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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: TAV-THE |
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THEMISTOCLES (c. 514-449 B.C.) , Athenian soldier and statesman in some respects probably the ablest and most far-sighted whom Greece produced in the first half of the 5th century. He was the son of Neocles, an Athenian of no distinction and moderate means, his mother being a Carian or a Thracian, Hence according to the Periclean law iE &,u, oiv avroiv he would not have been a free Athenian at all (see PERICLES). Thucydides properly brings out the fact that, though he lacked that education which was the peculiar glory
personal and national, and the unscrupulous ability with which he pursued his ends. In all these points he is the antithesis of his great rival Aristides (q.v.). Of his early years little is known. He may have been strategus
glory
According to the Ath. Pol. it would seem that Themistocles was archon in 483-82 at the time when this naval programme began. Dionysius of Halicarnassus
chief
fleet
control of the Spartan Eurybiades, it was Themistocles who caused the Greeks to fight the indecisive battle of Artemisium, and still more it was he who, by his threat that he would lead the Athenian army to found a new home in the West, and by his treacherous message to Xerxes, precipitated the engagement at Salamis (q.v.). The retirement of the Persians left the Athenians free to restore their ruined city (see ATHENS). Sparta, nominally on the ground that it was dangerous to Greece that there should be any citadel north of the Isthmus which an invader might hold, urged that this should not be done, but Themistocles by means of diplomatic delays and subterfuges enabled the work to be carried sufficiently near to completion to make the .walls defensible. He also carried out his original
After the crisis of the Persian invasion Themistocles and Aristides appear to have composed their differences. But Themistocles soon began to lose the confidence of the people, partly owing to his boastfulness (it is said that he built near his own house
' There is, however, much difficulty regarding this accusation. It may be simply a misunderstanding of his ostracism.town, though it is said that his bones were secretly transferred to Attica. He was worshipped by the Magnesians as a god, as we find from a coin on which he is shown with a patera in his hand and a slain bull at his feet (hence perhaps the legend that he died from drinking bull's blood: cf. Aristoph. Eq. 83; Diod. xi. 58; Plut. Them. 31). Though his end was discreditable, though his great wealth can hardly have been obtained by loyal public service, there is no doubt that his services to Athens and to Greece were great. He created the Athenian fleet
There are monographs by Bauer (Merseburg, 1881) and Wecklein (Munich, 1882); but the best discussions of his career will be found in the chief
Mitchell
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