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The Athenian Embassy to Sparta in 371 B.C.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2013

D. J. Mosley
Affiliation:
University of Sheffield

Extract

Xenophon records that in 371 an embassy was sent from Athens to Sparta in order to negotiate a settlement. His account contains several peculiar features concerning both the procedure of the embassy and the personnel employed. To submit the historical writings of Xenophon to close and detailed scrutiny is often an unrewarding task, yet it is well to bear in mind that at the time of the events under discussion Xenophon, who had been exiled from Athens, was resident in the Peloponnese and he ought therefore to have been in a position to combine an understanding of the political workings of Athens with a knowledge of what went on in Sparta.

We read that Callias the son of Hipponicus, Autocles the son of Strombichides, Demostratus the son of Aristophon, Aristocles, Cephisodotus, Melanopus and Lycaethus, seven names in all, were sent as envoys, and further that the popular orator Callistratus was also present in Sparta. Included in the account are three speeches which at first sight are discordant and which Xenophon attributes to Callias, Autocles and Callistratus.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s). Published online by Cambridge University Press 1962

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References

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page 41 note 5 Ibid. VIII, 90.

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page 42 note 2 Demosthenes, XIX, 126. In 324 Demosthenes turned up in Arcadia to help an Athenian embassy there, but Arcadia was not enemy territory and Demosthenes was already in exile (Plutarch, , Demosthenes, 27Google Scholar).

page 42 note 3 Without real justification from the text he is described as ‘chef de l'embassade’ by Glotz-Cohen, , Histoire Grecque, III, 143Google Scholar. I hope to deal elsewhere with archipresbeutae and the relations between envoys.

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page 43 note 8 Ibid. VI, 3, 10.

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page 44 note 10 Aesch. II, 139.

page 44 note 11 Thucyd. IV, 118, 11.

page 44 note 12 Dem. XXIV, 12.

page 44 note 13 Harpocration, s.v. Μελανωπός.

page 44 note 14 I.G. II2, 106 = Tod, 135.

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page 46 note 4 I am indebted to T. T. B. Ryder and M. I. Finley for their arguments and criticisms and to Sheffield University, Research Fund Committee, for assistance.