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greek expansion notes
greek expansion notes

... Persian army had to pass through narrow mountain pass. 300 Spartan warriors met them and fought for 3 days before being killed. (known as battle of Thermopylae) Battle of Thermopylae bought other city-states time to prepare for war ...
File
File

... • King Darius (son of Cyrus) leads the Persian forces in an attack on Athens. • Battle of Marathon: Despite being outnumbered the Athenians win the battle. According to legend a runner is sent 26 miles (42 km) to Athens to deliver the news of victory. • Athens begins to build a strong navy to defend ...
The Persian Empire
The Persian Empire

...  480 B.C. Persian King Xerxes attacked Greece at Thermopylae.  Persians won on land, but lost at sea.  Athenian fleet ships lured Persian fleet into strait of Salamis near Athens.  Greeks won because their ships were fast and easy to maneuver. ...
The Greeks at War!
The Greeks at War!

... He encouraged the Athenians to build up their fleet and prepare for battle with the Persians. In 480 B.C. Darius’ son Xerxes sent a larger force to conquer Greece. He sent 200,000 soldiers and nearly 1,000 ships. ...
File
File

... The Ephors may have kept order while the kings were leading armies in battle. Council of Elders (Gerousia) The law-making body of Sparta. Was only open to people over 60 years old. They prepared laws for the assembly of citizens to vote on. ...
The Persian King wanted revenge on Athens
The Persian King wanted revenge on Athens

... generals) and the polemarch, Camillimachus (who was the real hero at Marathon, even though he was killed in the fighting) voted whether to wait for the promised Spartan reinforcements of to fight now. It was five to five when Miltiades (who was for fighting) talked to Camillimachus and Camillimachus ...
MILITARY HISTORY The Persian Wars
MILITARY HISTORY The Persian Wars

... • Mostly lightly armed archers • cavalry ...
A unique legacy: 2500 ago Greeks began on rock bound peninsula
A unique legacy: 2500 ago Greeks began on rock bound peninsula

... Persian Threat Persian empire attacked Greeks between 500-480 B.C.E Their first battle on plains of Marathon, Greeks won, Persians retreated. Greeks sent runner from Marathon to the city of Athens to tell of the victory. It was 26 miles from Marathon to Athens is why we have a 26 mile marathon today ...
The Later Middle Ages
The Later Middle Ages

... War left Greece open to attack from ________________________. (armies/outsiders) 2. The ________________________ began when Sparta declared war on Athens. (city-state/Peloponnesian War) 3. Two of the greatest city-states in Greece were Sparta and ________________________. (Athens/Persepolis) 4. Spar ...
Chapter 5 Section 5 - Kenston Local Schools
Chapter 5 Section 5 - Kenston Local Schools

... A. Darius and Xerxes 1. Darius – Persian leader who defeated Greeks in Asia Minor, but lost to Athens in the Battle of marathon. 2. Xerxes – Darius’ son. Led attack on Greece and defeated the Spartans in the Battle of Thermopylae. 3. Xerxes lost naval battle to Athens and was defeated when Athens an ...
Ancient Greece
Ancient Greece

...  Athens led the D.L., which really turns into the Athenian Empire  Sparta & others create an anti-Athens alliance  Sparta had no navy, made a deal w/Persians to get $ for ...
Honor Code
Honor Code

... b) Sparta Gains the Edge i) In the second year of war, a ____________ killed between one-third and two-thirds of Athens’ population, including Pericles. ii) In 415 B.C.E., a fleet of 27,000 Athenians sent to destroy _____________ were defeated iii) Finally, in ________ B.C.E., Athens and its allies ...
Classical Greece
Classical Greece

... The Persian Wars (490 to 479 B.C.E.) • Persia and the Greek citystates battled for over 10 years. • Persians were unsuccessful in their efforts to conquer Greek city-states. • Greek city-states formed alliance called Delian League. • League members eventually were successful in driving the Persians ...
The Persian Wars - Prep World History I
The Persian Wars - Prep World History I

... project [rather than distribute the money among the citizens, as was the usual practice]; by 481 BCE, Athens had a navy of two hundred ships. When Xerxes gathered his army at the Hellespont, the narrow inlet to the Black Sea that separates Asia Minor from Europe, most Greeks despaired of winning aga ...
Archaic Period
Archaic Period

... Herodotus' religious view of history/tragic sequence Marathon Miltiades' tactic Athenian hoplites are yeoman farmers in democratic state-high morale Class stratification within Persian army-lack of morale Victory: 192 vs. 6400 casualties!-military superiority of hoplites and 26 mile run source of gr ...
5. CH 5 NOTES
5. CH 5 NOTES

... 494 B.C. Battle of Marathon  *Athenians stop Persian invasion  *Conflict continues until 490 BC  *10 years of uneasy peace. Second Persian Invasion o *Xerxes: Persian Leader o *480 Invades Greece o *Battle of Thermopylae:  *300 Spartans stop Persians  Spartans refuse to surrender  All 300 die: ...
9.1 Cornell Notes on the Persian Wars
9.1 Cornell Notes on the Persian Wars

... • Let people keep customs (so they don’t revolt) • When he died, he ruled the largest empire the world had ever seen • Strong army – Immortals & cavalry. ...
The Persian Wars
The Persian Wars

... Those Clever Athenians • The Greeks ships first sailed from shore like they were fleeing the island • They then turned quickly around and began ramming the Persian ships • Before the Persians knew what had happened half of their fleet was on the ocean floor • The Persians once again retreated back ...
Persian Wars
Persian Wars

... He encouraged the Athenians to build up their fleet and prepare for battle with the Persians. In 480 B.C. Darius’ son Xerxes sent a larger force to conquer Greece. He sent 200,000 soldiers and nearly 1,000 ships. ...
Persian Wars
Persian Wars

... Persian Wars In 490 BC, King Darius led his Persian army in an attack on Greece which resulted in the Battle of Marathon. This assault was the Persians' second attempt at revenge on the Athenians and the Eritreans, Greeks who had previously backed the Ionian revolt against Persian rule. The first at ...
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL GREECE
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL GREECE

... officials not because they have to, as in other cities, but because they want to. Athenians had thus achieved something quite unique - being both ruled and rulers at one and the same time. This had forged a unique type of citizen. Clever, tolerant, and open minded, Athenians were able to adapt to an ...
Ancient Greece
Ancient Greece

... before they were outflanked by a mountain path : annihilated  The Allied fleet had also withstood two days of Persian attacks at the Battle of Artemisium, but when news reached them of the disaster at Thermopylae, they withdrew to Salamis. ...
Greece Test
Greece Test

... ***DO NOT WRITE ON TEST PAPER*** 25. Why was the Delian League formed? a. to guard against future attacks from Persia b. to create a trading alliance c. to give all the city-states equal power in Greece d. to unite the city-states into one empire 26. The Ancient Athenians are credited with a. inven ...
The Persian War
The Persian War

... 4. Persian Navy is lured (by reports of a pretend traitor) into the narrow strait between Salamis and mainland ...
Rivals: Athens vs. Sparta
Rivals: Athens vs. Sparta

... • Persians took over the Greek citystates in Ionia (in Asia) • Ionians revolted against Persians, with help from other city-states like Athens • Persians (led by King Darius) defeated the Ionians & decided to punish the other city-states on mainland Greece for helping the Ionians ...
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Corinthian War



The Corinthian War was an ancient Greek conflict lasting from 395 BC until 387 BC, pitting Sparta against a coalition of four allied states, Thebes, Athens, Corinth, and Argos, who were initially backed by Persia. The immediate cause of the war was a local conflict in northwest Greece in which both Thebes and Sparta intervened. The deeper cause was hostility towards Sparta provoked by that city's ""expansionism in Asia Minor, central and northern Greece and even the west"".The war was fought on two fronts, on land near Corinth (hence the name) and Thebes and at sea in the Aegean. On land, the Spartans achieved several early successes in major battles, but were unable to capitalize on their advantage, and the fighting soon became stalemated. At sea, the Spartan fleet was decisively defeated by a Persian fleet early in the war, an event that effectively ended Sparta's attempts to become a naval power. Taking advantage of this fact, Athens launched several naval campaigns in the later years of the war, recapturing a number of islands that had been part of the original Athenian Empire during the 5th century BC.Alarmed by these Athenian successes, the Persians stopped backing the allies and began supporting Sparta. This defection forced the allies to seek peace. The Peace of Antalcidas, commonly known as the King's Peace, was signed in 387 BC, ending the war. This treaty declared that Persia would control all of Ionia, and that all other Greek cities would be independent. Sparta was to be the guardian of the peace, with the power to enforce its clauses. The effects of the war, therefore, were to establish Persia's ability to interfere successfully in Greek politics and to affirm Sparta's hegemonic position in the Greek political system.
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