Delian League is the confederation
of Greek city-states under the leadership of Athens. The name is used to
designate two distinct periods of alliance, the first 478–404 B.C., the second
378–338 B.C. The first alliance was made between Athens and a number of Ionian
states (chiefly maritime) for the purpose of prosecuting the war against
Persia. All the members were given equal vote in a council established in the
temple of Apollo at Delos, a politically neutral island, where the league's
treasury was kept. The assessments to be levied on the members were originally
fixed by Athens, and the fairness with which these were apportioned contributed
much toward maintaining the initial enthusiasm. States contributed funds,
troops, and ships to the league. After Persia suffered a decisive defeat at
Eurymedon (468 B.C.), many members supported dissolution of the league. Athens,
however, which had profited greatly from the league, argued that the danger
from Persia was not over. When Naxos attempted to secede, Athens, taking the
leadership from the assembly, forced (c.470 B.C.) Naxos to retain allegiance.
Soon Thasos attempted the same maneuver and was likewise subdued (463 B.C.) by
the Athenian general Cimon. The Athenians were so successful in their aims, using
both force and persuasion, that by 454 B.C. the league had grown to c.140
members. An invasion by the league's enemies, Sparta and its supporters, was
averted in 457 B.C., and Thebes, the traditional enemy of Athens, was subjected
(456 B.C.). In 454 B.C., because of the real or pretended danger of Persian
attack, the treasury was transported from Delos to the Athenian Acropolis. The
league had in effect become an Athenian empire. However, its unity was not very
stable, and in 446 B.C. Athens lost Boeotia. Gradually Athens lost its prestige
as well as many of its alliances, and, with the Peloponnesian War (404 B.C.),
the league came to an end. In 394 B.C., Conon reestablished the Athenian
mastery of the sea at Cnidus. Proffers of alliance reached Athens, and in 378
B.C. the second Athenian confederacy was formed. Two years later Athens won a
naval victory over Sparta near Naxos; the Athenians and Spartans compromised
with a treaty that left Athens supreme on the sea and Sparta supreme on the
mainland of Greece. In 371 B.C., Thebes withdrew from the alliance and gained
predominance over Boeotian land that had been occupied (387 B.C.) by Sparta. A
treaty was made between Athens and Sparta. By 351 B.C., however, the status of
the league had been seriously weakened in the north and in the east, and in 338
B.C. the league was utterly destroyed by the victory of Philip II of Macedon in
the battle of Chaeronea.
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