Cimon's death makes diplomacy imperative in the …

Years: 449BCE - 449BCE

Cimon's death makes diplomacy imperative in the eastern sphere.

Apparently, a peace with Athens, advantageous to Persia, is signed in 449 BCE, whereby the Persians agree to stay out of the Aegean and the Athenians agree to leave Asia Minor to the Achaemenids.

The diplomat Callias, a notable member of one of the wealthiest Athenian families, who is said to have distinguished himself in the Greek victory over the invading Persians at Marathon and to have won the chariot race at the Olympic games three times, negotiates this so-called Peace of Callias (mentioned by Diodorus but one of Thucydides' most famous omissions).

Pericles now embarks on a policy designed to secure Athens' cultural and political leadership in Greece.

If peace with Persia has not ended the alliance of the Delian league, it may have ended the annual tribute paid to its treasury, transferred in 454 from Delos to Athens.

Whether to regain this tribute, or simply to assert Athenian leadership, Pericles summons a conference of all Greek states to consider the questions of rebuilding the Greek temples destroyed by the Persians, the payment of sacrifices due to the gods for salvation, and the freedom of the seas.

Sparta will not cooperate, but Pericles continues on the narrower basis of the Athenian alliance.

Tribute is to continue, and Athens will draw heavily on the reserves of the alliance for a magnificent building program centered on the Acropolis.

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