CHAPTER XC. PHILIP MASTERS GREECE
When Philip had entirely subdued the
Thracians and Olynthians, he helped the Thessalians
to get rid of their tyrant; and, adding their cavalry
to his infantry, he boasted of as fine an army as
the Greeks had ever been able to muster. He was
very anxious to find a pretext to march into Greece
at the head of this force, because he thought that,
once there, he would soon manage to become master
of all the towns. And the excuse for which he
longed so much soon came.
A contest known as the Sacred War
was going on in Greece at that time. It had arisen
because the Pho’cians had taken possession of
lands that were left waste in honor of the god Apollo.
The Amphictyonic Council said they should pay a fine
for this offense; and the Phocians, angry at being
thus publicly reproved, defied the council.
To show how little they intended to
obey, they not only kept the land they had taken,
but robbed the temple at Delphi. Then they used
the money thus obtained to win over some allies, and
soon began to make war against the people who obeyed
the council.
The loyal Greeks fought against the
Phocians for a long time, but were unable to conquer
them: so Philip proposed to come and help the
council. In their anxiety to win in this war,
the Greeks gladly allowed him to bring his army into
their country, and he soon completely subdued the
rebels.
In reward for his help, Philip was
made president of the council, a position
he had long coveted, and leader of the Pyth’i-an
games held in honor of Apollo.
When the war was ended, Philip quietly
went back to Macedon. He was, however, merely
waiting for a favorable opportunity to reenter Greece,
and punish the Athenians for listening to Demosthenes’
speeches against him.
In the mean while, Philip’s
gold had been very busy, and he was buying up as many
friends and allies as he could. Many of his gifts
had the desired effect, and were not like the gold
cup which he sent to Demosthenes. This, you know,
had wholly failed in its purpose, for the orator went
on talking more eloquently than ever against the Macedonian
king.
He finally roused the Athenians to
the point of arming to meet Philip, when they heard
that he was really coming at last to make himself master
of Greece. Their allies, the Thebans, joined them;
and the two armies met at Chaer-o-ne’a, in Boeotia,
where a terrible battle was fought.
Demosthenes had joined the army; but
as he was no soldier, and was not very brave, he fled
at the very first onset. Dashing through the bushes,
he was suddenly stopped by some spiky branches that
caught in his cloak and held him fast. The orator
was so frightened that he thought the enemy had captured
him, and, falling upon his knees, he began to beg
that his life might be spared.
While Demosthenes was thus flying
madly, his friends and fellow-citizens were bravely
meeting the Macedonians; but, in spite of all their
courage, they were soon forced to yield to the Macedonian
phalanx, and the battlefield was left strewn with
their dead.
Alexander, Philip’s son, who
was then only eighteen years of age, commanded one
wing of his father’s army, and had the glory
of completely crushing the Sacred Battalion of the
Thebans, which had never before been beaten.
This brilliant victory at Chaeronea
made Philip really master of all Greece; but he generously
refrained from making the Athenians recognize him
openly as their lord, although he made their government
do whatever he pleased.
As Greece was now obedient to him,
the ambitious Philip began to plan the conquest of
Asia and the downfall of the Persian Empire. To
get as large an army as possible, he invited all the
Greeks to join him, artfully reminding them of all
they had suffered at the hands of the Persians in
the past.
His preparations were nearly finished,
and he was on the point of starting for Asia, when
he was murdered by Pausanias, one of his subjects,
whom he had treated very unkindly.