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CROESUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 480 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CROESUS  , last

king of
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Lydia, of the Mermnad dynasty, (560—546 B.C.), succeeded his
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father
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Alyattes after a war with his
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half-
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brother . He completed the
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conquest of
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Ionia by capturing Ephesus, Miletus and other places, and extended the Lydian
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empire as far as the Halys . His
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wealth, due to trade, was proverbial, and he used
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part of it in securing alliances with the Greek states whose fleets might supplement his own army . Various legends were told about him by the Greeks, one of the most famous being that of Solon's visit to him with the lesson it conveyed of the divine
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nemesis which waits upon overmuch prosperity (Hdt. i . 29 seq.; but see SoLON) . After the over-throw of the Median empire (549 B.C.) Croesus found himself confronted by the rising power of Cyrus, and along with Nabonidos of Babylon took
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measures to resist it . A coalition was formed between the Lydian and Babylonian kings,
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Egypt promised troops and Sparta its
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fleet . But the coalition was defeated by the rapid movements of Cyrus and the treachery of Eurybatus of Ephesus, who fled to
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Persia with the gold that had been entrusted to him, and betrayed the plans of the
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con-federates . Fortified with the Delphic oracles Croesus marched to the frontier of his empire, but after some initial successes fortune turned against him and he was forced to retreat to
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Sardis . Here he was followed by Cyrus who took the city by storm . We may gather from the recently discovered poem of
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Bacchylides (iii . 23-62) that he hoped to escape his conqueror by burning himself with his wealth on a funeral pyre, like Saracus, the last king of
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Assyria, but that he fell into the hands of Cyrus before he could effect his purpose.' A different version of the story is given (from Lydian
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sources) by Herodotus (followed by
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Xenophon), who makes Cyrus condemn his prisoner to be burnt alive, a mode of
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death hardly consistent with the Persian reverence for fire .

Apollo, however, came to the rescue of his pious worshipper, and the name of Solon uttered by Croesus resulted in his deliverance . According to
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Ctesias, who uses Persian sources, and says nothing of the attempt to burn Croesus, he subsequently became attached to the court of Cyrus and received the governorship of Barene in
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Media . Fragments of columns from the temple of
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Artemis now in the
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British Museum have upon them a dedication by Croesus in Greek . See R . Schubert, De Croeso et Solone fabula (1868) ; M . G . Radet, La Lydie et le monde grec an temps
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des Mermnades (1892–1893); A . S . Murray, Journ . Hell . Studies, x. pp . 1-10 (1889) ; for the supposition that Croesus did actually perish on his own pyre see G .

B .

Grundy,
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Great Persian War, p . 28; Grote, Hist. of
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Greece (ed . 1907), p . 104 . Cf . CYRUS; LYDIA .

End of Article: CROESUS
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CROFT (or CROFTS), WILLIAM (1678–1727)

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