Xerxes spent more than four years gathering soldiers and stockpiling supplies from every corner of his empire. At last a phantom allegedly appeared in his dreams, urging him to invade Greece - this being interpreted by his magi as a portent for world conquest. He waffled over whether the long-delayed punishment of Athens merited such a far-flung campaign. Greece was saved - but only for a while.ĭarius’ son Xerxes does not seem to have been especially driven to complete his late father’s unfinished business. The first Persian War ended badly for Darius, however, when his troops were defeated by a smaller Athenian army at Marathon in 490 bc. He even commanded one of his servants to interrupt him during every dinner three times to remind him of his goal with the admonition, Master, remember the Athenians. Grant, O God, he said, shooting an arrow into the air, that I may punish the Athenians. A vengeful man, Darius had ordered that the severed heads of the magi be paraded through the streets on pikes.Īccording to the Greek historian Herodotus, Darius was especially furious to learn that a distant city called Athens had dared to assist his rebellious subjects in Asia Minor. Darius had seized power in 521, when he and six other men crushed a conspiracy of priests on a day that became celebrated on the Persian calendar as Magophonia - The Killing of the Magi. It was inevitable, then, that there would be tension between the Greek and Persian ways of life, and in 499 bc several Greek cities in Asia Minor revolted against the Persian King Darius. Such was the general atmosphere of oppression that one Persian nobleman who failed to do the shah’s bidding was forced to eat the flesh of his own son - and upon being shown that he had just done so, could muster no more potent a reply than to say, May the king’s will be done. There seems to have been little escape from the arbitrary tyranny of the rulers known by the Greeks simply as ‘the King or the Great King, enforced by a system of spies who acted as his eyes and ears. One shah’s wife reportedly had 14 children buried alive in an attempt to cheat death. Stories abounded of executions and tortures ordered on the whims of angry monarchs. The Greeks of Asia Minor were blessed during their period of subjugation only insofar as the Persian kings generally remained remote figures of power. By 545 bc, Cyrus had extended Persian hegemony to the coast of Asia Minor. Persian expansion had begun in the mid-6th century, when its first shah, or great king, Cyrus, had led a revolt against the dominant Medes. Nowadays, ancient ruins attest to its long-vanished greatness, but to the Greeks of the early 5th century bc, the Persian empire was young, aggressive and dangerous. The long path to battle at Thermopylae began in what is now Iran, heart of the once vast Persian empire.
And yet, despite those fundamental differences, the most memorable battle between Greeks and Persians would hinge on less ideological and more universal factors: the personality of a king and the training and courage of an extraordinary band of warriors. The Greeks had cast off their own god-kings and were just beginning to test a limited concept of political freedom, to innovate in art, literature and religion, to develop new ways of thinking, unfettered by priestly tradition.
Persia represented the old ways - a world of magi and god-kings, where priests stood guard over knowledge and emperors treated even their highest subjects as slaves. Their wars would determine the viability of a new direction in Western culture, for even as Greece stood poised to embark on an unprecedented voyage of the mind, Persia threatened to prevent the Hellenes from ever achieving their destiny.
In the 5th century bc, the Persian empire fought the city-states of Greece in one of the most profoundly symbolic struggles in history.