The Account Of The Ancient Greece Persia Wars

By Michelle Miller


In the 492 BC to 449 BC, there were series of war that was fought between the person and the Greek. At the time of this war, the Persian Empire was the largest and the one, which was more potent. These bodies controlled a stretch of land that came from Egypt to India. On the other hand, the Greeks were made of some city-states like the Athens and Sparta. The cities used to fight against each other until the time that they united their force to fight against the Persia in the Ancient Greece Persia war.

The people living on the coastal side of Turkey were conquered and colonized by the Persians a regime that they were very much opposed to. Because of that, they decided to seek help from the Greeks to fight against Persia. Though the Greeks sent help to assist the coastal Ionians, the Persians proved stronger than them and still defeated them. That caused King Darius of Persia to develop the interest of fighting with Persia to silence them from assisting the Ionians, which he did.

The king mobilized a vast army and sent troops to Greece. Around 490 BC the forces surrounded the whole of Greece with the hope of capturing them. What the Persians did not know was the fact that the Greeks were more experienced in war. During the war, the Greeks lost only 192 men of war but cleared an entirely 6000 Persian soldiers under the command of King Darius.

After the battle, the Greek soldiers ran 25 miles back to their city, which was known as Athens so that they could prevent the soldiers under King Darius I from attacking the city. This was where the origin of marathon race came from.

480 BC, which was after ten years after this war, King Xerxes, who succeeded King Darius and his son, decided to revenge for his people against the Greek. He designed the attack by coming up with a large of around 200,000 soldiers and above 1000 warships. The Greeks also prepared by putting together a small army led by King Leonidas 1 as well as 300 Spartans.

They Greeks decided to launch their battle at Mt Thermopylae, which had a narrow passage where they were to attack the Persians. The Greeks lead the fight until the Persians discovered they can go round the mountain and beat the Greeks. When King Leonidas realized that they had been cornered, he asked the majority of his army to run for their lives. He decided to fight with even a fewer number but lost the battle as well as his life.

King Xerxes with his army continued to match. When they reached the Anthers city, they found that it was deserted as the people who lived there had fled. However, the Athenian Fleet was waiting off the cast by the island of Salamis.

King Xerxes had already assumed victory since they had so many ships. On the contrary, the Athenians had small but very swift ships able to maneuver around. They maneuvered their way and made sure they sunk all the Persian ships forcing King Xerxes to lose and retreat.




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