Everything about Theban Hegemony totally explained
The
Theban Hegemony lasted from the Theban victory over the
Spartans at
Leuctra in
371 BC to their defeat of a coalition of
Peloponnesian armies at
Mantinea in
362 BC though Thebes sought to maintain its position until finally eclipsed by the rising power of
Macedon in
346 BC.
Externally, the way was paved for Theban ascendancy by the collapse of
Athenian power in the
Peloponnesian War (431 - 404 BC) and the weakening of the Spartans by their oliganthropia (demographic decline) and the inconclusive
Corinthian War (395 - 386 BC). Internally, the Thebans enjoyed two temporary military advantages:
- The leaders of the Theban oligarchy at the time, Epaminondas and Pelopidas, were fully committed to an aggressive foreign policy and could be relied on to win any battle and
- The same leaders had instituted tactical improvements in the Theban heavy infantry (for example longer spears, the use of a wedge-shaped formation of spearmen), which had yet to catch on among their rivals.
The Thebans had traditionally enjoyed the hegemony of the
Boeotian League, the oligarchical federation of
Aeolic-speaking Greeks to the immediate north-west of Athenian-dominated
Attica. Their brief rise to power outside the Boeotian Plain began in 373 when the Boeotians defeated and destroyed of the town of
Plataea, strategically important as the only Athenian ally in
Boeotia. This was taken as a direct challenge by the previous hegemonic power, the Spartans, who gambled on restoring their waning ascendancy by a decisive defeat of the Thebans. At Leuctra, in Boeotia, the Thebans comprehensively defeated an invading Spartan army. Out of 1,000 Spartan citizens, 400 died at Leuctra. After this, the Thebans systematically dominated
Greece. In the south, they invaded the Peloponnese to liberate the
Messenians and
Arcadians from Spartan overlordship and set up a pro-Theban Arcadian League to oversee Peloponnesian affairs. In the north, they invaded
Thessaly, to crush the growing local power of
Pherae and took the future
Philip II of Macedon hostage, bringing him to Thebes. Pelopidas, however was killed at
Cynoscephalae, in battle against troops from Pherae (though the battle was actually won by the Thebans).
The Thebans overstretched themselves strategically and, in their efforts to maintain control of the north, their power in the south disintegrated. The Spartan king,
Agesilaus II, scraped together an army from various Peloponnesian towns dissatisfied with Theban rule and managed to kill but not defeat
Epaminondas in the
Battle of Mantinea, but not to re-establish any real Spartan ascendancy. This was if anything a Pyrrhic victory for both states. Sparta lacked the manpower and resources to make any real attempt at regaining her empire and Thebes had now lost both of the innovative leaders who had allowed her rise to dominanace and was similarly reduced in resources to the point where that dominance could, not be guaranteed. The Thebans sought to maintain their position through diplomacy and their influence at the
Amphictyonic council in Delphi, but when this resulted in their former allies the Phocians seizing Delphi and beginning the
Third Sacred War (c. 355), Thebes proved too exhuasted to bring any conclusion to the conflict. The war was finally ended in 346 BC, by the forces not of Thebes, or any of the city-states, but of Philip of Macedon, to whom the city-states had grown desperate enough to turn. This signalled the rise of Macedon within Greece and finally brought to an end a Theban Hegemony which had already been in decline.
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