The History of Antiquity, Vol. 6 (of 6). Duncker Max
and puts his capture in Ol. 58,1 = 548 B.C. According to the statement of Syncellus (1,455, ed. Bonn.), Crœsus was defeated in the 14th year of Cyrus, which would give 547 B.C., if with Eusebius, who allows Cyrus to reign 31 years, we put his accession in 560 B.C. (V. p. 381
23
Herod. 1, 153.
24
Plat. "Protagoras," p. 327. Demosth. "De Corona," 24; Aesch. "in Ctesiph." 137, and the Scholia.
25
Polyb. 7, 15; 8, 22.
26
Raoul Rochette, "Mémoires de l'institut," 17, 2, p. 278 ff.
27
Herod. 1, 87.
28
Büdinger objects to this view that the Lydian tradition, which would be favourable to Crœsus, could not possibly convert the merit of such a sacrifice into an execution. Whether the tradition of the Lydians was favourable or not to Crœsus is not handed down; that the Greeks were favourable to him we know for certain. It is the tradition of the Greek cities – favourable to Crœsus and unfavourable to Cyrus – which we have in the account of Herodotus. The rescue of Crœsus and the wisdom of Solon were the points of view given in the Greek tradition and guiding it. If Nicolaus of Damascus has used Xanthus, and his account rests on a combination of the Greek and Lydian tradition – it is precisely in his account that the sacrifice, and the prevention of it by rain, comes out more clearly than in Herodotus.
29
Steph. Byzant. Βαρήνη. The Barce of Justin (1, 7) must be the same city. [Barene in Jeep's ed.] Ptolem. 6, 2, 8; "Vend." 1, 68.
30
Aesch. "Pers." 770; Xenoph. "Cyri inst." 7, 4, 2; 8, 6, 8.
31
Herodotus, 9, 107, remarks that Xerxes gave the satrapy of Cilicia to Xenagoras of Halicarnassus; yet even after this date we find a Syennesis at the head of that country, which in the list of Herodotus formed the fourth satrapy.
32
Herod. 1, 141, 142, 151, 169.
33
Herod. 1, 152; Diod. Exc. Vatic. p. 27 = 9, 36, 1.
34
Herod. 1, 153. In 1, 157, on the other hand, we find "to the Persians;" cf. 1, 177.
35
H. Stein on Herod. 1, 153.
36
Herod. 1, 161. What is brought forward in the treatise "on the unfairness of Herodotus" from Charon of Lampsacus against the historian's statement about the surrender of Pactyas is limited to the naked fact that he came from Chios into the power of Cyrus.
37
Thucyd. 1, 12, 14.
38
Herod. 1, 164, 165; Plutarch, "Aristid." c. 25; Pausan. 7, 5, 4.
39
A party of the emigrant Teians is said to have founded Phanagoria; Scymn. Ch. 886; "Corp. inscrip. Graec." 2, 98.
40
Herod. 1, 174.
41
Herod.
42
The subsequent inhabitants of Xanthus are explained by Herodotus to be foreigners, except eighty families, who were absent at the time. He also mentions Caunians about the year 500 B.C. The name of the city occurs at a later date. On the continuance of the league of the Lycians, vol. I. p. 575.
43
Herod. 1, 143, 160.
44
The year 548 B.C. no doubt passed before the revolt of Pactyas. The Greek cities had time to build or strengthen their walls before they were attacked. Phocaea entered into negotiations for this object with the prince of Tartessus after the fall of Crœsus (Herod. 1, 163), and the great wall of the city was finished, with the assistance of money furnished by him owing to the approach of the Medes, when Harpagus attacked it. This attack cannot therefore have taken place before 547 B.C. The sieges of the Ionian and Aeolian cities occupied at least a year; the campaign against the Dorian cities, the Carians and Lycians, must therefore have taken place in 546 B.C., if not a year later. Hieronymus puts the battle of Harpagus against Ionia in Olymp. 58, 3 = 546 B.C.
45
Oroetes resided at Sardis in the reign of Cambyses and Mithrobates at Dascyleum; Herod. 3, 120.
46
Herod. 1, 168; Miletus and Samos contended in 440 B.C. for the possession of Priene.
47
Herod. 5, 37, 38; Heracl. Pont. fragm. 11, 5, ed. Müller.
48
Justin. 1, 7.
49
Excerpt. Vatic. p. 27 = 9, 35, 1.
50
Herod. 1, 153.
51
Diod. Excerpt. Vatic. p. 27 = 9, 36, 1.
52
Herod. 1, 155, 156; Polyaen. "Strateg." 7, 6, 4.
53
The reigns of Nebuchadnezzar, Evilmerodach, Neriglissar, and the accession of Nabonetus in 555 B.C., are now fixed not only by the canon of Ptolemy but also by the Babylonian tablets, which give