- Brasidas
Brasidas (Greek: "Βρασίδας") (d. 422 BC) was a
Sparta n officer during the first decade of thePeloponnesian War .He was the son of Tellis and Argileonis, and won his first laurels by the relief of
Methone , which was besieged by the Athenians (431 BC). During the following year he seems to have beeneponym ousephor (Xen. "Hell." ii. 3, 10), and in 429 he was sent out as one of the three commissioners (o'bu/3ovXoi) to advise the admiralCnemus . As trierarch he distinguished himself in the assault on the Athenian position at theBattle of Pylos , during which he was severely wounded (Thuc. iv. II. 12).In the next year, while Brasidas mustered a force at
Corinth for a campaign inThrace , he frustrated an Athenian attack onMegara (Thuc. iv. 70-73), and immediately afterwards marched throughThessaly at the head of 700helots and 1000 Peloponnesian mercenaries to join theMacedon ian king Perdiccas. Refusing to be made a tool for the furtherance of Perdiccas's ambitions, Brasidas set about the accomplishment of his main object, and, partly by the rapidity and boldness of his movements, partly by his personal charm and the moderation of his demands, succeeded during the course of the winter in winning over the important cities of Acanthus,Stagirus ,Amphipolis andToroni as well as a number of minor towns. An attack on Eion was foiled by the arrival ofThucydides , the historian, at the head of an Athenian squadron. In the spring of 423 a truce was concluded between Athens and Sparta, but its operation was at once imperilled by Brasidas's refusal to give up Scione, which, the Athenian partisans declared, revolted two days after the truce began, and by his occupation ofMende shortly afterwards.An Athenian fleet under
Nicias andNicostratus recovered Mende and blockaded Scione, which fell two years later (421 BC). Meanwhile Brasidas joined Perdiccas in a campaign againstArrhabaeus , king of theLyncesti , who was severely defeated. On the approach of a body ofIllyria ns, who, though summoned by Perdiccas, unexpectedly declared for Arrhabaeus, the Macedonians fled, and Brasidas's force was rescued from a critical position only by his coolness and ability. This brought to a head the quarrel between Brasidas and Perdiccas, who promptly concluded a treaty with Athens, of which some fragments have survived (I.G. i. 42).In April 422 the truce with Sparta expired, and in the same summer
Cleon was despatched to Thrace, where he stormedToroni andGalepsus and prepared for an attack on Amphipolis. But a carelessly conducted reconnaissance gave Brasidas the opportunity for a vigorous and successful sally. The Athenian army was routed with a loss of 600 men and Cleon was sealed away then slain. On the Spartan side only seven men are said to have fallen, but amongst them was Brasidas. He was buried at Amphipolis with impressive pomp, and for the future was regarded as the founder (olKu7ri~s) of the city and honoured with yearly games and sacrifices (seeBattle of Amphipolis ; Thuc. iv. 78-v. II). At Sparta acenotaph was erected in his memory near the tombs of Pausanias andLeonidas , and yearly speeches were made and games celebrated in their honour, in which only Spartiates could compete (Paus. iii. 14). Thus the two men from both Athens and the Peloponnese who were the most open advocates of continuous war, Brasidas and Cleon, were killed in a single battle, and the way was open to a peace negotiation under more moderate leaders.Brasidas united in himself the personal courage characteristic of Sparta with those virtues in which the typical Spartan was most signally lacking. He was quick in forming his plans and carried them out without delay or hesitation. With an oratorical power rare amongst the Lacedaemonians he combined a conciliatory manner which everywhere won friends for himself and for Sparta (Thuc. iv. 81).
See in particular Thucydides; what Diodorus xii. adds is mainly oratorical elaboration or pure invention. A fuller account will be found in the histories of Greece (e.g. those of
George Grote ,Karl Julius Beloch ,Georg Busolt , Meyer) and inG. Schimmelpfeng , "De Brasidae Spartani rebus gestis atque ingenio" (Marburg, 1857).External links
* [http://www.livius.org/bn-bz/brasidas/brasidas.html Brasidas] by Jona Lendering
References
*1911
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