- Paralus (ship)
The "Paralus" was an Athenian sacred ship and a messenger
trireme of the Athenian navy during the late 5th century BC. Its crew were known for their vehement pro-democracy views. It played a notable role in several episodes of thePeloponnesian War .The Paralus appears more often in the literary and epigraphical sources for the classical period than any other individual ship; [Jordan, "Athenian Navy", 172] it carried almost all recorded Athenian
diplomatic mission s in the 5th and 4th centuries, and it appears that on most of these missions the treasurer ("tamias") of Paralus acted as the chief ambassador. [Jordan, "Athenian Navy", 172]The crew of the Paralus (the "Paraloi") was known for its exceptionally strong pro-democracy views; its remarkable unity on this matter may indicate that it was composed of the members of a single
genos of the name "Paraloi". [Jordan, "Athenian Navy", 174-5] This crew was instrumental in preventing an oligarchic coup at Samos in411 BC . Upon bringing the news of this event to Athens, however, they found that a successful oligarchic coup had taken place there, and were interned; one crew member, escaping, brought the news of this event to the fleet at Samos, beginning the period of open division between the city and the fleet.In
405 BC , the Paralus was one of ten ships that escaped from the Athenian disaster at Aegospotami withConon ; it was then dispatched to inform Athens of the defeat, its arrival setting off a citywide panic. [Xenophon, "Hellenica" ]References
Other sources
*Kagan, Donald. "The Peloponnesian War" (Penguin Books, 2003). ISBN 0-670-03211-5
*Jordan, Borimir, "The Athenian Navy in the Classical Period". (Berkeley, University of California Press, 1975) ISBN 0-520-09482-4
*Xenophon, ""
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