When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Peloponnesian War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peloponnesian_War

    But at its end, a massive Spartan invasion of Attica forced Athens to cede the lands it had won on the Greek mainland, and Athens and Sparta recognized each other's right to control their respective alliance systems. [4] The war was officially ended by the Thirty Years' Peace, signed in the winter of 446/5 BC. [9]

  3. Battle of Pylos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Pylos

    When the negotiators reached Athens, they made a speech to the Athenian assembly in which they argued that the Athenians should take advantage of the opportunity they had to make peace. The Spartans, they claimed, had suffered a misfortune not through incapacity or overreaching, but through mere bad luck; the Athenians should seize this ...

  4. Battle of Tanagra (457 BC) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Tanagra_(457_BC)

    The Battle of Tanagra was a land battle that took place in Boeotia in 457 BC between Athens and Sparta during the First Peloponnesian War. Tension between Athens and Sparta had built up due the rebuilding of Athens' walls and Spartan rejection of Athenian military assistance. [3] [4] The Athenians were led by Myronides and held a strength of ...

  5. Battle of the 300 Champions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_the_300_Champions

    According to Herodotus [1] Sparta had surrounded and captured the plain of Thyrea. When the Argives marched out to defend it, the two armies agreed to let 300 champions from each city fight, with the winner taking the territory. Presumably the idea was to reduce the total number of casualties.

  6. First Peloponnesian War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Peloponnesian_War

    When Athens started to rebuild its walls and the strength of its naval power, Sparta and its allies began to fear that Athens was becoming too powerful. [6] Different policies made it difficult for Athens and Sparta to avoid going to war, since Athens wanted to expand its territory and Sparta wanted to dismantle the Athenian democratic regime. [7]

  7. Battle of Thermopylae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Thermopylae

    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. A congress met at Corinth in late autumn of 481 BC, [ 43 ] and a confederate alliance of Greek city-states was formed.

  8. Wars of the Delian League - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wars_of_the_Delian_League

    The allies of Athens were not released from their obligations to provide either money or ships, despite the cessation of hostilities. [63] In Greece, the First Peloponnesian War between the power-blocs of Athens and Sparta, which had continued on and off since 460 BC, finally ended in 445 BC, with the agreement of a thirty-year truce. [115]

  9. Battle of Leuctra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Leuctra

    The Spartan right was hurled back with a loss of about 1,000 men, of whom 400 were some of Sparta's most experienced soldiers, including King Cleombrotus I. [ 2 ] Wilhelm Rüstow and Hermann Köchly , writing in the 19th century, believed that Pelopidas led the Sacred Band out from the column to attack the Spartans in the flank.