History of the Peloponnesian War

Thucydides

Thucydides, Vol. 1-4. Smith, Charles Foster, translator. London and Cambridge, MA: Heinemann and Harvard University Press, 1919-1923.

For it was in the following manner that the Athenians found themselves face to face with those circumstances in dealing with which they rose to greatness.

When the Persians had retreated from Europe, defeated on both sea and land by the Hellenes,[*](At Salamis, Plataea, Mycale.) and those of them who with their ships had taken refuge at Mycale had perished there, Leotychides, king of the Lacedaemonians, wh1o was commander of the Hellenes at Mycale, went home with the allies from the Peloponnesus. But the Athenians, together with the allies fiom Ionia and the Hellespont,[*](The contingents from the islands and the coast of Asia Minor, who, in consequences of the battle at Mycale and the advance of the victors to Abydos, had been received into the Hellenic alliance.) who were already in revolt from the King, remained at their task and besieged Sestos, which was held by the Persians; and passing the winter there they took it, as it had been deserted by the Barbarians; and after that the contingents of the several cities sailed away from the Hellespont.

But the Athenian people, when the Barbarians had departed from their territory, straightway began to fetch back their wives and their children and the remnant of their household goods from where they had placed them for safety,[*](Salamis, Aegina, and Troezen; cf. Hdt. 8.41.) and to rebuild the city and the walls; for of the encircling wall only small portions were left standing, and most of the houses were in ruins, only a few remaining in which the chief men of the Persians had themselves taken quarters.