| The Athenian Empire
Once the Persian menace had been
removed, petty squabbling began amongst the members of the Hellenic
League. Sparta, feeling that its job was completed, left the
association, and Athens assumed domination of the league. Under the
leadership of Themistocles and Kimon, Athens reformed the alliance
into a new body called the Delian League. By using monetary
contributions from other member states to build its own military
forces, Athens essentially transformed the Hellenic League into its
own empire.
In the 450s B.C., Pericles (ca.
495-429 B.C.), known as the greatest statesman of ancient Greece,
laid the foundation of imperial rule. Athens set the level of
tribute for the member states, which were now subject to its
dictates, and it dealt harshly with failures to pay. Athens also
began regulating the internal policy of the other states and
occasionally garrisoning soldiers there. At its height in the 440s
B.C., the Athenian Empire was composed of 172 tribute-paying states.
Athens now controlled the Aegean.
The enormous wealth entering Athens
from subject states financed the flourishing of democratic
institutions, literature, art, and architecture that came to be
known as the golden age of Athens. Pericles built great
architectural monuments, including the Parthenon, to employ workers
and symbolize the majesty of Athens. The four greatest Greek
playwrights--Aeschylus, Aristophanes, Euripides, and Sophocles--wrote
during the golden age.
In society and government,
lower-class Athenians were able to improve their social position by
obtaining land in the subject states. Pericles gave more governing
power to bodies that represented the citizenship as a whole, known
as the demos. For the first time, men were paid to participate in
government organizations and sit on juries. Many states outside the
empire felt quite threatened by the growth of Athens, creating a
volatile situation in the mid-fifth century B.C.
|