The Persian Wars - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 70
About This Presentation
Title:

The Persian Wars

Description:

Title: PowerPoint Presentation Last modified by: Malcolm Created Date: 1/1/1601 12:00:00 AM Document presentation format: Other titles – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:120
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 71
Provided by: slaSjtuEd
Category:
Tags: bronze | persian | wars

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Persian Wars


1
The Persian Wars
  • Lecturer Wu Shiyu

2
The Rise of Persia
  • Cyrus (600 BC530 BC ) The model of a good king.
  • Under his own rule expanded vastly and
    eventually conquered most of Southwest Asia and
    much of Central Asia, parts of Europe and
    Caucasus.
  • From the Mediterranean sea and the Hellespont in
    the west to the Indus River in the east, to
    create the largest empire the world had yet seen.

3
(No Transcript)
4
(No Transcript)
5
  • Very successful model for centralized
    administration and establishing a government
    working to the advantage and profit of its
    subjects

6
The Rise of Persia
  • Darius (550 BC-486 BC) ascended the throne by
    assassinating the alleged usurper Bardiya with
    the assistance of six other Persian noble
    families Darius was crowned the following
    morning. Proved to be a very competent leader,
    and quelled rebellions.
  • held the empire at its peak, then including
    Egypt, northern India, and parts of Greece.
    Darius organized the empire, by dividing it into
    provinces and placing satraps to govern it.
  • Invaded Greece The Battle of Marathon (490 BC)

7
Darius
8
The Rise of Persia
  • Xerxes (519BC-465BC) took the empire to its
    height and set on its path of decline and
    ultimate demise.
  • Invasion of the Greek mainland
  • The Battle of Thermopylae (in August or September
    480 BC )
  • The Battle of Salamis (September 29, 480 BC)

9
(No Transcript)
10
  • And the story of Pythius.
  • Xerxes roars out, How dare you make such a
    request like this? Here I am, leading the army
    myself, and you are asking your son to stay
    behind. Alright, I grant it. Let him stay behind.
  • With a great sword, the executioner splits the
    son right down the middle, and one side of the
    body was placed at one side of the gate, and the
    other side, the other part of the gate, and
    through the sliced body of the son of Pythius,
    the mighty army marches out.

11
  • Now again, the lesson from Herodotus What is it
    like to live under a despot? Even the highest and
    richest man who the king might behold for favors,
    has no security of life or property.
  • And Pythius is not only a symbol of what it is
    under a tyrant, but also hybris.

12
  • Hellespont has his engineers lay a bridge over
    boats to cross it.. Suddenly, a storm comes up,
    but he still wants to cross. Xerxes now is rolled
    out into the Hellespont, and lashes the waters
    with his whip, You briny stream, how dare you
    stand before me? And he beat the water over and
    over and over again, and of course executed the
    engineers. And another bridge is laid down. And
    he crosses.

13
Hellespont
14
(No Transcript)
15
  • The superb cavalry, men and horse wrapped in
    armor, his immortals, ten thousand Persians
    carrying their spears, golden and silver
    pomegranate at the end, marching across, his body
    guards, and then the troops of the far ranging
    empire. His Arabs on horseback, Sythians with
    their bows and savage spears. Ethiopians, their
    bodies painted half white, half red, carrying
    spears all crossing in majesty. And it seems
    nothing can stop this expedition.

16
The Beginning of the Persian War The Ionian
Revolt
  • When Lydia and also many other Greek cities in
    the north were subjugated by Cyrus, they were
    however quite unhappy about the Persians
    control.
  • Taxes were heavy and the Ionians resented the
    puppet tyrants.

17
The Ionian Revolt
18
  • By 499B.C. the Ionians were ready to rise up.
    Aristagoras, tyrant of Miletus, having noticed
    the restlessness of the Ionians, decided to unite
    them in revolt. The Ionians showed their
    enthusiasm and did overthrow most of the tyrants.
  • Aristagoras decided to go and seek support from
    the Spartans (army), was rejected.
  • Aristagoras then went to Athens and had better
    luck with the Athenians (agreed to send troops).

19
  • Aristagoras presented before the Spartan king
    Cleomenes a bronze map of the world and showed
    him the prospect of conquering the wealthy
    peoples and liberating the Ionians.
  • But when Cleomenes heard it would take the
    Spartans three months time just to get to the
    Persian kingdom, Cleomenes cut short Aristagoras
    saying, Get out of Sparta before sundown,
    Milesian stranger, for you have no speech
    eloquent enough to induce the Lacedemonians
    (Spartans) to march for three months inland from
    the sea. (The Histories 550 Blanco)

20
  • Aristagoras was not yet willing to give up and he
    followed Cleomenes to his house,. As the
    suppliant sat in Cleomenes house, he noticed
    Cleomenes young daughter, Gorgo (8 years old),
    standing by his father. He asked Cleomenes to
    send his daughter away, but Cleomenes declined
    and told him to say whatever he liked.
  • Aristagoras then started by promising ten talents
    if he Cleomenes could send help. When this was
    rejected, Aristagoras kept adding up the amount
    until it reached fifty talents.
  • At this time, the child cried out, Father, this
    stranger will corrupt you with a bribe if you
    dont get up and leave! Delighted with the
    childs advice, Cleomenes withdrew into another
    room and Aristagoras failed in his attempt to
    gain help from the Spartans.
  • Foreign customs, cautious, conservative, and wary
    of foreign adventures, and who allowed their
    women to be assertive.

21
  • In 498B.C., the ships from Athens and Eretria
    arrived. Aristagoras led the Milesians and
    Athenians to launch a surprise attack on the
    Persians in Sardis. They captured the city,
    burned the sanctuaries, and dashed back to Ionia,
    where they found a Persian force waiting for
    them. In the following fight, the Ionians were
    defeated the Athenians barely escaped
    destruction and had to return home.
  • Not surprisingly, Darius was furious. As a
    revenge for the destruction of Sardis, Miletus
    was ruined. Its women and children were enslaved,
    and the men were relocated to the mouth of the
    Tigris. Miletus, which had been one of the most
    cultured cities as it was home of the
    philosophers Thales, Anaximander, and
    Anaximenens, and the geographer Hactaeus, was
    wholly wiped out.

22
The First Persian War
  • Darius thought Athens should also be punished for
    their role in aiding the Ionians in their revolt.
  • The Athenians was aware of the situation. They
    began to worry that the mainland Greece might
    have the same fate as Miletus.
  • Themistocles, a very capable Athenian leader, was
    then elected archon. He persuaded the Athenians
    to turn the Piraeus harbors into a fortified
    naval and commercial base.

23
The Battle of Marathon (490BC)
  • In 490B.C. Darius sent an army straight across
    the Aegean Sea. Along the way, many other Greek
    cities offered earth and water as recognition of
    the kings supremacy. Upon the same request,
    however, Sparta and Athens, among others, refused
    to submit to the Persian king. Then, under
    guidance of Hippias, the Persians landed on
    Marathon in northern Attica.

24
(No Transcript)
25
  • The Athenians knew what was coming and they were
    now under a critical situation (betraying). The
    Athenian forces were heavily outnumbered (more
    than two to one ) and Plataea, the only neighbor
    who sent help, had only an army numbered in the
    hundreds.
  • Still, the Athenian Assembly immediately voted to
    send their forces to meet the Persians.
  • Also a messenger was sent to Sparta to ask for
    help.

26
  • Greece rugged terrain, so rocky and steep that
    runners instead of horsemen were often sent to
    convey message between cities.
  • The runner named Philippides who was sent off to
    request Spartan help covered the distance of a
    little over 200 kilometers between Athens and
    Sparta in about thirty-six hours, which was quite
    remarkable. More remarkable, the Spartan army, in
    full battle gear, covered the same distance in
    three days.

27
  • However, the Spartans could not send their troops
    immediately (celebrating a festival of Apollo,
    the Carneia, and the ritual requirement forbade
    them to send an army into the field until the
    moon was full, which would be six days later).

28
  • The Persians had landed at Marathon, twenty-odd
    miles from Athens, on the other side of Mt.
    Pentele, where there was a small plain suitable
    for cavalry operations, a Persian strength.

29
  • At the time when Philippides was sent to Sparta,
    the Athenian army quickly marched to block the
    two exits from the plain of Marathon under the
    guidance of Miltiades, who had the greatest
    experience of fighting the Persians.
  • The Persians were prevented from moving inland
    for the time being. Both the Athenians and the
    Persians seemed to have been unwilling to take
    the initial risk of attacking, and for
    approximately five days the two armies confronted
    each other in stalemate across the plain of
    Marathon.

30
  • The Persian forces cavalry, archers, and
    skirmishing troops.
  • The Athenian and also the Spartans fought as
    hoplites, or heavy infantry, armored in
    greaves, helmet, and breastplate, and bearing a
    substantial hoplon or shield.
  • They deployed in closely packed lines, each
    hoplite bearing a thrusting spear overhand on his
    right and shielding his comrade to the left. The
    resulting phalanx was a formidable formation,
    but vulnerable to the flank attack from cavalry.
  • And so, it could be seen that the Persian cavalry
    would be the major threat to the Athenian
    hoplites.

31
(No Transcript)
32
  • Ten Athenian strategoi (generals) at Marathon,
    Miltiades being one of them. Elected and each
    took in turn a day to command the army.
  • In addition, a war archon in overall charge,
    elected by the whole citizen body. The war archon
    was Callimachus. As there was disagreement among
    the ten Athenian strategoi whether to wait or
    attack soon, they had a debate. Arguments went on
    until they learned that the Persian cavalry was
    suddenly missing and probably heading for
    Phaleron.
  • The general Miltiades, who had been eager to
    attack, tried to persuade his colleagues to
    launch the attack immediately. The ten strategoi
    came to a draw of five to five, thus the decision
    fell upon Callimachus, the war archon, who had a
    vote when the ten strategoi could not reach a
    majority vote. Miltiades tried to win

33
  • Callimachus, it is up to you, right now, to
    enslave Athens or to make it free, and to leave
    for all future generations of humanity a memorial
    to yourself such as not even Harmodius and
    Aristogiton have left. Right now, Athens is in
    the most perilous moment of its history. Hippias
    has already shown what we will suffer if we bow
    down to the Medes, but if this city survives, it
    can become the foremost city in all Greece.

34
  • Now, Ill tell you just how this is possible and
    how it is up to you --- and only you --- to
    determine the course of events. We ten generals
    are split right in two, with half saying fight
    and the other half not. If we dont fight now, I
    am afraid that a storm of civil strife will so
    shake the timber of the Athenian people that they
    will go over to the Medes.

35
  • But if we fight now, before the cracks can show
    in some of the Athenians, and provided that the
    gods take no sides, why then we can survive this
    battle. All this depends on you. It hangs on your
    decision --- now. If you vote with me, your
    country will be free and your city will be first
    in all of Hellas, but if you choose the side of
    those who urge us not to fight, then the opposite
    of all the good Ive spoken of will fall to you.

36
  • Obviously Callimachus was persuaded and voted in
    favor of Miltiades, and the Athenians decided to
    attack.

37
  • Miltiades ordered the two tribes forming the
    center to be arranged in the depth of 4 ranks
    while the other tribes at the flanks in ranks of
    8. Thus the Athenian army was formed into a long
    line, thin in the center but thick in the flanks.
    In this way the Athenian Phalanx formation would
    have no worry of being outflanked. When the line
    was ready, Miltiades gave a simple signal At
    them.
  • The distance between the Athenian and Persian
    armies was about 1,500 meters. Herodotus implies
    that the Athenians ran to the Persian lines the
    whole distance. The Persians tried to stop the
    Athenians with the arrows, but in vain, as the
    Athenians were protected for the most part by
    their heavy armour. Finally the Greek line
    collided with the Persian army. The hand-to-hand
    battle revealed the advantage of the Athenian
    phalanx formation, heavier armour and longer
    spear over the Persian army.

38
  • The Persians, after the initial surprise, tried
    to break through the center of the Athenian line
    and almost succeeded. At that time Athenian
    flanks had defeated the inferior Persian wings
    and began to envelope the Persian center.
  • The Persian army broke in panic and began to run
    back to their ships, perused by the Greeks. Some
    of them ran towards the swamps and drowned for
    ignorance of the local terrain.
  • The Athenians chased the Persians back to their
    ships and captured seven of the ships, though the
    majority were able to escape. Cynaegirus, brother
    of Aeschylus the tragedian, charged into the sea,
    grabbed one Persian warship, and tried to tow it
    back to the shore.
  • A member of the crew cut off his hand, and
    Cynaegirus died in the sea. Herodotus records
    that the Persians bodies counted on the
    battlefield were 6,400, not including those that
    perished in the swamps. The Athenians lost 192
    men, among whom was the war archon Callimachus.

39
First phase of the battle
40
The Second Phase of the War
41
  • Herodotus reports that after the Battle of
    Marathon a signal was given from Athens, urging
    the Persians to rush to Athens. But when they
    arrived at Athens, the Persians found that the
    Athenian army was also there, ready for defense.
    The Persians then decided to leave and went back
    to Persia. The Spartans arrived too late for the
    participation of the fighting, but they were able
    to visit the battlefield and survey the Persian
    corpses. After congratulating the great victory
    of the Athenians, they went back to Sparta.

42
  • The defeat at Marathon was a minor event for the
    Persian empire, yet it was an enormously
    significant victory for the Greeks. It was the
    first time that the Greeks beat the Persians, and
    showed that the Persians were not undefeatable.
    The Athenians took great honor in their victory
    of the Battle of Marathon. To commemorate the
    triumph, the Athenian dead were cremated and
    buried on the site of Marathon, instead of in the
    main Athenian cemetery. On the tomb of the
    Athenians, the epigram composed by Simonides
    reads

43
  • The Athenians, as defenders of the Hellenes, in
    Marathon
  • Destroyed the might of the golden-dressed Medes.

44
(No Transcript)
45
  • Very importantly, the victory of Marathon gave
    the Athenians an immense burst of self
    confidence. Such influence was enduring and could
    be seen in the next two generations, the golden
    age of Athens, of Pericles, of Phidias, of the
    Parthenon, of Herodotus and also of Greek
    tragedy.
  • The playwright Aeschylus, who also participated
    in the battle, took part in the drama competition
    in Athens in 472 B.C. with his play the Persian
    and won first prize. The play represents the
    growth of Athenian political, military, and
    cultural power after the victory. After his
    death, Aeschylus epitaph reads
  • The glorious grove of Marathon can tell of his
    valor --- as can the long-haired Persian, who
    well remembers it.

46
The Second Persian War
  • After the Battle of Marathon, Darius began
    collecting a huge new army. He was now determined
    to completely subjugate Greece, but was delayed
    in 486 BC when his Egyptian subjects revolted.
  • While still preparing to march on Egypt, Darius
    died and passed the throne to his son Xerxes, who
    crushed the Egyptian revolt, and very quickly
    re-started the preparations for the invasion of
    Greece.
  • Xerxes, Darius son and successor, made up his
    mind in 484B.C. to attack Greece.

47
  • When everything was ready, in 480, Xerxes led his
    huge army to march on road, which was believed to
    be the largest army ever assembled. Though the
    figure was not certain, historians estimated
    there were at least 500,000 Persian soldiers.
  • Besides, the Persian fleet amounted to 1294
    warships. Before Xerxes was marching out, he had
    sent heralds to the Greek cities, asking for
    earth and water, a token of compliance with the
    Persian army. Many cities, out of fear, submitted
    earth and water to Persia. Xerxes did not send
    anyone to Sparta and Athens, though, as
    messengers had been evilly treated there at the
    time of his fathers.

48
  • All the cities on the Greek mainland, only 31
    have resisted him. All the rest have sent him the
    sign of submission. He sent diplomats demanding
    earth and water.

49
  • And he sees before him spears glittering in the
    sun, 7000 warriors from the Peloponnese with the
    core of 300 Spartans. What means this, says the
    Persian king. An exile from Sparta is called and
    Xerxes asked, Who are these people?

50
  • The exile says, Sire, these are not just the
    bravest warriors in Greece, they are the bravest
    warriors in the world.
  • Xerxes says, Are you telling me that 300
    Spartans can resist my hundreds of thousands? Why
    dont you, you are from Sparta, fight a dozen of
    my men and see who wins?

51
The Battle of Hot Gate
  • Thats not it, Sire, it is the fact that these
    men fight signally brave, but fighting together,
    they are invincible, for they fear only the laws
    of Sparta and for that they will pay any price.
  • But Xerxes in his ate of moral blindness, will
    sweep on, to the battle of 300 Spartans at
    Thermopylae.

52
(No Transcript)
53
  • the Oracle at Delphi had revealed the following
    prophecy
  • O ye men who dwell in the streets of broad
    Lacedaemon!
  • Either your glorious town shall be sacked by
    the children of Perseus,
  • Or, in exchange, must all through the whole
    Laconian country

54
  • Leonidas was fully aware of the message and was
    convinced he was certainly going to die since his
    forces were not adequate for a victory, and so he
    deliberately selected the Spartans with living
    sons.

55
(No Transcript)
56
  • Then Xerxes against sent a messenger to Leonidas
    to negotiate with him, saying he would offer the
    allies freedom and the title Friends of the
    Persian People but the terms were rejected by
    Leonidas. Then the messenger asked him to lay
    down his weapons, upon which Leonidas' famous
    response was Molon Labe, meaning Come and get
    it. As the Persian messenger returned
    empty-handed, battle became inevitable.

57
  • Then probably on August 18, 480 B.C., the war
    broke out. The Greeks withstood the Persian army
    for three days though enormously outnumbered. In
    the narrow confines of the pass, Xerxes could not
    make use of his cavalry, and his overwhelming
    numbers could not be brought to bear. On the
    third day, however, a Greek traitor betrayed a
    secret path over the mountains leading to the
    rear of the Greek forces. On learning they were
    to be facing enemies at both sides, Leonidas
    dismissed the forces. Three hundred Spartans and
    also less than one thousand Thebans and Thespians
    remained there to give a hopeless defense. Still
    they killed many Immortals, the Xerxes
    personal guards, including two brothers of Xerxes
    before being killed themselves. This was seen as
    the Spartans finest hour, and their hopeless,
    suicidal defense galvanized Greece.

58
(No Transcript)
59
The Battle of Salamis
  • Though Leonidas was able to withhold the Persians
    for several days, the final victory went to the
    Persians. The Persians had slain the king of the
    leading Greek states, Sparta. The Persian army
    was then pouring unopposed now toward Athens.
    With several other city-states gone over to the
    Persian king, like Thessaly, there was no armed
    force between the Persian king and the borders on
    Athens. Athens was at its critical moment.

60
  • Themistocles also tried to persuade the Athenians
    to abandon their city. In the end, though
    reluctant, the Athenians made their calm decision
    to evacuate their country. Both homes that had
    been there for generations, the shrines (??) of
    their gods, the tombs of their ancestors were all
    to be evacuated. Since, Themistocles insisted
    that the wood walls in the words of the Oracle
    of Delphi only the wooden walls would survive
    meant the ships, Athenians loaded their women,
    their children, some of the older men onboard
    their ships and ferry them across to Salamis and
    also the city of Trizin, an allied city which
    agreed to give them shelter.
  • So, as Themistocles managed to persuade the Greek
    fleet from Artemesium to land at Salamis, by
    August 26 480 B.C. all were evacuated from Athens
    with the exception of only a few die-hards and
    priests at the Acropolis.

61
  • The Persians then rushed into Attica and entered
    the deserted city of Athens. The Persians gazed
    in wonder at what they saw in Athens and then
    after robbing the houses, set fire, and burned
    all the most beautiful buildings to ashes
    including the old temples in Acropolis for the
    revenge of burning the Sardis.
  • 8.5.4.2 War at Salamis
  • At the same time, the Persian fleet arrived at
    Phaleron on August 29, which at the time served
    as the main port for Athens. With the falling of
    Athens, the Peloponnesians led by Sparta were
    even more eager to withdraw to the Isthmus of
    Corinth. Themistocles warned that the Athenians
    would pack up and head off to southern Italy to
    start over if the Peloponnesians left. The ally
    then stayed for the Greeks had no chance of
    winning at sea without the Athenian fleet.

62
  • But as time passed, the disagreement remained. In
    the heated debate, Themistocles skilled himself
    just for a moment, sent off his most trusted
    servant, taking to Xerxes his secret message. The
    message was that Themistocles himself was now on
    the side of the Persians and was providing Xerxes
    valuable information ---the Greek fleet was about
    to leave, and if Xerxes would block the west wood
    isle, the Greeks would be trapped like fish in a
    barrel. Xerxes took the advice and sent off his
    fleet to bottle up the Greeks to the west. The
    Greeks then were forced to prepare for battle in
    the Salamis narrows.

63
  • The Persians spent a busy night, dispatching his
    troops and preparing their assault. Some of his
    best ships, his Phoenician and Ionian ships, were
    blockading the east outlet, Egyptian ships the
    west side, and the whole battle would be fought
    there at the east outlet. Xerxes even sent off
    hoplites on a small island near Salamis to kill
    any Greeks who tried to swim the shores. The
    Greeks, however, were able to take a rest before
    entering into battle. Themistocles demonstrated
    his prowess again by trying to lure the Persians
    into the narrows from the Phaleron the east for
    he knew that the Persian ships were lighter and,
    more maneuverable. In the narrow waters of the
    straits, their maneuverability would be limited
    and it would also be hard to bring their superior
    number into play.

64
  • causes sizable waves to develop. Then, the
    Persian ships would set higher in the water than
    the Greek triremes, and such waves would flow
    them off.
  • As the light begins to break, the Persian ships
    began to row in. Xerxes, meanwhile, had set
    himself up on the mainland with a good view of
    the whole channel, believing that his presence
    would encourage his sailors and marines to
    perform best. The Greek did not immediately
    engage the Persians, instead they rowed backward
    further into the bay to draw the Persians even
    further. In the early morning around 730 or 8,
    the wind really came up and waves began to rise.
    In mid-early morning the Greeks moved forward to
    battle, shouting as Themistocles tells us, row
    for your fathers, row for your children, row for
    your ancestors, row for freedom!.

65
(No Transcript)
66
  • The Athenians triremes fought very bravely they
    rowed up to the enemy ship, pulled the oars on
    one side and then slided by, cutting off the
    enemys oars, disabling it, and making it lurched
    in the water. The Persians superiority in
    numbers was in effect a hindrance (??) in the
    narrows, but the ships began to run afar of one
    another and they are drawn ever further in by the
    Greeks, and the Greeks, on the other hand, could
    dart in and out, slashing, ramming, boarding,
    cutting off the oars of the Persian ships, and
    then seeking other water. And so it went on.

67
  • By the end of the day, the Persians had suffered
    a great lossroughly 200 ships to Greek losses of
    forty or so. Themistocles proved right the
    narrows were the place to fight, and, in the end,
    wooden walls had saved Athens.
  • Xerxes watched from his throne, got furious and
    his reaction was to execute his Phoenician
    captains for alleged cowardice in the battle,
    without realizing it was his own fault to have
    caused the defeat. Soon enough the bulk of the
    Persian land forces withdrew and began the slow
    march back to Asia. Xerxes left his
    brother-in-law Mardonius, an able and experienced
    Persian commander, as commander of a force of
    300,000 men. His plan was to renew the land
    offensive the following spring in northern
    Greece.

68
  • The Greeks were over joyous over their naval
    victory at Salamis. The Greeks would ever honor
    the memory of these men who had fought the
    Salamis, honoring them with simple little epitaph
    (???), like we once lived in Corinth, and now we
    lie dead hereat Salamis. The youth of Greece
    given its life for freedom.
  • A year later, in 479 B.C., the two forces, one
    led by Pausanias, the successor of Leonidas, and
    one led by Mardonius, met in the Battle of
    Plataea. Mardonius was killed and the Persian
    army was totally defeated. Meanwhile, the Greek
    fleet led by the other Spartan king, Eurybiades,
    chased the Persian navy eastward and destroyed
    the Persian fleet at the Battle of Mycale near
    Miletus, eventually liberating the Ionians.
  • The victories at Plataea and Mycale marked the
    end of the war that had begun with Xerxess
    invasion. Celebration broke out across the Greek
    world. It is said that no dead in history were
    honored more than the dead of Marathon,
    Thermopylae, and Salamis.

69
  • Why the Greeks Won
  • As mentioned in the beginning of this chapter,
    sources on the Persians Wars are mainly from the
    great book Histories by Greek great historian
    Herodotus. Reading his Histories, we could see
    that Herodotus seems to attribute largely the
    loss of the Persians in the war, especially the
    war of Salamis to the character flaws on the part
    of Xerxes, mainly his hybris. We, however, could
    see that there should be more than that though
    Xerxes, a Persian despot, in fact committed
    foolish errors.
  • It is beyond this book to give a thorough
    analysis for such an issue. But by reading
    Herodotus Histories, we could easily draw the
    essential distinction between Greeks and
    Persians. Such a distinction seen from the
    perspective of Herodotus is that the Greeks are
    free and the Persians are not. The Persians,
    courageous, honest, capable, filled with all
    sorts of virtues though, are not free. In
    Herodotus view, even though they were vastly
    outnumbered, the Greeks won the Persian Wars, and
    finally deserved to win, because they were free.
    That is what sets the Greeks apart and, what is
    more, that is also what brings about the Greeks
    Golden Age after their victory in the Persians
    Wars, the flourishing of their great cultures.

70
? ?!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com