- Peace of Callias
The Peace of Callias is a purported treaty established around
449 BC between theDelian League (led byAthens ) and Persia, ending thePersian Wars .The peace was negotiated by
Callias , an Athenian politician. Persia had continually lost territory to the Greeks after the end ofXerxes I 's invasion in479 BC , and by 450 they were ready to make peace. The Peace of Callias gave autonomy to theIonia n states inAsia Minor , prohibited the establishment of Persiansatrap ies elsewhere on the Aegean coast, and prohibited Persian ships from the Aegean. Athens also agreed not to interfere with Persia's possessions in Asia Minor,Cyprus ,Libya orEgypt (Athens had recently lost a fleet aiding an Egyptian revolt against Persia).Arguments for the existence of a peace treaty
It is possible that the treaty never officially existed, and if did exist, its importance is disputed.
Thucydides did not mention it, nor does Herodotus, andPlutarch thought it had either been signed after theBattle of the Eurymedon in466 BC , or that it had never been signed at all. In any case, there seems to have been some agreement reached ending hostilities with Persia after 450/449, which allowed Athens to deal with the new threats from the other Greek states such as Corinth and Thebes, as well as Euboeoa which rebelled from the Delian League shortly after this. These conflicts arose when the other Greeks felt there was no longer a justification for theDelian League , which had developed from theSparta n-led Hellenic League that defeated Xerxes' invasion, as Persia was no longer a threat. As Athens demanded more and more tribute and exerted more control over its allies, it has been argued that the League became more of a true empire, and many of Athens' former allies began to rebel. Although Callias was also responsible for a peace (TheThirty Years' Peace ) with Sparta in446 –445 BC , the growing Athenian threat would eventually lead to thePeloponnesian War .There was no direct fighting between the Greeks and the Persians after 450, but Persia continued to meddle in Greek affairs over the next twenty years, and was to become instrumental in securing a
Sparta n victory in the Peloponnesian War.Further reading
*De Ste. Croix, G.E.M.,"The Origins of the Peloponnesian War", London 1972 (especially the Appendices).
*Rhodes, P.J. "The History of the Classical World 478-323BC", 2005.ee also
*
List of treaties
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