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History 107 Lecture 14

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First War (Persia invades Greece, 490 B.C. ... Athens and Sparta fought over land and harbors in Greece ... ultimate undoing of Greece during the Golden Age ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: History 107 Lecture 14


1
History 107Lecture 14
  • Ancient Greece Persian and Peloponnesian Wars

2
Prelude to War the Persian Empire
  • The Persians, led by Cyrus, replace the Assyrians
    in 539 B.C.
  • Cyrus allows Hebrews to return to Palestine
  • Persian Empire spreads to Asia Minor (modern
    Turkey), and makes contact with Greeks
  • Persians conquer Egypt in 525 B.C.
  • Persians invade Thrace in Greece in 512 B.C.
    Miletus resists.
  • Major cultural differences between Greeks and
    Persians
  • Greek cities in Asia Minor revolt against Persia
    between 499 and 494 B.C. Athens sends ships in
    their defense

Persian Art c. 486 B.C.
3
Prelude to War the Persian Empire
  • Between 521 B.C. and 486 B.C., the Persians were
    led by the mighty King Darius I
  • Darius expanded the Persian Empire greatly (see
    following map)
  • Darius innovatively organized his large empire
    into divisions known as satrapies administered by
    governors called satraps
  • Uniform coinage in empire, and a new capital city
    named Persepolis
  • However, individual regions were allowed to keep
    their own religious values

Persian Art c. 486 B.C.
4
Persian Near East Under Darius
5
The Persian Wars (490 479 B.C.)
  • Summary causes of Persian War expansion of
    Persia and growing Greek defiance (especially
    Miletus revolts, 499 494 B.C.)
  • First War (Persia invades Greece, 490 B.C.)
  • Main attack against Athens, which had defended
    Miletus, a democratic city-state that had grown
    in power and trade strength
  • Battle of Marathon, 490 B.C. Outnumbered
    Athenians defeat Persians
  • Athenian Pheidippides runs 25 miles, from
    Marathon to Athens, to announce the defeat of the
    Persians
  • Persian defeat a shock to Darius Athenians
    rejoice
  • Themistokles builds up Athenian fleet and waits
    for second Persian attack

6
The Persian Wars (490 479 B.C.)
  • Second War (Persia invades Greece, 480/479 B.C.)
  • Xerxes (son of Darius) returns ten years later
    with bigger army
  • Athenians abandon Athens and let Persians burn it
    (480 B.C.)
  • Athenian navy wins at Salamis
  • Athenians, with help of Spartans, win land battle
    of Platea (479 B.C.)
  • Summary Greeks win the Persian Wars
  • Athens emerges as the major Greek city/state
  • Athenians continue fight against Persia to
    liberate remaining Greek cities on the mainland
    of Asian Minor (Delian League, 478 B.C.)

7
The Peloponnesian Wars (431-404 B.C.)
  • What caused the Peloponnesian Wars between Athens
    and Sparta?
  • Athens and Sparta fought over land and harbors in
    Greece
  • Athens the major sea power Sparta the major land
    power
  • Pericles rules Athens from 462 B.C. to 429 B.C.
    (30 years) builds Acropolis and the temple of
    Athena expands democracy
  • Athens becomes a society based on slavery
  • After 440 B.C., Pericles made peace with Persia
    but spurned Sparta
  • Greek defensive alliance against Persia was led
    by Athens, and it became a de facto empire for
    Athens
  • This caused bitterness among Sparta and the other
    Athenians
  • The war was fought to take Athens down a notch

8
The Parthenon (built by Pericles)
9
The Peloponnesian Wars (431-404 B.C.)
  • What happened during the Peloponnesian War?
  • The Athenian strategy was defensiveAthenians
    bunkered down behind the walls of their fortified
    city and Attica
  • But Attica fell, and in 430 B.C. plague swept
    through Athens, killing a quarter of the
    population, including Pericles
  • In 404 B.C., Athens finally surrendered and
    Sparta took over the city, making it a subject
    state
  • By the 300s B.C., Sparta reached the limits of
    its own power, but Athens continued on as a
    vibrant cultural center
  • Sum The competitive city/state system was the
    ultimate undoing of Greece during the Golden Age
  • The warrior ethic pushed them into endless
    competition and warfare, even among themselves
  • Parallel (the Greeks fell like the Sumerians
    didthey were too divided)

10
Greek Historians Reflect
  • Herodotus (484-420 B.C.) the father of history
    writes about the causes of the Persian Wars
  • Thucydides, second generation historian (460-400
    B.C.) writes about the causes of the
    Peloponnesian Wars
  • Assigned reading Thucydides, History of the
    Peloponnesian Wars Funeral Speech of
    Pericles
  • How are the dead mourned in Athens?
  • What are the benefits of democracy?
  • What are the reasons for Athens greatness?
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