Authors: Robert Garland
403 | With the restoration of democracy Athenian deportees and refugees who had been living in the Piraeus staged a triumphal return to Athens. Those who had been sympathetic to the Thirty Tyrants and feared for their lives were permitted to relocate in Eleusis, which now became a semi-independent polity (Xen. |
401/400 | The Spartan king Agis deported “a vast number of slaves” from Elis (Xen. |
399 | Following an outbreak of |
395 | The Boeotians and Argives seized Heraclea Trachinia. They slew the Spartan garrison but allowed the other Peloponnesians to depart with their possessions. They then recalled the Trachinians whom the Spartans had expelled and permitted them to reside in the city (D.S. 14.82.6â7). |
392 | Dionysius I of Syracuse deported most of the Sicels from Tauro-menium, a |
385/4 | After being defeated by a Spartanled coalition, the inhabitants of Mantinea were forced to raze their city to the ground and return to their original four villages (D.S. 15.12.2; Xen. |
ca. 385 | The inhabitants of Thasos were exiled from their island on the orders of Sparta. |
382â79 | The |
ca. 373 | The Thebans made a surprise attack on the Plataeans, destroyed their town for the second time, and annexed their territory. As in 427, the surviving Plataeans sought refuge in Athens. The Thespians, who had also been expelled, begged the Athenians not to leave them “without a city” (Xen. |
ca. 370 | At the foundation of the Arcadian League “800 Tegeans fled to Sparta” according to Xenophon ( |
365? | The Athenian general Timotheus, while assisting the Persian satrap Ariobarzanes, successfully besieged Samos in order to strengthen Athenian control of the Aegean. The Athenians deported the Samians and established a cleruchy on the island. According to the fourth-century historian Heraclides Ponticus, quoted by Aristotle (fr. 611.35 Rose), the Athenians “exiled everyone.” Shipley (1987, 164) states, “The exodus in 365 no doubt ran into many hundreds, possibly thousands.” Most of the refugees settled in Ionia, Aeolis, and Caria. See Habicht (1957, 152â237) for a collection of Samian inscriptions thanking the “benefactors of Samos” for their support in their years of wandering. The Samians were still in exile 43 years later in 324, when Alexander promulgated the so-called Exiles' Decree (D.S. 18.8.7; see |
363/2 | The Athenians decreed that the rebellious Iulietae of Ceos “are to be banished from Ceos and Athens and their possessions are to belong to the |
358â47 | After Philip II of Macedon had successfully besieged Potidaea, he “humanely” sent the Athenian garrison back to Athens, sold the citizens into slavery, and handed the city “with all its buildings” over to the Olynthians (D.S. 16.8.5). No numbers are given. The Athenian general Chares, having captured Sestos, slew all the adult males and enslaved the remainder of the population (D.S. 16.34.3). No numbers are given. |
357 | Philip II captured Amphipolis and “ |
354 | After successfully besieging Methone, a |
352 | The Phocian general Phaüllus razed to the ground Naryka, a |
339/8 | Timoleon “slaughtered” the Campanians living in Aetna (D.S.16.82.4) and deported the Syracusans from Leontini (D.S.16.82.7). |
338 | After Philip II had exiled the Troezenians, the latter appealed to the Athenians, who granted them citizenship and other privileges. They did so in recognition of the fact that the Troezenians had provided refuge for their women and children before the Battle of Salamis 150 years prior (Hyp. |
336/5 | Shortly after coming to power Alexander the Great put down a revolt in Thebes. He then ordered the massacre of over 6,000 Thebans. The restâsome 30,000 in allâwere sold into slavery “with the exception of the priests, the guest-friends of the Macedonians, the descendants of Pindar, and those who had opposed the vote for revolt” (Plu. |
335? | Certain Chians, who were hostile to the Macedonians, betrayed their city to the Persians and deported their opponents (Arr. |
APPENDIX D
CATALOGUE OF EXILES
As noted earlier, it is not always possible to distinguish between exiles, fugitives, and those who choose to “retire” abroad.
Aeschines, Athenian politician:
Left Athens and retired to Rhodes after being defeated by his adversary Demosthenes in 330.
Agathocles, tyrant and later king of Syracuse:
Exiled from Syracuse in ca. 330 by his oligarchic opponents because of his democratic leanings; recalled by the Syracusan
dêmos
but again exiled by the oligarchs; reinstated in 319/8 in Syracuse, where he ruled as tyrant; remained in control until his death in 289.
Alcaeus of Mytilene, lyric poet:
Went into exile from Mytilene in ca. 600 after he was discovered to be plotting against the tyrant Myrsilus, though he remained on the island of Lesbos; went into exile two more times as a result of his opposition to the tyrant Pittacus (fr. 114, 130 B Campbell). For full discussion of the testimonia, see Bowie (2007, 33â34).
Alcibiades, Athenian politician, grandfather of the more famous Alcibiades
: Ostracized in 460.
Alcibiades, Athenian politician and general:
Fled from Athens to Sparta in 415/4 to avoid prosecution for his involvement in religious scandals; subsequently condemned to death; tried unsuccessfully to engineer his return by obtaining the support of Persia; reappointed general in 411; returned to Athens to a rapturous welcome in 407; withdrew to Thrace in 406 when one of his subordinates was defeated by the Spartans; attempted unsuccessfully to give advice to the Athenians before the Battle of Aegospotami in 405; took refuge with the
Persian satrap Pharnabazus but was murdered on his host's orders in 404/3.
Anaxagoras, Ionian philosopher:
Put on trial for impiety in Athens in ca. 450; subsequently retired to Lampsacus in the northern Troad.
Andocides, Athenian politician:
Charged with being implicated in the mutilation of the herms and the profanation of the Mysteries in 415; secured immunity by confessing to his role in the mutilation; being debarred from entering sanctuaries or the Agora, he left Athens and became a merchant; made two unsuccessful attempts to regain his citizenship in 411 and 410; took advantage of the amnesty of 403 to return to Athens; successfully defended himself in 400 or 399 against a further attempt to debar him from entry into sanctuaries or the Agora in his famous speech titled “On the Mysteries”; prosecuted for treason because of his role in negotiating terms with the Spartans in 392/1; fled from Athens before the verdict was given, after which nothing more is heard of him.
Androtion, Athenian politician and local historian:
Exiled in 346 after being prosecuted for making an illegal proposal; lived out his days in Megara.
Aristides, Athenian politician and general:
Ostracized in 482, in part because of his intense rivalry with Themistocles (Hdt. 8.79.2); recalled in 480 when an amnesty was announced in advance of Xerxes' invasion of Greece (Forsdyke 2005, 166â67).
Aristotle of Stagira, philosopher:
Settled in Athens in 367 at the age of 17 to study under Plato; left Athens on Plato's death in 348/7 and journeyed first to Assos and then to Mytilene; became tutor to Alexander the Great in 342 at the invitation of Philip II of Macedon; returned to Athens in 335, where he became a metic and established his philosophical school called the Lyceum; fled to Chalcis in 323 to escape the anti-Macedonian sentiment that broke out on the death of Alexander; later claimed that his flight was occasioned by the desire to prevent the Athenians from “sinning twice against philosophy”âan allusion to the trial and execution of Socrates; died in Chalcis in 322.
Cimon, Athenian general and politician:
Ostracized in 461, in part because of his intense rivalry with Pericles' political ally Ephialtes.
Cleisthenes, Athenian politician:
Forced to withdraw from Athens for a short period by his political rival Isagoras in 508/7.
Cleomenes I, Spartan king:
Took refuge in Thessaly after being accused of intriguing against his fellow-king Demaratus; invited back to Sparta, where he allegedly committed suicide, perhaps suffering from paranoid schizophrenia.
Critias, Athenian politician:
Exiled in 406, possibly because of his association with Alcibiades; withdrew to Thrace, where he is said to have worked to establish democracy and to have fought on behalf of a servile group known as the
penestai
(Xen.
Hell
. 2.3.36); recalled in 404 in accordance with Athens's peace treaty with Sparta at the end of the Peloponnesian War; became the leader of the Thirty Tyrants; killed fighting against Thrasybulus in 403.
Demaratus, Spartan king:
Fled to Persia in ca. 491 as the result of rivalry with his fellow-king Cleomenes I; accompanied Xerxes on his invasion of Greece (Hdt. 6.61â70, 73â75).
Democedes, physician from Croton:
Fled from Croton when the city was engulfed in
stasis
; settled in Plataea.
Demosthenes, Athenian orator and politician:
Went into voluntary exile in 323 after being found guilty of misappropriating public money; recalled soon afterward; exiled by Antipater, who became ruler of Macedon after the death of Alexander the Great; subsequently condemned to death; under pursuit from Antipater's henchmen, he took refuge in the sanctuary of Poseidon on the island of Calauria, where he committed suicide in 322.
Diagoras, poet from Melos:
Condemned to death for impiety by the Athenians; fled first to Pallene and later to Corinth.