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The Persian Factor

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The Assyrians controlled both Babylonia and northern Persia, or Media. ... Persians marched into Athens and burned the Acropolis. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Persian Factor


1
The Persian Factor
  • Medes and Persians burst on the world scene to
    confront the Greeks

2
Rise of the Medes
  • In 700 the Assyrian Empire was at its height.
  • The Assyrians controlled both Babylonia and
    northern Persia, or Media.
  • Deioces led the Medes in a successful rebellion
    against their Assyrian overlords and is made
    king.
  • His successor Phraortes conquers the area south
    of Media known as Persia.

3
The Rise of Babylon
  • Babylonia revolted against their Assyrian
    overlords, joining forces with Medes in doing so.
  • The combined forces of the Babylonians under
    Nabopolassar and Medes defeated the Assyrian army
    and Ninevah fell in 612.
  • The Assyrian Empire was divided between Media and
    Babylonia.
  • Nebuchadnezzar succeeds to the Babylonian throne
    and brings that Empire to its greatest height,
    604-562.
  • Babylon now thought to be the greatest city in
    the worldits Hanging Gardens one of the worlds
    seven wonders.

4
Meanwhilein Ionia
  • The greatest polis of Ionia in western Asia Minor
    was Miletus.
  • There lived a Greek named Thales who had studied
    astronomy in Egypt.
  • He was the first European to successfully predict
    an eclipse to occur during May of 585.
  • We know him as the first Greek philosopher who
    was also the first scientist he believed water
    was the common substance that explained the
    variety and unity of natural phenomena.

5
The Medes and Lydia
  • Medes now controlled eastern Asia Minor to the
    banks of the Halys Riverthe border with Lydia.
  • To conquer Lydia was the Median objective and
    they went to war for six years.
  • Butin the midst of battle on May 28, 585, the
    eclipse occurred! Warriors of both armies were
    stunned.
  • Both sides laid down their arms and concluded a
    peace. The Lydian king Alyattes gave his
    daughter in marriage to the Median king Astyages.

6
Croesus, 560-546
  • Freed from Median threat, Lydia now turned to
    conquest of the Greek cities of Ionia and Aeolia.
  • Alyattes son Croesus was able to subdue all the
    poleis except Miletus, which had signed a peace
    treaty with his father.
  • Croesus adopted Greek religion, language, dress,
    and culture. He consulted Delphi.
  • He built the world famous Temple of Artemis at
    Ephesus.
  • His incredible wealth became proverbial. He
    introduced coins of pure gold and silver.

7
Fall of the Medes and Lydia
  • Croesus brother-in-law Astyages was ousted from
    the throne by the Persian Cyrus the Great.
  • Croesus consulted Delphi about a pre-emptive
    attack. The oracle said, if you cross the Halys
    you will destroy a mighty empire.
  • Cyrus turned him back and captured Sardis in 546.
    Croesus foolish attack had destroyed a mighty
    empirehis own.
  • The fall of Lydia removed an important buffer
    between Greek mainland and the eastern empires.
  • The Persians inherited Greek lands in western
    Asia Minorand would look longingly to the Greek
    mainland.

8
A Story About Croesus
  • According to Herodotus, Cyrus built a great pyre
    and placed Croesus along with 14 Lydian youths on
    the top.
  • While awaiting burning, Croesus recalled a
    conversation with the Athenian Solon about
    happiness.
  • He had been offended that Solon thought only
    poorer men truly happy, but now he recognized
    Solons wisdom.
  • He cried aloud, moaning the name of Solon. The
    fire was lit when Cyrus heard what Croesus had
    been crying about and ordered him sparedtoo
    late.
  • Apollo heard Croesus prayer and sent a rain
    shower out of a clear sky to quench the flames.
  • Croesus was carried into exile in Media. This
    story became as popular to the Greeks as The
    Three Bears is to us!

9
Handwriting on the Wall
  • The Persians conquered Babylon in 538 and killed
    the king Belshazzar. Mene Mene Tekel Peres
    Weighed in the balances and found wanting, your
    kingdom will be handed over to the Medes and
    Persians.
  • Darius succeeded Cambyses, Cyrus son and turned
    his attention to Greece, beginning with the
    campaign against Scythia and the conquest of
    Thrace.
  • Darius ruled from 522-486 B.C. after he killed a
    usurper to the throne who claimed to be Cambyses
    brother.

10
The Persian Machinery of Rule
  • Darius centralized the Persian government at
    Persepolis.
  • Darius divided the empire into satrapies.
    Satraps ruled them as a governor does a province.
    The title is from old Farsi for protector.
  • Satraps were appointed by the king and were
    assessed an annual tribute.
  • Persian king was viewed much like a demigod whose
    orders to labor or perform military service were
    unquestioned by his subjects.
  • This was a hard pill for Greeks, who were used to
    more independence than Persian subjects.

11
Ionian Rebellion
  • Greeks were Persian subjects in western Asia
    Minor, or Ionia.
  • Ionia and Lydia were two satrapies ruled by a
    single satrap at Sardis.
  • Persians at first were content to allow tyrants
    to rule in Ionia, one of them was Aristagoras,
    tyrant of Miletus.
  • With the kings blessing, Aristagoras attempted
    to annex the island of Naxos, but he was betrayed
    by the admiral of the Persian navy in the Aegean.
  • Disillusioned with the Persians, Aristagoras led
    a failed revolt in 499 that overthrew tyrants in
    Ionia and enlisted the aid of Athens and Eretria.

12
Revenge of the Persians
  • In the Ionian rebellion, Athenians and Eretrians
    not only helped the rebelsthey accidentally
    burned down Sardis, capital of the satrapy.
  • The mainland Greeks left the city and marched to
    Ephesus. There they were met by a Persian force
    that defeated them.
  • After the battle at Ephesus the mainland Greeks
    went home, but they were now on Darius radar.
  • When told that the Athenians burned Sardis,
    Darius remarked, Athenians? Who are they?
  • In 494, Miletus was defeated by the Persian navy.
    Aristagoras got away Miletus men were carried
    off to the mouth of the Tigris wives and kids
    enslaved.

13
Athens braces for the Persians
  • The defeat of Miletus depressed the Athenians.
  • Athenians elected Themistocles archon and he
    adopted a policy of building defenses and
    fortifying harbors.
  • In 492 the Persians conquered Thrace, Macedonia,
    and Thasos.
  • In 490 the Persian navy landed a force in Greece,
    first burning Eretria and carrying off her people
    to central Asia.
  • The Persians then sailed to the plains of
    Marathon in order to make a run at Athens.

14
The Battle of Marathon
  • August 490
  • How different the world would be today if the
    Athenians had suffered the same fate as the
    Eretrians!

15
Preparing for the battle
  • Marathon was a Peisistradid fortress about 26
    miles northwest of Athens near the Aegean coast.
  • Athens decided to meet the Persians rather than
    wait for them to come to Athens.
  • They sent a runner, Philippides, to Sparta who
    ran the 140 miles in one day to ask for help.
    The Spartans would come as soon as possible, at
    the new moon.
  • About 1000 Plataeans did come to Athens aid.
    The Athenians may have had 9000 of their own to
    face a Persian force of more than 20,000.

16
The Battlefield
17
The Battle
  • Callimachus was the elected strategos who was
    advised by the brilliant Miltiades.
  • The Athenians were in perfect position to engage
    the Persians.
  • The Persians attempted to slip by on a southern
    route to Athens.
  • The Athenians attacked their flank from the west,
    thin in the middle and strong on the sides (let
    me demonstrate)
  • According to Herodotus (who is probably right)
    the Greeks lost 192, the Persians 6400.
  • The surviving Persians escaped to the fleet which
    tried to make a run at Piraeus.
  • The Athenian army left a regiment to clean up and
    quick marched back to Athens and stared down the
    Persians.

18
Athenian Soul Searching
  • The Spartans arrived during the clean-up.
  • The Persians were not done by a long shot.
  • How best to fight the Persians in the future?
  • Themistocles wanted to use a windfall silver
    strike from Laurium to build a navy, but
    Aristides opposed him.
  • Aristides was ostracized and the navy built in
    482.

19
A Persian Comeback?
  • Persians soon began to prepare for another
    invasion try.
  • Darius died in 485 and was succeeded by Xerxes.
    After putting down rebellion in Egypt, he began
    to prepare to invade Greece.
  • He built a canal in Chalcedon around Mt.
    Athosstrange to us, but necessary for his army
    and navy.
  • In 484 Xerxes began to rebuild the navy.

20
The Hellenic League
  • 481 Thirty-one poleis met at Corinth to discuss
    the Persian problem.
  • Athens, Aegina, and the Peloponnesian League
    cities formed an alliance.
  • Sparta was given military command with the
    Athenian navy under their direction.
  • The League decided to make a stand in central
    Greece at Thermopylae.
  • Atticas populace was evacuated to Salamis.

21
The Battle of Thermopylae
  • July 480
  • Go tell the Spartans, stranger passing by,
  • That here, obeying their commands, we lie.

22
A Place to Stand
  • The Peloponnesians were most concerned with a
    defense of the Corinthian isthmus, but
    contributed soldiers to a defense of Attica.
  • To protect eastern Greece the most feasible place
    of defense was Thermopylae (hot springs), a pass
    between the Malian Gulf and the Callidromus
    mountains in central Greece.
  • Its only weakness was a mountainous bypass south
    of the pass that had to be secured.
  • Spartan King Leonidas led the Greek army, which
    numbered about 7000 from a number of areas,
    including 300 Spartans.

23
The Battle Begins
  • The Greek fleet hovered nearby as did the Persian
    fleet, but the Persians lost hundreds of ships in
    two storms and this emboldened the natives,
    mostly Athenian.
  • Leonidas dispatched 1000 Phocians to guard the
    mountain bypass.
  • Xerxes arrived with his army, but waited four
    days, expecting a Greek retreat, then attacked on
    the fifth and sixth days.
  • The Greeks spearmen were superior to the Persian
    archers and beat them back.

24
Betrayal and Tragedy
  • Xerxes decides to try the mountain bypass and a
    Malian Greek named Epialtes shows the way around
    the native armies to the Immortals, Xerxes
    personal guard.
  • Phocians flee higher seeing Persian strength and
    stragglers report news to Leonidas.
  • Leonidas dismisses all but 1400 of his forces to
    take up a new position. 300 Spartans guard the
    west end of the pass, 1100 Thebans and Thespians
    guard the east end.
  • Leonidas charges oncoming Persians with his
    soldiers and is killed. A battle of Homeric
    proportions results to protect his body. All the
    Spartans are slain, Greek total losses in the
    thousands.

25
The Battle of Salamis
  • September 480
  • A heavy blow to the naval power of the Persians

26
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27
The Battle Begins
  • When the Greek fleet heard of the fall of
    Thermopylae, they retreated to the shores of
    Attica.
  • People of Attica had been removed to the island
    of Salamis.
  • Persians marched into Athens and burned the
    Acropolis.
  • Persian fleet thought they had the Greeks bottled
    up in a sound called the Bay of Eleusis between
    Attica and the island of Salamis.
  • Persian fleet decided to go through to the bay by
    way of an entrance bisected by an island into two
    narrow straits on morning of September 20.

28
The Battle Ends
  • The Greeks divided the Persian fleet and drove
    their unwieldy ships into the shore. It was a
    disaster for the Persians under the view of
    Xerxes, enthroned on the Attican shore watching.
  • The awful strategy of the Persian navy may
    actually have been invited by Themistocles, to
    force his Greeks to fight and not be tempted to
    withdraw to Corinth.
  • Persian fleet retreats to the Hellespont.
  • Xerxes leaves with 60,000 troops for Hellespont
    rendezvous.

29
Platea Spring 479
  • The last battle with the Persians in Europe took
    place near Platea, a city in extreme southeastern
    Boeotia.
  • A Greek force of Spartans, Athenians, and Tegeans
    opposed a huge force of Persians and their Theban
    allies.
  • Persian forces misperceived a weakness in the
    Spartan forces and attacked. The Spartans saw
    positive omens and attacked fiercely and crushed
    the Persians against a hillside.
  • The battle was over before any Athenians could
    get involved. Persians fled to the Hellespont,
    the Greeks besieged Thebes.

30
Mycale, Spring 479
  • The Greek fleet was positioned at the island of
    Delos.
  • A message came from Greeks of the island of
    Samos, asking for liberation from the Persians.
  • The Greek fleet under Xanthippus sailed to Samos,
    then pursued the retreating Persian navy to Cape
    Mycale where an army of Ionians and some Persians
    was camped.
  • The Greeks blocked the Persians, then destroyed
    the land base when Ionian troops deserted the
    Persians. Ionia was free!
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