During a sacrifice presided over by King
Agesilaus II and an unnamed seer (Teisamenos?), the omens proved to be very bad. Xenophon bluntly indicated that the seer foresaw "a most terrible conspiracy". Several days later, an unnamed man denounced the conspiracy of Cinadon to the
ephors, saying that he had accompanied Cinadon to the
agora, where Cinadon had asked him to count the
Spartiates in the crowd of about 4,000 assembled there. Cinadon thus indicated that only 40 people present were peers – comprising the king,
ephors,
gerousia, and other
full citizens, and that these 40 were significantly outnumbered. He also stated that the Spartans proper were the enemy of the vast majority of the crowd, who were therefore potential allies of the conspirators. The informer added that Cinadon had gathered around himself a number of other disaffected men (of those classes listed above) who also hated the Spartans, "for whenever among these classes any mention was made of
Spartiatae, no one was able to conceal the fact that he would be glad to eat them raw". The informer added that while only some conspirators were armed, the rest had access to tools and implements that could serve as makeshift weapons, such as axes and sickles. The ephors did not immediately arrest Cinadon for fear that this would precipitate the revolt. By means of an elaborate ruse, they sent him to the
Elean frontier at
Aulon in
Messenia. His escort was composed of members of the king's guard carefully selected by their commander. An additional detachment of cavalry (
hippeis) was sent along as reinforcements. Cinadon was interrogated at Aulon, whereupon he revealed the names of the principal co-conspirators. When word came back to Sparta, they were then arrested. On Cinadon's return to Sparta, he was further questioned until all his accomplices were named. Cinadon and the conspirators were then bound, collared, and "led around the city, struck with whips and goads as they went". When asked about the reason for his coup, Cinadon replied that it was so that he might be inferior to no one in Lacedaemonia. Polyaenus, in his short version of this event (cited above), added that the when the
ephors received word from Aulon, they "ordered the execution of the other conspirators while he was still absent, and in this way they suppressed the conspiracy without any resistance". Where he got this information is not known. ==Notes==