|   | 
	
	
    
	   
	    
       
	   
 
GREEK HISTORY 
     	
     SOME IMPORTANT DATES
 
 
  
- 594		
SOLON  is archon (chief magistrate) at Athens.  His reforms. The beginnings of Athenian Democracy.  Herodotus,   Histories,  Book I, ch. 32f. (Gochberg, p. 149).   
- 566		
PANATHENAIC GAMES established at Athens  (recitations of the Homeric Poems as part of the celebrations)  
- 560		
PISISTRATUS (Solon's cousin) becomes  tyrant  in Athens   (560-528).  
- 560		
 
			
- 546 Spring	
King Croesus  meets  King Cyrus  (King of the Medes and the Persians) on the Battlefield.  End of Croesus.  
[Story told by  Herodotus:   Gochberg  pp. 158-159.]  
- 535?		
 
- 525	
	AESCHYLUS  the tragedian is born at Eleusis in Athens. (Dies  456)  
- 514		
Assassination attempt against the sons of the Tyrant Pisistratus.  One is killed, and the regime turns nasty  (Harmodius and Aristogeiton).
  
- 510		
Revolution in Athens:  expulsion of the tyrants;  expulsion of a Spartan force sent to `help';  installation of 
the  `Radical Democracy' sponsored by Cleisthenes (son of Megacles, of the Alcmaeonid Family). 
   
- 496	
	SOPHOCLES the tragedian born at Colonus in Athens. (Dies  405)  [See Gochberg, pp. 47-48]  
- 490		
First Persian Invasion of Greece  (DARIUS I the Great).	Battle of MARATHON.  
- 487		
The first   ostracism  in Athens  (expulsion of one politician in the early Spring of a given year, if and only if a minimum of  5000 people vote in the balloting).  No crime is charged;  the decision is extra-legal, but designed to protect the democracy against its own leaders.  
- 485		
EURIPIDES  the tragedian is born in Athens.  (Dies in Macedonia 406/5)  
- 484		
Aeschylus  wins his first victory in the tragedy competitions.   
- 480		
SECOND  PERSIAN INVASION  OF GREECE.		 
			Themistocles of Athens.	Battle of SALAMIS 
			Battle of  THERMOPYLAE  Leonidas of Sparta     [HERODOTUS,  in  Gochberg pp. 132-148]
  
- 479		
		Battle of PLATAEA  
 
 
 
- 478-404		
THE ATHENIAN EMPIRE:  an alliance against the Persian threat, but most allies preferred (and by 450 were required) to pay Athenians to staff the ships rather than supply ships and crews themselves.  This gave Athens the power base and organization to dominate the Aegean area.  
- 469		
SOCRATES  the philosopher is born in Athens.  [executed in 399, age 70]
  
- 455		
First of Euripides' 92 plays produced in Athens. (he came in 3rd)
  
- 453		
PERICLES,  whose mother is an Alcmaeonid, comes to prominence.  [His life and career related by 
Thucydides, and by Plutarch in his Biography of Pericles in the Parallel Lives]
  
- 443		
HERODOTUS,  `Father of (Greek) History'  is living in Athens
  
 
 
 
- 432		
Beginning of the   SECOND  (GREAT)  PELOPONNESIAN WAR:   Athens vs. Sparta.   
The Athenian 
general and (later) historian  THUCYDIDES  began taking notes.
  
- 431		
PERICLES'  FUNERAL ORATION  (reported by Thucydides:  Gochberg, pp. 176-183)
 
 
- 430	
	Birth of XENOPHON  (Gochberg, p. 160),  author of  Memories of Socrates,  The Expedition of the Ten 
Thousand (Anabasis),  The Hellenic History.
 
 
- 429	
	Plague breaks out in Athens  (429-426)   [Thucydides,  in Gochberg, pp. 184-188]   Pericles dies.  
 Shortly thereafter  Sophocles produces  Oedipus Tyrannos  (429-425).  [Gochberg,  pp. 47-130]
 
 
- 427		
ARISTOPHANES began producing comedies  ( Clouds, 423, about Socrates and his `think-factory'.  
  PLATO,  
the philosopher,  pupil of Socrates from about 407-399,  born.
  
 
- 424		
Athenian campaign in Thrace around Amphipolis against Spartans and their general Brasidas.   Thucydides 
the Historian was one of the Athenian generals (in charge of logistics).  He was blamed for the Athenian 
disaster and was exiled.
  
 
- 415	
	After a truce (421-415)  the Peloponnesian War breaks out again.  Athens sends an expedition to Sicily to 
try to capture Syracuse, but the intended commander (Alcibiades, a protege of Pericles) is 
disgraced as things are just getting started.  By 412  the expedition is a disastrous failure.
 
 
- 411		
Aristophanes'  Lysistrata.  A conservative coup-d'-etat in the Spring (the 400) and a democratic counter-
coup in the summer.  Very hard feelings all around.
 
 
- 406		
Battle of ARGINUSAE.  Disaster:  Six of the ten admirals executed, including the son of PERICLES.
			Socrates presided over the Ecclesia (Athenian national assembly) on the day that the disaster was 
first discussed in public, the morning after the news arrived;  he refused to put the motion for the 
death penalty for all the generals to a vote.
 
 
- 405		
Battle of AEGOSPOTAMI
 
 
- 404		
September:  Capitulation of Athens to Sparta.  Occupation by Lysander the Spartan general.
 
 
 
  
- 404-3		
Athens under the rule of  the THIRTY TYRANTS  (including Plato's uncle and cousin, both of whom were ex-
friends of Socrates), a bunch of Spartan Quislings of a conservative and vengeful stamp.    More 
than 1500 executions.
 
 
- 403		
Restoration of the DEMOCRACY.  A new Athenian Empire ( ca. 378-338) but much diminished in power, 
wealth and influence.
 
 
- 399	
 
- 395-347	
	Career of PLATO  (at an Athenian gymnasium called the Academy).  Plato's pupil  ARISTOTLE  (who taught, 
from 335, at a gymnasium in Athens called the LYCEUM),  died 322.
  
 
- 371	
	Battle  of  LEUKTRA
 
 
- 362		
Battle of MANTINEA.  Sparta's third military defeat in her history.  Sparta occupied by Theban army.  
Helots liberated.  The end of Sparta as a significant force in Greek politics,  replaced by Thebes (until 338). 
 
 
- 359-336		
PHILIP II   (383/2–336)  [son of Amyntas III (393/2–369/8) and Eurydice],  King of Macedonia.
    
 
- 338	
	BATTLE OF CHAERONEA.  Debut of Alexander, son of Philip and Olympias.  Defeat of Thebes and 
Athens:  Macedonia replaces Thebes as the leading Greek state   (HEGEMON). 
 
 
- 336	
	Philip assassinated,  succeeded by his 19 year-old son, ALEXANDER III (359–323). 
 
 
- 335		
Beginning of the campaigns of ALEXANDER THE GREAT against PERSIA. 
   
 
- 356-323		
Aristotle's most important pupil,  ALEXANDER III  (`THE GREAT'),  king of Macedonia from 336,  Pharaoh of 
Egypt from 331,  Great King of Persia from 328,  god from 324/3.   Died of fever in Babylon in 
June of 323,  aged 33. 
 
 
- From 323	
ALEXANDER'S EMPIRE dismantled, eventually into four kingdoms;
  
			(1)  Macedonia  (The Antigonids)	 	(2)  Egypt  (The Ptolemies) 
		(3)  Pergamon   (The Attalids) 		(4)  Syria-Mesopotamia  (The Seleucids).
 
 
 
 
 
10/03/2001   |     
    
	
	
		  |