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Chapter 13 § 95. The Burial Truce and the Trophy after the Battle.
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A Day in Old Athens, by William Stearns Davis (1910) Professor of Ancient History at the University of Minnesota |
Chapter XIII. The Armed Forces of Athens.
95. The Burial Truce and the Trophy after the Battle.--A few
hours after the battle, while the victors are getting breath and
refreshing themselves, a shamefaced herald, bearing his sacred
wand of office, presents himself. He is from the defeated army,
and comes to ask a burial truce. This is the formal confession of
defeat for which the victors have been waiting. It would be gross
impiety to refuse the request; and perhaps the first watch of the
nigh is spent by detachments of both sides in burying or burning
the dead.
The fates of prisoners may be various. They may be sold as slaves.
If the captors are pitiless and vindictive, it is not contrary to
the laws of war to put the prisoners to death in cold blood; but
by the fourth century B.C. Greeks are becoming relatively humane.
Most prisoners will presently be released against a reasonable
ransom paid by their relatives.
The final stage of the battle is the trophy: the visible sign on
the battlefield that here such-and-such a side was victorious. The
limbs are lopped off a tree, and some armor captured from the foe
is hung upon it. After indecisive battles sometimes both sides
set up trophies; in that case a second battle is likely to settle
the question. Then when the victors have recovered from their
own happy demoralization, they march into the enemy's country; by
burning all the farmsteads, driving off the cattle, filling up the
wells, girdling the olive and fruit trees, they reduce the defeated
side (that has fled to its fortified town) to desperation. If
they have any prisoners, they threaten to put them to death. The
result, of course, is frequently a treaty of peace in favor of the
victors.
This resource page is copyright © 2002 N.S. Gill.