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See also: admiral and diplomatist
.
Aelian (See also: Var
.
Hist. xii
.
43) and See also: Phylarchus (ap
.
Athen. vi
.
271 e) say that he was a mothax, i.e. the son of a helot See also: mother (see See also: HELOTS)., but this tradition is at least doubtful; according to Plutarch he was a Heraclid, though not of either royal See also: family
.
We do not know how he See also: rose to See also: eminence: he first appears as admiral of the Spartan See also: navy in 407 B.C
.
The See also: story of his influence with Cyrus the Younger, his See also: naval victory off Notium, his See also: quarrel with his successor Callicratidas in 406, his See also: appointment as bred roXevs in 405, his decisive victory at See also: Aegospotami, and his share in the siege and capitulation of Athens belong to the See also: history of the Peloponnesian War (q.v.)
.
By 404 he was the most powerful See also: man in the See also: Greek See also: world and set about completing the task of See also: building up a Spartan See also: empire in which he should be supreme in fact if not in name
.
Everywhere democracies were replaced by oligarchies directed by bodies of ten men (decarchies, SeKapXiai) under the control of Spartan See also: governors (harmosts, apuovrai)
.
But See also: Lysander's boundless influence and ambition, and the superhuman honours paid him, roused the jealousy of the See also: kings and the ephors, and, on being accused by the Persian satrap See also: Pharnabazus, he was recalled to See also: Sparta
.
Soon afterwards he was sent to Athens with an army to aid the oligarchs, but See also: Pausanias, one of the kings, followed him and brought about a restoration of democracy
.
On the See also: death of See also: Agis II., Lysander secured the succession of Agesilaus (q.v.), whom he hoped to find amenable to his influence
.
But in this he was disappointed
.
Though chosen to accompany the See also: king to
See also: Asia as one of his See also: thirty advisers (o pj3ovXot), he was kept in-active and his influence was broken by studied affronts, and finally he was sent at his own See also: request as See also: envoy to the Hellespont
.
He soon returned to Sparta to mature plans for overthrowing the hereditary kingship and substituting an elective See also: monarchy open to all Heraclids, or even, according to another version, to all Spartiates
.
But his alleged attempts to bribe the oracles were fruitless, and his schemes were cut See also: short by the outbreak of war with See also: Thebes in 395
.
Lysander invaded See also: Boeotia from the west, receiving the submission of Orchomenus and sacking Lebadea, but the enemy intercepted his despatch to Pausanias, who had meanwhile entered Boeotia from the See also: south, containing plans for a joint attack upon Haliartus
.
The See also: town was at once strongly garrisoned, and when Lysander marched against it he was defeated and slain
.
He was buried in the territory of Panopeus, the
nearest Phocian city
.
An able See also: commander and an adroit diplomatist, Lysander was fired by the ambition to make Sparta supreme in See also: Greece and himself in Sparta
.
To this end he shrank from no treachery or cruelty; yet, like Agesilaus, he was totally See also: free from the characteristic Spartan See also: vice of avarice, and died, as he had lived, a poor man
.
See the See also: biographies by Plutarch and Nepos; Xen
.
Hellenica,
5 ; Diod
.
Sic. xiii . 70 sqq., 104 sqq;, xiv . 3, 10, 13, 81; See also: Lysias xii
.
60 sqq.; See also: Justin v
.
5-7; See also: Polyaenus i
.
45, vii
.
19; Pausanias iii., ix
.
32, 5-10, X
.
9, 7-11; C
.
A
.
Gehlert, Vita Lysandri (See also: Bautzen, 1874) ; W
.
Vischer, Alkibiades and Lysandros (See also: Basel, 1845); O
.
H . J . Nitzsch, De Lysandro (See also: Bonn, 1847) ; and the Greek histories in general
.
,
(M
.
N
.
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