Sophocles was born in the rural
deme (small community) of
Colonus Hippius in
Attica, which would later become a setting for his plays. His birth took place a few years before the
Battle of Marathon in
490 BC: the exact year is unclear, although 497/6 is perhaps most likely. The young Sophocles won awards in
wrestling and
music, was graceful and handsome, and led the chorus of boys (
paean) at the Athenian celebration of the victory against the
Persians at the
Battle of Salamis in
480 BC. His artistic career began in earnest in 468 BC when he took first prize in the
Dionysia theatre competition over the reigning master of Athenian drama,
Aeschylus.
Sophocles became a man of importance in the public halls of Athens as well as in the theatres. Early in his career, the politician
Cimon might have been one of his patrons, although if he was there was no ill will borne by
Pericles, Cimon's rival, when Cimon was ostracized in 461 BC. In 443/2 he served as one of the
Hellenotamiai, or treasurers of Athena, helping to manage the finances of the city during the political ascendancy of Pericles. He was also elected by the
Athenian people as one of the ten generals for 441/0, during which he participated in the crushing of the revolt of
Samos, though his contemporaries did not consider him a great politician or general. In 420 he welcomed and set up an altar for the icon of
Asclepius at his house, when the deity was introduced in Athens. For this he was given the posthumous epithet
Dexion (receiver) by the Athenians. He was also elected, in 413 BC at the age of 83, to be one of the commissioners crafting a response to the catastrophic destruction of the Athenian expeditionary force in
Sicily during the
Peloponnesian War.
Several ancient writers have commented on Sophocles'
love of youths. Athenaeus alleged that in addition to seeking and keeping female courtesans, "Sophocles was fond of young lads, as Euripides was fond of women." He quotes from a now-lost book by
Ion of Chios regarding an incident of Sophocles flattering a serving boy at a
symposium and then using a strategem to kiss and embrace him, as well as another, ascribed to Hieronymus of Rhodes, in which Sophocles is tricked by a hustler.
Plutarch, in his "Life of Pericles,"
http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Lives/Pericles mentions an incident, during a naval expedition, in which Sophocles praised the beauty of a young recruit.
Pericles rebuked him by warning that a general must keep not only his hands clean, but also his eyes.
Sophocles died at the venerable age of ninety in 406 or 405 BC, having seen within his lifetime both the Greek triumph in the Persian Wars and the terrible bloodletting of the Peloponnesian War. He was so respected by the Athenians that two plays performed at the Lenea soon after his death paid homage to him, and his unfinished play Oedipus at Colonus<i> was completed and performed years later. Both Iophon, one of his sons, and a grandson, also called Sophocles, followed in his footsteps to become playwrights themselves.