Incredibly thorough and chronological account of Athenian history. Some parts of this book will make you forget that you are reading a historical nonfiction and not a Homeric epic, an impressive feat.
Begins with the failed legal code of Dracon and the seisachtheia of Solon. Solon’s successor and lover Pisistratus became a tyrant, building the Athenian agora and turning the city into a hub for commerce, arts, and scholars. Pisistratus was succeeded by his sons, Hippias and Hipparchus, with Hipparchus being an infamous playboy who upset a local aristocrat by trying to steal his lover, the maneuver resulted in the deaths of the lover, Harmonius, the assassination of Hippachus, and the abduction and torturing of the aristocrat, Aristogeiton. Hippias continued to rule but his reign was marked by paranoia and brutality after the assassination attempt. The Spartans invaded Athens on behalf of the exiled aristocrats, forcing Hippias to flee the city.
Cleisthenes, leader of the aristocrats returned to the city, only to be challenged for power by Isogoras, who faced public backlash when he tried to dissolve the democratic councils and constitution of Solon. He was forced into exile after attempts to call on Spartan assistance for his regime. Cleisthenes empirically realized that the public would no longer accept blatant aristocratic, designing an elaborate and complicated facade of democracy institutions, that he believed to be too complicated for the public to actually participate in. This included equal rights for all male citizens, he allowed the lower lower classes to be represented in the public forums, and established representative districts known as “demes”. He’s known as the “Father of Democracy”.
Athens supported the resistance movements in the Ionian city-states that were under Persian influence, this upset the Persian King Darius who launched an invasion of Attica. With Sparta participating in an annual festival, Athens had to march into the Plains of Marathon to meet the Persian threat themselves. In a heroic battle, the Athenians lost 192 soldiers to the Persians’s 6,400. These martyrs for democracy were idolized across the Hellenic world, and showed that democracies could come together and organize against a greater threat, and win.
Themistocles was the next popular leader, with his primary objective being to establish Athens as a naval empire. He believed it would be beneficial to establish colonies in fertile lands to feed the growing population, and to defend against another Persian invasion. When a second invasion looked certain under Darius’s successor, Xerxes, Athens hosted a pan-Hellenic congress to establish a common resistance plan. Athens evacuated its entire population to the island of Salamis. Xerxes met Spartan General Leonidas at the Battle of Thermopylae, demanding the Spartans drop their weapons, only to be met with Leonidas’s famous response, “Come and get them!” Xerxes feared battle in the narrow passage, believing the strong Spartan defense would result in a bloody stalemate, but after bribing a local man to show them a secret route around the passage, the Persians encircled the Spartans. Upon learning of this, Leonidas ordered his men to “Eat a quick breakfast, for we will eat dinner in Hades.” Leonidas died in the fabled battle and after a Homeric battle over his body, was impaled on a pike. The Persians pursued the Athenians to Salamis. Themistocles, facing the threat of deserters, conducted a risky maneuver by sending a spy to tell the Persians to commence a blockade, for the “Athenian defenses were weak”, this forced the threatening deserters to stay in Salamis and participate in the battle. Strong winds funneled the ships through the Bay of Eleusius where fast moving Greek ships rammed the Persian warships, resulting in confusion. Xerxes declared a premature victory and returned to Persia, leaving Mardonius behind to occupy the Greek mainland. Upon the defeat of Mardonius at the Battle of Platea, some soldiers recommended his impalement to avenge Leonidas, but it was decided against, for it “wasn’t the Greek way”. Though repelled, Xerxes claimed a symbolic victory by pillaging the abandoned and evacuated city of Athens.
Themistocles and the hero of Platea, Pausanias, emerged war heroes after the war. Themistocles fell out of favor with the public after bragging about his war hero status, surprisingly moving to Persia and requesting to be made a governor by Xerxes’s heir, Artaxerxes. Pausanias went on to liberate Cyprus and Byzantium from Persia but also made diplomatic overtures, requesting the Persians support him and prop him up as loyal ally in Greece. This conspiracy was revealed and Pausanias locked himself in a Temple of Athena in Sparta and starved himself to death to avoid the authorities. Strange endings for the first heroes of the Greco-Persian War.
In Athens, a “Maritime Alliance” was proposed to act as a military pact against Persia, with member states contributing ships or money. Cimon, the son of Militades, a hero of the Battle of Marathon became leader. He forcefully and punitively enforced harsh penalties for member states of the League that couldn't meet ship or funding quotas, forcefully squashing revolts in states that tried to leave the League. In addition to this brutality, Athens established an empire of colonial garrison outposts, facing backlash for stealing resources and commerce from its allies. Evolving from a collective defense pact into a punitive imperialist empire, Athens acted selfishly under the veil of League business.
In 465 Sparta was destroyed by a series of earthquakes, resulting in a slave revolt in the countryside. Allies, including Athens were called in to help suppress the rebels, but once pushed to Mount Ithome, Sparta exiled their allies out of suspicions they may turn around to assist the rebels. Cimon, who advocated for a strong relationship with Sparta was humiliated and voted out of power. After the armistice, Athens provided refuge for some Spartan rebels, further upsetting the relationship between the two states.
Pericles was born into nobility but aligned himself with the Democrats of Athens. A popular democratic movement was sweeping Athens led by Ephialtes who sought to strip the Areopagus, a council controlled by oligarchs, of its power. He did this, and delegated the council’s authority to the democratic Ecclesia. Ephialtes was kidnapped and killed, likely by the oligarchs, leaving Pericles the natural successor of the democratic movement. He built a series of walls to secure naval access, founded food colonies, and agreed to the Peace of Callias, officially ending the Greco-Persian Wars, which saw Persia retreat from the Mediterranean all together, with Ionian city-states becoming fee. With the threat repelled, some began to question the need for the expensive and domineering Maritime League.
Pericles was a democrat with an aristocratic temperament. He recognized imperial overreach and instead of continuing to overextend, using the naval power to coerce allies into unity. He encouraged festivities in the city, promoting architecture, philosophy, and art. He extracted wealth from colonies and hired teams of renowned sculptures and architecture to make Athens “a city crowned with violence”, with baths, music halls, ands gyms all being open to the public. Pericles understood the use of "soft power" of culture, inviting tourists and students to diffuse Athenian culture and artistic styles across the Hellenic world.
Pericles faced opposition from a populist demagogue, Cleon. In the colony of Epidamnus, a democratic revolution threatened to overthrow the aristocracy. The colony’s mother city of Corcya supported the aristocrats, while Cocyan rival, Corinth, supported the democrats, conducting a naval buildup as tensions heightened its Corcya. This naval buildup threatened Athenian naval supremacy, prompting them to form a defense pact with Corcya. Corinth sought an ally in Sparta, who was growing weary of Athenian hegemony. The first battle took place in Platea, an ally of Athens, where Thebans were assisted by Spartans in taking the city, the Spartans then marched towards Attica, forcing Athenian farmers to flee the countryside for the city as Spartans marched through. Overcrowding led to a pandemic that killed thousands of people. Athenians were fatalist, believing the Gods had turned against them. Pericles became unpopular and depressive, with his own sons dying from the pandemic, he soon followed them. Athens faced a failing economy, expensive naval maintenance, supply chain complications, food shortages, a raging pandemic, all in the face of a defensive war. Cleon succeeded his rival Pericles and turned to an aggressive offensive war posture. In these times of crisis, the standards of decency the Greeks once prided themselves on collapsed, Athenians killed Spartan diplomats en route to the city, angry mobs murdered aristocrats in Corcyra. Across Greece, people took advantage of the anarchy engulfing the land to settle personal debts, grievances, and vendettas against neighbors and rivals. Aggression in these times came to be regarded as party loyalty, with suggestions of moderation considered treacherous to the cause, politics was a zero-sum game, Hellenic unity was a lost cause. Cleon ruled Athens with terror through public surveillance and secret police informants, he used brash rhetoric to whip crowds of supporters into violent partisan mobs. Cleon went as far as to approve the total eradication of the male population of Scione, selling the women and children into slavery and giving the land to the Plateans. The great bloodletting spilled across the land. As the war turned against the Spartans, the last holdout was established on the island of Pylos. Sparta made diplomatic overtures but Cleon demanded total victory. General Nicias, a general loyal to Pericles blamed Cleon for prolonging the war with winter approaching, which was making Cleon unpopular. He challenged Cleon to end the war himself, which was a challenge he surprisingly accepted, traveling to Pylos himself, attacking Spartan defenses and pushing them all the way to Amphipolis, where he and the Spartan general Brasidas killed each other in battle. General Nicias took control of the city and negotiated a a peace with the Spartans after the symbolic death of both leaders.
Some Spartan allies refused to uphold the treaty, destroying towns and bases that were supposed to be returned to Athens. The Sicilian city of Segesta requested Athenian support against their rival, Selinus. Alcibiades, an Athenian statesman favored intervention, while Nicias, favored peace. Alcibiades won the debate and set sail for Sicily. As the expedition began, an overnight vandalizing of Hermes statues across the city was blamed on Alcibiades and the sacrilegious act seemed to spell a bad omen as the expedition began. While in Sicily, authorities demanded he return to Athens to stand trial, but instead, he fled to Sparta offering to reveal state secrets for refuge. Meanwhile in Sicily, the Spartan ally of Syracuse intervened on behalf of Selinus, which prompted the Athenians to double down, sending additional resources and General Demosthenes. The first battle at Epipolae, at night, resulted in Athenians falling from cliffs and losing cohesion. The Spartans sent General Gylippus who recruited large numbers of native Sicels from the island’s interior. Demothenes advised a return to Athens, but Nicias, now refused to show weakness by retreating, only convinced to leave by a soothsayer he consulted out of superstition after witnessing a lunar eclipse. The soothsayer advised him to leave in three days. The Syracusans and Spartans learned of the Athenian intentions to retreat in three days and blockaded the shores, forcing the Athenians to move inland and survive off the land, cut off from coastal supply lines. Many fell ill, and Demosthenes lagged behind, surrounded and forced to surrender, Nicias soon followed, surrendering to Gylippus personally, both were executed. The Sicilian Expedition was a display of imperial hubris from an already overextended empire, it irresponsibly wasted resources for the unattainable goal of securing the island of Sicily, with no further plans on how to govern the island after the war. The war resulted in ships being destroyed and the loss of many soldiers.
After the disaster in Sicily the Ionian cities rebelled from the League, supported by Sparta, who was building a new fleet with Persian funding. Once the Ionian cities were free, Spartans, in return for the fleet, allowed them to fall under Persian rule. Alciabides fled to Persia out of fear the Spartans might kill him. Athenian aristocrats senses instability, hiring assassins to kill leading democrats, dissolving the democratic councils and constitution, and establishing the Council of 400 Oligarchs. The lead oligarchs were subsequently killed out of fear they might accept Spartan hegemony in a peace deal. Moderate oligarch, Theramenes took control. Alcibiades is recalled but after an admiral he appointed sacrifices a large naval fleet while taunting the Spartans he’s exiled, and returns to Persia, where Persian officials assassinate him at request of the Spartans. The final peace deal saw there dissolution of the Maritime League, Athenian city defenses destroyed, an end to its independent foreign policy, and an oligarchic council led by Critias and loyal to Sparta established in the city.
The Peloponnesian War cut the Athenian population in half, socio-economic inequality rose, ships no longer delivered gold or food, unemployment rose as manufacturers had to move away from wartime production, and independent merchants controlled the seas. With the Athenian fleet gone, piracy rose to disrupt commerce. Many Athenians fled to the countryside to become self-sustaining farmers, finally ending the city’s reliance on grain imports. Critias confiscated weapons, made a registry of democrats, and executed many rivals in a reign of terror, including Theramenes. Admiral Thrasybulus and democratic politician Anytus join forces to march on the city, with their promises of a restored democracy drawing many supporters. Critias and many oligarchs die in battle and the oligarchic council is dissolved, the Spartan garrison is removed from the city and Anytus restores democracy in the city. The Corinthian Wars ensued with Athens, Thebes, and Corinth attempting to rise against Spartan hegemony, but failing.
The city of Chalcidice was growing and threatening Sparta. Sparta marched through Thebes to reach Chalcidice, however, a Spartan general was enticed by a local Theban oligarch to help him overthrow the Theban government. He accepted and occupied the city, and his impulsive actions were supported by the Spartan government. Theben rebels and Athens declared war, outraged that Sparta would so blatantly violate the peace. Athens proposed a new League to tame Sparta, promising it wouldn’t be as authoritarian as the last, with member states having seats in a democratic Ecclesia. Theban rebels overthew the oligarchic government with help from Athenian volunteers. Theban General Epomionodes reformed the Theban army, chasing the Spartans back to the Peloponnese. He freed the populations enslaved by Sparta, including Messenia and Arcadia, helping them establish democracies and build defensive walls. This ended Spartan hegemony, humbling it into a local power in the Peloponnese.
Meanwhile in a rural region called Macedon that spoke butchered Greek and remained in permanent conflict with itself between different feudal warlords, Thebes intervened on behalf of one of the warlords. The warlord sent his rivals, including Philip of Macedon to Thebes as hostages. In Thebes, Philip learned about Epomionodes’s military techniques and reforms that destroyed the Spartans. An Anti-Theban league formed and killed Epaminondas at the Battle of Mantinea, ending Theban hegemony by killing their most brilliant general. Meanwhile in Athens, the War of Allies ensued, with member states growing angry that Athens had begun establishing colonies with undisciplined mercenaries. Bankrupt Athens couldn’t suppress cities in revolt and was forced to accept their independence. Athens became an “open air museum” as Everitt describes it, only renowned for its cultural influence, attracting artists, poets, and scholars from all over the world, including Plato, a student of Socrates who opened the “Academy” for Philosophy and Mathematics there.
When Philip of Macedon returned home, he defeated his feudal opponents and was elected king, establishing a professional army that employed the techniques he learned from Epaminondas in Thebes. He founded the gold-rich city of Philippi and introduced the first army engineering corp, constructing catapults and battering rams, alongside introducing a proper infantry division to his ranks. The newly freed Peloponnese city-states looked to Philip for support after the collapse of both Athens and Thebes. Philip respected Athens and sought an alliance with them, but after besieging the cities of Byzantium and Perinthus, Demosthenes (not the one from the Sicilian expedition) declared war against Philip. Upon a Macedonian victory at the Battle of Chaerona, Athens was forced to dissolve its maritime league and return all hostages. Thankful for the soft peace, statues of Philip were built in Athens, and he and his son Alexander were awarded Athenian honorable citizenship. Philip announced a Common Peace across Greece, marching against the only dissenter, Sparta, dissecting even more than the Thebans did by freeing more enslaved cities. Philip arranged plans to invade Persia and free the Ionian cities, only to be assassinated before the plan could be enacted. His son Alexander succeeded him, invading and conquering Persia. After Alexander’s death the empire collapsed. Athens, as a city, rotted under mismanagement of imperial occupiers, from the Romans, to Byzantines, to Ottomans, but was always spared from total destruction only due to its historic legacy.