Isle of Chios Frederic Leighton source ArtUK |
History of the Peloponnesian War
Book VIII: While Athens is paralyzed in disbelief about the catastrophic Sicilian expedition, Sparta takes advantage of their weakness and begins to
foment strife among Athenian allies.
They instigate revolts in Chios and Miletus, as well as other areas that
pay tribute to Athens. The
Athenians fight back with some success.
Various battles and political strategems abound, with Alcibiades coming to
the forefront, inciting unrest and disagreement wherever he goes, a result of his selfish manipulations. Finally the Peloponnesians suspect him
of subterfuge as he is now tight with the Persian, Tissapherne, and the Athenians
mistrust him as well. It is unclear as to whether Alcibiades' urging is the main catalyst, but suddenly Athenian groups
break from their beloved democracy and revolt against it, sending envoys back
to Athens to overthrow the democracy and establish oligarchies along the
way. Their actions are so
ill-planned that the areas they convert are so intoxicated with their new
freedom that they begin self-government and the intended plan of the reform set
to them by the Athenian envoys is completely ignored. Sparta and Persia form an alliance and Alcibiades is up to
his usual no-good, playing off Sparta and Athens against each other with the
help of Tissapherne, the corrupt Persian governor.
In Athens, mistrust and subterfuge is rampant as no one knows
who to trust and any opponent of oligarchies is murdered. A “party” named the Four Hundred
overthrows the democracy in Athens and takes control, and another oligarchic party
in Samos plans the same, but they are thwarted by a number of pro-democratic
Athenians who vow to have nothing to do with the oligarchs in Athens, intending to
restore democracy by fighting on their own.
Eretria, Euboea, Greece Edward Lear source Wikiart |
The Acropolis of Athens (1883) Ivan Aivazovsky source Wikiart |
This final chapter though was quite riveting and exposed the perils and weaknesses of human nature like no other has done so far.
I know I haven't been commenting on these, but I just don't have anything to say. I guess I'll wait until you start another book :-D
ReplyDeleteHa ha! I'm going to probably put a number of you to sleep again, as I start the Republic. The good news is that I'm reading other books in between so HOPEFULLY, I'll throw in a couple of reviews on those before long!
DeleteI thought Book VIII was a bit harder to follow, maybe because there's less dialogue/rhetoric than in earlier parts of the book. One of the interesting bits of this section, though, is Thucydides's description of "the line of conduct so surely fatal to oligarchies that arise out of democracies." In these governments the oligarchs pretend to be more than political equals: each thinks himself "the chief and master of his fellows" and will not easily accept political defeat. In democracies, on the other hand, the democratic process means that the outcome of elections is largely a matter of chance, so defeat is not really a cause for humiliation.
DeleteThe hardest parts of reading Thucydides were probably getting started and finishing, but I enjoyed most of the middle and overall it was quite powerful.
So interesting ..... I loved Book VIII because I thought it really highlighted the defects of human nature in more condensed (events) and yet a little more detailed fashion: the attacks and manipulations and changing alliances and chaos and short-sightedness, etc. I was sad when it ended.
DeleteI wonder though if the Greeks set up true oligarchies as a fair comparison. It sounded like a bunch of people wanting to try something new that was influenced by a complete Narcissist (Alcibiades) and then went about it in a haphazard fashion.
It's interesting that Thucydides targets "oligarchies that arise out of democracies" You'd think if the new rulers had been in a democracy, they would have been used to "sharing" and not on such big power-trips. It is clear however, that Thucydides values democracy.
I'm glad to have you reading along with us! You're often ahead of me and sometimes it seems we're the only ones who finish, with the exception of perhaps, Ruth. I hope you continue on with the list!