The
Battle of Salamis
Today is the anniversary of the Battle of
Salamis, which took place in 480 B.C.
A decade earlier Darius of Persia invaded
Greece. It was the famous victory at
Marathon that put an end to that venture.
Xerxes, successor to Darius, again
invaded Greece. Those of you who saw
“The 300” know something of how part of this invasion went. BTW, while parts of that movie conform to the
sources (“then we will fight in the shade”), much of it does not. For example, Sparta had not one but two
kings, and Leonidas had already fallen before the final onslaught and
destruction of the Spartan force. Still
they had achieved their objective, namely delaying the Persians.
At Salamis the Greek fleet attacked that
of Persia and won a major victory. The
Persian army, fearing that it would be trapped in Greece, largely
withdrew. The remainder met the Greek
army the next year at Plataea. It was at
Plataea that the exhortation with which The 300 opens and closes takes
place. That battle was not the set piece
that is indicated in the movie, but it did result in a Greek victory.
There were no more Persian invasions of
Greece.
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