When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Second Persian invasion of Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Persian_invasion_of...

    The second Persian invasion of Greece (480–479 BC) occurred during the Greco-Persian Wars, as King Xerxes I of Persia sought to conquer all of Greece. The invasion was a direct, if delayed, response to the defeat of the first Persian invasion of Greece (492–490 BC) at the Battle of Marathon, which ended Darius I's attempts to subjugate Greece.

  3. Xerxes I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xerxes_I

    Xerxes' presentation in Greek and Roman sources is largely negative and this set the tone for most subsequent depictions of him within the western tradition. Xerxes is a central character of Aeschylus' play The Persians, first performed in Athens in 472 BC, only seven years after his invasion of Greece. The play presents him as an effeminate ...

  4. Battle of Salamis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Salamis

    Xerxes evidently took the bait, and the Persian fleet was sent out that evening to effect this block. [44] Xerxes ordered a throne to be set up on the slopes of Mount Aigaleo (overlooking the straits), in order to watch the battle from a clear vantage point, and so as to record the names of commanders who performed particularly well. [45]

  5. Greco-Persian Wars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greco-Persian_Wars

    The military history of Greece between the end of the second Persian invasion of Greece and the Peloponnesian War (479–431 BC) is not well supported by surviving ancient sources. This period, sometimes referred to as the pentekontaetia ( πεντηκονταετία , the Fifty Years ) by ancient writers, was a period of relative peace and ...

  6. Battle of Thermopylae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Thermopylae

    However, the Athenians lacked the manpower to fight on both land and sea, requiring reinforcements from other Greek city-states. In 481 BC, Xerxes sent ambassadors around Greece requesting "earth and water" but very deliberately omitting Athens and Sparta. [42] Support thus began to coalesce around these two leading cities.

  7. Battle of Marathon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Marathon

    After Darius died, his son Xerxes I restarted the preparations for a second invasion of Greece, which finally began in 480 BC. The Battle of Marathon was a watershed in the Greco-Persian wars, showing the Greeks that the Persians could be beaten; the eventual Greek triumph in these wars can be seen to have begun at Marathon.

  8. First Persian invasion of Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Persian_invasion_of...

    The first Persian invasion of Greece took place from 492 ... ships accompanied 1,207 triremes during Xerxes's invasion in 480 ... (History of the Greek nation volume ...

  9. List of wars involving Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wars_involving_Greece

    This is a list of known wars, conflicts, battles/sieges, missions and operations involving ancient Greek city states and kingdoms, Magna Graecia, other Greek colonies (First Greek colonisation, Second Greek colonisation, Greeks in pre-Roman Crimea, Greeks in pre-Roman Gaul, Greeks in Egypt, Greeks in Syria, Greeks in Malta), Greek Kingdoms of Hellenistic period, Indo-Greek Kingdom, Greco ...