Persia Greece: Greco-Persian War Greco-Persian Wars, Also Called Persian Wars, (492-449
Persia Greece: Greco-Persian War Greco-Persian Wars, Also Called Persian Wars, (492-449
The Persians met the Greeks in battle over a period of three days in August 480. At
sea a detachment of 200 Persian ships attempted to surprise the Greek fleet, but the
Greeks, forewarned, engaged the main Persian navy. That night a tremendous storm
destroyed the Persian squadron while the Greeks were safely in port. On land the
Persians attacked the Greeks at Thermopylae for two days but suffered heavy losses.
However, on the second night a Greek traitor guided the best Persian troops around
the pass behind the Greek army. The Spartan general Leonidas dispatched most of the
Greeks south to safety but fought to the death at Thermopylae with the Spartan and
Thespian soldiers who remained. While the battle raged at Thermopylae, the Persian
fleet attacked the Greek navy, with both sides losing many ships. Xerxes’ army, aided
by northern Greeks who had joined it, marched south. In September the Persians
burned Athens, which, however, by that time had been evacuated. In the meantime,
the Greeks decided to station their fleet in the Strait of Salamis. Themistocles devised
a clever stratagem: feigning retreat, he lured the Persian fleet into the narrow strait.
The Persians were then outmaneuvered and badly beaten by the Greeks’ ships in the
ensuing naval battle. Soon afterward, the Persian navy retreated to Asia.
Leonidas at Thermopylae, oil on canvas by Jacques-Louis David, 1814; …
Art Media/Heritage-Images
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Although Xerxes returned to Persia that winter, his army remained in Greece. It was
finally driven from the country after the battle of Plataea in 479 BCE, where it was
defeated by a combined force of Spartans, Tegeans, and Athenians. The Persian navy
was defeated at Mycale, on the Asiatic coast, when it declined to engage the Greek
fleet. Instead the Persian navy beached its ships and, joining a land army, fought a
losing battle against a Spartan force led by Leotychidas.
Although the Persian invasion was ended by the battles at Plataea and Mycale,
fighting between Greece and Persia continued for another 30 years. Led by the
Athenians, the newly formed Delian League went on the offensive to free
the Ionian city-states on the Anatolian coast. The league had mixed success, and in
449 BCE the Peace of Callias finally ended the hostilities between Athens and its allies
and Persia.