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The Persian Wars

By N.S. Gill

In the Archaic Age, when Greek colonists were driven out of mainland Greece, many wound up in Ionia (now Asia Minor). Eventually these uprooted Greeks came under the rule of the Lydians. In 546, the Persians replaced the Lydians. The Ionian Greeks found the Persian rule oppressive and attempted to revolt -- with the aid of the mainland Greeks. And so it began....

The Persian Wars lasted from 492 - 449 B.C.

Ionian Greeks
The Athenians considered themselves Ionian, but what we consider Ionian Greeks were those pushed off the mainland who migrated to what is now Asia Minor or Anatolia. The stories say that descendants of Heracles and Dorian invaders forced the migration.

Ionian Greeks made many important contributions to Greek culture -- especially philosophy.

Sally Goetsch on the Identity of the Ionians
Homeric Questions - Geography
Archaic Age of Greece

Croesus of Lydia
King Croesus of Lydia, whose wealth supposedly derived from the legendary King Midas (famed for his golden touch), is said to have been the first foreigner to come into contact with the Greeks who had settled in Ionia in Asia Minor. Croesus was responsible for the loss of Lydia to Persia which, in turn, led to conflict between the Ionian Greek cities and Persia.

Herodotus on Solon's advice to King Croesus of Lydia
Croesus of Lydia

The Persian Empire
King Cyrus of Persia conquered the Lydians and put King Croesus to death.* By acquiring Lydia, Cyrus was now king of the Ionian Greeks. The Greeks objected to the strains the Persians put on them, including the draft, heavy tribute, and interference in local government. A Greek tyrant of Miletus, Aristagoras, first tried to ingratiate himself with the Persians and then led a revolt against them.

Persian Empire
Cyrus of Persia

The Persian War
The Ionian Greeks sought and received military help from Greece, but once the mainland Greeks came to the attention of the empire building Persians, the Persians sought to annex them. With many more men and a despotic government going for the Persian side, it looked like a one-sided fight....

Persian Wars Timeline

Darius - King Darius of Persia
Darius ruled the Persian Empire from 521-486. Going east, he conquered the Indus Valley and attacked the Scythians, but never conquered them. Nor was Darius able to conquer the Greeks. Instead, he suffered a defeat in the Battle of Marathon, which was very important for the Greeks, although fairly minor for Darius. [Although on an entirely different scale, the victory of the colonists in the American revolution was far more important for them than it was for the losing British side.]

Darius
Battle of Marathon
Late Period Egypt - for the effect of the Persian loss at Marathon on Egypt.

Xerxes - King Xerxes of Persia
The son of Darius, Xerxes was more aggressive in his empire building. To avenge his father's defeat at Marathon, he led an army of about 150,000 men and a 600-ship navy into Greece, defeating the Greeks at Thermopylae. He was then defeated in a the battle off the island of Salamis. Xerxes left Greece, but his general Mardonius remained to be defeated at Plataea.

Battle of Thermopylae
Battle of Salamis
Battle of Plataea

Herodotus
Herodotus' History, a celebration of the Greek victory over the Persians, was written in the mid-fifth century B.C. Herodotus wanted to present as much information about the Persian War as he could. What sometimes reads like a travelogue, includes information on the entire Persian Empire, and simultaneously explains the origins of the conflict with references to mythological prehistory.

The History of Herodotus
Greek Historians
Monarchy, Oligarchy, or Democracy Debate

The Delian League
After an Athenian led Greek victory over the Persians at the Battle of Salamis, in 478, Athens was put in charge of a protection alliance with the Ionian cities. The treasury was at Delos; hence the name for the alliance. Soon the leadership of Athens became oppressive, although in one form or another, the Delian League survived until the victory of Philip of Macedonia over the Greeks at Chaeronea.

*For various and conflicting poetic and historical accounts of the death of Croesus, see: "What Happened to Croesus?" by J. A. S. Evans. The Classical Journal, Vol. 74, No. 1. (Oct. - Nov., 1978), pp. 34-40.

The Delian League
The Peloponnesian War

Before You Buy Related Resources
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Before You Buy Ancient Sources
After the Peloponnesian War - The Thirty Tyrants
Democracy Then and Now
Major Near Eastern Kings
The Rise of Democracy
Timeline - The Fifth Century B.C.
Anatolia - Asia Minor - Lydia
Also see: Major People in Ancient History

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