fbpx
Wikipedia

Areus I

Areus I (Greek: Ἀρεύς; c. 320 or 312 – 265 BC) was Agiad King of Sparta from 309 to 265 BC. His reign is noted for his attempts to transform Sparta into an Hellenistic kingdom and to recover its former pre-eminence in Greece, notably against the kings Antigonos Gonatas of Macedonia and Pyrrhus of Epirus.

Areus I
Tetradrachm of Areus, minted c. 265 BC. The first Spartan coin.[1]
King of Sparta
Reign309–265 BC
PredecessorCleomenes II
SuccessorAcrotatus II

The first part of Areus' reign was dominated by the influence of his uncle and regent Cleonymus, a skilled general who campaigned in Greece and abroad at the head of mercenary armies. Areus' first record in the scanty ancient sources took place in 281 BC, when he led an alliance of Greek city-states to challenge Macedonian control over Greece, but was rapidly defeated by the Aitolian League (allied with Macedonia). In 275 BC, Cleonymus defected to Pyrrhus of Epirus, who launched an invasion of the Peloponnese in 272 BC. Areus nevertheless repelled the attack and pursued Pyrrhus until his death in Argos. Thanks to the prestige of this victory, Areus founded another alliance in 267 BC with Athens and Egypt against the Macedonian king Antigonos Gonatas. The following Chremonidean War was however a disaster for the Greeks; Areus died in battle near Corinth in 265 BC.

Although the military activity of Areus shows that Sparta had temporarily regained some of its former glory, the main interest of his reign is the introduction of Hellenistic features in the traditionally austere Sparta. For the first time in centuries, prominent artists are found in Sparta—likely attracted by the sponsorship of Areus, who probably built the first theatre of the city. Areus is also known as the king who first minted coins in Sparta, whereas money was hitherto banned. His posture as a Hellenistic king brought him considerable international prestige, but altered the constitutional order of the city, notably by eclipsing kings of the other Spartan dynasty.

In order to facilitate his recruitment of Jewish mercenaries, Areus claimed a shared ancestry with the Jews, who answered favourably and later repeatedly renewed their friendship with Sparta, even though the reality of this Spartan-Jewish connection is disputed.

Family background and regency

Areus was the son of Acrotatus, and the grandson of Cleomenes II (r. 370–309), king of Sparta of the Agiad dynasty, one of the two royal families at Sparta (the other being the Eurypontids). As Cleomenes' reign was very long, his son Acrotatus died before him, and Areus succeeded his grandfather in about 309.[2] Karl Julius Beloch has suggested that Areus was born shortly after his father had come back from a mission in Sicily in 312.[3][4] Paul Cartledge favours an earlier date, about 320.[5][6]

Pausanias, a Greek geographer of the 2nd century AD, as well as Plutarch, tell that since Areus was still a young child in 309, Cleomenes' second son Cleonymus contested the claim of his nephew, but the Gerousia—the supreme assembly at Sparta—still upheld the traditional linear succession of the Spartan kingship, and ruled in favour of Areus.[7][8][9] However, this story may be a retrojection from Pausanias in light of the later opposition between Areus and Cleonymus.[10] Moreover, succession disputes were normally settled before the ekklesia—the citizen assembly at Sparta—not the Gerousia, as in 400 when Agesilaus II was chosen king against the initial claim of his nephew Leotychidas. Cleonymus was then made the regent of Areus, thus indicating that he did not challenge the oligarchic order.[11]

Cleonymus retained a prominent place during the first half of Areus' reign, commanding mercenary armies with official support, such as in 303, when Sparta sent him to help Tarentum against Lucanians and the Roman Republic.[12] Pausanias further tells that Cleonymus was given the command of the army as a compensation for his denied claim on the throne,[13] but this is probably another invention as there is nothing unusual for the regent to receive such command. For example, in 479, Pausanias won the Battle of Plataea as regent to his younger cousin Pleistarchus.[14]

Nothing is known of Areus until 281, principally because of the loss of several ancient sources, but also because Sparta was now only a regional power of lesser interest for ancient historians, who did not record its activity.[15]

Reign

Fifth Sacred War (281–280 BC)

 
The Fifth Sacred War (281–280 BC), with the hypothetical allies of Sparta, and Areus' plan to take Corinth.

In 281–280, the Wars of the Diadochi—the former generals of Alexander the Great—came to an end with the deaths of Lysimachus, king of Macedonia, and Seleucus, founder of the Seleucid Empire. In Greece, many cities immediately attempted to recover their independence from the new Macedonian king Antigonos Gonatas, and Sparta is found leading allies for the first time since the defeat of Agis III at Megalopolis in 331.[16] Sparta did not frontally attack Macedonia though, targeting instead its weaker ally, the Aitolian League, which had taken control of the Panhellenic sanctuary of Delphi a few years before. Since the Second Sacred War in the 440s, Sparta had assumed the role of Delphi's protector and Areus denounced the profanation of sacred soil by the Aitolians.[17] The attack on the Aitolian League may have been determined by the impossibility of passing through the Isthmus of Corinth, which was heavily garrisoned by Macedonia (in the Acrocorinth fortress); Areus' plan was possibly to win a victory against the Aitolians, then attack Corinth from both the north and south.[18] This war is sometimes called the Fifth Sacred War by modern scholars, named after the other Sacred Wars for the control of Delphi.[19][20]

Areus was chosen by several other states to lead the alliance against the Aitolians, perhaps because the campaigns of Cleonymus made a good impression, and Sparta was seen as producing capable commanders again.[21] Modern historians however disagree on the extent of this alliance as most of this war is known from Justin, a Roman historian of the 2nd century AD, whose account is very short.[22][23] The only certain allies of Sparta were the four Achaian cities of Patrai, Tritaia, Dyme and Pharai (which soon after founded the Achaian League), and most of the Arcadians (without Megalopolis), because Areus would not have been able to cross the Peloponnese to Aitolia without their support.[24] Other possible allies were Megara, Boeotia, Argos, Epidauros, Elis, Athens and Western Crete, but the state of evidence is very thin.[25][26][27][28][29]

Areus then crossed the Corinthian Gulf and landed in the Kirrhan plain, in the southwest of Delphi. Despite posturing as the liberator of Delphi's sacred land, Areus let his soldiers disperse to plunder the area; as a result, the Aitolians inflicted a resounding defeat on Areus' scattered army, although the figures cited by Justin are improbable: he says that 500 Aitolians killed 9000 Spartans and allies.[30][31] In fact, Areus might have commanded 3,000 men at most.[24] The Spartans likely buried their dead on the spot, either in a polyandrion near Delphi,[31] or in a place called Lakonikon in the Kirrhan plain.[32][33] The new alliance collapsed following Areus' defeat, likely because his military leadership was by now discredited.[34] Another possibility is that as Antigonos Gonatas was far away campaigning in Asia, the Peloponnesians did not feel threatened enough to stay in the alliance.[35]

The defection of Cleonymus (275 BC)

After the defeat of Areus, military operations were headed by Cleonymus again.[36] He is recorded in 279 campaigning against Messenia, which prevented them from sending aid to the Aitolians, who were facing an invasion of Gallic tribes.[37] Sparta recovered the border area of Denthaliates, which had been lost after the Battle of Leuctra in 371.[38] Between 279 and 276, Cleonymus took the Macedonian garrison of Troezen in the Argolis and is also mentioned in Crete, acting as peacemaker between the cities of Polyrrennia and Phalasarna.[39][40] This policy of intervening into Cretan affairs was continued by Areus, as Polyrrennia later built a statue in his honour.[41] The island produced a lot of mercenaries, on which Sparta relied for its operations. Crete was furthermore one of the few places where Sparta could extend its influence without angering any of the big three Hellenistic kingdoms (Macedonian, Ptolemaic, and Seleucid).[42]

Cleonymus was therefore given all the military commands between 279 and 275, probably because he was seen as more capable than Areus following the king's defeat against the Aitolians, a situation that must have concerned Areus.[43] In addition, Plutarch tells that Cleonymus married a much younger woman named Chilonis,[8][44] who was the daughter of a Leotychidas, a name commonly found in the Eurypontid dynasty, the other royal family of Sparta. As daughters could inherit property in Sparta, Chilonis was a particularly attractive bride, because of her royal descent and wealth. It shows that Cleonymus tried to get closer to the other king, Archidamus IV, and therefore enhance his status within Sparta. However, Areus sent his son Acrotatus to seduce Chilonis in order to thwart the political ambitions of his uncle Cleonymus.[45][46] In 275, angered Cleonymus left Sparta and went into exile in Epirus, as he had been familiar with its king Pyhrrus since his command in Italy in 303.[47][31]

War against Pyrrhus (272 BC)

In 275 Pyrrhus had just come back from Magna Graecia after an unsuccessful expedition against the Roman Republic and Carthage. Plutarch and Pausanias tell that Cleonymus fled to Pyrrhus in order to request his help to become king of Sparta, but this is unlikely, as Pyrrhus' campaign against Sparta only dates from 272.[48] Pyrrhus' first confrontation was instead against Antigonos Gonatas, as he coveted the Macedonian throne, during which he gave Cleonymus the important command of the Epirote phalanx. Clenoymus notably captured Aigai, the historical capital of Macedonia, in 274.[49]

In 272, Pyrrhus assembled a large army of 25,000 foot soldiers, 2,000 cavalry, and 24 elephants, and moved to the Peloponnese.[50] His plan was to take the whole region in order to further weaken Gonatas, while giving Sparta to his friend Cleonymus.[51] The Aitolian League, which had abandoned Gonatas, let him pass through its territory.[52][53] He likewise received the support of the Achaian League, on the other side of the Corinthian Gulf, as well as Elis, and then settled in Megalopolis, another new ally, where he received embassies from multiple states, notably Argos, which had a strong pro-Pyrrhus faction.[54] Pyrrhus disguised his real intentions to the Spartans, by assuring them that his only ambition was to remove Gonatas' influence from the Peloponnese, and to bring his young sons to Sparta so they could be trained in the Agoge.[55][56] The Spartans were therefore completely caught off-guard when Pyrrhus attacked them and besieged their city, as Areus was campaigning in Crete, supporting Gortyn in a war against Knossos.[57][53][58]

Surprisingly, Sparta received help from Messena.[59] Although its inhabitants had been Spartan helots before the Battle of Leuctra, relationships between the two cities considerably improved during the third century, as evidences show ties between respective aristocrats.[60][61] Even more unexpected is the help sent by Gonatas, who in fact feared that Pyrrhus would be able to challenge his throne if he took the whole Peloponnese. As a result, thanks to the Macedonian mercenaries headed by Ameinias the Phocian, Pyrrhus had to raise the siege of Sparta.[62][63] He then ravaged southern Laconia, but retreated to Argos in order to support his faction in the civil war that had just broken out in this city. However, Areus, who had landed in Laconia with a thousand Cretan mercenaries, organised ambushes against Pyrrhus' army; one of which was fatal to Ptolemy, one of Pyrrhus' sons.[64] The final battle took place in Argos, where Pyrrhus was killed during streetfighting against the armies of Areus and Gonatas. Although he had taken the city of Zarax, in the southeastern Peloponnese, Cleonymus had to go into exile after the death of Pyrrhus, likely in Syria.[65]

Chremonidean War (267–265 BC)

 
Operations during the first stage of the Chremonidean War (267–265 BC)

The victory against Pyrrhus increased Areus' prestige on the international stage, which turned Sparta into a regional power again.[66] Areus became one of the leaders of a new coalition with Athens directed against Macedonia.[67] As both Athens and Sparta had been allied with Egypt before concluding an alliance between them, it seems that the initiative came from Ptolemy II, who was an enemy of Gonatas and had tried to get a foothold in mainland Greece.[68][69][70][71] Dated from 268 to 267, the text of the Athenian decree sealing the alliance with Sparta is still extent, and is the major source of these otherwise poorly documented events.[72][73] The Athenian leader behind this alliance was Chremonides—after whom the subsequent war is named—who compared the alliance with Sparta and against Macedonia to the Greek coalition against the Persian emperor Xerxes in 480.[74] Athens had no other ally, but Sparta is described as bringing its own allies into the coalition.[75] Elis, Achaia, and five Arcadian cities (Tegea, Mantineia, Orchomenos, Phigalia, and Kaphyae) are cited; Corinth, Argos, and Megalopolis remained on the side of Gonatas, Messenia was neutral.[76] This set of Spartan allies has been described as a revival of the Peloponnesian League,[77] which used to be the instrument of Sparta's supremacy over southern Greece until its disbandment in 338, although this time Sparta did not dominate its allies. Areus' alliance looked very similar to the alliance set by king Agis III in 331 before the Battle of Megalopolis, showing the enduring support enjoyed by Sparta in the Peloponnese.[78][79] Areus also counted several allies in Crete: Polyrrenia, Phalasarna, Gortyn, Itanos, Olous, Aptera, Rhithymna, and Lyttos, while Knossos might have joined later.[80][81][82][83] Ptolemy brought his massive fleet to the alliance, as well as military subsidies, which enabled the allies to enlist mercenaries. Areus' army indeed counted numerous mercenaries from his Cretan allies, and from the reopening of the large mercenary market of Tainaron, located on the middle prong of the Peloponnese.[78]

 
Aerial view of the Acrocorinth fortress, with the Corinthian Gulf in the background. The fortifications date from the Venetian occupation of the area.

The Chremonidean War started in 267–266, but its development is obscure as it is one of the least known wars of Greek history, with only short mentions by Justin and Pausanias.[67][84] Despite the large number of participants, the anti-Macedonian alliance suffered from the isolation of its individual members, while Gonatas' territories formed one block.[85] Furthermore, Gonatas still had control of the Athenian harbour of Piraeus, which equated to a permanent siege of Athens.[86][87][88] Ptolemy helped Athens by sending his admiral Patroklos, but his forces were not sufficient to dislodge Gonatas from Piraeus, although he built several forts on the shore of Attica.[89][90][91][92] The outcome of the war therefore depended on Areus, who apparently passed the Isthmus of Corinth unhindered during the first year of the war, but then could not join with Patroklos because Gonatas had built a wall in Attica to block him.[93][94][95] He returned home once his supplies ran out.[96] Gonatas then garrisoned the wall on the Isthmus to prevent Areus from passing through, which he tried to do one or two times (in the years 266–265 and/or 265–264).[97] In about 265, a battle took place near Corinth between the bulk of Gonatas' army and that of Areus, in which the latter was killed, and apparently a lot of his troops as well, because Sparta is not found attacking the isthmus again.[98] Gonatas had not been able to concentrate his troops against Areus the previous year because of a short-lived revolt of his Gallic mercenaries in Megara.[99][100] Despite the death of Areus, Athens held out until its surrender in 263–262, thus concluding Gonatas' victory.[101]

Areus was succeeded by his son Acrotatus, who died soon after before the walls of Megalopolis, likely in 262.[102][103]

A Hellenistic king

 
Obol of Areus, minted c. 265 BC. The obverse features the head of Herakles, while there are a club and the stars of the Dioscuri on the reverse. All symbols allude to the ancestry of the Spartan kings.[104][105]

While the Spartan kingship had been an anachronism in Classical Greece (5th and 4th centuries BC), it became the prevalent form of government during the Hellenistic era.[106] Areus' rule as king shows that he tried to emulate the Hellenistic monarchs, who by now ruled the Greek world, at the expense of the ancestral Spartan constitution written by Lycurgus.[107] Although Sparta was a diarchy, with two kings of equal powers, Areus completely eclipsed the kings of the Eurypontid dynasty.[108] Nothing is known of Areus' co-king Archidamus IV after his defeat against Demetrios Poliorketes in 294, and Archidamus' son Eudamidas II is the most obscure of all the Spartan kings; the dates of their reign are highly conjectural.[109] The Eurypontids were also denied any military command; even when Pyrrhus attacked Sparta while Areus was away, the defence of the city was entrusted to Areus' young son Akrotatus.[110] In the engraved Athenian decree forging the alliance with Sparta before the Chremonidean War, Areus is mentioned by name five times, while his co-king is absent, therefore showing that for the Athenians, Areus was the sole ruler of Sparta.[111][112][113]

The most striking feature of this new era is the introduction of coinage in Sparta. The use of coins had been allegedly banned since the time of Lycurgus because money was seen as a source of greed and corruption.[114] Areus' first coins were tetradrachms of the Athenian standard, featuring the head of young Herakles and Zeus seated on a throne, which at the time formed the common imagery on the coins of Alexander the Great and all his successors.[115] The legend reads "King Areus" (Basileos Areos) without mentioning the other king or even the city of Sparta, but is very similar to the coins of the Diadochi.[116] Several dates have been suggested for the production of these tetradrachms, but recent studies support a date at the beginning of the Chremonidean War in order to pay the vast number of mercenaries hired by Areus.[117] They were probably minted outside Sparta, perhaps near Corinth.[118][119] Areus also produced a second series of smaller coins, which were more likely intended for local circulation within Sparta. These obols feature the head of Herakles and his club, alluding to their ancestry.[104] The Spartan kings were indeed the last of the Heracleidae—the descendants of Herakles—following the extinction of the Argead dynasty of Macedonia in 309 BC, an important source of prestige within the Greek world.[120]

 
The ancient theatre of Sparta, possibly built under Areus.

Imitating the Ptolemies and Seleucids, Areus furthermore initiated a royal patronage of the arts. c.270 a Spartan comic actor named Nicon won a prize at the Soteria festival in Delphi, which would have been unthinkable in the Classical era, when theatre was held great contempt by the Spartans.[121] Paul Cartledge thinks the first theatre of Sparta was precisely built during his reign.[122] In the 280s or 270s Areus hired the sculptor Eutychides of Sikyon to create an allegory of the Eurotas river, which was praised by Pliny the Elder and perhaps copied as far as Salamis in Cyprus.[123][124] Eutychides possibly made another statue of Herakles seated and reclining on his mace, because the tyrant Nabis later used this scene typical of Eutychides on his coins.[125] Under Areus, the syssitia—Spartan collective messes—evolved into spectacular banquets.[106] The development of mosaics in Sparta can furthermore be dated from his reign, as they decorated banquet rooms.[126]

Another aspect of Areus' innovativeness was the promotion of his image.[127] He was honoured by a important number of statues, more than any other Spartan king, while a century earlier Agesilaus II had always refused to be portrayed.[128] Pausanias describes three of his statues at the Sanctuary of Olympia. One was dedicated by Ptolemy II and likely placed next to a statue of Ptolemy I and other Diadochi; a second one was an equestrian monument, typical of the new era; the third was dedicated by the city of Elis, another ally of Sparta.[129] Outside Olympia, two statues have also been found in cities allied with Sparta: Arkadian Orchomenos and Polyrrhenia in Crete.[130]

Areus' goals behind this transformation of his role as Spartan king was to picture himself as the peer of the massively more powerful Hellenistic kings.[108] Although he still retained the constitutional framework of Sparta, Areus' enhancement of his kingship dangerously shook the institutional balance in the city, which later lead to the abolition of dyarchy and the reduction the ephorate and Gerousia under Kleomenes III and Nabis.[131]

Areus and the Jews

Areus' letter to the Jews

To Onias, Areus King of the Spartans, greeting.
In a work concerning the Spartans and the Jews
there is a statement that they are brothers and
that they are descended from Abraham.
Now that we have learned this, please be so good
as to write us how you are.
We are ready to write in reply to you, 'Your cattle
and property are ours, and ours are yours.' We
have ordered that you be given a full report on
these matters."

I Maccabees, translated by Jonathan Goldstein.[132],

Areus makes a surprising appearance in the ancient Jewish literature. The First Book of the Maccabees first reproduces a letter sent by Areus to the High Priest Onias I, then a letter from the High Priest Jonathan c.144, and a third dated c.142 from the Spartans to Simon, Jonathan's successor.[133] Flavius Josephus, a Jewish historian of the 1st century AD, also refers to these letters, which all establish and renew friendship ties between Sparta and Judea.

Both sources describe Areus as a friend of the Jews, who claimed a common ancestry between Jews and Spartans, said to be "brothers" and descendants of Abraham. This puzzling connection between a Greek state and a people subject of Ptolemaic Egypt has attracted considerable attention among modern scholars. Already in 1934 Michael Ginsburg noted that "it is a hard and ungrateful task to wade through the vast literature dealing with this problem".[134] The core of the academic debate is whether the letters reproduced in I Maccabees are forgeries. The growing majority view has been to consider them authentic, with some elaborations from the authors of I Maccabees and Josephus, although the minority—or sceptical—view remains important.[135]

The main argument in favour of the authenticity of Areus' letter is that he was much less famous than other Spartan kings of the Hellenistic era, such as Agis III or Kleomenes III. A forger would presumably have picked an universally known figure.[136] A forger would have also not failed to mention the ephors—the main magistrates at Sparta—while their absence in the letter fits well with Areus' autocratic tendencies.[137] It seems that the letter was originally written in Aramaic; its wording also shows that Areus was well aware of Jewish customs. A Greek writer contemporary of Areus, Hecataeus of Abdera, precisely published a work on the Jews, where he told that the Greek heroes Cadmeus and Danaos were expelled from Egypt at the same time as the Jews. As Danaos was an ancestor of Heracles and therefore the Spartans, it may be the origin of the kinship between Spartans and Jews.[138] The most common explanation of Areus' claim of such kinship was his need to hire mercenaries, since Jews were known to be good soldiers.[139] The Jewish-Spartan connection seems to be confirmed by the High Priest Jason, who attempted to seek shelter to Sparta in 168.[140]

Erich Gruen has been the most vocal critic of the authenticity of Areus' letter. He considers that Areus would have not engaged in independent diplomacy with the Jews, as they were the subjects of his ally Ptolemy II. He adds that Areus would not have needed to highlight his alleged descent from Abraham to hire Jewish mercenaries.[141] The language of the letter is furthermore "suspiciously biblical" ("ours are yours"), which would not have been written by a Greek.[142] Gruen thinks instead that this correspondence is a Jewish invention, which results from the need for them to find their place in the new Hellenistic order that followed the conquest of the Persian Empire by Alexander the Great. He writes that "the Jews attempted to assimilate Greeks into their own tradition", by crafting a kinship with Areus and Sparta, which were still held in high regard by the Greeks of the second century BC, when I Maccabees was written.[143]

References

  1. ^ Hoover, Handbook of Greek Coinage, p. 142.
  2. ^ Cartledge, Hellenistic and Roman Sparta, pp. 24, 26.
  3. ^ Beloch, Grechische Geschichte, vol. 4, part 2, pp. 157, 158.
  4. ^ McQueen, "The Eurypontid House", p. 165 (note 13).
  5. ^ Oliva, Sparta and her Social Problems, pp. 205 (note 4), 206, also supports an earlier birthdate for Areus.
  6. ^ Cartledge, Hellenistic and Roman Sparta, p. 221 (note 5).
  7. ^ Pausanias, Laconia, iii. 6 § 2.
  8. ^ a b Plutarch, Pyrrhus, 26.
  9. ^ Cartledge, Hellenistic and Roman Sparta, pp. 26, 27, accepts Pausanias' account.
  10. ^ Françoise Ruzé & Jacqueline Christien, Sparte, p. 326.
  11. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 31–38.
  12. ^ Cartledge, Hellenistic and Roman Sparta, p. 27.
  13. ^ Pausanias, Laconia, iii. 6 § 2.
  14. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 37.
  15. ^ McQueen, "The Eurypontid House", p. 163.
  16. ^ Cartledge, Hellenistic and Roman Sparta, p. 28.
  17. ^ Grainger, The League of the Aitolians, p. 105.
  18. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 71.
  19. ^ Rousset, Le territoire de Delphes, pp. 216, 217.
  20. ^ Graninger, Cult and Koinon in Hellenistic Thessaly, pp. 121–123 (note 38).
  21. ^ Kralli, The Hellenistic Peloponnese, pp. 116, 117.
  22. ^ Justin, xxiv. 1.
  23. ^ Kralli, The Hellenistic Peloponnese, p. 116, she summarises the historiography p. 139 (note 8).
  24. ^ a b Kralli, The Hellenistic Peloponnese, p. 118.
  25. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 66, accepts Argos, Epidauros, Megara and Boeotia, but rejects Elis and Athens as "doubtful".
  26. ^ Habicht, Athens from Alexander to Antony, pp. 130, 131, rejects Athens.
  27. ^ Cartledge, Hellenistic and Roman Sparta, p. 29, considers Boeotia, Megara, and "some towns in the Argolid" as Spartan allies.
  28. ^ Christien, "Areus et le concept de symmachie", p. 167, rejects Argos, but tentatively adds Thebes and Western Crete.
  29. ^ Kralli, The Hellenistic Peloponnese, pp. 119, 120, accepts Epidaurus, but considers an alliance with Elis and Argos "much more dubious", and does not discuss possible allies outside the Peloponnese.
  30. ^ Grainger, The League of the Aitolians, p. 96. Grainger dates the war from 280.
  31. ^ a b c Cartledge, Hellenistic and Roman Sparta, p. 29.
  32. ^ Rousset, Le territoire de Delphes, pp. 170, 216, 217.
  33. ^ Anne Jacquemin, "Sparte et Delphes du IVe siècle av. J.-C. au IIe siècle av. J.-C., Un déclin inscrit dans l’ espace sacré", in Legras & Jacqueline Christien (ed.), Sparte hellénistique, pp. 144, 145
  34. ^ Kralli, The Hellenistic Peloponnese, p. 120.
  35. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 73.
  36. ^ Kralli, The Hellenistic Peloponnese, p. 121.
  37. ^ Françoise Ruzé & Jacqueline Christien, Sparte, p. 330.
  38. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 74, 75.
  39. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 75, 76, 78, 79, 84, 85.
  40. ^ Christien, "Areus et le concept de symmachie", p. 169.
  41. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 85.
  42. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 84, 89, 90.
  43. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 93, 94.
  44. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 95–97.
  45. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 97, 98, does not write that Areus sent his son to seduce Chilonis.
  46. ^ Cartledge, Hellenistic and Roman Sparta, pp. 29, 30.
  47. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 101, 102.
  48. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 100–104.
  49. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 101.
  50. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 104.
  51. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 103, 104.
  52. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 104.
  53. ^ a b Cartledge, Hellenistic and Roman Sparta, p. 30.
  54. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 105.
  55. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 105, 106.
  56. ^ Kralli, The Hellenistic Peloponnese, p. 123.
  57. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 105.
  58. ^ Willetts , Aristocratic Society, p. 235
  59. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 115, 116.
  60. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 117, 118.
  61. ^ Kralli, The Hellenistic Peloponnese, pp. 124–126.
  62. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 111, 114.
  63. ^ Kralli, The Hellenistic Peloponnese, pp. 123, 124.
  64. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 113. Phyrrhus was nevertheless able to counter-attack and defeat the Spartan group that had killed his son.
  65. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 112, 114 (note 86).
  66. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 115.
  67. ^ a b Marasco, Sparta, p. 142.
  68. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 142, says that it is not possible to tell who between Areus and Ptolemy took the initiative of the alliance.
  69. ^ Habicht, Athens from Alexander to Antony, pp. 142, 143.
  70. ^ O’Neil, "A re-examination of the Chremonidean War", p. 66.
  71. ^ Hauben, "Callicrates of Samos", pp. 46, 47, 54.
  72. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 139.
  73. ^ O’Neil, "A re-examination of the Chremonidean War", pp. 66–71.
  74. ^ O’Neil, "A re-examination of the Chremonidean War", p. 66.
  75. ^ O’Neil, "A re-examination of the Chremonidean War", p. 67.
  76. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 139, 140.
  77. ^ Nielsen, Inventory of Archaic and Classical Poleis, p. 514.
  78. ^ a b Marasco, Sparta, p. 141.
  79. ^ Kralli, The Hellenistic Peloponnese, pp. 130, 131, rejects the comparison between Areus' alliance and the Peloponnesian League.
  80. ^ Van Effenterre, La Crète, pp. 203, 204, rejects Lyttos.
  81. ^ Willetts, Aristocratic society, p. 236, follows with reservation the old statement of Giuseppe Cardinali, that Polyrrenia, Phalasarna, Gortyn, Itanos, Olous, Aptera, Rhithymna, and Lyttos, were pro-Spartan, while Knossos, Kydonia, and Praisos, were Pro-Macedonian.
  82. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 140, only considers Polyrrenia, Phalasarna, and Gortyn, as secure allies of Sparta, but thinks Knossos, Olous and Itanos possibly rejoined later in the war.
  83. ^ Kralli, The Hellenistic Peloponnese, pp. 130, 142 (note 57), follows Marasco, adding that the Cretan cities were led by Gortyn.
  84. ^ O’Neil, "A re-examination of the Chremonidean War", p. 65.
  85. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 144.
  86. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 145, 146.
  87. ^ Habicht, Athens from Alexander to Antony, p. 124, 145, writes that "Clearly, Antigonus' forces surrounded Athens right after the outbreak of war".
  88. ^ O’Neil, "A re-examination of the Chremonidean War", pp. 71, 72.
  89. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 144, 145.
  90. ^ Habicht, Athens from Alexander to Antony, pp. 144, 145.
  91. ^ O’Neil, "A re-examination of the Chremonidean War", pp. 74–76.
  92. ^ Hauben, "Callicrates of Samos", pp. 60, 61.
  93. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 146, thinks Areus could not even break through the Isthmus of Corinth.
  94. ^ Habicht, Athens from Alexander to Antony, pp. 145, 146, is unsure whether Areus could pass the Isthmus.
  95. ^ O’Neil, "A re-examination of the Chremonidean War", pp. 78, 81.
  96. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 151, 152.
  97. ^ O’Neil, "A re-examination of the Chremonidean War", pp. 81, 82, suggests Areus died during his third campaign in 264.
  98. ^ Marasco, Sparta, pp. 152, 153.
  99. ^ Marasco, Sparta, p. 153.
  100. ^ O’Neil, "A re-examination of the Chremonidean War", pp. 80–83.
  101. ^ Habicht, Athens from Alexander to Antony, p. 146.
  102. ^ Cartledge, Hellenistic and Roman Sparta, p. 33.
  103. ^ Kralli, The Hellenistic Peloponnese, pp. 138, 144, 145 (notes 89, 90, 91)
  104. ^ a b Hoover, Handbook of Greek Coinage, p. 143.
  105. ^ Pagkalos, "Coinage of King Areus", p. 152.
  106. ^ a b Walthall, "Becoming Kings", p. 131.
  107. ^ Jean‑Georges Texier, "192-182 avant J.‑C. : regards et réflexions sur dix ans d’ histoire spartiate", in Legras & Christien (eds.), Sparte héllenistique, pp. 256, 257.
  108. ^ a b Walthall, "Becoming Kings", p. 132.
  109. ^ McQueen, "The Eurypontid House", pp. 167, 168.
  110. ^ McQueen, "The Eurypontid House", p. 166.
  111. ^ McQueen, "The Eurypontid House", pp. 166, 167.
  112. ^ Cartledge, Hellenistic and Roman Sparta, pp. 32, 33.
  113. ^ Walthall, "Becoming Kings", pp. 135, 136.
  114. ^ Christien, "Iron money in Sparta", pp. 172, 173.
  115. ^ Palagia, "Art and Royalty in Sparta", p. 206.
  116. ^ Walthall, "Becoming Kings", p. 133.
  117. ^ Legras & Christien, Sparte héllenistique, pp. 24, 25, favour a date at the beginning of the Chremonidean War.
  118. ^ Walthall, "Becoming Kings", p. 134 (note 13).
  119. ^ Pagkalos, "Coinage of King Areus", p. 151.
  120. ^ Pagkalos, "Coinage of King Areus", pp. 147, 148.
  121. ^ Ghiron-Bistagne, Recherches sur les acteurs, p. 176.
  122. ^ Cartledge, Hellenistic and Roman Sparta, pp. 33, 34.
  123. ^ Pliny, xxxiv. 78.
  124. ^ Legras & Christien, Sparte héllenistique, p. 181 (note 37).
  125. ^ Legras & Christien, Sparte héllenistique, p. 181.
  126. ^ Legras & Christien, Sparte héllenistique, pp. 182, 183.
  127. ^ Walthall, "Becoming Kings", p. 135.
  128. ^ Walthall, "Becoming Kings", pp. 136, 137.
  129. ^ Walthall, "Becoming Kings", pp. 137, 138.
  130. ^ Walthall, "Becoming Kings", pp. 138, 139.
  131. ^ Walthall, "Becoming Kings", pp. 132, 133, 140.
  132. ^ Goldstein, I Maccabees, p. 445.
  133. ^ Gruen, "The Purported Jewish-Spartan Affiliation", pp. 255, 256.
  134. ^ Ginsburg, "Sparta and Judea", p. 118.
  135. ^ Gruen, "The Purported Jewish-Spartan Affiliation", p. 256, writes "a growing number of commentators now incline to accept the correspondence as genuine".
  136. ^ Goldstein, I Maccabees, p. 456.
  137. ^ Goldstein, I Maccabees, p. 455.
  138. ^ Goldstein, I Maccabees, pp. 457, 458.
  139. ^ Goldstein, I Maccabees, pp. 456, 457.
  140. ^ Gruen, "The Purported Jewish-Spartan Affiliation", p. 256.
  141. ^ Gruen, "The Purported Jewish-Spartan Affiliation", p. 257.
  142. ^ Gruen, "Fact and Fiction", p. 76.
  143. ^ Gruen, "The Purported Jewish-Spartan Affiliation", pp. 260, 261, 264.

Bibliography

Ancient sources

Modern sources

  • Karl Julius Beloch, Grechische Geschichte (2nd edition), Berlin and Leipzig, De Gruyter, 1927.
  • Paul Cartledge, Agesilaos and the Crisis of Sparta, Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1987. ISBN 978-0715630327
  • —— & Antony Spawforth, Hellenistic and Roman Sparta, A tale of two cities, London and New York, Routledge, 2002 (originally published in 1989). ISBN 0-415-26277-1
  • Jacqueline Christien, "Iron money in Sparta: myth and history", in Anton Powell and Stephen Hodkinson (editors), Sparta: beyond the mirage, The Classical Press of Wales, Swansea, 2002, pp. 171–190.
  • ——, "Areus et le concept de symmachie au IIIe siècle. Les réalités hellénistiques", Dialogues d'histoire ancienne, 2016/Supplement 16, pp. 161–175.
  • Paulette Ghiron-Bistagne, Recherches sur les acteurs dans la Grèce antique, Paris, les Belles Lettres, 1976.
  • Michael S. Ginsburg, "Sparta and Judaea", Classical Philology, Vol. 29, No. 2 (Apr., 1934), pp. 117–122.
  • John D. Grainger, The League of the Aitolians, Leiden, Brill, 1999. ISBN 9004109110
  • Denver Graninger, Cult and Koinon in Hellenistic Thessaly, Leiden, Brill, 2011. ISBN 9789004207103
  • Christian Habicht, Athens from Alexander to Antony, Harvard University Press, 1997. ISBN 9780674051119
  • Jonathan A. Goldstein, The Anchor Bible, I Maccabees, A New Translation, with Introduction and Commentary, New York, 1976. ISBN 0-385-08533-8
  • Erich S. Gruen, "The Purported Jewish-Spartan Affiliation", in Robert W. Wallace & Edward M. Harris (editors), Transitions to Empire, Essays in Greco-Roman History, 360–146 B.C., in Honor of E. Badian, University of Oklahoma Press, 1996, pp. 254–269. ISBN 0-8061-2863-1
  • ——, "Fact and Fiction: Jewish Legends in a Hellenistic Context", in Paul Cartledge, Peter Garnsey, Erich Gruen (editors), Hellenistic Constructs, Essays in Culture, History, and Historiography, Berkeley, University of California press, 1997, pp. 72–88. ISBN 0520206762
  • Hans Hauben, "Callicrates of Samos and Patroclus of Macedon, champions of Ptolemaic thalassocracy", in Kostas Buraselis, Mary Stefanou, Dorothy J. Thompson (editors), The Ptolemies, the sea and the Nile: studies in waterborne power, Cambridge University Press, 2013, pp. 39–65. ISBN 978-1-107-03335-1
  • Oliver D. Hoover, Handbook of Coins of the Peloponnesos: Achaia, Phleiasia, Sikyonia, Elis, Triphylia, Messenia, Lakonia, Argolis, and Arkadia, Sixth to First Centuries BC [The Handbook of Greek Coinage Series, Volume 5], Lancaster/London, Classical Numismatic Group, 2011. ISBN 0980238773
  • Ioanna Kralli, The Hellenistic Peloponnese: Interstate Relations, A Narrative and Analytic History, from the Fourth Century to 146 BC, Swansea, The Classical Press of Wales, 2017. ISBN 978-1-910589-60-1
  • Bernard Legras & Jacqueline Christien, Dialogues d'histoire ancienne Supplément N° 11, Sparte hellénistique, IVe-IIIe siècles avant notre ère, Presses universitaires de Franche-Comté, 2014. ISBN 978-2-84867-493-3
  • E. I. McQueen, "The Eurypontid House in Hellenistic Sparta", Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, Bd. 39, H. 2 (1990), pp. 163–181.
  • Gabriele Marasco, Sparta agli inizi dell'età ellenistica, il regno di Areo I (309/8-265/4 a.C.), Firenze, 1980.
  • Pavel Oliva, Sparta and her Social Problems, Amsterdam, Hakkert, 1972 [translated from the Czechoslovak by Iris Urwin-Lewitova; originally published as Sparta ajeji socialni prolemy, 1971].
  • James L. O’Neil, "A re-examination of the Chremonidean War", in Paul McKechnie & Philippe Guillaume (editors), Ptolemy II Philadelphus and his World, Leiden/Boston, Brill, 2008, pp. 65–89. ISBN 978 90 04 17089 6
  • Manolis E. Pagkalos, "The coinage of King Areus revisited: use of the past in Spartan coins", Graeco-Latina Brunensia 20, 2015, 2, pp. 145–159.
  • Olga Palagia, "Art and Royalty in Sparta of the 3rd Century B.C.", Hesperia: The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, Vol. 75, No. 2 (Apr. - Jun., 2006), pp. 205–217.
  • Denis Rousset, Le territoire de Delphes et la terre d'Apollon, Athens, Ecole française d'Athènes, 2002. ISBN 9782869581630
  • Françoise Ruzé & Jacqueline Christien, Sparte, Histoire, mythe, géographie, Malakoff, Armand Colin, 2017. ISBN 220061814X
  • Henri Van Effenterre, La Crète et le monde grec de Platon à Polybe, Paris, 1948.
  • D. Alexander Walthall, "Becoming Kings: Spartan Basileia in the Hellenistic Period", in Nino Luraghi (editor), The Splendors and Miseries of Ruling Alone, Encounters with Monarchy from Archaic Greece to the Hellenistic Mediterranean, Franz Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart 2013. ISBN 978-3-515-10259-9
  • R. F. Willetts, Aristocratic society in Ancient Crete, London, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1955.
Preceded by Agiad King of Sparta
309–265 BC
Succeeded by

areus, greek, Ἀρεύς, agiad, king, sparta, from, reign, noted, attempts, transform, sparta, into, hellenistic, kingdom, recover, former, eminence, greece, notably, against, kings, antigonos, gonatas, macedonia, pyrrhus, epirus, tetradrachm, areus, minted, first. Areus I Greek Ἀreys c 320 or 312 265 BC was Agiad King of Sparta from 309 to 265 BC His reign is noted for his attempts to transform Sparta into an Hellenistic kingdom and to recover its former pre eminence in Greece notably against the kings Antigonos Gonatas of Macedonia and Pyrrhus of Epirus Areus ITetradrachm of Areus minted c 265 BC The first Spartan coin 1 King of SpartaReign309 265 BCPredecessorCleomenes IISuccessorAcrotatus IIThe first part of Areus reign was dominated by the influence of his uncle and regent Cleonymus a skilled general who campaigned in Greece and abroad at the head of mercenary armies Areus first record in the scanty ancient sources took place in 281 BC when he led an alliance of Greek city states to challenge Macedonian control over Greece but was rapidly defeated by the Aitolian League allied with Macedonia In 275 BC Cleonymus defected to Pyrrhus of Epirus who launched an invasion of the Peloponnese in 272 BC Areus nevertheless repelled the attack and pursued Pyrrhus until his death in Argos Thanks to the prestige of this victory Areus founded another alliance in 267 BC with Athens and Egypt against the Macedonian king Antigonos Gonatas The following Chremonidean War was however a disaster for the Greeks Areus died in battle near Corinth in 265 BC Although the military activity of Areus shows that Sparta had temporarily regained some of its former glory the main interest of his reign is the introduction of Hellenistic features in the traditionally austere Sparta For the first time in centuries prominent artists are found in Sparta likely attracted by the sponsorship of Areus who probably built the first theatre of the city Areus is also known as the king who first minted coins in Sparta whereas money was hitherto banned His posture as a Hellenistic king brought him considerable international prestige but altered the constitutional order of the city notably by eclipsing kings of the other Spartan dynasty In order to facilitate his recruitment of Jewish mercenaries Areus claimed a shared ancestry with the Jews who answered favourably and later repeatedly renewed their friendship with Sparta even though the reality of this Spartan Jewish connection is disputed Contents 1 Family background and regency 2 Reign 2 1 Fifth Sacred War 281 280 BC 2 2 The defection of Cleonymus 275 BC 2 3 War against Pyrrhus 272 BC 2 4 Chremonidean War 267 265 BC 3 A Hellenistic king 4 Areus and the Jews 5 References 6 Bibliography 6 1 Ancient sources 6 2 Modern sourcesFamily background and regency EditAreus was the son of Acrotatus and the grandson of Cleomenes II r 370 309 king of Sparta of the Agiad dynasty one of the two royal families at Sparta the other being the Eurypontids As Cleomenes reign was very long his son Acrotatus died before him and Areus succeeded his grandfather in about 309 2 Karl Julius Beloch has suggested that Areus was born shortly after his father had come back from a mission in Sicily in 312 3 4 Paul Cartledge favours an earlier date about 320 5 6 Pausanias a Greek geographer of the 2nd century AD as well as Plutarch tell that since Areus was still a young child in 309 Cleomenes second son Cleonymus contested the claim of his nephew but the Gerousia the supreme assembly at Sparta still upheld the traditional linear succession of the Spartan kingship and ruled in favour of Areus 7 8 9 However this story may be a retrojection from Pausanias in light of the later opposition between Areus and Cleonymus 10 Moreover succession disputes were normally settled before the ekklesia the citizen assembly at Sparta not the Gerousia as in 400 when Agesilaus II was chosen king against the initial claim of his nephew Leotychidas Cleonymus was then made the regent of Areus thus indicating that he did not challenge the oligarchic order 11 Cleonymus retained a prominent place during the first half of Areus reign commanding mercenary armies with official support such as in 303 when Sparta sent him to help Tarentum against Lucanians and the Roman Republic 12 Pausanias further tells that Cleonymus was given the command of the army as a compensation for his denied claim on the throne 13 but this is probably another invention as there is nothing unusual for the regent to receive such command For example in 479 Pausanias won the Battle of Plataea as regent to his younger cousin Pleistarchus 14 Nothing is known of Areus until 281 principally because of the loss of several ancient sources but also because Sparta was now only a regional power of lesser interest for ancient historians who did not record its activity 15 Reign EditFifth Sacred War 281 280 BC Edit The Fifth Sacred War 281 280 BC with the hypothetical allies of Sparta and Areus plan to take Corinth In 281 280 the Wars of the Diadochi the former generals of Alexander the Great came to an end with the deaths of Lysimachus king of Macedonia and Seleucus founder of the Seleucid Empire In Greece many cities immediately attempted to recover their independence from the new Macedonian king Antigonos Gonatas and Sparta is found leading allies for the first time since the defeat of Agis III at Megalopolis in 331 16 Sparta did not frontally attack Macedonia though targeting instead its weaker ally the Aitolian League which had taken control of the Panhellenic sanctuary of Delphi a few years before Since the Second Sacred War in the 440s Sparta had assumed the role of Delphi s protector and Areus denounced the profanation of sacred soil by the Aitolians 17 The attack on the Aitolian League may have been determined by the impossibility of passing through the Isthmus of Corinth which was heavily garrisoned by Macedonia in the Acrocorinth fortress Areus plan was possibly to win a victory against the Aitolians then attack Corinth from both the north and south 18 This war is sometimes called the Fifth Sacred War by modern scholars named after the other Sacred Wars for the control of Delphi 19 20 Areus was chosen by several other states to lead the alliance against the Aitolians perhaps because the campaigns of Cleonymus made a good impression and Sparta was seen as producing capable commanders again 21 Modern historians however disagree on the extent of this alliance as most of this war is known from Justin a Roman historian of the 2nd century AD whose account is very short 22 23 The only certain allies of Sparta were the four Achaian cities of Patrai Tritaia Dyme and Pharai which soon after founded the Achaian League and most of the Arcadians without Megalopolis because Areus would not have been able to cross the Peloponnese to Aitolia without their support 24 Other possible allies were Megara Boeotia Argos Epidauros Elis Athens and Western Crete but the state of evidence is very thin 25 26 27 28 29 Areus then crossed the Corinthian Gulf and landed in the Kirrhan plain in the southwest of Delphi Despite posturing as the liberator of Delphi s sacred land Areus let his soldiers disperse to plunder the area as a result the Aitolians inflicted a resounding defeat on Areus scattered army although the figures cited by Justin are improbable he says that 500 Aitolians killed 9000 Spartans and allies 30 31 In fact Areus might have commanded 3 000 men at most 24 The Spartans likely buried their dead on the spot either in a polyandrion near Delphi 31 or in a place called Lakonikon in the Kirrhan plain 32 33 The new alliance collapsed following Areus defeat likely because his military leadership was by now discredited 34 Another possibility is that as Antigonos Gonatas was far away campaigning in Asia the Peloponnesians did not feel threatened enough to stay in the alliance 35 The defection of Cleonymus 275 BC Edit After the defeat of Areus military operations were headed by Cleonymus again 36 He is recorded in 279 campaigning against Messenia which prevented them from sending aid to the Aitolians who were facing an invasion of Gallic tribes 37 Sparta recovered the border area of Denthaliates which had been lost after the Battle of Leuctra in 371 38 Between 279 and 276 Cleonymus took the Macedonian garrison of Troezen in the Argolis and is also mentioned in Crete acting as peacemaker between the cities of Polyrrennia and Phalasarna 39 40 This policy of intervening into Cretan affairs was continued by Areus as Polyrrennia later built a statue in his honour 41 The island produced a lot of mercenaries on which Sparta relied for its operations Crete was furthermore one of the few places where Sparta could extend its influence without angering any of the big three Hellenistic kingdoms Macedonian Ptolemaic and Seleucid 42 Cleonymus was therefore given all the military commands between 279 and 275 probably because he was seen as more capable than Areus following the king s defeat against the Aitolians a situation that must have concerned Areus 43 In addition Plutarch tells that Cleonymus married a much younger woman named Chilonis 8 44 who was the daughter of a Leotychidas a name commonly found in the Eurypontid dynasty the other royal family of Sparta As daughters could inherit property in Sparta Chilonis was a particularly attractive bride because of her royal descent and wealth It shows that Cleonymus tried to get closer to the other king Archidamus IV and therefore enhance his status within Sparta However Areus sent his son Acrotatus to seduce Chilonis in order to thwart the political ambitions of his uncle Cleonymus 45 46 In 275 angered Cleonymus left Sparta and went into exile in Epirus as he had been familiar with its king Pyhrrus since his command in Italy in 303 47 31 War against Pyrrhus 272 BC Edit In 275 Pyrrhus had just come back from Magna Graecia after an unsuccessful expedition against the Roman Republic and Carthage Plutarch and Pausanias tell that Cleonymus fled to Pyrrhus in order to request his help to become king of Sparta but this is unlikely as Pyrrhus campaign against Sparta only dates from 272 48 Pyrrhus first confrontation was instead against Antigonos Gonatas as he coveted the Macedonian throne during which he gave Cleonymus the important command of the Epirote phalanx Clenoymus notably captured Aigai the historical capital of Macedonia in 274 49 In 272 Pyrrhus assembled a large army of 25 000 foot soldiers 2 000 cavalry and 24 elephants and moved to the Peloponnese 50 His plan was to take the whole region in order to further weaken Gonatas while giving Sparta to his friend Cleonymus 51 The Aitolian League which had abandoned Gonatas let him pass through its territory 52 53 He likewise received the support of the Achaian League on the other side of the Corinthian Gulf as well as Elis and then settled in Megalopolis another new ally where he received embassies from multiple states notably Argos which had a strong pro Pyrrhus faction 54 Pyrrhus disguised his real intentions to the Spartans by assuring them that his only ambition was to remove Gonatas influence from the Peloponnese and to bring his young sons to Sparta so they could be trained in the Agoge 55 56 The Spartans were therefore completely caught off guard when Pyrrhus attacked them and besieged their city as Areus was campaigning in Crete supporting Gortyn in a war against Knossos 57 53 58 Surprisingly Sparta received help from Messena 59 Although its inhabitants had been Spartan helots before the Battle of Leuctra relationships between the two cities considerably improved during the third century as evidences show ties between respective aristocrats 60 61 Even more unexpected is the help sent by Gonatas who in fact feared that Pyrrhus would be able to challenge his throne if he took the whole Peloponnese As a result thanks to the Macedonian mercenaries headed by Ameinias the Phocian Pyrrhus had to raise the siege of Sparta 62 63 He then ravaged southern Laconia but retreated to Argos in order to support his faction in the civil war that had just broken out in this city However Areus who had landed in Laconia with a thousand Cretan mercenaries organised ambushes against Pyrrhus army one of which was fatal to Ptolemy one of Pyrrhus sons 64 The final battle took place in Argos where Pyrrhus was killed during streetfighting against the armies of Areus and Gonatas Although he had taken the city of Zarax in the southeastern Peloponnese Cleonymus had to go into exile after the death of Pyrrhus likely in Syria 65 Chremonidean War 267 265 BC Edit Main article Chremonidean War Operations during the first stage of the Chremonidean War 267 265 BC The victory against Pyrrhus increased Areus prestige on the international stage which turned Sparta into a regional power again 66 Areus became one of the leaders of a new coalition with Athens directed against Macedonia 67 As both Athens and Sparta had been allied with Egypt before concluding an alliance between them it seems that the initiative came from Ptolemy II who was an enemy of Gonatas and had tried to get a foothold in mainland Greece 68 69 70 71 Dated from 268 to 267 the text of the Athenian decree sealing the alliance with Sparta is still extent and is the major source of these otherwise poorly documented events 72 73 The Athenian leader behind this alliance was Chremonides after whom the subsequent war is named who compared the alliance with Sparta and against Macedonia to the Greek coalition against the Persian emperor Xerxes in 480 74 Athens had no other ally but Sparta is described as bringing its own allies into the coalition 75 Elis Achaia and five Arcadian cities Tegea Mantineia Orchomenos Phigalia and Kaphyae are cited Corinth Argos and Megalopolis remained on the side of Gonatas Messenia was neutral 76 This set of Spartan allies has been described as a revival of the Peloponnesian League 77 which used to be the instrument of Sparta s supremacy over southern Greece until its disbandment in 338 although this time Sparta did not dominate its allies Areus alliance looked very similar to the alliance set by king Agis III in 331 before the Battle of Megalopolis showing the enduring support enjoyed by Sparta in the Peloponnese 78 79 Areus also counted several allies in Crete Polyrrenia Phalasarna Gortyn Itanos Olous Aptera Rhithymna and Lyttos while Knossos might have joined later 80 81 82 83 Ptolemy brought his massive fleet to the alliance as well as military subsidies which enabled the allies to enlist mercenaries Areus army indeed counted numerous mercenaries from his Cretan allies and from the reopening of the large mercenary market of Tainaron located on the middle prong of the Peloponnese 78 Aerial view of the Acrocorinth fortress with the Corinthian Gulf in the background The fortifications date from the Venetian occupation of the area The Chremonidean War started in 267 266 but its development is obscure as it is one of the least known wars of Greek history with only short mentions by Justin and Pausanias 67 84 Despite the large number of participants the anti Macedonian alliance suffered from the isolation of its individual members while Gonatas territories formed one block 85 Furthermore Gonatas still had control of the Athenian harbour of Piraeus which equated to a permanent siege of Athens 86 87 88 Ptolemy helped Athens by sending his admiral Patroklos but his forces were not sufficient to dislodge Gonatas from Piraeus although he built several forts on the shore of Attica 89 90 91 92 The outcome of the war therefore depended on Areus who apparently passed the Isthmus of Corinth unhindered during the first year of the war but then could not join with Patroklos because Gonatas had built a wall in Attica to block him 93 94 95 He returned home once his supplies ran out 96 Gonatas then garrisoned the wall on the Isthmus to prevent Areus from passing through which he tried to do one or two times in the years 266 265 and or 265 264 97 In about 265 a battle took place near Corinth between the bulk of Gonatas army and that of Areus in which the latter was killed and apparently a lot of his troops as well because Sparta is not found attacking the isthmus again 98 Gonatas had not been able to concentrate his troops against Areus the previous year because of a short lived revolt of his Gallic mercenaries in Megara 99 100 Despite the death of Areus Athens held out until its surrender in 263 262 thus concluding Gonatas victory 101 Areus was succeeded by his son Acrotatus who died soon after before the walls of Megalopolis likely in 262 102 103 A Hellenistic king Edit Obol of Areus minted c 265 BC The obverse features the head of Herakles while there are a club and the stars of the Dioscuri on the reverse All symbols allude to the ancestry of the Spartan kings 104 105 While the Spartan kingship had been an anachronism in Classical Greece 5th and 4th centuries BC it became the prevalent form of government during the Hellenistic era 106 Areus rule as king shows that he tried to emulate the Hellenistic monarchs who by now ruled the Greek world at the expense of the ancestral Spartan constitution written by Lycurgus 107 Although Sparta was a diarchy with two kings of equal powers Areus completely eclipsed the kings of the Eurypontid dynasty 108 Nothing is known of Areus co king Archidamus IV after his defeat against Demetrios Poliorketes in 294 and Archidamus son Eudamidas II is the most obscure of all the Spartan kings the dates of their reign are highly conjectural 109 The Eurypontids were also denied any military command even when Pyrrhus attacked Sparta while Areus was away the defence of the city was entrusted to Areus young son Akrotatus 110 In the engraved Athenian decree forging the alliance with Sparta before the Chremonidean War Areus is mentioned by name five times while his co king is absent therefore showing that for the Athenians Areus was the sole ruler of Sparta 111 112 113 The most striking feature of this new era is the introduction of coinage in Sparta The use of coins had been allegedly banned since the time of Lycurgus because money was seen as a source of greed and corruption 114 Areus first coins were tetradrachms of the Athenian standard featuring the head of young Herakles and Zeus seated on a throne which at the time formed the common imagery on the coins of Alexander the Great and all his successors 115 The legend reads King Areus Basileos Areos without mentioning the other king or even the city of Sparta but is very similar to the coins of the Diadochi 116 Several dates have been suggested for the production of these tetradrachms but recent studies support a date at the beginning of the Chremonidean War in order to pay the vast number of mercenaries hired by Areus 117 They were probably minted outside Sparta perhaps near Corinth 118 119 Areus also produced a second series of smaller coins which were more likely intended for local circulation within Sparta These obols feature the head of Herakles and his club alluding to their ancestry 104 The Spartan kings were indeed the last of the Heracleidae the descendants of Herakles following the extinction of the Argead dynasty of Macedonia in 309 BC an important source of prestige within the Greek world 120 The ancient theatre of Sparta possibly built under Areus Imitating the Ptolemies and Seleucids Areus furthermore initiated a royal patronage of the arts c 270 a Spartan comic actor named Nicon won a prize at the Soteria festival in Delphi which would have been unthinkable in the Classical era when theatre was held great contempt by the Spartans 121 Paul Cartledge thinks the first theatre of Sparta was precisely built during his reign 122 In the 280s or 270s Areus hired the sculptor Eutychides of Sikyon to create an allegory of the Eurotas river which was praised by Pliny the Elder and perhaps copied as far as Salamis in Cyprus 123 124 Eutychides possibly made another statue of Herakles seated and reclining on his mace because the tyrant Nabis later used this scene typical of Eutychides on his coins 125 Under Areus the syssitia Spartan collective messes evolved into spectacular banquets 106 The development of mosaics in Sparta can furthermore be dated from his reign as they decorated banquet rooms 126 Another aspect of Areus innovativeness was the promotion of his image 127 He was honoured by a important number of statues more than any other Spartan king while a century earlier Agesilaus II had always refused to be portrayed 128 Pausanias describes three of his statues at the Sanctuary of Olympia One was dedicated by Ptolemy II and likely placed next to a statue of Ptolemy I and other Diadochi a second one was an equestrian monument typical of the new era the third was dedicated by the city of Elis another ally of Sparta 129 Outside Olympia two statues have also been found in cities allied with Sparta Arkadian Orchomenos and Polyrrhenia in Crete 130 Areus goals behind this transformation of his role as Spartan king was to picture himself as the peer of the massively more powerful Hellenistic kings 108 Although he still retained the constitutional framework of Sparta Areus enhancement of his kingship dangerously shook the institutional balance in the city which later lead to the abolition of dyarchy and the reduction the ephorate and Gerousia under Kleomenes III and Nabis 131 Areus and the Jews EditAreus letter to the Jews To Onias Areus King of the Spartans greeting In a work concerning the Spartans and the Jews there is a statement that they are brothers and that they are descended from Abraham Now that we have learned this please be so good as to write us how you are We are ready to write in reply to you Your cattle and property are ours and ours are yours We have ordered that you be given a full report on these matters I Maccabees translated by Jonathan Goldstein 132 Areus makes a surprising appearance in the ancient Jewish literature The First Book of the Maccabees first reproduces a letter sent by Areus to the High Priest Onias I then a letter from the High Priest Jonathan c 144 and a third dated c 142 from the Spartans to Simon Jonathan s successor 133 Flavius Josephus a Jewish historian of the 1st century AD also refers to these letters which all establish and renew friendship ties between Sparta and Judea Both sources describe Areus as a friend of the Jews who claimed a common ancestry between Jews and Spartans said to be brothers and descendants of Abraham This puzzling connection between a Greek state and a people subject of Ptolemaic Egypt has attracted considerable attention among modern scholars Already in 1934 Michael Ginsburg noted that it is a hard and ungrateful task to wade through the vast literature dealing with this problem 134 The core of the academic debate is whether the letters reproduced in I Maccabees are forgeries The growing majority view has been to consider them authentic with some elaborations from the authors of I Maccabees and Josephus although the minority or sceptical view remains important 135 The main argument in favour of the authenticity of Areus letter is that he was much less famous than other Spartan kings of the Hellenistic era such as Agis III or Kleomenes III A forger would presumably have picked an universally known figure 136 A forger would have also not failed to mention the ephors the main magistrates at Sparta while their absence in the letter fits well with Areus autocratic tendencies 137 It seems that the letter was originally written in Aramaic its wording also shows that Areus was well aware of Jewish customs A Greek writer contemporary of Areus Hecataeus of Abdera precisely published a work on the Jews where he told that the Greek heroes Cadmeus and Danaos were expelled from Egypt at the same time as the Jews As Danaos was an ancestor of Heracles and therefore the Spartans it may be the origin of the kinship between Spartans and Jews 138 The most common explanation of Areus claim of such kinship was his need to hire mercenaries since Jews were known to be good soldiers 139 The Jewish Spartan connection seems to be confirmed by the High Priest Jason who attempted to seek shelter to Sparta in 168 140 Erich Gruen has been the most vocal critic of the authenticity of Areus letter He considers that Areus would have not engaged in independent diplomacy with the Jews as they were the subjects of his ally Ptolemy II He adds that Areus would not have needed to highlight his alleged descent from Abraham to hire Jewish mercenaries 141 The language of the letter is furthermore suspiciously biblical ours are yours which would not have been written by a Greek 142 Gruen thinks instead that this correspondence is a Jewish invention which results from the need for them to find their place in the new Hellenistic order that followed the conquest of the Persian Empire by Alexander the Great He writes that the Jews attempted to assimilate Greeks into their own tradition by crafting a kinship with Areus and Sparta which were still held in high regard by the Greeks of the second century BC when I Maccabees was written 143 References Edit Hoover Handbook of Greek Coinage p 142 Cartledge Hellenistic and Roman Sparta pp 24 26 Beloch Grechische Geschichte vol 4 part 2 pp 157 158 McQueen The Eurypontid House p 165 note 13 Oliva Sparta and her Social Problems pp 205 note 4 206 also supports an earlier birthdate for Areus Cartledge Hellenistic and Roman Sparta p 221 note 5 Pausanias Laconia iii 6 2 a b Plutarch Pyrrhus 26 Cartledge Hellenistic and Roman Sparta pp 26 27 accepts Pausanias account Francoise Ruze amp Jacqueline Christien Sparte p 326 Marasco Sparta pp 31 38 Cartledge Hellenistic and Roman Sparta p 27 Pausanias Laconia iii 6 2 Marasco Sparta p 37 McQueen The Eurypontid House p 163 Cartledge Hellenistic and Roman Sparta p 28 Grainger The League of the Aitolians p 105 Marasco Sparta p 71 Rousset Le territoire de Delphes pp 216 217 Graninger Cult and Koinon in Hellenistic Thessaly pp 121 123 note 38 Kralli The Hellenistic Peloponnese pp 116 117 Justin xxiv 1 Kralli The Hellenistic Peloponnese p 116 she summarises the historiography p 139 note 8 a b Kralli The Hellenistic Peloponnese p 118 Marasco Sparta p 66 accepts Argos Epidauros Megara and Boeotia but rejects Elis and Athens as doubtful Habicht Athens from Alexander to Antony pp 130 131 rejects Athens Cartledge Hellenistic and Roman Sparta p 29 considers Boeotia Megara and some towns in the Argolid as Spartan allies Christien Areus et le concept de symmachie p 167 rejects Argos but tentatively adds Thebes and Western Crete Kralli The Hellenistic Peloponnese pp 119 120 accepts Epidaurus but considers an alliance with Elis and Argos much more dubious and does not discuss possible allies outside the Peloponnese Grainger The League of the Aitolians p 96 Grainger dates the war from 280 a b c Cartledge Hellenistic and Roman Sparta p 29 Rousset Le territoire de Delphes pp 170 216 217 Anne Jacquemin Sparte et Delphes du IVe siecle av J C au IIe siecle av J C Un declin inscrit dans l espace sacre in Legras amp Jacqueline Christien ed Sparte hellenistique pp 144 145 Kralli The Hellenistic Peloponnese p 120 Marasco Sparta p 73 Kralli The Hellenistic Peloponnese p 121 Francoise Ruze amp Jacqueline Christien Sparte p 330 Marasco Sparta pp 74 75 Marasco Sparta pp 75 76 78 79 84 85 Christien Areus et le concept de symmachie p 169 Marasco Sparta p 85 Marasco Sparta pp 84 89 90 Marasco Sparta pp 93 94 Marasco Sparta pp 95 97 Marasco Sparta pp 97 98 does not write that Areus sent his son to seduce Chilonis Cartledge Hellenistic and Roman Sparta pp 29 30 Marasco Sparta pp 101 102 Marasco Sparta pp 100 104 Marasco Sparta p 101 Marasco Sparta p 104 Marasco Sparta pp 103 104 Marasco Sparta p 104 a b Cartledge Hellenistic and Roman Sparta p 30 Marasco Sparta p 105 Marasco Sparta pp 105 106 Kralli The Hellenistic Peloponnese p 123 Marasco Sparta p 105 Willetts Aristocratic Society p 235 Marasco Sparta p 115 116 Marasco Sparta p 117 118 Kralli The Hellenistic Peloponnese pp 124 126 Marasco Sparta p 111 114 Kralli The Hellenistic Peloponnese pp 123 124 Marasco Sparta p 113 Phyrrhus was nevertheless able to counter attack and defeat the Spartan group that had killed his son Marasco Sparta pp 112 114 note 86 Marasco Sparta p 115 a b Marasco Sparta p 142 Marasco Sparta p 142 says that it is not possible to tell who between Areus and Ptolemy took the initiative of the alliance Habicht Athens from Alexander to Antony pp 142 143 O Neil A re examination of the Chremonidean War p 66 Hauben Callicrates of Samos pp 46 47 54 Marasco Sparta p 139 O Neil A re examination of the Chremonidean War pp 66 71 O Neil A re examination of the Chremonidean War p 66 O Neil A re examination of the Chremonidean War p 67 Marasco Sparta pp 139 140 Nielsen Inventory of Archaic and Classical Poleis p 514 a b Marasco Sparta p 141 Kralli The Hellenistic Peloponnese pp 130 131 rejects the comparison between Areus alliance and the Peloponnesian League Van Effenterre La Crete pp 203 204 rejects Lyttos Willetts Aristocratic society p 236 follows with reservation the old statement of Giuseppe Cardinali that Polyrrenia Phalasarna Gortyn Itanos Olous Aptera Rhithymna and Lyttos were pro Spartan while Knossos Kydonia and Praisos were Pro Macedonian Marasco Sparta p 140 only considers Polyrrenia Phalasarna and Gortyn as secure allies of Sparta but thinks Knossos Olous and Itanos possibly rejoined later in the war Kralli The Hellenistic Peloponnese pp 130 142 note 57 follows Marasco adding that the Cretan cities were led by Gortyn O Neil A re examination of the Chremonidean War p 65 Marasco Sparta p 144 Marasco Sparta pp 145 146 Habicht Athens from Alexander to Antony p 124 145 writes that Clearly Antigonus forces surrounded Athens right after the outbreak of war O Neil A re examination of the Chremonidean War pp 71 72 Marasco Sparta pp 144 145 Habicht Athens from Alexander to Antony pp 144 145 O Neil A re examination of the Chremonidean War pp 74 76 Hauben Callicrates of Samos pp 60 61 Marasco Sparta p 146 thinks Areus could not even break through the Isthmus of Corinth Habicht Athens from Alexander to Antony pp 145 146 is unsure whether Areus could pass the Isthmus O Neil A re examination of the Chremonidean War pp 78 81 Marasco Sparta pp 151 152 O Neil A re examination of the Chremonidean War pp 81 82 suggests Areus died during his third campaign in 264 Marasco Sparta pp 152 153 Marasco Sparta p 153 O Neil A re examination of the Chremonidean War pp 80 83 Habicht Athens from Alexander to Antony p 146 Cartledge Hellenistic and Roman Sparta p 33 Kralli The Hellenistic Peloponnese pp 138 144 145 notes 89 90 91 a b Hoover Handbook of Greek Coinage p 143 Pagkalos Coinage of King Areus p 152 a b Walthall Becoming Kings p 131 Jean Georges Texier 192 182 avant J C regards et reflexions sur dix ans d histoire spartiate in Legras amp Christien eds Sparte hellenistique pp 256 257 a b Walthall Becoming Kings p 132 McQueen The Eurypontid House pp 167 168 McQueen The Eurypontid House p 166 McQueen The Eurypontid House pp 166 167 Cartledge Hellenistic and Roman Sparta pp 32 33 Walthall Becoming Kings pp 135 136 Christien Iron money in Sparta pp 172 173 Palagia Art and Royalty in Sparta p 206 Walthall Becoming Kings p 133 Legras amp Christien Sparte hellenistique pp 24 25 favour a date at the beginning of the Chremonidean War Walthall Becoming Kings p 134 note 13 Pagkalos Coinage of King Areus p 151 Pagkalos Coinage of King Areus pp 147 148 Ghiron Bistagne Recherches sur les acteurs p 176 Cartledge Hellenistic and Roman Sparta pp 33 34 Pliny xxxiv 78 Legras amp Christien Sparte hellenistique p 181 note 37 Legras amp Christien Sparte hellenistique p 181 Legras amp Christien Sparte hellenistique pp 182 183 Walthall Becoming Kings p 135 Walthall Becoming Kings pp 136 137 Walthall Becoming Kings pp 137 138 Walthall Becoming Kings pp 138 139 Walthall Becoming Kings pp 132 133 140 Goldstein I Maccabees p 445 Gruen The Purported Jewish Spartan Affiliation pp 255 256 Ginsburg Sparta and Judea p 118 Gruen The Purported Jewish Spartan Affiliation p 256 writes a growing number of commentators now incline to accept the correspondence as genuine Goldstein I Maccabees p 456 Goldstein I Maccabees p 455 Goldstein I Maccabees pp 457 458 Goldstein I Maccabees pp 456 457 Gruen The Purported Jewish Spartan Affiliation p 256 Gruen The Purported Jewish Spartan Affiliation p 257 Gruen Fact and Fiction p 76 Gruen The Purported Jewish Spartan Affiliation pp 260 261 264 Bibliography EditAncient sources Edit Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca Historica Justin Historia Philippicae et Totius Mundi Origines et Terrae Situs Pausanias Description of Greece Pliny the Elder Historia Naturalis Plutarch Moralia Parallel Lives Modern sources Edit Karl Julius Beloch Grechische Geschichte 2nd edition Berlin and Leipzig De Gruyter 1927 Paul Cartledge Agesilaos and the Crisis of Sparta Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 1987 ISBN 978 0715630327 amp Antony Spawforth Hellenistic and Roman Sparta A tale of two cities London and New York Routledge 2002 originally published in 1989 ISBN 0 415 26277 1 Jacqueline Christien Iron money in Sparta myth and history in Anton Powell and Stephen Hodkinson editors Sparta beyond the mirage The Classical Press of Wales Swansea 2002 pp 171 190 Areus et le concept de symmachie au IIIe siecle Les realites hellenistiques Dialogues d histoire ancienne 2016 Supplement 16 pp 161 175 Paulette Ghiron Bistagne Recherches sur les acteurs dans la Grece antique Paris les Belles Lettres 1976 Michael S Ginsburg Sparta and Judaea Classical Philology Vol 29 No 2 Apr 1934 pp 117 122 John D Grainger The League of the Aitolians Leiden Brill 1999 ISBN 9004109110 Denver Graninger Cult and Koinon in Hellenistic Thessaly Leiden Brill 2011 ISBN 9789004207103 Christian Habicht Athens from Alexander to Antony Harvard University Press 1997 ISBN 9780674051119 Jonathan A Goldstein The Anchor Bible I Maccabees A New Translation with Introduction and Commentary New York 1976 ISBN 0 385 08533 8 Erich S Gruen The Purported Jewish Spartan Affiliation in Robert W Wallace amp Edward M Harris editors Transitions to Empire Essays in Greco Roman History 360 146 B C in Honor of E Badian University of Oklahoma Press 1996 pp 254 269 ISBN 0 8061 2863 1 Fact and Fiction Jewish Legends in a Hellenistic Context in Paul Cartledge Peter Garnsey Erich Gruen editors Hellenistic Constructs Essays in Culture History and Historiography Berkeley University of California press 1997 pp 72 88 ISBN 0520206762 Hans Hauben Callicrates of Samos and Patroclus of Macedon champions of Ptolemaic thalassocracy in Kostas Buraselis Mary Stefanou Dorothy J Thompson editors The Ptolemies the sea and the Nile studies in waterborne power Cambridge University Press 2013 pp 39 65 ISBN 978 1 107 03335 1 Oliver D Hoover Handbook of Coins of the Peloponnesos Achaia Phleiasia Sikyonia Elis Triphylia Messenia Lakonia Argolis and Arkadia Sixth to First Centuries BC The Handbook of Greek Coinage Series Volume 5 Lancaster London Classical Numismatic Group 2011 ISBN 0980238773 Ioanna Kralli The Hellenistic Peloponnese Interstate Relations A Narrative and Analytic History from the Fourth Century to 146 BC Swansea The Classical Press of Wales 2017 ISBN 978 1 910589 60 1 Bernard Legras amp Jacqueline Christien Dialogues d histoire ancienne Supplement N 11 Sparte hellenistique IVe IIIe siecles avant notre ere Presses universitaires de Franche Comte 2014 ISBN 978 2 84867 493 3 E I McQueen The Eurypontid House in Hellenistic Sparta Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte Bd 39 H 2 1990 pp 163 181 Gabriele Marasco Sparta agli inizi dell eta ellenistica il regno di Areo I 309 8 265 4 a C Firenze 1980 Pavel Oliva Sparta and her Social Problems Amsterdam Hakkert 1972 translated from the Czechoslovak by Iris Urwin Lewitova originally published as Sparta ajeji socialni prolemy 1971 James L O Neil A re examination of the Chremonidean War in Paul McKechnie amp Philippe Guillaume editors Ptolemy II Philadelphus and his World Leiden Boston Brill 2008 pp 65 89 ISBN 978 90 04 17089 6 Manolis E Pagkalos The coinage of King Areus revisited use of the past in Spartan coins Graeco Latina Brunensia 20 2015 2 pp 145 159 Olga Palagia Art and Royalty in Sparta of the 3rd Century B C Hesperia The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens Vol 75 No 2 Apr Jun 2006 pp 205 217 Denis Rousset Le territoire de Delphes et la terre d Apollon Athens Ecole francaise d Athenes 2002 ISBN 9782869581630 Francoise Ruze amp Jacqueline Christien Sparte Histoire mythe geographie Malakoff Armand Colin 2017 ISBN 220061814X Henri Van Effenterre La Crete et le monde grec de Platon a Polybe Paris 1948 D Alexander Walthall Becoming Kings Spartan Basileia in the Hellenistic Period in Nino Luraghi editor The Splendors and Miseries of Ruling Alone Encounters with Monarchy from Archaic Greece to the Hellenistic Mediterranean Franz Steiner Verlag Stuttgart 2013 ISBN 978 3 515 10259 9 R F Willetts Aristocratic society in Ancient Crete London Routledge and Kegan Paul 1955 Preceded byCleomenes II Agiad King of Sparta309 265 BC Succeeded byAcrotatus II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Areus I amp oldid 1133959798, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.