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Pisistratus

Pisistratus (also spelled Peisistratus or Peisistratos; Greek: Πεισίστρατος Peisistratos; c. 600 BC – 527 BC) was a politician in ancient Athens, ruling as tyrant in the late 560s, the early 550s and from 546 BC until his death. His unification of Attica, the triangular peninsula of Greece containing Athens, along with economic and cultural improvements laid the groundwork for the later pre-eminence of Athens in ancient Greece.[3][4] His legacy lies primarily in his institution of the Panathenaic Games, historically assigned the date of 566 BC, and the consequent first attempt at producing a definitive version of the Homeric epics. Pisistratus' championing of the lower class of Athens is an early example of populism.[5] While in power, he did not hesitate to confront the aristocracy and greatly reduce their privileges, confiscating their lands and giving them to the poor. Pisistratus funded many religious and artistic programs,[6] in order to improve the economy and spread the wealth more equally among the Athenian people.

Pisistratus
Fictitious depiction of Pisistratus from the 19th century
Tyrant of Athens
In office
561 BC, 559–556 BC, 546–527 BC
Succeeded byHippias
Personal details
Bornc. 600 BC[1]
Athens, Greece
DiedSpring 527 BC (aged c. 73)[2]
Athens, Greece
ChildrenHipparchus and Hippias
ParentHippocrates

Pisistratids is the common family or clan name for the three tyrants, who ruled in Athens from 546 to 510 BC, referring to Pisistratus and his two sons, Hipparchus and Hippias.

Background edit

Ancient Greek governments traditionally were monarchy-based, dating back to the 9th and 10th centuries BC.[7] For the 7th and 6th centuries during the Archaic Period, political power began to be wielded by aristocratic families, who had accumulated wealth, land, and religious or political offices, as the Greek city-states began to develop. The most notable families could trace their lineage back to a legendary or mythological founder/king, such as Herakles (Heracles) or an ancestor who participated in the Trojan War, for example.[8][9] In the 6th and 5th centuries BC, prominent aristocratic families of Athens were the Pisistratids, Philaids, and the Alcmaeonids.[10] The Pisistratid clan were originally from the Mycenaean Bronze Age city of Pylos, located in the region of Messenia, Greece, and traced their ancestry to the mythological king of Pylos, Neleus, whose son, Nestor, the Homeric hero, fought in the Trojan War.[11][12]

The second clan, the Alcmaeonids, came to prominence in the 6th century BC during the lifetime of their namesake Alcmaeon and whose son, Megacles, both opposed and supported Pisistratus at various points in his reign.[13][8] Due to the infighting between aristocratic families and the inability to maintain order, a tyrant was well-positioned to capitalise on the discontent of the poor and disenfranchised to make a bid for power.[14][7] In the age of antiquity and especially in the Archaic Age of Greece, a tyrant was not viewed in the modern sense of the definition, but rather, a ruler who obtained power unconstitutionally, usually through the use of force, or inherited such power.[15] In the first documented instance of Athenian tyranny, Herodotus notes the story of Cylon, an ancient Olympic Games champion, who gathered supporters, in either 636 or 632 BC, in an attempt to seize power by occupying the Acropolis. His attempt was unsuccessful and despite assurances to the contrary, Cylon and his supporters were allegedly killed by the Alcmaeonids, resulting in the Alcmaeonid curse.[16]

Related to Pisistratus through his mother, Solon was an Athenian statesman and lawmaker who, in the early 6th century BC, restructured the social class system of Athens as well as reformed the law code, originated by Draco. Among his many reforms, Solon eliminated debt slavery, which primarily impacted poor Athenians, who were in the majority, giving the demos — the common people of the city-state — collectively a concession to ease their suffering and possibly preventing a civil war.[17] Pisistratus' later rise to power would draw on support from many of the poor people composing this constituency.

Early life and rise to power edit

 
Location of Attica region on the mainland of Greece

Not much is known about the early years of Pisistratus' life, but his father, Hippocrates, attended the Olympic Games in either 608 or 604, and during a sacrifice to the gods, the meat was said to have been boiled without a fire, as witnessed by Chilon the Lacedaemonian. As a result of this sign, Chilon recommended that Hippocrates send away his wife, if she could bear children, and if he had a son, to disown him. Hippocrates did not follow Chilon's advice, and later, he had a son named Pisistratus.[18]

Originally, Pisistratus became known as an Athenian general who captured the port of Nisaea (or Nisaia) in the nearby city-state of Megara in approximately 565 BC.[19][18] This victory opened up the unofficial trade blockage that had been contributing to food shortages in Athens during the previous several decades.[20]

In the subsequent years after Solon and his departure from Athens, Aristotle reports that the city of Athens was still very divided and in turmoil, with many secondary sources noting the development of three distinct political factions competing for control of Athens and its government. According to Aristotle, these groups were partitioned in both a geographic (as documented below) and economic sense. The first two factions, based on the plains and the coast, appeared to exist prior to the formation of the third faction. The third group, referred to as men of the Highlands (or Hill), had various motives to align with Pisistratus, including those men in poverty, recent immigrants who feared loss of citizenship, and lenders who were denied the ability to collect their debts.[21] Names of the competing factions differ according to the accessed source, with some references offering details on each group's composition while others do not:

  • Pedieis or Pediakoi: the population that resided on the plains, led by Lycurgus. These landowners produced grain, giving them leverage during the food shortage.[22]
  • Paralioi or Paraloi: the population living along the coast, led by Megacles, an Alcmaeonid. The Paralioi party was not as strong as the Pedieis, primarily because they could not produce grain, like the plainsmen.[22] With the Megareans patrolling the sea, much of Athens' import/export power was limited.
  • Hyperakrioi: not previously represented by the first two factions or parties listed above, dwelled primarily in the hills and were by far the poorest of the Athenian population. Their only production was barter in items like honey and wool.[22] Pisistratus organised them into a third faction, the Hyperakrioi, or hill dwellers. This party grossly outnumbered the other two parties combined.[20] R.J. Hopper provides similar names for the factions and classifies them by their region in Attica: Pedion, Paralia, and Diakria.[23]

Pomeroy and her fellow three authors state the three factions of Athens are as follows:

  • the Men of the Plain: the population composed mostly of large landowners.
  • the Men of the Coast: the population likely including fishermen and craftsmen.
  • the Men of the Hill: the population containing the poorer residents of the Attic highlands, and possibly including residents of cities of Attica as well.[24]

Herodotus provides the following information about the three groups:

  • Plains district: led by Lycurgus, son of Aristoleides.
  • Coastal district: led by Megacles, son of Alcmaeon.
  • Hill district: formed by Pisistratus in an effort to become tyrant of Athens.[18]

His role in the Megarian conflict gained Pisistratus popularity in Athens, but he did not have the political clout to seize power. Around the year 561 BC, Herodotus writes how Pisistratus intentionally wounded himself and his mules, asking the Athenian people to provide bodyguards for protection and reminding them of his prior accomplishments, including the port capture of Nisiai. Pisistratus had driven his chariot into the agora or marketplace of Athens, claiming he had been wounded by his enemies outside of town, and thus, the people of Athens selected some of their men to function as a bodyguard, armed with clubs rather than spears, for him. Previously, he had assumed control of the Hyperakrioi, which was not an aristocratic group like the other two Athens factions, by promoting his democratic program and securing a mutual agreement with the members or demos of the faction. By obtaining support from this vast number of the poorer population and receiving the protection of bodyguards, he was able to overrun and seize the Acropolis as well as grasp the reins of the government.[18][25] The Athenians were open to a tyranny similar to that under Solon, who previously had been offered the tyranny of Athens but declined, and in the early part of the Archaic Age, the rivalries among the aristocratic clans was fierce, making a single-ruler tyranny an attractive option, with the promise of possible stability and internal peace, and Pisistratus' ruse won him further prominence.[26] With the Acropolis in his possession and with the support of his bodyguard, he declared himself tyrant.[27]

Periods of power/three attempts at tyranny edit

 
City of ancient Athens and its surrounding towns. The Long Walls shown were not built until the 5th century BC.

First period of power edit

Pisistratus assumed and held power for three different periods of time, ousted from political office and exiled twice during his reign, before taking command of Athens for the third, final, and longest period of time from 546–528 BC. His first foray into power started in the year 561 and lasted about five years. His first ouster from office was circa 556/555 BC after the other two factions, the Plains people led by Lycurgus and the Coastal people led by Megacles, normally at odds with each other, joined forces and removed him from power.[28] Different sources provide conflicting or unspecified time intervals for the periods of Pisistratus' reign. For example, Herodotus writes that Megacles' and Lycurgus' followers combined after a short time to expel Pisistratus from power.[29] Aristotle comments that Pisistratus was forced out during the year of the archonship of Hegesias, five years after he originally assumed his first tyranny in Athens.[30]

In this period (557–556 BC), one of the Athenian polemarchs was Charmus of Kolyttus, who had been eromenos of Pisistratus.[31] Charmus was the first Athenian to dedicate an altar to Eros, god of love.[32]

Exile and second period of power edit

 
Illustration from 1838 by M. A. Barth depicting the return of Pisistratus to Athens, accompanied by a woman dressed as Athena, as described by the Greek historian Herodotus

He was exiled for three to six years during which the agreement between the Pedieis (Plains) and the Paralioi (Coast) fell apart.[33] Soon after, in the year 556 BC or so, Megacles invited Pisistratus back for a return to power upon the condition Pisistratus marry Megacles' daughter. According to Herodotus, the two men concocted a creative method to rally the people of Athens back to Pisistratus' side. A tall, almost six foot woman, Phye, from the deme or rural village of Paiania was selected to pose as the goddess Athena, by being dressed in full armour, riding in a chariot, and being counselled on how to portray the goddess. Heralds were sent ahead to announce that Athena herself was bringing Pisistratus back to her acropolis and that she exalted him above all other men. Word travelled fast to the people throughout the villages and even to those in the city believing that Phye was the goddess Athena and consequently, Pisistratus was welcomed back by the awestruck Athenians.[29]

How much of this story is based in facts versus an oral fabrication or exaggeration passed down to Herodotus is not entirely known.[28] Lavelle writes that this story provides a Homer-type mythological tie-in to the connection between the gods and Greek heroes where Pisistratus' prior resume as a warrior and general would be viewed as heroic and furthermore, Pisistratus would be viewed in a similar manner as the Greek hero Odysseus, who was viewed as cunning and having a special relationship with Athena.[34] It is debated to what extent this staged event impacted the return of many to his side.[35] Krentz postulates that the story should be viewed in the context of a premeditated performance of Athena returning to the temple dedicated to her.[36] While some argue that the general public believed he had won the favour of the goddess, others instead put forward the idea that the public were aware that he was using the chariot ride as a political manoeuvre, drawing comparisons between himself and the ancient kings of Athens.[35][37][38]

Conflict, second exile, and return to power for third time edit

Soon after, Herodotus reports that Pisistratus, who had been previously married and had two grown sons, did not want to have any children with his new wife, the daughter of Megacles, and would not have intercourse with her in the traditional manner. Apparently, Pisistratus was unwilling to compromise the political futures of his sons, Hipparchus and Hippias. Furious, Megacles broke off this short-lived alliance with Pisistratus and drove him into exile for a second time, with the help of Pisistratus' enemies.[39][40] During the length of his exile lasting approximately ten years, Pisistratus relocated to Rhaicelus or Rhaecelus, notable for its good agricultural base, in the Strymon river region of northern Greece, and eventually settled in the vicinity of Mount Pangaeus or Pangaion, accumulating wealth from the gold and silver mines located nearby.[41][42] Financed by the mining money, he hired mercenary soldiers and bolstered with the support of allies such as the Thebans and the affluent Lygdamis of the island Naxos, he looked southward for a return to power.

In 546 BC, using Eretria as a base and supported by Eretrian cavalry, Pisistratus landed at Marathon on the northern side of Attica and advanced towards Athens, joined by some local sympathizers from Athens and the surrounding demes. The Athenians mustered a force in opposition and met Pisistratus' forces at Pallene.[43][44] Providing some background details, Herodotus comments that just before the battle commences a seer gave Pisistratus a prophecy that the net has been cast and the tuna will swarm through. With the prophecy both welcomed and understood by Pisistratus, his troops advanced and attacked the Athenian forces who were resting after lunch, easily routing them. While the Athenians retreated and in order to prevent them from reforming their forces, Pisistratus directed his sons to ride after the routed Athenians and announce that they should return home, retaining no anxiety or fear from the situation at hand. With those instructions, the Athenians complied and Pisistratus was able to return to rule Athens for a third time as tyrant, with his reign lasting from 546 BC till his death in 528 or 527 BC.[45]

Achievements and contributions to Athens during third and final tyranny edit

 
Location of cities of ancient Greece and neighbors; Mt. Pangaeus

Analysis of secondary sources regarding both the length, as mentioned previously, and the accomplishments of Pisistratus' first two tyrannies are conflicting and very sparse in details, respectively. For instance, Lavelle hypothesises that Megacles and the Alcmaeonids still held the majority of the political offices in the Athens government as part of the price and negotiation process that Pisistratus had to pay in order to become tyrant, and consequently, Pisistratus perhaps only functioned as a figurehead during his first two times in power.[46]

During the three reigns of Pisistratus in the mid to latter part of the 6th century BC, Athens was beginning its transition to becoming the largest and most dominant of the cities on the Attic peninsula.[47] Starr states that Athens was coalescing into the framework of a city, rather than a loose affiliation of neighbouring villages.[48] Perhaps next in importance was Piraeus, the main port city of Attica, just 5 miles southwest of Athens, and this port location was key to granting Athens easy access to maritime trade opportunities and the ocean waterways.[49] Other notable cities in Attica include Marathon and Eleusis.

Culture, religion, and arts edit

With an emphasis on promoting the city of Athens as a cultural centre and enhancing his prestige, Pisistratus instituted a number of actions to show his support for the gods and patronage of the arts. A permanent copying of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey was commissioned by Pisistratus and he also increased the visibility of the Panathenaic festival, whose origins date from earlier in the 6th century and was celebrated to a large degree every four years, with scaled-down versions of the festival every year. Due to the expansion of the Panathenaic festival, Athena became the most revered goddess of Athens, in essence the patron god of the city-state, and the end of the festival would see a parade travelling to Athena's temple at the Acropolis, featuring a robe for the deity made by young Athenian women. Recitations of Homeric poems and athletic competitions became part of the festivities and prizes were given to the winners.

New festivals were inaugurated such as the greater and lesser Dionysia, which honoured Dionysus, the god of wine and pleasure, and vase paintings of that period highlighted drinking and exuberant celebratory scenes.[50][51] At the Dionysia festival, prizes were granted for the singing of dithyrambs and by the year 534 BC approximately, tragedy plays were an annual competition occurrence.[51][52] Control of the temple of Demeter, located in Eleusis and honouring the goddesses Demeter and Persephone, was also accomplished by Pisistratus and as a result, the floor plan of a great hall, the Telesterion, was redesigned so a much larger building (27m by 30m) could be built on site, with completion during the last few years of Pisistratus' reign or during the time of his sons' rule. Completely made of stone, the Telesterion had marble upper works, a Doric style portico, and tiles. The Greater Mysteries festival at Eleusis was an annual event held in the fall of each year, and was a Pan-Hellenic cult event for people both inside and outside of the Attica region.[53][54] Other minor local cults sprinkled throughout Attica were either relocated entirely or in part to the city of Athens.[51]

Policy: domestic and foreign edit

Domestic edit

 
Men harvesting olives (ca. 520 BC); British Museum, London

One of the major areas of focus for Pisistratus and his government was the economy, and building and expanding on what his predecessor, Solon, had originally started. Pisistratus, likewise, had a two pronged approach: improve and modify agricultural production as well as expand commerce. In terms of agriculture, Solon had previously initiated a focus on the growth and cultivation of olives, which were better suited to the Athenian climate, as a cash crop. Pisistratus reintroduced a focus on olive production and in conjunction, he allocated funds to help the peasants outside the city of Athens, who were a key constituent bloc of his party, the Hyperakrioi, to obtain land as well as purchase tools and farm equipment.[55][56][57] The small farmer loans were funded in large part by an assessment or tax on agricultural production, a rare documented example of an Athenian direct tax, at a rate of ten percent according to Aristotle.[56][58] A secondary source reports that the tax was closer to five percent.[57] Consequently, providing loans and monies to the rural residents surrounding Athens allowed them to continue working in the fields and to perhaps have them be uninterested in the politics of the city-state.[58]

Pisistratus also initiated a travelling system of judges throughout the countryside to conduct trials on location and even the tyrant himself would occasionally accompany these groups for inspection purposes and conflict resolution. At one point, Pisistratus appeared before the court in his own defence, charged with murder, but the prosecution/accuser dropped the charges, being reluctant or afraid to move forward in the case.[58][57]

On the commerce side, Athenian or Attic pottery was a key export, with small numbers of pottery beginning to arrive in the Black Sea, Italian, and French regions (the modern-day names for these regions) in the 7th century. Under Solon, beginning in the early part of the 6th century, these black-figure pottery commodities began to be exported in ever increasing numbers and distance from Athens, arriving throughout the Aegean and Mediterranean Sea regions. Pisistratus continued to expand this vital pottery trade, with the black-figure pottery being found in Ionia, Cyprus, and as far east as Syria, while to the west, Spain was the most distant market.[55] The popularity of Athenian pottery was noteworthy in the fact that its numbers eventually began to surpass Corinthian pottery exports.[56]

As for the city of Athens itself, Pisistratus embarked on a public building project campaign to improve the infrastructure and architecture of Athens, building new and upgrading old. His administration built roads and worked to improve the water supply of Athens. An aqueduct was connected to the Enneakrounos fountain at the edge of the agora and this marketplace was improved by revising the market lay-out in a more systematic way, improving both its effectiveness and use of space. Archaeologists have discovered agora markers from the 6th century supporting such a claim.[57] Aristocrats had previously owned their private wells and Pisistratus elected to construct fountain houses with public access to water. On the Acropolis, the temple of Athena was reconstructed as the 6th century progressed, and during Pisistratus' rule, the building of a very large temple dedicated to Zeus was initiated, stopped upon his death, resumed several centuries later, and finally completed by Hadrian, a Roman emperor, in 131 AD.[59][60][61] Public rather than private patronage became the hallmark of a Pisistratus-ruled society, providing a steady source of construction jobs to those citizens in need and more affordable housing in the city centre. Consequently, more people were able to move to the city of Athens.[60]

To finance these public infrastructure projects as well as increasing the depth and variety of cultural and arts offerings, Pisistratus used the revenue streams generated from the mining at Mount Pangaeus in northern Greece and the silver mines located closer to home at Laurion, owned by the state, in Attica.[62][57] However, despite evidence of silver coinage, R. J. Hopper writes that silver was indeed produced during this time, but the amount is unclear for the years prior to 484 or 483 BC and it is possible that historians and researchers have overestimated the importance of the mines.[63]

Didrachm of Athens, 545–510 BC
 
Obv: Four-spoked wheel Rev: Incuse square, divided diagonally
Silver didrachm of Athens of heraldic type from the time of Pisistratus, 545–510 BC

Regarding the minting of silver coins, evidence of this production started to appear in the early 6th century in various Greek city-states.[64] Pomeroy contends that the first stamping of coins, imprinted with the image of an owl, was initiated by either Pisistratus or his sons. This owl depiction symbolised the goddess of wisdom, Athena, and these coins quickly became the most widely recognized currency in the Aegean region.[60] Meanwhile, Verlag argues that the minting most likely started in the first decade of Pisistratus' third reign in power (546 to circa 535 BC), but the design was the so-called Wappenmünzen (heraldic coins) at first and then followed by a change to the owl currency version. The dating and placement of this change is uncertain, either late in the Pisistratid dynastic era or early in the democratic era of Athens.[65]

Foreign edit

 
Roman copy of Greek bust of Miltiades (original dating to 5th−4th century BC)

In conjunction with the burgeoning Athenian commerce, Pisistratus conducted a foreign policy, especially in the central Aegean Sea, with the intent of building alliances with friendly leaders. On the island of Naxos, the wealthy Lygdamis, who assisted Pisistratus in his triumphant return from his second exile, was installed as ruler and tyrant, and Lygdamis, in turn, placed Polycrates as ruler of the island Samos. Pisistratus re-assumed control of the port city Sigeion or Sigeum, on the coast of western Anatolia (modern-day Turkey), placing one of his sons in charge of the government.

In addition, Pisistratus was able to establish an Athenian presence in the Thracian Chersonese, now known as the Gallipoli peninsula located in modern-day Turkey, by dispatching Miltiades to rule as tyrant.[60] The Hellespont waterway was a narrow strait of water between the Thracian Chersonese and Anatolia, and the Thracian peninsula was a key location along travel routes between Asia Minor (Anatolia) and the European continent. Herodotus reports in the Histories that Miltiades was sent over to take control of the Chersonese at a later time in the 6th century, in the year 516, by the sons of Pisistratus. In the process of assuming power, Miltiades procured the support of 500 mercenaries, in a tactic similar to that of Pisistratus, and married a Thracian princess.[66]

Popular tyrant edit

As opposed to the modern definition of a tyrant, a one-person leader whose ruling attributes are often considered to be violent and oppressive, the usage of the term tyrant during the Archaic Age of Greece did not automatically imply dictatorial or harsh actions by that individual. Rather, the Greek populace would judge a tyrant's reign, good or bad, in regards to his actions and behaviour. Some tyrannies were short-lived while others, like Pisistratus' rule, could last quite long, even decades, if perceived to be a good tyranny and accepted by the people. By definition, tyrants obtained their ruling position by force or other unconstitutional means, and they did not inherit this authoritarian role in the manner of a king or via monarchical succession. However, once in power, many tyrants attempted to establish the propagation of their rule by passing the leadership mantle to their sons, as did Pisistratus. Usually, a tyrant would come from the ranks of fellow aristocrats, but would frequently rally the poor and powerless to their cause in a bid to obtain power, exemplified by Pisistratus when he formed the Hyperakrioi faction. To ease their transition into power and encourage societal security, tyrants could elect to keep the status quo for government institutions and laws, and even legacy officeholders, rather than purge them,[67]

In Herodotus' view as documented in the Histories, after assuming power for the first time, Pisistratus managed the city of Athens even-handedly and fairly, maintaining the government and political office structure as is with no changes to existing laws. However, after reassuming control in 546 BC for his third stint as head of state, Herodotus says that he firmly established his tyranny with his mercenary force, increased his revenues from mining sources in Attica and Mt Pangaeus, placed opponents' children as hostages on the island of Naxos, and exiled both Alcmaeonids as well as other Athenian dissenters (whether by freely chosen exile or by force is unclear).[68] Pomeroy reaffirms Herodotus' commentary regarding Pisistratus' third turn in power, adding that Pisistratus installed relatives and friends in the offices of various archonships and detained the children of some Athenians as hostages to deter future uprisings and discourage opposition.[69][70] Some of these actions would contradict the perception that Pisistratus ruled justly and followed the law. Aristotle seconds the initial remarks of Herodotus by characterising Pisistratus' reign as moderate and mild, describing the ruler as having a pleasant and tender disposition. As an illustration, Aristotle relates the case of a member of Pisistratus' entourage encountering a man tilling a stony plot of land and asking what was the yield of this land. The anonymous man responded that he received physical soreness and aches and Pisistratus received one-tenth of this yield. Due to his honesty, or perhaps his cleverness, Pisistratus exempted the man from paying his taxes. Aristotle also comments that Pisistratus' government functioned more in a constitutional manner and less like a tyranny.[71]

Rosivach writes that the Pisistratid dynasty did not fundamentally change the government as originally created by Solon; instead, they maintained power by installing allies in important governmental positions, threatening force as needed, and using marriage alliances, all being tactics residing outside the constitution and law.[72] Forsdyke chronicles the certain usage of Greek words by Herodotus in his Histories in reference to Pisistratus' tyranny and advocates that a society ruled by a tyrant has weak citizens while a democratic society has strong and free people.[73]

Legacy and aftermath edit

Pisistratus died in 527 or 528 BC, and his eldest son, Hippias, succeeded him as tyrant of Athens. Hippias, along with his brother, Hipparchus, kept many of the existing laws and taxed the Athenians at no more than five percent of their income. In 514 BC, a plot to kill both Hippias and Hipparchus was conceived by two lovers, Harmodius and Aristogeiton, after Hipparchus had unsuccessfully solicited the younger Harmodius and subsequently insulted his sister. However, Hipparchus was the only one assassinated, and per Thucydides, was mistakenly identified as the supreme tyrant due to being the victim. However, Hippias was the actual leader of Athens, remaining in power for another four years. During this time, Hippias became more paranoid and oppressive in his actions, killing many of the Athenian citizens.[74] The Alcmaeonid family helped depose the tyranny by bribing the Delphic oracle to tell the Spartans to liberate Athens, which they did in 510 BC. Following the capture of their children, Hippias and the other Pisistratids were forced to accept the terms dictated by the Athenians to recover their children and were exiled, being provided safe passage to Sigeion.[75]

The surviving Pisistratid ruler, Hippias, eventually joined the court of King Darius of Persia, and went on to aid the Persians in their attack on Marathon (490 BC) during the Greco-Persian Wars, acting as a guide.[76][77] Upon the fall of the Pisistratid dynasty in 510 and the deposition of Hippias, Cleisthenes of Athens ultimately triumphs in a power struggle, dividing the Athenian citizens into ten new tribes, creating a Council of Five Hundred as a representative assembly, and ushering in the age of democratic government in the year 508/507.[78][79] According to Pomeroy, the tyranny of Pisistratus and his sons functioned as a social levelling mechanism, regardless of economic status, for those outside the Pisistratid faction and sympathizers. Hence, the democratic style of government that evolved to replace the overthrow of the Pisistratids was aided by the circumstances and outcomes of the outgoing tyranny.[80]

Obol of Athens, 545–525 BC
 
Obv: An archaic Gorgoneion Rev: Square incuse
An archaic silver obol of Athens of heraldic type from the time of Peisistratos, 545–525 BC

Upon the passing of Pisistratus, the coalescing of Athens and its city-state population into a tightly knit society, both of a religious and civil nature, was well underway, even though Athens was still much less influential militarily and politically compared to Sparta, its future ally and rival of the upcoming 5th century BC.[81] Per Aristotle, the tyranny during the time of Pisistratus was commonly thought of as "the age of gold". This reference to an age of gold harkened back to the mythological god Cronos (Cronus), who ruled during what was called the Golden Age.[82]

During the era of Athenian democracy, the development of ostracism, the expelling of a citizen for up to ten years, as a governmental management tool arose in reaction to the tyranny of the Pisistratids, and was envisioned, in part, as a defence against potential tyrants or individuals who amassed too much power or influence.[72]

The poet Dante in Canto XV of the Purgatorio, the second instalment of the Divine Comedy, references Pisistratus as responding in a gentle way when interacting with an admirer of his daughter.[83][84]

According to Suda, the bodyguards of Pisistratus were called wolf-feet (Λυκόποδες), because they always had their feet covered with wolf-skins, to prevent frostbite; alternatively, because they had a wolf symbol on their shields.[85]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Pisistratus". The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece and Rome. Oxford University Press. 2010. ISBN 978-0-19-517072-6.
  2. ^ D.M. Lewis, "The tyranny of the Pisistratidae", Cambridge Ancient History, vol. IV, p. 287
  3. ^ Everdell, William R. (2000). The End of Kings: A History of Republics and Republicans. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 42. ISBN 978-0226224824.
  4. ^ Starr, Chester (April 2019). "Peisistratus: TYRANT OF ATHENS". Encyclopedia Britannica.
  5. ^ Holladay, James (1977). "The Followers of Peisistratus". Greece & Rome. 24 (1): 40–56. doi:10.1017/S0017383500019628. JSTOR 642688. S2CID 145629351.
  6. ^ Furlow Sauls, Shanaysha M. (18 April 2008). The Concept of Instability and the Theory of Democracy in the Federalist (Thesis). Duke University. p. 77. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.1005.6216. hdl:10161/629.
  7. ^ a b "Tyrant, ancient Greece". Britannica. Retrieved 2021-04-28.
  8. ^ a b Higbie, Carolyn (2009). Strassler, Robert B. (ed.). The Landmark Herodotus, The Histories, Appendix L. New York: Anchor Books. p. 786.
  9. ^ Dewald, Carolyn (2009). Strassler, Robert B. (ed.). The Landmark Herodotus, The Histories, Appendix T. New York: Anchor Books. p. 835.
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pisistratus, other, people, with, same, name, peisistratus, disambiguation, also, spelled, peisistratus, peisistratos, greek, Πεισίστρατος, peisistratos, politician, ancient, athens, ruling, tyrant, late, 560s, early, 550s, from, until, death, unification, att. For other people with the same name see Peisistratus disambiguation Pisistratus also spelled Peisistratus or Peisistratos Greek Peisistratos Peisistratos c 600 BC 527 BC was a politician in ancient Athens ruling as tyrant in the late 560s the early 550s and from 546 BC until his death His unification of Attica the triangular peninsula of Greece containing Athens along with economic and cultural improvements laid the groundwork for the later pre eminence of Athens in ancient Greece 3 4 His legacy lies primarily in his institution of the Panathenaic Games historically assigned the date of 566 BC and the consequent first attempt at producing a definitive version of the Homeric epics Pisistratus championing of the lower class of Athens is an early example of populism 5 While in power he did not hesitate to confront the aristocracy and greatly reduce their privileges confiscating their lands and giving them to the poor Pisistratus funded many religious and artistic programs 6 in order to improve the economy and spread the wealth more equally among the Athenian people PisistratusFictitious depiction of Pisistratus from the 19th centuryTyrant of AthensIn office 561 BC 559 556 BC 546 527 BCSucceeded byHippiasPersonal detailsBornc 600 BC 1 Athens GreeceDiedSpring 527 BC aged c 73 2 Athens GreeceChildrenHipparchus and HippiasParentHippocratesPisistratids is the common family or clan name for the three tyrants who ruled in Athens from 546 to 510 BC referring to Pisistratus and his two sons Hipparchus and Hippias Contents 1 Background 2 Early life and rise to power 3 Periods of power three attempts at tyranny 3 1 First period of power 3 2 Exile and second period of power 3 3 Conflict second exile and return to power for third time 4 Achievements and contributions to Athens during third and final tyranny 4 1 Culture religion and arts 5 Policy domestic and foreign 5 1 Domestic 5 2 Foreign 6 Popular tyrant 7 Legacy and aftermath 8 See also 9 Notes 10 ReferencesBackground editAncient Greek governments traditionally were monarchy based dating back to the 9th and 10th centuries BC 7 For the 7th and 6th centuries during the Archaic Period political power began to be wielded by aristocratic families who had accumulated wealth land and religious or political offices as the Greek city states began to develop The most notable families could trace their lineage back to a legendary or mythological founder king such as Herakles Heracles or an ancestor who participated in the Trojan War for example 8 9 In the 6th and 5th centuries BC prominent aristocratic families of Athens were the Pisistratids Philaids and the Alcmaeonids 10 The Pisistratid clan were originally from the Mycenaean Bronze Age city of Pylos located in the region of Messenia Greece and traced their ancestry to the mythological king of Pylos Neleus whose son Nestor the Homeric hero fought in the Trojan War 11 12 The second clan the Alcmaeonids came to prominence in the 6th century BC during the lifetime of their namesake Alcmaeon and whose son Megacles both opposed and supported Pisistratus at various points in his reign 13 8 Due to the infighting between aristocratic families and the inability to maintain order a tyrant was well positioned to capitalise on the discontent of the poor and disenfranchised to make a bid for power 14 7 In the age of antiquity and especially in the Archaic Age of Greece a tyrant was not viewed in the modern sense of the definition but rather a ruler who obtained power unconstitutionally usually through the use of force or inherited such power 15 In the first documented instance of Athenian tyranny Herodotus notes the story of Cylon an ancient Olympic Games champion who gathered supporters in either 636 or 632 BC in an attempt to seize power by occupying the Acropolis His attempt was unsuccessful and despite assurances to the contrary Cylon and his supporters were allegedly killed by the Alcmaeonids resulting in the Alcmaeonid curse 16 Related to Pisistratus through his mother Solon was an Athenian statesman and lawmaker who in the early 6th century BC restructured the social class system of Athens as well as reformed the law code originated by Draco Among his many reforms Solon eliminated debt slavery which primarily impacted poor Athenians who were in the majority giving the demos the common people of the city state collectively a concession to ease their suffering and possibly preventing a civil war 17 Pisistratus later rise to power would draw on support from many of the poor people composing this constituency Early life and rise to power edit nbsp Location of Attica region on the mainland of GreeceNot much is known about the early years of Pisistratus life but his father Hippocrates attended the Olympic Games in either 608 or 604 and during a sacrifice to the gods the meat was said to have been boiled without a fire as witnessed by Chilon the Lacedaemonian As a result of this sign Chilon recommended that Hippocrates send away his wife if she could bear children and if he had a son to disown him Hippocrates did not follow Chilon s advice and later he had a son named Pisistratus 18 Originally Pisistratus became known as an Athenian general who captured the port of Nisaea or Nisaia in the nearby city state of Megara in approximately 565 BC 19 18 This victory opened up the unofficial trade blockage that had been contributing to food shortages in Athens during the previous several decades 20 In the subsequent years after Solon and his departure from Athens Aristotle reports that the city of Athens was still very divided and in turmoil with many secondary sources noting the development of three distinct political factions competing for control of Athens and its government According to Aristotle these groups were partitioned in both a geographic as documented below and economic sense The first two factions based on the plains and the coast appeared to exist prior to the formation of the third faction The third group referred to as men of the Highlands or Hill had various motives to align with Pisistratus including those men in poverty recent immigrants who feared loss of citizenship and lenders who were denied the ability to collect their debts 21 Names of the competing factions differ according to the accessed source with some references offering details on each group s composition while others do not Pedieis or Pediakoi the population that resided on the plains led by Lycurgus These landowners produced grain giving them leverage during the food shortage 22 Paralioi or Paraloi the population living along the coast led by Megacles an Alcmaeonid The Paralioi party was not as strong as the Pedieis primarily because they could not produce grain like the plainsmen 22 With the Megareans patrolling the sea much of Athens import export power was limited Hyperakrioi not previously represented by the first two factions or parties listed above dwelled primarily in the hills and were by far the poorest of the Athenian population Their only production was barter in items like honey and wool 22 Pisistratus organised them into a third faction the Hyperakrioi or hill dwellers This party grossly outnumbered the other two parties combined 20 R J Hopper provides similar names for the factions and classifies them by their region in Attica Pedion Paralia and Diakria 23 Pomeroy and her fellow three authors state the three factions of Athens are as follows the Men of the Plain the population composed mostly of large landowners the Men of the Coast the population likely including fishermen and craftsmen the Men of the Hill the population containing the poorer residents of the Attic highlands and possibly including residents of cities of Attica as well 24 Herodotus provides the following information about the three groups Plains district led by Lycurgus son of Aristoleides Coastal district led by Megacles son of Alcmaeon Hill district formed by Pisistratus in an effort to become tyrant of Athens 18 His role in the Megarian conflict gained Pisistratus popularity in Athens but he did not have the political clout to seize power Around the year 561 BC Herodotus writes how Pisistratus intentionally wounded himself and his mules asking the Athenian people to provide bodyguards for protection and reminding them of his prior accomplishments including the port capture of Nisiai Pisistratus had driven his chariot into the agora or marketplace of Athens claiming he had been wounded by his enemies outside of town and thus the people of Athens selected some of their men to function as a bodyguard armed with clubs rather than spears for him Previously he had assumed control of the Hyperakrioi which was not an aristocratic group like the other two Athens factions by promoting his democratic program and securing a mutual agreement with the members or demos of the faction By obtaining support from this vast number of the poorer population and receiving the protection of bodyguards he was able to overrun and seize the Acropolis as well as grasp the reins of the government 18 25 The Athenians were open to a tyranny similar to that under Solon who previously had been offered the tyranny of Athens but declined and in the early part of the Archaic Age the rivalries among the aristocratic clans was fierce making a single ruler tyranny an attractive option with the promise of possible stability and internal peace and Pisistratus ruse won him further prominence 26 With the Acropolis in his possession and with the support of his bodyguard he declared himself tyrant 27 Periods of power three attempts at tyranny edit nbsp City of ancient Athens and its surrounding towns The Long Walls shown were not built until the 5th century BC First period of power edit Pisistratus assumed and held power for three different periods of time ousted from political office and exiled twice during his reign before taking command of Athens for the third final and longest period of time from 546 528 BC His first foray into power started in the year 561 and lasted about five years His first ouster from office was circa 556 555 BC after the other two factions the Plains people led by Lycurgus and the Coastal people led by Megacles normally at odds with each other joined forces and removed him from power 28 Different sources provide conflicting or unspecified time intervals for the periods of Pisistratus reign For example Herodotus writes that Megacles and Lycurgus followers combined after a short time to expel Pisistratus from power 29 Aristotle comments that Pisistratus was forced out during the year of the archonship of Hegesias five years after he originally assumed his first tyranny in Athens 30 In this period 557 556 BC one of the Athenian polemarchs was Charmus of Kolyttus who had been eromenos of Pisistratus 31 Charmus was the first Athenian to dedicate an altar to Eros god of love 32 Exile and second period of power edit nbsp Illustration from 1838 by M A Barth depicting the return of Pisistratus to Athens accompanied by a woman dressed as Athena as described by the Greek historian HerodotusHe was exiled for three to six years during which the agreement between the Pedieis Plains and the Paralioi Coast fell apart 33 Soon after in the year 556 BC or so Megacles invited Pisistratus back for a return to power upon the condition Pisistratus marry Megacles daughter According to Herodotus the two men concocted a creative method to rally the people of Athens back to Pisistratus side A tall almost six foot woman Phye from the deme or rural village of Paiania was selected to pose as the goddess Athena by being dressed in full armour riding in a chariot and being counselled on how to portray the goddess Heralds were sent ahead to announce that Athena herself was bringing Pisistratus back to her acropolis and that she exalted him above all other men Word travelled fast to the people throughout the villages and even to those in the city believing that Phye was the goddess Athena and consequently Pisistratus was welcomed back by the awestruck Athenians 29 How much of this story is based in facts versus an oral fabrication or exaggeration passed down to Herodotus is not entirely known 28 Lavelle writes that this story provides a Homer type mythological tie in to the connection between the gods and Greek heroes where Pisistratus prior resume as a warrior and general would be viewed as heroic and furthermore Pisistratus would be viewed in a similar manner as the Greek hero Odysseus who was viewed as cunning and having a special relationship with Athena 34 It is debated to what extent this staged event impacted the return of many to his side 35 Krentz postulates that the story should be viewed in the context of a premeditated performance of Athena returning to the temple dedicated to her 36 While some argue that the general public believed he had won the favour of the goddess others instead put forward the idea that the public were aware that he was using the chariot ride as a political manoeuvre drawing comparisons between himself and the ancient kings of Athens 35 37 38 Conflict second exile and return to power for third time edit Soon after Herodotus reports that Pisistratus who had been previously married and had two grown sons did not want to have any children with his new wife the daughter of Megacles and would not have intercourse with her in the traditional manner Apparently Pisistratus was unwilling to compromise the political futures of his sons Hipparchus and Hippias Furious Megacles broke off this short lived alliance with Pisistratus and drove him into exile for a second time with the help of Pisistratus enemies 39 40 During the length of his exile lasting approximately ten years Pisistratus relocated to Rhaicelus or Rhaecelus notable for its good agricultural base in the Strymon river region of northern Greece and eventually settled in the vicinity of Mount Pangaeus or Pangaion accumulating wealth from the gold and silver mines located nearby 41 42 Financed by the mining money he hired mercenary soldiers and bolstered with the support of allies such as the Thebans and the affluent Lygdamis of the island Naxos he looked southward for a return to power In 546 BC using Eretria as a base and supported by Eretrian cavalry Pisistratus landed at Marathon on the northern side of Attica and advanced towards Athens joined by some local sympathizers from Athens and the surrounding demes The Athenians mustered a force in opposition and met Pisistratus forces at Pallene 43 44 Providing some background details Herodotus comments that just before the battle commences a seer gave Pisistratus a prophecy that the net has been cast and the tuna will swarm through With the prophecy both welcomed and understood by Pisistratus his troops advanced and attacked the Athenian forces who were resting after lunch easily routing them While the Athenians retreated and in order to prevent them from reforming their forces Pisistratus directed his sons to ride after the routed Athenians and announce that they should return home retaining no anxiety or fear from the situation at hand With those instructions the Athenians complied and Pisistratus was able to return to rule Athens for a third time as tyrant with his reign lasting from 546 BC till his death in 528 or 527 BC 45 Achievements and contributions to Athens during third and final tyranny edit nbsp Location of cities of ancient Greece and neighbors Mt PangaeusAnalysis of secondary sources regarding both the length as mentioned previously and the accomplishments of Pisistratus first two tyrannies are conflicting and very sparse in details respectively For instance Lavelle hypothesises that Megacles and the Alcmaeonids still held the majority of the political offices in the Athens government as part of the price and negotiation process that Pisistratus had to pay in order to become tyrant and consequently Pisistratus perhaps only functioned as a figurehead during his first two times in power 46 During the three reigns of Pisistratus in the mid to latter part of the 6th century BC Athens was beginning its transition to becoming the largest and most dominant of the cities on the Attic peninsula 47 Starr states that Athens was coalescing into the framework of a city rather than a loose affiliation of neighbouring villages 48 Perhaps next in importance was Piraeus the main port city of Attica just 5 miles southwest of Athens and this port location was key to granting Athens easy access to maritime trade opportunities and the ocean waterways 49 Other notable cities in Attica include Marathon and Eleusis Culture religion and arts edit With an emphasis on promoting the city of Athens as a cultural centre and enhancing his prestige Pisistratus instituted a number of actions to show his support for the gods and patronage of the arts A permanent copying of Homer s Iliad and Odyssey was commissioned by Pisistratus and he also increased the visibility of the Panathenaic festival whose origins date from earlier in the 6th century and was celebrated to a large degree every four years with scaled down versions of the festival every year Due to the expansion of the Panathenaic festival Athena became the most revered goddess of Athens in essence the patron god of the city state and the end of the festival would see a parade travelling to Athena s temple at the Acropolis featuring a robe for the deity made by young Athenian women Recitations of Homeric poems and athletic competitions became part of the festivities and prizes were given to the winners New festivals were inaugurated such as the greater and lesser Dionysia which honoured Dionysus the god of wine and pleasure and vase paintings of that period highlighted drinking and exuberant celebratory scenes 50 51 At the Dionysia festival prizes were granted for the singing of dithyrambs and by the year 534 BC approximately tragedy plays were an annual competition occurrence 51 52 Control of the temple of Demeter located in Eleusis and honouring the goddesses Demeter and Persephone was also accomplished by Pisistratus and as a result the floor plan of a great hall the Telesterion was redesigned so a much larger building 27m by 30m could be built on site with completion during the last few years of Pisistratus reign or during the time of his sons rule Completely made of stone the Telesterion had marble upper works a Doric style portico and tiles The Greater Mysteries festival at Eleusis was an annual event held in the fall of each year and was a Pan Hellenic cult event for people both inside and outside of the Attica region 53 54 Other minor local cults sprinkled throughout Attica were either relocated entirely or in part to the city of Athens 51 Policy domestic and foreign editDomestic edit nbsp Men harvesting olives ca 520 BC British Museum LondonOne of the major areas of focus for Pisistratus and his government was the economy and building and expanding on what his predecessor Solon had originally started Pisistratus likewise had a two pronged approach improve and modify agricultural production as well as expand commerce In terms of agriculture Solon had previously initiated a focus on the growth and cultivation of olives which were better suited to the Athenian climate as a cash crop Pisistratus reintroduced a focus on olive production and in conjunction he allocated funds to help the peasants outside the city of Athens who were a key constituent bloc of his party the Hyperakrioi to obtain land as well as purchase tools and farm equipment 55 56 57 The small farmer loans were funded in large part by an assessment or tax on agricultural production a rare documented example of an Athenian direct tax at a rate of ten percent according to Aristotle 56 58 A secondary source reports that the tax was closer to five percent 57 Consequently providing loans and monies to the rural residents surrounding Athens allowed them to continue working in the fields and to perhaps have them be uninterested in the politics of the city state 58 Pisistratus also initiated a travelling system of judges throughout the countryside to conduct trials on location and even the tyrant himself would occasionally accompany these groups for inspection purposes and conflict resolution At one point Pisistratus appeared before the court in his own defence charged with murder but the prosecution accuser dropped the charges being reluctant or afraid to move forward in the case 58 57 On the commerce side Athenian or Attic pottery was a key export with small numbers of pottery beginning to arrive in the Black Sea Italian and French regions the modern day names for these regions in the 7th century Under Solon beginning in the early part of the 6th century these black figure pottery commodities began to be exported in ever increasing numbers and distance from Athens arriving throughout the Aegean and Mediterranean Sea regions Pisistratus continued to expand this vital pottery trade with the black figure pottery being found in Ionia Cyprus and as far east as Syria while to the west Spain was the most distant market 55 The popularity of Athenian pottery was noteworthy in the fact that its numbers eventually began to surpass Corinthian pottery exports 56 As for the city of Athens itself Pisistratus embarked on a public building project campaign to improve the infrastructure and architecture of Athens building new and upgrading old His administration built roads and worked to improve the water supply of Athens An aqueduct was connected to the Enneakrounos fountain at the edge of the agora and this marketplace was improved by revising the market lay out in a more systematic way improving both its effectiveness and use of space Archaeologists have discovered agora markers from the 6th century supporting such a claim 57 Aristocrats had previously owned their private wells and Pisistratus elected to construct fountain houses with public access to water On the Acropolis the temple of Athena was reconstructed as the 6th century progressed and during Pisistratus rule the building of a very large temple dedicated to Zeus was initiated stopped upon his death resumed several centuries later and finally completed by Hadrian a Roman emperor in 131 AD 59 60 61 Public rather than private patronage became the hallmark of a Pisistratus ruled society providing a steady source of construction jobs to those citizens in need and more affordable housing in the city centre Consequently more people were able to move to the city of Athens 60 To finance these public infrastructure projects as well as increasing the depth and variety of cultural and arts offerings Pisistratus used the revenue streams generated from the mining at Mount Pangaeus in northern Greece and the silver mines located closer to home at Laurion owned by the state in Attica 62 57 However despite evidence of silver coinage R J Hopper writes that silver was indeed produced during this time but the amount is unclear for the years prior to 484 or 483 BC and it is possible that historians and researchers have overestimated the importance of the mines 63 Didrachm of Athens 545 510 BC nbsp Obv Four spoked wheel Rev Incuse square divided diagonallySilver didrachm of Athens of heraldic type from the time of Pisistratus 545 510 BCRegarding the minting of silver coins evidence of this production started to appear in the early 6th century in various Greek city states 64 Pomeroy contends that the first stamping of coins imprinted with the image of an owl was initiated by either Pisistratus or his sons This owl depiction symbolised the goddess of wisdom Athena and these coins quickly became the most widely recognized currency in the Aegean region 60 Meanwhile Verlag argues that the minting most likely started in the first decade of Pisistratus third reign in power 546 to circa 535 BC but the design was the so called Wappenmunzen heraldic coins at first and then followed by a change to the owl currency version The dating and placement of this change is uncertain either late in the Pisistratid dynastic era or early in the democratic era of Athens 65 Foreign edit nbsp Roman copy of Greek bust of Miltiades original dating to 5th 4th century BC In conjunction with the burgeoning Athenian commerce Pisistratus conducted a foreign policy especially in the central Aegean Sea with the intent of building alliances with friendly leaders On the island of Naxos the wealthy Lygdamis who assisted Pisistratus in his triumphant return from his second exile was installed as ruler and tyrant and Lygdamis in turn placed Polycrates as ruler of the island Samos Pisistratus re assumed control of the port city Sigeion or Sigeum on the coast of western Anatolia modern day Turkey placing one of his sons in charge of the government In addition Pisistratus was able to establish an Athenian presence in the Thracian Chersonese now known as the Gallipoli peninsula located in modern day Turkey by dispatching Miltiades to rule as tyrant 60 The Hellespont waterway was a narrow strait of water between the Thracian Chersonese and Anatolia and the Thracian peninsula was a key location along travel routes between Asia Minor Anatolia and the European continent Herodotus reports in the Histories that Miltiades was sent over to take control of the Chersonese at a later time in the 6th century in the year 516 by the sons of Pisistratus In the process of assuming power Miltiades procured the support of 500 mercenaries in a tactic similar to that of Pisistratus and married a Thracian princess 66 Popular tyrant editAs opposed to the modern definition of a tyrant a one person leader whose ruling attributes are often considered to be violent and oppressive the usage of the term tyrant during the Archaic Age of Greece did not automatically imply dictatorial or harsh actions by that individual Rather the Greek populace would judge a tyrant s reign good or bad in regards to his actions and behaviour Some tyrannies were short lived while others like Pisistratus rule could last quite long even decades if perceived to be a good tyranny and accepted by the people By definition tyrants obtained their ruling position by force or other unconstitutional means and they did not inherit this authoritarian role in the manner of a king or via monarchical succession However once in power many tyrants attempted to establish the propagation of their rule by passing the leadership mantle to their sons as did Pisistratus Usually a tyrant would come from the ranks of fellow aristocrats but would frequently rally the poor and powerless to their cause in a bid to obtain power exemplified by Pisistratus when he formed the Hyperakrioi faction To ease their transition into power and encourage societal security tyrants could elect to keep the status quo for government institutions and laws and even legacy officeholders rather than purge them 67 In Herodotus view as documented in the Histories after assuming power for the first time Pisistratus managed the city of Athens even handedly and fairly maintaining the government and political office structure as is with no changes to existing laws However after reassuming control in 546 BC for his third stint as head of state Herodotus says that he firmly established his tyranny with his mercenary force increased his revenues from mining sources in Attica and Mt Pangaeus placed opponents children as hostages on the island of Naxos and exiled both Alcmaeonids as well as other Athenian dissenters whether by freely chosen exile or by force is unclear 68 Pomeroy reaffirms Herodotus commentary regarding Pisistratus third turn in power adding that Pisistratus installed relatives and friends in the offices of various archonships and detained the children of some Athenians as hostages to deter future uprisings and discourage opposition 69 70 Some of these actions would contradict the perception that Pisistratus ruled justly and followed the law Aristotle seconds the initial remarks of Herodotus by characterising Pisistratus reign as moderate and mild describing the ruler as having a pleasant and tender disposition As an illustration Aristotle relates the case of a member of Pisistratus entourage encountering a man tilling a stony plot of land and asking what was the yield of this land The anonymous man responded that he received physical soreness and aches and Pisistratus received one tenth of this yield Due to his honesty or perhaps his cleverness Pisistratus exempted the man from paying his taxes Aristotle also comments that Pisistratus government functioned more in a constitutional manner and less like a tyranny 71 Rosivach writes that the Pisistratid dynasty did not fundamentally change the government as originally created by Solon instead they maintained power by installing allies in important governmental positions threatening force as needed and using marriage alliances all being tactics residing outside the constitution and law 72 Forsdyke chronicles the certain usage of Greek words by Herodotus in his Histories in reference to Pisistratus tyranny and advocates that a society ruled by a tyrant has weak citizens while a democratic society has strong and free people 73 Legacy and aftermath editPisistratus died in 527 or 528 BC and his eldest son Hippias succeeded him as tyrant of Athens Hippias along with his brother Hipparchus kept many of the existing laws and taxed the Athenians at no more than five percent of their income In 514 BC a plot to kill both Hippias and Hipparchus was conceived by two lovers Harmodius and Aristogeiton after Hipparchus had unsuccessfully solicited the younger Harmodius and subsequently insulted his sister However Hipparchus was the only one assassinated and per Thucydides was mistakenly identified as the supreme tyrant due to being the victim However Hippias was the actual leader of Athens remaining in power for another four years During this time Hippias became more paranoid and oppressive in his actions killing many of the Athenian citizens 74 The Alcmaeonid family helped depose the tyranny by bribing the Delphic oracle to tell the Spartans to liberate Athens which they did in 510 BC Following the capture of their children Hippias and the other Pisistratids were forced to accept the terms dictated by the Athenians to recover their children and were exiled being provided safe passage to Sigeion 75 The surviving Pisistratid ruler Hippias eventually joined the court of King Darius of Persia and went on to aid the Persians in their attack on Marathon 490 BC during the Greco Persian Wars acting as a guide 76 77 Upon the fall of the Pisistratid dynasty in 510 and the deposition of Hippias Cleisthenes of Athens ultimately triumphs in a power struggle dividing the Athenian citizens into ten new tribes creating a Council of Five Hundred as a representative assembly and ushering in the age of democratic government in the year 508 507 78 79 According to Pomeroy the tyranny of Pisistratus and his sons functioned as a social levelling mechanism regardless of economic status for those outside the Pisistratid faction and sympathizers Hence the democratic style of government that evolved to replace the overthrow of the Pisistratids was aided by the circumstances and outcomes of the outgoing tyranny 80 Obol of Athens 545 525 BC nbsp Obv An archaic Gorgoneion Rev Square incuseAn archaic silver obol of Athens of heraldic type from the time of Peisistratos 545 525 BCUpon the passing of Pisistratus the coalescing of Athens and its city state population into a tightly knit society both of a religious and civil nature was well underway even though Athens was still much less influential militarily and politically compared to Sparta its future ally and rival of the upcoming 5th century BC 81 Per Aristotle the tyranny during the time of Pisistratus was commonly thought of as the age of gold This reference to an age of gold harkened back to the mythological god Cronos Cronus who ruled during what was called the Golden Age 82 During the era of Athenian democracy the development of ostracism the expelling of a citizen for up to ten years as a governmental management tool arose in reaction to the tyranny of the Pisistratids and was envisioned in part as a defence against potential tyrants or individuals who amassed too much power or influence 72 The poet Dante in Canto XV of the Purgatorio the second instalment of the Divine Comedy references Pisistratus as responding in a gentle way when interacting with an admirer of his daughter 83 84 According to Suda the bodyguards of Pisistratus were called wolf feet Lykopodes because they always had their feet covered with wolf skins to prevent frostbite alternatively because they had a wolf symbol on their shields 85 See also editLand reform in Athens High Noon Pisistratus tale of being deposed and reinstated is used as a civics lesson in the dialogue Stasis ancient Greece Notes edit Pisistratus The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece and Rome Oxford University Press 2010 ISBN 978 0 19 517072 6 D M Lewis The tyranny of the Pisistratidae Cambridge Ancient History vol IV p 287 Everdell William R 2000 The End of Kings A History of Republics and Republicans Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 42 ISBN 978 0226224824 Starr Chester April 2019 Peisistratus TYRANT OF ATHENS Encyclopedia Britannica Holladay James 1977 The Followers of Peisistratus Greece amp Rome 24 1 40 56 doi 10 1017 S0017383500019628 JSTOR 642688 S2CID 145629351 Furlow Sauls Shanaysha M 18 April 2008 The Concept of Instability and the Theory of Democracy in the Federalist Thesis Duke University p 77 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 1005 6216 hdl 10161 629 a b Tyrant ancient Greece Britannica Retrieved 2021 04 28 a b Higbie Carolyn 2009 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories Appendix L New York Anchor Books p 786 Dewald Carolyn 2009 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories Appendix T New York Anchor Books p 835 Higbie Carolyn 2009 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories Appendix L New York Anchor Books p 791 Macquire Kelly October 6 2020 Pylos World History Encyclopedia Retrieved June 3 2021 Silk M S 2004 Homer The Iliad ProQuest Ebook Central Cambridge University Press p 28 Herodotus 2007 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories trans Andrea L Purvis New York Anchor Books 1 60 1 61 The Tyrants Encyclopedia com Retrieved April 30 2021 Cartwright Mark March 20 2018 Ancient Greek Government World History Encyclopedia Retrieved May 7 2021 Herodotus 2007 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories trans Andrea L Purvis New York Anchor Books 1 59 Ancient Greek Poleis Systems of Government Athens and Sparta PDF p 6 Retrieved May 8 2021 a b c d Herodotus 2007 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories trans Andrea L Purvis New York Anchor Books 1 59 Chester G Starr ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA Peisistratus TYRANT OF ATHENS Archived 2016 07 01 at the Wayback Machine a b Ancient Greek Poleis Systems of Government Athens and Sparta PDF p 6 7 Retrieved May 8 2021 Kenyon Frederic G 1912 Aristotle on the Athenian constitution Ath nai n politeia English G Bell and Sons pp 21 23 hdl 2027 inu 30000131032322 a b c French A 1959 The Party of Peisistratos Greece amp Rome 6 1 46 57 doi 10 1017 S0017383500013280 JSTOR 641975 S2CID 162486749 Hopper R J 1961 Plain Shore and Hill in Early Athens The Annual of the British School at Athens 56 189 219 doi 10 1017 S006824540001354X JSTOR 30096844 S2CID 162857455 Pomeroy Sarah B Burstein Stanley Donlan Walter Roberts Jennifer Tolbert 1999 Ancient Greece a political social and cultural history New York Oxford Oxford University Press pp 169 170 Pomeroy Sarah B Burstein Stanley Donlan Walter Roberts Jennifer Tolbert 1999 Ancient Greece A political social and cultural history New York Oxford Oxford University Press p 170 Gouschin Valerij May 1999 Pisistratus leadership in A P 13 4 and the establishment of the tyranny of 561 60 B C The Classical Quarterly 49 1 14 23 doi 10 1093 cq 49 1 14 JSTOR 639486 Aristotle The Athenian Constitution Part 13 24 Herodotus The Histories 1 59 Plutarch Life of Solon in Plutarch s Lives London Printed by W M Dowell for J Davis 1812 185 a b Pomeroy Sarah B Burstein Stanley Donlan Walter Roberts Jennifer Tolbert 1999 Ancient Greece A political social and cultural history New York Oxford Oxford University Press p 170 a b Herodotus 2007 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories trans Andrea L Purvis New York Anchor Books 1 60 Kenyon Frederic G 1912 Aristotle on the Athenian constitution Ath nai n politeia English G Bell and Sons p 24 hdl 2027 inu 30000131032322 Plutarch Life of Solon 1 4 Pausanias Description of Greece 1 30 1 Ancient Greek Poleis Systems of Government Athens and Sparta PDF p 6 7 Retrieved May 8 2021 Lavelle B M 2005 Fame Money and Power The Rise of Peisistratos and Democratic Tyranny at Athens ProQuest Ebook Central University of Michigan Press p 103 a b Connor W R 1987 Tribes Festivals and Precessions Civic Ceremonial and Political Manipulation in Archaic Greece Journal of Hellenic Studies 107 40 50 doi 10 2307 630068 JSTOR 630068 S2CID 154790382 Krentz Peter 2007 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories Appendix A New York Anchor Books p 724 Aristotle The Athenian Constitution Part 14 Lavelle B M 2005 Fame Money and Power The Rise of Peisistratos and Democratic Tyranny at Athens University of Michigan Press pp 118 122 Herodotus 2007 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories trans Andrea L Purvis New York Anchor Books 1 61 Pomeroy Sarah B Burstein Stanley M Donlan Walter Roberts Jennifer Tolbert 1999 Ancient Greece A political social and cultural history New York Oxford Oxford University Press pp 170 171 Cole J W April 1975 Peisistratus on the Strymon Greece and Rome 22 1 42 44 doi 10 1017 S0017383500020052 JSTOR 642830 S2CID 162097904 Lavelle B M January 18 2005 Fame Money and Power The Rise of Peisistratos and Democratic Tyranny at Athens Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press pp 127 128 Pomeroy Sarah B Burstein Stanley Donlan Walter Roberts Jennifer Tolbert 1999 Ancient Greece a political social and cultural history New York Oxford Oxford University Press p 171 Aristotle 1914 Aristotle on the Athenian Constitution Translated by F G Kenyon London G Bell And Sons LTD pp 25 26 Herodotus 2009 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories trans Andrea L Purvis New York Anchor Books 1 62 1 64 Lavelle B M 2005 Fame Money and Power The Rise of Peisistratos and Democratic Tyranny at Athens ProQuest Ebook Central Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press p 114 Boegehold Alan L 1996 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Thucydides A Comprehensive Guide to The Peloponnesian War Appendix A New York Free Press p 577 Starr Chester April 2019 Peisistratus TYRANT OF ATHENS Encyclopedia Britannica Cartwright Mark June 2 2013 Piraeus World History Encyclopedia Retrieved May 15 2021 Pomeroy Sarah B Burstein Stanley M Donlan Walter Roberts Jennifer Tolbert 1999 Ancient Greece a political social and cultural history New York Oxford Oxford University Press pp 172 173 a b c Starr Chester G Peisistratos Tyrant of Athens Britannica Retrieved May 15 2021 Pomeroy Sarah B Burstein Stanley M Donlan Walter Roberts Jennifer Tolbert 1999 Ancient Greece a political social and cultural history New York Oxford Oxford University Press p 172 Boardman John 1975 Herakles Peisistratos and Eleusis The Journal of Hellenic Studies 95 1 12 doi 10 2307 630865 JSTOR 630865 S2CID 161930012 Evans Nancy A 2002 Sanctuaries Sacrifices and the Eleusinian Mysteries Numen 49 3 227 254 doi 10 1163 156852702320263927 JSTOR 3270542 a b Pomeroy Sarah B Burstein Stanley Donlan Walter Roberts Jennifer Tolbert 1999 Ancient Greece a political social and cultural history New York Oxford Oxford University Press p 171 a b c Martin Thomas R Tyranny at Athens Perseus Digital Library Tufts University Retrieved May 15 2021 a b c d e Starr Chester G Peisistratos Tyrant of Athens Britannica Retrieved May 15 2021 a b c Aristotle 1914 Aristotle on the Athenian Constitution trans F G Kenyon London G Bell And Sons LTD p 27 Cartwright Mark August 2015 Temple of Olympian Zeus Athens World History Encyclopedia a b c d Pomeroy Sarah B Burstein Stanley M Donlan Walter Roberts Jennifer Tolbert 1999 Ancient Greece a political social and cultural history New York Oxford Oxford University Press p 172 Glowacki Kevin T 2004 The Acropolis The Stoa A Consortium for Electronic Publication in the Humanities The Ancient City of Athens Retrieved May 16 2021 Pisistratus Encyclopedia com May 29 2018 Retrieved May 16 2021 Hopper R J 1968 The Laurion Mines A Reconsideration The Annual of the British School at Athens 63 293 326 doi 10 1017 S006824540001443X JSTOR 30103196 S2CID 163856204 Cartwright Mark July 15 2016 Ancient Greek Coinage World History Encyclopedia Retrieved May 16 2021 Davis Gil 2014 Mining money in Late Archaic Athens Historia 63 3 257 277 doi 10 25162 historia 2014 0014 JSTOR 24432808 S2CID 160134528 Herodotus 2007 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories trans Andrea L Purvis New York Anchor Books 6 39 Martin Thomas R 2013 Ancient Greece From Prehistoric to Hellenistic Times Second Edition Yale University Press pp 104 105 ISBN 978 0 300 16005 5 Herodotus 2007 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories trans Andrea L Purvis New York Anchor Books 1 59 1 64 Pomeroy Sarah B Burstein Stanley Donlan Walter Roberts Jennifer Tolbert 1999 Ancient Greece a political social and cultural history New York Oxford Oxford University Press p 171 Herodotus 2007 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories trans Andrea L Purvis New York Anchor Books 1 64 Kenyon Frederic G 1912 Aristotle on the Athenian constitution Ath nai n politeia English G Bell and Sons pp 27 28 hdl 2027 inu 30000131032322 a b Rosivach Vincent J 1988 The Tyrant in Athenian Democracy Quaderni Urbinati di Cultura Classica 30 3 43 57 doi 10 2307 20546964 JSTOR 20546964 Forsdyke Sara 2001 Athenian Democratic Ideology and Herodotus Histories The American Journal of Philology 122 3 329 358 doi 10 1353 ajp 2001 0038 JSTOR 1562032 S2CID 154123954 Thucydides 1996 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Thucydides A Comprehensive Guide to The Peloponnesian War trans Richard Crawley New York Free Press 1 20 6 54 6 57 6 59 Herodotus 2007 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories trans Andrea L Purvis New York Anchor Books 5 63 5 65 Herodotus 2007 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories trans Andrea L Purvis New York Anchor Books 6 102 6 107 Thomas Rosalind 2012 Hippias Oxford Dictionary of the Classical World Krentz Peter 2007 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories Appendix A New York Anchor Books p 725 Herodotus 2007 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories trans Andrea L Purvis New York Anchor Books 5 66 6 131 Pomeroy Sarah B Burstein Stanley Donlan Walter Roberts Jennifer Tolbert 1999 Ancient Greece a political social and cultural history New York Oxford Oxford University Press p 171 Starr Chester G Peisistratos Tyrant of Athens Britannica Retrieved May 15 2021 Aristotle 1914 Aristotle on the Athenian Constitution trans F G Kenyon London G Bell And Sons LTD p 28 Alighieri Dante 2015 Dante s Purgatorio The Vision of Purgatory from the Divine Comedy trans The Rev Henry Francis Cary illustr Gustave Dore Minneapolis MN First Avenue Editions p 88 Barolini Teodolinda 2014 Written at New York NY Purgatorio 15 Divine Multiplication Commento Baroliniano Digital Dante Columbia University Libraries Retrieved May 18 2021 Suda Encyclopedia ToposText trans Suda On Line project Retrieved June 3 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint others link References editAlighieri Dante Dante s Purgatorio The Vision of Purgatory from the Divine Comedy Translated by The Rev Henry Francis Cary Illustrated by Gustave Dore Minneapolis First Avenue Editions 2015 Ancient Greek Poleis Systems of Government Athens and Sparta May 8 2021 https www classicsteachers com uploads 1 1 6 9 116945311 politics in athens and sparta pdf Kenyon Frederic G 1912 Aristotle on the Athenian constitution Ath nai n politeia English G Bell and Sons hdl 2027 inu 30000131032322 Barolini Teodolinda Purgatorio 15 Divine Multiplication Commento Baroliniano Digital Dante New York Columbia University Libraries 2014 https digitaldante columbia edu dante divine comedy purgatorio purgatorio 15 Berti Monica Fra tirannide e democrazia Ipparco figlio di Carmo e il destino dei Pisistratidi ad Atene Alessandria Edizioni Dell Orso 2004 Boardman John 1975 Herakles Peisistratos and Eleusis The Journal of Hellenic Studies 95 1 12 doi 10 2307 630865 JSTOR 630865 S2CID 161930012 Borthwick Edward K Music and Dance Civilization of the Ancient Mediterranean World Greece and Rome Eds Grant Michael and Kitzinger Rachel 3 vols New York Scribner s 1988 Vol 1 1507 8 Cahill Thomas Sailing the Wine Dark Sea Why the Greeks Matter New York Doubleday 2003 Cartwright Mark Ancient Greek Coinage World History Encyclopedia July 15 2016 https www worldhistory org Greek Coinage Cartwright Mark Ancient Greek Government World History Encyclopedia March 20 2018 https www worldhistory org Greek Government Cartwright Mark Piraeus World History Encyclopedia June 2 2013 https www worldhistory org Piraeus text Piraeus 20 or 20Peiraieus 20was 20the Kantharos 2C 20Zea 2C 20and 20Munichia Cole J W April 1975 Peisistratus on the Strymon Greece and Rome 22 1 42 44 doi 10 1017 S0017383500020052 JSTOR 642830 S2CID 162097904 Connor W R November 1987 Tribes festivals and processions civic ceremonial and political manipulation in archaic Greece The Journal of Hellenic Studies 107 40 50 doi 10 2307 630068 JSTOR 630068 S2CID 154790382 Davis Gil 2014 Mining money in Late Archaic Athens Historia 63 3 257 277 doi 10 25162 historia 2014 0014 JSTOR 24432808 S2CID 160134528 Evans Nancy A 2002 Sanctuaries Sacrifices and the Eleusinian Mysteries Numen 49 3 227 254 doi 10 1163 156852702320263927 JSTOR 3270542 Everdell William The End of Kings A History of Republics and Republicans Chicago University of Chicago Press 2000 Forsdyke Sara 2001 Athenian Democratic Ideology and Herodotus Histories The American Journal of Philology 122 3 329 358 doi 10 1353 ajp 2001 0038 JSTOR 1562032 S2CID 154123954 French A 1959 The Party of Peisistratos Greece amp Rome 6 1 46 57 doi 10 1017 S0017383500013280 JSTOR 641975 S2CID 162486749 Sauls Shanaysha M Furlow 18 April 2008 The Concept of Instability and the Theory of Democracy in theFederalist Thesis Durham North Carolina Duke University CiteSeerX 10 1 1 1005 6216 hdl 10161 629 Garland Robert Greek Spectacles and Festivals Civilization of the Ancient Mediterranean World Greece and Rome Eds Grant Michael and Kitzinger Rachel 3 vols New York Scribner s 1988 Vol 1 1148 Glowacki Kevin T The Acropolis The Stoa A Consortium for Electronic Publication in the Humanities The Ancient City of Athens 2004 https www stoa org athens sites acropolis html Gouschin Valerij May 1999 Pisistratus leadership in A P 13 4 and the establishment of the tyranny of 561 60 B C The Classical Quarterly 49 1 14 23 doi 10 1093 cq 49 1 14 JSTOR 639486 Holladay James 1977 The Followers of Peisistratus Greece amp Rome 24 1 40 56 doi 10 1017 S0017383500019628 JSTOR 642688 S2CID 145629351 Hopper R J 1968 The Laurion Mines A Reconsideration The Annual of the British School at Athens 63 293 326 doi 10 1017 S006824540001443X JSTOR 30103196 S2CID 163856204 Hopper R J 1961 Plain Shore and Hill in Early Athens The Annual of the British School at Athens 56 189 219 doi 10 1017 S006824540001354X JSTOR 30096844 S2CID 162857455 Hornblower Simon and Spawforth Anthony eds Peisistratus The Oxford Classical Dictionary 3rd ed Oxford University Press 2003 Lavelle B M Fame Money and Power The Rise of Pisistratus and Democratic Tyranny at Athens The University of Michigan Press 2005 Lavelle B M December 1991 The Compleat Angler Observations on the Rise of Peisistratos in Herodotos 1 59 64 The Classical Quarterly 41 2 317 324 doi 10 1017 S0009838800004493 S2CID 171069685 Macquire Kelly Pylos World History Encyclopedia October 6 2020 https www worldhistory org Pylos Martin Thomas R 2013 Ancient Greece From Prehistoric to Hellenistic Times Second Edition Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 16005 5 Martin Thomas R Tyranny at Athens Perseus Digital Library Tufts University Accessed May 15 2021 http www perseus tufts edu hopper text doc Perseus 3Atext 3A1999 04 0009 3Achapter 3D6 3Asection 3D28 Mitchell John Malcolm 1911 Peisistratus Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 21 11th ed pp 59 60 Pisistratus Encyclopedia com May 29 2018 https www encyclopedia com people history ancient history greece biographies pisistratus Pomeroy Sarah B Stanley M Burstein Walter Donlan and Jennifer Tolbert Roberts Ancient Greece a political social and cultural history New York Oxford Oxford University Press 1999 Roisman Joseph and translated by J C Yardley Ancient Greece from Homer to Alexander Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2011 ISBN 1 4051 2776 7 Rosivach Vincent J 1988 The Tyrant in Athenian Democracy Quaderni Urbinati di Cultura Classica 30 3 43 57 doi 10 2307 20546964 JSTOR 20546964 Silk M S Homer The Iliad Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2004 ProQuest Ebook Central Starr Chester G Pisistratus Tyrant of Athens Britannica Accessed May 15 2021 https www britannica com biography Peisistratus Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Herodotus The Histories Translated by Andrea L Purvis New York Anchor Books 2007 Strassler Robert B ed The Landmark Thucydides A Comprehensive Guide to the Peloponnesian War Translated by Richard Crawley New York Free Press 1996 Suda Encyclopedia Translated by Suda On Line project ToposText Accessed June 3 2021 https topostext org work 240 la 797 Thomas Rosalind 2012 Hippias Oxford Dictionary of the Classical World Thucydides Funeral Oration of Pericles The Peloponnesian War Trans Benjamin Jowett 1881 Ed Paul Brians December 18 1998 lt http katie luther edu moodle mod resource view php id 68564 gt Tyrant Ancient Greece Britannica Accessed April 28 2021 https www britannica com topic tyrant The Tyrants Encyclopedia com Accessed April 30 2021 https www encyclopedia com history news wires white papers and books tyrants Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pisistratus amp oldid 1194072618, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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