Page:Thucydides, translated into English Vol 1.djvu/122

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6
THE TROJAN EXPEDITION
[i

to this day. For the piratical tribes plundered, not only one another, but all those who, without being seamen, lived on the sea-coast.

8 The islanders were even more addicted to piracy than The pirates in the islands of Carian or Phoenician origin. the inhabitants of the mainland. They were mostly Carian or Phoenician settlers. This is proved by the fact that when the Athenians purified Delos[1] a during the Peloponnesian War and the tombs of the dead were opened, more than half of them were found to be Carians. They were known by the fashion of their arms which were buried with them, and by their mode of burial, the same which is still practised among them.

After Minos had established his navy, communication by sea became more general. For, he having expelled the marauders[2] when he colonised the greater part of the islands, the dwellers on the sea-coast began to grow richer and to live in a more settled manner; and some of them, finding their wealth increase beyond their expectations, surrounded their towns with walls. The love of gain made the weaker willing to serve the stronger,[3] and the command of wealth enabled the more powerful to subjugate the lesser cities[3]. This was the state of society which was beginning to prevail at the time of the Trojan War.

9 I am inclined to think that Agamemnon succeeded in Rise of the Pelopidae: the wealth and power which Agamemnon inherited from Atreus and Eurystheus enabled him to assemble the chiefs who fought at Troy. collecting the expedition, not because the suitors of Helen had bound themselves by oath to Tyndareus, but because he was the most powerful king of his time.[4] Those Peloponnesians who possess the most accurate traditions say that [4] originally Pelops gained his

power by the great wealth which he brought with him

  1. Cp. iii. 104 init.
  2. Cp. i. 4.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Or, 'and incited the more powerful, who now had wealth at their command, to subjugate the lesser cities.'
  4. 4.0 4.1 Or, 'Those who possess the most accurate traditions respecting the history of Peloponnesus say that' etc.