Bloedow, 'Hegemony and Greek Historians', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9409
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9409-bloedow-hegemony
John Wickersham, Hegemony and Greek Historians. Lanham,
MA: Rowman & Littlefield, 1994. Pp. x, 195. $22.50 paper, $52.50
cloth. ISBN 0-8476-7781-8, ISBN 0-8476-7780-X.
Reviewed by Edmund F. Bloedow -- University of Ottawa
According to the publisher's advertisment this book (published
within the series, Greek Studies: Interdisciplinary Approaches)
concentrates on the following questions:
1) What status is called hegemonia?
2) What cases of it occupy the historian's attention?
3) What are its requirements and rewards?
4) What are the means of acquiring or losing it?
5) Most particularly, what is its precise importance for our
general and detailed understanding of this author?
Moreover, according to Nagy, the General Editor of the Series, W.
also offers "insights into the interplay of Hegemony and Empire
in the thinking of the Greek historians" (vii). All of the above
W. attempts to answer and explore by discussing four authors:
Herodotus, Thucydides, Xenophon (Hellenika) and Ephorus.
He explains that his book is "not a semantic study of
hegemonia and words of the same field," nor does it
"describe changing Greek attitudes toward hegemony," nor is it
"an examination of how hegemony (in the modern sense) actually
worked and behaved in Greek history from 481 to 362"; rather,
does it consist of "a set of literary studies carried out on
historical writers"--i.e., "it asks only what each writer did
with hegemony in his work" (ix-x). It is therefore not an
integrated study, but consists of essentially four independent
essays, each with its own conclusion. Consequently, there is no
general conclusion at the end, drawing together the results of
the study of each writer.
In W.'s attempt to attain the above objectives, he offers not
a few stimulating insights and new ideas. In many instances,
however, we are not given the entire story, so that what the
reader is presented with is something more akin to half a loaf.
In the remarks which follow, I shall concentrate, very
selectively (because of space), on this aspect.
In Herodotus, hegemonia is seen as being essentially
synonymous with "international command" in the war against Xerxes
(i.e., it is limited to 480 BC) and quarrelling amongst the
Greeks over who should have it. W., accordingly, discusses "Four
Instructive Contests" in "Getting Hegemony": Argos, Gelon, Athens
in connection with command of the sea, and Athens versus Tegea at
Plataea (4-15). In these instances, W. argues that the decision
among the contestants turns on, not who has the most
dunamis, but on dignity: "the Greeks in Herodotus settle
hegemony on the basis of honor first; only when that is taken
care of do they start to think prudently, in terms of power,
strategy, and tactics" (13). For instance, in connection with
Gelon's claim, "the case of the Athenian is especially clear,
because he yields the hegemony to Sparta, which has fewer ships
than Athens, but not to Gelon, who has the most of all" (8).
That this posturing is hardly serious, however, is shown by the
fact that Athens could have advanced the same argument vis a
vis the Spartans--namely, a) that the Athenians alone are
"the oldest of Greek nations, the only ones who are not
immigrants," and 2) that they have it on the authority of Homer
that "the best tactician at Troy was an Athenian".
As for Gelon himself, W.'s is not the only scenario. Apart
from the possibility that the Greeks never sent any envoys to
Gelon,[[1]] there is also the possibility that Gelon made
unacceptable demands deliberately, because he wanted to remain in
Sicily to deal with the anticipated invasion by the
Carthaginians.
Otherwise, hegemony in the sense of 'international command' is
acquired essentially as a recognition of dunamis--in the
case of the Spartans, not as a gesture of honor nor of superior
naval power nor of superior generalship; rather, in recognition
of her reputation, based on her military exploits in the past, or
because of jealousy or enmity towards Athens on the part of some
states. On this last point, the Athenians readily understood the
ramifications, and promptly gave way--not in recognition of honor
for Sparta, but purely out of self-interest: "as long as the
Athenians greatly needed the others" (Hdt. 8.3.2). In other
words, time does not even enter into the equation.
In his discussion of Herodotus, W. also discusses "A
Hegemon Unseated" (15-22). He begins by claiming that
"the hegemony considered by Herodotus must lapse when the
alliance ceases". This, however, is not really so. According to
Thucydides, it was not until 462, upon Cimon's return from
Sparta, that the Athenians "denounced the original treaty of
alliance which had been made against the Persians and allied
themselves with Sparta's enemy, Argos" (1.102.4). But W.
believes that Sparta lost the 'international command' long before
this.[[2]] Moreover, Sparta was not so much 'unseated,' but lost
the 'international command' essentially by default--thanks to
Pausanias' behaviour.
Moreover, in respect of the "Aftermath" it is questionable to
claim that "arkhe, or struggle for it, was in this case
the next step, but its relationship to hegemonia is not
clear" (20). The struggle for arche came with the
Peloponnesian War (First and Second), so that 'the next step' was
Athens' acquisition of arche. Herodotus states
this specifically: "they took the hegemony ['international
command'?] away from Sparta" (8.3.2.). This, however, is only
part of the story--at least according to Thucydides, who points
out that after the Pausanias episode, "Sparta sent out no other
commanders ... and at the same time they [the Spartans] no longer
wanted to be burdened with the war against Persia; they regarded
the Athenians as being perfectly capable of exercising the
command and as being also at the time friendly to themselves"
(1.95.7).
W. also maintains that "arkhe ... is as a whole limited
to non-Greek situations". This requires one to take account of
Polycrates, since Herodotus notes that he was "the first Greek we
know of who made an attempt at thalassokratia" (3.122.2).
W. notes, however, that Polycrates' attempt was "nipped in the
bud," and also that "such things were not normal in Greek
affairs". To claim that such things were not normal in Greek
affairs appears most unusual. According to Thucydides, "Minos
.. was the first person to organise a navy. He controlled the
greater part of what is now called the Hellenic Sea. He ruled
over the Cyclades, in most of which he founded the first
colonies" (1.4). Moreover, "Agamemnon ... must have been the
most powerful of the rulers of his day ... It was to this empire
[of Mycenae] that Agamemnon succeeded, and at the same time he
had a stronger navy than any other ruler" (1.9.1,3). Even if
Herodotus may for once have been "more really critical than
Thucydides" in appearing to reject Minos and Agamemnon[[3]]--if
this passage was written after 445 BC, as seems likely, i.e.,
after Herodotus had spent some time in Athens, he would have been
in Athens when "the idea of thalassocracy was in the air", i.e.,
after "Themistocles had revealed its possibilities and Cimon had
realized them".[[4]] The reason there were no other attempts at
thalassocracy before the Athenians is doubtless due to special
historical circumstances. It is not certain that Herodotus, in
noting Polycrates' failed attempt at thalassocracy, implied
criticism, as W. seems to think, or if he did, his criticism may
have been associated more with his persistent censure of
tyrannis than with his opposition to arche. In any
event, if it was 'nipped in the bud,' this was not carried out by
the Greeks but by the Persians, and then not because it was an
attempt at thalassokratia. One may also wonder whether
Herodotus would have been critical of Polycrates, whose other
achievements elicited his greatest admiration and whose island,
along with Athens, was one of the two cities to which he was most
attached.
In turning to Thucydides, it is pertinent to recall W.'s early
statement that his book does not "describe changing Greek
attitudes toward hegemony, using the historians as evidence" (x).
It does not, however, turn out quite like this, for now we are
told that "the line of thinking begun by Herodotus comes to
completion in Thucydides" (43), with considerable discussion on
how this came about.
Specifically, in Thucydides "hegemonia is leadership in
a symmachy" (31). W. then cites
1) The Spartan hegemony in the War against Xerxes.
2) The Athenian hegemony in its continuation.
3) The hegemony of Sparta in her own system of alliances.
4) The position of Corinth in her alliance with Epidamnus against
Corcyra.
5) The position that Corinth thinks she ought to have over
Corcyra.
6) The position which Argos hopes to recover in the Peloponnesus
after the Peace of Nicias.
7) The field-command as assigned by the terms of the Four-Power
Coalition of 420.
8) The hegemony of all Greece, which Sparta hopes to get in the
second part of the War.
Of this list, five (nos. 4-8) do not, however, involve a
symmachy.[[5]] Nor does W. discuss all of the above, claiming
that those which "truly matter in Thucydides" are Nos. 1) and 3),
and two additional hegemonies not included in the above--namely,
9) the one "out of which the Peloponnesian War arises," and 10)
"the one which is in conflict with arkhe" (31). Of these
10, one is "most important ... in Thucydides for his study of
hegemonia"--"the comparison and contrast with
arkhe". Since W., however, contends that "hegemony is
treated implicitly by Thucydides," it seems doubtful whether one
should speak of his 'study' of hegemony. Moreover, W.
finds virtually all the relevant information in the speeches
(32), and also claims that "the imperial status of Athens is
"definitely excluded" from the ten hegemonies cited above, and
that "arkhe ... is given rather a back seat to hegemony" (31-32).
As a matter of fact, however, it is precisely arche to
which W. devotes a great deal of his discussion, specifically
"the process of hegemony-turning-into-empire" (47). As for the
claim that the most important feature in Thucydides is the
comparison and contrast of hegemony with arche, Thucydides
never embarks on such a comparison, not even implicitly. Here
too one is not given the entire story. For one thing, in most
instances Thucydides uses hegemonia and its variants in
the sense of military command or military commanders--not as
leadership in a symmachy; and this information is found not in
the speeches but in the narrative. He also uses the term
hegemones for statesmen, guides and pilots. Moreover, he
uses hegemonia interchangeably with arche and with
strategia. One needs to take all these into account in a
study of hegemonia in Thucydides. As for the idea of
hegemony-turning-into-arche or a comparison of hegemony
with arche, this appears to be a false distinction,
because the very first time that an ally sought to withdraw from
the Alliance, Athens used force to prevent it from doing so. Had
this occurred on the morning of the day after a treaty had been
made with that ally, Athens would presumably have acted in the
same way. There is therefore no essential distinction between
hegemonia and arch_ in Thucydides. That is why it
is incorrect to maintain that "fundamental is distinction between
hegemonia and arkhe"--namely, "the difference
between the Athenian position in 478 and that in 432 ... and the
difference between Athens and Sparta at the beginning of the War"
(33). Much of W.'s discussion of Thucydides hinges on this
perceived distinction.
When we reach Xenophon, a problem is posed by which of his
works one should consult, for he refers to hegemonia in a
number of different writings. W. surveys these very briefly
(81-87), from which he chooses to concentrate solely on the
Hellenika, but not with (it seems to me) wholly compelling
reasons. A writer is scarcely likely to have restricted his
views on such an (ostensibly) important subject to one work.
According to W., "the Hellenica is not a failure, but
the story of a failure: it is about how Greece searched for an
answer to the problem of hegemony, nearly found one, but lost it,
tried to get it back, and lost it for good" (87). In what
follows it is difficult to see just what answer is meant.
Presumably, it should be indicated in "The Organization of the
Hellenica," which follows immediately. In this, W. refers
to three 'benchmarks': total Spartan domination of Greece,
Leuctra and Mantineia (87-90). It is difficult, however, to see
how a) in any of these Greece as a whole was searching for
an answer to the problem of hegemony, or b) these three
developments represent nearly finding an answer, then losing it,
trying to get it back and finally losing it for good. Otherwise,
the answer to the problem of hegemony should be found in "The
Hegemony Sea-saw" and in "the Hegemony Carousel"--i.e., in the
more detailed discussion (90-117). In the former of these,
however, the problem turns out to be, not hegemony as such, but a
clash between the exercise of power (arche) and the
desire for autonomy. Key is part of a speech by Autocles:
You [Spartans] always say, 'the cities must be autonomous,' but
you are the ones who are most in the way of autonomy. First you
make alliances on terms that require your allies to follow
wherever you might lead them; but what has this to do with
autonomy? (6.3.7).
According to W., in contrast to Euphemus in Thucydides, "Xenophon
[not Autocles] shows the Greeks treating it [hegemony] as a real
problem and working towards a solution" (101). From W.'s
discussion, however, here too it is difficult to see how the
Greeks nearly found autonomy, lost it, tried to get it back, and
then lost it for good.
Otherwise, Xenophon has "Greece return three times to the
Peace of Antalcidas". In discussing the various Peaces, however,
W. adopts a most idiosyncratic view of the King's Peace--allowing
Xenophon to abandon the Greeks of Asia Minor even more happily
than did the Spartans, and permitting him to concentrate
exclusively on the Greek mainland. Even here, however, it is
difficult to see how the King's Peace can be construed as a
Greek solution to the problem of hegemony, at least since
the Spartans assumed the role of guarantor of the
Peace--doubtless by arrangement with the Great King.
The real answer to the problem of hegemony, it turns out, was
ostensibly "dual-hegemony"--that Sparta and Athens
together should govern Greece, as proposed in the Peace of
Callistratus-Callias in 371 (104). This, however, turned out to
be a non-starter, as it was designed by both of them (but chiefly
by Athens) against Thebes. Nor was it "immediately wrecked by
the Theban victory at Leuctra"--rather, by the Spartan and
Athenian refusal to regard Thebes-Boeotia as an entity similar to
Laconia and Attica, which brought on the battle of Leuctra. It
is interesting that W. seeks to make much of this alleged dual
hegemony, that really had nothing going for it, but never so much
as mentions the dual hegemony of Sparta and Athens from 479 to
462 as championed by Cimon--a dual hegemony that was actually
viable.[[6]] The thesis that after 362 a dual hegemony of
"Thebes, with her allies from Boeotia, Euboea, Thessaly and some
Peloponnesians," on the one side, and "the coalition led by
Athens and Sparta," on the other, was thought feasible by
Xenophon has little to recommend it. If Xenophon thought that
this had any prospect of success, he was not living in the real
world. Or the Greeks were not living in the real world--if it is
true that "the attempt to hold things together was real: the
Greeks are openly trying to do it" (108). The object of this
argument appears to be the claim that "there really is no such
thing in the Hellenica as Theban Hegemony" (113).
Two further points on method in W.'s discussion of Xenophon
call for comment. One has to do with the role of speeches. He,
for instance, gives at some length the speech of the Thebans in
which they comment on Spartan rule (Hell. 3.5.11-15). To
this, he comments as follows: "in this speech Xenophon shows an
ability to express in detail a swing of events" (96). Since
Xenophon is here ostensibly reporting a speech made by a Theban,
it seems strange that its contents should at the same time be
attributed to Xenophon. This happens frequently. The comment
continues: "what the Theban speaker omits, and what Xenophon
himself does not express, is the question, What is to keep this
same sequence, in which the victorious hegemon of the last war
becomes the target of the next, the defeated aggressor becomes
the champion, and allies vibrate between Athens and Sparta, from
repeating?" This comes close to reading modern ideas into
the ancient text--i.e., to extrapolate the questions which the
Theban speaker and Xenophon should have asked, but did not. This
is not an isolated instance.
W. also maintains that "the Hellenica is understandable
as a whole if it is conceived as an historical answer to the
questions, Why are there no grand hegemons anymore? What
happened to hegemony?" (90). Why are there no grand hegemons
anymore? For one thing, Xenophon himself does not compare
Spartan hegemony with Athenian hegemony. Nor does he ever state
that Athens was a 'grand hegemon'.[[7]] More important is that
he records the fall of two instances of arche.
In his discussion of Ephorus, W., to begin with, eschews
Diodorus and chooses to concentrate on the fragments of Ephorus,
especially Fragments 118 and 119.[[8]] As he acknowledges, F 118
gives "a bizarre view of Greek history" (122)--indeed, so bizarre
that it is not really worth discussing (in part, that there was a
Spartan hegemony from possibly ca. 870 to 371 BC). At the
end of F 118, "the Thebans took the Hegemonia away from
them".
On the other hand, F 119 provides more specific information on
Theban hegemony--consisting of the two basic components of
geography and national character: the former very favourable, the
latter much less so, because the Boeotians neglected education,
which consigned Theban hegemony to a very brief history.
According to W., this is the most 'modern' approach to hegemony
in Greek historians: concise but comprehensive. He finds this
approach attractive. Indeed, "in a sense, this passage of
Ephorus is what I have been working toward all along: beyond the
narrative itself, the idea of hegemony as a topos for the
historian" (127).[[9]]
In W.'s detailed discussion, numerous questions arise. At the
outset, for instance, he dismisses Gomme's theory that "access to
foreign lands gives educational opportunities". Indeed, he
claims, "Ephorus comes nowhere near to implying that the
'education' was supposed to be a result of the geography".
Evidence for this he finds in particular in the countries or
places Ephorus mentions: "surely one did not expect to get
education from Macedon or Libya; and Propontis is not even a
'foreign country' in any real sense". On the contrary,
"agoge and paideia come from Sparta and Athens, not
from Sicily and Cyprus" (129). W. may, however, be somewhat too
hasty in dismissing Gomme. Speaking of the Western Greeks,
tradition had it that the lawgivers Zaleucus and Charondas came
from Locri and Catana, respectively. Gorgias, one of the
founders of rhetoric, came from Leontini. Protagoras, one of the
chief architects of the Sophistic Movement, came from Abdera,
which, if not directly in Macedonia, was very close to it. The
people of Samos probably learned a great deal about sculpture and
architecture in Egypt, which was next door to Libya. Ephorus
also points out that Euboea was so close that it was "almost part
of Boeotia". After the end of the Bronze Age, Euboea seems to
have been first and foremost in establishing crucial connections
with both the Eastern and the Western Mediterranean. In other
words, Boeotia could have tapped into almost innumerable
opportunities for culture and education at the time, had she
chosen to do so. What the consequences of this might have been,
is tantalizing to speculate--as Ephorus seems to have done. This
affects W.'s thesis, of attempting to restrict the places
mentioned by Ephorus (Italy, Sicily, Libya, Egypt, Cyprus, the
islands, Macedonia, the Propontis and the Hellespont) to places
connected with the "import of strategic materials," and
that Ephorus has mistaken the model of Boeotia for that of Athens
(129-30). Since Ephorus, however, makes the point of Boeotia's
proximity to Euboea, he is scarcely likely to have confused
Boeotia with Athens.
Otherwise, W. examines the detailed statements of Isocrates
(136-42), from which he concludes that "Isocrates' views on
hegemony would fit perfectly onto the general argument suggested
by Ephorus F 119" (142)--easy enough, since Ephorus' statement on
the subject is so general. He also notes that "the political
thought of the time stresses the ethical acceptability of any
hegemon or influential state," that "moralizing of hegemony is in
the air," and that "it is likely that Ephorus has this view of
hegemon"--and if so, "it is very important because of his
standpoint and the scope of his historical project"--namely, a
"moralizing account of hegemony as a unifying theme" (144).
He then proceeds, however, to investigate the question of just
what represents Ephorus' views as compared with those of
Diodorus, and notes that modern research on Diodorus has
"seriously weakened" Ephorean identification, to which he adds
some instances of his own (150-76). Despite this serious
weakening, he finally concludes that "there is great likelihood
that Ephorus made hegemony into an explicit and systematic theme
of his Histories, and that his explanation for the rise
and fall of hegemonies was in accord with ideas found in other
writers of the Fourth century, particularly Isocrates," but at
the same time, that Diodorus "has probably submerged the Ephorean
material under his own ideas and interests too deeply to enable
us to recover Ephorus, even though other scholars have attempted
to do so" (176-77). On this ambiguous note the book ends. If W.
is correct, we now know somewhat more about hegemonia in
ancient Greece--but at the same time, also somewhat less.
NOTES
1. Cf. P. Treves, "Herodotus, Gelon and Pericles," CP 36
(1941), 321-345.
2. W. never specifies just when he thinks Athenian hegemony had
completed the process of turning into arche.
3. W.W. How and J. Wells, A Commentary on Herodotus I
(Oxford 1912), 295.
4. Loc. cit.
5. As for No. 4, there really was no 'alliance' with Epidamnus.
The Epidamnians, upon consulting the Oracle at Delphi on whether
"they should hand over their city to the Corinthians as their
founders, were advised by the Priestess to do so and to accept
the Corinthians as their military commanders [hegemonas]".
They accepted this advice, and "made over the colony to the
Corinthians [paredosan ten opoikian]" (1.25.1-2). This
does not amount to a symmachy.
6. W. does not even mention Cimon.
7. Similarly, W. writes that "the Peloponnesian War seemed to
show that even a fine arkhe could be brought down by
misos" (91). This, however, is also a modern
interpretation. No Greeks prior to the War regarded Athens rule
as a 'fine' arche.
8. Following others, he rejects F 191 = POxy 1610, which
seems to imply an Athenian hegemony of unspecified duration.
9. Emphasis added.