were at once ordered up to
reinforce the threatened left. It was the very movement which Alexander had
foreseen and provided for. Scarcely had the cavalry on the Indian right galloped
off along the front to join their overmatched comrades on the left than Koinos
wheeled round and followed them, and one wing of each army was thus suddenly
withdrawn to the other end of the line. The Indian cavalry, however, now massed
upon the left had a difficult manoeuvre to perform, and that in the very face
of the enemy; for, being well in advance of their own centre, they were
threatened on two points at once—by Alexander in front, and Koinos in the
rear, and had, therefore, to face both rear and front. They were in the act of
attempting this manoeuvre when Alexander gave the word to charge. Unsteady and
hesitating, they wavered for a moment, then broke and rode for their lives
towards the elephants to the shelter of a friendly rampart, passing between
them and through the intervals between the divisions of the infantry. The
mahouts, it would appear, had already begun to urge their animals on to the
charge and were supported by the infantry—a movement which might have been
dangerous had it not been checked by a rapid advance of the phalanx. It was a
fearful struggle such as even these veterans had never before experienced. The
huge animals trampled down their ranks by sheer weight, or seized the men
singly with their trunks, and, raising them aloft, dashed them to the ground;
while the soldiers in the howdahs plied them with arrows and javelins. The
cavalry, moreover, had rallied, and presently advanced once more to the
charge. But they were no match for Alexander's troopers either in steadiness
or bodily strength, and were speedily repulsed and driven in again upon the
centre. By this time, too, the elephants, a force scarcely more dangerous to
foes than friends, were becoming unmanageable. Some of them had been wounded,
and many of the mahouts slain; and being hemmed in by the close press of
horsemen and infantry, distracted by the confusion, and maddened by pain, they
kept up an incessant trumpeting, and began to turn round, treading down the men
of their own side, or to try and back out of the turmoil' like boats backing
water.' Then the infantry also were thrown into confusion, foot, and horse,
and elephants beiE£ hopelessly intermingled ; whereupon the king ordering the
phalanx to push steadily onwards in front, drew a cordon of cavalry, as it
were, round the flank and rear of the struggling, helpless mass, and completed
the demoralisation and ruin by repeated charges. The loss was prodigious,
including all the chariots. Two of the sons of Poros were slain, and a great
number of the superior officers. If a portion of the infantry and cavalry broke
through and escaped, it was but to find themselves hotly pursued by a fresh and
unspent enemy in the person of Krateros, who had forced the passage of the
river during the battle; so that 3,000 of the horse are said to have been
slain, and 12,000 of the infantry; while 9,000 prisoners were taken, and 80
elephants. The Macedonian loss was, as usual, trifling; amounting to no more
than 280 cavalry and 700 infantry —taking the highest estimate of the
Macedonian, and the lowest of the Indian losses July, 326).
Poros himself
fought like a brave man, not, as Darius, being the first to flee, but stoutly
resisting to the last. But when he saw the day was lost, being him- poros
a self also wounded in the shoulder, he turned Prisonei-
his elephant and began to retire. Alexander was most anxious that
he should be taken alive; but Poros sullenly resisted all overtures for
surrender, even attacking the officers whom the king sent after him. At last,
weary and faint with thirst, he yielded to the appeals of a personal friend,
halted, and dismounted from his elephant. The king, it is said, when Poros was
brought into his presence, was struck with admiration of his manly presence
and undaunted bearing, and, because he approached him as one brave man should
approach another, Alexander asked him how he wished to be treated. i
Like a king,' was the answer. ' That boon, O Poros/ replied the conqueror, (thou
shalt have for my sake. For thy own sake ask what thou wilt.' But Poros
answered that everything was contained in his request to be treated like a
king. Alexander was so charmed with his reply that he restored to him his
kingdom, and added to it largely, and thus secured a faithful friend.
The army was now
allowed to rest a month in the capital of Poros until the rains had somewhat
abated. Passage of In the interval Alexander
founded two cities— sfasfand Nikaianear the field of battle, and Boukephalia, Hydraotes. which he named after the favourite horse which
had carried him so gallantly through a thousand dangers, and was now dead. He
further ordered timber to be felled in the forests of the Upper Hydaspes, and a
fleet to be built for the navigation of the Indus. Then he crossed successively
the Akesin£s and the Hydraotes, into the country of the warlike Kathaeans whom
he soon reduced, and added to the subjects of Poros.
The Hyphasis
(Sutlej), to which he next advanced, was the eastward limit of his conquering
march. Beyond it, Advance to was lay a
desert of eleven days' march the Hypha- as far as the mighty
Ganges, whose valley was the empire of a king greater than Poros. To
Alexander's enterprising spirit such a vista of adventures was no doubt
delightful. Indeed, if we can credit the speech to the army put into his mouth
by Arrian, he had some strange notion thate the great sea which
encircles the earth,' was just beyond the Ganges, and that thence they might
circumnavigate Libya to the pillars of Herakles, and so march through Libya
homewards. But soldiers and officers alike were downcast and homesick, and at
first only answered his appeals with an eloquent silence ; The soldiers unt^> being urged by him to
speak, they ex- refuse to pressed their feelings in
the curious speech assigned by Arrian to KoinOs. ' Our numbers are thinned,' he
said ; ' we are longing to see our wives and children ; let us return, and
afterwards, if thou wilt, lead other troops, fresher and younger than we are,
to the Euxine, or to Carthage, or wherever thou wilt.' But Alexander was wroth,
and dismissed the troops to their quarters. Next day he tried a further appeal
to their loyalty and devotion. Anyone who pleased, he said, should return ; he
would take with him only volunteers ; the rest might go home and report that
they had abandoned their king in the midst of his enemies. And then he retired
to his tent, deeply mortified. For three days no one was admitted to his
presence. But gloom and silence still pervaded the camp, and the revulsion of
feeling which he hoped for never came. On the fourth day he offered sacrifice
preparatory to crossing the river; but the victims were unpropitious.
Then at last,
overborne by all these adverse signs, he summoned his friends and some of the
Companions, and bade them make known to the army his Return to resolution
to return. The universal joy was Nlkjua- attested by shouts and
tears and blessings on their king, who had never known defeat but from them.
Twelve huge altars were raised on the bank as a thank-offering for the
protection of the gods, and as a memorial of his victories ; and sacrifices
were offered and games were celebrated before he set his face finally
westward. Then at last the army set out on its long march for home. The
Hydraotes was passed, and the Akesines; and at length they reached the new
cities, Nikaia and Boukephalia, where the fleet was being built, and the
preparations made for the voyage down the Indus. But one man at least was
destined never to go further. Koinos died, and was honoured with a magnificent funeral;
although Alexander, having not forgotten nor, perhaps, forgiven his
expostulations at the Hyphasis, could not forbear the cynical remark, that
Koinos bad made his long speech to very little purpose.
CHAPTER XVI.
the return from the hyphasis to susa.
However disappointed
Alexander may have been to give up his schemes of adventure beyond the
Hyphasis, Alleviations ti^1"6 was quite enough of the marvellous and disap- the unknown in the future to make him soon ^ointment. forget the
disappointment. He had seen alligators in the Indus, and a lotus similar to
that of Egypt; and a letter of his, written about this time to his mother
Olympias, shows that he thought he had discovered the source of the Nile in the
Indus, which he believed must flow by a circuitous course through the desert,
and there, losing its name, pass through Ethiopia and Egypt under the new title
of Nile. His after discoveries, of course, and more particularly the
adventurous voyage of his admiral Nearchos, who explored the whole coast from
the Indus to the Euphrates, dispelled-the illusion.
The fleet built
or collected for the downward passage amounted to 2,000 vessels, including
eighty men-of-war. Preparation The were chiefly manned by Phoenicians for the and Egyptians, and Nearchos was in com- dowrfthe mand. Of the troops, 8,000 were to be on Indus. board under the king's own command; the main body,
with the elephants, under Hephaistion was to accompany the fleet along the
eastern bank; Krateros was to lead a smaller division along the opposite side ;
while a fourth corps was to follow after three days' interval.
On the appointed
day at dawn the army began its embarkation ; and Alexander himself, after
sacrificing to The start. stand on the bows of his
ship and poured
a solemn libation, with prayers, to the river deities whose waters he was about to explore^ and especially
to his great forefathers Herakles and Ammon. Then, at a given signal, the oars
were dashed into the water, and the fleet was under weigh, each division of
horse transports, baggage ships, and men-of- war being ordered to keep at a
safe and invariable distance from the others. Never before—and probably never
since—was such a sight seen on the Hydaspes. The banks rising high above the
level of the water were crowded with natives, whom the splash of the oars and
the shouts of the boatswains, re-echoing from the cliffs and surrounding woods,
had drawn from every side to gaze on the unwonted sight. With childish delight
they ran along the shore by the side of the fleet, and sang barbaric songs,
keeping time with the measured sweep of the oars. Thus hour by hour the fleet
dropped quickly down the stream, till on the fifth day they reached the
confluence of the AkesinSs and Hydaspes, a point of no little danger. For here
the banks converged, and the greater mass of water, pent within a narrower
space, formed an eddying, chafing rapid, the roar of which was heard from afar.
Amazed at the sound, the sailors almost involuntarily rested on their oars, and
the boatswains ceased their chant. They had barely time, indeed, to recover
presence of mind before they drifted into danger. The broader vessels suffered
no damage; but the long war-ships got athwart the current, which broke some of
the oars and made them almost helpless. Two of the number fouled one another
and foundered, losing most of the crews. At last, partly drifting, partly
rowing, they reached the broader water below, and put in to the right bank to
refit
As they were now
approaching the country of a people from whom a fierce resistance was expected,
Alexandet at this point made a new disposition of his forces. The people were
the Mallians, whose name, perhaps, remains in that of the city of Multan. It is
true that their ter- ritory lay to the- north of the HydraotSs, and that Multan
now lies considerably to the south of it; but it is well known The Mai- that the Punjab rivers often change their
courses mans and^" ^ Present
day, and geographers have Oxydra- supposed that the
HydraotSs (Ravi) and Hy- kans. daspes in Alexander's time met far more to the
south. In
conjunction with the Mallians occur two other names, at once curious and
interesting—Brachmans and Oxydrakans (Sudrakae). If we may suppose that these
names represent what we know as Brahmins (high caste) and Sudras (low caste),
it is not only of interest as confirming the high antiquity of Indian castes,
but will serve to explain why, powerful as they were, they failed to act in
concert. The mutual jealousy of high and low caste was only suspended for a
while by common hostility to the invader. Their forces, if united, are said to
have numbered 80,000 infantry, 10,000 cavalry, and 700 chariots, but they do
not appear to have dreamt of resistance in the field, but to have trusted
rather to their walled towns and to the belt of desert which sheltered their
northern frontier. Fearing lest they might seek to escape him by flight,
Alexander organized four flying columns, as he had before done in Sogdiana, to
sweep through the country. He himself intended to strike boldly across the
desert, the side whence they would least anticipate attack, and thus to be upon
them before they expected him. Nearchos was sent on with the fleet to the
confluence of the Akesin£s and Hydraotes.
This campaign
against the Mallians reminds us in many points of the campaign of 329 in
Sogdiana. Rapidity ^ . of action characterized both alike. The pre-
Campaign r
against the parations of the natives were forestalled by
Mallians. ^ kjng>s dash across the desert Town
after town was taken
with ease. Scattered bodies of their
troops were
intercepted and cut to pieces. Fugitives were pursued and destroyed. Little by
little the miserable remnant of the population was driven in upon their chicf
town, where it was hoped that all further resistance might be crushed at one
blow. If we can overlook the inhumanity of an attack on unoffending natives
—and it can hardly be too often repeated that to a Greek the use of the term in
such a connexion would seem quite out of place—we cannot but admire the king's
skilful tactics, and the energy with which they were carried out.
In attacking
this town Alexander was within a little of losing what might have seemed a
charmed life. At the first onset the defenders abandoned the Attack of wails and fled to the citadel. The Macedonians
^capita^ burst in through a postern gate, Alexander ofAiex-ger leading
the way. The rest followed, but in ander- the hurry of the moment,
or in the belief that the place was as good as taken, most of the ladders were
left behind. It soon became clear that the walls must be scaled if the citadel
was to fall; and theking, seizing the first ladder that came to hand, planted
it against the wall himself, and crouching behind his shield mounted and leaped
to the top. Close behind him followed Peukestas, bearing the sacred shield from
the temple of the Ilian Athene : behind Peukestas was Leonnatos. The veteran
Abreas mounted by another ladder. At the foot were swarming the foremost
troops, eager to be at their king's side, when suddenly both ladders broke
beneath the weight of the climbing crowd, and Alexander was left with his three
companions on the wall, a mark for every weapon. To clear a free space around
him was the work of a moment; some of the enemy were slain, others pushed headlong
from the wall. Then after a moment's hesitation, and with what even in
Alexander was insane rashness, he leaped down among the enemy on the inside
and, setting his back against the wall, prepared to defend himself. At first
tliey ventured to attack him at close quarters, thinking to kill him offhand ;
but when they saw their leader slain, and three others fall beneath his sword
or by the stones which, like some Homeric hero, he picked up and dashed among
them, they drew off and plied him from a distance with darts and arrows. By
this time his three companions were at his side, but the position was becoming
critical. Abreas was struck in the face and slain. The king himself was
wounded in the chest, and after fighting for a while began to faint from loss
of blood, and sank upon his shield; while Peukestas and Leonnatos, who
sheltered him as best they could, were also wounded. Meantime the soldiers
outside were in a state of fury at their king's danger. In the absence of
ladders they improvised means of mounting by driving pegs into the earthen
rampart, or climbing on each other's backs. Others burst a hole through one of
the gates and so struggled in, a few at a time. A short, sharp conflict
followed, and then a terrible massacre, the enraged soldiers sparing neither
man, woman, nor child to tell the tale. Alexander was carried out on his shield
in a dead faint, and, when he came to himself, the barbed arrow was cut out of
the wound ; but when from loss of blood he fainted again and lay as one dead,
the rumour that he was dead spread even to the camp on the river, and was
followed by an universal outburst of genuine sorrow and panic. Their heroic
leader had fallen, it seemed; and now who was to lead them back to Macedon
through the thousand dangers which were before them ? It is easy to imagine the
general shout of joy, therefore, which welcomed Alexander, when he was
sufficiently recovered to drop down the river to the camp, and was seen not
only to wave his hand to the anxious crowds upon the bank, but to be able even
to mount his horse. They pressed around him to touch his hands, his knees, his
clolhes, or crowned him with garlands and fillets.
Before the camp
on the AkesinSs was abandoned the Mallians made their submission. The king then
sailed to the junction of the five rivers and founded, From tho as
usual, another colony, with docks and forts co^uenw to command the navigation;
and thence pro- rivers loathe ceeded southwards towards the mouth, meet- sca-
ing with but little opposition except from the Brahmins, who seem to have been
able in those days, as in these, to rouse a tempest of religious and political
fanaticism against the ' infidel,' and induced a certain king Mousi- kanos to
revolt when Alexander had passed to the south. But such partial resistance was
useless, and its punishment fearful. Mousikanos and his advisers were attacked,
seized, and crucified. Many of his towns were razed to the ground, and the
inhabitants reduced to slavery. Others were occupied by garrisons. There was
still a voyage of some 200 miles before the open sea could be reached ; but
when the Rajah of the Delta of the Indus had surrendered his dominions, there
was little more hostility to be feared, and Krateros was detached with three
divisions of the phalanx, the elephants, and some light troops, together with
the invalids, to take the easier but longer road to Persia, by way of the Bolan
Pass and the valley of the Etymander into Karmania. The king himself continued
the descent of the river towards its mouth, accompanied by Hephaistion on the
left bank. At the apex of the Delta, 130 miles above the sea, Hephaistion was
left to turn the native town of Pattala into a strong fortress; and Alexander
took only the swiftest ships of the fleet to face the unknown dangers before
him. The shifting sand banks were presumably as great a source of peril then as
now, and for the greater part of the distance he could obtain no pilots.
Near the mouth,
moreover, his vessels were caught in the ebb and flow of a rushing tide (an
experience quite unfamiliar to Greeks) and somewhat roughly handled. All
dangers, however, were happily surmounted; Alexander sailed some miles out into
the Indian Ocean and satisfied himself of its true nature; he explored the
Delta and the Runn of Cutch; and then returned to Pattala, to finish the
preparations for his own march to the West, and for the voyage of exploration
along the shores of the ocean, the direction of which was given to Nearchos.
Although
Alexander was in part aware of the difficulties of his intended march, he
clearly did not know them March of ^ nor ^ t*me the march would re-
the king quire. Yet his object in making it was precise Gedrosia anc* intelligible. If we suppose,
with Arrian, and Kar- that he was eager to do what
Cyrus and
** Semiramis had failed to do, we may be sure also that he
wished to reduce provinces of the empire as yet unvisited, and to be near at
hand in case the fleet were in need of help. He had set out from Pattala, with
perhaps 50,000 men, towards the end of August, 325. The great heat, therefore,
which lasts from March to November, though beginning to subside, was still so
terrific as to render night marches for the most part necessary. The nature of
the country, too, is harassing and forbidding. There are ranges of mountains
which form the southern fringe of the terrible central plateau before
described, and which run parallel to the sea, but seldom nearer than ten miles.
The ridges are bare, and even the valleys poor and barren. At intervals the
desert seems, as it were, to intrude upon the mountains, and though here and
there aromatic plants were found to relieve the bareness, the horrors of heat
and thirst were aggravated by the numbers of poisonous herbs and venomous
snakes; while they were not a little annoyed by thorns, says
Arrian, of such
uncommon size and strength as to tear the horseman from his horse if they
caught his clothes, and to hold an entangled hare as firmly as the hook does a
fish. Sometimes they would come to stretches of fine soft sand, like untrodden
snow, dazzling to the eye and hot to the feet, and swept by the wind into vast
rolling billows. Men and beasts alike sank under the toil of ascending and
descending these yielding sand waves, so that the sick and weakly fell out of
the ranks, while the chariots for their transport had been broken up to avoid
the labour of dragging them through the sea of sand. To fall out, therefore,
was certain death. But of all their hardships thirst was the most terrible, as
it is of all human sufferings the most intolerable, the one torture which robs
ordinary men of the spirit of self-sacrifice. Yet a fine and touching story is
told of Alexander, which borders on the sublime. They were on the march,
Alexander at the head; all alike oppressed with heat and thirst. Some light
troops had come upon some water in a shallow torrent bed, a priceless prize,
which they gathered in a helmet and bore loyally to their king. Greedy, if
loving, eyes were turned upon him; yet it was too little to share with others.
Who but a man of self-restraint, almost heroic, would have endured, as
Alexander endured, to take the helmet and calmly pour the water on the ground !
And so refreshed was the whole army by this example (such is Arrian's comment)
that one might have thought that every man had drunk of the water poured out by
'Alexander.
From the horrors
of Gedrosia the army passed with joy into the fertile country of Karmania, and
the king celebrated games, and offered solemn thanksgivings for his victories
over the Indians and for his safe return. Here also he was joined by abundant
convoys, by troops from Media, and by Krateros with his division. Some satraps
and officers, who had presumed upon his long absence to misconduct themselves
in office, were arrested with Kra- and put to death.
Here, too, he met with Nwirchos, Nearchos, who, as we shall see presently,
a?Sttsa.ival kaci passed through dangers and privations
nearly as great as the king himself, and more trying because strange and novel.
Then, dividing his forces, he bade Hephaistion lead the main body to Susa, by
the shore of the Persian Gulf, where the climate was mild and provisions
plentiful; while he himself made for Persagerd and Persepolis. At the former
place his special anger was aroused by the discovery that the famous tomb of
Cyrus had been violated in his absence, the golden coffin chipped and opened,
and the body of the great king gone. Having done justice on the offender, and
having stopped for awhile to lament over the memorial of his own folly, the
blackened palace of Persepolis, he went on his way to rejoin Hephaistion at
Susa. A strange spectacle was there witnessed by the whole army. At Taxila
Alexander had met certain Indian anchorites, whom the Greeks called
Gymnosophists; and <$ne of them, by name Kalanos, had been persuaded to
follow the king. This man, being advanced in years and threatened with disease,
resolved to die while he was still in possession of his faculties, and so,
mounting ah immense funeral pyre, he was burnt to death in the sight of all, amid
the screech of elephants and the blare of trumpets.
Nearchos,
meanwhile, had led the fleet in safety along the coast of Gedrosia and the
shores of the Persian Voyage of Gulf, and proved (if
nothing else) that the Nearchos Indus was not the Nile. Arrian's account of Indus to the this memorable nautical enterprise in
Grecian Euphrates, antiquity is a compilation
from other and later authors, as well as from Nearchos himself; yet the general
accuracy of the details, and the frequent reference to the admiral's own words
as the basis of them, prove that it must have been an epoch in the annals of
Greek geography. If not the first, it was one of the first steps towards
correcting the crude notions of earlier geographers. The coast line was
followed from the Indus to the Euphrates, and landings were made at various
points;' while curious observations were recorded both in physical phenomena
and in natural history. Quantities of crabs, oysters, and indeed fish of all
kinds were met with throughout the voyage. Whales and porpoises were seen many
times. One monster of the deep is described, which had been cast up by the sea,
whose length was 50 cubits and its skin a cubit in thickness, and covered with
limpets and oysters. In fact, the southern shore of Gedrosia was occupied by
people who lived upon fish, partly eating it raw, partly drying it in the sun
and then pounding it into a sort of pemmican or fish-bread, and who made their
huts with fish-bones and their clothes with fish-skins—uncivilised barbarians,
who had the claws of wild beasts rather than nails, wherewith they tore their
fish asunder, and who supplied their ignorance of iron by the use of flints.
But inside the Persian Gulf they reached less wild districts, where provisions
were comparatively abundant, and every island was fertile with vines and palms.
The approaches to the mouth of the Euphrates Nearchos described in terms which
might be used now—shallows, not of sand but of deep, treacherous mud, in which
a man would sink up to the shoulders, and where the channel, marked out by
stakes, was only navigable for a single ship. Another observation he made,
which in the hands of a geographer eighty- years later was the basis of the
first measurement of the circumference of the earth. He observed, when they
were in the open sea about latitude 25 north, as Eratos- a. h , o
thengs observed at Sy6n£ in nearly the same latitude, that the sun at
midday cast no shadow. Facts like these, apparently unimportant, were in
reality of the greatest value as items in the slowly growing mass of physical
knowledge, which the philosophers of Hellas were accumulating and learning how
to use. Nor were the observations of Nearchos the only scientific results of
Alexander's reign. At the request of Aristotle, the king had been for some time
employing agents, in many parts of Asia as well as Europe, to collect specimens
of animals and send them to Athens; and after examining and comparing these,
Aristotle wrote down the results in the fifty volumes of his Natural History.
Alexander also despatched three exploring squadrons along the southern. coast
of the Persian Gulf, having clearly in his mind the reduction of Arabia, and
the establishment of a sea route between Egypt, Babylon, and India.
But the leading idea, as well as the hardest task,
which Alexander had set before him was the amalgama- , tion of his diverse
subjects into one people.
Plans of , ,, ,. „ , J ... , r
Alexander It was equally difficult to conciliate the Euro-
mldSrif Pean
and t0 protect the Asiatic. The latter his sub-
had been drilled by centuries of oppression into abject submission to extortion
and tyranny. The former had learned from years of freedom and a long
muster-roll of victories to despise the effeminate Oriental How was it possible
to combine elements so antagonistic ? Nevertheless Alexander set himself the
task. It was before all things necessary to convince Asiatics that tyranny and
extortion were not the principles of the king's government; and with this view,
as has been already mentioned, many satraps and officers, who had presumed on
his long absence, were banished or executed. The worst offender had been
Harpalos, the Macedonian. Already convicted of pecu- lation as treasurer before
the battle of Issos, and a fugitive, he had been pardoned by Alexander,
restored to his post, and afterwards appointed satrap of Babylonia. There, as
lavish as he was grasping, his shameless luxuries in the king's absence had
rivalled even those of a Sardanapalus. The fish for his table were brought
specially from* the sea. His gardens were filled with choice exotics. On
Alexander's return he fled a second time to Athens with avast sum of money, and
so escaped justice. But it was men like these, if any, Difficulties who
would endanger the empire, and whose of the task, excesses,
therefore, it was essential to punish. On the other hand, it wa§ not less
essential and much more difficult to induce the conquerors of these Asiatics to
acknowledge the conquered as their equals under a common sovereign. Englishmen
are only now beginning to find it possible, after 100 years of empire, to
recognise Hindoos as fellow-subjects and equals. It is true that the gulf
between the latter is greater than was that between Greeks and Persians; but
such a fusion is impossible in the course of a few months or even years, and
when forced on people against their will is often opposed with singular
obstinacy. And so it was with Alexander's attempted fusion of Macedonians and
Persians. He did his best, indeed, to bribe and flatter the former into acquiescence.
He offered to pay the debts of every Macedonian in the army ; and when the
soldiers hesitated to register their names lest it should be remembered
against them, heaps of gold were placed on tables, from which every man was
allowed to help himself. Several of the generals were presented with crowns of
gold. He himself married Statira, daughter of Darius, and nearly 100 of the
officers to please him followed his example in marrying Persian women ; and
when as many as 10,000 of the soldiers were found to have o 2 already formed
such connexions, or to be ready to do so, he presented each with a marriage
portion, and the weddings were celebrated publicly, with the accompaniment of
a grand banquet in a pavilion built for the occasion. But the jealousy of the
Macedonians was not one whit lessened; and when on one occasion he had
assembled the troops Mutiny of ' at Opis, and told
them that he- meant to dis- Opis'onthe band any them who were unfit
to serve Tigris. from age or wounds, they,
remembering that he had drafted thousands of Asiatics into the ranks, and
choosing to suspect that he only wanted to get rid of them, broke out into open
mutiny and, no longer awed into silence by his presence, bade him dismiss them
all and go campaigning alone with his father—meaning, of course, Zeus Ammon.
The outbreak was sudden, but told of a deep current of feeling below. Another
man might have hesitated what to do ; but Alexander leaped down at once among
them with three or four of his generals, and, pointing out the ringleaders to
the guards, ordered them off to instant execution. They were at once seized and
put to death, to the number of thirteen. A deep silence immediately followed
among the vast crowd, broken after a pause by the king's voice, who had remounted
the platform. He was bitter and angry, and his words were sarcastic. i
They to mutiny! Men who owed all to his father and himself! Men who once were
rude clowns dressed in skins, and now were satraps and generals loaded with the
wealth of Lydia and the treasures of Persia and the good things of India. They
thought, perhaps, he had spared himself, or kept too much for himself ? Could
any man show more wounds than he could? or accuse him of niggardliness in his
rewards ? " You all are wishing to go," he cried, " and go you
shall; and tell those at home how you left your king, who had led you
victorious from the Granikos to the
Hyphasis—ay, and
would have crossed the Hyphasis had you not been laggards !—to the care of
barbarian guards ? It may be that such things are glorious in the eyes of men,
and right in the sight of the gods ! Away!n With these words he
hurriedly left the platform and shut himself up in the palace. For two days he
saw no one. On the third he sent for the chief Persian officers, and gave them
his orders. In future (he said) he would have Persian troops only, named and
organized after the Macedonian model, but officered by Persians. This was the
last drop in the cup. Repentant before, the soldiers were now in despair; and,
rushing to the palace, they threw their arms at the gates, and, with cries and
prayers for admittance declared that they would not depart by night or clay
till Alexander showed them some pity. Then the king relented, and came out to
them in haste; and the reconciliation, soon effected, was sealed by a banquet
at which 9,000 of the troops were entertained by Alexander.
Soon afterwards
10,000 veterans were led home by Krateros—' the trusty friend, dear to the king
as his own life'—each man receiving a talent above his Despatches pay. At the
same time he sent despatches to the
Greece, bidding
the cities receive back all Greeks, exiles who had not
been guilty of sacrilege or murder, and requiring them to give himself divine
honours. Of the two demands the latter seemed to Hellenes ridiculous, and the
former intolerable. Alexander's speedy death, indeed, relieved the Greek cities
from this direful prospect of having in fact to receive so many Macedonian
garrisons in the persons of their exiled citizens; while the general view, held
on the question of divine honours, may be adequately summed up in the advice of
DemadSs to the Athenians, not to lose earth while contesting about heaven, and
in the reply of the Spartans that if Alexander would be a god, he might.
CHAPTER XVII.
closing scenes.
199
C1I. XVII.
In the winter of
324-3 Alexander set out from Susa to Agbatana, passing on his way the famous
rock monu- Festival at ments of Bdhistun. His
object, no doubt, Agbatana. waJS t0 gratify
the Medes by a short stay in their capital, as he had already stayed in Babylon
and Persepolis, and to retain what had been a yearly custom of the former kings
of Persia. They were further gratified by a magnificent celebration of the
annual festival of Dionysos. But the general joy was suddenly overcast Death of by a great sorrow. Hephaistion, the ' lover of Hephaistion. Alexander/ fell ill of a fever, which a
foolish confidence in his own strength induced him to neglect. During the feast
he became rapidly worse, and at last sank before the king could reach his
bedside from the amphitheatre, whence he was hastily summoned. It was only
natural that a man of strong, manly affection like Alexander should for three
days shut himself up in sorrowful isolation, and neither eat nor drink. It was
only natural that he should bury a comrade, so dear and faithful, with
extraordinary honours at Babylon, his capital, and that he should order a
general mourning throughout Asia. But we may surely dismiss, as the mere gossip
which gathers round every great name, such tales as that he cut off the hair of
his horses and mules, or dismantled the town walls of their battlements, or
killed the foolish physician who could not save his friend's life, or razed to
the ground the temple of Asklepios in Agbatana by way of revenge ; and may echo
Arrian's verdict, that such barbarous 1 follies were not consistent
with Alexander's character, though they might be natural enough in a Xerxes,
who chastised the Hellespont with fetters for wrecking his bridge.'
The king was
roused from his deep dejection by that best of remedies, the necessity for
action. The Kossaeans, a mountain tribe on the borders of Susiana _ ,. .
, ,, . _
. . . . Subjection
and Media, were
up in arms. Taking with of the him the dead body for burial, he set out on his Kossacans-
march to Babylon, about mid-winter 324-3, dividing his army into two corps
under himself and Ptolemy respectively, and crushing the armed resistance of
the mountaineers as he went. He then came down from the mountains into the
Tigris valley, and so passed on to the capital.
It was his last
march. Already omens and presages, we are told, of impending calamity. were of
frequent occurrence, and it would seem that even Omens of Alexander's strong
mind was not a little im- coming eviL pressed. As he drew near to
Babylon he was met by a body of Chaldean priests, who in private audience besought
aim to defer his entry into the city; for their god Bebs had revealed to them
that an entrance into Babyloi at that time would not be for his good. Then a
strarge story got wind about the Indian philosopher Kalan»s. Before his death,
it was said, he declined to take leave of the king, because he should soon meet
him at Baiylon. On another occasion Alexander was cruising 01 the canal of
Pallakopas, which had been dug to earn off the superfluous waters of the
Euphrates at flood time As the boat in which he was sailing passed by soire
tomljs of ancient Assyrian kings, it chanced that a sudien gust lifted from his
head the kausia, or broad- brinmed cap, which fell into the water, while the
diadem wKch encircled it lodged in the reeds that grew out ot ore of the tombs.
A sailor at once plunged in and swam to recover it, but in returning placed it
on his own head, lest it should be wetted. For this exploit he was rewarded
with a talent, but afterwards flogged for being so thoughtless as to put on the
king's head-dress. Some of the soothsayers were even so alarmed at the evil
omen as to urge the king to put the sailor to death. By-and-by another event
happened still more disquieting, It was at Babylon, and the king was holding a
council about his intended campaigns. Feeling thirsty, he rose from his throne
and left the council-room, followed by his officers, only a few attendants
remaining behind. It was a moment of unguarded relaxation. On a sudden a man, a
stranger to all, entered the chamber, and passing through the midst of the
astonished slaves, before they had presence of mind to stop him, seated himself
in the empty throne. The .etiquette of the Persian court, as stringent as that
of the French or Spanish couits in their palmy days, forbade the laying of a
finger or one who was sitting in the royal seat. So the slaves fell to rending
their clothes and beating their breasts, but had nothing else that they could
do. The news was presently carried to Alexander, who ordered the man to be
seized ; and an attempt was made by torture to elicit his purpose or the names
of his confederates. But the oriy thing that he could say was that it came into
his mini to do and he did it—a statement from which the seers hferred that it
was an inspiration from heaven, and must be regarded as a warning. Our
inference should be, perhaps, that he was mad.
However little
any of these omens singly might have affected so powerful a mind as
Alexander's, it was nevi- Their effect table that their
concurrence at a time vhen upon he
was depressed, and when perhaps the
201
ch. xvii. Alexander
at Babylon.
,Alexandcr- seeds of fever
were already in his system, should impress him not a little. The first warning
of the Chaldean priests he set aside with a jesting quotation from Euripides,
and indeed shrewdly suspected that they had a
personal interest in keeping him out of Babylon, fearing to be brought to book
for peculation during his absence. But the recurrence of the omens and the
increasing alarm of the seers seem at last to have made Alexander himself
anxious, and to have inspired him with fears of a plot.
Nevertheless, it
became necessary to enter Babylon, and (owing to the morasses on the south and
west) with his face turned towards the gloomy west, and by the very eastern
gate against which into Baby- the priests had
warned him. But it was a ^ splendid spectacle such as the city had seldom, if
ever, seen. There were the veteran troops that had conquered Asia—the fleet of
Nearchos, which had sailed in waters never but once navigated before. There
were new ships from Phoenicia, and others building on the stocks of the new
harbour. There was an army of workmen busy upon the splendid funeral pile of
Hephaistion. Last, but not least, there were crowds of ambassadors, not only
from Greek cities, but from Libya, from the Lucanians, the Tyrrhenians, and
even, according to one author, from the Romans, from Scythia, Ethiopia, and
Carthage—an imposing array, testifying to the widespread influence of
Alexander's name. For the moment Babylon was the centre and capital of the
world.
But, as Arrian
repeats many times over, with an almost dramatic iteration, the end was drawing
near. All things indeed went on as usual. Reinforce- ^ mentswere coming and
going. The Euphrates ewPans- fleet was finished and its
sailors were under constant drill. The details of the Arabian voyage and
campaign appear to have been settled, and a scheme for the exploration of the
Caspian was so far arranged that a party of shipwrights was sent to that sea to
build a fleet. Finally, a further step towards the fusion of the peoples of the
empire was made by the incorporation of a certain number of Persians with the
Macedonian infantry of the phalanx, each file of sixteen containing twelve
Persians, while the places of honour and importance, the first three and the
last in the file, were reserved for Macedonians.
But the end was drawing
near. A solemn sacrifice was celebrated for the success of the projected
expedi-
illness and at wine and meat were
distri-
death of buted to the troops ; and the king himself Alexander. gave a banquet to his
friends, which was carried on far into the night. As he was leaving the feast,
Medios, an officer of the Companion cavalry, pressed him to continue the revel
at his quarters* and Alexander complied. The next evening Medios renewed his
invitation, and again a great deal of wine appears to have been drunk. On the
following day the king felt the first symptoms of fever, and accordingly slept
at the house of Medios, though still well enough to transact business. He was
afterwards carried on a couch to the river side, and rowed over to a park on
the other bank, passing the next day in retirement, and in conversation with
Medios. But he now grew rapidly worse, and day by day became weaker, hardly
mustering strength to perform the usual sacrifice; until on the seventh day of
the attack, feeling apparently that he was dying, he had himself carried back
to the palace, and summoned the generals to his presence. He recognised them,
but had no strength to speak. Four of them in despair passed the next night in
the temple of Serapis, hoping for a sign. Three others even consulted the
oracle as to whether it would be better to bring the king to the temple of the
god. The answer was that he was better where he was. Some of the soldiers
meanwhile, from anxiety and affection, demanded to be admitted to see
Alexander, and, being allowed to pass through his chamber, soon saw that all
hope was gone. He lay speechless but sensible, recognising them severally as
they passed by his bedside with eloquent eyes, but hardly able to raise his
head. Had he been able to frame articulate words, it is possible that he might
have returned the answer ascribed to him in the story, and said that he left
his kingdom1 to the worthiest.' As it was, all he had strength for
was to take the ring from his finger and give it to Perdikkas. Shortly afterwards
he died in the 33rd year of his life, and the 13th of his reign (June, 323).
It has been said
that none of mortal birth ever went through such an ordeal as Alexander the
Great; and Arrian insists on certain points which ought not to be forgotten in
forming an estimate of character his hero. He was the
son of the able and lstlGtm unscrupulous Philip and of the violent
Olympias. He was brought up in a court notoriously licentious. He was a king at
twenty—the greatest monarch of the world before thirty. A general who never
knew defeat, he was surrounded by men vastly inferior to himself, who intrigued
for his favour and flattered his weaknesses. Thus inheriting n fierce and
ambitious temper, and placed in circumstances calculated to foster it, it would
have been little short of a miracle had Alexander shown a character without
alloy. To stand on a pinnacle of greatness higher than man had ever reached
before, and to be free at the same time from vanity, would have required a
combination of virtues impossible before Christ, perhaps never possible.
Alexander Was beyond question vain, impulsive,
passionate, at times furious; but he had strong affections, and called out
strong affections in others. A man of energy and ambition, he was the hardest
worker of his day both in body and mind. In- capable of fear, he foresaw
difficulties or combinations which others never dreamed of, and provided
against them with success. Amid endless temptations this son of Philip remained
comparatively pure. Unlike his fellow-countrymen, he was (says Arrian) no
great drinker, though he loved a banquet and its genial flow of conversation.
On one point in his character Arrian dwells with an admiration in which we may
heartily join. Alexander, he says, stood almost alone in his readiness to
acknowledge and express regret for having done wrong. That in his later days,
and when he had succeeded to the position of the Great King, he adopted the
Persian dress and customs may be ascribed to the same motive which induced him
himself to marry, and to press his officers and soldiers to marry, Asiatic
women, a politic desire not indeed to ape the ways of foreigners, but to
amalgamate his diverse subjects into one body. And if, over and above this, he
went so far as to claim divine honours as the son of a god, we may remember
that of all men Greeks were most easily thrown off their balance by
extraordinary prosperity, as were Miltiades and Alkibiades, Pausanias and
Lysan- dros, and that few men of his day or country were more susceptible to
the charm of heroic and.legendary associations than was Alexander. Elated,
therefore, by success, and genuinely wrought upon by the legends which were as
the air he breathed, he set an extravagant value on obtaining a public
recognition of the super-human nature of his powers, in which, perhaps, he had
even come to believe himself.
It has been said
in -depreciation of Alexander that His con-
his conquests were needless and the bloodshed ?mmor5°bi wanton>
*kat Save stroke to the
the eyes of ruin of free Hellas, and that whatever benefits the Greeks. Asja derived from its
conquests by Greeks were due rather to Alexander's successors than to himself.
These objections are as false in the spirit as they are true in the letter. For
on the first of these points we shall go altogether astray unless we place
ourselves at the point of view of a Greek of the fourth century. His view of
the relations between himself and a barbarian (and all who were not Greeks were
barbarians), was something similar to that of a mediaeval Christian towards a
Mohammedan, or of a Mohammedan towards an infidel. The natural state of things
between them was war ; and for the vanquished there remained death to the men,
slavery or worse for women and children. Any milder treatment was magnanimous
clemency. For years before Alexander, the idea of a war of revenge against
Persia had been rife. That he should invade Asia, therefore, and put down the
Great King, and harry and slay his subjects, would seem to almost every Greek
right and proper.
A few here and
there indeed were clear-headed enough to see that the elevation of Macedon
meant the downfall of free Greece. It clearly was so. And Greek free_
yet, if we look the facts in the face, we ob- dom de- ^ serve the free life of
Greece in the fourth cause the e" century
assuming a phase incompatible in h^di^de- the long run with freedom. It was the
day senred to be of orators, not of statesmen or warriors—of
timid action and peace at any price. It was a time of isolation, when (thanks
to Sparta) the glorious opportunity of a free Hellenic nation had been for
ever lost, and when the narrow Greek notion of political life within the
compass of city walls and no further had reasserted itself. It was the day of
mercenary forces, when free men talked of freedom but did not fight for it It
was a time of corruption, when politicians could be bought, and would seH their
country's honour. Indeed, con- sidering that the hegemony of Macedon was distinctly
less oppressive than that of Sparta, we may well believe that while cities,
like Athens or Sparta, which had once been leaders themselves felt a real
humiliation in subjection to Macedon, many less prominent states felt it to be
a change for the better, in proportion as such government was less oppressive
than rulers of the type, of the Spartan harmosts or the Thirty Tyrants at
Athens. Technically the Macedonian conquest did put an end to Hellenic freedom.
On the other hand, that freedom was fast tending towards, if in some cases it
had not already passed into, the anarchy which belies freedom, or the pettiness
which cramps it.
Lastly, we may
allow that in all probability Alexander neither intended nor foresaw half the
benefits which Salutary in- resulted from his career
to Asia and the" fluence of world, without
saying more than has to be said
Alexanders - r .. ,
conquest of every man of commanding and progressive upon Asia. ideas. it is
not, as a rule, given to men to see the fruit of their labours. Nevertheless
the world combines to honour those who initiate its varied steps of progress.
The change for the better which Alexander's conquests made in Asia can hardly
be exaggerated. Order took the place of disorder. The vast accumulations of
the Persian kings, lying idle in their coffers, were once more brought into
circulation, and at least tended to stimulate energy and commercial activity.
Cities were founded in great numbers. New channels of communication were
opened between the ends of the empire. Confidence was restored; and it may
fairly be added that only the king's own premature death cut short the
far-sighted plans which he had devised for the gradual elevation of his Asiatic
subjects to the level of his European, and which, indeed, had already begun to
work the results which he intended. It is true we can trace no signs of
political reform in Alexander's projects; but Asiatics had never known any but
despotic government, and beyond question were unfit for any other ; while a
king of Macedon would probably look on government by free assemblies with as
much contempt and suspicion as a Tsar of Russia in our own day. Even Greece,
which gained no direct benefit from the Macedonian empire, was yet indirectly a
gainer, in the fact that it was her language which was the medium of
communication, her literature which modified the religion that came back to her
and to Europe from Asia. It was Alexander who planted that literature and
language in Asia; and it was to Alexander that the great Christian cities of
Jerusalem, Antioch, and Alexandria always looked back with reverence as in
some sort their founder and benefactor.
It would be
difficult to conclude this short sketch of a heroic life more aptly than in the
words of Bishop Thirlwall. 'Alexander was one of the greatest of earth's
sons—great above most for what Condusion- he was in himself, and,
not as many who have borne the title, for what was given to him to effect;
great in the course which his ambition took, and the collateral aims which
ennobled and purified it, so that it almost grew into one with the highest of
which man is capable, the desire of knowledge and the love of good—in a word,
great as one of the benefactors of his kind.'