Section 1
Part 1
...[They were tried] by a court empanelled from among the noble families,
and sworn upon the sacrifices. The part of accuser was taken by Myron.
They were found guilty of the sacrilege, and their bodies were cast out
of their graves and their race banished for evermore. In view of this expiation,
Epimenides the Cretan performed a purification of the
city.
Part 2
After this event there was contention for a long time between the
upper classes and the populace. Not only was the constitution at this time
oligarchical in every respect, but the poorer classes, men, women, and
children, were the serfs of the rich. They were known as Pelatae and also
as Hectemori, because they cultivated the lands of the rich at the rent
thus indicated. The whole country was in the hands of a few persons, and
if the tenants failed to pay their rent they were liable to be haled into
slavery, and their children with them. All loans secured upon the debtor's
person, a custom which prevailed until the time of Solon, who was the first
to appear as the champion of the people. But the hardest and bitterest
part of the constitution in the eyes of the masses was their state of serfdom.
Not but what they were also discontented with every other feature of their
lot; for, to speak generally, they had no part nor share in
anything.
Part 3
Now the ancient constitution, as it existed before the time of
Draco, was organized as follows. The magistrates were elected according
to qualifications of birth and wealth. At first they governed for life,
but subsequently for terms of ten years. The first magistrates, both in
date and in importance, were the King, the Polemarch, and the Archon. The
earliest of these offices was that of the King, which existed from ancestral
antiquity. To this was added, secondly, the office of Polemarch, on account
of some of the kings proving feeble in war; for it was on this account
that Ion was invited to accept the post on an occasion of pressing need.
The last of the three offices was that of the Archon, which most authorities
state to have come into existence in the time of Medon. Others assign it
to the time of Acastus, and adduce as proof the fact that the nine Archons
swear to execute their oaths 'as in the days of Acastus,' which seems to
suggest that it was in his time that the descendants of Codrus retired
from the kingship in return for the prerogatives conferred upon the Archon.
Whichever way it may be, the difference in date is small; but that it was
the last of these magistracies to be created is shown by the fact that
the Archon has no part in the ancestral sacrifices, as the King and the
Polemarch have, but exclusively in those of later origin. So it is only
at a comparatively late date that the office of Archon has become of great
importance, through the dignity conferred by these later additions. The
Thesmothetae were many years afterwards, when these offices had already
become annual, with the object that they might publicly record all legal
decisions, and act as guardians of them with a view to determining the
issues between litigants. Accordingly their office, alone of those which
have been mentioned, was never of more than annual duration.
Such, then, is the relative chronological precedence of these offices.
At that time the nine Archons did not all live together. The King occupied
the building now known as the Boculium, near the Prytaneum, as may be seen
from the fact that even to the present day the marriage of the King's wife
to Dionysus takes place there. The Archon lived in the Prytaneum, the Polemarch
in the Epilyceum. The latter building was formerly called the Polemarcheum,
but after Epilycus, during his term of office as Polemarch, had rebuilt
it and fitted it up, it was called the Epilyceum. The Thesmothetae occupied
the Thesmotheteum. In the time of Solon, however, they all came together
into the Thesmotheteum. They had power to decide cases finally on their
own authority, not, as now, merely to hold a preliminary hearing. Such
then was the arrangement of the magistracies. The Council of Areopagus
had as its constitutionally assigned duty the protection of the laws; but
in point of fact it administered the greater and most important part of
the government of the state, and inflicted personal punishments and fines
summarily upon all who misbehaved themselves. This was the natural consequence
of the facts that the Archons were elected under qualifications of birth
and wealth, and that the Areopagus was composed of those who had served
as Archons; for which latter reason the membership of the Areopagus is
the only office which has continued to be a life-magistracy to the present
day.
Part 4
Such was, in outline, the first constitution, but not very long
after the events above recorded, in the archonship of Aristaichmus, Draco
enacted his ordinances. Now his constitution had the following form. The
franchise was given to all who could furnish themselves with a military
equipment. The nine Archons and the Treasurers were elected by this body
from persons possessing an unencumbered property of not less than ten minas,
the less important officials from those who could furnish themselves with
a military equipment, and the generals [Strategi] and commanders of the
cavalry [Hipparchi] from those who could show an unencumbered property
of not less than a hundred minas, and had children born in lawful wedlock
over ten years of age. These officers were required to hold to bail the
Prytanes, the Strategi, and the Hipparchi of the preceding year until their
accounts had been audited, taking four securities of the same class as
that to which the Strategi and the Hipparchi belonged. There was also to
be a Council, consisting of four hundred and one members, elected by lot
from among those who possessed the franchise. Both for this and for the
other magistracies the lot was cast among those who were over thirty years
of age; and no one might hold office twice until every one else had had
his turn, after which they were to cast the lot afresh. If any member of
the Council failed to attend when there was a sitting of the Council or
of the Assembly, he paid a fine, to the amount of three drachmas if he
was a Pentacosiomedimnus, two if he was a Knight, and One if he was a Zeugites.
The Council of Areopagus was guardian of the laws, and kept watch over
the magistrates to see that they executed their offices in accordance with
the laws. Any person who felt himself wronged might lay an information
before the Council of Areopagus, on declaring what law was broken by the
wrong done to him. But, as has been said before, loans were secured upon
the persons of the debtors, and the land was in the hands of a
few.
Part 5
Since such, then, was the organization of the constitution, and
the many were in slavery to the few, the people rose against the upper
class. The strife was keen, and for a long time the two parties were ranged
in hostile camps against one another, till at last, by common consent,
they appointed Solon to be mediator and Archon, and committed the whole
constitution to his hands. The immediate occasion of his appointment was
his poem, which begins with the words:
I behold, and within my heart deep sadness has claimed its
place,
As I mark the oldest home of the ancient Ionian
race
Slain by the sword.
In this poem he fights and disputes on behalf of each party in
turn against the other, and finally he advises them to come to terms and
put an end to the quarrel existing between them. By birth and reputation
Solon was one of the foremost men of the day, but in wealth and position
he was of the middle class, as is generally agreed, and is, indeed, established
by his own evidence in these poems, where he exhorts the wealthy not to
be grasping.
But ye who have store of good, who are sated and
overflow,
Restrain your swelling soul, and still it and keep it
low:
Let the heart that is great within you be trained a lowlier
way;
Ye shall not have all at your will, and we will not for ever
obey.
Indeed, he constantly fastens the blame of the conflict on the
rich; and accordingly at the beginning of the poem he says that he fears
'the love of wealth and an overweening mind', evidently meaning that it
was through these that the quarrel arose.
Part 6
As soon as he was at the head of affairs, Solon liberated the people
once and for all, by prohibiting all loans on the security of the debtor's
person: and in addition he made laws by which he cancelled all debts, public
and private. This measure is commonly called the Seisachtheia [= removal
of burdens], since thereby the people had their loads removed from them.
In connexion with it some persons try to traduce the character of Solon.
It so happened that, when he was about to enact the Seisachtheia, he communicated
his intention to some members of the upper class, whereupon, as the partisans
of the popular party say, his friends stole a march on him; while those
who wish to attack his character maintain that he too had a share in the
fraud himself. For these persons borrowed money and bought up a large amount
of land, and so when, a short time afterwards, all debts were cancelled,
they became wealthy; and this, they say, was the origin of the families
which were afterwards looked on as having been wealthy from primeval times.
However, the story of the popular party is by far the most probable. A
man who was so moderate and public-spirited in all his other actions, that
when it was within his power to put his fellow-citizens beneath his feet
and establish himself as tyrant, he preferred instead to incur the hostility
of both parties by placing his honour and the general welfare above his
personal aggrandisement, is not likely to have consented to defile his
hands by such a petty and palpable fraud. That he had this absolute power
is, in the first place, indicated by the desperate condition the country;
moreover, he mentions it himself repeatedly in his poems, and it is universally
admitted. We are therefore bound to consider this accusation to be
false.
Part 7
Next Solon drew up a constitution and enacted new laws; and the
ordinances of Draco ceased to be used, with the exception of those relating
to murder. The laws were inscribed on the wooden stands, and set up in
the King's Porch, and all swore to obey them; and the nine Archons made
oath upon the stone, declaring that they would dedicate a golden statue
if they should transgress any of them. This is the origin of the oath to
that effect which they take to the present day. Solon ratified his laws
for a hundred years; and the following was the fashion in which he organized
the constitution. He divided the population according to property into
four classes, just as it had been divided before, namely, Pentacosiomedimni,
Knights, Zeugitae, and Thetes. The various magistracies, namely, the nine
Archons, the Treasurers, the Commissioners for Public Contracts (Poletae),
the Eleven, and Clerks (Colacretae), he assigned to the Pentacosiomedimni,
the Knights, and the Zeugitae, giving offices to each class in proportion
to the value of their rateable property. To who ranked among the Thetes
he gave nothing but a place in the Assembly and in the juries. A man had
to rank as a Pentacosiomedimnus if he made, from his own land, five hundred
measures, whether liquid or solid. Those ranked as Knights who made three
hundred measures, or, as some say, those who were able to maintain a horse.
In support of the latter definition they adduce the name of the class,
which may be supposed to be derived from this fact, and also some votive
offerings of early times; for in the Acropolis there is a votive offering,
a statue of Diphilus, bearing this inscription:
The son of Diphilus, Athenion hight,
Raised from the Thetes and become a knight,
Did to the gods this sculptured charger bring,
For his promotion a thank-offering. And a horse stands in evidence
beside the man, implying that this was what was meant by belonging to the
rank of Knight. At the same time it seems reasonable to suppose that this
class, like the Pentacosiomedimni, was defined by the possession of an
income of a certain number of measures. Those ranked as Zeugitae who made
two hundred measures, liquid or solid; and the rest ranked as Thetes, and
were not eligible for any office. Hence it is that even at the present
day, when a candidate for any office is asked to what class he belongs,
no one would think of saying that he belonged to the
Thetes.
Part 8
The elections to the various offices Solon enacted should be by
lot, out of candidates selected by each of the tribes. Each tribe selected
ten candidates for the nine archonships, and among these the lot was cast.
Hence it is still the custom for each tribe to choose ten candidates by
lot, and then the lot is again cast among these. A proof that Solon regulated
the elections to office according to the property classes may be found
in the law still in force with regard to the Treasurers, which enacts that
they shall be chosen from the Pentacosiomedimni. Such was Solon's legislation
with respect to the nine Archons; whereas in early times the Council of
Areopagus summoned suitable persons according to its own judgement and
appointed them for the year to the several offices. There were four tribes,
as before, and four tribe-kings. Each tribe was divided into three Trittyes
[=Thirds], with twelve Naucraries in each; and the Naucraries had officers
of their own, called Naucrari, whose duty it was to superintend the current
receipts and expenditure. Hence, among the laws of Solon now obsolete,
it is repeatedly written that the Naucrari are to receive and to spend
out of the Naucraric fund. Solon also appointed a Council of four hundred,
a hundred from each tribe; but he assigned to the Council of the Areopagus
the duty of superintending the laws, acting as before as the guardian of
the constitution in general. It kept watch over the affairs of the state
in most of the more important matters, and corrected offenders, with full
powers to inflict either fines or personal punishment. The money received
in fines it brought up into the Acropolis, without assigning the reason
for the mulct. It also tried those who conspired for the overthrow of the
state, Solon having enacted a process of impeachment to deal with such
offenders. Further, since he saw the state often engaged in internal disputes,
while many of the citizens from sheer indifference accepted whatever might
turn up, he made a law with express reference to such persons, enacting
that any one who, in a time civil factions, did not take up arms with either
party, should lose his rights as a citizen and cease to have any part in
the state.
Part 9
Such, then, was his legislation concerning the magistracies. There
are three points in the constitution of Solon which appear to be its most
democratic features: first and most important, the prohibition of loans
on the security of the debtor's person; secondly, the right of every person
who so willed to claim redress on behalf of any one to whom wrong was being
done; thirdly, the institution of the appeal to the jurycourts; and it
is to this last, they say, that the masses have owed their strength most
of all, since, when the democracy is master of the voting-power, it is
master of the constitution. Moreover, since the laws were not drawn up
in simple and explicit terms (but like the one concerning inheritances
and wards of state), disputes inevitably occurred, and the courts had to
decide in every matter, whether public or private. Some persons in fact
believe that Solon deliberately made the laws indefinite, in order that
the final decision might be in the hands of the people. This, however,
is not probable, and the reason no doubt was that it is impossible to attain
ideal perfection when framing a law in general terms; for we must judge
of his intentions, not from the actual results in the present day, but
from the general tenor of the rest of his legislation.
Part 10
These seem to be the democratic features of his laws; but in addition,
before the period of his legislation, he carried through his abolition
of debts, and after it his increase in the standards of weights and measures,
and of the currency. During his administration the measures were made larger
than those of Pheidon, and the mina, which previously had a standard of
seventy drachmas, was raised to the full hundred. The standard coin in
earlier times was the two-drachma piece. He also made weights corresponding
with the coinage, sixty-three minas going to the talent; and the odd three
minas were distributed among the staters and the other
values.
Part 11
When he had completed his organization of the constitution in the
manner that has been described, he found himself beset by people coming
to him and harassing him concerning his laws, criticizing here and questioning
there, till, as he wished neither to alter what he had decided on nor yet
to be an object of ill will to every one by remaining in Athens, he set
off on a journey to Egypt, with the combined objects of trade and travel,
giving out that he should not return for ten years. He considered that
there was no call for him to expound the laws personally, but that every
one should obey them just as they were written. Moreover, his position
at this time was unpleasant. Many members of the upper class had been estranged
from him on account of his abolition of debts, and both parties were alienated
through their disappointment at the condition of things which he had created.
The mass of the people had expected him to make a complete redistribution
of all property, and the upper class hoped he would restore everything
to its former position, or, at any rate, make but a small change. Solon,
however, had resisted both classes. He might have made himself a despot
by attaching himself to whichever party he chose, but he preferred, though
at the cost of incurring the enmity of both, to be the saviour of his country
and the ideal lawgiver.
Part 12
The truth of this view of Solon's policy is established alike by
common consent, and by the mention he has himself made of the matter in
his poems. Thus:
I gave to the mass of the people such rank as befitted their
need,
I took not away their honour, and I granted naught to their
greed;
While those who were rich in power, who in wealth were glorious
and
great,
I bethought me that naught should befall them unworthy
their
splendour and state;
So I stood with my shield outstretched, and both were sale in
its
sight,
And I would not that either should triumph, when the triumph
was
not with right.
Again he declares how the mass of the people ought to be treated:
But thus will the people best the voice of their leaders obey, When neither
too slack is the rein, nor violence holdeth the sway; For indulgence breedeth
a child, the presumption that spurns control,
When riches too great are poured upon men of unbalanced
soul.
And again elsewhere he speaks about the persons who wished to redistribute
the land: So they came in search of plunder, and their cravings knew no
hound, Every one among them deeming endless wealth would here be found.
And that I with glozing smoothness hid a cruel mind within. Fondly then
and vainly dreamt they; now they raise an angry din, And they glare askance
in anger, and the light within their eyes Burns with hostile flames upon
me. Yet therein no justice lies. All I promised, fully wrought I with the
gods at hand to cheer, Naught beyond in folly ventured. Never to my soul
was dear With a tyrant's force to govern, nor to see the good and base
Side by side in equal portion share the rich home of our
race.
Once more he speaks of the abolition of debts and of those who
before were in servitude, but were released owing to the
Seisachtheia:
Of all the aims for which I summoned forth
The people, was there one I compassed not?
Thou, when slow time brings justice in its train,
O mighty mother of the Olympian gods,
Dark Earth, thou best canst witness, from whose
breast
I swept the pillars broadcast planted there,
And made thee free, who hadst been slave of yore.
And many a man whom fraud or law had sold
For from his god-built land, an outcast slave,
I brought again to Athens; yea, and some,
Exiles from home through debt's oppressive load,
Speaking no more the dear Athenian tongue,
But wandering far and wide, I brought again;
And those that here in vilest slavery
Crouched 'neath a master's frown, I set them free.
Thus might and right were yoked in harmony,
Since by the force of law I won my ends
And kept my promise. Equal laws I gave
To evil and to good, with even hand
Drawing straight justice for the lot of each.
But had another held the goad as
One in whose heart was guile and greediness,
He had not kept the people back from strife.
For had I granted, now what pleased the one,
Then what their foes devised in counterpoise,
Of many a man this state had been bereft.
Therefore I showed my might on every side,
Turning at bay like wolf among the hounds.
And again he reviles both parties for their grumblings in the times
that followed:
Nay, if one must lay blame where blame is due,
Wer't not for me, the people ne'er had set
Their eyes upon these blessings e'en in dreams:-
While greater men, the men of wealthier life,
Should praise me and should court me as their friend. For had any other
man, he says, received this exalted post,
He had not kept the people hack, nor ceased
Til he had robbed the richness of the milk.
But I stood forth a landmark in the midst,
And barred the foes from battle.
Part 13
Such then, were Solon's reasons for his departure from the country.
After his retirement the city was still torn by divisions. For four years,
indeed, they lived in peace; but in the fifth year after Solon's government
they were unable to elect an Archon on account of their dissensions, and
again four years later they elected no Archon for the same reason. Subsequently,
after a similar period had elapsed, Damasias was elected Archon; and he
governed for two years and two months, until he was forcibly expelled from
his office. After this, it was agreed, as a compromise, to elect ten Archons,
five from the Eupatridae, three from the Agroeci, and two from the Demiurgi,
and they ruled for the year following Damasias. It is clear from this that
the Archon was at the time the magistrate who possessed the greatest power,
since it is always in connexion with this office that conflicts are seen
to arise. But altogether they were in a continual state of internal disorder.
Some found the cause and justification of their discontent in the abolition
of debts, because thereby they had been reduced to poverty; others were
dissatisfied with the political constitution, because it had undergone
a revolutionary change; while with others the motive was found in personal
rivalries among themselves. The parties at this time were three in number.
First there was the party of the Shore, led by Megacles the son of Alcmeon,
which was considered to aim at a moderate form of government; then there
were the men of the Plain, who desired an oligarchy and were led by Lycurgus;
and thirdly there were the men of the Highlands, at the head of whom was
Pisistratus, who was looked on as an extreme democrat. This latter party
was reinforced by those who had been deprived of the debts due to them,
from motives of poverty, and by those who were not of pure descent, from
motives of personal apprehension. A proof of this is seen in the fact that
after the tyranny was overthrown a revision was made of the citizen-roll,
on the ground that many persons were partaking in the franchise without
having a right to it. The names given to the respective parties were derived
from the districts in which they held their lands.
Part 14
Pisistratus had the reputation of being an extreme democrat, and
he also had distinguished himself greatly in the war with Megara. Taking
advantage of this, he wounded himself, and by representing that his injuries
had been inflicted on him by his political rivals, he persuaded the people,
through a motion proposed by Aristion, to grant him a bodyguard. After
he had got these 'club-bearers', as they were called, he made an attack
with them on the people and seized the Acropolis. This happened in the
archonship of Comeas, thirty-one years after the legislation of Solon.
It is related that, when Pisistratus asked for his bodyguard, Solon opposed
the request, and declared that in so doing he proved himself wiser than
half the people and braver than the rest,-wiser than those who did not
see that Pisistratus designed to make himself tyrant, and braver than those
who saw it and kept silence. But when all his words availed nothing he
carried forth his armour and set it up in front of his house, saying that
he had helped his country so far as lay in his power (he was already a
very old man), and that he called on all others to do the same. Solon's
exhortations, however, proved fruitless, and Pisistratus assumed the sovereignty.
His administration was more like a constitutional government than the rule
of a tyrant; but before his power was firmly established, the adherents
of Megacles and Lycurgus made a coalition and drove him out. This took
place in the archonship of Hegesias, five years after the first establishment
of his rule. Eleven years later Megacles, being in difficulties in a party
struggle, again opened-negotiations with Pisistratus, proposing that the
latter should marry his daughter; and on these terms he brought him back
to Athens, by a very primitive and simple-minded device. He first spread
abroad a rumour that Athena was bringing back Pisistratus, and then, having
found a woman of great stature and beauty, named Phye (according to Herodotus,
of the deme of Paeania, but as others say a Thracian flower-seller of the
deme of Collytus), he dressed her in a garb resembling that of the goddess
and brought her into the city with Pisistratus. The latter drove in on
a chariot with the woman beside him, and the inhabitants of the city, struck
with awe, received him with adoration.
Part 15
In this manner did his first return take place. He did not, however,
hold his power long, for about six years after his return he was again
expelled. He refused to treat the daughter of Megacles as his wife, and
being afraid, in consequence, of a combination of the two opposing parties,
he retired from the country. First he led a colony to a place called Rhaicelus,
in the region of the Thermaic gulf; and thence he passed to the country
in the neighbourhood of Mt. Pangaeus. Here he acquired wealth and hired
mercenaries; and not till ten years had elapsed did he return to Eretria
and make an attempt to recover the government by force. In this he had
the assistance of many allies, notably the Thebans and Lygdamis of Naxos,
and also the Knights who held the supreme power in the constitution of
Eretria. After his victory in the battle at Pallene he captured Athens,
and when he had disarmed the people he at last had his tyranny securely
established, and was able to take Naxos and set up Lygdamis as ruler there.
He effected the disarmament of the people in the following manner. He ordered
a parade in full armour in the Theseum, and began to make a speech to the
people. He spoke for a short time, until the people called out that they
could not hear him, whereupon he bade them come up to the entrance of the
Acropolis, in order that his voice might be better heard. Then, while he
continued to speak to them at great length, men whom he had appointed for
the purpose collected the arms and locked them up in the chambers of the
Theseum hard by, and came and made a signal to him that it was done. Pisistratus
accordingly, when he had finished the rest of what he had to say, told
the people also what had happened to their arms; adding that they were
not to be surprised or alarmed, but go home and attend to their private
affairs, while he would himself for the future manage all the business
of the state.
Part 16
Such was the origin and such the vicissitudes of the tyranny of
Pisistratus. His administration was temperate, as has been said before,
and more like constitutional government than a tyranny. Not only was he
in every respect humane and mild and ready to forgive those who offended,
but, in addition, he advanced money to the poorer people to help them in
their labours, so that they might make their living by agriculture. In
this he had two objects, first that they might not spend their time in
the city but might be scattered over all the face of the country, and secondly
that, being moderately well off and occupied with their own business, they
might have neither the wish nor the time to attend to public affairs. At
the same time his revenues were increased by the thorough cultivation of
the country, since he imposed a tax of one tenth on all the produce. For
the same reasons he instituted the local justices,' and often made expeditions
in person into the country to inspect it and to settle disputes between
individuals, that they might not come into the city and neglect their farms.
It was in one of these progresses that, as the story goes, Pisistratus
had his adventure with the man of Hymettus, who was cultivating the spot
afterwards known as 'Tax-free Farm'. He saw a man digging and working at
a very stony piece of ground, and being surprised he sent his attendant
to ask what he got out of this plot of land. 'Aches and pains', said the
man; 'and that's what Pisistratus ought to have his tenth of'. The man
spoke without knowing who his questioner was; but Pisistratus was so leased
with his frank speech and his industry that he granted him exemption from
all taxes. And so in matters in general he burdened the people as little
as possible with his government, but always cultivated peace and kept them
in all quietness. Hence the tyranny of Pisistratus was often spoken of
proverbially as 'the age of gold'; for when his sons succeeded him the
government became much harsher. But most important of all in this respect
was his popular and kindly disposition. In all things he was accustomed
to observe the laws, without giving himself any exceptional privileges.
Once he was summoned on a charge of homicide before the Areopagus, and
he appeared in person to make his defence; but the prosecutor was afraid
to present himself and abandoned the case. For these reasons he held power
long, and whenever he was expelled he regained his position easily. The
majority alike of the upper class and of the people were in his favour;
the former he won by his social intercourse with them, the latter by the
assistance which he gave to their private purses, and his nature fitted
him to win the hearts of both. Moreover, the laws in reference to tyrants
at that time in force at Athens were very mild, especially the one which
applies more particularly to the establishment of a tyranny. The law ran
as follows: 'These are the ancestral statutes of the Athenians; if any
persons shall make an attempt to establish a tyranny, or if any person
shall join in setting up a tyranny, he shall lose his civic rights, both
himself and his whole house.'
Part 17
Thus did Pisistratus grow old in the possession of power, and he
died a natural death in the archonship of Philoneos, three and thirty years
from the time at which he first established himself as tyrant, during nineteen
of which he was in possession of power; the rest he spent in exile. It
is evident from this that the story is mere gossip which states that Pisistratus
was the youthful favourite of Solon and commanded in the war against Megara
for the recovery of Salamis. It will not harmonize with their respective
ages, as any one may see who will reckon up the years of the life of each
of them, and the dates at which they died. After the death of Pisistratus
his sons took up the government, and conducted it on the same system. He
had two sons by his first and legitimate wife, Hippias and Hipparchus,
and two by his Argive consort, Iophon and Hegesistratus, who was surnamed
Thessalus. For Pisistratus took a wife from Argos, Timonassa, the daughter
of a man of Argos, named Gorgilus; she had previously been the wife of
Archinus of Ambracia, one of the descendants of Cypselus. This was the
origin of his friendship with the Argives, on account of which a thousand
of them were brought over by Hegesistratus and fought on his side in the
battle at Pallene. Some authorities say that this marriage took place after
his first expulsion from Athens, others while he was in possession of the
government.
Part 18
Hippias and Hipparchus assumed the control of affairs on grounds
alike of standing and of age; but Hippias, as being also naturally of a
statesmanlike and shrewd disposition, was really the head of the government.
Hipparchus was youthful in disposition, amorous, and fond of literature
(it was he who invited to Athens Anacreon, Simonides, and the other poets),
while Thessalus was much junior in age, and was violent and headstrong
in his behaviour. It was from his character that all the evils arose which
befell the house. He became enamoured of Harmodius, and, since he failed
to win his affection, he lost all restraint upon his passion, and in addition
to other exhibitions of rage he finally prevented the sister of Harmodius
from taking the part of a basket-bearer in the Panathenaic procession,
alleging as his reason that Harmodius was a person of loose life. Thereupon,
in a frenzy of wrath, Harmodius and Aristogeiton did their celebrated deed,
in conjunction with a number of confederates. But while they were lying
in wait for Hippias in the Acropolis at the time of the Panathenaea (Hippias,
at this moment, was awaiting the arrival of the procession, while Hipparchus
was organizing its dispatch) they saw one of the persons privy to the plot
talking familiarly with him. Thinking that he was betraying them, and desiring
to do something before they were arrested, they rushed down and made their
attempt without waiting for the rest of their confederates. They succeeded
in killing Hipparchus near the Leocoreum while he was engaged in arranging
the procession, but ruined the design as a whole; of the two leaders, Harmodius
was killed on the spot by the guards, while Aristogeiton was arrested,
and perished later after suffering long tortures. While under the torture
he accused many persons who belonged by birth to the most distinguished
families and were also personal friends of the tyrants. At first the government
could find no clue to the conspiracy; for the current story, that Hippias
made all who were taking part in the procession leave their arms, and then
detected those who were carrying secret daggers, cannot be true, since
at that time they did not bear arms in the processions, this being a custom
instituted at a later period by the democracy. According to the story of
the popular party, Aristogeiton accused the friends of the tyrants with
the deliberate intention that the latter might commit an impious act, and
at the same time weaken themselves, by putting to death innocent men who
were their own friends; others say that he told no falsehood, but was betraying
the actual accomplices. At last, when for all his efforts he could not
obtain release by death, he promised to give further information against
a number of other persons; and, having induced Hippias to give him his
hand to confirm his word, as soon as he had hold of it he reviled him for
giving his hand to the murderer of his brother, till Hippias, in a frenzy
of rage, lost control of himself and snatched out his dagger and dispatched
him.
Part 19
After this event the tyranny became much harsher. In consequence
of his vengeance for his brother, and of the execution and banishment of
a large number of persons, Hippias became a distrusted and an embittered
man. About three years after the death of Hipparchus, finding his position
in the city insecure, he set about fortifying Munichia, with the intention
of establishing himself there. While he was still engaged on this work,
however, he was expelled by Cleomenes, king of Lacedaemon, in consequence
of the Spartans being continually incited by oracles to overthrow the tyranny.
These oracles were obtained in the following way. The Athenian exiles,
headed by the Alcmeonidae, could not by their own power effect their return,
but failed continually in their attempts. Among their other failures, they
fortified a post in Attica, Lipsydrium, above Mt. Parnes, and were there
joined by some partisans from the city; but they were besieged by the tyrants
and reduced to surrender. After this disaster the following became a popular
drinking song:
Ah! Lipsydrium, faithless friend!
Lo, what heroes to death didst send,
Nobly born and great in deed!
Well did they prove themselves at need
Of noble sires a noble seed.
Having failed, then, in very other method, they took the contract
for rebuilding the temple at Delphi, thereby obtaining ample funds, which
they employed to secure the help of the Lacedaemonians. All this time the
Pythia kept continually enjoining on the Lacedaemonians who came to consult
the oracle, that they must free Athens; till finally she succeeded in impelling
the Spartans to that step, although the house of Pisistratus was connected
with them by ties of hospitality. The resolution of the Lacedaemonians
was, however, at least equally due to the friendship which had been formed
between the house of Pisistratus and Argos. Accordingly they first sent
Anchimolus by sea at the head of an army; but he was defeated and killed,
through the arrival of Cineas of Thessaly to support the sons of Pisistratus
with a force of a thousand horsemen. Then, being roused to anger by this
disaster, they sent their king, Cleomenes, by land at the head of a larger
force; and he, after defeating the Thessalian cavalry when they attempted
to intercept his march into Attica, shut up Hippias within what was known
as the Pelargic wall and blockaded him there with the assistance of the
Athenians. While he was sitting down before the place, it so happened that
the sons of the Pisistratidae were captured in an attempt to slip out;
upon which the tyrants capitulated on condition of the safety of their
children, and surrendered the Acropolis to the Athenians, five days being
first allowed them to remove their effects. This took place in the archonship
of Harpactides, after they had held the tyranny for about seventeen years
since their father's death, or in all, including the period of their father's
rule, for nine-and-forty years.
Part 20
After the overthrow of the tyranny, the rival leaders in the state
were Isagoras son of Tisander, a partisan of the tyrants, and Cleisthenes,
who belonged to the family of the Alcmeonidae. Cleisthenes, being beaten
in the political clubs, called in the people by giving the franchise to
the masses. Thereupon Isagoras, finding himself left inferior in power,
invited Cleomenes, who was united to him by ties of hospitality, to return
to Athens, and persuaded him to 'drive out the pollution', a plea derived
from the fact that the Alcmeonidae were suppposed to be under the curse
of pollution. On this Cleisthenes retired from the country, and Cleomenes,
entering Attica with a small force, expelled, as polluted, seven hundred
Athenian families. Having effected this, he next attempted to dissolve
the Council, and to set up Isagoras and three hundred of his partisans
as the supreme power in the state. The Council, however, resisted, the
populace flocked together, and Cleomenes and Isagoras, with their adherents,
took refuge in the Acropolis. Here the people sat down and besieged them
for two days; and on the third they agreed to let Cleomenes and all his
followers de art, while they summoned Cleisthenes and the other exiles
back to Athens. When the people had thus obtained the command of affairs,
Cleisthenes was their chief and popular leader. And this was natural; for
the Alcmeonidae were perhaps the chief cause of the expulsion of the tyrants,
and for the greater part of their rule were at perpetual war with them.
But even earlier than the attempts of the Alcmeonidae, one Cedon made an
attack on the tyrants; when there came another popular drinking song, addressed
to him:
Pour a health yet again, boy, to Cedon; forget not this duty to
do,
If a health is an honour befitting the name of a good man and
true.
Part 21
The people, therefore, had good reason to place confidence in Cleisthenes.
Accordingly, now that he was the popular leader, three years after the
expulsion of the tyrants, in the archonship of Isagoras, his first step
was to distribute the whole population into ten tribes in place of the
existing four, with the object of intermixing the members of the different
tribes, and so securing that more persons might have a share in the franchise.
From this arose the saying 'Do not look at the tribes', addressed to those
who wished to scrutinize the lists of the old families. Next he made the
Council to consist of five hundred members instead of four hundred, each
tribe now contributing fifty, whereas formerly each had sent a hundred.
The reason why he did not organize the people into twelve tribes was that
he might not have to use the existing division into trittyes; for the four
tribes had twelve trittyes, so that he would not have achieved his object
of redistributing the population in fresh combinations. Further, he divided
the country into thirty groups of demes, ten from the districts about the
city, ten from the coast, and ten from the interior. These he called trittyes;
and he assigned three of them by lot to each tribe, in such a way that
each should have one portion in each of these three localities. All who
lived in any given deme he declared fellow-demesmen, to the end that the
new citizens might not be exposed by the habitual use of family names,
but that men might be officially described by the names of their demes;
and accordingly it is by the names of their demes that the Athenians speak
of one another. He also instituted Demarchs, who had the same duties as
the previously existing Naucrari,-the demes being made to take the place
of the naucraries. He gave names to the demes, some from the localities
to which they belonged, some from the persons who founded them, since some
of the areas no longer corresponded to localities possessing names. On
the other hand he allowed every one to retain his family and clan and religious
rites according to ancestral custom. The names given to the tribes were
the ten which the Pythia appointed out of the hundred selected national
heroes.
Part 22
By these reforms the constitution became much more democratic than that
of Solon. The laws of Solon had been obliterated by disuse during the
period of the tyranny, while Cleisthenes substituted new ones with the
object of securing the goodwill of the masses. Among these was the law
concerning ostracism. Four year after the establishment of this system, in
the archonship of Hermocreon, they first imposed upon the Council of Five
Hundred the oath which they take to the present day. Next they began to
elect the generals by tribes, one from each tribe, while the Polemarch was
the commander of the whole army. Then, eleven years later, in the archonship
of Phaenippus they won the battle of Marathon; and two years
after this victory, when the people had now gained self-confidence,
they for the first time made use of the law of ostracism.
This had originally been passed as a precaution against men
in high office, because Pisistratus took advantage of his
position as a popular leader and general to make himself tyrant; and
the first person ostracized was one of his relatives, Hipparchus son of
Charmus, of the deme of Collytus, the very person on whose account especially
Cleisthenes had enacted the law, as he wished to get rid of
him. Hitherto, however, he had escaped; for the Athenians,
with the usual leniency of the democracy, allowed all the
partisans of the tyrants, who had not joined in their evil
deeds in the time of the troubles to remain in the city; and
the chief and leader of these was Hipparchus. Then in the very next year,
in the archonship of Telesinus, they for the first time since the tyranny
elected, tribe by tribe, the nine Archons by lot out of the five hundred
candidates selected by the demes, all the earlier ones having been elected
by vote; and in the same year Megacles son of Hippocrates, of the deme
of Alopece, was ostracized. Thus for three years they continued to ostracize
the friends of the tyrants, on whose account the law had been passed;
but in the following year they began to remove others as well, including
any one who seemed to be more powerful than was expedient. The first
person unconnected with the tyrants who was ostracized was Xanthippus son
of Ariphron. Two years later, in the archonship of Nicodemus, the mines of
Maroneia were discovered, and the state made a profit of a hundred talents from
the working of them. Some persons advised the people to make a distribution
of the money among themselves, but this was prevented by Themistocles.
He refused to say on what he proposed to spend the money,
but he bade them lend it to the hundred richest men in Athens,
one talent to each, and then, if the manner in which it was
employed pleased the people, the expenditure should be charged
to the state, but otherwise the state should receive the sum
back from those to whom it was lent. On these terms he received the
money and with it he had a hundred triremes built, each of the hundred individuals
building one; and it was with these ships that they fought the
battle of Salamis against the barbarians. About this time Aristides the
son of Lysimachus was ostracized. Three years later, however, in the archonship
of Hypsichides, all the ostracized persons were recalled, on account
of the advance of the army of Xerxes; and it was laid down for the
future that persons under sentence of ostracism must live between Geraestus
and Scyllaeum, on pain of losing their civic rights irrevocably.