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PHOCION , Athenian statesman and general, wasSee also: born about 402 B.C.,' the son of a small manufacturer
.
He became a pupil of See also: Plato and in later See also: life was a close friend of See also: Xenocrates
.
This See also: academic training See also: left its mark upon him, but it was as a soldier rather than as a philosopher that he first came into See also: notice
.
Under See also: Chabrias he distinguished himself in the See also: great See also: sea-fight of See also: Naxos (376), and in the subsequent See also: campaigns loyally supported his chief
.
He won the confidence of the See also: allies by his See also: justice and integrity
.
In 351–3492 he entered the Persian service and helped to subdue a See also: rebellion in See also: Cyprus
.
Hence-forward he always held a prominent position in Athens, and although he never canvassed he was elected general See also: forty-five times in all
.
In politics he is known chiefly as the consistent opponent of the See also: anti-Macedonian firebrands, headed by See also: Demosthenes, Lycurgus and See also: Hypereides, whose fervent eloquence he endeavoured to See also: damp by recounting the plain facts of Athens's military and See also: financial weakness and her need of See also: peace, even when the arms of Athens seemed to prosper most
.
But although he won the respect of his See also: audience, his advice was frequently discarded
.
Yet his influence was felt at the trial of Aeschines in 343, whom he helped to defend, and after the disaster of See also: Chaeroneia (338), when he secured very lenient terms from See also: Philip
.
He also rendered
See also: good service in the See also: field: in 348 he saved the force operating against the
See also: philo-Macedonian tyrants in Euboea by the brilliant victory of Tamynae
.
Under the Macedonian predominance his reputation steadily increased
.
1 Diodorus' statement that Phocion was 75 at his See also: death (i.e. that he became general at 3o and was elected 45 years in succession) would give 394–393 as the date of See also: birth; but he must have been quite 25 as second-in-command at Naxos (376)
.
2 The chronology is uncertain: the See also: dates given for this See also: period are Beloch's ivrsechische Geschichte,
Though by no means inclined to See also: truckle to the Macedonians, as is shown by his See also: protection of the refugee Harpalus and his spirited See also: campaign in defence of See also: Attica in 322, he won the confidence of the conquerors, and in the restricted democracy which See also: Antipater enforced he became the virtual ruler of Athens
.
Old age, however, was telling on him; when Polyperchon by his proclamation of " freedom " raised a new crisis in 318, Phocion's dilatoriness was interpreted as active treason on Cassander's behalf, and the See also: people, incited by the restored democrats, deposed him from office
.
Phocion fled to Polyperchon, but was sent back by the latter to be tried at Athens
.
The See also: assembly, containing numerous slaves and all the city See also: mob, shouted Phocion down and condemned him to death unheard
.
Not long after, the Athenians decreed a public See also: burial and a statue in his honour
.
Phocion's character and policy, were throughout inspired. by his philosophic training, which best explains his remarkable purity of character and his prudent See also: councils
.
To the same influence we may ascribe his reserve and his reluctance to co-operate heartily either with the people or with the Macedonian conquerors who put their See also: trust in him: a greater spirit of energy and enterprise might have made him the saviour of his country
.
Phocion remained famous in antiquity for the pithy sayings with which he used to See also: parry the eloquence of his opponents
.
Demosthenes called him " the chopper of my periods."
Plutarch (Life of Phocion) draws much good information from See also: Philochorus and See also: Duris (who reproduces Hieronymus of Cardia); his numerous anecdotes are repeated in other See also: works of his and in Aelian (See also: Var
.
Kist.)
.
Diodorus (xvi.–xviii.) is likewise based on Duris
.
See Holm . Gk . Hist. vol. iii . (Eng. trans., See also: London, 1896)
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