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Information About

Battle Of Plataea




  partof the Persian Wars
  caption Map of the battlefield at Plataea
  date August, 479 BC
  place Plataea
  result Decisive Greek victory
  combatant1 Greek City-state s
  combatant2 Persia
  commander1 Pausanias
  commander2 Mardonius &dagger
  strength1 110,000
  strength2 Herodotus claims 300,000 (Some modern critics give numbers as low as 80,000)
  casualties1 1360
  casualties2 Herodotus claims 250,000+ (historical accounts of the battle are probably inaccurate)


The Battle of Plataea took place in 479 BC between an alliance of Greek City-state s Sparta , Athens , Corinth , Megara , and others against the Persians .


BACKGROUND

After the Battle Of Salamis , Xerxes I returned to Persia, leaving Mardonius in charge of the conquered Greek territories. Mardonius, through Alexander I Of Macedon , asked for a truce with Athens , offering autonomous government and Persian aid in rebuilding their city. Athens rejected this and asked for Sparta n help, though the Spartans were more interested in protecting the Peloponnese . Mardonius then recaptured Athens, but Athens once more rejected his offer of peace. The Spartans hesitated as they were celebrating a religious festival, but eventually sent 45,000 men under the command of Pausanias to aid the Athenians. The Spartans knew the importance of this battle, it was the Greek city states fighting for their existence against the Persian forces. The Spartans fielded 5,000 Spartiates (full citizen soldiers); this was the largest single Spartan fighting force ever to appear in battle. Spartan forces typically consisted of relatively few actual Spartan soldiers, and mostly consisted of Perioci , Helot s (Servants of the state) and soldiers provided from their allies. When Mardonius learned of the Spartan force he sacked Athens for a third time, then retreated to Thebes to await the Greek force.


BATTLE

Mardonius fortified the Asopus river in Boeotia , hoping that the Greeks would be unable to unite against him. However, the Athenians sent 8,000 men and marched with the Spartan force of 45,000 (5,000 Spartiates, 5,000 Perioci and 35,000 Helots ) to the pass over Mount Cithaeron , where they could successfully defend themselves from Persian raids. Mardonius sent a cavalry charge under the commander Masistius to take the pass, but Masistius was resisted by the Megara ns and Athenians under the command of Olympiodorus. Masistius was killed and his cavalry retreated. The Greeks began to move away from the pass towards the plain of Plataea where Mardonius was camped, and where the Greek Hoplite s could fight more easily. The Athenians formed the left wing of the army during this movement while the Spartans formed the right wing and the Tegea ns formed the middle.

By this point the Greek army had been reinforced by many other city-states, giving the Greeks a total strength of 110,000 men of 38,700 hoplites and 71,300 light troops, according to Herodotus . The city-state of Corinth sent 5,000 hoplites, Tegea 1,500, Potidaea 300, Arcadian Orchomenus 600, Sicyon 3,000, Epidaurus 800, Troezen 1,000, Leprea 200, Mycene and Tiryns 400, Floia 1,000, Hermion 300, Eretreia and Styra 600, Chalkis 400, Ambrakia 500, Lefkas and Anactorium 800, Cephalonia 200, Aegena 500, Megara 3,000 and Plataea 600. Of the light troops 35,000 were the aformentioned helots, 1,800 were Thespians and the other 34,500 are simply said to be from the other cities. The 35,000 helots number has come under doubt because it implies 7 helots for every Spartiat. The battle near Mycale is supposed to have taken place at the same time, that means at least 25,000 men (mostly Athenians but also a lot of Spartans) were occupied on Asian front, that means the Greek coalition probably numbered around 80,000 men.

Mardonius, on the other hand, according to did leave the baivaram undermanned it is very hard to see how he could have left so small an army. Plus Mardonius probably had also a force of allied Greeks - all Greek states north of Athens - especially Thebans and allies from Thesalia. Ancient sources say they numbered perhaps 50,000, and while this may seem exgenerated they northern states were certainly able to field 30,000 hoplites.

Both armies camped in front of each other for 10 days, with only small raids on each side. Finally Mardonius decided to attack, but the Greeks were warned of this by Alexander of Macedon. The Athenians and Spartans switched positions so that the Athenians would defend against the main Persian force while the Spartans would fight the Greek subjects within the Persian army. However, the Persians diverted the Greek water supply and cut off their supply of food, so the Greeks were forced to find a new camp.

On discovering the Greeks had abandoned their positions, Mardonius chased after them. The Persian cavalry and Archer s first came upon the Spartans, and the infantry arrived soon after. The cavalry and archers did little damage and moved off when the infantry arrived. The numerically superior Persian troops could not break through the Greek lines of Hoplite s, whose long spears gave them a tactical advantage over the Persian short spears and swords. The Persians were annihilated; Mardonius himself was killed by a Spartan named Aeimnestus. The Persian Artabazus, who had unsuccessfully tried to convince Mardonius to avoid a pitched battle, took command of the Persian force and immediately retreated, allowing the Greeks to capture their camp. According to Herodotus only 43,000 of the 300,000 Persians survived the battle, while the Greeks as a whole lost only 159 men. Plutarch though gives 1360 Greek casualties which seems more accurate while Ephorus probably is exaggerating when he gives over 10,000. However historical records of the period are notoriously biased or inaccurate and the real number of casualties will never truly be known.


AFTERMATH

According to tradition, the Battle Of Mycale occurred on the same day, with the Greek fleet destroying the Persians in the Aegean Sea off the coast of Ionia . The Persian army, now under the command of Artabazus , retreated all the way back to Asia Minor after Plataea. This ended the Persian War , although the Persians continued to interfere in Greek politics until they were conquered in the 4th Century BC by Alexander The Great . However, this was the last time the Persians tried to invade the Greek mainland with a goal of total conquest.

A bronze column in the shape of intertwined snakes was created from the treasure acquired in the plunder of the Persian camp and was offered at the Oracle of Delphi , which commemorated all the Greek city-states who participated in the battle. Part of it still survives in the Hippodrome in modern Istanbul , where it was carried by Constantine The Great during the founding of his city. It lists all city-states that took part in the battle, confirming Herodotus's account (but not his numbers).

Another important and longer-lasting aftermath was that after the Persian wars the Persian empire started recruiting and relying on Greek mercenaries. Eventually, especially after the Anabasis , their superior fighting ability (due to their armor and the way they fought) was demonstrated, leading the way for Alexander The Great 's conquests.


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