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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2013
Thucydides (iv. 36) describes the last phase of the long contest which led to the surrender of the 292 surviving Spartans on Sphacteria.
They had gradually retired to the summit of the hill at the north end of the island,—an altitude of something under 500 feet, and were making their last stand in the neighbourhood of the παλαιὸν ἔπυμα mentioned by Thucydides, which had once defended this summit, and of which small fragments are yet to be seen. These fragments are still there, for since prehistoric times this practically waterless island has probably never had inhabitants except a few nomad goatherds.
The ground,—working round west, north, east, south,—is as follows, and, the photographs reproduced will help to make it clear (Fig. 1, and Plan) To the S.W. is the long slope up which the Spartans had been slowly retiring from their camp on the low level in the centre of the island. To the west the hill falls, not very steeply, to a saddle; and from this and all sides except (as they thought) the east, the Spartans were exposed to attack; then comes a shoulder before the ground slopes away westward to the open sea.
1 Mr.Grundy's, survey (J.H.S. vol. xvi.)Google Scholar makes both Pylos and Sphacteria 450 feet in height, and their equality is confirmed by photographs.
2 This so far as we could judge might, with a little wading, have proved a possible track, but the probabilities seem all in favour of the other, and we are not in a position to assert the practicability of the water's edge route.
3 It can easily be identified also in the photograph taken from Voithio-Kilia (Fig. 7).