Athens is forced in April 346 BCE …
Years: 346BCE - 346BCE
Athens is forced in April 346 BCE to conclude the notorious Peace of Philocrates—notorious because of the attempts by various leading Athenian orator-politicians to saddle each other with responsibility for what is in fact inevitable.
Athens has reason to fear that Philip's next campaign in Thrace (346 BCE) might challenge its own control of the sea route to southern Russia, its main source for imported corn.
Significantly, however, it had been Philip, and not Athens, who had made the first overtures for peace, though all the military initiatives lay in his own hand.
His plans for the future, in Greece and farther afield, include Athens as a willing ally, not as a defeated enemy.
Demosthenes, partly to gain time to prepare for the long struggle he sees ahead, agrees to the peace and goes as one of the ambassadors to negotiate the treaty with Philip.
Philip, recognizing Demosthenes' eloquence as a threat to his plans, ignores him during the negotiations and instead addresses his fellow ambassador Aeschines.
The two men return from the embassy bitter foes, Demosthenes denouncing Aeschines and Aeschines assuring everyone of Philip's good intentions, seeking to reconcile the Athenians to Macedonian expansion into Greece.
In his oration On the Peace late in 346 Demosthenes, though condemning the terms of the treaty of Philocrates, argues that it must be honored.
Even before the peace with Athens is ratified, the Athenian publicist Isocrates had, in the letter To Philip, invited Philip to reconcile the four leading cities of Greece and to lead a united Greek alliance in a war of expansion against Persia.
Locations
People
Groups
- Thebes, City-State of
- Greece, classical
- Persian people
- Sparta, Kingdom of
- Thessalian League
- Macedon, Argead Kingdom of
- Boeotian League
- Achaemenid, or First Persian, Empire
- Athens, City-State of
- Athenian Empire or Confederacy, Second
Topics
- Iron Age Europe
- Greek colonization
- Iron Age Cold Epoch
- Classical antiquity
- Macedon, Rise of
- Sacred War, Third
