DID THEOPHRASTUS HELP DELIVER ERESUS FROM TYRANTS?*

Plutarch ’ s Moralia mentions that Theophrastus twice delivered his native city from tyrants (1097B, 1126F), a detail that has been difficult to make coherent with our existing understanding of Theophrastus ’ life. Theophrastus seems to be in the wrong place at the wrong time for this to have been possible, or to have been too undemocratic and scholastic a philosopher to have wanted to participate in these struggles in the first place. By more closely examining the nature of Plutarch ’ s comment and the evidence for Theophrastus ’ political orientation and character, this article argues that there are, however, grounds on which to take Plutarch ’ s report seriously. It presents a case for Theophrastus ’ participation in two liberation struggles in 334 and 332, without complicating the trajectory of his accompanying Aristotle to both Macedonia and Athens during this period.

Theophrastus mentions an estate in the town of Stagira in Macedonia in his will (Diog. Laert. 5.52). Finally, the list of Theophrastus' works includes a treatise entitled Callisthenes, or On Bereavement, revealing a deep friendship between Theophrastus and Callisthenes, the nephew of Aristotle who was likely taught by the two philosophers alongside Alexander (Diog. Laert. 5.44). 4 There is another biographical detail, however, that makes the idea of Theophrastus accompanying Aristotle initially seem less probable. This is that, as Plutarch claims, Theophrastus 'twice delivered' Eresus, his native city on the island of Lesbos, 'from tyrants' (Mor. 1126F). 5 This presents a complication because any of the opportunities to carry out the liberation of Eresus from tyranny would fall either in the period in which Theophrastus and Aristotle are thought to be in Macedon, or in the period in which Theophrastus and Aristotle are both thought to have already arrived in Athens. 6 While there has been much debate over the exact timing of the struggles against tyranny in Eresus in this period, this holds true for the two major sets of dates proposed: both for the standard argument that there were three upheavals in 336, 334 and 332, and for the recent suggestion that only these two latter upheavals took place. 7 In both cases, the argument runs that the Macedonians, led either by Philip in 336, or by Alexander in 334 and 332, overthrew the city's tyrants and replaced them with a democracy. 8 If we wish to take this comment by Plutarch seriously, it has seemed that we would therefore need to revise our understanding of where Theophrastus was in this period. By looking at the context of Plutarch's claims, I suggest that this is unnecessary, proposing a chronology in which Theophrastus could have participated in these struggles without compromising the dates he is reported to have been in Macedon and then in Athens.
Theophrastus has often been thought to be a reclusive philosopher who, if occasionally interested in participating in public life, swayed towards supporting oligarchy and History of his Development, transl. R. Robinson (Oxford, 1948 2 ), 115-16 n. 1; W.K.C. Guthrie, A History of Greek Philosophy (Cambridge, 1981), 6.35 n. 1. If both Jaeger and Guthrie question this detail, they are certain that, in Jaeger's words, 'Theophrastus joined Aristotle at least as early as the Macedonian period' or, in Guthrie's words, 'Theophrastus followed him to Macedonia'. 4 On the question of whether Callisthenes was Alexander's fellow pupil, see T.S. Brown, 'Callisthenes and Alexander', AJPh 70 (1949), 225-48, at 228 n. 13. A fragment of Theophrastus' treatise on Callisthenes is paraphrased in Cic. Tusc. 3.21. All quotations from Diogenes are from R.D. Hicks's edition and translation (Cambridge, MA, 1925

TRUSTING THE EPICUREANS OR PLUTARCH?
Plutarch mentions this detail about Theophrastus in an attempt to reveal a contradiction present in the Epicurean Colotes' arguments. Colotes, Plutarch argues, recognizes the need for good laws but, in the same breath, criticizes all those who participate in public life. This latter position is consistent with the typical Epicurean praise of the maxim λάθε βιώσας, 'live unnoticed', the notion that a life away from public service is most conducive to happiness. 14 Here in his Reply to Colotes in Defence of the Other Philosophers (1126A-F), as in his Is 'Live Unknown' a Wise Precept? (εἰ καλῶς εἴρηται τὸ λάθε βιώσας), a brief treatise dedicated to the subject, Plutarch argues against this ideal. His allusion to Theophrastus' liberation of Eresus is used in this vein, concluding a litany of examples that he gives of philosophers who carried out acts of political significance.
Plutarch begins by detailing the ways in which the philosophers Colotes critiqued were in fact responsible for creating or upholding the laws he valorizes. 15 He then uses these examples to ask Colotes whether any public actions of similar import have 'proceeded from Epicurus' philosophy and maxims?' (1126E). This is not, Plutarch clarifies, a question of listing Epicurean slayers of tyrants, champions of battle, advisers of kings, leaders of people or martyrs for just causes-all of which, we might think, would present too much of a contradiction with the doctrine of living unnoticed. Rather it is the question of which of their sages ever 'took ship in his country's interests, went on an embassy, or expended a sum of money?' (1126E). These, Plutarch says, seem to be the kinds of public actions admired by Epicurus, given his 'solemn glorification' of the one instance when his follower Metrodorus assisted a Syrian royal officer who had been arrested (1126F). If this is the case, Plutarch demands, how would Epicurus have reacted if a philosopher did 'as great a thing as Aristotle, who restored his native city which Philip had destroyed, or Theophrastus who twice delivered his from tyrants?' (1126F). The whole Nile, Plutarch concludes, would have to be turned into papyrus, before Epicurus and his followers 'wearied of writing about it' (1126F).
While we should be wary of some interpretation bias here, given that Plutarch would be keen to emphasize (or over-emphasize) the political achievements of past philosophers, both Plutarch's extensive knowledge of the Theophrastean corpus as well as his earlier critiques of Colotes for not having first-hand familiarity with Theophrastus' writings (1115A) provide enough grounding to see whether this testimony can be forked out as one of the 'rare gobbets of fact' swimming in this ancient biographer's stew of 'dubious inference and unreliable anecdote'. 16 The fact that Plutarch is happy to use Theophrastus' political engagement as a final means to clinch this argument, and that he has previously had Theon invoke Theophrastus' involvement in Eresus to a similar effect (1097B), gives this search for truth further foundation. 17 Few biographers, however, incorporate Theophrastus' potential participation in these liberation struggles in their histories of his life. 18 Mejer's account, which registers but dismisses these two Plutarchan comments, reveals two reasons why. First, that we are lacking evidence for a journey back to Lesbos after Theophrastus reaches Athens with Aristotle: 'it is unlikely', Mejer says, that Theophrastus 'twice liberated his fatherland from tyrants', as 'we have no information that Theophrastus ever returned to live in Eresus once he had left for Athens'. 19  Theophrastus finds further support in Diogenes' account of a letter that Theophrastus sent to Phanias in which he used the word σχολαστικόν: 'scholarly' or 'free from political and business activities', in Mejer's translation. 22 While it is not especially clear to whom Theophrastus is referring here-with Diogenes' line running, 'in this letter he [Theophrastus] has called someone "pedant"', ἐν ταύτῃ τῇ ἐπιστολῇ σχολαστικὸν ὠνόμακε (Diog. Laert. 5.37)-Mejer rests on a tradition of reading this to be self-referential, in the assumption that between σχολαστικόν and ὠνόμακε the word αὐτόν has gone missing. 23 Mejer is careful to note that this reading of Theophrastus' life as secluded or scholarly 'is not contradicted' by the various stories of how Theophrastus 'had good relations with some rulers', 'spoke before the Areopagus' or 'worked to secure the return of the orator Dinarchus from his exile', as, in his view, these would have all been actions expected by 'famous intellectuals' in Athens. 24 Looking closer at the rulers with whom Theophrastus had good relations-how, for example, he was received by Cassander and how Demetrius of Phaleron helped him obtain a garden of his own (Diog. Laert. 5.37-9)-we might detect here a third reason why Plutarch's details have seemed anathema to our understanding of Theophrastus' biography: that his public actions make him seem supportive of oligarchy, and so would make it suspect that he twice participated in struggles that aimed to replace tyranny with democracy.
It is worth seeing what happens, however, when we apply pressure on this orthodoxy. We might first attempt to explain the lack of evidence for Theophrastus returning to Eresus after his arrival in Athens in 335/4 by arguing that he returned to his native city from Macedon instead. explain why we have no record for a voyage to Eresus. We could equally imagine that Theophrastus' participation in these liberation struggles did not require him to be in situ, making redundant the need for a documented return. I will come to an evaluation of these two hypotheses below. We might secondly point to how far Mejer's argument about Theophrastus' preference for a quiet life rests on trusting two questionable details: the Epicurean characterization of Theophrastus and the idea that Theophrastus' use of the word 'scholarly' is indeed a reference to himself. Neither of these details is, however, as solid as it appears. The Epicurean perspective is compromised by how the full version of the Philodemus fragment, as restored by Sudhaus-the version quoted by Mejerseems to give rise to an interpretation contrary to the one Mejer derives. If with Sudhaus we read the line following Mejer's extracted citation (fr. 16, lines 10-13) to be [ it appears that Philodemus did not endorse the view that Theophrastus had no political experience. 25 In lines 3-10 of the fragment, Philodemus seems simply to be reporting views on Theophrastus' ignorance of politics (hence the accusative and infinitive construction in Text A). In lines 10-13, in Sudhaus's rendering (Text B), Philodemus would then be disqualifying the reproach in question. Even if Sudhaus's rendering is incorrect, relying on Philodemus' remarks would remain problematic, with Fortenbaugh commenting that it is 'more than likely Philodemus' characterization of Theophrastus is unfair and perhaps influenced by Theophrastus' quarrel with Dicaearchus'. 26 However, either way, the fragmentary nature of the evidence here makes it very difficult to use this as one of our foundations for a view of Theophrastus as a purely theoretical philosopher.
The self-characterization as 'scholarly' is equally shaky given how far, as Sollenberger comments, 'it is by no means certain that the insertion of αὐτόν is correct'. 27 Indeed, the text of the manuscripts preserved in Dorandi's recent edition only implies that Theophrastus called someone σχολαστικός, not that he applied the term to himself. 28 If both this emendation and the Epicurean perspective stand on unstable ground, we find ourselves without much on which to build an image of Theophrastus as a private philosopher. If instead of these details we begin with the list of Theophrastus' treatises, we would not need to work around Theophrastus' engagement in public life, as Mejer does, but would find this to be coherent with his philosophical interests in rulership, legislation, education and government.
Furthermore, we need not imagine that Theophrastus' interest in politics was strictly tied to monarchy or oligarchy, despite his evident connection with Cassander and Demetrius of Phaleron. Lane Fox nuances these existing pointers to Theophrastus' monarchic or oligarchic tendencies by describing how Themistius 'knew a tradition' that Theophrastus was hostile to Cassander (Or. 23.285c) and by looking at how Theophrastus left copies of his will both with a high-powered  . 7), 245 suggests that 'Plutarch's anecdotes could, therefore, refer to any of the exiles or refusals of readmission seen under Alexander (334, 332, and 323), Philip III (319), or Antigonos Monophthalmos (306-301)', I do not consider dates after 332 as possible candidates for Theophrastus' participation. My rejection of 306-301 and 319 rests on the importance that I will claim for Theophrastus' participation involving the persuasion of a ruler, and the assumption that, owing to his existing relationship with Alexander, Alexander would be the most likely candidate. See n. 44 below for the reasons why I dismiss a date around 323 as an option. 33 Lane Fox (n. 10), 133-4. 34 This seems to be, in part, because Lane Fox does not think that Theophrastus went to Mieza. In his account of Alexander, Theophrastus is not mentioned as being present with Aristotle in Philip's court, but only referred to in passing as a 'pupil' of Aristotle: R.J. Lane Fox, Alexander the Great (London, 1973), 45, 57, 206, 246, 364. 35 Lane Fox (n. 10), 160-1 n. 62 notes that 'various "liberations" from tyrants' can be inferred from the epigraphical evidence: 'one in or before 336, one (perhaps) in 334, one in 332'. It is not made fully clear, however, why this parenthesized adverb has found itself before the second attempt. chronology coherent with Mejer's point that we have no evidence of Theophrastus returning to Lesbos from Athens.
But an even simpler explanation might be in order. Could it not be, as Lott suggests, that 'Plutarch must mean that Theophrastos spoke with Alexander on behalf of his patria' while he was in Macedonia? 36 Indeed, in his questioning about whether any Epicureans carried out acts of public service, Plutarch clarifies, as we have seen, that what he means by 'public service' is not going off to slay tyrants or champion in battle, but going 'on an embassy' or expending 'a sum of money' for one's 'country's interests' (1126E). 37 With this we might then ask if Theophrastus could not have 'twice delivered' his city 'from tyrants' in Plutarch's view, by going on an embassy to restore his native city's democracy, rather than participating in the battle in Eresus himself.
If Lott's suggestion of a kind of politics by proxy can help us understand how Theophrastus might have liberated Eresus, his argument about when this would have happened contains a complication. Lott pioneered the argument that there is only evidence for two tyrannies in Eresus, and therefore for only two liberation attempts. The first liberation struggle in 336, he maintains, has been concocted by scholars 'in order to make Philip a champion of democracy in Asia Minor alongside his son Alexander'. 38 In Lott's view, Philip aided the tyrants Apollodorus, Hermon and Heraeus to come to power around 338. Their tyranny, he maintains, was overthrown only in 334, in part as a result of Theophrastus' persuasion of Alexander. This was an action that Theophrastus had cause to take again in 332, after Eresus was seized by the mercenary Memnon of Rhodes and given two new pro-Persian tyrants, Agonippus and Eurysilaus.
The complication with this chronology is that, if we think that Theophrastus' persuasion of Alexander took place in person, it is unclear how Theophrastus might have solicited Alexander to help Eresus on this later date. By 332 Theophrastus was already in Athens, and Alexander was already enmeshed in the attempt to conquer Tyre, Gaza and Egypt, having set out from Macedon to Asia in May 334. 39 While it seems that Theophrastus could easily have been able to speak 'with Alexander on behalf of his patria' in early 334-especially if we follow scholars who argue for 334 (or after) rather than 335 as the year in which Theophrastus 'joined [Aristotle] on his return to Athens'-this is much less probable two years later. 40 Lott does not, however, leave us at this impasse, but instead offers one suggestion for how Theophrastus might have again influenced Alexander in 332. In his view, when Memnon died shortly after his conquest of Eresus, the Macedonians set out to recapture the city. When they were successful, Agonippus and Eurysilaus were promptly exiled and then sent to Alexander in Egypt. One note in Lehmann's recent argument for the presence of two tyrannies in Eresus lays out a path for an alternative approach. Maintaining the notion that liberation attempts were only in 334 and 332, Lehmann comments that Theophrastus might have participated in either of them not only through direct action, or 'personal diplomatic influence', but also through sending 'letters to the king', participating in Eresian politics with an even greater degree of physical distance. 43 If Theophrastus might have advocated for the liberation of Eresus by means of a letter, Lott's initial dates of 334 and 332 would no longer seem so difficult to maintain. While in 334 Theophrastus could have spoken to Alexander in person, in 332 Theophrastus could have written to him instead. This would be coherent with the 'three books of Letters' Theophrastus is said to have written (Diog. Laert. 5.46), as well as with the well-known tradition of ancient letter-writing between philosophers and statesmen, an important tradition in the Hellenistic world. 44 With this hypothesis, we would gain a plausible sense of two dates on which Theophrastus could have twice delivered his native city from tyrants, consistent with our existing knowledge of Theophrastus' biography and-unlike Lane Fox's conjecture-with the recent dismissal of 336 as a potential liberation attempt.

CONCLUSION
This paper brings together two fields: scholarship on the life of Theophrastus and on the tyrannies at Eresus. By maintaining the chronology taken from the former and pairing it with the dates and details provided by the latter we do not, it then seems, find ourselves at such a crossroads. This is because Theophrastus' participation in these struggles seems the action of the philosopher, not the fighter, with a strategy of convincing Alexander of the need to free his native city from tyranny on two different occasions. At neither point does it seem that Theophrastus would have needed to be elsewhere than in Mieza or Athens in order to do so. Rather, he could have exploited his position in the Macedonian court to exercise influence on Alexander or communicated with him by letter from Athens. If the chronology and the geography of Theophrastus' life in this way permit taking Plutarch's anecdotes seriously, so does a more nuanced account of Theophrastus' character and politics. By the possible truth of these comments in the Moralia we are provided with even more of a sense that Theophrastus was not a philosopher as unfriendly to democracy or to the participation in public life as previously thought.
This has two major consequences for our interpretation of Theophrastus' works. It first warns us against imagining that his many treatises on monarchy must contain a position supportive of this type of rule. Examining what we know of these works from the perspective of Plutarch's biographical detail, we might even start to discern a Theophrastean approach to monarchy directed towards alerting readers to how easily it can become tyrannical. 45 This could help to clarify why we have a report stating that his On Kingship (Περὶ βασιλείας) criticizes the tyranny of Hiero (FHS&G 612)-since, if fragments on tyranny naturally fit in a work entitled Περὶ μοναρχίας, they require an explanation in a work with Theophrastus' chosen title, given that βασιλεία is the good form of monarchy for Aristotle (Pol. 1279b5). Plutarch's detail could further help us to see potential critiques of tyranny in what remains of Theophrastus' political works, exposing a possible coherence between Theophrastus' remarks on Hiero, his critiques of the tyrant Dionysius (FHS&G 609; FHS&G 548), and the treatise he is said to have written On Tyranny (Diog. Laert. 5.45).
Opening up the perspective that Theophrastus could have been inclined towards democracy-at least at one point in his life-would secondly allow us to dissociate his works from being necessarily supportive of oligarchy. An ambivalence towards oligarchy would give coherence to the warning in On the Choice of Magistrates that, as one commentator puts it, 'a simple property qualification is a poor standard for evaluating prospective magistrates'. 46 It would also provide us with a new impetus to try to understand whether a political intention could be present in the one existing work by Theophrastus which directly engages with mocking a figure representing oligarchy: his Characters. 47 If we have reason to believe that Theophrastus could have participated twice in the liberation of Eresus from tyranny, we have reason, in sum, to approach his corpus from a changed point of view: one which considers how he might be engaging with politics not only differently but also more extensively than we have previously thought.