Victory & Defeat in the Greek World

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Victory & Victory & Defeat in the Defeat in the Greek World Greek World Ch. 5, Section 3

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Victory & Defeat in the Greek World. Ch. 5, Section 3. “Earth and Water”. In 492 B.C. King Darius I of Persia demanded “earth and water” from the Greek city-states. Athens and Sparta REFUSED! Persians conquered the city-states of Ionia. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Victory & Defeat in the Greek World

Page 1: Victory & Defeat in the Greek World

Victory & Defeat in Victory & Defeat in the Greek Worldthe Greek World

Ch. 5, Section 3

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“Earth and Water”

• In 492 B.C. King Darius I of Persia demanded “earth and water” from the Greek city-states.

• Athens and Sparta REFUSED!• Persians conquered the city-states of Ionia.• In 499 B.C. the Ionian Greeks revolted against

Persia. Athens (wealthiest Greek city-state) sent ships to Ionia to help them!

• King Darius I was furious at Athens. . .

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The Persian Wars490 B.C.E. – 479 B.C.E.

Greek City-States vs. Persians (Ionia, Athens, etc.)

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Reasons for War

Where is Greece? Where is Ionia?

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Highlights of Persian WarsBattle of Marathon (490 B.C)• Persians crossed the Aegean Sea and

attacked the Athenians on a plain called Marathon outside of Athens

• Greeks outnumbered, but WON!

• Sent Pheidippides their fastest runner to carry home the news of victory!

• He sprinted 26.2 miles to Athens — “Rejoice, we conquer,” he gasped and then died!

• In honor of Pheidippides’ run, marathon runners still run 26.2 miles!

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The Athenians used clever war tactics to win the Battle of Marathon including the use of hoplites manning phalanxes.

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Battle of Thermopylae (480 B.C)• King Darius I died, but his

son Xerxes took up the fight against Greece

• 300 Spartans and allies vs. 150,000 - 1 million Persians

• Spartans held their ground for 2 days guarding the narrow mountain pass of Thermopylae but were defeated by the Persians

• Persians marched south and burned down Athens but the city was empty

Statue of Spartan King Leonidas at

Thermopylae

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Battle of Salamis 480 B.C.• Turning point in Persian War

• Greeks defeated Persians by sea under the guidance of General Themistocles

• Athenian warships drove into Persian boats with underwater battering rams

• After win at Salamis, the Greeks went on to defeat the Persians on land—End of War!

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Effects of Persian Wars• Athens emerged as most powerful and

prosperous city-state in Greece• Athens organized the Delian League =

alliances with other city-states• Athens used its influence over other city-

states to build an Athenian Empire!• Many other Greek city-states resented Athens

and split from the Delian League• Sparta created the Peloponnesian League• Athenians great at sea, Sparta great on land!

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Peloponnesian War (431-404 B.C.)

• Delian League v. Peloponnesian League

• Democracy (Athens) v. Oligarchy (Sparta)

• Athenians provided most of the ships and sailors and asked the other city-states to contribute money. Sparta feared this increase in Athenian power.

• Fought for 27 years to determine which city-state would control southern Greece.

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Highlights of War• Athens faced a serious

geographic disadvantage!

• Sparta was located inland, so it could not be attacked by sea.

• Yet Sparta only had to march north to attack Athens by land.

• In 404 B.C. with the help of the Persian navy (longtime enemy), Spartans captured Athens.

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Good Thought, Bad Result!• When Sparta invaded Athens, the Athenian leader Pericles allowed people from the surrounding countryside to move inside the city walls for protection.

• The overcrowded conditions soon led to disaster: a terrible plague broke out!

• 1/3 of the Athenian population (including Pericles) were killed.

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• The Spartan victors stripped Athenians of their naval fleet and empire.

• However, Sparta rejected calls from its allies to destroy Athens (perhaps out of respect for Athen’s role in the Persian Wars).

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Effects of Peloponnesian War• An end to Athenian domination of the

Greek world.

• More in-fighting occurred amongst Greek city-states, weakening them.

• Weakened Greek city states were easier to conquer later on by the Macedonians and Alexander the Great!