Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Battle of Thermopylae
Episode Date: May 2, 2021In the year 480 BC, one of the most famous battles in history took place on the shore of the Malian Gulf in the Aegean Sea. Several thousand Greeks held back several hundred thousand Persians, in a ba...ttle which is still remembered 2,500 years later. While the Greeks lost the battle, they did ultimately win the war. Learn more about the Battle of Thermopylae and the 300 hundred Spartans, on the 300th episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
In the year 480 BC, one of the most famous battles in history took place on the shore of the Malian Gulf in the Aegean Sea.
Thousands of Greeks held back several hundred thousand Persians in a battle which is still remembered 2,500 years later.
While the Greeks ultimately lost the battle, they did ultimately win the war.
Learn more about the Battle of Thermopylae and the 300 Spartans on the 300th episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
long. ThruLine 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 Thurline podcast from NPR.
This episode is sponsored by audible.com. My audiobook recommendation today is Thermopylae by Paul
Cartlidge. In 480 BC, a huge Persian army led by the inimitable King Xerxes entered the
mountain pass of Thermopyla to march on Greece, intending to conquer the land with little
difficulty. But the Greeks, led by King Leonidas and a small army of Spartans, took the battle
to the Persians at Thermopylae and halted their advance. Almost. It's one of history's most
acclaimed battles and one of civilization's greatest last stands. Renowned classical historian,
Paul Cartlidge, looks anew at this history-altering moment and shows how its repercussions
Cursions affect us even today.
You can get a three-one-month trial to Audible and two free audiobooks by going to
audibletrial.com slash everything everywhere, or by clicking on the link in the show notes.
Most battles and wars throughout human history have involved neighboring kingdoms or tribes,
who despite their differences were probably more alike than different in the big global
scheme of things.
Occasionally, however, different civilizations will clash.
These conflicts can alter the course of world history in
a way that regular battles cannot. One of the first such cases occurred 2,500 years ago
between the Persian Empire and the city-states of Greece. These were profoundly different societies.
The Persian Empire, also known as the Achaemenid Empire, was a massive empire which stretched
from what is today northern Greece to India to Libya. While the empire was multicultural
and multilingual, it was a highly centralized bureaucracy with an absolute ruler at the top.
They were the largest, richest, and most powerful empire on earth.
Many historians have considered them to be the world's first superpower, before the Romans,
the Chinese, before the Mongols, and even before the Macedonians.
Greece, on the other hand, wasn't even really a thing.
What we think of as Greece was a collection of city states that were constantly warring with
each other.
Many of the cities were republics that exercised a form of democracy.
They would trade extensively through the Aegean and the Mediterranean.
The customs, traditions, religions, and ascetics of the Greeks
were profoundly different from the Persians.
They didn't have anything close to the size or wealth of Persia,
and that is ignoring the fact that they were in no way united.
It was in this context that the Greco-Persian wars took place.
In the year 490 BC, the Persians attempted their first invasion of Greece.
Led by King Darius I, also known as Darius the Great,
they were ultimately unsuccessful, having decisively lost at the Battle of Marathon.
After Darius died, his son Xerxes took the throne.
Zerxes intended to complete the job that his father couldn't.
He was going to invade and conquer Greece.
The Persian spent about four years planning and preparing the invasion.
They assembled one of the largest armies in the ancient world.
The Greek historian Herodotus, a contemporary writer,
claimed that the Persian army had 2.6 million men under arms with an equivalent number and support.
Siamides of Sios claimed that it was four million strong.
Ancient writers had a tendency to exaggerate numbers, especially if it makes their side look good if they win.
The bigger the opponent, the greater the victory.
Modern scholars, however, think that the actual size of the Persian army was between 100 and 300,000 men,
which would still be one of the largest armies in ancient history.
They created a huge logistical operation to feed and support their army.
Xerxes dug a canal through the Mount Athos Peninsula, which is something I referenced in my previous episode on the topic.
The Persian army also had to cross the Hellespont, today known as the Dardanelles,
so Xerxes had built a floating bridge a mile long to have his entire army cross it on foot.
Both of these things were incredible engineering feats for the time.
Supplying and equipping an army of that size was an incredible undertaking,
but Xerxes didn't want to leave victory to chance.
The Greeks, however, were not in a very good position.
The Athenians, who were the primary force that defeated the Persians at the Battle of Marathon,
years earlier, had been preparing for war against Persia for years. They had built a massive
fleet, but they didn't have enough men to both fight at sea and on land. Zerxes sent ambassadors
to all the Greek city states, except Sparta and Athens, which were the two strongest.
He wanted the smaller city states to capitulate without a fight and create divisions between
the city states, isolating Athens and Sparta in the process. A council was called with the
various city states to deal with the Persian threat. It was decided that the best strategy was
to use their terrain to their advantage to try to counter the Persian superior forces.
Their first best opportunity to slow them would be along the coast of the Malian Gulf
at a place known as Thermopyla.
If you've seen the movie 300 or any depiction of the battle,
it's almost always shown as taking place on a path with large rocks on either side.
This is not actually what happened.
There was a winding trail that hug the coastline.
On one side there was a mountain and on the other side was the sea.
If you look at a picture of the location today, or if you visit it, it doesn't look like this at all.
I drove through the area several years ago, and I was perplexed as to how they could have defended such a broad area.
Over the last 2,500 years, the Malian Gulf has silted an inn because of a local river, which has caused the shore to move out.
Today, the spot of the battle is actually several kilometers from the shore.
It's estimated that the width of the path that the Greeks defended was about 100 meters or 300 feet wide.
King Leonidas of Sparta agreed to take 300 of his elite royal guard to Thermopylae.
Along the way, they would try to recruit as many men as they could to try to hold off the Persians.
Along the way, they recruited about 7,000 more men, and set up camp defending the narrowest part of the passage.
After several weeks, the Persians finally arrived.
For several days, they didn't do anything.
On the fifth day, however, Xerxes ordered his men to take the passage.
They first fired an enormous volley of arrows, but they were ineffective due to the Greek
shields and armor. He then sent in 10,000 men on a frontal assault, and they were torn to ribbons
by the Greeks. The Greeks fought with a formation known as a phalanx, with their primary weapon being a
very long spear. With their shields locked, the Greeks could reach the Persians with their spears,
and the Persians couldn't reach the Greeks. After the first assault, Xerxes then sent in as elite
immortal guards who suffered the same result. On the second day of the battle, Xerxes figured
that the Greeks would be tired and injured, so he just tried another frontal assault and got the same
results. However, later in the second day, they were informed of a path that went up into the
mountains and came back down on the other side where the Greeks were defending. The information
was given to them by one Effialtis of Trakis, whose name became synonymous in Greece, with treachery
and treason thereafter. Zerxes sent his elite units up the path that evening to encircle the Greeks.
The Greeks heard the Persians and realized what was happening. They had been a way to
of the path. They held a war council that evening, and Leonidas said that he and his men would
stay to defend the pass, and everyone else could retreat. As the battle was hopeless, they felt
that if they could hold off the Persians long enough, the rest of the Greek forces could get
away to fight again another day. About 2,000 of the 7,000 men stayed behind a fight. On day three of the
battle, knowing that all was lost, the Greeks led by the Spartans, advanced into the Persians
with the goal of taking out as many of them as possible, and occupying them for as long as long as
long as possible. They fought until their spears broke, and then they fought with their swords,
and then with their hands. They were totally wiped out. In the end, about 2,000 Greeks were killed
in Thermopyla. However, they killed over 20,000 Persians in the process. Even though it was technically
a defeat, the valor and performance of the Greeks at Thermopylae was a huge morale boost to the rest
of Greece. Zerxes continued to march into Greece. Athens was evacuated, and there was a treat
across the Isthmth of Corinth, which was highly defendable.
It was then the Athenian Navy defeated the Persians in the decisive Battle of Salamis,
which gave the Greeks control of the sea about one month after the Battle of Thermopyla.
Xerxes, afraid that the Greeks would destroy his bridge across the Hellespont,
thus stranding his army, retreated with most of his forces back to Asia.
Having lost control of the sea, he was unable to supply his massive army,
and most of his men died in the retreat from starvation and disease.
The remaining Persian forces left behind were defeated the next year at the Battle of Palatea,
which ended the Persian invasion of Greece.
150 years later, the tables would be turned.
Philip II of Macedonia would conquer Greece, and his son, Alexander the Great,
would in turn conquer Persia, ending the Persian threat to Greece once and for all.
It is difficult to stress just how different history would have turned out if Greece had been conquered by Persia.
The Battle of Thermopylae has been a centerpiece of Western and military history since
it took place. It's been the subject of poems, books, songs, and movies. And today, over
2,500 years after the events took place, the defiant last stand of the Greeks is still remembered.
The associate producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Thor Thompson. Today's five-star review
comes from listener Becky Hickman over on Apple Podcast. They write, similar to Cabinet of
curiosities, I enjoy these short tales on interesting topics and about interesting people. The only
I don't like is the reading of five-star reviews. Thanks, Becky. I see what you did there.
By saying you don't like five-star reviews and putting that into a five-star review, knowing that I would
read the five-star review, you attempted to create a recursive loop that would cause the podcast to
self-destruct. Fortunately, I only got a slight nosebleed. Remember, if you leave a five-star review,
you too can have your review read on the show.
Threatened my people with slavery and death. This is madness.
goodness this is sparta
