The Thebans enter the southwestern Peloponnesus in…
369 BCE
The Thebans enter the southwestern Peloponnesus in the winter (a most unusual season for Greek warfare) of 370-369, and penetrate the valley of the Eurotas (modern Evrótas).
For the first time in at least two centuries, an enemy army is in sight of Sparta.
The subject population of helots revolts, and Epaminondas re-creates the state of Messenia, which has been enslaved by the Spartans for three hundred years.
Epaminondas founds the city of Messene for the descendants of exiled Messenians as a heavily fortified city-state independent of Sparta.
The site dominates the fertile Messenian plain; with Megalopolis, Mantineia, and Argos, it forms a strategic barrier, conceived by Epaminondas, to contain Spartan ambition.
The summit of Mount Ithómi, 2two thousand six hundred and eighteen feet (seven hundred and ninety-eight meters) in altitude, serves as the acropolis, but apparently it had been fortified earlier as well.
The “state-of-the-art” fortifications of fourth-century Messene, an artillery-conscious circuit, stretch for nearly four miles over Mount Ithome.
Messene’s famously strong walls, with their thirty towers, are designed to protect against technically advanced artillery-and-siege warfare.
While the new city flourishes, the province remains depopulated.
Messene soon joins the league of the Achaeans, a confederation of small cities in the northern Peloponnesus and southeastern Thessaly formed as a defense against pirates.