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Now the way in which Miltiades had made himself master of Lemnos was
the following. There were certain Pelasgians whom the Athenians once
drove out of Attica; whether they did it - justly or unjustly I
cannot say, since I only know what is reported concerning it, which
is the following: Hecataeus, the son of Hegesander, says in his
History that it was unjustly. "The Athenians," according to him,
"had given to the Pelasgi a tract of land at the foot of Hymettus as
payment for the wall with which the Pelasgians had surrounded their
citadel. This land was barren, and little worth at the time; but the
Pelasgians brought it into good condition; whereupon the Athenians
begrudged them the tract, and desired to recover it. And so, without
any better excuse, they took arms and drove out the Pelasgians."
But the Athenians maintain that they were justified in what they did.
"The Pelasgians," they say, "while they lived at the foot of
Hymettus, were wont to sally forth from that region and commit
outrages on their children. For the Athenians used at that time to
send their sons and daughters to draw water at the fountain called 'the
Nine Springs,' inasmuch as neither they nor the other Greeks had
any household slaves in those days; and the maidens, whenever they
came, were used rudely and insolently by the Pelasgians. Nor were
they even content thus; but at the last they laid a plot, and were
caught by the Athenians in the act of making an attempt upon their
city. Then did the Athenians give a proof how much better men they
were than the Pelasgians; for whereas they might justly have killed
them all, having caught them in the very act of rebelling, the;
spared their lives, and only required that they should leave the
country. Hereupon the Pelasgians quitted Attica, and settled in
Lemnos and other places." Such are the accounts respectively of
Hecataeus and the Athenians.
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