Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Battle of Marathon
Episode Date: September 27, 2023In the year 490 BC, one of the most pivotal battles in world history took place. Just north of the City of Athens, Persian and Greek forces clashed in what was to be the first of several Persian att...empts to invade Greece. Despite being seriously outnumbered, the Greeks managed to win a decisive victory that had long-lasting ramifications. Learn more about the Battle of Marathon, its causes, and its outcome on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Draft Kings Step into the thrilling world of sports and entertainment with DraftKings, where every day is game day! Join the millions of fans who have already discovered the ultimate destination for fantasy sports and sports betting. Download the DraftKings Sportsbook app and use code EVERYTHING to score two hundred dollars in bonus bets instantly when you bet just five dollars! Newspapers.com Newspapers.com is like a time machine. Dive into their extensive online archives to explore history as it happened. With over 800 million digitized newspaper pages spanning three centuries, Newspapers.com provides an unparalleled gateway to the past, with papers from the US, UK, Canada, Australia and beyond. Use the code “EverythingEverywhere” at checkout to get 20% off a publisher extra subscription at newspapers.com. Noom Noom is not just another diet or fitness app. It’s a comprehensive lifestyle program designed to empower you to make lasting changes and achieve your health goals. With Noom, you’ll embark on a personalized journey that considers your unique needs, preferences, and challenges. Their innovative approach combines cutting-edge technology with the support of a dedicated team of experts, including registered dietitians, nutritionists, and behavior change specialists. Noom’s changing how the world thinks about weight loss. Go to noom.com to sign up for your trial today! ButcherBox ButcherBox is the perfect solution for anyone looking to eat high-quality, sustainably sourced meat without the hassle of going to the grocery store. With ButcherBox, you can enjoy a variety of grass-fed beef, heritage pork, free-range chicken, and wild-caught seafood delivered straight to your door every month. ButcherBox.com/Daily Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
In the year 490 BC, one of the most pivotal battles in world history took place.
Just north of the city of Athens, Persian and Greek forces clashed in what was to become the first Persian attempt to invade Greece.
Despite being outnumbered over two to one, the Greeks managed to win a decisive victory that had long-lasting ramifications.
Learn more about the Battle of Marathon, its causes, and its outcome on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
throughline is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night and how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
To understand why the Battle of Marathon took place, we have to understand the events that led up to it.
Even a cursory inspection would show that a clash between Greece and Persia was pretty much inevitable.
But first, let's start with Greece.
Ancient Greece wasn't a singular uniform entity.
There was no Greek empire, although there would be a Macedonian empire later on.
The Greeks can be better thought of as a civilization, a collection of city-states that often
fall with each other, but were united under common linguistic, cultural, and religious practices.
The Greeks didn't just inhabit the area that makes up modern-day Greece.
They had spread out, establishing satellite colonies around the coast of the Mediterranean,
black, and iginces.
For the purpose of this episode, this included many Greek communities that existed in modern-day
Turkey, especially in the area along the Baspora Strait and in the Egenc.
The Persians were very different from the Greeks.
The Persian Empire had expanded rapidly and conquered many lands with different people who had different cultures and languages.
The Persian Empire, and if you remember back to my previous episode on this subject,
I'm talking about the Achaemenid Empire or the First Persian Empire,
was the largest in the world at this time.
As the empire expanded westward, it eventually bumped into Greek cities located on the Asian side of the Aegean.
These cities became dominated by the Persians and the Persians sent rulers to govern these cities.
And this didn't sit well with the Greeks.
Each Greek community had its own set of rules, but for the most part they did things her own way,
and the Persian overlords had no clue about Greek customs and norms.
This friction between the Greeks and Persians eventually came to a head in the early 5th century BC.
From 499 to 493 BC, several Greek communities along the Aegean and Bosphorus revolted against Persian rule.
These were known as the Ionian revolts.
The Persians managed to put down the revolts, but not before the cities of Athens and Eritrea had given the rebellious Greek city's aid.
In fact, Athens sent troops to assist the city of Sardis in the year 499 BC.
This angered the Persian king Darius I, who, after the rebellions were put down, sought to seek revenge against the Greek city.
cities who conspired against him. The Ionian revolts were not the first interaction between
Greeks and Persians. Darius had extended the Persian Empire across the Bosphorus into a region known as
Thrace, which includes the modern-day parts of European Turkey, Bulgaria, and northern Greece.
These northern parts of the Greek cultural area were also under the dominion of Darius and had become
vassal states. In 491 BC, Darius sent envoys to Athens requesting their submission to Darius.
The Athenians executed the envoys and proceeded to create a defensive pack with the city of Sparta in the event of a Persian invasion.
In the year 490 BC, Darius decided to launch a punitive expedition against the Greek city states that had supported the rebellious cities in the Ionian revolts.
He built an armada of ships and island hopped their way across the Aegean, conquering islands such as Naxos, which had previously resisted Persian advances.
The fleet probably carried close to 90,000 people in total, of which, 24,000.
5,000 were believed to have been warriors. Most of the Persian troops were archers and cavalry.
The Persian forces were commanded by an admiral by the name of Dattus. The first target was the city of
Eritrea, one of the two cities that aided the rebels. Arritrea isn't technically on the mainland,
but rather is on the island of Ubeah. Still, it's literally only 40 meters from the mainland at
its closest point and several bridges crossed the strait today. The Persians landed nearby,
laid siege to the city, sacked it, and enslaved the island.
the survivors. The next stop was to take care of the Athenians. It wasn't actually that far away.
They just had to sail up the Attica Peninsula, which Athens is located on, and that Eritrea was only a few
hundred meters from. In September 490 BC, the Persian forces landed about 27 kilometers,
or 17 miles northeast of Athens, in a place called the Plains of Marathon. The decision to land in
Marathon was made by an exiled Athenium by the name of Hippaius, who was once a tyrant who ruled the city.
The Athenians were aware of what the Persians were doing.
They were not being subtle, and they had advanced knowledge from what happened in Eritrea.
The Athenians assembled an army and headed north.
One of their leaders was a man by the name of Miltides.
Miltides was a former ruler of a Greek colony in Thrace that was a vassal of the Persians.
He had tried to sabotage a Persian advance into Skithia, what is today modern-day Romania,
by burning a bridge across the Danube that would have stranded the Persian army.
He later helped with the Ionian Revolt and was selected as the leader,
because he had the most experience fighting the Persians.
Miltides was one of 12 generals who represented the Athenian tribes.
In theory, they were supposed to rotate command every day,
but every day the new leader just seated his command to Miltides.
Miltides led a group of about 10,000 Athenian Hopalites to Marathon
to block the passage that led out of the planes.
The hopolites were infantry units that fought in tight ranks
using a shield, heavy armor, and a very long spear.
Meanwhile, a runner was sent from Athens to contact Sparta to ask for their assistance
and to honor their end of the defensive pact that they made with Athens.
The Athenians sent their best runner, a man by the name of Piapides.
He ran the distance between Athens and Sparta about 240 kilometers or 150 miles in just two days.
When Fiapides arrived in Sparta, the Spartans were celebrating their feast of Karnia.
The Spartans were warriors through and through and loved a good fight.
However, as seriously as they took war, they took their religion even more seriously.
The Spartans were not allowed to wage war during Carnia.
They told Fiatis that they would send help, but they couldn't do so until the next full moon,
which wasn't for another ten days.
The only Greek city that sent help was the small town of Plataia, which sent about a thousand
hoplites.
The assistant sent by Plataa wasn't much, but it ended up being a huge morale boost for the Athenian
soldiers and for the Athenian citizenry.
Back in Marathon, the Persians and the Athenians stared each other down for several days.
The Athenians were situated between two groves of trees so they couldn't be easily outflanked.
The weight benefited the Athenians.
The longer they could hold out, the closer they got to the arrival of the Spartans.
However, after several days, the Athenians eventually attacked.
It isn't exactly clear why they did this without the Spartans.
The leading theories that the Persian cavalry had left the field and Miltides was taking advantage of the situation.
It could be that the Persians may have decided to get the horses aboard their ships to take them around Athens to attack while the main army was occupied in the marathon.
The Athenian forces lined up for battle in an odd way.
The center of the Athenian lines were only four men deep, but the flanks of the Athenian lines were eight men deep.
This formation has been debated by military historians for centuries.
Some think that this was an attempt at a double envelopment of the Persians.
The center would hold while the flanks would try to encircle the Persians, similar to what Hannibal and the
Carthaginians would do to the Romans 250 years later at the Battle of Caney.
Others think that this was just an attempt to strengthen the Athenian flanks so they wouldn't get
outflanked by the Persians. The two sides started out about a kilometer and a half or a mile away
from each other. The records of the battle, which were all written well after the event,
say that the Athenians sprinted the entire distance to the Persian lines.
More probable is that they marched until they were within distance of the Persian archers,
of which there were many, and then sprinted the last 200 or so meters to lessen the time they
would have to spend under Persian arrows. They were mostly able to protect themselves from arrows
by their armor and shields. Once the Athenians clashed with the Persian infantry lines,
they had the advantage. Without any Persian cavalry and with the Persian archers now mostly
neutralized, they were able to deal with the thin Persian infantry lines. The Athenian center
was pushed back as expected, given how thin it was. But the Athenian flanks were able to have their way
with the Persian flanks, which, as Militides probably knew, was where the Persians put their
weakest soldiers. Once the Persian flanks collapsed, the center soon collapsed, and then the route was on.
The Athenians pushed the Persians all the way back to their ships. The archers, once confronted
with armored infantry, were no match. The Greek historian Herodotus reported the bodies of
6,400 Persian soldiers were counted on the battlefield. The Athenians lost only 192 men,
and the Palatians only 11.
In the process, the Athenians also captured seven Persian ships.
This, however, was not the end.
Despite the heavy losses incurred by the Persians,
they still had a numerical advantage over the Athenians.
They sailed their ship south to attempt to attack Athens directly
while the Athenian forces were still north in Marathon.
The Athenians knew the threat to Athens wasn't over,
and immediately marched most of their troops back to the city.
They managed to block any Persian landing and force the Persians to retreat back across the Aegean to Asia.
After the Athenians had left a marathon, the Spartans showed up a day later, only to realize that the battle had already taken place, and the Athenians had won.
The entire Spartan army managed to make the entire 240-kilometer or 150-mile trip in just three days on foot.
Darius had every intention of assembling a new army and heading back to Greece, but it never happened.
He had to attend to other rebellions and other parts of his empire and just never got around to it.
That task was given to his son Xerxes, who later attempted an invasion of Greece,
which the Spartans later thwarted at the Battle of Thermopyly, which I've covered in a previous episode.
At this point, you must be noticing that I have completely ignored the one thing you probably think of when I say the word marathon,
the running race that goes by the same name.
According to legend, the runner Piapides ran the distance from Marathon to Athens,
to tell everyone the results of the battle.
When he arrived in Athens, he supposedly shouted,
Ni Niki Kaman, or we have won, and then promptly died.
The problem is that there's no evidence for this story.
It first appeared over 500 years after the battle took place.
It appears to be a confusion of two elements of the story.
Theopides run to Sparta and the march of the Athenian soldiers back to Athens after the battle.
The Battle of Marathon wasn't the biggest or greatest battle in history.
but it was an extremely important battle.
It was a battle between two civilizations.
The result of the battle allowed for the creation of Athenian democracy,
which became the basis for Republican politics and Western culture,
as well as for the later development of Greek philosophy
and the works of people like Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Peter Bennett and Cameron Kiever.
I wanted to give a big thanks to everyone who supports the show on Patreon.
Your support helps me put out a new show every day.
And if you're interested in everything everywhere daily merchandise,
Patreon is currently the only place where it's available.
And if you'd like to talk to other listeners of the show and get notified to future episodes and projects,
please join my Facebook group or Discord server.
Links to everything are in the show notes.
