The Ancients - Fall of Sparta
Episode Date: January 8, 2026How did Sparta, the most feared military state in ancient Greece, fall from grace in a single generation?In this episode of The Ancients, Tristan Hughes is joined by Dr Roel Konijnendijk and Dr Owen R...ees to chronicle Sparta's catastrophic collapse in the fourth century BC. Fresh from its victory over Athens in the year 404, Sparta stood unrivalled. Yet within decades, its power would be shattered, its authority broken, and its golden age over. From decisive battles against resurgent rivals Thebes and Corinth to over-ambitious kings and a defining clash with a warband of sacred lovers, it is a gripping story of sky-high stakes and two-faced duplicity; of brutal power struggles and the cut-throat scramble to become the hegemonic power of ancient Greece.MOREMarch of the 10,000Listen on AppleListen on SpotifySparta vs Athens: The Greek World WarListen to AppleListen to SpotifyPresented by Tristan Hughes. Audio editor is Aidan Lonergan, the producer is Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.The Ancients is a History Hit podcast.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Ever wondered why the Romans were defeated in the Tudorburg forest?
What secrets lie buried in prehistoric Ireland?
Or what made Alexander truly great?
With a subscription to History Hit,
you can explore our ancient past alongside the world's leading historians and archaeologists.
You'll also unlock hundreds of hours of original documentaries
with a brand-new release every single week
covering everything from the ancient world to World War II.
Just visit historyhit.com slash subscribe.
It's 404 BC, and the Spartans celebrate one of their greatest triumphs.
After decades of on and off fighting with Athens, they had finally defeated their great rival.
The polarised Greek world that had existed.
shattered, with Sparta now clearly ruling the roost over Greece, entering its golden age,
its military zenith. And yet, within a few decades, this legendary city's dominance would come
tumbling down, never to rise to such heights again. So why did this happen? What caused Sparta
to fall from power so quickly in the early 4th century BC? It's a fascinating story.
story that features battles, city revivals, overseas expeditions, formidable Spartan kings,
and so much more.
This is the ancients.
I'm Tristan Hughes, your host, and this is the Fool of Spartan.
Joining me today, we have two returning guests, Dr. Rul Caninadike, Darby Fellow in Ancient History at Lincoln College, Oxford,
and Dr Owen Reese,
lecturer in Applied Sciences at Birmingham Newman University.
Rool and Owen, it is a pleasure to have you both on the podcast
at the same time, in the same room.
We never thought it could happen, but it has happened.
Thanks for having me, Tristan.
It's such a pleasure.
We've had you both on in the past for individual episodes,
but you are both experts in ancient Greece,
and it felt about time we covered the story of Sparta
in the fourth century.
BC. And it's often called the time when Sparta falls from prominence. And is that a fair
statement to say at the beginning? Rold, I'll start with you. I mean, absolutely. It's a century that
Sparta starts as the undisputed hegemen of the Greek world and ends as a minor state in the
Peloponnese. Like all of its power is stripped away. All of its allies fall away. It is
completely unable to re-sert itself. I think that's very much the story for Sparta in the century.
Yeah, absolutely. It's one of those sort of ironies of Spartan history where at the moment of its
great success, it is already falling apart. So as much as it is them at their sort of hegemonic
point, allegedly leading the Greeks, it is just a downward trajectory, pretty much from that
point onwards. Which is funny. Also, doesn't it feel that largely today, when we think of
Sparta, we seem to overlook the 4th century BC quite a bit, at least in the popular idea,
you'll think of Thermopylae, you'll think of Sparta beating the Athenians in the Peloponnesian
war, and then you kind of just forget about them, because you know that the Macedonians
and then the Romans come along, I guess.
There's a real tendency, I find, where people think that the end of the Peloponnesian
war has something to do with the rise of Macedon, that these things are related, right?
The Greeks exhausted themselves in the Peloponnesian War, and that allowed Macedon to rise.
There's like 60 years between those things, right?
You need to acknowledge that there are things happening in that time that also influence things.
And in fact, at the end of the Peloponnesian War, I mean, a lot of Greeks would have thought,
like, right, okay, that was, you know, not very nice.
But now we're back to the status quo, right?
Sparta is back on top. Athens has been humbled, and we return to the kind of structures that
we had before the Peloponnesian War. So they would have thought, you know, mostly that's
the return to business as usual. And it's what happens in the decades after. That really
changed the landscape. Yeah. And the other irony with Sparta is the fourth century is when
we actually get almost good evidence. Bold, clear. For Sparta. But, you know, this is where
Spartan history of the early fourth century is very much the work of Xenophon, who has a good
understanding of Spartan systems. He spends time in Spartan lands. He knows the Spartan king.
His account is we get to see Sparta, not necessarily realistically. There is still a propagandistic
nature to what he's doing, but it is better than we've had before. He was there and he can tell
what Sparta was actually like at that time. Precisely that. And he is writing about it in various
different books. He's given us these different perspectives. So it is quite odd. You are right.
we sort of overlook the fourth century as a result, and the irony is never sort of lost on us
with that.
And yeah, Zipon's, at least in my opinion, a much easier source to read anyway, isn't he?
He is.
He's a more interesting, oh, I'll upset people now.
He's just such a more interesting read.
Sorry, Therodon, Dys, sorry, Rodotus.
I mean, this is a sort of very xenophon-loving environment here, I think.
We both sort of love him very much, both because he's accessible as a source, you know,
he's easy to read, he's easy to pick up.
he wears his opinions honestly, but also because he's a very amusing figure as a character
that he appears in his own work or that appears through the interest that he writes about.
You can kind of relate to him in certain ways.
You can see what he likes.
You can see what he doesn't like.
And in that sense, he feels closer to you than somebody who stands very aloof of his material
like a Thucydides who is just like kind of laying it out as it is and you have to kind
of accept his authority.
Xenophon feels more personable.
Yeah, absolutely.
Absolutely.
And as a result, he gives just an amazing level of insight into things.
especially when he's witnessed them himself.
And you really do, when you're reading someone like Xenophon,
you get moments you're like, you were clearly there.
This is a bit too vivid.
And sometimes he will say that or imply it,
and other times he will leave it sort of quietly.
Like he gives a lot of detail about the defense of the oligarchives of 30 in Athens
after the Peloponnesian War.
We'll get to that.
We'll get to that.
Okay.
I won't say anything about it now.
Spoilers.
He's very conspicuously able to give a very detailed account.
But he wasn't there.
But he wasn't there.
But he was not there.
No one could possibly.
Possibly, you can't prove anything.
Xenophon, it sounds like here's our main source for much of the period that we're going
to be talking about today, like the half century or so.
But surely we've got a few other sources as well, writing a bit later.
My mind might think of Plutarch or Diodorus Siculus or the like.
Are they also helpful additions to what Xenophon supplies?
They're very helpful.
I mean, both because any source can tell you something more, even just about the kind
of traditions that used to survive.
Plutarch has access to a lot of sources that we don't have anymore.
And he quotes them and he talks about them, compares them.
He also writes about topics that other sources or Xenophon perhaps might not be so interested
in. So he gives all these biographies, you know, you get all these glimpses of other parts
of the Greek world and even beyond that. And Diodorus obviously preserves this continuous history.
I mean, he was trying to write a universal history. Most of it is lost, but there is a significant
chunk, especially the 4th century, that's preserved entire. So you actually rely on him.
Once Xenophon's narrative ends in 362, you have Diodorus and otherwise you would have very little at all.
But I also want to mention a couple of other sources that become very prominent in the
fourth century, especially the orators, because in the fifth you have just the first
beginning of that, in the fourth century, the Athenian orators, these writers who write
essentially speeches to the assembly, speeches to the council, and speeches in courts, and they
become a hugely important additional source.
And they're obviously hugely problematic in all sorts of ways, but they actually give us
a whole extra layer, and often they refer to and appeal to and organize in some ways historical
events as well. This will, when you get later, the speeches of Lycogos and Demosthenes
and the like by Dynath. But even the speeches of Lysias, you know, for individual Athenian citizens
who fought in many of the wars we're going to talk about, fought in many of the battles we talked
about, just gives you that kind of the human side of these sort of stories as well. But on top
of that, we also can't forget this, the fourth century is the century of Plato, Socrates's
students, basically. So Plato and then obviously his protege in Aristotle. And, you know,
Aristotleian school is very much obsessed with politics and political systems.
And so, you know, there's a lot of work being done on when we talk about Sparta.
A lot of our sort of political models of Sparta come as much from the sort of Aristotle
tradition as much as anything else.
So, yeah, there is a lot of, I always refer to it as like patchwork.
It's almost like a jigsaw of evidence.
You're just trying to piece it all together whilst you navigate something.
I know we've talked about a lot and you've talked about a lot on your podcast about
the Spartan Mirage. This is sort of one of the ways we try and navigate this by bringing
so many different forms of evidence together to try and build a semblance of a picture.
Yeah, there's more realistic Spanish in the fourth century compared to the centuries,
I guess, and spare a thought for the often useless Justin. I guess once in a while,
he does make a statement once in a while, doesn't he? I've all didn't mention him.
I'm not a big fan of Justin. Justin is precious because he is summarizing a lost
Philippic, right? So there was a whole tradition of people writing histories of Philip
Macedon. They're all lost. And we have the summary of diodorus, and we have the summaries of
Justin. And so we do need them both in order to get something like a story. And yeah, Justin is
problematic. But Justin is one of those authors who talks about when Sparta builds a wall for the
first time for the instance. So there are important things that are reported by Justin that
otherwise we find much more difficult. I know. I'm being too harsh on Justin. I mean, it's right to be
harsh on Justin, but, you know, we also can't afford to throw anything out. That's the problem
of ancient history in general. You can tell how nerdy we're getting now that we're talking about
a very obscure ancient source and dealing into the Justin run. No, it's my fault for bringing you that.
It needs to be done. But let's set the scene then, the beginning of the 4th century BC. Should we start
at the end of the Peloponnesian War? So we'll kick us off. What does the world look like?
How powerful is Sparta when they've just defeated the Athenians? So this is the point when Sparta is at the height
of its power, right? Essentially, it has subjected Athens, and it has signed this, this surrender
agreement, essentially, which makes Athens into one of its subject allies. So they are basically
now made to do Sparta's bidding. Their fleet has been scrapped. Essentially, their empire has been
dissolved. But it's not exactly clear, but it seems to be, Diodorus seems to be quite certain
about this, that the Spartans don't just dissolve the Athenian Empire and say, okay, that's done
now. They actually just take it over. So they are now the ones who are having all these allies
that used to be formerly subject to Athens, they are drawing in the tribute, thousand talents
a year, we're told.
So the Spartan Empire.
The Spartan Empire, exactly.
So this is a period when Sparta still has its fleet that was funded by the Persians, of course,
so they still have naval hegemony, and they have no rivals on the sea, and they control
basically the entire Greek world, or at least the mainland and the islands in the
Egypt?
And so does Persia keep funding the fleet, or do the Sparsans by taking over all of these
former territories of the Athenians now have the money from them to keep funding the fleet?
So it's a complex picture, but the Persians, obviously, what they want is they want to regain control of Asia Minor, right?
So that's what they've been doing by funding these Greeks.
So they want to take, they want to push back Athenian control so that they can resume levying tribute from the cities in what is now Western Germany.
And Asia Minor's Anatolia today.
That's right.
And so that's what they ultimately want.
Initially, they thought the Spartans could help them get it.
But then when the Spartans sort of take Susserente over that area, they kind of reclaim it for themselves for a Spartan empire, that obviously doesn't sit well with the Persians.
So they covertly start building up, they start cultivating this asset, which is Conan,
the Athenian general who fled from the fatal battle at Picospotamoy with a couple of ships.
He fled to Cyprus, and the Persians are basically marinating him and building a fleet around him.
So they're preparing to potentially challenge Spartan control of the sea in order to push them back.
And because the Spartans get more and more involved in Asia Minor to, say, support the continued independence of the Greek states there from the Persians,
it becomes more and more difficult for the Persians to leave them at it.
Eventually, they just have to say, okay, well, we've got to do something about these guys.
That happens pretty quickly, actually, after the end of the Copenhagen War.
It absolutely does.
And I think it's also worth pointing out that there's a real, in the sources,
there's a real sort of strain between other Spartans liberating
or other Spartans building their empire further.
You know, the sort of the main player early on is the commander Lysander,
who is pretty much installing pro-Spartan governments anywhere he can
liberate. So we do have that spread of Spartan authority, that's spread of Spartan influence
throughout. So in a sort of a Persian perspective, it makes sense that they need to stem this
tide. The easiest way to stem this tide has always been to encourage internal strife
with the Greeks. And so the fleet is just an extension of that kind of policy, continuing on,
as we've already seen in the Peloponnesian War, continue on further.
They've been backing the Spartans as it suits them in the Peloponnesian War, but as we'll
see, the Persians will play their own game as we've talked.
through the story of Sparta over the following decades.
They also kind of have to, because Sparta makes this sort of great strategic mistake, right?
They owe Cyrus for their victory in the Pelvinian War.
Cyrus is this prince of Persia, right?
So he is the second oldest son of Darius the second.
When Darius dies, his son out of Xerxes takes a throne.
Cyrus doesn't like it, so he starts a bid to take the throne for himself.
It's essentially a rebellion, an internal struggle within Persia.
Sparta, because they owe Cyrus, because they feel they have a personal bond with him,
rather than an abstract bond with Persia for winning the war for them, they back him.
But Cyrus loses. He dies in the Battle of Kunaksa, so Arta Xerxes the second is affirmed as
king, at which point obviously Sparta finds itself having back the wrong side in a struggle for
the throne, you know, on the wrong side of the Persian. So there's these moments when Sparta
essentially makes a misstep that puts them further and further in the sort of on the red
in Persia's ledgers.
So that is definitely something that
is going to come to head. This is the March
of 10,000, which we've covered actually.
We have covered in this episode. It's great story. What a narrative that is,
the March of the 10,000. We'll put a link to that
in the description. And also you mentioned earlier
the Basso-Vegas Potsmice. That's the last big naval
clash, isn't it? Where the Athenians are clearly
defeated by the Spartans at sea.
But let's go back to the Spartans and how
they deal with Athens in particular, because you mentioned
earlier, is it the 30 tyrants?
So what is the 30 tyrants?
So once Sparta has taken control, brought an end to the Peloponnesian War, it has won its battle, it has put Athens under siege, and then they finally have their accord agreement, as rules talked us through.
There is a bit of a debate, what do we do with Athens?
Athens during the Peloponnesian War was rather notoriously brutal with cities that opposed it.
So there was something of a conflict, do we destroy Athens, do we wipe it off, do we try and control it, do we turn it into a tiny version of what?
it once was. And the agreement in the end, there was a lot of internal conflict within
Sparta about this. And the agreement was that they would take down the walls, as we've mentioned,
they'd take the fleet from them and would install a tyrant, a tyranny of 30 pro-Spartan,
Athenian elites. So an oligarchy, this idea is it?
That's exactly what this is, yeah. A tyrannical oligarchy.
with the idea...
I should specify, because there's a difference obviously between tyranny and oligarchy.
It became known even already in ancient tradition as the 30 tyrants, but it's initially
just the oligarchy of the 30.
So it's such a narrow oligarchy that there's only 30 of them, where more traditionally
you'd get, you know, a few hundred or a few thousand.
No, that's a fair point.
That's a fair point.
I might be buying into the Athenian narrative later.
That's the Athenian historian.
No, it's very funny because there's later traditions even sort of describe the campaign against
the 30 as tyrant killing.
Like, they compare it to...
Yeah, compared to the two.
Comodias and Aristotle, Guyton, yeah.
Yeah, precisely that.
So, you know, that's very much the narrative.
But, yeah, really, it's an oligarchy installed,
much like the Spartans have been installing in so many other different states.
Because it's Athens, because Athens was that such a novel democracy.
It's kind of, it has that resonance with us, even to this day, you know,
the 30 tyrants get put in place.
Although it doesn't last more than it's like a year.
Really?
There is a, basically, an uprising against it.
I've just listened to a fantastic talk by an academic.
You might be opposite me, literally talking through this, you know, and sort of the overthrow
of this tyranny and the reinstallation of democracy comes quite quickly.
And what's interesting for me when we consider the Spartans, the Spartans don't really
have the ability or the will to stop it.
It's a very strange story because the Spartans obviously are backing this regime, right?
They're backing the 30.
They have a garrison in Athens.
And in fact, some Athenian sources will paint this as a time when Athens is under
Spartan occupation, essentially.
It's under the control of the foreign power.
At the same time, the Spartans aren't necessarily going to put all of their weight behind
the 30.
They're not sort of marching in to clear out this rebellion.
They do send an army and they do fight that rebellious army briefly, but then they kind of
force them to reconcile, which effectively means, and they must know that it means the democracy
will be restored.
Like these oligarchs get thrown out.
And the Spartans kind of sit by and let that happen.
And it's a real question of why they're doing that, like why they think that that is the better
move for them.
But it's likely that they think that it's just never going to stop otherwise, it's just going
be this continuous civil war in Athens. And also it might have something to do with internal
factional strife between Paul Zanias, who is overseeing this and Lysander, who we've already
mentioned, the admiral, who is very much in favor of keeping all these regimes everywhere that
are pro-Spartan, but who is getting a little bit too important and too influential in Sparta?
Especially for a non-royal, exactly. And so there are some concerns about Lysander, which
Pozanias is trying to nip in the bud, in part by essentially sawing off the legs of the chair he's
sitting on by taking away these regimes.
So I've already mentioned how, you know, there's that soon after there's that campaign
where quite a few Spartans go eastwards with Cyrus, the March of 10,000.
We won't cover that in detail today because we've done that in the past.
But can you summarize then what happens with Sparta and its power?
And I guess also its popularity amongst the Greeks in the decade or so following the great
success defeating Athens, because it seems to go bad pretty quick.
Really quick, yeah.
In fact, these regimes that we mentioned that are put in place by Lyssal.
So he puts in these so-called decharchies, these rules of the ten, which are even more narrow than the 30th at Athens, and they're widely hated, and they get thrown out very quickly.
And so there's already a kind of low-key rebellion against what the Spartans have done, although that doesn't mean a rebellion against Spartan interest, just in the regime that they have put in place.
And it's clear from the sources that there is increasing just displeasure, discomfort with the fact that Sparta is now the undisputed hedgemen.
And especially the larger powers, Khorians and Thebes and Argos are really unhappy with this.
And they're increasingly starting to think that something should be done.
They're putting in these kind of moments of rebellion whenever they can to kind of show that they want to retain some or regain some level of autonomy.
And these have been former allies of Sparta during the Peloponnesian War.
But now Athens is out of the picture.
They now see Sparta as the greatest threat to themselves, I guess.
Yeah, absolutely.
So the aftermath of the Peloponian War, a lot of these alliances very quickly come under like scrutiny is the wrong word.
But, you know, very much, now what?
Especially as Sparta begins to expand more and more,
which, of course, it never attempted to really do before.
So Sparta is now trying to do something
that its allies are not used to it trying to do.
Sparta is notoriously isolationist in its mentality
during the 5th century.
You know, they reluctantly send men outside of their own territory
and really the Peloponnesian Wars where you see it done systematically.
So this is unusual, and it creates an uncomfortable balance.
Like so much so, Thebes, there is a bit of an obsession in Sparta after the Peloponnesian
war in what's going on with Thebes and the growth of Thebes potentially as a rival.
And you could even date it to the debate about whether or not we destroy Athens.
I'll say we, the Spartans, should they destroy Athens?
And, you know, Thebes is very much on one side of that debate.
Yes, we should.
They're always, aren't they?
Any chance they can get to destroy Athens, they take it.
And so, you know, even from that point,
And then they seem to be sort of involved in the insurrection of the Democrats coming back to Athens.
So, again, they're getting involved in the other side of that conversation within a year.
And, you know, because if you look it from a Spartan perspective, it's almost like they're just being prodded, poked at by the Thevens.
It's like, you know, we're now just picking any sides that I'm not on.
So you get this real conflict.
And when we get a new, Sparta, as you know, is ruled by two kings.
When we get a new king on one of those thrones, I guess in Laos for second, he, in particular,
has a real being of bonnet about the Thebans, and it sort of goes throughout his entire reign.
So from that respect, I mean, this is why we kind of come back to the first point we talked about,
which is at the end of the Peloponnesian War. Sparta is at this zenith of its power,
but everything is falling apart, including all the internal politics and the geopolitics
that it was used to navigating before that point, is now quickly shifting and adapting to what they're doing.
It's easy to skip ahead to when there's an actual war, but like what you see in the period
before that already, I'm always pointing this out to my students, like when you look at individual
campaigns, when all the allies of Sparta are meant to march with them, right?
They're meant to follow orders, but you keep seeing them just not doing it.
And that is itself a sign that they're just not willing to do Sparta's bidding and fight and
die for Sparta's interests, right?
So when the Spartans are going to war against the rebels in Athens, the Thieves refused to march
with them, right? When they go to war against Elis, the Thebans and the Corinthians refuse
to march with them. When they go across to Asia Minor to fight the Persians, Thebans and
Corinthians refuse to march with them. They just keep saying, like, yeah, you can tell us to go,
we just won't go. Which is telling you so much about the extent to which Sparta is still
able to tell people, you know, to order people around.
Does it make sense then for us to now explore a little bit about how successful the Spartans are in Asia Minor?
Or should we go now to what is called, is it the Corinthian War or Nomea or chronologically wise?
Where should we start?
Should we start with Asia Minor and Sparta or the mainland?
Big question, actually.
It's a massive question.
I think really you need to start with Egesia Leos II.
Okay.
And here's coming to the throne.
Okay.
So we're talking 400 pieces.
He comes to the throne late in life. He's about 40 years old. And more interestingly, he was not supposed to be kicked. He was not the next in line for the throne. He very much took an opportunity when his brother, I think it is, or half-brother, died and exploits a question about the legitimacy of the next in line, in part because of the sport he had from the great Lysander, who was likely to have been his lover as a younger man. So a close relationship between those two. So a Gesele,
then takes to the throne in 400 and it is he who takes the Spartans properly to Asia Minor.
So whilst the Spartans are over there sort of doing their actions,
is Aguze Laos finally gets given control of both the army, the Navy, and he properly takes,
should we say, a more directed campaign into Asia Minor.
So yeah, Aguzeleos has got to be the starting point.
Yeah, this is actually Alcabidi's influence, right?
So he is the one who seduces the other Spartan.
king's wife, which means that his offspring, allegedly, which is why his offspring is of doubted
parentage, which allows Aguselais to become king. So it's all Alcabydides is fault, just so we're clear
on that. That pesky thing in general you could just get back to you. But come on, let's move on
from outside. Let's move on that. He's dead now. We don't need to talk about him anymore.
So Agiselaus takes over in Asia Minor, leads a large army. This is obviously when the Persians
realized they have to respond in force. And there's different stories about how the eventual
Corinthian war breaks out. One of those stories is very prominent in the sources is essentially
that the Persians send a guy to the mainland Greeks with a big bag of money saying, would you
like to fight the Spartans in exchange for this big bag of money? And of course, you know, Xenophon
implies that a lot of people are very happy with this big bag of money, that others rejected
but are happy to fight the Spartans anyway. Supposedly the Athenians are like, no, we'll do it for
free. There is a lot of discontent that sort of bubbles to the surface at that point. And the money
may or may not have been a sort of nudge, you know, a further sort of nudge in that direction.
The other account, Hellenic Oxirinia, I think, doesn't mention the money at all, is not
interested in saying you were bribed into it.
So, Helena Oxy, are these papyrus?
Yeah, so this is a papyrus story.
Another source.
If you want to get really nerdy about it, there is a rival account which helps us in some
cases and complicates things in others.
Anyway, this is why the Persians are important, but also because they have been, as I said,
marinating this Athenian commander and building a fleet around him, which at that point
they actually send into the Aegean to challenge the Spartans.
And so that is the moment when Persians are sort of simultaneously starting a war on land
that is waged by a coalition of Greek states and a war at sea, which is waged very much
by the Persians themselves.
Persians themselves at this time.
So they held trigger, and do you think it's pretty likely that this is the true case
that the Persians, seeing that this Spartan army threat on their territory, like
classic, you know, they almost create a diversionary tactic by encouraging, you know, their
upset allies at home to rise up and find. Yeah, I think that's a periphery by the way of looking
at it. And I don't, I suppose the filling in the gaps part of the historian's job here is what
they perhaps don't realize is how much discontent they reason Sparta at this point. So even
though we've come out of this victorious moment, by 400, a Giselaus comes to the throne.
So what's that? Four years after the end of the Peloponnesian War, 399, so five years are
Peloponnesian War, we have a conspiracy in Sparta to overthrow the entire citizenry,
the entire structure of the Spartan political system. The Kinodon conspiracy were basically
a rather disaffected non-Spartan, but not foreign or enslaved. So he's likely to either be
someone who's sort of fallen out of the Spartan system because he hasn't got enough money
or conversely, he might well have been sort of half Spartan when we're not 100% sure.
And he seems to have united a group of Helots, so that's the enslaved population.
We've got the Perioicoy, who were the people living around Sparta but aren't citizens.
And we've also got other disgruntled previous Spartans who, in theory, is what they're called, in the source material.
And there seems to be a conspiracy to basically ban together and overthrow the sparring system
with the idea of sharing out that kind of citizen rights to everyone.
So this is going on in Sparta.
It is completely subdued by the Kings.
It is resolved. Kinodon is rather brutally and publicly paraded around, whipped and executed.
But it immediately gives you the idea of actually there are things going on in Spartan.
The Spartans are not happy internally.
Do Persia know about that?
I don't know.
There's no way of us really knowing that.
But what they are doing is also creating further stress to a system that is already in a potential period of flux.
Right, well, let's keep going on from there then. So that's important to highlight the internal aspect of all of this. But how does the Corinthian War play out?
I mean, so it plays out very differently on land than sea, which is why Xenophon actually separates these two things.
Like he talks only about the land campaigns, and at the very end is like, also, we go back a few years in time and then talk about the sea campaign, which is very interesting.
As a historical structure, that's actually very novel.
But fundamentally on land, even though, so you have a coalition of Athens, Argos, Corinth, and Thebes.
So the four greatest cities on the mainland, arguably, you know, each of them individually is a larger population than Sparta.
They banned together, they tried to fight the Spartans, it goes very badly for them.
So Sparta does recall Aguselaus from Major Minor, which is what the Persians want.
So in that sense, the Persians get this early win.
But he marches back into the mainland and defeats the coalition army that is gathered against him.
That's actually the second battle, the Battle of the Maya that happens earlier.
There's a huge coalition going against the Spartans that also gets absolutely trapped.
So the Spartans reassert themselves on land and it becomes this war of attrition.
after that, where the allied states know that they shouldn't encounter the Spartans in land battles
sort of in the open, but they can support these sort of mercenary garrisons that they put in
place in strategic places and that raid the countryside and win these sort of ambushes
in minor battles against the sort of states that are trying to back the Spartans.
So on land, it grinds to a halt in this way. And you see the Spartans as well sort of flailing
about trying to find some weak spot in the alliance. So they go and invade Akarnania and they march
into Thebes and all these kinds of things, they're trying to find something that they can do
to prize this alliance apart. It doesn't really work. But on land, they managed to hold their
own because on land they're just still a very powerful state and alliance. On the sea, they get
utterly defeated in the first battle. It doesn't go well. It doesn't go well. The Battle of Knidos in
394, I mean, arguably one of the most decisive battles in Greek history because it just destroys
almost for good the Spartan ambition to also rule the sea.
So actually, if we're talking about the Falling Sparta, this is still a key date.
This is absolutely. Yeah, yeah, yeah. This is a crucial moment. So it's this Persian-funded,
arguably just Persian fleet, because it's also commanded by the Satrap Farnabazos,
alongside the Athenian conan, which allows the Athenians to say, like, actually, no,
it was an Athenian fleet, which, sure, guys, but it just happens to be, you know,
massively funded by the Persian. But they destroy the Spartan fleet.
And then, obviously, that creates a complete shift in the situation in the Egyptian.
and Asia Minor, because once the Spartans don't have a fleet, how are they going to protect
any of the states in that area? How are they going to exact money from them? They can't. They
can't either do their duty as a hegeman or reap the benefits. And so at that point, this is all
in flux again. Obviously, the Persians try reassert themselves in Asia Minor, and the Athenians
very soon afterwards started trying to reassert themselves in Virginia.
And so how does it all end then? Is there almost, do they come to an agreement at the end of
day, a ceasefire or a full on peace treating?
So as we're sort of running through the end of the Corinthian War, we also have, the Spartans
take the port of Corinth, so there's real attempts to assert themselves throughout.
There's a famous defeat of a Spartan mora in actual open battle against Peltas, the great
moment where the hoplites are defeated by Peltas.
Oh, is this the legend of Epicritus that?
Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah, precisely that.
But this all sort of ticks away, you know, this conflict is constantly growing and the different Greek
states are adapting and trying to push back in their different ways. We're seeing a bit of novelty
in the way they're sort of trying to engage with the Spartans militarily after having been
sort of trounced on land for so long. And then we sort of get to the next decade, so where are we sort
of 380s? And there's only one power in the Mediterranean who can end the Greeks' argument
with each other, and that's the Persians. So you get what's called the King's Peace. So there's
this really interesting moment in Greek history where the traditional enemy of the Greeks
has to come in and make them play nice.
Guys, we've got to stop this now.
But it's very interesting because you phrased it as like a truce or a treaty,
but it's actually not a treaty.
It's a dictat from the Persian king.
Like he literally sends an envoy who reads out loud to them
the agreement that's been made.
And that is the end of the war.
It's called the King's Peace.
It's called the Peace of Antauquidas in some source
because there's Spartan who went and negotiated with the Persian King.
And obviously there are terms that favor Sparta.
There are some terms that favor Athens.
But for the most part,
It is the Persian king saying, no, no, no, this is how our geopolitics are organized, right?
I'm telling you this.
And, you know, if you have any trouble with this, you can take it up with me, which is
almost literally what it says, right?
If anybody violates this arrangement, I will back them with chips and money, which are
the two things that the Persians have in abundance.
How successful a treaty is this?
Does it endure?
I mean, do they both abide by it?
I mean, how does Sparta then fare once this dictat has been ordered to them?
And I guess for pride's sake in one way, it's a bit humiliating because, you know, you're being told to do this.
And yet you still expect yourself to be the dominant power.
I think something to always note about Greek peace treaties, where however they're determined, they're never meant to last long.
Even when they're given like timeframes, like 30 years, 50 years, whatever it be, there's always this understanding they will end.
And that's a very different relationship with peace than perhaps we're used to talking about.
So it doesn't last long at all.
conflict quickly starts to pick up before the end of the 380s. So not even 10 years.
But as Sparta go around kind of saying like, we're on the side of the great peace kind of thing,
we're enforcing this treaty, but using that as an excuse to actually advance their own names.
In fact, ideologically, I think that the king's piece is arguably the most important moment
in the 4th century because it brings the Greek something new, which is the most important
part of that piece, which is the autonomy clause, as it's called, which is that the Persian
king says, okay, there are a couple of bits of the Aegean that belong to Athens, but otherwise,
Every Greek state must remain autonomous, which is a clues from leagues, as in like alliances
and things like so you cannot assert control, even if you're not controlling the city itself.
You're not allowed to essentially, I mean, later treaties will make this more explicit.
You're not allowed to change the government of another state.
You're not allowed to impose a garrison or another state.
All these things that the Athenians used to do, and then the Spartans also started doing.
And so this is essentially a no empire clause, right?
There should be no more Greek empires.
And that is obviously something that the Persian king wants,
Because if the Greeks remain divided and weak, then he can do what he won.
But it's also something that most of the Greek states want.
And that's why it's such a stroke of diplomatic genius is because all of these Greeks are also like,
well, I don't want to pay tribute.
So it's great if I can say, if somebody imposes tribute on me,
I can just go running to the Persian king and says, he's not obeying the king's peace.
He's not obeying the autonomy clause.
And so this is something that the Greeks themselves will keep referring back to for the rest of the 4th century,
as long as the Persian Empire is around.
And right up to the end, really, right until even when Alexander,
is campaigning against them, there are still Greek states that appeal to the Persian king saying,
these Macedonians are violating the king's peace. Because that is, you know, it's illegal,
according to the treaty. The Persians are supposed to support you if this happens. And so they
love that clause. They love that idea, except if you're Sparta or Athens and you're used to
being a hegeman, you actually are really in trouble now, right? Because you can't assert
your power in the way that you used to. And so the Spartans have this thing where they
declare themselves prostates. They declare themselves the champion of the peace or the
guarantor of the peace, which means they go around telling everyone else, like, oh, no, you're violating
the king's peace. We're going to stump on you now. And they go around the Greek world essentially
sort of splitting up states and breaking up federations because they say it's a via, they claim it's
a violation of the peace. And that's how they get to be, you know, the biggest fish in a very small
pond, a shrinking pond, essentially. They kind of manipulate the wording of it to kind of
suit their own agendas there. So how long does this kind of Spartans triumphing themselves as like,
you know, being the champions of the king's peace. How long does this last before there's,
dare I say, a misstep by the Spartans and they go a bit too far? I mean, it's within like
five years. It is quick. And the misstep is one of those historical questions of did the Spartans
do it on purpose or not? So a Spartan commander basically enters Thebes. It's them again.
Remembering what I said earlier, Thebes has become the bugbear of the Spartans and in particular, I
Elias himself. So we mentioned the Asia Minor campaign he went on. There's a story in which he
basically tries to present himself as like the next Agamemnon. So then he took the Greeks to war with
Troy. And he goes to Aurelis and he's much like Agamemnon did to give a sacrifice. Yeah,
exactly that. Not his own daughter in this case. No, no, just a normal sacrifice. But it's
interrupted by the Boeotian cavalry. So basically the Theban-led Leagues cavalry interrupt it. And he is not
happy about this at all. And this sort of hatred of the Thebans kind of just grows throughout
his reign. So the idea that a Spartan army sort of without any orders from kings entered Thebes
takes control of the Cadmere, which is basically the Acropolis of Thebes, and garrisons it,
which again goes against everything that they've agreed and are supposed to be upholding
throughout the Greek world. The idea that that happened, whilst they're trying to maintain that
they're the ones who are asserting the King's Peace, that they're the ones asserting the status quo
is laughable. And made worse by the fact that Aguzeleos intervenes. The Spartans were going to
very much punish the commander who did it. You know, it's that moment of, it's a rogue commander,
he's done wrong, we're going to punish him, everything's fine, and Agaerzileos intervened.
And so they find him, but they didn't move the garrison. And that seems to have his fingerprints
all over it. And that seems to have his fingerprints all over it. And
That really, for me, that is where this whole thing really falls apart.
Well, it's not just for you, right? It's Xenophon, right?
Like, he actually steps in in his narrative at that point.
Sorry, yeah, no, exactly. Yeah, that's it. You're all made Xenophon.
Like, he actually invokes the gods at this point. He says, you know, everything was going
great for Sparta, but at this point they offended the gods.
This is actually, like, divine retribution will follow because they have committed this
horrendous sort of, you know, it's not just a misstep or a diplomatic copal or even just
a military sort of provocation. It's actually just they've done wrong, right?
They've done something that is sort of morally reprehensible.
No Greek condones it.
And so, you know, retribution will follow.
And it says a lot that Xenophon is this clear about it.
Xenophon is very pro-Spartons the wrong.
It's probably a bit of an overstep.
But, you know, he very much massages, especially Aguzeleos, what Aguzeleos is doing.
This is one of the closest moments we get in all of his accounts of Ageselaos,
which includes a eulogistic biography of him.
And it's the closest we get to him openly criticizing Aga Zeselaos.
You know, all biases aside, all relationships aside, this was completely immoral, unethical,
wrong, should not have happened, and everything that occurs after that, dare say, was coming to
them.
So what goes after that?
How do the Thebes respond?
In a nutshell.
The Thebans, actually, initially, they have to put up with it, right?
This is a Spartan-backed oligarchy as well, same as in Athens before.
So you have an oligarchy that was already pro-sparty, which is propped up by this garrison.
And so they have two, their democratic faction, essentially, where they're at,
least non-pro-Spartan faction, it's very sort of amorphous, what kind of political ideals they
have, but they have to flee, they're in exile. But they, just like the Athenians went to Thebes,
the Thebans go to Athens and get support, they go back in...
Ironic as well, by the way. Yeah, I know. And not just, I mean, it's very well noticed at the time
as well. I mean, there's a really interesting passage in Dynarchus where he actually says,
oh, we keep quoting at each other this time, this decree that the Thebans issued that they
helped us when we were in trouble as a way to persuade the assembly to help them when they are in
trouble. This is something that is remembered. And one of the people who backed this, the Theban
uprising, was one of the people who was involved in this Athenian uprising. So you have this kind
of quid pro-crow thing where, okay, we'll help you get your state back. So they send these
exiles in and they managed to drive the Spartan garrison out, which triggers the so-called
Beocean War. It's only a few years after the Spartans take over. There's this protracted
conflict, where the Spartans keep having to send troops to Thebes or to Biosha into the region
essentially to try and reassert themselves, but they can't seem to get anything done.
They really just sort of fruitlessly campaigning.
They're managed to nibble away some of the minor cities of the region, but they can't do
anything to put Thebes back in its place, essentially.
Yeah, no, that's a really good point.
And what really comes across is the regular raiding that does occur is achieving nothing
like rules saying. So you've got that kind of demoralizing reality of we don't have the power
to put them back in their box to the point where we see Sparta very much sort of stops leaving
as much as it had its own lands. So very much you see the amount of military activity very much
begins to wane. Again, as I mentioned earlier, so why I brought up the internal problems
they're dealing with because one of the other reasons why Sparta is struggling to maintain its
momentum during these decades is it can't sustain it from home.
all the way out to, well, originally Asia Minor, but now we're only talking central Greece. It cannot
maintain that momentum. But what is the secret then to Thebes' success at being able to hold out,
of being able to defend against these continuous... You're both laughing. I don't know why you're
laughing when I ask this question. It's an important question. It's a great question. It's one of the
big questions. Why is Thebes able to hold out? Why is it actually pretty powerful at this time?
Thebes very much goes through, with the reassertion of its control of the city, we see
innovative change, shall we say.
And this is often assigned to individuals.
So one of those individuals are Epaminondas, the great military commander.
We also get Pelopidas and his creation of the sacred band.
Gorgidas is the one who created Pelopis.
Oh yeah, so the sort of the fronting of it at this point.
So the narrative is often that Thebes is basically having a revolution, a military revolution.
This, I think, is probably overstated quite a lot.
Rule has written on this a lot.
But I'm going to talk for now.
I suppose the big thing for me is what Thieves is doing is filling a void that Sparta
has created by its inability to sustain itself.
So what Thebes does is, I suppose, the easiest way, and I think it's something you've
said to before, Rule, is Thieves, like, catches up, basically with what made Sparta
so dominant on land during the previous.
century, Thebes has matched it, not necessarily surpassed it, but just matched it in terms of
having a crack force that is capable of following orders.
Is it that discipline that they focus on to kind of make them that next level?
I mean, it's, it, this is us hypothesizing like what makes this force so effective.
Because we, we know that it's effective, but we don't actually know anything about
its training regime or its organization.
The sacred band, exactly.
And the rest of the, of the Beocean Army under Theban control, we know a little bit more,
but it's also not, it doesn't seem to show any special features.
One of the things that the Bocions really do play out in this conflict is they have very strong
cavalry, which obviously works very well for them when they're depending their ferritory,
because that's one of the things that cavalry is really good at.
You know, you herd together your enemy army, you prevent them from spreading out across the
countryside to pillage and burn.
You manage to keep them together so they can't do any damage.
And this plays into Thib's main strength, which is they have, you know, they are the grain
the grain area of central Greece, right?
they have these extensive planes that allow them to feed themselves.
But they also do this really innovative thing where they're defending territory
where building this long palisade across the entirety of Biosha,
keeping the Spartans out, or at least funneling their movements.
So they're trying to play these different strengths in combination.
You know, they have very good agricultural resources.
They have this territorial defense.
They have the cavalry to protect their lands.
And they now have this increasingly effective hoplight militia,
this hoplight force, which is built around this core.
it, that's a very, very capable called the Sacred Bound. So militarily, as well as strategically,
they have a lot of cards to play when it comes to the defence of their own territory.
Yeah, absolutely. And whilst we talk about Thebes, one of the other areas of conflict
here is Thebes is very much the head of its league, the Boeotian League. So when we're talking
about Thebes and the Theban army, much like when we talk about the Spartan army, we're talking
about them and their allies and those around them. So yeah, Thebes has very much, it is
in its ascendancy now at this point, very much filling the void that Spartan in action is beginning
to create.
And the Persians are just watching at the sides, they're just rubbing their hands at the moment.
Probably chuckling to themselves.
They have their own problems as well.
I mean, this is something that, you know, it's not exactly quite on the Eastern Front.
But you do get a situation as well with the Spartans try for one last time to assert
themselves as a naval power, which the Athenians, at this point, they become completely
resurgent as a naval empire.
Like, they are provoked by Spartan to joining the war, which they then sort of capitalize
on by rebuilding what's sometimes called the Second Athenian Empire or the Second Athenian Confederacy,
which is not an empire, of course, because we're all in abidance here.
King's Peace. As we've discussed, these are not subject allies. They are allies, defensive
allies only. And they're not paying tribute. I think you'll find they're paying contributions
to the joint defense, which happens to be Athenian organized. So we're all in compliance
with the terms of the Kings Peace, which is explicitly in the Treaty, right? In the Alliance
Treaty, it says in accordance with the King's Peace as a defense against Sparta violating it.
But that's very explicit. But the Athenians are forming a new tribute-paying empire essentially,
which allows them to raise a new fleet, and they defeat the Spartans at Naxos and
they defeat the Spartans at Alizea, and that is actually the end of Spartan naval anything.
They just don't do anything on the sea after them. We have the Battle of Knidos earlier,
which is like the major tipping point, but this is like the decisive end of any Spartan ambition
to roll the sea. Well, let's go to start the next big date then,
if you're talking about another big battle with sparsian degemony, which is 371 BC, the Basil of Lutra.
Just before then, we've done a whole episode about the Thief and Sacred Band in the past,
with Dr. James Rom. But I should also ask you guys about the story that the sacred band
is 300 strong and it's made of 150 pairs of homosexual lovers. Do we think that's likely?
So it's debated, right? So there's the general perspective is that they were because
Plutarch tells us, right? That's the baseline. But David Lightow has a really interesting
argument that came on 2003 where he specifically so tries to deconstruct that a little bit.
The interesting thing is that even in Plutarch's account, the historical record of this unit
is completely attached from this reputation it supposedly has as a unit that is composed entirely
of pairs of lovers. He presents this in a very hedgy way. He keeps saying, you know, legatai, they say,
you know, it is said, which is one of the ways in which he's kind of distancing himself from the claim.
He's trying to say, like, oh, people tell me that this is true, I'm not sure. And the problem
is that we don't get any independent attestation of this, right? So there is nothing in any other
source that corroborates it. And so the suggestion there is that those two traditions are
actually separate. You have this unit, which is very effective and has a very sort of historical
presence in the campaigns of this period. You also have the idea of a unit that is composed
of lovers, which is also brought up in Xenophon and in Plato, in fact, there's discussion
of the idea that this would be really effective, that this would really work. But very interestingly,
those authors who both lived at the time when the sacred band was around don't mention the sacred
band as an example of such a unit, which obviously they should have, right? It's an argument
from silence, but it's very strange that they don't do this. And so the argument there has been
that there was, in the same time that the sacred band was around, there was an idea that this
would have been a really good idea, like a really effective concept, and that those two things
have become sort of merged in later traditions, so that they've, this become attached
to the sacred band, primarily because the Thevens already had kind of a reputation for really
liking these pederastic relationship and being a really important part in their social and political
sort of maturing, like the process of their upbringing. And so for that reason, there is some doubt
as to whether this unit actually was composed of homosexual lover. At the very least, you can say
that, you know, it has that reputation because the Greek were thinking about that as an idea
and maybe thinking about trying it, and they may or may not have done so. But we can't be certain.
You do wonder how much of it is an attempt to explain the exceptional. So when you build a narrative
of Spartan invincibility in your source material, in your writing and things like that.
And then, as we're going to get to Alutra, they are defeated.
How do you explain that defeat?
And, you know, point into the sacred band.
And then you're like, well, what makes them special compared to the 300 bodyguards
of the Spartans, who they're quite clearly modeled on?
How can they be better than them?
How can that be explained?
Well, then let's go into this almost theoretical, superior morale, building relationships.
The idea being that you would fight stronger and harder and longer for the loved one next to you
than like a friend next to you is the sort of idea.
And then perhaps that would explain how the great Spartans could be defeated.
So yeah, part of those narratives as well.
Well, let's go on to the vassal of Lucre, because this feels like the big day we need to talk about.
Who would like to talk through?
So the idea is that a peace treaty is supposed to finish the Beocean War.
The peace treaty has, of course, in conformity with the King's Peace, has all.
the states listed separately, the Thebans object, they want to sign for all of Beosha,
which confirms their hegemony in that region. Obviously, the Spartans say this is unacceptable,
and really it is. If we are still obeying the king's peace, it is. So they strike the names
of Thebes and the Beotians off of the treaty, and they march on. Only because the Spartans
refused to do the same. They were told, we won't do that. But if we are going to do that,
you can't sign for any of the Laconian or Messonian cities either, which of course is the Spartans
Martin territory. And Gézaleos, him again, when no.
So, I mean, everyone sucks here, right? Like, it's not like, but that's fundamentally the idea is that the Spirons then launch a surprise invasion of Thebes to kind of finally set them straight. And this is like all out, all Pelibonnesian forces, like everybody who's still loyal to Sparta has to go. So they march in force, later stories to say, 11,000 hoplides or something like that, very, very large army. March into Bioccian.
by a surprise route going along the coast and then sort of marching inland sort of from the Delphi
direction, so from the southwest. And the Beotians or the Thebans and their remaining allies
confront them there. They are heavily outnumbered. They're only maybe 7,000 of them. We're not
really sure about the numbers, maybe in fewer. And the Thebans sort of get together in council.
They have a council of generals, which is very common in the Greek world, especially in
democracy. So the Athenians always sent out several generals. They have a council of generals.
They debate together saying, should we fight? Or is this a lost thought? Right? Like we're heavily outnumbered,
They're angry. They have cause. We are just us, like our allies are melting away because
all of these Beotian cities that are under the Theban Thum, they obviously see this opportunity,
so they're literally sort of, you know, bleeding out of the army. The Beotians have this
debate and say, like, are we sure we want to do this? Unanda says, let's just do it and be
legends. And this is Epaminondas. He's at the forefront. According to the tradition, yeah.
There is some, a very interesting evidence that some of the other Beotarch, some of the other
thief in generals, wants an equal claim to this bravery. But in the later tradition, it's
Epaminondas who puts his foot down and says, no, we're fighting. And Pelopidas shows up late
and cast the tie-breaking vote to fight. This is the dramatic. The dramatic moment, the movie
scene essentially that you can almost picture in your minds. He shows up late, there's seven of them.
He shows up late. He's the seventh, and he casts the tie-breaking vote. And so they fight. And this is
sort of something that generally, as we've seen, it's a bad idea of fighting a Spartan army,
but it's become clear the Spartan army has become much more weakened than it was before.
Its numbers are shrinking.
It can't rely on its allies like it used to.
There's a lot of discontent in the alliance as well.
No one wants to fight for Sparta.
And so the Thebans figure out how to beat this army, which is you just got to beat the
Spartans themselves.
You just got to fight them, put a stop to them, ideally kill their command structure,
like just cut off the head as they put it, cut off the snake.
Yeah, as they put it.
Is that what they say?
Do they actually say that?
That's supposed to be a quote of Epamonondas himself.
And do you think that's the origins of the, you know, cut the head of the snake,
crush the head of the snake actually originates from here?
That is the origin.
Yeah, that is.
Yeah, that is.
So crush the head of the snake and then the rest of the body is useless.
That is how Epamonanda supposedly sells his plan to his group.
So you just hit the Spartans themselves, hit them as hard as you can.
Ideally kill their chain of command, kill the king and the leading officers who are fighting
in the front anyway.
So that's, you know, it's going to be achievable.
I'm not going to say easy, but achievable.
And then the rest will just wrong because they're not there because they're not there because they want to be, right?
No one's there because they want to be. It's between Thieves and Sparta.
And at that level, actually, the Thebans have numerical superiority.
Locally, they can outnumber the Spartans.
And locally, they have a force that is willing to fight them.
This is the sacred man.
And so that's what they do.
They make a battle plan where they put all of their guys together in this column, like this very deep formation,
smash it directly into the Spartan part of the line.
And they killed Cleombrotus, the Spartan king, or at least mortally wound him.
Most of the officers around him and then eventually, basically all of the Hippes, the Spartan royal
guard, are killed in the fighting.
And at that point, the rest of the army just has had enough and breaks and runs off.
So Aguselaus, the king of Sparta, who had been involved in kind of causing this to happen,
he's actually not the Spartan king who gets sent in the army.
No, no.
If you follow the story of Ghezelaus, he's very good at avoiding things.
I love Giselaus.
He's an amazing.
He's an amazing ancient historical figure.
So at this point, he's getting old.
He's not well, is he still in this point?
No, he's ill at this point.
Yeah, he's still ill as well.
And he's got to be, I mean, we're nearly 30 years away from now getting to the throne.
So he's like 70.
He's an old man.
Previous conflicts, he's refusing to lead armies because he should be retired militarily.
According to the Spartan's own system, he is now too old to be in the army.
So he very much uses that.
He doesn't want to go to thieves.
He doesn't want to leave this.
and he doesn't. He leads it to a younger...
Clembrotus. Yeah, Calimbrus.
Cleombrotus has a bit of a point to prove
as well, because he's led the last few campaigns
against the Beotions, and people have thought that he was kind of
lackluster in his leadership. He didn't really want to hurt
the Thebans. He wasn't making an effort.
And so he is now being driven by people
who are sort of watching him. And this is a very Spartan thing, right?
There's a lot of social peer-to-peer control.
There's a lot of scrutiny. He is
being watched by his subordinates saying, like, is he going to
do it? So Cleombrotus has to fight.
And this is something that Agus Leic is presumably
relying on to be like, he'll do the job.
So we know what happens. He'll know what he gets what he wants from it. But yeah, I guess it'll
us know it to be seen. And obviously, Kenebrotis, he doesn't do the job. He failed.
No, he absolutely does the job. I mean, this is very much it. Yeah, he does what's expected of him,
but it just goes against him. Oh, okay, there. Thank you for clarifying.
Psychologically, how massive is the Spartan defeat at Lucha to its power in the story of
Sparta's decline through these decades? I mean, it's enormous.
So the Greek world, Sparta has now been defeated.
I mean, that's very much how it was perceived.
And then the sort of growth of Theban influence in Greece was just rapid as a result
of this.
So, you know, we were talking about the fact that their allies are already sort of beginning
to seep away.
They're now just.
Sparta is not the reliable power that we could sort of get ourselves behind.
They often talk about ascending shockwaves through the Greek world, this defeat,
because it's very much the entire status quo of 40 years ago of all.
we've just accepted for the past century, really.
Athens, Sparta, top, that is now gone entirely.
Psychologically, it's not just the Greek world that is shaped by it.
It is Sparta itself is taken by this realization of what's just occurred.
They have lost, what is it, the 300 bodyguards, the king.
They lost almost 400 of the 700 Spartans they sent in this army.
That is a sizable portion of their Spartite, so that's their citizen population, has now died.
Like we hear that when the news enters Lutra, basically people were told to sort of be quiet about it, and people who had lost people would walk around with smiles.
Yeah, when the news enters Sparta.
Yeah, when the news itself, so the families of the dead were supposed to walk around with smiles on their face and the families of basically the survivors were in shame.
But, I guess Elios again, steps in rather helpfully, domestically.
And what is it, they say, he basically rests the laws of Sparta for a day.
so that the survivors who come home
are not declared cowards
which has legal and social ramifications on them
because basically Sparta can't afford for that to happen.
They literally have to suspend
a century of culture
and of social norms
to allow the society
to try and recover from this.
Although to be fair, they've done that before.
I mean, the Spartans have this law against cowardice,
right? If you run away from battle,
you're supposed to be punished,
socially ostracized and all this kind of thing.
But they never actually do it,
especially if a significant number of Spartans runs away from battle or surrenders, like
Ottsvacteria, they will always say, like, let's just, you know.
Let's find a loophole.
So there's literally, I mean, we have the different accounts of these kinds of laws that
exist at Sparta for cowardice.
We have one occasion where they were applied after Thermopylae because one guy survived
and that was very bad for him.
And then we have three occasions where it's attested that they don't enact the law, they let the law sleep.
The number of occasions where it is used is actually outnumbered by the number of cases where
We're explicitly told that it was not applied.
But fundamentally, after Luke, I mean, it's an earthquake.
It's an absolute overturning of everything that the Greeks thought they knew about the Spartans
and about their power structures and everything else, not just demographically, which is a very important point.
But also because in the final instance, Spartan hegemony rests on the idea that individually, Sparta could beat all of you, right?
Individually, all of those states that are allied to Sparta, if they band together, they might be able to get away with it.
But if they individually resist Sparta, Sparta is just going to destroy.
them, right? They can do that. They have the military power to trump each individual state.
But at this point, people are starting to say, maybe that's not actually true.
You know, maybe we can actually throw off the yoke and still feel safe.
Do the Thebans pounce on this? Do they capitalize on their success in Sparta's week?
And they know that feeling is going through the Greek cities that maybe Sparta's not the
titan it once was, do they then decide, you know, now is the time to strike. We won this battle,
but we are still hundreds of kilometres from Sparta. Do we now kind of march more towards
where Sparta is to make it clear to the people who live in Sparta and around there that,
yes, this wasn't just a one-off far away. We are now more dominant. Your allies he once had are no
longer there, and your power is now much clearly weaker. I mean, yes, this is exactly what the
Thebans do, and this is why sometimes this has been considered to be the first sort of strategic
offensive, like it's not just beating them in battle and then saying, look, let's, you know,
we've beaten you, let's make a treat. But actually proceeding into the Peloponnese and dismantling
Spartan power at a local level. So what they do is they liberate Messinia, which at this point
has been under Spartan's subjection for, according to tradition, like 200 years or even longer,
400 years according to depending on which source you follow on this. But for ages, Sparta has had
to essentially, has been able to double its territory by seizing Messenia. It is now
liberated. It is set up as an autonomous state.
is that land the left of the Spartan peninsula at the bottom of the Pelican.
Yeah, to the west.
Yeah, so exactly, if you cut sort of the Peloponnese into four chunks, then Sparta
is in the sort of southeastern chunk and Messina is a southwestern chunk, and they used
to be sort of under Spartan control for the entirety of the classical period at least.
At this point, they become, not just an independent state, but of course an independent state
that has every interest in keeping Sparta weak. They never want to see Sparta research.
So that is the first move they make, and then the other move is that they set up the
Arcadians in a great new established city, which they call Megalopolis, very imaginatively.
Megalopolis.
Big city.
They set up this new city, which is drawing together a number of Acadian communities, but
also Perioic communities.
So these places that used to be subject to Sparta puts them together in a new big sort of
established polis, which allows them to also make a sort of stronger stand united against
against Sparta. So they sort of hem Sparta in. What's left of Sparta now is sort of surrounded
by states that are so emphatically and inveterately hostile to that. Megalopolis is a strong
city from the start. It's got strong, I mean, in the time of the successes, there's a big siege
there and everything. So, you know, and that's only about 50 years or so later. So it has big
walls already, a formidable city that's created and built at that time overlooking the
Spartan homeland. So it's quite, yeah, significant. Yeah, it is. And, you know, when we talk
about them losing Messenia. That's not just a large
proportional land and farmland. That's also
a large proportion of their
helot community that they've been heavily
relying on for the workforce.
Not all the helots, there are helots obviously
in Laconia as well. But
they have very much done the one thing the Spartans
were always worried about throughout
especially post-460
onwards of losing
control of the helip, the helip population
that it relied so much on
for its workforce.
And is there any last attempt
or maybe not even last attempt, but it seems very much that Sparta's star is very much dwindling
at this point. Is there any last attempt if, like I said, Laos is still there? I know he's old
at the time, but to try and revive Spartan fortunes once again, to bring it back from these
humiliations, quite frankly, by Thebes. I mean, yeah, they do. I guess Leos begins to actually
go abroad to make money, and the easiest way to make money was for him to sell himself as a military
expert. So he basically becomes a mercenary for hire, but as a commander, fundamentally,
he's going around doing just that. And then really, I mean, Ruh, you might have a different view
on this, but I don't see Sparta as really exerting itself well at all through the 360s. It is
pretty much never fully recovering. It's putting out fires, but I mean, I think it's important
to story who it, Sparta never gives up, right? They never stop seeing themselves as this
hegemonic power, even when at this point they've been humiliated, their power.
has been drastically reduced, their sway in the Greek world is now relatively marginal compared
to other states that have ascended Thebes, Athens is back on its feet, you know, other states
are really rising. Sparta is nowhere near that and cannot manage to assert itself, but it never
stops trying. And so throughout the 360s, you have these sort of attempts to try and push back
against those boundaries that are, the walls that are moving in, you know, they try to sort of push that
back out. They have some success, but also mostly it's, you know, it's dismal fighting, it's endless
campaigns that don't really achieve anything. They aren't able to retake Messenia, which is their
main purpose. They aren't able to dismantle Megalopolis, the Arcadian Federation, which is one of
the strongest new powers in the region. They aren't even able to sort of traditionally, they've
always been able to punish Argos at least. But in this case, they're really not able to manage
themselves against any of these states in any lasting way that rebuilds their hegem.
Sometimes you get the Battle of Mantonea, said it 362 is like another last kind of hurrah of the
Spartans. But how much truth can we look?
into that? I mean, it definitely is a final hurrah, if you want to think of it like that. I think
their real last hurrah is the fact that they protect Sparta from Epaminandas himself. So the
Battle of Mantonair is sort of the big battle that sort of brings into question the dominance of the thiebens.
The Thiebans are defeated as the wrong word, but sort of ends in this moment of stalemate,
yeah. Whereas as the Spartans went to join the many allies to resist thieves, it is said
that Permanondas spotted that Sparta was unprotected.
And some of the thing that always strikes me is in the aftermath of Lutra,
they never ever go to destroy Sparta.
And now, as we near the Battle of Mantonair, they give it a go.
We'll attack Sparta itself.
And Gizaleos has his final moment, finally, as a big fan of his,
where he races back basically from Mantonair with the force to protect the city.
And he protects the famously unwalled city against the Thebans
and Akkadmanandas kind of goes, oh, okay.
And then heads over to basically the great battle of Manzanagh.
It occurs as a result.
And, well, he dies.
So I think it's fair to say he's defeated.
Eminemnon does not fare well, no, yeah.
Spear to the chest, it all ruin your whole day.
Yeah.
But this is the moment where Theban hegemony gets in trouble
because it seems to hinge so much on the energy
and the ideas and innovative sort of diplomacy
and maneuvering of figures like Upmanondas,
Like when they are killed, the Thebans really struggle to maintain themselves as well.
And they get caught up very soon afterwards in this long drawn-out, very costly Third Sacred War,
which is a more regional conflict, but it sort of drains their energies.
So the Battle of Mantonea creates the situation where kind of no one knows what's going on.
But Sparta is still, it remains completely unable to capitalize on that.
So into the 350s as well, there's always campaigning going on.
They're constantly trying to fight Megalopolis.
They're trying to fight Argos.
They're trying to fight Messenia.
they get nowhere in any of these cases. They win battles. They sometimes take minor towns,
but they're never able to kind of disrupt the kind of ring of enemies that surrounds them.
So right down to the end of the 4th century, I mean, they're continuously trying to regain
Messenia. And there's one of the quirks of their policy in this period is that the Greeks
keep signing these common pieces that repeat the terms of the King's piece, right? They keep saying
everybody's autonomous, we're not doing any empires, we're not doing any hegemony.
Sparta refuses to sign them. Why do they refuse to sign them? Because some
signing it means acknowledging that Messenia is autonomous. They cannot do it. So they must
remain the sort of diplomatic pariah in the Greek world. They must remain outside of all of those
treaties because they cannot say, they cannot agree to anything that allows Messenia to
assert we are in an autonomous state. So they can't sign anything that quotes the king's peace.
So even though they kind of hang out in their own beliefs and in what they believe,
is it fair to say then that by the 360s, even by it and then at the 350s, that Sparta has
well and truly fallen by this time.
Yeah, so for me, I very much follow Xenophon here.
So one of the things I love about Xenophon's histories is he quite categorically ends it.
Thucydides famously doesn't have an ending to his histories that we have.
But Xenophon's very much like Battle of Mantonea.
That's it.
Someone else can take this up now.
If they want to write another history, they can continue.
To him, this was a watershed moment.
And I very much see that in similar lines as this brought an end to
sort of 150 years of how the Greek world thought it worked, I suppose.
Pretty much every illusion that, including Thieves, is going to fill that void,
was very much smashed that moment.
And that's why I think Xenophon has that as his point of departure.
And yes, Sparta continues and tries to assert itself.
We then get the reassertion like 100 years later,
trying to reestablish itself and things like that.
But the Sparta that we talk about, the Sparta of, you know,
the descendants of Leonidas and all those kind of traditions,
For me, 362, God.
I would not agree with that, actually.
I'm not having a rule.
Fair enough.
Because it depends on how we interpret fall.
Like if we say fall from grace, fall from hegemony, absolutely agree with you.
Right?
Like, that's over.
The Spartans will never recover that.
But when you're talking about the fall of a city, I mean, I do kind of want to see something
more dramatic than saying, okay, well, they have to relegate themselves.
They have to acknowledge increasingly that they are just a second-ray power now.
The actual invasion and destruction of Spartan territory happens a few times,
even with the Theatans, but they aren't able to take the city, right?
That doesn't happen until very much later.
But you do get these increasing sort of incremental stages
of further reduction of Spartan power in the decades that follow.
So also, for instance, Philip II invades Sparta
and strips away number of its territories,
gives them to neighboring states or makes them autonomous.
So Spartan territory keeps on shrinking further and further.
They have to give hostages to Alexander the Great
after they try rebelling against him, which also obviously
ends very badly.
And so you have these continuous attention.
by the Spardons to try and say, look, but we still matter. We still have manpower. We still
have money. We still have wealth. We still have territory. Let's try and expand it. Let's try
and go back. And they never really give that up, you know, throughout the third century,
even they never really. Selassia as well. Is that another battle?
Exactly. That's a century after this. Like that's 2-2 when the Battle of Salassia
happened, when they essentially the Spirons provoke the Macedonians and the Macedonians
come down to meet them. You never want this to happen. But that's, at that point, you know,
they've been defeated several times with Macedonians by that point. They've
defeated, you know, the Kermanadean war. And in fact, I mean, Pyrrhus of Epirus besieges
spout at one point. Like, they have to save it from a, they save victory from the
jaws of defeat there as well. So they are constantly taking a battering by everyone who now
matters in the Hellenistic world, but they just never give up. You know, they're always trying
again, trying again. What's that, I mean, to Libon, what's that one thing? When Philip
the second of Macedon comes down and, like, you know, saying of the Spartans probably
later that, that would have one word laconic response? What's that story? Yeah, so this is
story that's reports only in Plutarch in the fantastically irrelevant little treatise on brevity.
So it's specifically the topic of the treatises is to say a lot in a few words. And he gives
this famous example where Philip supposedly sent them an ultimatum saying, if I come into your lands,
I will destroy you utterly, to which the Sparans reply is. Just it. And then Philip marches
into their territory and destroys it utterly. There is always this impression that people have
that this is a moment of Sparta sort of boldly asserted, like, go on, try it, you know,
one of those Molon Lave moments, one of those come and get their moments, like, we dare you.
But the problem is, of course, the world has changed.
If somebody dares at that point to try and attack Sparta, they'll probably win,
because the Spartans aren't, they don't have the kind of power that they used to.
They don't have the kind of military superiority.
They don't have the allies.
They don't have the numbers.
And the Macedonian military machine is just a better one.
It's a more effective, more professional, better organized, faster, more flexible.
Well, it's just a better army.
And so at that point, Sparta can try and be defiant and, you know, go down in histories
as this power that has this aura of esteem and this aura of defiance.
But in terms of actual power, I mean, they're done.
Because it had fallen.
In 362.
Come back to my argument there, Tristan.
Fine, fine.
Guys, this has been absolutely fantastic.
As we all know, as those decades go on, you do see the rise of Macedon,
Alexander the Great and his success is amazing period of history.
I need to get you on us too a bit more.
But my last question will be, sometimes there is a link between Philip the second of Macedon,
Alexander the Great's father and the man who sees Macedon rise in the 350s and 40s, early 30s,
that Philip the second of Macedon, either he's at Lutra or he's at Thieves at the time,
and he witnessed his firsthand this demise in Spartan hegemony.
So my question to you to end this is, how significant do you think is the decline of Sparta
and the way that it does fall in Philip the 2nd's ultimate success in this conquest of Greece?
I'll be honest with you. I often dismiss it as trying to explain through the Greeks how the
Macedonians were able to rise up because it's not that the Macedonians is superior.
It's that they learned from the Greek greatness and implemented the right lessons of the genius
that is epimenontas. This is the kind of narrative which I very much see that working within
from that perspective. I think that's exactly right. And so we need to doubt that story a little
bit. But obviously, Philip was interested in Greek affairs. The thing is, like, when he starts
out, he takes over this kingdom in 360 or 359, it's in a total shambles, right? And specifically,
it's in a shambles with regard to the Illyrians and the Thessalians at his borders and
the Athenians messing with matters in the North Aegean. Sparta's a long way away. And Sparta is not going to
become relevant to his immediate interests for a very long time. I think Philip gets away with
not caring about Sparta, essentially, and that is the whole thing about this quote. He tried
to intimidate them with words because there's too much trouble actually going that, unless they
defy him, in which case, fine, I'll go. But in terms of how important it is for his, to facilitate
his rise to power, it's much harder to say, because you're dealing with a world in which it's become
from unipolar at the start of the four century, Sparta is in control, to being very multipolar. You have
all these different states, the Arcadians, the Athenians, the Thebans, you have...
Well, as you said, the Athenians have risen back up by this time.
Exactly. And the Athenians, by far, the most powerful Greek state, when Philip rises
to power, there's no question. And so, to what extent it matters that it's not Sparta?
I'm not entirely sure that we could quantify that in any meaningful way. But you could imagine,
for instance, Sparta, winning the Battle of Luxtra, humbling the Thebans, taking over the
region again. And then when Philip expands southward, he encounters essentially the Spartans
rather than the Thebans, but I don't know how that would have made any difference because
the whole point is that these Greek states have been exhausting each other in this constant infighting,
and there is still obviously manpower and expertise left in that world, but there isn't the
unity that you would need to make a stand against Philip.
This has been absolutely great. This is why I wanted to get you both in person for this chat
because it's been so much fun over the last hour or so. And it just goes to me to say,
thank you so much to both of you for coming back on the podcast.
No, thank you so much, Justin. Always a pleasure.
Absolutely. I'm so glad to be here. Thank you.
Well, there you go. There was Dr. Roolkanerdyke and Dr. Owen Reese talking through the Fool of Sparta.
A fantastic chat. I loved getting them both in the office and doing that interview together.
You can see how they work so well together.
Thank you for listening to this episode of The Ancients.
Now, if you enjoy this episode, make sure that you are following the show, either on Spotify or
wherever you get your podcasts. That really helps us, and you'll be doing us a big favor.
You'll also be doing us a big favor if you'd be kind enough to leave us a rating as well.
We'd really appreciate that. And don't forget, you can also sign up to History Hit
for hundreds of hours of original documentaries with a new release every week.
Sign up at HistoryHit.com slash subscribe.
That's all from me. I'll see you in the next episode.
Thank you.
