Aristagoras
Aristagoras was the leader of
Miletus in the late
6th century BC and early
5th century BC.
He was the son of Molpagoras, and son-in-law (and nephew) of
Histiaeus, whom the
Persians had set up as
tyrant of Miletus. Aristagoras gained control of the city when Histiaeus was appointed as an advisor to the Persian king
Darius I. When
Naxos revolted in
502 BC, the Persian overlords of the island asked Aristagoras for help, and he agreed in the assumption that he would be recognized as ruler of the island. He allied with
Artaphernes, the Persian
satrap of
Lydia, and was given a fleet of ships. Unfortunately for the invasion, Aristagoras quarrelled with the admiral
Megabates, who then informed the Naxians that the fleet was coming.
The invasion failed and the alliance with Artaphernes fell apart. In an attempt to save himself from the wrath of Persia he began to plan a revolt with the Milesians and the other
Ionians. Meanwhile, Histiaeus, from his post in Persia, hoped to begin his own revolt in Miletus, so that the Persians would crush it and reinstall him as tyrant. In Miletus in
499 BC, Aristagoras was supported by most of the citizens, except the
historian Hecataeus. A
democracy was established, and soon the other Ionian cities had also revolted against the Persians, thus beginning the
Ionian Revolt.
Aristagoras then travelled to mainland
Greece to find support for the revolt. In
Sparta he met with the king
Cleomenes I, and argued that a pre-emptive invasion of Persia would be easy; there were many riches along the way, and the capital of
Susa was "only" three months away. Cleomenes rejected his offer, but Aristagoras found more success in
Athens, because, according to
Herodotus, it was easier to convince an assembly of thousands of Athenians than it was to convince one Spartan king.
With Athenian help Aristagoras led the attack on
Sardis, the Persian capital in Ionia. However, when the Ionian Revolt was eventually put down (and Histiaeus restored as tyrant), Aristagoras fled to
Thrace, where he attempted to establish a
colony on the
Strymon river, at the same site as the later Athenian colony of
Amphipolis. He was killed by the Thracians while attacking a neighbouring Thracian town.
Another
Aristagoras was the Persian tyrant of
Cyme in Ionia, who was overthrown by the above Aristagoras during the Ionian Revolt.