<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI<br/> <span class="subhead">THE LAND OF HELLAS</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> stories of gods and heroes are not pure history. They
are myths or legends which have grown with the ages, until
sometimes they are told as though they were true.</p>
<p>Although the tales I have been telling you of the early
days of Greece are myths, yet the Greeks who lived in later
times would often speak of them as though they had actually
happened.</p>
<p>I am going to tell you now, not of gods or heroes, but
of the true deeds of mortal men. And first of all you will
wish to hear a little about the land in which the ancient
Greeks lived.</p>
<p>It was named, as you already know, Hellas, while the
inhabitants were called Hellenes.</p>
<p>But Hellas and her people had another name given to
them by the Romans, who called Hellas Graecia, and the
Hellenes Graeci, from a tribe that dwelt in a part of the
country known as Epirus. Epirus was not a very important
region, but it was well known to the Romans who dwelt in
the south of Italy. We have altered these Roman names a
little and call Hellas Greece, the Hellenes Greeks.</p>
<p>If you open your atlas at the map of Europe, you will
find in the south the little country of Greece, which although
it is so small has yet flung its influence over all the wide
world.</p>
<p>On three sides Greece is bounded by the Mediterranean
Sea, and the country is now usually known as the Balkan
Peninsula.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span></p>
<p>Greece is a land of great mountains. Of its loftiest
summit; Olympus, which in ancient days was the abode of
the gods, you have already read.</p>
<p>The coast-line is broken up much as is the coast of
Scotland, by arms of the sea which run far inland, so far
inland that it is easy to reach the water from any part of the
country.</p>
<p>Close to the shores of Greece lie the islands of the Ægean
Sea. In these islands many Greeks settled, so that they
became an important part of Greece. The Ægean Sea we
now call the Archipelago.</p>
<p>In the time of Homer all Greeks were called Achaeans.
But in later days, only those Greeks were called Achaeans who
lived in the narrow strip of land in northern Peloponnesus
called Achaea.</p>
<p>The ancient Achaeans dwelt in the valleys, which were
cut off from one another by great spurs of mountains. They
were united by an ancient league, and quarrelled less with one
another than did the other peoples of Greece.</p>
<p>Besides the Achaeans there were three other great races
in Greece.</p>
<p>The Dorians came from a little country called Doris, near
the famous Pass of Thermopylae, of which you have still
to hear. The Ionians dwelt on the east side of the Ægean
Sea, that is, they lived on the coast of Asia, while the Æolians
were scattered here and there throughout Greece.</p>
<p>All these different tribes were Greeks, and they were
proud of their name, counting all other peoples barbarians,
and despising them because they were not Greeks. Many of
them were traders or adventurers from Asia, and they entered
the new country from the north-east, through Thessaly, and
that was not a difficult journey.</p>
<p>Others crossed over from Asia by sea to search for a new
home. But their galleys were rough, uncomfortable vessels,
in which there was little room for the many who embarked.
When storms arose they suffered great misery, huddled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span>
closely together on their small and unseaworthy boats.
Fear, too, took hold of them and the horror of death.</p>
<p>So the wanderers were glad when they saw the many
little islands that were studded here and there over the
Ægean Sea. Some of these islands, it is true, were mere
rocks, desolate and without water. But there were others
where people had already settled and made a home. On these
the strangers landed to fight with the inhabitants, until, by
the help of the gods, they had conquered and taken possession
of them. Here they feasted, glad of heart that the perils of
the sea were now at an end.</p>
<p>In the Heroic Age the kings of the different tribes were
believed to have descended from the gods, and each country
or state had its own king. And so it was when the Heroic
Age had passed away. Each tribe or little nation, living in
its own valley or plain, still had its own separate sovereign,
and each soon built for itself a city. The city might be
small, but it was always surrounded by a wall, which was
built for defence. If there was no wall it was not a city but
a village, however large it might be.</p>
<p>In those days kings were not ashamed to work. They
were often to be seen in the fields at harvest time, not looking
idly on, but toiling side by side with their people.</p>
<p>Odysseus, King of Ithaca, is said to have built his own
bedroom as well as his own boats. He claimed too to be a
skilful ploughman and reaper. And still, for many years
after the age of Odysseus, kings worked as hard as he had
done.</p>
<p>The queens and princesses were as diligent as the kings.
Often they were to be found, like Penelope, sitting at a loom
weaving or working beautiful embroideries. They even went
to the well themselves to fetch water, and were sometimes
to be seen by the riverside, where they helped to wash the
linen of the household.</p>
<p>In battle the king was always on the field, riding before
his army in a war chariot.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span></p>
<p>When peace reigned he often sat in the market-place to
judge his people. Each suppliant told his own tale and
brought his own witnesses. The elders of the city then gave
their judgment of the case, after which the king, taking his
sceptre in his hand, stood up to pronounce sentence.</p>
<p>But above all else the king was the chief priest of his
people, offering sacrifices for them, while they, with due
reverence, looked upon him as a god.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span></p>
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