Chambers 1967
Chambers 1967
Chambers 1967
^ A bibliography of most of the studies of the decree is placed at the end of this article.
' Several scholars, nnable to assert that the decree is a faithfnl copy of a text from 480,
have fallen back on Sponsoring a belief in the "relative authenticity" of the text. I would
Protest against this. Either the Athenians planned, even before the battle of Artemisium,
to evacuate Athens, or they did not. The decree says that they did, but Herodotus seems not
to know this. We must choose between the historian and the inscription.
that the word is common in the fonrth Century as well as in the fifth; and at
all times it means no more than "a group of people organized in some
manner". If Aeschylus U8ed it to mean "a ship's crew", that does not mean
that no one in the fourth Century could have used the word in the same
wayi. And, even if it could be shown that the word was somewhat imfamiliar
in the fourth Century in the sense of "crew", a potential forger of the decree
could have selected the word to lend credibility to his work.
The same criticaL method is available to those who defend the authenticity
of the decree. Some critics have pointed to the epithet used of Athena,
"the guardian of Athens" ('A9T()vöi(i [(ieSeo]ü[<r)rJ, 4—5) as an indication
that the text cannot descend from the early fifth centary. They suggest
that this epithet presupposes the existence of the Athenian Empire: it is
found on inscriptions dating from the time of the Empire (ca. 454—404)
and Coming from outside Athens, while in strictly Athenian inscriptions
it is practically non-existent®. This Observation is accurate and trenchant,
but it is not conclusive. We must admit, with Professor M E B I T T , that
"existence of the epithet in the middle fifth Century and in the early fourth
Century abroad does not prove that it was inappropriate in Athens earlier"
We might also object to the rhetorical style — the "pathetic" style, as
it has been called — of the resolution. D A V I D L E W I S would reply that we
have no reason to deny that Themistocles used moving rhetoric on the
occasion. This reply may be valid. I still consider the inflated, patriotic
language unlikely in a genuine public resolution; but the defenders invoke
yet another argument. Everyone admits that decrees were preserved on
papyri and that only a fraction of those passed were ever inscribed on stone
by an expensive process. When the Athenians did inscribe a decree, they
may have altered or revised its text*. The same thing might happen if the
transmifision then went the other way — that is, if a weiter copied an
inscription. We can see the result of such changes if we compare the in-
^ In his Persians, 381—382, Aeschylus does indeed use the word when referring to a
crew; but the Greek-English Lexicon of LIDDELL and SCOTT provides examples from the
fourth Century where the word means "group, squad, contingent" — a meaning in no way
different from that of Aeschylus.
^ See HABICHT, p. 4, a n d MOBETTI (2).
« MEBITT (2), p. 29.
* Several defenders of the decree have drawn support from GÜNTHEB KLAFFENBACH'S
"Bemerkungen zum griechischen Urkundenwesen", Sitzungsber. der Deutschen Akad. der
Wiss. zu Berlin, Kl. für Sprachen, Lit. und Kunst (No. 6, 1960), pp. 1—42. For example
(p. 34): " w e must free ourselves from the modern concept of the nature of a document...
For the Greeks the only question concemed the content, and the form was secondary. The
wording did not have to be completely identical in all details, provided that everything
essential was said."
1 For this inscription (Inscr. Graecae P 86), see M. N. Tod, A Seleotion of Oreek Histo-
rical Inscriptions, vol. 1, ed. 2 (Oxford 1946), no. 72. In the case of this decree, two reasons
appear for the discrepancies between Thucydides' version and the remains of the version
found at Athens: Thucydides' own spelling and usage, and the probahility that he was
copying from an ezemplar of this international treaty that he found outside Athens.
^ Several writers (Teeu, Schachebmbtb) have suggested that our text was in the
collection of decrees compiled by Craterus. Nothing proves this assumption. There is even
some evidence pointing against it, in the fact that Plutarch (Themistocles 10,11) see ms to
regard the provisions for evacuating Athens and the decree recalling the ostracized as two
separate Themistocles decrees; see Hahn. Plutarch sometimes used Craterus (Cimon 13,
Aristides 26) and perhaps would not have faUed to notice that Craterus considered the whole
Themistocles decree as a unit, if such had been the case. Still, we must leave open the
possibility that Craterus included the decree, substantially in its present version, in his
work.
» See J a m e s o n (5), 3 8 8 - 3 9 1 .
12»
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simply to state that this verbal similarity does not compel us to associate
Herodotus with the text of the decree.
Next, I have heard it suggested that a passage at 8.41.1 can be interpreted
so as to reconcile Herodotus and the decree. The historian here says that
after the battle at Artemisium the Atheniana issued a proclamation, xrjpuyfxa,
ordeiing everyone to look to his own safety. To me, this remark proves
that nobody in Athens had ever moved a decree providing for evacuation
before Artemisium waa even fought. But some would say that this pro-
clamation, or XT^puYjia, was a kind of "executive Order" or "activating
decree" that put into action a plan already long conceived; in other wordsj
the Themistocles decree, with its minute preparations, had already been
passed and the moment to put it into operation had now arrived®. This
interpretation does ofFer a way out of the conflict between Herodotus and
the inscription. I do not accept it, because I believe that Herodotus would
have made it clearer that a decree had been passed some weeks previolisly,
if this had been the caae®.
The clash between Herodotus and the new decree therefore remains.
There is no reason to imagine him wrong in considering the evacuation of
Athens a last-minute action by frightened people. That is not to say that
nobody in Athens had ever imagined that evacuation might become neces-
' DASCAI-AKIS has quite rightly taken his stand on this gronnd.
' THIEL, in an essay written in his nsoal sparkling English, conjectnres that a final
section of the decree has been lost; in this portion, Themistocles will have stated that
a proclamation would signal an evacuation if it became necessary. T H I E L finds this "pro-
clamation" in the x^puyixa mentioned by Herodotus, 8.41. In other, more persuasive,
parts of his paper, he refuses to admit that a mere delaying operation was planned at
Artemisium. See also L A Z E N B T .
* Herodotus' word föo^e (7.144.3) only means that the Athenians "decided" to resist
the Fersians with their navy. We need not understand the word as an echo of the decree,
which admittedly begins (like aU other decrees reeording public decisions in Athens) with
föo^e.
they hold out the promise of restoration for these exiles only after they
have gone to the island of Salamis to serve out an indefinite waiting period;
it is hardly likely that they would accept such a cold invitation. Plausibly,
HIGNETT suggests that the composer of the decree took seriously the story
in Herodotus, to the effect that Aristides suddenly appeared at Salamis
just before the famous sea-battle that turned back the Persian navy^. To
reject the section on the ostracized by pointing to a doubtful anecdote in
Herodotus might seem to be yielding ground to his critics; one could then
go on to say that, since Herodotus was inaccurate about Aristides' sudden
Visit to Salamis, he may well have been wrong about the circumstances
of the evacuation of Attica.
But there are also chronological reasons for suspicion about the lines of
the decree in which the ostracized are recalled. If the decree is historical,
it was proposed at some time during the summer of 480; whether in June
or July is of secondary importance and depends on complicated reaaoning
about the chronology of the campaign of 480®. N o w the decree ofiFering
amnesty to the ostracized is dated in Aristotle's Athenian Constitution to
the year when Hypsichides was the Athenian archon®. I n most secondary
sources, Hypsichides and the vote of amnesty are dated to the Attic year
481/480, the year being reckoned from one summer to the next*. This date
' Hdt. 8.79, where Aristides is said to have crossed to Salamis from Aegina; how he
got to Aegina is not ezplained, but the whole story is suspiciotisly dramatic, as HIONETT
implies. It is also ably questioned by C. W. FOBNABA, The Hoplite Achievement at Psyt-
taleia, Journal of Hellenic Studies 86, 1966, 61—54.
' For a discussion of the chronology of 480, see HIONBTT. He does not accept the attempt
by J. LIABABBE, in Btdl. de correspondance hell^niqne 78, No. 1, 1964, 1—21, to prove
that the battle of ArtemiBiom and the concurrent battle of Thermopylae were in progress
on July 30, 480. LABABBE'S argument rests on a clever anecdote in the Strategie writer
Folyaenus, 1.32. SSALBT accepts LABABBE'S theory and dates the battle of Salamis to
middle or late September. He accounts for the long interval between Artemisium-Thermop-
ylae and Salamis by postulating a fairly serious attempt to hold the Athenian Acropolis.
There is some evidence in Herodotus 8.62 in favor of his opinion. If this is right, then the
Athenians changed (or never adopted) the plan envisioned by the decree, namely, to leave
only treasurers and priestesses on the Acropolis as a merely religious remnant. SEALBT
thus partly restates MTTNBO'S view in the Cambridge Ancient History, and BTTBT'S in his
History of Greece (ed. 3, London 1961 etc.), 278. If we accept this vievr, which we may
do regardless of the chronology that LABABBE proposes, we have another point at which
the decree departs fairly widely from the historical facts.
' Aiistotle, Athenian Constitution 22.8.
* So, for example, C. HIONETT, A History of the Athenian Constitution, Oxford 1952,
336 —337; G. BUSOLT, Griechische Geschichte, 3 vols. in 4, Gotha 1893—1904, vol. 2,
ed. 2, p. 651, n. 4; J. E. SAITDYS, Aristotle's Constitution of Athens, ed. 2, London 1912,
on 22.8.
would fit the Themistocles decree if we date the decree to midsummer 480,
before the new archon, Calliades, took office for 480/479.
I wish to point out that we have no independent evidence from chronog-
raphers or archon-lists that would fix Hypsichides in 481/480. The reader
of Dr. C a d o u x ' s leamed edition of the Attic archon-list will see that we
can recover the date of this archon only by combination And there is
good reason to think that Hypsichides actuaUy belongs in 482/481. His date
depends on our Interpretation of chapter 22 of Aristotle's Constitution.
Aristotle here lists several ostracisms, including that of Xanthippus, the
father of Pericles. Aristotle gives no date for the ostracism of Xanthippus,
but we can date it from the fact that Aristotle uses it as a chronological
reference-point and says that the Athenians discovered their famous mines
in Maroneia in the third year after this ostracism — namely, in the year
of Nicodemus. This archon in t u m is datable to 483/482 on the authority
of Dionysius of Halicamassus^. Therefore Xanthippus was ostracized in
the third year back (on inclusive reckoning), or in 485/484. This, then, is
the year that Aristotle used as a fixed reference-point.
Later in the same chapter of the Constitution, Aristotle says that "in
the fourth year afterward" the Athenians recaUed those who had been
ostracized. The fourth year after what? I t is natural to assume that he goes
back to the same fixed point he has just used, that is, the year of Xanthippus'
ostracism. The fourth year after 485/484 is 482/481. This year has no archon
attested by any chronographic source. As C a b c o p i n o saw, this is the year
to which we should assign Hypsichides®. No objection to this date can
arise from Aristotle's remark that the Athenians recalled the ostracized
"on account of the invasion of Xerxes". This statement, though perfectly
true, is only an editorial addition by Aristotle or his source, made to explain
why the amnesty was voted: it is not a chronological datum that can assure
US that the amnesty was passed while Xerxes' army was already marching
through Greece.
Therefore Aristotle's date for the amnesty-decree, which he must have
extracted from the Atthis, or History of Athens, by the fourth-century
historian Androtion^, shows that the amnesty had been voted at least one
year before the purported date of the Themistocles decree. Consequently,
the final section of the decree must be thrown out entirely; or we must
adopt a date for the amnesty-decree that will force us to emend the text
of Aristotle®. Probably the composer of the final section of the decree, on
the ostracized, overlooked the fact that the resolution ofFering them amnesty
was one year earlier than the date required by the Themistocles decree.
I t would have been hard for him to resist the tempting collocation of the
amnesty-decree and the rest of the text that we are considering.
The v a l u e of t h e decree. The Themistocles decree is still an ancient
inscription (even though not a historically authentic one), and we must
still add it to our mass of documentation about Greece. Some scholars who
deny the authenticity of the decree have given their hypotheses about the
circumstances in which the text came into existence®. We can never be
certain why such a decree was forged, unless we can point to some specific
legislation or political aim that a forgery would have advanced. My own
suggestion has been that the decree comes from an era when the Athenians
were reinterpreting that past from a patriotic point of view. This happened
especially during the decade from 357 (when the war broke out between
Athens and her allies) to 346 (when Athens made a temporary peace wlth
King Philip II of Macedon). During this period, the assumptions and practice
of demoo-acy went through a searching review. Part of the result was the
ill-informed reconstruction of the history of Athenian democracy that foimd
its way into fourth-century histories of Athens and then into Aristotle's
Constitution.
Along wlth the movement of rewriting the history of Athens, we might
imagine that some Athenians looked for positive evidence for the past glory
of their democracy. We might go farther, with Professor HABICJHT, and
believe that the creation of documents favorable to democracy took place
1 The usual assumption, that Aristotle normally follows Androtion for bis chronologi-
cally-ordered seriea qf facta, is stated by F E L I X JACOBY, Atthis, Oxford 1 9 4 9 , p. 2 3 5 ,
n. 36. This view is also sponsored by J. DAY and M. CHAMBEES, Aristotle's History of
Athenian Democracy, Berkeley and Los Angeles 1962, 5—12.
* If we try to reckon Aristotle's "fourth year afterward" from the last event mentioned
(the discovery of the mines), in 4 8 3 / 4 8 2 , we reach 4 8 0 / 4 7 9 ; and we cannot place the amnesty-
decree and the archon Hypsichides in this year, for CaUiades is abeady known to have
been archon in 4 8 0 / 4 7 9 . Therefore some historians have proposed to emend Aristotle's
text so that "fourth" becomes "third": see ü. v. WILAMOWITZ-MOEIX.EMDOKE'F, Aristoteles
und Athen, 2 vols., Berlin 1 8 9 3 , 1 . 2 5 — 2 6 ; CADOUX, loc. cit., p. 164, note 1, above), 1 1 8 ;
HiomsTT, op. cit. (p. 163, note 4 , above), 3 3 6 — 3 3 7 .
» HABICHT, pp. 2 6 — 3 5 , examines several possibilities and concludes that political aims
were paramount.
within the circle of politicians who would then be able to praise democracy
on the basis of this new evidence. But the Une between politicians and histo-
rians in Greece was not a firm one; and we do not have to assume that only
politicians in the strict sense wotdd have fabricated the Themistocles decree
and the other falsified documents aUegedly coming from the period of the
Persian Ware.
No matter who was the Compiler of the decree, he was an Athenian
devoted to restoring or confirming a patriotio view of Athenian history^.
He replaced the historically probable picture of the Athenians evacuating
their city in panic, after their failure to stop the Persians at Artemisium,
with another one that he found preferable: the well-organized Athenians,
guided by their democratic leader Themistocles, had planned it all from the
beginning. The supporters of the decree object that this veraion removes
the ground for the Athenian claim that only the failure of their allies to
stand and fight on land after Artemisium forced the evacuation. But what
of it? A subtle, historically-minded reader might find such an objection,
but the ordinary man of ancient Greece must have been inspired by the
Order, discipline, and Strategie finesse of the operation.
Someone in the Peloponnesian village of Troizen (which had given shelter
to some of the evacuees), for a reason what we do not yet know, chose an
oecasion in the third Century to have this manufactured decree transferred
to stone®. His general purpose was to honor Athens, and he must have re-
oeived his text from Athens. Whatever explanation we may one day have
for this kindly act, even in our present ignorance it shows us something
of the relations between ancient Greek city-states.
1 Even if, with HAHK, we assume that Craterus (or someone eise) at some time united
the parts of the decree into one text, we can hardly imagine that anyone but an Athenian
was responsible for the content of the insoription(8).
» We also do not know the procedure by which the inscription came into existence at
Troizen. Dow (2) suggests that a papyrus copy of the text was sent to Troizen, where the
stone was cut by a local stonecutter. MEBITT (2) agrees with JAMESON (2) in the belief that
the stone is of Pentelic marble: that is, it comes from Attica. If so, it was probably in-
scribed at Athens and then sent to Troizen. HABDT and PBITCHETT would like it explained
how the stone is known to be Pentelic.
J . and L. ROBERT, Bulletin 6pigraphique, in Revue des Stüdes grecques as follows: 74,
Jan.—June, 1961, no. 320; 75, Jan.—June, 1962, nos. 135 — 143; 76, Jan.—June, 1963,
n o s . 9 6 - 9 8 ; 7 7 , J a n . - J u n e , 1964, n o s . 1 8 2 — 1 8 7 ; 7 8 , J a n . — J u n e , 1 9 6 5 , n o s . 166-170.
Summaries of selected articles; authenticity firmly denied.
Supplementum Epigraphioum Graecum 18, 1962, no. 153, also pp. 245—247; 19, 1963,
no. 319. SEG will continue to resume the bibliography.
III. Discussions
P. AMAITDBT, Th^mistocle: un d^cret et an portrait. Bull, de la Facult^ des Lettres de
Strasbourg 38, No. 8, 1961, 413—435. Against, on grounds of style and historical im-
probability; argues t h a t the famons portrait bust from Ostia is also inanthentic.
Y. B:6QUIONON, Revue arch^ologique, No. 1, 1961, 57—59. Raises question of authen-
ticity.
H. BEBTE, Zur Themistokles-Inschrift von Troizen, Bayerische Akad. der Wissen-
schaften (Munich), Philos.-hist. Klasse, Sitzimgsberichte, No. 3, 1961, pp. 1—50. Acoepts
authenticity; largely a detailed reply to HABICHT. (Review by L. MOBBTTI, Rivista di
filologia, new ser., 40, No. 2, 1962, 194—196.)
W. DEN BOBB, Themistocles and Fifth-century Historiography, Mnemosyne, ser. 4, 15,
No. 3, 1962, 225—237. Decree is genuine and was passed in the absence of Attic peasants,
who were on their land and not voting. The xi^puYfxa of Hdt. 8.41 " m u s t have been pre-
ceded" by a large prior evacuation.
A. R. BTTBN, Persia and the Greeks, New York 1962, pp. 364—377 ("The Troizen
Inscription"). Author "inclines to the soeptical side", suspecting t h a t Athenians tried to
"restore" lost decrees of the Persian Wars. Independent translation, textual notes.
M. CHAMBEBS, The Authenticity of the Themistocles Decree, American Historical
Review 67, No. 2, 1962, 306—316. Against, with arguments largely similar t o those of
HABICHT a n d MOBBTTI.
N. G. CONOMIS, A Decree of Themistocles from Troizen: A Note, Klio, 40,1962, 44—50.
Comparison of the decree with authors who cite it; accepts authenticity, which " m a y
increase our surprise a t the misrepresentation of the facts by Herodotus and later authori-
ties".
A. DASCAI.AXIS, Problömes historiques autour de la bataille des Thermopyles, £cole
fran9aise d'Äthanes, Travaux et m6moires, etc., fasc. 12, Paris 1962, Appendice, pp. 189—
204 (also issued separately in July, 1961). Against authenticity on historical grounds;
notices of some articles already published.
G. DAUX, Chronique des fouillea 1959, Bulletin de correspondance hell^nique 84, No. 2,
1960, 685—688. Suspicious of authenticity; the first to suggest a third-century date for the
inscription (c. 250).
S. Dow (2), The Purported Decree of Themistokles: Stele and Inscription, American
Jonmal of Archaeology 66, No. 4, 1962, 353 — 368, with notes on the text by JAMESON,
p. 368. Many technical aspects of the form of the inscription; date, third Century.
H.-P. DBÖOEITÜIXEB, Bemerkungen zur Stele von Troizen, Gymnasium 68, Nos. 3—4,
1961, 230—233. Finds decree probably a forgery.
C. W. FOENABA, The Value of the Themistocles Decree, American Historical Review,
forthcoming. Herodotna 7.144 refers to the decree; accepta validity.
L. M. GLUSKENA, The Troizen Inscription with the Decree of Themistocles (in Russian),
Vestnik Drevnej Istorii, n. 86, 1963, 35—52.1 cannot read this; said to accept validity.
M. GUABDUCCI, Nnove osservazione sul decreto di Temistocle, Rivista di filologia, new
ser., 39, No. 1, 1961, 48—78. Agrees with MOEETTI, against; dates composition of text to
3 5 7 - 3 5 5 B.C.
C. HABICHT, Falsche Urkunden zur Geschichte Athens im Zeitalter der Perserkriege,
Hermes 89, No. 1, 1961, 1—35. The still classic Statement sgainst authenticity.
I . HAHN, Zur Echtheitsfrage der Themistokles-Inschrift, Acta Antiqua Acad. Scienti-
arum Hungaricae 13, Nos. 1—2, 1965, 27—39. The three parts of the decree (evacuation,
mobilization, recall of the ostracized) descended separately and were united by Craterus.
Accepta validity.
C. HIONBTT, Xerxes' Invasion of Greece, Oxford 1963, pp. 458—468. Against authenti-
city; written in January, 1961. Excellent treatment.
M. H. JAMESON (3), How Themistokles Planned the Battie of Salamis, Scientific Ameri-
can 204, No. 3, 1961, 111-120.
M. H. JAMESON (4), Waiting for the Barbarian: New Light on the Persian Wars, Greece
& Rome, new ser., 8, No. 1, 1961, 5—18.
M. H. JAMESON (5), The Provisions for Mobilization in the Decree of Themistokles,
Historia 12, No. 4, 1963, 385—404. Argues that ÜTtrjpeoia means "fighting men"; this
otherwise unexampled use points towards authenticity. Other details discussed.
J . F. LAZENBY, The Strategy of the Greeks in the Opening Campaign of the Persian
War, Hermes 92, No. 3, 1964, 264—284. Decree may be valid, but Artemisium was not a
holding action.
D. M. LEWIS, Notes on the Decree of Themistokles, Classioal Quarterly, new ser., 11,
No. 1, 1961, 61—66. Defends authenticity, sees no difficulties in rhetorical style.
IDA CAI.ABI LIMBNTANI, II decreto di Temistocle nella nuova stele di Trezene, Rivista
storioa italiana 73, No. 2, 1961, 345-355. Against.
G. MASSOU, N valore storiografico del decreto temistocleo di Trezene, Parola del passato
18, fasc. 93, 1963, 4 1 9 - 4 3 4 . Substantially accepts authenticity.
B. D. MKBITT (2), Greek Historical Studies (Semple Lecture), Cincinnati 1962, pp. 21—34.
Defends validity, replies to HABICHT and other critics.
B. D. MEBITT (3), Greek Inscriptions, Hesperia 33, No. 2, 1964, 175—178. Reply to
Dow (2): examples of Attic inscriptions with lettering resembling that of the decree;
assertion that the stone is Pentelic marble and was inscribed in Athens.
L. MOEETTI (1), Nota al decreto di Temistocle trovato a Trezene, Rivista di filologia, new
ser., 38, No. 4, 1960, 390—402. First published article critical of authenticity; historical
arguments since stated by others.
L. MORBTTI (2), Studi sul decreto di Temistocle, Rivista di filologia, new ser., 42, No. 1,
1964, 117 — 124. Summary and review of the scholarship since M.'s earlier article. Maintains
his critical position.
W. K. PBITCHETT, Herodotos and the Themistokles Decree, American Journal of
Archaeology 66, No. 1, 1962, 43—47. C!onfirms H A B I C H T ' S reading, "ten marines", in line
24; follows H A B I C H T on authenticity, upholds Herodotus as a soiirce.
A. E. RAUBITSCHEK (1), The Covenant of Plataea, Transactions of the American Philo-
logical Association 91, 1960, 178 — 183. Accepts the "C!ovenant of Plataea"; its authenticity
implies that of the decree. ''
A. E. RAUBITSCHEK (2), Herodotus and the Inscriptions, Bull, of the Institute of Classical
Studies, Univ. of London, 8, Part 1, 1961, 59—61. Accepts decree.
F. SCHACHBBMEYB, Die Themistokles-Stele und ihre Bedeutvmg für die Vorgeschichte
der Schlacht von Salamis, Jahreshefte des Osterreichischen Archäologischen Institutes in
Wien 46, 1963, 158—175. The decree is genuine; Themistocles persuaded Delphi to give
the Oracle fizing Salamis as the place for the crucial battle.
R . S E A L E Y , A Note on the Supposed Themistocles-Decree, Hermes 9 1 , No. 3 , 1 9 6 3 ,
3 7 6 — 3 7 7 . Postulates a serious attempt to hold the Acropolis, which the decree does not
envision; concludes that the decree is inauthentic.
J . H. THIEL, The Inscription from Troezen, Med. der Konin. Nederlandse Akad. van
Wetenschappen, Afd. Letterkunde, new ser., 25, No. 8,1962, pp. 1 —19. Decree is authentic
but must have been followed by a rider "annonncing the beginning of the evacuation"
when it became necessary.
M. TBEU, Zur neuen Themistokles-Inschiift, Historia 12, No. 1, 1963, 47 —69. Defends
authenticity.
H. T. WALUNOA, Die inscriptie van Troizen, Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis 77, No. 1,
1964, 25—38. Seeks to combine Herodotiis and the decree.
F . R . W Ü S T , A Decree of Themistokles from Troizen, Gymnasium 6 8 , Nos. 3 — 4 , 1 9 6 1 ,
2 3 3 - 2 3 9 . Against.
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