In her weakened condition, Sparta was unable to force her allies to comply with the terms of the peace, and her failure to do so sparked a movement toward a renewal of the war. Athens was, however, unable to wring maximum advantage from her superior position in 421, because her war strategy had weakened Sparta without inflicting commensurate damage on Sparta's allies, and it was from these allies that the most vital political and territorial concessions in Athens' favor might have been won. The Peloponnesian League was on the verge of total collapse when the Peace of Nicias was signed. She had effectively demonstrated Sparta's inability to redress the grievances of her allies. Had its terms been implemented, Athens would have gained the objectives set forth by Pericles at the beginning of the war. The Peace of Nicias nevertheless marks, both implicitly and explicitly, a limited victory for Athens. This war pitted Sparta's land based coalition, the Peloponnesian League, against Athens' highly regimented naval alliance, and neither side was able to achieve total victory. The Peace of Nicias, signed in 421 B.C., was an attempt to end the Peloponnesian War after ten years of fighting.
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