Read Makers of Ancient Strategy: From the Persian Wars to the Fall of Rome Online
Authors: Victor Davis Hanson
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elegantly sculpted barriers around public plazas or decorative cladding for bulky
protective concrete wal s. . . . The most chil ing example of the new medievalism
is New York’s Freedom Tower, which was once touted as a symbol of enlighten-
ment. Designed by David Childs of Skidmore, Owings & Merril , it rests on a
20-story windowless fortified concrete base decorated in prismatic glass panels in a
grotesque attempt to disguise its underlying paranoia. And the brooding, obelisk-
like form above is more of an expression of American hubris than of freedom.
13 Diodorus 11.29.3.
80 Berkey
14 The translation is by C. H. Oldfather in the Loeb Classical Library. See also Tod,
GHI
2.204, 21–51, Lycurgus
Against
Leocrates
80–81. Contra: Theopompus,
FGrHist
115
F153. Russell Meiggs,
The Athenian Empire
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1972), 504–7,
accepts the validity of the Oath of Plataea, while P. J. Rhodes,
CAH
52.34, doubts the
existence of a clause requiring temples to be left in ruins.
15 Jeffrey M. Hurwit,
The Athenian Acropolis: History, Mythology, and Archaeology from
the Neolithic Era to the Present
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999), 135–42.
The archaeological evidence of the Persian sack of Athens, and the Agora in particular,
is presented in T. Leslie Shear Jr., “The Persian Destruction of Athens,”
Hesperia
62
(1993): 383–482. See also Homer A. Thompson, “Athens Faces Adversity,”
Hesperia
50
(1981): 343–55. He writes (346), “To sum up: their triumphs in the Persian Wars undoubt-
edly stimulated the Athenians in some of their finest achievements in art, literature and
international affairs. But the evidence of the excavations reminds us that the sack of
480/79 BC caused a long and distressed disruption of the domestic, civic, and religious
life of the city.”
16 Simon Hornblower (
A Commentary on Thucydides
, I [Oxford: Clarendon Press,
1991], s.v. 1.89.3–1.93.2, 135) cites R. A. McNeal (“Historical Methods and Thucydides
1.103.1,”
Historia
19 [1970]: 306–25) on the significance of walls in Thucydides. McNeal
writes (312), “In Thucydides’ elaborate theory of power, a fleet permits commerce,
commerce brings revenues, revenues create treasure, treasure means stability and walls,
and walls permit political domination of weaker states. For Thucydides the wall is the
ultimate symbol of power.” See also Hornblower’s commentary on 1.2.2, where he
quotes from Yvon Garlan (“Fortifications et histoire Greque,” in
Problèmes de la guerre en
Grèce ancienne
, ed. Jean-Pierre Vernant, 245–60 [Paris: Mouton, 1968], quotation at 255)
that “la notion d’enceinte urbaine est inseparable du concept de cite.”
The author of the
Athenaion Politeia
credits both Themistocles and Aristides in the
construction of the circuit walls (23.3–4, trans. P. J. Rhodes [Aristotle,
The Athenian Con-
stitution
(London: Penguin Books, 1984)]):
(3) The champions of the people at this time were Aristides son of Lysimachus
and Themistocles son of Neocles: Themistocles practised the military arts,
while Aristides was skilled in the political arts and was outstanding among his
contemporaries for his uprightness, so the Athenians used the first as a general
and the second as an adviser. (4) The two men were jointly responsible for the
rebuilding of the walls, in spite of being personal opponents; and it was Aris-
tides who saw that the Spartans had gained a bad reputation because of Pausa-
nias and urged the Ionians to break away from the Spartan alliance.
For a discussion of this passage, see P. J. Rhodes,
A Commentary on the Aristotelian
Athe-
naion Politeia (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1981), 292–95.
See Diodorus 11.39–40 (incorrectly dated 478–477 BC). Plutarch also emphasizes
the clever manner in which the Athenians launched their ambitious quest for empire
(
Themistocles
19):
No sooner were these great achievements behind him, than he immediately
took in hand the rebuilding and fortification of Athens; according to Theopom-
pus’s account he bribed the Spartan ephors not to oppose his plans, but most
Why Fortifications Endure 81
writers agree that he outwitted them. He arranged a visit to Sparta, giving him-
self the title of ambassador, and the Spartans then complained to him that the
Athenians were fortifying their city, while Polyarchus was sent expressly from
Aegina to confront him with this charge. Themistocles, however, denied it and
told them to send men to Athens to see for themselves; this delay, he calculated,
would gain time for the fortifications to be built, and he was also anxious that
the Athenians should hold the envoys as hostages for his own safety. This was
just how things turned out. The Spartans, when they discovered the truth, did
not retaliate against him, but concealed their resentment and sent him away.
17 Thucydides 1.90.1–3.
18 Thucydides 1.93.1–2.
19 John M. Camp,
The Archaeology of Athens
(New Haven, CT: Yale University Press,
2001), 59–60; Gomme,
HCT
, s.v. 1.93.2, 260–61; Hornblower,
A Commentary on Thucy-
dides
, I, s.v. 1.93.2, 137–38.
20 For a description of these wal s, see Wycherley,
The Stones of Athens
, 13. The Athe-
nians placed unbaked bricks on top of a stone socle, which was “composed of several
courses of massive wel -shaped bricks on either face of a core of rougher stone. The mate-
rial was poros or harder limestone, with increasing use of conglomerate in later phases.”
21 Gomme,
HCT
, s.v. 1.92, 260.
22 See T. 1.1.1: “The preparations of both the combatants were in every department
in the last state of perfection; and he [Thucydides] could see the rest of the Hellenic
race taking sides in the quarrel; those who delayed doing so at once having it in con-
templation” (1.18.3):
For a short time the league [the Hellenic League of 481] held together, till the
Spartans and the Athenians quarreled, and made war upon each other with their
allies, a duel into which all the Hellenes sooner or later were drawn, though
some at first might remain neutral. So that the whole period from the Median
war to this, with some peaceful intervals, was spent by each power in war, either
with its rival, or with its own revolted allies, and consequently afforded them
constant practice in military matters, and that experience which is learnt in the
school of danger.
23 Hansen, in
Polis,
writes (95–96):
Already in the Archaic period, then, walls were an important aspect of the
Greek perception of what a
polis
was, and an overview of surviving walls only
serves to strengthen that point. . . . In the written sources, 222
poleis
in all are
referred to as walled in the Archaic and Classical periods, and only in nineteen
cases is it expressly said that a city is unwalled; there are only four
poleis
of which
we know positively that they did not have any walls at the end of the Classical
period: namely, Delphi, Delos, Gortyn and Sparta.
24 Plato
Laws
778d–779b (trans. A. E. Taylor):
As for walls, Megillus, I am of the same mind as your own Sparta. I would leave
them to slumber peacefully in the earth without waking them, and here are
82 Berkey
my reasons. As the oft-quoted line of the poet happily words it, a city’s walls
should be of bronze and iron, not of stone, and we in particular shall cover
ourselves with well-merited ridicule, after taking our young men in annual
procession to the open country to block an enemy’s path by ditches, entrench-
ments, and actual buildings of various kinds—all, if you please, with the notion
of keeping the foe well outside our borders—if we shut ourselves in behind a
wall. A wall is, in the first place, far from conducive to the health of town life
and, what is more, commonly breeds of certain softness of soul in the towns-
men; it invites inhabitants to seek shelter within it and leave the enemy unre-
pulsed, tempts them to neglect effecting their deliverance by unrelaxing nightly
and daily watching, and to fancy they will find a way to real safety by locking
themselves in and going to sleep behind ramparts and bars as though they had
been born to shirk toil, and did not know that the true ease must come from
it, whereas dishonorable ease and sloth will bring forth toil and trouble, or am
I much mistaken.
25 Victor Davis Hanson,
The Soul of Battle: From Ancient Times to the Present Day. How
Three Great Liberators Vanquished Tyranny
(New York: Free Press, 1999), 72–104. On 101–2,
he writes,
Again, modern students of Greek history, to gain full insight into the real con-
temporary view of Spartan culture, must visit the remains of Messenê, Mega-
lopolis, and Mantinea. That such vast circuits could arise so quickly after the
Spartan defeat at Leuctra and subsequent invasion of Laconia should tell us ex-
actly what Sparta’s neighbors thought about Spartan society. Battlements—the
Berlin Wall and the current fieldworks arising on the American-Mexican border
are good examples—often provide more honest testimony than literary sources
and government proclamation about the respective apprehensions, fears, and
ideologies of the cultures on either side of the ramparts. Just as tremors in the
Soviet Union caused walls to crash in Germany, so too the check on Sparta of-
fered by Epaminondas immediately prompted thousands to go out into the
Peloponnesian countryside to cut and raise stone while they still had the chance.
26 Aristotle
Politica
2.8 (1267b22–30). See R. E. Wycherley,
CAH
52.203–8, and M. Ost-
wald,
CAH
52.315.
27 Thucydides 1.93.3–7.
28 See also the comments of Plutarch on the impact of this policy for the Athenians
(
Themistocles
19):
After this he proceeded to develop the Piraeus as a port, for he had already
taken note of the natural advantages of its harbors and it was his ambition
to unite the whole city to the sea. In this he was to some extent reversing the
policy of the ancient kings of Attica, for they are said to have aimed at drawing
the citizens away from the sea and accustoming them to live not by seafaring
but by tilling and planting the soil. It was they who had spread the legend about
Athena, how when she and Poseidon were contesting the possession of the
country, she produced the sacred olive tree of the Acropolis before the judges
Why Fortifications Endure 83
and so when the verdict. Themistocles, however, did not, as Aristophanes the
comic poet puts it, ‘knead the Piraeus on to the city’; on the contrary, he at-
tached the city to the Piraeus and made the land population dependent on the
sea. The effect of this was to increase the influence of the people at the expense
of the nobility and to fill them with confidence, since the control of policy now
passed into the hands of sailors and boatswains and pilots. This was also the
reason why the platform of the people’s Assembly in the Pnyx, which had been
built so as to look out to sea, was later turned round by the Thirty Tyrants, so
that it faced inland, for they believed that Athens’ naval empire had proved to
be the mother of democracy and that an oligarchy was more easily accepted
by men who tilled the soil.
29 See the new study of the Long Walls by David H. Conwell,
Connecting a City to
the Sea: The History of the Athenian Long Walls
,
Mnemosyne Supplements
, vol. 293 (Leiden: Brill, 2008). After describing the walls’ physical characteristics, nomenclature, and the
local topography where they were situated, Conwell provides a chronological narra-
tive of the walls’ construction and purpose during four phases. He concludes with a
strategic analysis of the Long Walls in Athenian history from their initial construction
to the end of the fourth century.
30 Thucydides 1.107,108.2. Conwel conjectures that the construction was begun as
early as 462–4611 and completed in 458–457. His argument (
Connecting a City to the Sea,
39–54), which attempts to confirm the involvement of Cimon in the project and thereby
substantiate a remark in Plutarch (
Cimon
13.5–7)—that is, in contradiction to Thucydides’
admittedly imprecise chronology (1.107)—and also thereby propose an early date for the
start of construction, fails to address adequately the democratic thrust of this initiative.
The Athenians’ commitment to build the Long Wal s reinforced the polis’s reliance on
the masses of citizens who serviced the fleet. For Cimon to favor this segment of the
Athenian citizen body seems inconsistent with his political views. Cimon, who had re-
cently suffered dishonor stemming from his pro-Spartan policies, was not in a position
of sufficient trust with his fel ow citizens to suggest a project involving so much of the