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SPARTA LOSES SK1RITI. 233 Not only was the portion of Laconia west of the Messenian Gulf now rendered independent of Sparta, but also much of the territory which lies north of Sparta, between that city and Arcadia. Thus the Skiritse (hardy mountaineers of Arcadian race, heretofore de- pendent upon Sparta, and constituting a valuable contingent to her armies), 1 with their territory forming the northern frontier of La- conia towards Arcadia, became from this time independent of and hostile to Sparta. 2 The same is the case even with a place much nearer to Sparta, Sellasia; though this latter was retaken by the Lacedaemonians four or five years afterwards. 3 Epaminondas remained about four months beyond the legal du- ration of his command in Arcadia and Laconia. 4 The sufferings of a severe mid-winter were greatly mitigated to his soldiers by the Arcadians, who, full of devoted friendship, pressed upon them an excess of hospitality which he could not permit consistently with his military duties. 5 He stayed long enough to settle all the preliminary debates and difficulties, and to put in train of serious execution the establishment of Messene and Megalopolis. For the completion of a work thus comprehensive, which changed the face and character of Peloponnesus, much time was of course necessary. Accordingly, a Theban division under Pamenes was left to repel all obstruction from Sparta ;6 while Tegea also, from this time for- 1 Thucyd. v, 66. 2 Xen. Hellen. vii, 4, 21. 3 Xen. Hellen. vii, 4, 12 ; Diodor. xv, 64.

  • The exact number of eighty-five days, given by Diodorus (xv, 67),

seems to show that he had copied literally from Ephorus or some other older author. Plutarch, in one place (Agesil. c. 32), mentions "three entire months," which differs little from eighty-five days. He expresses himself as if Epa- minondas spent all this time in ravaging Laconia. Yet again, in the Apophth. Reg. p. 194 B. (compare JElian, V. H. xiii, 42), and in the life of Pelopidas (c. 25), Plutarch states, that Epaminondas and his colleagues held the command four whole months over and above the legal time, being en- gaged in their operations in Laconia and Messenia, This seems to me the more probable interpretation of the case ; for the operations seem too large to have been accomplished in either three or four months. 8 Seo a remarkable passage in Plutarch An Seni sit gerenda Respub- lica (c. 8, p. 788 A.). 8 Pausan. viii, 27, 2. Pammenes said to have been an earnest friend of Epaminondas, but of older political standing; to whom Epaminondas partly owed his rise (Plutarsh, Reip. Ger. Praecep. p. 805 F.).