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• How did Persia’s empiric rise impact ancient Greece? • What was the general outcome of the Persian Wars? • How did Greece respond after the end of the Persian Wars? • What was the immediate causes of the Peloponnesian Wars? • Greeks spent great deal of time fighting one another • At the same time, Persia was growing in power • By 520 BCE Persian Empire encircled Greek city-states & have conquered former Greek colonies – Zoinks! • 507 BCE: Athenians sent ambassador to Persian King Darius I to create protective alliance against Sparta – Ambassador made alliance – BUT Athenian assembly eventually rejected deal – Why would the Athenian process confuse the Persians? We’ll vote on it and get back to you! WHAT?! ? Me so angry • 499-493 BCE: Greek cities throughout Asia Minor rise up against Persian rule. • 498 BCE: After pleading for an alliance with the Persians, the Athenians back the Ionian Revolt – Help Ionians to sack Persian city of Sardis – Result: Persians are ANGRY!!! AGH! Those Greeks will pay for this We’re on the way Help! • 490 B.C. - King Darius sent 600 ships and 20,000 soldiers to invade Greece; wanted to punish Athenians for helping Ionian rebels • Persian army landed at Marathon, north of Athens – Athenian force had no horses or archers, only fierce foot soldiers (hoplites; 10,000) – Athenians bravely (or stupidly) lined up their men and attacked (after 4 day standoff) – Center of the line breaks, but the flanks engulf the Persians • Casualties – Persians 6,400, Athenians 192 • Key Individuals: – King Darius I of Persia – Overthrown king of Athens, Hippias who fled to Persia after he was ousted – Miltiades led Athenian troops against the Persians at Marathon • After standoff, the remaining Persians decided to attack Athens by sea • While they were preparing their ships, Athenians attacked and defeated them • Persians retreated…holla! • Greeks sent their fastest runner Pheidippides to carry home news of victory. – Sprinted 26.2 miles from battle site to Athens • Arrived and said, “Rejoice, we conquer,” and died from exhaustion • This is where we get the 26.2 miles in the contemporary marathon race! Finish like somebody else! • Explain the causes of the Persian Greco War. • Who was the King of Persia in 480 BCE? • Describe the “match-up” between the Persian army and the Greek army at Marathon. • What fatal flaw did the Persians make leading to their loss at Marathon? • What is the “Myth of Marathon”? • The Greek ruler Themistocles knew Marathon was a temporary victory. He encouraged the Athenians to build up their naval 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. • By this time Athens had convinced Sparta to join them in battle along with 30 other Greek citystates – Sparta took charge of the army. • Persian moved through northern Greece easily • Came to narrow mountain pass called Thermopylae where 300 Spartans waited for the Persians led by King Leonidas – The only road between Thessaly and Central Greece • Spartans held out heroically against the enormous Persian force for 3 days. • Spartans betrayed when someone (Ephialtes) told the Persians how to get in behind the army. • Spartans defeated, but won valuable time for the rest of the Greeks. • Persians march south after victory at Thermopylae; destroyed city of Athens • But REWIND… in 483 Athens suddenly became very rich when a large vein of silver was discovered in the mines it owned – They use this money to build a new fleet of 100 war-ships in a new style, "triremes" with 200 men rowing 150 oars arranged in three tiers • Knowing the Persians were en route to crossing the isthmus to Peloponnese the Athenian fleet moved and was lying in wait behind the island of Salamis • More than 800 Persian ships attacked Athenian navy near the island, but the large Persian ships could not maneuver the water; smaller Greek ships destroy them Thermopylae Marathon Salamis • The Greek sense of uniqueness was increased • Athens emerged as most powerful citystate in Greece • Athens organized the Delian League, an alliance with other Greek city-states • Ironically, Athens did not support democracy in other city-states • Forces other city-states to pay tribute for protection • Moved the Delian League treasury from Delos to Athens and begin to abuse the access to the Leagues’ money • Many Greeks resented Athenian domination • Greek world split into rival camps. – Result: Sparta forges an alliance with the other city states and forms the Peloponnesian League – Declares war on Athens, which eventually leads to the down fall of Athens • Athens at a disadvantage: – Geography – Navy = no good against Spartans located inland – After Spartan invasion, Pericles allows people from countryside to move inside city • Result: Overcrowding leads to a plague ; killed 1/3 of the people – Internal struggles undermined Democratic government • Sparta allied with Persia, their old enemy, against the Delian League. • 404 B.C., with the help of the Persian navy, the Spartans captured Athens and stripped it of its fleet and empire • The Peloponnesian war ended Athenian greatness • In Athens Democratic government suffered: corruption and selfish interests replaced order • Fighting continued to disrupt the Greek world • Sparta itself suffered defeat at the hands of Thebes, another Greek city-state • Greece was left vulnerable to invasion (hello Alexander the Great…we’ll meet you soon!) • Cultural development was halted