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A. C. in their liberty, erect statues to their deliverers, and A. Rə re-establish the popular government. Hippias throws himself into the arms of Darius, whom he finds already disposed to undertake the conquest of Greece, and all his hope now lies in his protection. At the time he was expelled, Rome also got rid of her tyrants. Tarquin the proud had rendered the regal dignity odious by his oppression and violence: the lewdness of Sextus his son gave it the finishing stroke. Lucretia de. 245. flowered, killed herself: her blood, and the harangues of Brutus, spirited up the Romans. The kings were banished, and consular government established upon the plan of Servius Tullius; but it was soon weakened by the jealousy of the people. In the first consulship, P. Valerius the consul, celebrated for his victories, became suspected by his citizens; and to satisfy them, was obliged to enact the law, which allowed an appeal to the people, from the senate and consuls, in all causes wherein the punishment of a citizen was concerned. The expelled Tarquins found friends: the neighbouring kings looked upon their banishment as an indignity offered to all crowned heads; and Porsenna, king of the Clusians, a people of Hetruria, took up arms 507. against Rome: which being reduced to the last ex- 247; tremity, and almost taken, was saved by the valour of Horatius Cocles. The Romans performed wonders in defence of their liberty: Scevola, a young citizen, burned the hand which had missed Porsenna; Clelia, a young virgin, astonished that prince by her resolution: Porsenna left Rome in peace, and the Tarquins 500. remained succourless. Hippias, for whom Darius de- 25. clared, had some better hopes. All Persia rose in his behalf, and Athens was threatened with a dreadful 493. war. Whilst Darius was making preparations, Rome, 261. that had so gallantly defended herself against foreign powers, had like to have fallen by her own hand: the jealousy bad revived between the Patricians and Plebeians: the consular power, though already moderated by the Valerian law, seemed still exorbitant to a people

c. too jealous of their liberty. They seceded to the A. R. Aventine mount: violent overtures proved fruitless; nothing could bring back the people, but the calm remonstrances of Menenius Agrippa: it was necessary, however, to find some lenitives, and to grant the people tribunes to defend them against the consuls. The law which instituted this new magistracy, was called the sacred law; and such was the rise of the tribunes of the people. Darius had at last openly broke with Greece. His son-in-law Mardonius, after overrunning Asia, thought to overpower the Grecians by his num490. bers; but Miltiades, with ten thousand Athenians, de- 264. feated that vast army in the plain of Marathon. Rome was beating all her enemies round about, and seemed to have nothing to fear but from herself. Coriolanus, a zealous patrician, and the greatest captain she had, being expelled notwithstanding his services, by the po489. pular faction, meditated the ruin of his country, led on 265. 8. the Volci against it, reduced it to the last extremity, and 266. nothing but his mother could appease him. Greece enjoyed not long the tranquillity which the battle of Marathon had procured her. In order to revenge the affront of Persia and Darius, Xerxes his son and successor, and grandson of Cyrus by his mother Atossa, attacked the Grecians with 1100,000 fighting men, 274. (some say 1700,000) without reckoning his naval force of 1200 ships. Leonidas, king of Sparta, with no more than three hundred men, killed him 20,000 of them at the streights of Thermoplyse, and bravely died with all his followers. By the conduct of Themistocles the Athenian, Xerxes's naval armament is the same year defeated near Salamis. That prince repassed the Hellespont in consternation; and a year after, his land army, which Mardonius commanded, is cut to pieces nigh Platea, by Pausanias king of Lacedemon, and Aristides the Athenian, surnamed the just. The battle was fought in the morning, and in the evening of that famous day. The Ionian Greeks who had shaken off the yoke of the Persians, killed thirty thousand of them

430.

479.

275,

A. c. in the battle of Mycale, under the conduct of Leoty- A. R. chides. That general, to hearten his soldiers, told them, that Mardonius was just defeated in Greece. The news proved true, either by some unaccountable effect of fame, or rather by a lucky hit of conjecture; and all the Grecians of the lesser Asia set themselves at liberty. That nation was gaining every where considerable advantages; and, a little before, the Carthagenians, then powerful, were beat in Sicily, which they had invaded at the instigation of the Persians. Notwithstanding this ill success, they did not cease forming new designs upon an island, so commodious for securing the empire of the sea, which was the great aim of their republic. Greece enjoyed it then, but her attention was wholly turned upon the east and the 177. Persians. Pausanias had just freed the island of Cy- 277. prus from their yoke, when he conceived the design of enslaving his country. All his schemes proved abortive, notwithstanding the great promises of Xerxes: the traitor was betrayed by him he loved best, and his 474. infamous affection cost him his life. The same year 280. Xerxes was slain by Artabanus, captain of his guards: Polit either the perfidious wretch wanted to mount his mas- v. 10. ter's throne, or else he dreaded the severity of a prince, whose cruel orders he had not readily enough execut473. ed. Artaxerxes Longimanus his son began his reign, 281. and shortly after received a letter from Themistocles, who, being proscribed by his citizens, made him a proffer of his service against the Grecians. He, well knowing how to prize so renowned a captain, gave him a great appointment, in spite of the jealousy of the Sa467. traps. That magnanimous prince protected the Jews, 287. Ez and in his twentieth year, memorable for its conse454. quences, he permitted Nehemiah to rebuild Jerusalem 300. nem.ii. with her walls. This decree of Artaxerxes differs from

vii.viii

Ne

that of Cyrus, in that Cyrus's related to the temple, and this was made for the city. At this decree, foreDan. seen by Daniel, and mentioned in his prophecy, the ix. 25. 490 years of his weeks commence. This important

Arist.

A. c. date has very solid foundations. The banishment of A. R. Themistocles is placed by Eusebius's chronicle, in the

cyd.

last year of the 76th Olympiad, which answers to the 280th of Rome. Other chronologists bring it a little farther down; the difference is inconsiderable, and the circumstances of time confirm Eusebius's date. They Thu- are taken from Thucydides, a most accurate historian; b. 1. and this grave author, almost contemporary, as well as fellow-citizen, with Themistocles, makes him write his letter in the beginning of the reign of Artaxerxes. Cornelius Nepos, an ancient and judicious, as well as Corn. elegant author, admits no doubt of this date after the The authority of Thucydides; an argument so much the mis. more solid, that another author, more ancient still than

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Thucydides, entirely agrees with him. And that is Plut. in Charon of Lampsachus, quoted by Plutarch; and Them. Plutarch himself adds, that the annals, meaning those of Persia, are conformable to these two authors. He does not, however, follow them, but gives us no reason for it; and the historians, who begin the reign of Artaxerxes eight or nine years later, are neither of that time, nor of so great authority. It appears therefore unquestionable, that its beginning is to be placed towards the end of the 76th Olympiad, and near the 208th year of Rome, whereby the twentieth year of that prince must fall towards the end of the 81st Olympiad, and about Rome's 300th year. In fine, those who cast the beginning of Artaxerxes' reign lower, to reconcile authors, are reduced to suppose, that his father had, at least, associated him in the kingdom, when Themistocles wrote his letter; and which way ever it is, our date is ascertained. This foundation being laid, the rest of the computation is easy, which the sequel will make evidently appear. After the decree of Artaxerxes, the Jews laboured hard in rebuilding their city and its walls, as Daniel had foretold. Nehemiah Dan. conducted the work with great prudence and resolution, amidst all the opposition made by the Samaritans, Arabians, and Ammonites. The people strenuously

ix. 25.

A. C. exerted themselves, and Eliashib the high priest ani- A. R mated them by his example. Meantime the new magistrates, that had been given to the Roman people, fomented the divisions of the city; and Rome, formed under kings, wanted the laws necessary for the good constitution of a commonwealth. The reputation of Greece, still more celebrated for its government than for its victories, moved the Romans to take from 452. thence their pattern. So they sent deputies to study 302 the laws of the cities of Greece, and especially those of Athens, which were the most agreeable to the state 451. of their republic. Upon this model, ten absolute ma- sas. gistrates, who were created the year after under the 450. name of Decemvirs, digested the laws of the twelve 304. tables, which are the foundation of the Roman law. The people, charmed with the equity with which they composed them, suffered them to ingross the supreme 449. power, which they used in a tyrannical manner. Great 305

commotions were now occasioned by the incontinence of Appius Claudius, one of the Decemvirs, and by the murder of Virginia, whom her father chose rather to kill with his own hand, than suffer ber to be prostituted to Appius's passion. The blood of this second Lucretia roused the Roman people, and the Decemvirs, were expelled. While the Roman laws were forming under the Decemvirs, Ezra, a doctor of the law, and Nehemiah, governor of God's people, newly re-established in Judea, were reforming abuses, and enforcing Neh. the observance of the law of Moses by their example Deut. as well as authority. One of the principal articles, of xxiii.3. their reformation was, to oblige all the people, and par

xiii.

ticularly the priests, to put away the strange wives,
whom they had married contrary to the law. Ezra put
the sacred,books in order, accurately revised them,
and collected the ancient memoirs of the people of
God, to compose the two books of the Paralipomena,
or Chronicles, whereto he added the history of his own
time, which was finished by Nehemiah. Their books
conclude that long history begun by Moses, and unin-

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