Alexander the Great - Fort Thomas Schools

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Transcript Alexander the Great - Fort Thomas Schools

Part 1: Greece
Part 2: Alexander the Great
Lesson 20
Part 1: Greece
Theme: The Decline of the City-states
Lesson 20
ID & SIG
• Delian League, Marathon, Peloponnesian
War, Persian Wars, Thermopylae
Persian Wars
• Greek colonization brought the city states
in conflict with the Persian Empire
– Remember from Lesson 6
• Result was the Persian Wars (500-479
B.C.)
Ionian Rebellion
• As Persian emperors Cyrus
and Darius tightened their grip
on Anatolia, the Greek cities
on the Ionian coast became
increasingly restless
• In 500 B.C., they revolted and
expelled the Achaemenid
administrators
• Athens sent a fleet in support
of their fellow Greeks and
commercial partners
• In 493, Darius repressed the
rebellion
Cyclades Islands
Persian Wars
• To punish the
Athenians and
discourage future
interference, Darius
attacked Athens in 490
• The Athenians repelled
the invasion
– Marathon
Battle of Marathon
• The Persians landed
at the Plains of
Marathon on
September 9, 490
• For eight days, the two
armies faced each
other
• On the ninth day, the
Persians started to
advance, forcing
Miltiades, the
commander in chief of
the Athenian army, to
deploy his army of
10,000 Athenians and
1,000 Plataeans for
battle
Battle of Marathon
• The Athenians
surrounded the
Persians in a double
envelopment
– Although the
Athenians were
outnumbered, their
spears were
superior to the
Persians’ bows and
short lances
• The Persians fled to
their ships
• Persians lost 6,400
men and seven ships
• Athenians lost 192
Battle of Marathon
• However, Miltiades realized that the
Persian fleet could sail and attack
the undefended city of Athens
• According to legend, he called upon
Phidippides to run to Athens to tell
them of the victory and warn them of
the approaching Persian ships
• Phidippides ran the 26 miles from
Marathon to Athens in about three
hours, successfully warning the
Athenians who repelled the Persian
invasion
• Phidippides was exhausted from the
fight at Marathon and the 26 mile run
and died upon announcing the
warning
Miltiades
Olympic Marathons
• The marathon was part of
the 1896 Olympics
– The course was from
Marathon to Athens
(24.85 miles or 40 km)
• At the London Olympics in
1908, the Olympic
marathon course was set at
26 miles, 385 yards (42.195
km) to accommodate the
Royal Family’s viewing
• In 1921 the International
Amateur Athletic
Foundation made 42.195
km the official distance of a
marathon
Xerxes
• Darius’s
successor
Xerxes tried to
avenge the
Persian losses
by launching
another attack in
480
– Thermopylae
Thermopylae
• The Greeks sent an allied
army under the Spartan
king Leonidas to
Thermopylae, a narrow
mountain pass in
northeastern Greece
• The point was to stall the
Persians long enough that
the city states could
prepare for later major
battles after the Persians
broke through
Persians attempting to force
the pass at Thermopylae
Thermopylae
• Twice the Greeks repelled the Persians
• Then Ephialtes, a local farmer, traitorously led
a force of Persian infantry through a mountain
passage and the next morning they appeared
behind the Greek lines
• Leonidas ordered the rest of the army to
withdraw and held the passage with just 300
Spartans
• As true Spartans, they chose death over
retreat
– Remember Lesson 17
• All died but they did hold off the Persians long
enough to ensure the safe withdrawal of the
rest of the Greek army.
Leonidas
Thermopylae
• “Stranger, go tell
the Spartans that
we lie here in
obedience to their
laws.”
– (Inscription carved
on the tomb of
Leonidas’s Three
Hundred)
Leonidas at
Thermopylae by David
After Thermopylae
• The Persians
captured and
burned Athens but
were defeated by
the Athenian navy
at Salamis
• In 479 the
Persians were
defeated at
Plataea and forced
back to Anatolia
Delian League
• After the Persian threat subsided, the Greek poleis had
conflicts among themselves
• The poleis formed an alliance called the Delian League
– Athens supplied most of the military force and the other poleis
provided financial support
– Sparta did not join the league
– In the absence of the Persian threat, eventually the other poleis
came to resent financing Athens’s bureaucracy and construction
projects
• The resulting tensions led to the Peloponnesian War
(431-404) in which the poleis divided up into two sides
led by Athens and Sparta
The Peloponnesian War
(431-404 B.C.)
• The war went back and
forth until 404 when the
Spartans and their allies
forced Athens to
surrender
• Conflicts continued
however and the world
of the poleis steadily lost
power
– Alexander the Great is
going to step into this
power vacuum (next
lesson)
“Failure of the Nerve”
• Xenophon lamented that up to this point, “the
City-state, the Polis, had concentrated upon
itself all the loyalty and the aspiration of the
Greek mind. It gave security to life. It gave
meaning to religion.”
• Then, however, “it was not now ruled by the best
citizens. The best had turned away from
politics.”
• Intellectual and imaginative life of 4th Century
Greece gave way to an atmosphere of defeat
– Gilbert Murray explains it as “a failure of nerve”
Part 2: Alexander the Great
Theme: Advances in Warfare
Lesson 20
ID & SIG
• Alexander the Great, Darius, Gaugamela
(Arbela), phalanx, Philip, siege, Tyre
Philip II
• Ruled Macedonia from 359336 B.C. and transformed it
into a powerful military
machine
• Moved into northern Greece
and met little resistance due
to residual effects of
Peloponnesian War
– By 338 he had Greece under
his control
Macedonia
Alexander the Great
• Philip intended to use Greece as a launching
pad to invade Persia, but he was assassinated
before he could begin his plan
• Instead the invasion of Persia would be left for
Philip’s son Alexander who was just 20 when
Philip was assassinated
– “Alexander inherited from his father the most perfectly
organized, trained, and equipped army of ancient
times.”
• J.F.C. Fuller, The Generalship of Alexander the Great
Conquests of Alexander
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Ionia and Anatolia
Syria, Palestine, Egypt
Mesopotamia
Persepolis
King of Persia
India
Returns to Susa
Dies (age 33)
333
332
331
331
330
327
324
323
Warfare in the Age of Alexander
• Phalanx: A formation of infantry carrying
overlapping shields and long spears, developed by
Philip II and used by Alexander the Great
Warfare in the Age of Alexander
• Hoplite
– The main melee
warrior of the
Macedonian army.
– Worked mainly in the
tight phalanx
formation, creating
impregnable lines that
often left the enemy
demoralized.
Hoplites in Action
Warfare in the Age of Alexander
• Sieges involved the
surrounding and
blockading of a town or
fortress by an army trying
to capture it.
• A variety of weapons
were built to hurl
projectiles over city walls,
scale or batter the walls,
and transport soldiers
over them.
Tyre
• “… if Alexander deserves permanent
commemoration as a general, then it is
above all in his capacity as a besieger,
and of all his sieges Tyre was his
masterpiece.”
– Paul Cartledge, Alexander the Great, 147
Tyrian Fire Ship Burns the Towers
After Gaugamela
• Darius’s escape frustrated Alexander
because it prevented him from full claim to
being king of Persia
• Eventually Darius’s followers assassinated
him
• As Alexander became king of Persia and
continued to advance east, he took on an
increasingly Eastern attitude
The End of the Empire
• Alexander
– Married Roxanna and had his men
also intermarry
– Adopted Eastern dress and habits
– Publicly insisted upon his descent
from the gods
– Began giving key positions to
Persians
• The Macedonians were tired of
campaigning and resented the
changes in Alexander’s behavior
and become mutinous
• Alexander died in June 323,
perhaps as a result of poisoning
"The Marriage of
Alexander the Great
and Roxanna" by
Ishmail Parbury
After Alexander
• After Alexander died,
his generals jockeyed
for power and by 275
they had divided up his
kingdom into three large
states
– Antigonus took
Greece and
Macedon
– Ptolemy took Egypt
– Seleuces took the
former Achaemenid
empire
• The period of Alexander
and his successors is
called the Hellenistic
period to reflect the
broad influence of
Greek culture beyond
Greece’s borders
Next
• Aztecs and Mongols