The Persian Wars c. 560 to 479
560?
Greece
First seizure of power in the unstable city-state of Athens by Peisistratus (born c. 596), son of Hippocrates, head of one of the three main contending factions (the hill villages) and a protégé/relative of the elderly statesman and constitutional reformer Solon (chief ‘archon’ in 594/3). Aristotle dates this first coup to the archonship of Comeas, i.e. 561/0.
Solon’s political and economic reforms – probably carried out during his archonship – had stabilized Athenian politics for some years afterwards, by cancelling rampant debts that oppressed the poor and by admitting the three higher social classes to a share of political power, but turbulence has returned by the 560s. Peisitratus has risen to political prominence as a military commander by capturing the port of Nisaea from Athens’ rival Megara in 564. He pretends that he has been attacked in his chariot out in the countryside and shows the city’s council his injuries (self-inflicted) in order to be given an official bodyguard, and then uses this to seize power. This and other contemporary ‘one-man’ regimes in Greece are known as the age of the ‘tyrants’, but the word is not a pejorative one in its original context.
At around this time, the embryonic ‘Spartan Alliance’ in the central Peloponnese – nucleus of the later ‘Peloponnesian League’ – emerges. This commences with a rapprochement between Sparta and Tegea after years of conflict, allegedly at the suggestion of the oracle of Delphi and based on Sparta acquiring the ‘bones of Orestes’ (i.e. the son and successor of legendary ruler Agamemnon at Mycenae in the Argolid) to pose as the leader of the region. The Sparta/Tegea alliance is joined in the 550s (?) by most of Arcadia, Elis, and Sicyon, but Argos stays aloof.
559
?Expulsion of Peisistratus from Athens (anything from one year to five after his seizure of power), after quarrelling with his rivals Megacles the Alcmaeonid, head of the ‘Paralia’ coastal faction, and Lycurgus the head of the ‘plain’, the rural area around Athens. The faction-names may be based on the home region of the faction-leader rather than a distinct ‘class’ difference between wealthy lowland region farmers (the plain around Athens, i.e. Lycurgus’ region, being the richest area) and poorer hillmen. Herodotus is unclear how long the first ‘tyranny’ lasted except that it was brief; Aristotle, however, dates the expulsion of Peisistratus to five years after 561/0, i.e. ?556.
Persia
?Accession of the creator of the Persian empire, Cyrus ‘the Great’, son of Cambyses, of the Achaemenid dynasty that rules the homeland province of the ‘Persians’ in southern Iran. Probable union with the neighbouring northern state of Media, which Herodotus claims Cyrus takes from his hostile grandfather Astyages – though Herodotus’ story is similar to that of the founder of Mycenae in Greece, Perseus, and his grandfather Acrisius of Argos.
c.556–5 or 551/0
Greece
Brief second period of rule by Peisistratus in Athens, involving his return to power in the company of a tall young woman called Phye? whom he has dressed up as the goddess Athene to convince the rural peasantry that he has divine support. She then escorts him by chariot from her village to Athens, in company with his ally Megacles. He forms an alliance with Megacles and marries his daughter, but avoids having children by her, annoying her father, and is expelled again. This implies that his elder sons Hippias and Hipparchus, the first an adult by 546 according to Herodotus, are already born by c. 558, by his first marriage, and he does not want to divide up his estates with a half-Alcmaeonid younger son to their detriment.
Around 555 Sicyon joins the ‘Spartan Alliance’ after the end of the ‘tyranny’ (benevolent) of Cleisthenes, father-in-law of the Athenian aristocrat Megacles (above). The date of Cleisthenes’ death is uncertain; he probably ruled for around thirty years. By around 550 Corinth and Megara have also joined the alliance – Megara probably to protect herself against Athens after her defeat by Peisistratus in 564.
547
Persia/Greece
Croesus, king of Lydia in western Asia Minor, attacks the expanding Persian empire, crossing the River Halys Eastwards, after allegedly sending an enquiry to the oracle at Delphi about the war and being told that he will destroy a great empire – Persia, as he thinks, but, in fact, it means his own. He fights a drawn battle with the army of Great King Cyrus, ruler of eastern Asia Minor and Armenia as well as Persia/Media/Syria, then withdraws back to his capital, Sardes, for the winter. Unknown to him, Cyrus is planning to attack in winter contrary to the usual customs of war, and keeps his army mobilized.
546
Early – The Persian army arrives at and besieges Sardes, and Croesus brings his army out to fight but is routed, according to Herodotus by the smell of Cyrus’ camels panicking his famous cavalry’s horses. Croesus is forced to surrender a fortnight later, after Persian mountaineers scale a path up the rock of the citadel; Lydia is annexed to Persia. According to Herodotus and others, Croesus either plans to commit suicide or is punished by being put on a pyre with noble youths and some of his riches, but is (probably) spared by Cyrus as Herodotus thinks likeliest. (The date of this conquest of Lydia is presumed but unclear, and may follow the fall of Babylon in 539).
The annexation of Lydia by Persia is followed by the annexation of the adjacent Greek states of Ionia, who have to pay tribute but retain their autonomy; the inhabitants of the city of Phocaea, besieged by the Persian general Harpagus, evacuate themselves by sea to their colony in Corsica and the inhabitants of Teos move to found Abdera in Thrace.
Probable date of a major war between Sparta and Argos for the rule of the eastern Peloponnese over the region of Thyaea, which Sparta wins – according to Herodotus this war is underway when Croesus sends an unsuccessful appeal to Sparta, chief military power in Greece, for aid. Traditionally the war leads to a disputed ‘battle of the champions’ combat between 300 men from each city, which both claim to win as only two Argives and one Spartan survive, and then a large-scale battle won by Sparta. This conflict leads to the Spartan-led alliance of Peloponnesian states, traditionally known as the ‘Peloponnesian League’, dominating central Greece.
The preoccupation of Argos and Sparta with their war may be the occasion for the overthrow of the unstable oligarchic regime at Athens, for the second time, by the ‘tyrant’ Peisistratus. He and his sons return from about a decade (Herodotus and Aristotle agree on this length of time as ten years) in exile in Thrace, where they have set up a goldmine and enlisted troops, land at Marathon in the East of Attica, and defeat their foes in battle at Pallene. They then occupy Athens, and Peisistratus becomes a benevolent dictator, ‘national’ unifier and expander of the annual festival of the ‘Panathenaia’, and patron of the arts. One of Peisistratus’ main allies is the wealthy ‘tyrant’ Lygdamis of Naxos, in the Cyclades, who as a private citizen lent him men for his seizure of power and was helped to seize Naxos in return (i.e. after 546).
(Herodotus says that the main period of Peisistratid rule lasted for thirty-six years, to 511/10; thus it commenced in 547/6.)
Late 540s?
Seizure of power on the eastern Ionian island of Samos by the most notable pirate ruler and fleet-commander of the age, Polycrates, aided by Lygdamis of Naxos. Polycrates is also a patron of the age’s major lyric poets, such as Anacreon of Teos (c. 570–485 BC), and a noted builder.
539
Persia
Cyrus’ conquest of Babylonia, with his army defeating the dilettante astronomer king Nabonidus’ army at Opis (October) and advancing on the defenceless city, which surrenders. The formal occupation of Babylon is on 12 October; the wealthy and powerful local cults are preserved intact in an alliance with the ancient priesthoods, and Cyrus makes his elder son Cambyses the new king of Babylon. Restoration of the Jewish exiles there to their homeland in Israel.
530/29
Death in battle in Central Asia of Cyrus ‘the Great’, campaigning against the ‘Massegetae’ nomads on the River Oxus, after a thirty-year reign in Persia; succeeded by his mentally unstable eldest son, Cambyses.
Greece
(Probably spring 527) Death of the benevolent ‘tyrant’ Peisistratus of Athens, probably aged around seventy, after an eighteen-year third period of rule; succeeded by his sons Hippias and Hipparchus. Both are probably over thirty by this time. They also hold family mines in Thrace and the town of Sigeum on the Hellespont.
527/6
Archonship of the obscure Onestorides in Athens.
526
Persia/Egypt
Cambyses invades Egypt, according to some stories after Pharaoh Amasis II ‘insulted’ him by only pretending to send his daughter to the Great King as a wife and sending a fake (?the daughter of his predecessor Apries) instead. Greek mercenaries fight on both sides in the war, with a Greek colony at Naucratis in Egypt supplying troops to the Egyptians; however, Amasis’ leading Greek mercenary captain Phanes has defected to Persia and escaped an attempt to kidnap and repatriate him. The invasion is held up by the defiance of the fortress-city of Gaza on the Palestinian border; Amasis II dies six months before the fall of Egypt (i.e. November 526?), after a reign of forty-four years, and is succeeded by his son Psammetichus III.
526/5
Archonship of Hippias in Athens.
525
Early? – Fall of Gaza after a prolonged siege leads to the invasion of Egypt proceeding; Cambyses leads his army across the desert to the eastern mouth of the Nile and wins a major battle against Pharaoh Psammetichus at Pelusium. (The piles of bones are still visible when the historian Herodotus visits Egypt over sixty years later.) The city falls, followed by the capital up-river at Memphis where the defenders initially kill the crew of an Ionian ship (from Mytilene) who Cambyses sends to demand their surrender. The Pharaoh surrenders and is spared; Egypt is annexed as a Persian province and according to Herodotus Cambyses manically suppresses the local cults, killing the sacred bull of the god Apis to insult the Egyptians. This is at odds with the usual Persian respect for local religions – and archaeological evidence suggests that the current Apis cult bull died and was buried in a normal, honoured fashion c. 524.
525/4
Greece
Cleisthenes, head of the Alcmaeonid family and son of Megacles (by the daughter of the late ‘tyrant’ Cleisthenes of Sicyon), becomes the eponymous ‘archon’ of the year at Athens. This indicates that either Peisistratus or Hippias has recalled his family, despite their supposed permanent banishment from Athens arising from the ‘curse of Cylon’ (their part in murdering the would-be coup leader Cylon and his men in the sanctuary of a temple in 639 BC). Within a few years Cleisthenes and his family are banished again.
?(Story in Herodotus) The piratical tyrant Polycrates of Samos, ally of the Peisistratidae, is called on to send a naval contingent with Cambyses’ army to Egypt and sends off shiploads of his political foes, with a secret request to the Great King to get rid of them; they realize what he intends, overthrow his commanders and revolt, and sail back to attack Samos. They fail to take the eponymous capital, and have to leave for exile.
524
Cimon, half-brother of Miltiades (I) the founder of the family’s Athenian colony on the Chersonese, wins his third Olympic chariot-victory – a rare privilege and a sign of his wealth and prestige. His son Miltiades (II) is the eponymous ‘archon’ of the year 524/3 at Athens. Cimon’s subsequent murder is rumoured to be at the hands of the jealous Peisistratids who fear a coup.
c. 522
Polycrates is lured to Sardes by the ambitious satrap Oroites, who covets Samos and its fleet as a gift for the Great King, to alleged talks on an alliance against the tyrannical Cambyses. Polycrates ignores warnings of the Persian being untrustworthy, allegedly including a dream by his daughter, and greedily believes a report from his envoy that he was shown a room full of treasure by Oroites; he is seized at Sardes, executed, and exposed on a cross but the island of Samos holds out against Oroites under the leadership of Polycrates’ brother Maeandrius. The crisis probably leads to Polycrates’ court poet Anacreon moving to Athens, according to Herodotus at the invitation of Hipparchus who sends a ship to fetch him.
522/1
Hippias’ son, the younger Peisistratus, is eponymous ‘archon’ at Athens.
Persia
Spring? – Murder of Great King Cambyses’ brother Bardiya/Smerdis, in secret in Persia on his orders sent back from Egypt; this is disputed though the next king, Darius, presents the ‘Bardiya’/Smerdis who he killed as a pretender.
July? – Death of Cambyses in an accident on his way home to Persia from Egypt, in Syria; some portray it as suicide but a freak accident is more likely. Either the real Bardiya/Smerdis or (‘official’ version put out subsequently by the next ruler, Darius) a pretender who looks like him, a Magian priest called Gaumata, seizes power in Persia.
September – A conspiracy by seven great Persian nobles leads to the assassination of either the real or the fake Bardiya/Smerdis at Sikyavauvati, a fortress in the Nisean hills near Ecbatana; the leaders of the conspiracy include Ottanes (who Herodotus says has refused an offer of the throne), Megabyzus, Intaphrenes, and Gobryas. One of the plotters, the late Great King’s distant cousin and honorary ‘lance-bearer’ Darius, son of the nobleman Hystaspes, becomes the new Great King and in effect founds a new dynasty but marries Cambyses’ sister Atossa to increase his legitimacy. Several years of rebellion across the empire follow before his power is secured; initially Media, the Persian homeland, and Armenia are in revolt, plus Babylon.
November – Darius recovers Babylon.
Spring – Darius puts down the rebel ‘king’ Phraortes in Media, and then deals with a revolt in lowland Elam south-east of Babylonia; his generals recover Armenia to the northwest.
June – Darius’ general Artavardiya defeats the rebels in the Persian homeland, who are led by Vahyazdata, at the battle of Parga.
c. 520
Persia/Greece
Oroites, the murderous satrap of Lydia and Ionia, is executed by arriving envoys from the new Great King Darius, particularly on account of his recent killing of Mitroates the governor of Dascylium and his failure to assist the new ruler.
Polycrates’ and Maeandrius’ exiled brother Syloson, who has gone to Persia to get aid and according to Herodotus met future ruler Darius while on the Egyptian expedition, persuades the new Great King Darius to let him become the new tyrant of Samos as a Persian vassal. He arrives with a Persian fleet under the senior noble (and 522 coup plotter) Otanes. Maeandrius proposes to abdicate his tyranny for a democracy and leave unmolested for exile, but his released captive brother Charilaus tries to put up a fight with some of the late tyrant’s mercenaries and is defeated; the Persians massacre the populace and install Syloson as their puppet-ruler. Maeandrius ends up in Sparta.
Revolt of Babylon against Darius, according to Herodotus after the Persian expedition to Samos.
519
Greece
The southern Boeotian town of Plataea defects from the Thebes-led Boeotian League, and on advice from its putative helper Sparta allies with nearer Athens instead.
516
Hippias and Hipparchus send out the future general Miltiades (II), nephew of the eponymous founder of the family’s colony on the Chersonese, to command the latter and protect the Athenian corn-trade route from the Black Sea; this may be another move to rid themselves of a potential political rival.
(or 515/14)? Seizure of the Athenian border fortress of Leipsydrium by the exiled Alcmaeonids, who use it to make attacks on Attica in an attempt to undermine Peisistratid rule; later they are driven out.
c. 515
Death of King Anaxandridas of Sparta; he is succeeded by his eldest son, Cleomenes, who is his son by his second wife who the King married thinking his first wife was barren; the elder son by Anaxandridas’ first wife, the slightly younger Doreius, objects to this and soon leaves to found a new colony in Libya/Cyrene.
Spring – At the ‘Great Panathenaia’ festival in Athens, the tyrant Hippias’ brother Hipparchus is assassinated by the famed ‘tyrannicides’, Harmodius and Aristogeiton. They are commemorated as heroes, especially with a statue-group on the Acropolis, after the fall of Hippias – but, in fact, their motive seems from Herodotus to have been personal rather than political. Allegedly Harmodius refused the advances of the homosexual Hipparchus, who in revenge banned his sister from taking part in the sacred procession of the ‘maidens’ attending the statue of Athene as she was ‘not a virgin’ so family honour had to be avenged. The assassins are killed, along with a number of suspects, and Hippias becomes notably more paranoid after this and the number of exiles increases; possibly the Peisistratids’ poetic client, the famed Simonides of Ceos, leaves for Thessaly.
513
Persia
Expedition of Great King Darius over a ‘bridge of boats’ across the Bosphorus to invade Thrace – the first Persian penetration into Europe, with an Ionian Greek naval contingent led by Histiaeus, tyrant of Miletus, who has his own landed interests in Thrace. The ‘bridge of boats’ is built by Mandrocles of Samos, a Greek engineer. Darius and a large army advance across eastern Thrace to the Danube, and the local Getae submit. The Persian fleet sails into the Danube and transports the Persian army across to attack the nomad ‘Scythians’ on the plains of Wallachia, but the latter refuse to submit and withdraw in their horse-drawn wagons out of reach, burning the countryside. The Persians run short of supplies and are harassed by horse-archers, and eventually Darius has to give up and retire to the Danube and thence to Asia; before his arrival back at the Hellespont Scythian envoys have tried to lure its Ionian Greek protectors (including Miltiades of Athens ruler of the Chersonese) into demolishing the ‘bridge of boats’ there to cut Darius off. Behind him, some of the Propontis Greek states revolt, led by Chalcedon, which the Persians then sack, and the nomad Thracians attack the Persian bases in the region. This expedition arguably gives Miltiades, future victor of Marathon in 490, invaluable experience of Persian battle-tactics.
c.513
Greece
The exiled Alcmaeonids gain the contract for the rebuilding of the temple of Apollo at Delphi from the authorities, and use it to pressurize the Spartans to overthrow the Peisistratids; this duly has an effect on King Cleomenes, who plans an invasion on their behalf. ?Alliance between Hippias and the tyrant of Lampsacus on the Hellespont, as the Peisistratids’ new link to the court of the Great King.
511/10
Sicily
?Cleomenes’ half-brother Dorieus and his Spartans make a failed attempt to create a new colony in Sicily near Mount Eryx after leaving Cyrene, but are wiped out by local Siceliots.
Failed first invasion of Athens on behalf of the exiles by Cleomenes, king of Sparta; the Spartan army, led by Anchimolius, lands at the port of Phalerum but is driven back by the Peisistratids’ hired 1000 Thessalian cavalry.
?Conquest of Thrace as a Persian province by the general Megabazus.
510
Greece
Summer – Second attack on Athens on behalf of the Alcmaeonids and other exiles by Cleomenes and the Spartan army; local help assists them in defeating the tyrant’s Thessalian cavalry, and Hippias is blockaded on the Acropolis until his sons are captured and he is forced to agree to terms and leave Athens for his family’s lands on the Hellespont at Sigeum. The pre-Peisistratid rule of the noble families is restored, but soon breaks down in feuding between the Alcmaeonids and the ambitious Isagoras, possibly a ‘Philiad’ and a friend of Cleomenes.
510/09
Sicily
Traditional date for the destruction of the famously rich and luxurious (hence ‘sybaritic’) Greek city-state of Sybaris in southern Italy by its neighbour Croton. According to Diodorus its new ‘tyrant’ Telys expels five hundred of the richest citizens, who flee to Croton as supplicants and persuade the city to help them; the Olympic wrestler Milo, possibly son-in-law to the locally resident philosopher/mathematician Pythagoras, leads the army of Croton to destroy the Sybarites’ much larger army (Diodorus’ figures are implausible) and the winners raze Sybaris to the ground. Strabo later (first century) claims a river is diverted over the site. Descendants of the evictees will attempt to restore Sybaris in 446/5, then join the new colony at Thurii.
508
Summer – Isagoras elected chief ‘archon’ at Athens, despite Cleisthenes rallying the support of the non-enfranchised classes who used to back the Peisistratids against the ‘old’ nobility. Isagoras declares that the Alcmaeonids must leave the city as they are still hereditarily guilty of the sacrilegious massacre of Cylon and his party in 639, and gets Cleomenes to send a herald agreeing to this; when they have left he calls in Cleomenes and Spartan troops to assist him (presumably against riots).
Cleomenes draws up a long list of 700 families to be banished as the Alcmaeonids’ alleged co-conspirators in the 639 massacre, i.e. the opponents of his ally Isagoras; he proposes to replace the Areopagus council (?) with a new council of 300 consisting of Isagoras’ faction, but there is a revolution led by the council and the Athenian people besiege Cleomenes and Isagoras on the Acropolis. After two days the besieged surrender, and Cleomenes’ Spartans and Isagoras are allowed to leave but some of the oligarchic faction are arrested and executed. Cleisthenes and his faction are recalled, and envoys are sent to the Great King’s satrap at Sardes, his brother Artaphernes, to seek a Persian alliance to warn off Sparta. The latter requires them to do homage with ‘earth and water’ as usual for a Persian vassal, but they are disowned on their return to Athens.
Cleisthenes as chief archon of Athens reforms the constitution, to negate aristocratic influence by creating new sub-divisions of the state as the basis for elections – one region each from the city (‘asty’), coast (‘paralia’), and inland (‘mesogaia’), the three forming a new ‘tribe’ (‘phyle’) of which there are now ten in the state. These tribes are not based on one distinct geographical place, unlike the previous ones, so they are not dominated by the rich landed aristocrats. These new electoral areas are now used to elect the ‘pool’ of personnel from whom the new ‘Council of Five Hundred’ (‘Boule’) is chosen by lot; the council takes over the main administrative functions, certainly from the ex-archons’ Areopagus council and possibly from Solon’s ‘Council of Four Hundred’ if this still exists. In effect all the citizens have equal rights in politics as previously in justice; an equal chance at joining the government is provided by selecting which one of the ten committees (each of 50) in the 500 will govern the state when in the year, in rotation, by lot.
507/6
Archonship of Alcmaeon, from his name presumably a relative and ally of Cleisthenes, at Athens. This choice is probably to preserve the latter’s new constitution from any ‘comeback’ by Isagoras and his oligarchic allies, and so provokes them into calling in Cleomenes again to aid a coup.
506
Spring – Cleomenes attempts to rectify his failure to help Isagoras earlier, by cozening the Peloponnesian League into sending troops to the Spartan army at the Isthmus for a campaign and not announcing the target until they have crossed the Athenian border to Eleusis. Meanwhile, his allies the Boeotian League, led by Thebes and hostile to Athens over the secession of Plataea, and Chalcis on Eretria attack Athens simultaneously from the north (via Oeonoe) and north-east. However, the Peloponnesians are unhappy at finding they are helping Sparta to restore an oligarchic faction at Athens as Sparta is supposed to be the foe of tyrants, and as the Athenian army arrives at Eleusis the Corinthians refuse to fight them. Cleomenes’ co-ruler Demaratus agrees, refuses to go along with Cleomenes’ plan, and withdraws his troops from the army. The army breaks up, and Cleomenes has to return home. At Sparta it is agreed that from now on only one king shall command in an overseas war at a time.
The Athenians head north-east for Euboea to deal with Chalcis, but coincidentally intercept the Boeotian army en route and defeat them, taking 700 prisoners; the same day they cross to Euboea and defeat the Chalcis army. The wealthy ‘horse-owners’ class of Chalcis are dispossessed and replaced by a colony of 4000 Athenian ‘cleruchs’ to control this state; these men keep their Athenian citizenship though living in another state. The Boeotian and Chalcis prisoners are ransomed at 50 drachmas a head, and a tenth of the money is used to commission bronze chains, which are hung up in a temple on the Acropolis as a trophy.
During this brief war, Thebes appeals to Athens’ foe Aegina for help and the Aeginetan fleet attacks and burns the port of Phalerum in an unannounced, and thus generally disapproved of, act of war.
Athens refuses a demand by Artaphernes, satrap of Lydia, on Darius’ behalf to restore Hippias to power; the ex-tyrant goes to the congress of the Spartan-led ‘Peloponnesian League’ to ask them for help, and Sparta (probably via King Cleomenes) backs him, but Sosicles of Corinth persuades the allies to leave the plan alone. With a majority of the allies against backing Hippias, Sparta bows to their will. Hippias leaves Greece again and settles at Sigeum on the Hellespont, a family possession of the Peisistradae owned by his half-brother Hegistratus.
?At around this date King Cleomenes of Sparta attacks Argos, and during the course of a series of skirmishes between the two armies succeeds in driving the enemy troops into a supposedly sacred wood, which he blockades and then sets on fire; this may be the first sign of his later violent madness, and the insult to the gods is cited as reason for his later misfortunes.
501
Probable inauguration of the new board of ten generals (‘strategoi’), commanding in rotation, to lead the Athenian army and fleet; the traditional annual commander, the ‘polemarch’, becomes largely honorary.
500
Aristagoras, tyrant of Miletus, interests his Persian overlords in extending their influence across the Aegean by aiding a faction of refugee oligarchs expelled from the island of Naxos; the Great King agrees to lend him troops for a naval expedition there to restore them to power as Persian vassals.
499
Spring-summer – Failure of a three-month siege of the eponymous ‘capital’ town of Naxos by Aristagoras, ruler of Miletus, and his Ionian/Persian army; the Persians blame him for making the expedition sound easy and he fears being reported to Darius and replaced.
Aristagoras is advised to start an Ionian revolt by his father-in-law and predecessor Histiaeus, now living at Darius’ court in Susa. (According to Herodotus, Histiaeus tattoos his message on a slave’s head, then waits while he grows his hair back and sends him to Miletus with a message to shave him.) Aristagoras, possibly realizing that he needs to use local anti-Persian feeling for his own benefit and pose as a national leader if he is not to be overthrown by his enemies as a Persian puppet, holds secret meetings of local notables to plan the war. He is advised by the geographer Hecataeus, who fears their being overwhelmed without outside help, to win control of the seas but does not take his advice to use the temple treasures of the shrine of Apollo at Didyma to pay for help. The Ionian fleet is still at Miletus after the Naxos expedition, and its captains are either suborned or arrested; Aristagoras announces the overthrow of the region’s pro-Persian tyrants and proclaims his own abdication in the cause of democracy.
Winter – Aristagoras goes to Greece to ask for help, and visits Sparta but cannot interest its rulers – allegedly because he has to admit that the enemy capital is three months’ march from the sea. Athens promises support (possibly due to anger over Darius backing the exiled Hippias), as does the city of Eretria on Euboea, and twenty Athenian and five Eretrian ships sail to join the rebel Ionian navy.
498
Spring/early summer – Once the promised ships have arrived from Greece, the Ionian navy sails into the mouth of the river Cayster in Lydia and lands at Ephesus, but Aristagoras stays at Miletus and sends his brother Charopinus instead; the rebels march upriver on and sack the satrapal capital of Lydia, Sardes, but satrap Artaphernes, Darius’ nephew, holds the citadel. The sack of Sardes causes the revolt to spread to the Propontis, principally Byzantium, and to Caria to the south and on to Cyprus where Onesilus of Salamis leads the revolt and wins over most of the island except Amathus, which he attacks. Onesilus asks the Ionians for help.
Some months later, a Persian army under Daurises arrives in Lydia from inland and defeats the Ionian army at Ephesus, killing Eualcides the Eretrian commander; the Greeks flee to the coast. The Athenians and Eretrians go home. Darius sends Histaieus to Lydia to advise Artaphernes on putting down the rebellion, as the latter has been pressing so that he would have the opportunity to defect; Daurises, Hymeas and Artybius (sons-in-law of Darius) gather large Persian armies ready to attack on three ‘fronts’.
497
The piecemeal reconquest of Ionia commences; part of the coast in the north is reconquered by Daurises, who retakes Dardanus, Lampsacus, and Abydos on the Hellespont, and Hymeas.
Summer – Artybius and an army are taken by the Persian Phoenician fleet to rebel-held Cyprus to reconquer it. They land on the north coast without interception by the rebel fleet, and Artybius and the land-forces cross the island to attack Salamis, the main port on the east coast, with the fleet moving round to the east coast to cut it off from the sea. A land and sea battle follows near Salamis and Artybius is killed in combat, but some of the Cypriots desert led by Stesenor of Curium and the rebel land-army is defeated. The Ionian navy leaves Cyprus once the rebel-held towns are under siege.
Autumn – Daurises leads his army south to reconquer Caria in south Ionia and wins two major battles, the first against the locals at the river Marsyas and the second against a rescuing army of Ionians. While he is busy there, on the north-western ‘front’ Hymeas reconquers the southern Troad.
496
Fall of Soli on Cyprus to Persia after a four-month siege ends the rebellion there.
Hymeas and his north-western army in Ionia move south into Aeolis, but Hymeas dies; Artaphernes uses the army to take Cyme and Clazomenae. The army of Daurises is, however, heavily defeated in Caria and the other Persian army has to move south there to restore the situation.
Aristagoras leaves Miletus to set up a safer rebel base for himself in Thrace, but is killed at Myrcinus; Histiaeus arrives at Miletus seeking the return of his old command, is denied it by the citizens, and goes off to the Hellespont with a small fleet as a pirate. The Athenian colonial outpost in the Chersonese nearby is taken over by the future Athenian general Miltiades (II), nephew of its founding ruler Miltiades (I) and son of the Olympic chariot-victor Cimon.
495
Summer – As the Persian/Phoenician navy prepares to attack the main rebel centre at Miletus, the rebel cities and territories send envoys to a congress at the Panionium shrine and decide to base their fleet nearby at Lade to defend it. Three hundred and fifty-three ships assemble, commanded by Dionysius of Phocaea and centred on the fleets of Chios, Miletus, Samos, and Lesbos. The Persians send envoys promising a pardon for those who desert the rebels; these (including Aeces the ex-ruler of Samos) are officially defied, but soon the harsh training in ramming-tactics imposed on the fleet by Dionysius arouses discontent. As the Persian fleet, about twice the size of the Greek one, moves on Lade the Samian squadron sees the disorder of the Ionians, fears defeat, and flees except for eleven loyal ships, and the Lesbos squadron and others follow; the Chians (one hundred ships) lead the rebel defence, but lose about half their ships and abandon the fight. Dionysius takes three enemy ships and breaks out successfully to plunder off Phoenicia and then head for Sicily, and the rebel fleet disperses abandoning Miletus.
494
Siege, fall, and sack of Miletus; burning of the temple of Apollo at Didyma by the Persians. The inhabitants are deported to Susa by Darius. The Samians flee by sea to Italy rather than have Aeces put back as their ruler by Persia, and settle at Zancle (Messina), which the locals at Rhegium help them to take by evicting the current residents. The remaining rebel cities in Caria are either stormed or surrender; end of the Ionian rebellion. At around this time Histiaeus, having attacked Lesbos and Chios with his pirate ships, ventures onto the mainland in Mysia and is captured by Artaphernes’ ally, the general Harpagus; he and Artaphernes impale Histiaeus so he will not be pardoned by Darius, and send his head to Darius who is not pleased.
494/3
Darius’ son-in-law Mardonius, son of his 522 ally Gobryas, takes over the military command in Ionia, forces the Ionians to create a new league under Persian control where internal disputes will be dealt with by arbitration not war, and moves on via the Hellespont to Thrace to punish the restive tribes.
493/2
Mardonius conquers the Chersonese and also secures control of the Greek cities on the Propontis such as Byzantium. Miltiades has to flee the Chersonese, abandoning his base at Cardia with five ships, one of which the pursuing Persians take, and takes refuge in Athens to encourage resistance to Persia.
The non-aristocratic ‘arriviste’ Themistocles serves a term as chief ‘archon’ at Athens and commences the fortification of the Piraeus peninsula to protect Athens’ adjacent harbours; this marks the switch of Athens under his direction to a increasingly naval orientation, in which she can stand out from land-bound Sparta.
The Athenian popular court (the assembly?) fines the playwright Phrynichus a thousand drachmas for his politically uncomfortable play ‘The Fall of Miletus’, a reminder of the recent horrors in Ionia.
Unsuccessful impeachment of Miltiades, on a charge of ‘tyranny’ in his rule as lord of the Chersonese – possibly a populist move against an ambitious rich aristocrat of uncertain political allegiances.
492
?Mardonius’ fleet is sunk in a storm off Thrace as he is marching west; this probably brings a halt to any Persian plan for a land-based attack on mainland Greece, but King Alexander of Macedon becomes a Persian vassal around this time. The main military base of the Persian province of Thrace is at Doriscus.
491
Summer? – Aegina, Athens’ naval rival on the Saronic Gulf, agrees a treaty with Persian envoys as a dependent ally of Darius and withdraws from its membership of the Peloponnesian League. Athens appeals to Sparta for help over this threat to Greek unity; King Cleomenes fails to win the backing of his co-king and long-term rival Demaratus, who is probably pro-Persian, but he goes to Aegina on his own to demand the surrender of the oligarchs that signed the Persian treaty; this is refused on the grounds that both kings are not present so this does not represent an official Spartan diplomatic initiative. He goes home to link up with Demaratus’ half-brother Leotychidas and have Demaratus deposed in the latter’s favour on a charge of being a bastard as his father, King Ariston, had public doubts over his paternity due to his marrying the baby’s just-divorced mother barely nine months before it was born. Sparta asks the oracle at Delphi for advice, and the ‘Pythia’ priestess declares Demaratus to be a bastard – allegedly bribed by Cleomenes via a local friend of his.
With Leotychidas as his co-ruler, Cleomenes manages to persuade Sparta to attack Aegina. He and King Leotychidas lead an invasion, and the island is forced to surrender and ten members of its leadership are arrested; Cleomenes deports them to Athens for trial.
Autumn? – Cleomenes is accused by his enemies at Sparta of bribing the ‘Pythia’ at Delphi, and loses his nerve and flees to Thessaly; he moves closer to home, to Arcadia, to form a plot to invade Sparta and restore himself, and the worried Spartan government invites him home as king. Soon after his return, he apparently suffers a mental collapse (or so his critics claim in the ‘official’ story) and has to be placed under restraint; later he manages to get hold of a knife and kills himself (or possibly is murdered). His brother Leonidas succeeds him.
Sicily
?Hippocrates, the tyrant of Gela, is killed by Siceliots; he is succeeded by his brother Gelon, who deposes his young sons.
Greece
Aegina rallies support for its recent dealings with Darius at Sparta, probably with Demaratus, and succeeds in getting the ‘ephors’ to send Leotychidas to Athens to demand that the ten arrested pro-Persian oligarchs be released. Athens refuses on the grounds that both Spartan kings are not present so this is not an official Spartan request.
?Demaratus leaves Sparta for Persia in a rage to seek Darius’ help after he is assured by his mother that he is legitimate and Leotychidas (who has just been abusing him at a public festival over his humiliating deposition) and Cleomenes cheated him out of his rights.
Persia/Greece
Darius sends a naval expedition across the Aegean to sack Athens and Eretria and demand submission there and along the route in reprisal for their support for the Ionian rebellion; the army is mustered in Cilicia and sails along the coast to Ionia. The Phoenician/Cilician/Ionian fleet is 600 vessels strong according to Herodotus, carrying a substantial army led by Darius’ nephew, the successful 490s general/satrap Artaphernes, and admiral Datis. The exiled Athenian tyrant Hippias accompanies the expedition, and probably advises on tactics.
The expedition sails via Samos and lands on Naxos and sacks its principal town, deporting those who have not fled, but treats the sanctuary at Delos with respect as is usual for Persia’s tolerance of other religions in its empire; after they leave Delos suffers a (rare) earthquake, seen by Herodotus as a sign of the crisis now coming to Greece; assorted Cycladean islands are forced to submit and supply troops to the expedition.
The Persians land at Carystus at the southern tip of Euboea, which resists; during the siege Eretria sends to warn Athens, which orders its 4000 colonists (‘cleruchs’) at Chalcis, at the narrows of the Euboea/mainland channel, to assist them; the Eretrians are divided over whether to resist or not, and the Athenians are sent off to safety in Attica on the advice of chief citizen Aeschines, and land at Oropus to warn their compatriots. After they leave, the Persians arrive and besiege the town for six days; on the seventh day traitors open the gates, and Eretria is looted, its temples are burnt, and its inhabitants are deported on the Persian fleet to Persia.
The Persian army lands on the bay of Marathon, on the East coast of Attica opposite Euboea, and disembarks the cavalry ready for a battle on the flat plain if Athens attacks; if not they will advance on the city, parallel to their fleet. Hippias lands on his home territory after twenty years, acting as the Persians’ guide and in charge of the Eretrian prisoners. The Athenians hold a meeting of the assembly, decide to advance to Marathon, and send the runner Pheidippides to Sparta for help, a journey of one hundred and forty miles covered in one day. The Spartans reply that the feast of the Carneia is underway but they can come after the full moon, in six days, on the sixteenth day of the Athenian month ‘Boedromion’. Pheidippides returns to Athens.
The Athenian army of around 10,000 ‘hoplites’ plus 600 Plataean allies moves forward to the town of Marathon at the west end of its plain, inland from the Persian camp on the beach; the annually elected board of ten generals (‘strategoi’) is divided with five, led by Miltiades the ex-ruler of the Chersonese (who has served in the Persian army in Thrace), in favour of an attack and five in favour of waiting until the Spartans arrive. The overall commander, the ‘polemarch’ Callimachus of Aphidna, is summoned to give the deciding vote, and Miltiades intercepts and wins him over en route; an attack is ordered and as Miltiades has the only experience of fighting Persians his main supporter, Aristides, announces that when it is his day for the command on the rota he will give the command to Miltiades; the other three generals in favour of an attack agree to do this too.
(‘16th Boedromion, Athenian calendar) The Spartan army sets out for Athens as the moon sets.
(‘17th Boedromion’, Athenian calendar) Battle of Marathon – a few nights after Aristides’ plan at the generals’ meeting, an Ionian delivers a message to the Greek camp that the Persians have ‘sent away’ their cavalry (probably meaning loading it on the fleet, i.e. ready to sail and march on Athens next day). The Athenians move into position under Miltiades’ direction, the Athenians on the right wing and in the centre and their Plataean allies from Boeotia on the left wing; the line is extended so as to match the Persians’ line and avoid them being enveloped. At dawn the Greeks attack and charge the Persian line, and the ‘deeper’ wings drive the Persians back with the aid of their better defensive armour and spears. The Persians hold out and push the Greeks back in the centre, but the Greek wings move in on them from the sides and drive the larger Persian army into a confused mass; the remaining Persian cavalry on the beach cannot identify a clear target to charge at in the melee. Eventually, the Persians break and flee to the safety of a marsh, north-east of the battlefield, and those who can embark on the ships do so; seven of the ships are captured. As identified from the burial mound at the site, 192 Greeks are killed, with probably around 6400 Persian casualties. The most notable Athenian casualties are Callimachus and the brother of the dramatist Aeschylus.
The Persian fleet sails off for Cape Sunion en route for Athens, and the Greeks note a flashing shield apparently signalling to them in the sunlight from up on the ridge inland – presumably a signal from traitors in Athens. They head back to Athens to defend it, with Pheidippides running ahead to announce the victory and memorably collapsing dead after doing so. The Greeks arrive at the Bay of Phalerum before the Persians do so, and the Persians see the enemy drawn up on the shore by a temple of Heracles and sail off for Asia Minor.
‘18th Boemodromion’ (Athenian calendar) Next day: 2000 Spartans arrive at Athens after a two-day march, early in the morning, and go on to view the battlefield.
489
?Miltiades leads an expedition of seventy ships across the Cyclades to punish those islands who ‘medized’ and levy fines on them. Paros, next to Naxos, holds out and refuses to pay up; Miltiades besieges the main town, but is wounded and gives up the siege on the twenty-sixth day. On his return to Athens he is prosecuted for accepting a bribe to leave Paros, and has to defend himself on a stretcher in court; the prosecutor is his political rival, the populist aristocrat Xanthippus (father of the later statesman Pericles) who is married to the late democratic leader Cleisthenes’ niece Agariste. Miltiades has to pay a heavy fine, but dies before he can do so; his (teenage?) son Cimon does so instead.
Revolt in Egypt; Darius has to send his fleet there instead of back to Greece as planned.
Greece
The annual selection of the archons at Athens is changed from election to a choice by lot; this reduces the influence of the factions and clientage in selection. The institution of the annual ‘ostracism’ (i.e. a vote of the populace to expel an unpopular citizen for ten years, by secret ballot, if the public first decide there is a need for this) is either created or is first used in the year 488/7.
486
Persia
February/March? – Death of Great King Darius, probably in his sixties; succeeded by his son by Cyrus’ daughter Atossa, Xerxes.
June – Revolt against the Persian empire breaks out in Egypt.
Greece
Ostracism at Athens of the reputedly munificent and luxury-loving Megacles, nephew of the later reformer Cleisthenes and presumably as an Alcmaeonid an aristocratic rival of the democrats.
485
Ostracism at Athens of the statesman/general Xanthippus, married to Cleisthenes’ niece and the father of the future leader Pericles (born mid-late 490s); due to his role in prosecuting Miltiades earlier this is possibly an oligarchic ‘fight-back’ by Miltiades’ friends against the democrats or the Alcmaeonids.
Sicily
?The Gamoroi, an oligarchic faction ruling Syracuse, are expelled by rivals and flee to the city of Gela to get help from its tyrant, Gelon; he invades and takes Syracuse with them but then makes himself its ruler and transfers his base of power there. Leaving his brother Theron to rule Gela, he creates the new ‘power’ of Syracuse as the main city on the east coast and fortifies the mainland suburb of the small island citadel, Ortygia, to make it more secure.
483/2
Greece
Ostracism of Aristides by Athens, allegedly arranged by his main foe Themistocles and as such a triumph for the more radical democrats over the cautious moderates; he is, however, recalled later in time to command in the war in 480 by a vote to recall all the ostracized citizens arranged by Themistocles c.482/1.
A new gold-mine is discovered at Laurium in southern Attica, and Themistocles carries a proposal that it should be used to build a larger fleet – this is now 200 warships. As the ships are to be manned by rowers from the lower classes, a larger fleet also reflects their increased political prominence.
Greece/Persia
Xerxes orders the assembly of a huge army and fleet for an invasion of Greece in 480, and a channel is cut through the ‘neck’ of the peninsula of Mount Athos in the Chalcidice to make sailing that route safer; food-dumps are to be assembled en route by allies.
481
Late summer? – The Greek states send enquiries to the oracle at Delphi about how to resist Persia; Sparta is told that it will either lose its city or its king and Argos is allegedly told to stay neutral.
September – Following a discouraging reply to a query about their fate to the oracle at Delphi, which says that Athens will be sacked, the Athenians vote to trust Themistocles’ argument that the ‘wooden walls’ that will save them are the fleet, not the walls of the Acropolis; plans are made to evacuate Attica and the fleet is strengthened.
October? – The Greeks who are willing to fight Persia meet at Sparta, and set up a formal alliance; Sparta will command their army and fleet. Corcyra and Sicily are asked to send help; meanwhile, most of Boeotia and a few other states receive envoys, which are sent out by Persia and promise to submit. Reportedly an unsuccessful Greek request for help is sent to Gelon, ruler of Syracuse in Sicily, but he demands the command of all the Greek forces as his price for bringing 24,000 troops and is refused this.
480
Spring – The Greek states hold a congress at the Isthmus of Corinth to formalize their alliance and plans for the war. Thessaly sends to ask for a force to be sent to close the pass of the Vale of Tempe, without which they will be forced to submit to Persia; Euenetus the Spartan and 10,000 troops are sent there, but find that the Persians could easily use passes south from Macedon to the west and outflank them; a withdrawal is agreed, allegedly backed by local expert king Alexander of Macedon who warns that he will have to aid Persia.
The Persian army assembles at Sardes in Lydia, and advances on the Hellespont. Megabazus and Prexaspes bring the main Persian/Phoenician fleet up the Ionian coast parallel to the Persian army, while a major Ionian Greek contingent is commanded by Queen Artemisia of Halicarnassus; Xerxes’ brothers Ariabignes and Achaemenes command the Egyptian and Ionian land-contingents, his cousin Artaphernes commands the Lydians, his brother-in-law Artochmes commands the Phrygians and Armenians, his wife Amestris’ father Otanes commands the Persians, his brother Gobryas commands the Syrians, his brother Arsames commands the Arabians and ‘Ethiopians’ (Nubians?), his brother Hystaspes commands the Bactrians, Azanes the Sogdians from Central Asia, Pharnazathres the Indians, and Artabazus the Parthians. Xerxes arrives at Sardes from Susa.
Xerxes crosses the Hellespont on a ‘bridge of boats’ (360 ships supporting the upper, Northern passageway, and 314 the lower one) and invades Thrace, where the local tribes submit as do Macedon and Thessaly.
June–July? – The Persian ‘host that drank the rivers dry’, allegedly several million men strong but probably 300,000 or so at most, advance from their base at Doriscus in Thrace across Macedon into Thessaly, using up ‘food-dumps’ set up beforehand by their advance-forces and allies as far as possible; a fleet of 1200 ships (300 of them Greek Ionian ones), led by the Phoenician navy and squadrons from Cyprus and Egypt, heads along the northern Aegean shores parallel to this.
The Persian fleet waits at Thermae in Macedon while Xerxes, avoiding the Vale of Tempe coastal route into Thessaly, which could be blocked, has a road constructed across the hills west of Mount Olympus as an easier route.
The Greek congress held at the Isthmus of Corinth decides to defend the pass of Thermopylae into Phocis and Boeotia from Thessaly, and to station the fleet parallel to it at Artemisium at the north end of the Euboea channel. The designated army of around 6–7000 ‘hoplites’, commanded by Spartan king Leonidas with 300 Spartan citizens, 1000 non-citizen Laconians, 2800 other Peloponnesians, 700 Thespians, and 400 Thebans, arrives at Thermopylae with Xerxes already approaching them across Trachis from Thessaly. The fleet under the Spartan commander Eurybiades consists of 271 ships, led by 147 from Athens; it moves into position at the cape of Artemisium, and backs into the narrow Euboean channel after a first clash between a reconnaissance squadron of ten Persian ships and three Greek ones off the island of Sciathos. As the Greeks pull back to the narrows of Chalcis, to the rear of their land-army’s position at Thermopylae so presenting a danger of a Persian landing on the mainland, the Persians move south along the rocky coast of Magnesia in calm weather and drop anchor for the night, but are caught at dawn in a three-day storm with Easterly winds that blow them onshore; they lose up to 400 ships.
The Greeks hear of the storm, recover their nerve, and return to Artemisium to protect the parallel land-army at Thermopylae; the Persian survivors move south into the Bay of Pagasae and confront them.
(Four days before the start of fighting at Thermopylae – 12/13 September?) Xerxes’ land-army arrives in the plain north of Thermopylae; the Persian navy is meant to arrive parallel to this, at sea, but is late due to the storm.
(Two days later – 14/15 September?) The Persian navy arrives at the Bay of Pagasae to refit before the battle; this forces Xerxes to postpone his planned simultaneous land and naval attacks. A two-day halt ensues for refitting.
(Two days later – 16/17 September?) At night, a Persian naval squadron is sent off at sea round the east side of Euboea, to take control of the south exit from the Euboea/mainland channel and stop the Greeks evacuating their fleet that way after a defeat. This is not noticed by the Greeks, but later in the day a Greek diver in the Persian navy called Scyllias arrives at the Greek naval base after a lengthy swim, to report on the squadron’s move and on the extent of losses in the storm. A meeting of captains is held; most Greeks prefer to withdraw back down the channel once it is dark to attack the missing naval squadron as it arrives at the south end of the channel next day, but this is cancelled when it becomes apparent that the main Persian navy is not moving. One version has it (recorded by Plutarch) that the Euboeans bribe the Greeks not to desert them.
On land, the first attack develops against the Greek position, a repaired stone wall in the narrows of the pass at Thermopylae, which is only around fifty yards wide. This attack is pushed back; wave after wave of Persians make no visible impression on the defenders. Meanwhile, a force of Phocians has been sent by Leonidas to protect the path across the mountains to the south, which if taken by the Persians would ‘turn’ the Greek position.
Towards evening, the main Persian fleet moves out into the north end of the Euboea channel; the Greeks form a circle and dare the enemy to attack this, which they do; the Greeks row out and ram their attackers, who are pushed back but not decisively. Both sides hold their positions at dusk.
(That night) Another storm hits the Persian fleet, with southerly winds blowing the wreckage of the battle into the Persian ships; meanwhile, the storm wrecks the squadron of 200 Persian ships sent round the east side of Euboea so the Greeks cannot be taken in the rear.
(Next day – 17/18 September?) Second day of Persian infantry attacks on Thermopylae; fifty-five more Athenian ships join the Greek fleet. The Greeks attack again that evening and sink some Cilician ships; Xerxes still has more ships and he orders a Persian naval attack next day. That evening near dusk, the traitor Ephialtes of Malis informs the Persians at Thermopylae of the path round the south of the mountains to the rear of the Greek position. Xerxes orders his senior general Hydarnes and the crack regiment of the 10,000 ‘Immortals’, the Great King’s bodyguard, to take the path.
(Night) The ‘Immortals’ proceed along the path without being noticed.
(Next day – 18/19 September?) At first light, the ‘Immortals’ reach the Phocian position and are spotted; the defenders retire to a defensible hillock, but the Persians ignore them and march on. Leonidas is informed that the position at Thermopylae is untenable, and famously sends his army off to safety but proposes to hold the Persians back with his 300 Spartan citizens to protect their rear. The Thespians refuse to leave, and stay with Leonidas; he advances to a wider position in front of the narrowest part of the pass and (around 11 a.m.) the Persians attack. The Greeks are killed to the last man, apart from a regiment of Thebans who notoriously surrender – the only time a Spartan king will fall in battle until 371. Perhaps 20,000 Persians and 4000 Greeks are killed.
The naval battle rages all day off Artemisium, and the Greeks hold out with the Athenian captain Cleinias, father of the later statesman/general Alcibiades, distinguishing himself; however, losses are great, and half the Athenian ships are put out of action. Towards dusk news of the fall of Thermopylae arrives, and Eurybiadas announces withdrawal to the bay of Piraeus off Athens.
(Night) The fleet withdraws, leaving its camp-fires burning.
(Next day: 19/20 September?) A Persian force lands to find the camp at Artemisium empty; Xerxes marches on into Doris.
The Persians enter Boeotia via Phocis as the Greeks abandon the idea of a stand there with Chaeronea and Thebes both ‘medizing’; Thebes leads the surrender but Plataea and Thespiae are sacked as their populace flee; a ?small Persian force heads for Delphi but retreats after rocks fall from the cliffs during a thunderstorm.
The Greek navy assembles in the Bay of Salamis, and Athens is evacuated onto the island as the Greek congress meeting at the Isthmus decides not to defend Attica to the fury of Athens. In accordance with Themistocles’ decision of 481 that the ‘wooden walls’ that the oracle at Delphi says will save Athens are her fleet, not the wooden walls of the Acropolis, the city is abandoned; Argos and the neighbouring states stay neutral but Sparta, led by Pausanias the nephew of king Leonidas (now regent for his son Pleistarchus), starts to build a defensive wall across the Isthmus. Leonidas’ brother Cleombrotus commands the army at the Isthmus, and Eurybiadas of Sparta commands the allied fleet at Salamis but the most forceful of his assistants are Themistocles and Aristides for Athens.
28 September (as calculated back from the coming eclipse) – Nine days after the end of the naval fighting at Artemisium, the Persian army marches into the evacuated Athens in the morning; the temples’ treasurers and a force of volunteers hold out on the Acropolis, and Xerxes camps at the Areopagus and sends the defenders some of the exiled Peisistradae to offer terms of surrender but this is refused. Some Persians climb a path up the cliff onto the Acropolis, and the defenders either commit suicide by jumping off the rock or are overwhelmed; Xerxes burns the Acropolis and sends a victory message to Susa. The sight of the flames causes the Greek captains on Salamis to panic, and at a meeting before midday the majority propose to withdraw to the Isthmus sooner than be cut off and some leave immediately; Eurybiadas agrees, but is talked round by Themistocles who gets him to call a second meeting and steadies the captains’ nerves but threatens to take the Athenians off to the west and found a new colony as a Corinthian jeers at him as now being ‘stateless’. The Greek fleet is blockaded in the Bay of Salamis, with the exits east and west of the island guarded by the Persian fleet, which now arrives off Athens; at midday the Persian fleet puts out from the Piraeus to reconnoitre Salamis but withdraws after the Greeks do not move.
Late in the day, the Persian army starts to move west along the coast out of Athens, heading for the Megarid and thence the Isthmus; the Peloponnesians in the fleet want to move out to defend the Isthmus at sea, but the captains of Athens, Aegina, and Megara hold firm. Eurybiadas calls another meeting, and Themistocles quickly lures Xerxes to attack before the Greek fleet can break up by sending his slave Sicinnus to tell the Great King’s admirals that the Greeks will retreat next day and he is prepared to assist the Persians.
28/9 September, night – Xerxes’ commanders, convinced by Sicinnus, land a force of Persian marines on the island of Psyttalia in the middle of the eastern channel out of the Salamis narrows. The main Persian squadron moves to block the eastern exit, and a smaller one is sent round to the western exit; Aristides, arriving on Salamis from Aegina, spots this second force of Persian ships moving in on the western channel and tells Themistocles at the captains’ conference, which has now begun. The latter gets Aristides to make his report, and talks the other commanders round to a battle next day; a ship from Tenos in the Persian navy arrives in secret to deliver the Persian battle-arrangements, which increases the Greeks’ confidence. Before dawn, Themistocles addresses the marines on Sileniae beach about his tactics and they board the ships.
29 September, Battle of Salamis – 380 Greek ships against around 1200 Persian ships, with the main Greek line running north-south along the east coast of Salamis, facing the mainland where Xerxes sets up his throne on the promontory of Heraclea to watch the battle. The Corinthians protect the west entrance to the channel, in the Bay of Salamis north of the island. At dawn the Greeks assemble out of sight of the Persians and form up into columns for the advance south down the channel into their positions; the fastest, Aeginetan ships are in the vanguard and then the Spartans and Megarans, followed by the Athenians. As they move down the channel, they find the Phoenicians on the Persian right wing in a north-south line, closest to the shore and the Great King’s throne, with the Ionians on the left (south) out to sea. As the Persians advance the Phoenicians take the lead, and the Persian left wing out to sea lags behind. The Phoenicians round the cape into the narrows, and the Greeks move down on them (moving South) with the Aeginetans in the lead; they then swing leftwards (east) to attack. The Athenians on the Greek left back water to lure the Phoenicians in towards the narrowest part of the channel between Psyttalia and the mainland, then Themistocles orders an attack as the ‘swell’ starts to affect the heavy Phoenician ships. The Athenians ram them, and the Phoenicians are too tightly packed to manoeuvre; the Greeks all attack, and Aristides notices the Persian marines on Psyttalia and takes a force of Greek marines across from Salamis town to overpower them. The Phoenicians break first, and fleeing ships crash into those not yet engaged; the Persians are driven back, aided by a rising westerly wind, and eventually break off the battle to flee back to Phalerum bay off Athens leaving several hundred ships destroyed. The Greek losses of shipping are small, but many men have been killed and the Persian navy is still formidable but is now caught in an exposed bay with winter weather approaching. Xerxes thinks of erecting a boom to protect it from attack, but is told this is impractical and orders his fleet to withdraw out of reach to the Hellespont.
Early October to mid-November? – Xerxes marches back to the Hellespont in forty-five days, nervous that the Greeks will sail to the Hellespont and destroy his bridge of boats; he leaves a large occupation-force (60–70,000??) in Thessaly under his brother-in-law Mardonius and himself retires all the way to Susa; the Boeotians remain loyal to Persia ready for a new campaign in 479.
The Greek fleet advances across the Aegean to Andros without sighting the Persian navy, fails to force that island to pay compensation for ‘medizing’, but levies fines elsewhere; the leadership rejects Themistocles’ proposal to sail to the Hellespont and destroy the bridge of boats, and allegedly Aristides urges them not to bottle up the Persians in Greece or they will fight more strongly. Themistocles then sends Sicinnus or a captive eunuch to Xerxes to claim credit for this decision. The Greek fleet returns to Salamis to set up trophies of victory and send captured ships’ prows to Delphi; Aegina is awarded the prize for valour among the contingents, and Themistocles is invited to Sparta and feted there as a hero with a chariot and an honorary escort.
Sicily
Invasion of western Sicily by a large Carthaginian force in two hundred ships, led by the general Hamilcar; up to 300,000 men according to sources but probably fewer. The invasion is allegedly – or perhaps mostly – about restoring Terillus, Greek tyrant of Himera, who has been expelled by Theron of Akragas (father-in-law of Gelon of Syracuse) and who accompanies the invaders. It is not necessarily co-ordinated with Persia’s attack on Greece, but presumably the Carthaginians have been informed by their mother-city, Tyre in Phoenicia, of its fleet’s forthcoming role in the attack on Greece.
Hamilcar lands his army at Panormus, and plans to march along the north coast west to Himera to restore Terillus (?) and then east to Messina to link up with the tyrant Anaxilas of Rhegium, son-in-law of Terillus and foe of Carthage’s enemy Gelon of Syracuse. Theron of Akragas blocks the Carthaginian advance on land and sea at Himera on the north coast, and Hamilcar leads his army to besiege him there in a three-day march from Panormus, camping to the west of the city. Gelon arrives with 50,000 infantry and 5000 cavalry, and relieves the siege by sending supplies into the city; he then camps at the eastern side of the city. According to Diodorus (but not the nearer-contemporary Herodotus), his patrols secure a messenger from pro-Carthage Selinus saying when their cavalry will arrive to aid the Carthaginians. At the appointed time a force of Gelon’s cavalry turn up at the enemy camp pretending to be from Selinus, are admitted, and set fire to the Carthaginian fleet, possibly killing Hamilcar while he is conducting a sacrifice. The chaos, spotted in Himera, is the signal for the Syracusan army to attack the camp; Hamilcar is killed if still alive (Herodotus has him jump into the sacrificial fire as he is surrounded), and the Carthaginians’ Iberian (Spanish) mercenaries rally but are driven back. The invaders hold onto a strongpoint and are blockaded there without access to water until they surrender. Carthage has to pay 7000 talents as ransom and agree to peace on Gelon’s terms.
479
Persia/Greece
Winter – Sack of Olynthus in the Chalcidice by the local satrap Artabazus for a suspected plot; the population are rounded up and massacred. Successful revolt by Potidaea, which holds out; to the south, there is a guerrilla war in Phocis.
Spring – The Greek fleet of 110 ships musters at Aegina under King Leotychidas of Sparta and advances as far as Delos; meanwhile, Mardonius sends King Alexander of Macedon to Athens to offer independence, alliance and compensation if they leave the Greek league but these are refused. Sparta offers to protect and resettle the Athenians, but as their clients somewhere on the Peloponnese.
July – Mardonius invades Attica again, which is evacuated to Salamis, and sends to offer the Athenians alliance again; his envoy is received by the exiled Athenian ‘Boule’ on Salamis and refused, and the one councillor who backs alliance with Persia is immediately executed. Athens, Megara and Plataea (South Boeotia) all send a joint embassy to Sparta to ask them to invade Persian-occupied territories quicker and threaten to negotiate with Persia if this is not done, and the Spartan ‘ephors’ insolently keep them waiting through the ‘Hyacinthia’ festival before telling them at the end of it that the army at the Isthmus is already moving forward.
As the Greek army marches across the Isthmus Mardonius burns Athens and retires via Decelia to Boeotia to fight on more level ground suitable for his huge cavalry force. He sets up camp in the plain in South Boeotia below the ridge of Mount Cithaeron, with possibly 200,000 men and a huge stockaded camp; 1000 Phocians have to join the Persian army, and as they arrive Mardonius shows them how effective his cavalry is on manoeuvres as a warning.
In total, 5000 Spartan citizens, 5000 ‘periocoi’, and 35,000 ‘helots’ march from the Isthmus under Pausanias, regent for the young king Pleistarchus, and Aristides commands 8000 Athenians while Corinth sends 5000, Tegea 1500, 600 Plataeans, 3000 Megarans, and 500 from Aegina; the Boeotians except Plataea are fighting for Persia. There are 38,700 ‘hoplites’ from twenty-four states, and 70,000 light infantry plus a few cavalry.
(Probably c. 10/20 August?) – The Greek navy advances from Delos to Samos to attack the Persians, after some Samian democrats led by Hegistratus came to the Greeks to say that the local regime under tyrant Theomestor is unpopular and the Greeks’ arrival will start a revolution. The omens are taken on Delos and are said to be favourable to a Greek attack.
(Probably c. 20/23 August?) – At Plataea, Athens is given the Greek left wing, with Plataea next to them, then Megara and Aegina, and Sparta takes the right wing with Corinth and Tegea next to them. The Greeks advance from Mount Cithaeron to Plataea, but they are short of water up in the hills and Mardonius’ cavalry prevents them from foraging on the plain and ambushes their supply-convoys coming across the passes from the Megarid. Mardonius waits for the Greek army to split up with the traditional quarrels, but suffers a reverse when Athenian infantry and archers sent to rescue the Megarans’ camp from attacks kill his cavalry commander Masistius and routs a heavy cavalry ambush.
One night a horseman, believed to be King Alexander of Macedon, arrives at the Greek camp to say that the Persians have moved their best infantry from opposite the Spartans to opposite the Athenians and will attack at dawn; this may be either a move by him to betray Mardonius or a ploy by Mardonius to encourage the Greeks to fight. The Greeks move their infantry accordingly, but when next morning Mardonius sees the Spartans opposite his best infantry he declines battle again. The Persian cavalry attacks and blocks the main local spring at Gargaphia, and as a result Pausanias calls a council and decides to move that night to a new position. The army mostly starts to move once it is dark, but an obstinate Spartan officer called Amompharetus refuses to withdraw in the face of the enemy as it is cowardly and while Pausanias is arguing with him the news that the Spartans are still in position causes the Athenians and Tegeans to stay put too. At dawn Pausanias finally orders the Spartans to move off, via the foothills to avoid a cavalry attack, and Amompharetus and his company follow at a leisurely pace while the Athenians move off across the plain parallel to them.
(End of August) Battle of Plataea – the Persian cavalry makes for the expected Greek position, find it has been abandoned, and spot and attack Pausanias and Amompharetus on the march. Mardonius thinks the Greek army has broken up, and orders his infantry to charge them; the Greeks in the Persian army, led by the Boeotians, attack the Athenians who Pausanias tells too late to join up with his own troops, and the main Persian infantry attacks the Spartans and Tegeans. The Persians fire arrows at the Spartans before closing with them and waiting behind a ‘wall’ of their wicker shields, but the Spartan shields deflect the arrows and as the omens are declared favourable Pausanias orders a charge downhill onto the Persians. The Spartans break the Persian ‘shield-wall’ and drive the enemy back in hand-to-hand combat, the huge Persian infantry force being too closely packed to co-ordinate tactics easily, and the lack of Persian armour causes them severe casualties. Mardonius leads a cavalry charge by 1000 elite Median horsemen to crash into the Spartans, but is knocked off his horse and cut down and his men flee; the Persians are chased back to their camp, and the mass of men means that the untouched main Persian cavalry cannot get through them to tackle the pursuing Greeks. The Greek centre push forward down onto the plain where the Theban cavalry rally against them and 600 are killed and the rest flee back uphill, but the disintegrating Persian army forces the Boeotians, who are fighting the Athenians, to pull back as their elite force of 300 is destroyed. The Boeotians withdraw into Thebes, and Artabazus pulls back his cavalry and part of the centre, north across Booetia, abandoning the Persian camp which is so far holding out against the Spartans. The camp is overrun and looted, and the abandoned Persian infantry is destroyed; no prisoners are taken.
The Greeks agree to conduct solemn commemorative ceremonies and hold Games every year on the battlefield, and confirm the continuation of the League to liberate the rest of the Greeks, led by Sparta; 10,000 ‘hoplites’, 1000 cavalry, and 100 warships are to be levied every year for the war.
(Late August; traditionally the same day as the battle of Plataea) Battle of Cape Mycale – The Greek fleet of 110 ships (Herodotus), commanded by King Leotychidas of Sparta with Xanthippus, the commander of the Athens contingent, among his senior officers, engages the main Persian fleet at Cape Mycale near Samos. The Persians have withdrawn there from their base on Samos to the mainland a few days before and (Herodotus) have sent their Phoenician contingent away. The Persians join a land army of 60,000 under Tigranes. According to Diodorus the overall Persian total of men is 100,000.
The Persians rely on their army on the beach, in a stockaded camp, to protect their beached fleet, and refuse to sail out to fight; Leotychidas fails to entice the Persians out, and sails his flagship inshore to have a herald shout encouragement to the Ionian contingent to defect when opportune and announce a password for this (‘Hera’). He then sails on to land his men down the coast, while the nervous Persian commander disarms his Samian troops lest they defect and sends the Milesians away from his camp to protect its approaches. The Persians defend their camp on the beach, using their shields as a ‘wall’, and the Greeks advance eastwards on it – allegedly spurred on by a rumour of their land victory in Greece, which Leotychidas may announce before the battle. The Athenian/Corinthian/Sicyon/Troezen troops (on the right wing, by the sea) arrive first, and defeat the opposing Persian infantry, storm the rampart, and break into the Persian camp; then the Spartans on the left wing, who have had further to go (inland), arrive. As the camp is overrun the Ionians mutiny and turn on the Persians. The latter are routed, around 40,000 men are killed, and their navy is burnt; naval commanders Artayntes and Ithamitres escape but Tigranes is killed; Artayntes is abused as a ‘woman’ for his incompetent cowardliness as the survivors retreat by Xerxes’ brother, prince Masistes, and tries to kill him but is driven off by the Halicarnassan mercenary Xenagoras who Xerxes makes governor of Cilicia.
The Greek allies hold a meeting with the Ionians on Samos. The Spartans (who are not used to a long-term naval commitment and overseas allies) advise their new Ionian allies to evacuate their territory and move to places that the Greeks can defend, from which ‘medizers’ will be expelled to make room for them; the Athenians, however, offer to assist in protecting the defectors from Persia and accordingly Lesbos, Chios, and Samos (who have fleets) and other islands are taken into the Greek alliance – but not mainland states as yet.
Late Autumn – Leotychidas leads the fleet as it sails to Abydus to destroy Xerxes’ bridge across the Hellespont, but it has been washed away by storms; Leotychidas and the Peloponnesians sail home, leaving Xanthippus and the Athenians/Ionians to besiege the Persian garrison in Sestus. After some weeks the garrison is starved out and breaks out to flee, and its commander Astyoches is captured with his son and executed by Xanthippus after local accusations that he looted the local treasures at the tomb of Trojan War hero Protesilaus for his own use; other prominent Persians are captured too but are ransomed, and general Oeobazus escapes into the Chersonese with some troops but is captured and sacrificed by local Thracians. The chains of Xerxes’ bridge are taken back to Athens as a trophy of war.
Themistocles takes the lead in persuading the other Greeks of the alliance not to evict all states who ‘medized’ permanently from their counsels, as he fears this will give Sparta a permanent majority in votes.