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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:base="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><body xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><div type="textpart" subtype="alphabetic_letter" n="C"><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="cleomenes-iii-bio-1" n="cleomenes_iii_1"><head><label><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Cleo'menes</surname><genName full="yes">Iii.</genName></persName></label></head><p>the 31st king of Sparta of the Agid line, was the son of Leonidas II. After the death of
      Agis IV., <date when-custom="-240">B. C. 240</date>, Leonidas married his widow Agiatis to
      Cleomenes, who was under age, in order, as it seems, to bring into his family the inheritance
      of the Proclidae. Agiatis, though at first violently opposed to the match, conceived a great
      affection for her husband, and she used to explain to him the principles and designs of Agis,
      about which he was eager for information. Cleomenes was endowed, according to Plutarch, with a
      noble spirit; in moderation and simplicity <pb n="794"/> of life he was not inferior to Agis,
      but superior to him in energy, and less scrupulous about the means by which his good designs
      might be accomplished. His mind was further stirred up to manliness and ambition by the
      instructions of the Stoic philosopher Sphaerus of Borysthenes, who visited Sparta. To this was
      added the influence of his mother Cratesicleia. It was not long, therefore, before Cleomenes
      had formed the design of restoring the ancient Spartan discipline, and the death of his
      father, whom he succeeded (<date when-custom="-236">B. C. 236</date>), put him in a position to
      attempt his projected reform; but he saw that careful preparations must first be made, and
      that Sparta was not to be restored by the means which Agis had employed. Instead of repeating
      the vain attempt of Agis to form a popular party against the Ephors, the impossibility of
      which was proved by the refusal of Xenares, one of his most intimate friends, to aid his
      efforts, he perceived that the regeneration of Sparta must be achieved by restoring to her her
      old renown in war, and by raising her to the supremacy of Greece; and then that, the restored
      strength of the state being centred in him as its leader, he might safely attempt to crush the
      power of the Ephors. It was thus manifest that his policy must be war, his enemy the Achaean
      league. Lydiadas, the former tyrant of Megalopolis, foresaw the danger which the league might
      apprehend from Cleomenes; but the counsels of Aratus, who was blind to this danger, prevailed;
      and the proposal of Lydiadas, to make the first attack on Sparta, was rejected.</p><p>The first movement of Cleomenes was to seize suddenly and by treachery the Arcadian cities,
      Tegea, Mantineia, and Orchomenus, which had recently united themselves with the Aetolians,
      who, instead of resenting the injury, confirmed Cleomenes in the possession of them. The
      reason of this was, that the Aetolians had already conceived the project of forming an
      alliance with Macedonia and Sparta against the Achaean league. It is probable that they even
      connived at the seizure of these towns by Cleomenes, who thus secured an excellent position
      for his operations against the league before commencing war with it. Aratus, who was now
      strategos, at last perceived the danger which threatened from Sparta, and, with the other
      chiefs of the Achaean league, he resolved not to attack the Lacedaemonians, but to resist any
      aggression they might make. About the beginning of the year 227 B. C., Cleomenes, by the order
      of the Ephors, seized the little town of Belbina, and fortified the temple of Athena near it.
      This place commanded the mountain pass on the high road between Sparta and Megalopolis, and
      was at that period claimed by both cities, though anciently it had belonged to Sparta. Aratus
      made no complaint at its seizure, but attempted to get possession of Tegea and Orchomenus by
      treachery. But, when he marched out in the night to take possession of them, the conspirators,
      who were to deliver up the towns, lost courage. The attempt was made known to Cleomenes, who
      wrote in ironical terms of friendship to ask Aratus whither he had led his army in the night ?
      " To prevent your fortifying Belbina," was the reply. " Pray then, if you have no objection,"
      retorted Cleomenes, " tell us why you took with you lights and scaling ladders." By this
      correspondence Aratus found out with whom he had to do. The Spartans, on the other hand, were
      satisfied with the important advantage which they had gained in the fortification of Belbina;
      and Cleomenes, who was in Arcadia with only three hundred foot and a few horse, was recalled
      by the Ephors. His back was no sooner turned than Aratus seized Caphyae, near Orchomenus. The
      Ephors immediately sent back Cleomenes, who took Methydrion, and made an incursion into the
      territories of Argos. About this time Aristomachus succeeded Aratus as strategos of the
      Achaean league (in May, 227, B. C.), and to this period perhaps should be referred the
      declaration of war against Cleomenes by the council of the Achaeans, which is mentioned by
      Polybius. Aristomachus collected an army of 20,000 foot and 1000 horse, with which he met
      Cleomenes near Palantium; and, though the latter had only 5000 men, they were so eager and
      brave that Aratus persuaded Aristomachus to decline battle. The fact is, that the Achaeans
      were never a warlike people, and Aratus was very probably right in thinking that 20,000
      Achaeans were no match for 5000 Spartans. But the moral effect of this affair was worth more
      than a victory to Cleomenes. In May, 226, Aratus again became strategos, and led the Achaean
      forces against Elis. The Eleans applied to Sparta for aid, and Cleomenes met Aratus on his
      return, at the foot of Mount Lycaeum, in the territory of Megalopolis, and defeated him with
      great slaughter. It was at first reported that Aratus was killed; but he had only fled; and,
      having rallied part of his army, he took Mantineia by a sudden assault, and revolutionized its
      constitution by making the metoeci citizens. The effect of this change was the formation of an
      Achaean party in the town.</p><p>Cleomenes had not yet taken any open steps against the Ephors, though he could not but be an
      object of suspicion to them; they were however in a difficult position. The spirit of Agis
      still lived in the Spartan youth; and Cleomenes, at the head of his victorious army, was too
      strong to be crushed like Agis. Secret assassination might have been employed--and when was a
      Spartan ephor heard of who would have scrupled to use it ?--but then they would have lost the
      only man capable of carrying on the war, and Sparta must have fallen into the position of a
      subordinate member of the Achaean league. They appear, however, to have taken advantage of the
      loss of Mantineia to make a truce with the Achaeans. (<bibl n="Paus. 8.27.10">Paus.
       8.27.10</bibl>.) Cleomenes now took measures to strengthen himself against them. These
      measures are differently represented by Phylarchus, the panegyrist of Cleomenes, whom Plutarch
      seems on the whole to have followed, and by Polybius and Pausanias, who followed Aratus and
      other Achaean writers. At the death of Agis, his infant son, Eurydamidas, was left in the
      hands of his mother, Agiatis; and Archidamus, the brother of Agis, fled into Messenia,
      according to the statement of Plutarch, which, from the nature of the case, is far more
      probable than the account of Polybius (<bibl n="Plb. 5.37.2">5.37.2</bibl>, <bibl n="Plb. 8.1.3">8.1.3</bibl>), that Archidamus fled at a later period, through fear of
      Cleomenes. Eurydamidas was now dead, poisoned, it was said, by the Ephors, and that too,
      according to Pausanias (<bibl n="Paus. 2.9.1">2.9.1</bibl>), at the instigation of Cleomenes.
      The falsity of this last statement is proved by the silence of Polybius, who never spares
      Cleomenes, but it may serve to shew how recklessly he was abused by some of the Achaean <pb n="795"/> party. Archidamus had thus become the rightful heir to the throne of the Proclidae,
      and he was invited by Cleomenes to return; but no sooner had he set foot in Sparta than he was
      assassinated. This crime also is charged upon Cleomenes by the Achaean party, and among them
      by Polybius. The truth cannot now be ascertained, but every circumstance of the case seems to
      fix the guilt upon the Ephors. Cleomenes had everything to hope, and the Ephors everything to
      fear, from the association of Archidamus in his councils. Cleomenes, it is true, did nothing
      to avenge the crime : but the reason of this was, that the time for his attack upon the Ephors
      was not yet come; and thus, instead of an evidence of his guilt, it is a striking proof of his
      patient resolution, that he submitted to incur such a suspicion rather than to peril the
      object of his life by a premature movement. On the contrary, he did everything to appease the
      party of the Ephors. He bribed them largely, by the help of his mother Cratesicleia, who even
      went so far as to marry one of the chief men of the oligarchical party. Through the influence
      thus gained, Cleomenes was permitted to continue the war; he took Leuctra, and gained a
      decisive victory over Aratus beneath its walls, owing to the impetuosity of Lydiadas, who was
      killed in the battle. The conduct of Aratus, in leaving Lydiadas unsupported, though perhaps
      it saved his army, disgusted and dispirited the Achaeans to such a degree, that they made no
      further efforts during this campaign, and Cleomenes was left at leisure to effect his
      long-cherished revolution during the winter which now came on. (<date when-custom="-226">B. C.
       226</date>-<date when-custom="-225">225</date>.)</p><p>Having secured the aid of his father-in-law, Megistonus, and of two or three other persons,
      he first weakened the oligarchical party by drafting many of its chief supporters into his
      army, with which he then again took the field, seized the Achaean cities of Heraea and Asea,
      threw supplies into Orchomenus, beleaguered Mantineia, and so wearied out his soldiers, that
      they were glad to be left in Arcadia, while Cleomenes himself marched back to Sparta at the
      head of a force of mercenaries, surprised the Ephors at table, and slew all of them, except
      Agesilaus, who took sanctuary in the temple of Fear, and had his life granted afterwards by
      Cleomenes. Having struck this decisive blow, and being supported not only by his mercenaries,
      but also by the remains of the party of Agis, Cleomenes met with no further resistance. He now
      propounded his new constitution, which is too closely connected with the whole subject of the
      Spartan polity to be explained within the limits of this article. All that can be said here
      is, that he extended the power of the kings, abolished the Ephorate, restored the community of
      goods, made a new division of the lands, and recruited the body of the citizens, by bringing
      back the exiles and by raising to the full franchise the most deserving of those who had not
      before possessed it. He also restored, to a great extent, the ancient Spartan system of social
      and military discipline. In the completion of this reform he was aided by the philosopher
      Sphaerus. The line of the Proclidae being extinct, he took his brother Eucleidas for his
      colleague in the kingdom. In his own conduct he set a fine example of the simple virtue of an
      old Spartan.</p><p>From this period must be dated the contest between the Achaeans and Cleomenes for the
      supremacy of Greece, which Polybius calls the Cleomenic war, and which lasted three years,
      from <date when-custom="-225">B. C. 225</date> to the battle of Sellasia in the spring of <date when-custom="-222">B. C. 222</date>. For its details, of which a slight sketch is given under
      ARATUS, the reader is referred to the historians. Amidst a career of brilliant success,
      Cleomenes committed some errors, but, even if he had avoided them, he could not but have been
      overpowered by the united force of Macedonia and the Achaean league. The moral character of
      the war is condensed by Niebuhr into one just and forcible sentence :-- " Old Aratus
      sacrificed the freedom of his country by an act of high treason, and gave up Corinth rather
      than establish the freedom of Greece by a union among the Peloponnesians, which would have
      secured to Cleomenes the influence and power he deserved." (<hi rend="ital">History of
       Rome,</hi> iv. p. 226.)</p><p>From the defeat of Sellasia, Cleomenes returned to Sparta, and having advised the citizens
      to submit to Antigonus, he fled to his ally, Ptolemy Euergetes, at Alexandria, where his
      mother and children were already residing as hostages. Any hope he might have had of
      recovering his kingdom by the help of Ptolemy Euergetes was defeated by the death of that
      king, whose successor, Ptolemy Philopator, treated Cleomenes with the greatest neglect, and
      his minister, Sosibius, imprisoned him on a charge of conspiracy against the king's life.
      Cleomenes, with his attendants, escaped from prison, and attempted to raise an insurrection
      against Ptolemy, but finding no one join him, he put himself to death. (<date when-custom="-221">B.
       C. 221</date>-<date when-custom="-220">220</date>.) His reign lasted 16 years. He is rightly
      reckoned by Pausanias (<bibl n="Paus. 3.6.5">3.6.5</bibl>) as the last of the Agidae, for his
      nominal successor, Agesipolis III., was a mere puppet. He was the last truly great man of
      Sparta, and, excepting perhaps Philopoemen, of all Greece.</p><p>(Plutarch, <hi rend="ital">Cleom., Arat.;</hi> Polyb. ii. v., &amp;c.; Droysen, <hi rend="ital">Geschichte der Hellenismus,</hi> vol. ii. bk. 2.100.4; Manso, <hi rend="ital">Sparta,</hi> vol. iii.) </p><byline>[<ref target="author.P.S">P.S</ref>]</byline></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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