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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="P"><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="pelopidas-bio-1" n="pelopidas_1"><head><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Pelo'pidas</surname></persName></head><p>(<persName xml:lang="grc"><surname full="yes">Πελοπίδας</surname></persName>), the Theban general
      and statesman, son of Hippoclus, was descended from a noble family and inherited a large
      estate, of which, according to Plutarch, he made a liberal use, applying his money to the
      relief of such as were at once indigent and deserving. le lived always in the closest
      friendship with Epaminondas, to whose simple frugality, as he could not persuade him to share
      his riches, he is said to have assimilated his own mode of life. The disinterested ardour
      which marked his friendship was conspicuous also in his zealous attention to public affairs.
      This he even carried so far as to neglect and impair his property, remarking, in answer to the
      remonstrances of some of his friends, that money was certainly useful to such as were lame and
      blind. Hence, of course, he could not fail to be a marked man in any political commotion, and,
      accordingly, on the seizure of the Cadmeia by Phoebidas, in <date when-custom="-382">B. C.
       382</date>, he was obliged to flee from Thebes, and took refuge, with his fellow-exiles, at
      Athens. Here he was the chief instigator and counsellor of the enterprise by which democracy
      was restored to Thebes, and which Plutarch tells us the Greeks called "sister to that of
      Thrasybulus." In the execution of it also he bore a prominent part: it was by his hand that
       <hi rend="smallcaps">LEONTIADES</hi> fell; and, being made Boeotarch with Mellon and Charon,
      he succeeded in gaining possession of the Cadmeia before the arrival of succours from Sparta
       (<date when-custom="-379">B. C. 379</date>). From this period until his death there was not a year
      in which he was not entrusted with some important command. In <date when-custom="-378">B. C.
       378</date>, he and Gorgidas, his fellow-Boeotarch, induced Sphodrias, the Spartan harmost at
      Thespiae, to invade Attica, and thus succeeded in embroiling Athens with Lacedaemon [<hi rend="smallcaps">GORGIDAS</hi>]; and in the campaigns against the Lacedaemonians in that and
      the two following years he was actively occupied, gradually teaching his countrymen to cope
      fearlessly with the forces of Sparta, which had ever been deemed so formidable. The successes
      occasionally gained by the Thebans during this period (slight in themselves, but not
      unimportant in the spirit which they engendered) Pelopidas shared with others; but the glory
      of the battle of Tegyra, in <date when-custom="-375">B. C. 375</date>, was all his own. The town of
      Orchomenus in Boeotia, hostile to Thebes, had admitted a Spartan garrison of two moras, and
      during the absence of this force on an expedition into Locris, Pelopidas formed the design of
      surprising the place, taking with him for the purpose only the Sacred Band and a small body of
      cavalry. When he arrived, however, he found that the absent garrison had been replaced by
      fresh troops from Sparta, and he saw, therefore, the necessity of retreating. On his march
      back, he fell in, near Tegyra, with the two moras which formed the garrison at Orchomenus,
      returning from Locris under the polemarchs Gorgoleon and Theopompus. In spite of the
      inferiority of his numbers, Pelopidas exhibited great coolness and presence of mind; and when
      one, running up to him, exclaimed, "We have fallen into the midst of the enemy," his answer
      was, "Why so, more than they into the midst of us?" In the battle which ensued, the two
      Spartan commanders fell at the first charge, and the Thebans gained a complete victory.
      Plutarch might well call this the prelude of Leuctra, proving as it did that Sparta was not
      invincible, even in a pitched battle and with the advantage of numbers on her side. At Leuctra
       (<date when-custom="-371">B. C. 371</date>) Pelopidas joined Epaminondas in urging the expediency
      of immediate action; he raised the courage of his countrymen by the dream with which he
      professed to have been favoured, and by the propitiatory sacrifice which he offered in
      obedience to it [<hi rend="smallcaps">SCEDASUS</hi>], and the success of the day was due in a
      great measure to him and to the Sacred Band, which he commanded. In <date when-custom="-369">B. C.
       369</date>, he was one of the generals of the Theban force which invaded the Peloponnesus,
      and he united with Epamimnondas in persuading their colleagues not to return home till they
      had carried their arms into the territory of Sparta itself, though they would thus be
      exceeding their legal term of office. <pb n="180"/> For this, Epaminondas and Pelopidas were
      impeached afterwards by their enemies at Thebes, but were honourably acquitted. [<hi rend="smallcaps">EPAMINONDAS</hi>; <hi rend="smallcaps">MENECLEIDAS.</hi>] Early in <date when-custom="-368">B. C. 368</date>, the Thessalians who were suffering under the oppression of
      Alexander of Pherae, applied for aid to Thebes. The appeal was responded to, and Pelopidas,
      being entrusted with the command of the expedition, occupied Larissa, and received the
      submission of the tyrant, who had come thither for the purpose, but who soon after sought
      safety in flight, alarmed at the indignation shown by Pelopidas at the tales he heard of his
      cruelty and profligacy. From Thessaly Pelopidas advanced into Macedonia, to arbitrate between
       <hi rend="smallcaps">ALEXANDER</hi> II. and Ptolemy of Alorus. Having accommodated their
      differences, he took away with him, as hostages for the continuance of tranquillity, thirty
      boys of the noblest families, among whom, according to Plutarch and Diodorus, was the famous
      Philip, the father of Alexander the Great. [<hi rend="smallcaps">PHILIPPUS</hi> II.] In the
      course of the same year Pelopidas was sent again into Thessaly, in consequence of fresh
      complaints against Alexander of Pherae; but he went simply as an ambassador, not expecting any
      opposition, and unprovided with a military force. Meanwhile Alexander, the Macedonian king,
      had been murdered by Ptolemy of Alorus; and Pelopidas, being applied to by the loyalists to
      aid them against the usurper, hired some mercenaries and marched into Macedonia. If we may
      believe Plutarch, Ptolemy seduced his soldiers from him by bribes, and yet, alarmed by his
      name and reputation, met him submissively, and promised to be a faithful ally of Thebes, and
      to keep the throne for Perdiccas and Philip, the brothers of the late king, placing in his
      hands at the same time his son Philoxenus and fifty of his friends, as hostages for the
      fulfilment of his engagement. After this, Pelopidas, offended at the desertion of his
      mercenaries, marched with a body of Thessalians, whom he had collected, against Pharsalus,
      where he heard that most of the property of the delinquents was placed, as well as their wives
      and children. While he was before the town, Alexander of Pherae presented himself, and
      Pelopidas, thinking that he had come to give an account of his conduct, went to meet him,
      accompanied by a few friends and unarmed. The tyrant seized him, and confined him closely at
      Pherae, where he remained till his liberation, in <date when-custom="-367">B. C. 367</date>, by a
      Theban force under Epaminondas. During his imprisonment he is said to have treated Alexander
      with defiance, and to have exasperated his wife Thebe against him. In the same year in which
      he was released he was sent as ambassador to Susa, to counteract the Lacedaemonian and
      Athenian negotiations at the Persian court. His fame had preceded him, and he was received
      with marked distinction by the king, and obtained, as far as Persia could grant it, all that
      he asked for, viz. that Messenia should be independent, that the Athenians should lay up their
      ships, and that the Thebans should be regarded as hereditary friends of the king. For himself,
      Pelopidas refused all the presents which Artaxerxes offered him, and, according to Plutarch
       (<bibl n="Plut. Art. 22">Plut. Art. 22</bibl>), avoided during his mission all that to a
      Greek mind would appear to be unmanly marks of homage.</p><p>In <date when-custom="-364">B. C. 364</date>, the Thessalian towns, those especially of Magnesia
      and Phthiotis, again applied to Thebes for protection against Alexander, and Pelopidas was
      appointed to aid them. His forces: however, were dismayed by an eclipse of the sun (Jane 13),
      and, therefore, leaving them behind, he took with him into Thessaly only 300 horse, having set
      out amidst the warnings of the soothsayers. On his arrival at Pharsalus he collected a force
      which he deemed sufficient, and marched against Alexander, treating lightly the great
      disparity of numbers, and remarking that it was better as it was, since there would be more
      for him to conqen;. According to Diodorus, he found the tyrant occupying a commanding position
      on the heights of Cynoscephalae. Here a battle ensued, in which Pelopidas drove the enemy
      fiomn their ground, but he himself was slain as, burning with resentment. he pressed rashly
      forward to attack Alexander in person. The Thebans and Thessalians made great lamentations for
      his death, and the latter, having earnestly requested leave to bury him, celebrated his
      funeral with extraordinary splendour. They honoured his memory also with statues and golden
      crowns, and gave more substantial proofs of their gratitude by presents of large estates to
      his children.</p><p>Pelopidas has been censured, obviously with justice, for the rashness, unbecoming a general,
      which he exhibited in his last battle; and we may well believe that, on more occasions than
      this, his fiery temperament betrayed him into acts characteristic rather of the gallant
      soldier than of the prudent commander. His success at the court of Artaxerxes would lead us to
      ascribe to him considerable skill in diplomacy; but some deduction must be made from this in
      consideration of the very favourable circumstances under which his mission was undertaken, and
      the prestige which accompanied him in consequence of the high position of his country at that
      period, and the recent humiliation of Sparta. Certainly, however, this very power of Thebes,
      unprecedented and short-lived as it was, was owing mainly to himself and to Epaminondas. But
      these are minor points. Viewing him as a man, and taking him all in all, Pelopidas was truly
      one of nature's noblemen; and, if he was inferior to Epaminondas in powers of mind and in
      commanding strength of character, he was raised above ordinary men by his disinterested
      patriotism, his uncalculating generosity, and, not least, by his cordial, affectionate,
      unenvying admiration of his greater friend. (Plut. <hi rend="ital">Pelopidas, Reg. et Imp.
       Apoph.</hi> p. 61, ed. Tauchn.; <bibl n="Diod. 15.62">Diod. 15.62</bibl>, &amp;c., 67, 71,
      75, 30, 81; Wess. <hi rend="ital">ad loc.;</hi>
      <bibl n="Xen. Hell. 7.1">Xen. Hell. 7.1</bibl>. §§ 33, &amp;c.; <bibl n="Ael. VH 11.9">Ael. VH 11.9</bibl>, <bibl n="Ael. VH 14.38">14.38</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 9.15">Paus. 9.15</bibl>; <bibl n="Plb. 6.43">Plb. 6.43</bibl>, <hi rend="ital">Fragm. Hist.</hi>xv.; Corn. Nep. <hi rend="ital">Pelopidas.</hi>) [<hi rend="smallcaps">ALEXANDER</hi> of Pherae; <hi rend="smallcaps">EPAMINONDAS.</hi>]</p><byline>[<ref target="author.E.E">E.E</ref>]</byline></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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