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Athens and the Greek States From Alliance to Empire.

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Presentation on theme: "Athens and the Greek States From Alliance to Empire."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Athens and the Greek States From Alliance to Empire

3 Delian League

4 Bust of Pericles

5 Thucydides on Early Greek History  Thucydides-born of Athenian aristocratic family from Haliartus ca. 460 BCE ; failed as stratēgos (general) to relieve Spartan siege of Amphipolis in 424 BCE ; writes History in exile (cf. Histories 4.103- 106; 5.26)  Thucydides on insignificance of earlier Greek powers (Histories 1.21): Trojan War (1.9-11); Tyrants (1.17); Persian Wars (1.23)

6 Imaginative Bust of Thucydides

7 Thucydides and the “Realists”  Competitive Struggle for Security and Supremacy  “Zero-Sum” Competition  Power Ultimately the Final Arbiter  International “System” of Anarchy the Rule  “The problem is this: how to conceive of an order without an orderer and of organizational effects where formal organization is lacking.” (Kenneth Waltz, Theory of International Politics (89))

8 Pentekontaitia Defensive Alliance to Athenian Empire (Thuc. 1.89-117)  Athens rebuilt and fortified; Piraeus (Thuc. 1.90-93)  The Pausanias affair and Athenian allied leadership (Thuc. 1.126-138)  Delian Confederacy and the First Assessment Aristides’ First Assessment (460 talents); treasury at Delos (Thuc. 1.96) Allied contributions: money or ships Hellenotamiae (“Hellenic treasurers”)

9 Pentekontaitia Defensive Alliance to Athenian Empire (Thuc. 1.89-117)  Allied Military Actions Persia--470s: Eion (Persian stronghold); Scyros (pirate lair); Carystus (medizer) Cimon’s Eurymedon campaign in Pamphylia (469/8? 466?): Destruction of 200 Phoenician war- ships Expedition to Egypt (ends in disaster): 459-454 Internal Policing: Naxos, 470; Thasos, 465

10 470s: Eion, Scyros, Carystus

11 Cimon and the Persian Empire (Eurymedon)

12 Revolts: Naxos (470) and Thasos (465)

13 First Peloponnesian War ca. 460-455 BCE  Revolt of Thasos (465); Helot Revolt and Mt. Ithome (465); Athenian Settlement of Refugees at Naupactus  Alignment of Greek States-Sparta or Athens  Athenian Alliance with Argos, traditional Spartan enemy (461/460)  Athenian Assistance to Megara (Megarian revolt cripples Corinth, an important member of the Peloponnesian League headed by Sparta)  Tightening of Athenian control over Allies. Fortification of Athens and the “Long Walls” (459-442)  Allied treasury moved from Delos to Athens (454); Building Program (Propylaea, Parthenon)

14 Athens Fortified: Long Walls

15 Parthenon: Symbol of Periclean Democracy

16 Cimon, Pericles, and the Reorientation of Athenian Foreign Policy  Cimon’s Outmoded Policy (Sparta and Athens as the “yoke-fellows” of Greece against Persia)  Ephialtic Reforms of 462/1 BCE (archons by lot, pay for jury duty, stripping of Areopagus)  Ostracism of Cimon (ca. 462); obsolescence of Cimonian policy; “Peace of Callias” in 449?  Pericles and Sparta

17 Thucydides’ View on the War’s Causes (1.23) “What made war inevitable was the growth of Athenian power and the fear which this caused in Sparta.”


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