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Achaemenid destruction of Athens

Achaemenid destruction of Athens
Part of the Greco-Persian Wars

Part of the archaeological remains called Perserschutt, or "Persian rubble": remnants of the destruction of Athens by the armies of Xerxes. Photographed in 1866, just after excavation.
Date480 and 479 BCE
Location37°59′02″N 23°43′40″E / 37.983972°N 23.727806°E / 37.983972; 23.727806
Result

Persian victory

  • Destruction of Athens
  • Massacre of Athenians
Belligerents
Athenian city state Achaemenid Empire
class=notpageimage|
Location of Athens

The Achaemenid destruction of Athens was carried out by the Achaemenid Army of Xerxes I during the Second Persian invasion of Greece, and occurred in two phases over a period of two years, in 480–479 BCE.

First phase: Xerxes I (480 BCE) edit

 
"The Citadel at Athens" at the time of Xerxes (1900 reconstitution)

In 480 BCE, after the victory of Xerxes I at the Battle of Thermopylae, all of Boeotia fell to the Achaemenid Army. The two cities that had resisted Xerxes, Thespiae and Plataea, were captured and razed. Attica was also left open to invasion, and the remaining population of Athens was thus evacuated, with the aid of the Allied fleet, to Salamis.[1] The Peloponnesian Allies began to prepare a defensive line across the Isthmus of Corinth, building a wall, and demolishing the road from Megara, thereby abandoning Athens to the Persians.[2]

Athens fell a first time in September 480 BCE.[3] The small number of Athenians who had barricaded themselves on the Acropolis were eventually defeated, and Xerxes then ordered Athens to be torched.[4] The Acropolis was razed, and the Old Temple of Athena and the Older Parthenon destroyed:[5]

Those Persians who had come up first betook themselves to the gates, which they opened, and slew the suppliants; and when they had laid all the Athenians low, they plundered the temple and burnt the whole of the acropolis.

— Herodotus VIII.53[6]

Shortly thereafter, Xerxes I lost a large part of his fleet to the Greeks in the Battle of Salamis. With the Persians' naval superiority removed, Xerxes feared that the Greeks might sail to the Hellespont and destroy the pontoon bridges.[7] According to Herodotus, Mardonius volunteered to remain in Greece and complete the conquest with a hand-picked group of troops, while advising Xerxes to retreat to Asia with the bulk of the army.[8] All of the Persian forces abandoned Attica, with Mardonius over-wintering in Boeotia and Thessaly.[9]

Some Athenians were thus able to return to their burnt-out city for the winter.[9] They would have to evacuate again in front of a second advance by Mardonius in June 479 BCE.[3]

Second phase: Mardonius (479 BCE) edit

Main Achaemenid troops under Mardonius
Main troops of Achaemenid general Mardonius, according to Herodotus: Persians, Medians, Sakas, Bactrians and Indians,[10][11][12] illustrated in the list of troops by ethnicity, on the tomb of Xerxes I at Naqsh-e Rostam[13]

Mardonius remained with the rest of the Achaemenid troops in northern Greece. He selected some of the best troops to remain with him in Greece, especially Immortals, the Medes, the Sacae, the Bactrians and the Indians. Herodotus described the composition of the principal troops of Mardonius:[12][11]

Mardonius there chose out first all the Persians called Immortals, save only Hydarnes their general, who said that he would not quit the king's person; and next, the Persian cuirassiers, and the thousand horse, and the Medes and Sacae and Bactrians and Indians, alike their footmen and the rest of the horsemen. He chose these nations entire; of the rest of his allies he picked out a few from each people, the goodliest men and those that he knew to have done some good service... Thereby the whole number, with the horsemen, grew to three hundred thousand men.

— Herodotus VIII, 113.[10][12]
 
Answer of Aristides to the ambassadors of Mardonius: "As long as the sun holds to its present course, we shall never come to terms with Xerxes".[14]

Mardonius remained in Thessaly, knowing an attack on the isthmus was pointless, while the Allies refused to send an army outside the Peloponessus.[15]

Mardonius moved to break the stalemate, by offering peace, self-government and territorial expansion to the Athenians (with the aim of thereby removing their fleet from the Allied forces), using Alexander I of Macedon as an intermediary.[16] The Athenians made sure that a Spartan delegation was on hand to hear the offer, but rejected it.[16] Athens was thus evacuated again, and the Persians marched south and re-took possession of it.[16]

Mardonius brought even more thorough destruction to the city, and some authors considered that the city was truly razed to the ground during this second phase.[3] According to Herodotus, after the negotiations broke off:

(Mardonius) burnt Athens, and utterly overthrew and demolished whatever wall or house or temple was left standing

— Herodotus IX.13[17][3]

Perserschutt edit

Numerous remains of statues vandalized by the Achaemenids have been found, known collectively as the "Perserschutt", or "Persian rubble":

The statue Nike of Callimachus, which was erected next to the Older Parthenon in honor of Callimachus and the victory at the Battle of Marathon, was severely damaged by the Achaemenids. The statue depicts Nike (Victory), in the form of a woman with wings, on top of an inscribed column. Its height is 4.68 meters and was made of Parian marble. The head of the statue and parts of the torso and hands were never recovered.

Xerxes also took away some of the statuary, such as The Tyrant-slayers, a bronze statue of Harmodius and Haristogiton which was recovered by Alexander the Great in the Achaemenid capital of Susa two centuries later.[18]

 
Foundations of the Old Temple of Athena, destroyed by the armies of Xerxes I

Reconstruction edit

 
Athenians rebuilding their city under the direction of Themistocles

The Achaemenids were decisively beaten at the ensuing Battle of Plataea, and the Greeks were able to recover Athens. They had to rebuild everything, including a new Parthenon on the Acropolis. These efforts at reconstruction were led by Themistocles in the autumn of 479 BC, who reused remains of the Older Parthenon and Old Temple of Athena to reinforce the walls of the Acropolis, which are still visible today in the North Wall of the Acropolis.[19][20] His priority was probably to repair the walls and build up the defenses of the city, before even endeavouring to rebuild temples.[21] Themistocles in particular is considered as the builder of the northern wall of the Acropolis incorporating the debris of the destroyed temples, while Cimon is associated with the later building of the southern wall.[22]

The Themistoclean Wall, named after Themistocles, was built right after the war with Persia, in the hope of defending against further invasion. A lot of this building efforts was accomplished using spolia, remains of the destructions from the preceding conflict.

The Parthenon was only rebuilt much later, after more than 30 years had elapsed, by Pericles, possibly because of an original vow that the Temples destroyed by the Achaemenids should not be rebuilt.

Retaliatory burning of the Palace of Persepolis edit

 
Alexander the Great lifting Thais holding a torch, in "The Burning of Persepolis" (L'incendie de Persepolis), Georges Rochegrosse, 1890

In 330 BCE, Alexander the Great burned down the palace of Persepolis, the principal residence of the defeated Achaemenid dynasty, after a drinking party and at the instigation of Thais. According to Plutarch and Diodorus, this was intended as a retribution for Xerxes' burning of the old Temple of Athena on the Acropolis in Athens (the site of the extant Parthenon) in 480 BC during the Persian Wars.

When the king [Alexander] had caught fire at their words, all leaped up from their couches and passed the word along to form a victory procession in honour of Dionysus. Promptly many torches were gathered. Female musicians were present at the banquet, so the king led them all out for the comus to the sound of voices and flutes and pipes, Thaïs the courtesan leading the whole performance. She was the first, after the king, to hurl her blazing torch into the palace. As the others all did the same, immediately the entire palace area was consumed, so great was the conflagration. It was remarkable that the impious act of Xerxes, king of the Persians, against the acropolis at Athens should have been repaid in kind after many years by one woman, a citizen of the land which had suffered it, and in sport.

— Diodorus of Sicily (XVII.72)

References edit

  1. ^ Herodotus VIII, 41
  2. ^ Holland, p. 300
  3. ^ a b c d Lynch, Kathleen M. (2011). The Symposium in Context: Pottery from a Late Archaic House Near the Athenian Agora. ASCSA. pp. 20–21, and Note 37. ISBN 9780876615461.
  4. ^ Holland, pp. 305–306
  5. ^ Barringer, Judith M.; Hurwit, Jeffrey M. (2010). Periklean Athens and Its Legacy: Problems and Perspectives. University of Texas Press. p. 295. ISBN 9780292782907.
  6. ^ LacusCurtius Herodotus Book VIII: Chapter 53.
  7. ^ Herodotus VIII, 97
  8. ^ Herodotus VIII, 100
  9. ^ a b Holland, pp. 327–329
  10. ^ a b LacusCurtius • Herodotus — Book VIII: Chapters 97‑144. p. Herodotus VIII, 113.
  11. ^ a b Shepherd, William (2012). Plataea 479 BCE: The most glorious victory ever seen. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 25. ISBN 9781849085557.
  12. ^ a b c Tola, Fernando (1986). "India and Greece before Alexander". Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute. 67 (1/4): 165. JSTOR 41693244.
  13. ^ LacusCurtius • Herodotus — Book IX: Chapters 1‑89. pp. IX–31/32.
  14. ^ The Histories. Penguin UK. 2013. p. 484. ISBN 9780141393773.
  15. ^ Holland, pp. 333–335
  16. ^ a b c Holland, pp. 336–338
  17. ^ LacusCurtius Herodotus Book IX: Chapter 13.
  18. ^ D'Ooge, Martin Luther (1909). The acropolis of Athens. New York : Macmillan. p. 64.
  19. ^ Shepherd, William (2012). Plataea 479 BC: The most glorious victory ever seen. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 88. ISBN 9781849085557.
  20. ^ D'Ooge, Martin Luther (1909). The acropolis of Athens. New York : Macmillan. pp. 60–80.
  21. ^ D'Ooge, Martin Luther (1909). The acropolis of Athens. New York : Macmillan. pp. 64–65.
  22. ^ D'Ooge, Martin Luther (1909). The acropolis of Athens. New York : Macmillan. p. 66.

Sources edit

External links edit

  • Shear, Leslie (1993). The Persian destruction of Athens (PDF).

achaemenid, destruction, athens, part, greco, persian, warspart, archaeological, remains, called, perserschutt, persian, rubble, remnants, destruction, athens, armies, xerxes, photographed, 1866, just, after, excavation, date480, bcelocationathens, greece37, 9. Achaemenid destruction of AthensPart of the Greco Persian WarsPart of the archaeological remains called Perserschutt or Persian rubble remnants of the destruction of Athens by the armies of Xerxes Photographed in 1866 just after excavation Date480 and 479 BCELocationAthens Greece37 59 02 N 23 43 40 E 37 983972 N 23 727806 E 37 983972 23 727806ResultPersian victory Destruction of Athens Massacre of AtheniansBelligerentsAthenian city stateAchaemenid Empireclass notpageimage Location of Athens The Achaemenid destruction of Athens was carried out by the Achaemenid Army of Xerxes I during the Second Persian invasion of Greece and occurred in two phases over a period of two years in 480 479 BCE Contents 1 First phase Xerxes I 480 BCE 2 Second phase Mardonius 479 BCE 3 Perserschutt 4 Reconstruction 5 Retaliatory burning of the Palace of Persepolis 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksFirst phase Xerxes I 480 BCE edit nbsp The Citadel at Athens at the time of Xerxes 1900 reconstitution In 480 BCE after the victory of Xerxes I at the Battle of Thermopylae all of Boeotia fell to the Achaemenid Army The two cities that had resisted Xerxes Thespiae and Plataea were captured and razed Attica was also left open to invasion and the remaining population of Athens was thus evacuated with the aid of the Allied fleet to Salamis 1 The Peloponnesian Allies began to prepare a defensive line across the Isthmus of Corinth building a wall and demolishing the road from Megara thereby abandoning Athens to the Persians 2 Athens fell a first time in September 480 BCE 3 The small number of Athenians who had barricaded themselves on the Acropolis were eventually defeated and Xerxes then ordered Athens to be torched 4 The Acropolis was razed and the Old Temple of Athena and the Older Parthenon destroyed 5 Those Persians who had come up first betook themselves to the gates which they opened and slew the suppliants and when they had laid all the Athenians low they plundered the temple and burnt the whole of the acropolis Herodotus VIII 53 6 Shortly thereafter Xerxes I lost a large part of his fleet to the Greeks in the Battle of Salamis With the Persians naval superiority removed Xerxes feared that the Greeks might sail to the Hellespont and destroy the pontoon bridges 7 According to Herodotus Mardonius volunteered to remain in Greece and complete the conquest with a hand picked group of troops while advising Xerxes to retreat to Asia with the bulk of the army 8 All of the Persian forces abandoned Attica with Mardonius over wintering in Boeotia and Thessaly 9 Some Athenians were thus able to return to their burnt out city for the winter 9 They would have to evacuate again in front of a second advance by Mardonius in June 479 BCE 3 Second phase Mardonius 479 BCE editMain Achaemenid troops under Mardonius nbsp Persians nbsp Medians nbsp Sakas nbsp Bactrians nbsp IndiansMain troops of Achaemenid general Mardonius according to Herodotus Persians Medians Sakas Bactrians and Indians 10 11 12 illustrated in the list of troops by ethnicity on the tomb of Xerxes I at Naqsh e Rostam 13 Mardonius remained with the rest of the Achaemenid troops in northern Greece He selected some of the best troops to remain with him in Greece especially Immortals the Medes the Sacae the Bactrians and the Indians Herodotus described the composition of the principal troops of Mardonius 12 11 Mardonius there chose out first all the Persians called Immortals save only Hydarnes their general who said that he would not quit the king s person and next the Persian cuirassiers and the thousand horse and the Medes and Sacae and Bactrians and Indians alike their footmen and the rest of the horsemen He chose these nations entire of the rest of his allies he picked out a few from each people the goodliest men and those that he knew to have done some good service Thereby the whole number with the horsemen grew to three hundred thousand men Herodotus VIII 113 10 12 nbsp Answer of Aristides to the ambassadors of Mardonius As long as the sun holds to its present course we shall never come to terms with Xerxes 14 Mardonius remained in Thessaly knowing an attack on the isthmus was pointless while the Allies refused to send an army outside the Peloponessus 15 Mardonius moved to break the stalemate by offering peace self government and territorial expansion to the Athenians with the aim of thereby removing their fleet from the Allied forces using Alexander I of Macedon as an intermediary 16 The Athenians made sure that a Spartan delegation was on hand to hear the offer but rejected it 16 Athens was thus evacuated again and the Persians marched south and re took possession of it 16 Mardonius brought even more thorough destruction to the city and some authors considered that the city was truly razed to the ground during this second phase 3 According to Herodotus after the negotiations broke off Mardonius burnt Athens and utterly overthrew and demolished whatever wall or house or temple was left standing Herodotus IX 13 17 3 Perserschutt editNumerous remains of statues vandalized by the Achaemenids have been found known collectively as the Perserschutt or Persian rubble The statue Nike of Callimachus which was erected next to the Older Parthenon in honor of Callimachus and the victory at the Battle of Marathon was severely damaged by the Achaemenids The statue depicts Nike Victory in the form of a woman with wings on top of an inscribed column Its height is 4 68 meters and was made of Parian marble The head of the statue and parts of the torso and hands were never recovered Xerxes also took away some of the statuary such as The Tyrant slayers a bronze statue of Harmodius and Haristogiton which was recovered by Alexander the Great in the Achaemenid capital of Susa two centuries later 18 nbsp Acropolis excavation pit where remains of Archaic statues were found northwest of the Erechtheum nbsp The Kritios Boy was recovered decapitated in the Perserschutt nbsp The Antenor Kore recovered from the Perserschutt nbsp Part of the damaged Hekatompedon pediment nbsp The damaged Moscophoros nbsp The damaged Peplos Kore nbsp The damaged Rampin Rider nbsp The Capture of the Acropolis by the Persians nbsp Foundations of the Old Temple of Athena destroyed by the armies of Xerxes IReconstruction edit nbsp Athenians rebuilding their city under the direction of Themistocles See also Themistoclean Wall The Achaemenids were decisively beaten at the ensuing Battle of Plataea and the Greeks were able to recover Athens They had to rebuild everything including a new Parthenon on the Acropolis These efforts at reconstruction were led by Themistocles in the autumn of 479 BC who reused remains of the Older Parthenon and Old Temple of Athena to reinforce the walls of the Acropolis which are still visible today in the North Wall of the Acropolis 19 20 His priority was probably to repair the walls and build up the defenses of the city before even endeavouring to rebuild temples 21 Themistocles in particular is considered as the builder of the northern wall of the Acropolis incorporating the debris of the destroyed temples while Cimon is associated with the later building of the southern wall 22 The Themistoclean Wall named after Themistocles was built right after the war with Persia in the hope of defending against further invasion A lot of this building efforts was accomplished using spolia remains of the destructions from the preceding conflict The Parthenon was only rebuilt much later after more than 30 years had elapsed by Pericles possibly because of an original vow that the Temples destroyed by the Achaemenids should not be rebuilt nbsp Architectural remains of the Old Athena Temple built into the north wall of the Acropolis by Themistocles nbsp Column drums of the Older Parthenon reused in the North wall of the Acropolis by Themistocles nbsp The Older Parthenon in black was destroyed by the Achaemenids and then rebuilt by Pericles in 438 BCE in grey nbsp Ruins of the Themistoclean WallRetaliatory burning of the Palace of Persepolis edit nbsp Alexander the Great lifting Thais holding a torch in The Burning of Persepolis L incendie de Persepolis Georges Rochegrosse 1890 In 330 BCE Alexander the Great burned down the palace of Persepolis the principal residence of the defeated Achaemenid dynasty after a drinking party and at the instigation of Thais According to Plutarch and Diodorus this was intended as a retribution for Xerxes burning of the old Temple of Athena on the Acropolis in Athens the site of the extant Parthenon in 480 BC during the Persian Wars When the king Alexander had caught fire at their words all leaped up from their couches and passed the word along to form a victory procession in honour of Dionysus Promptly many torches were gathered Female musicians were present at the banquet so the king led them all out for the comus to the sound of voices and flutes and pipes Thais the courtesan leading the whole performance She was the first after the king to hurl her blazing torch into the palace As the others all did the same immediately the entire palace area was consumed so great was the conflagration It was remarkable that the impious act of Xerxes king of the Persians against the acropolis at Athens should have been repaid in kind after many years by one woman a citizen of the land which had suffered it and in sport Diodorus of Sicily XVII 72 References edit Herodotus VIII 41 Holland p 300 a b c d Lynch Kathleen M 2011 The Symposium in Context Pottery from a Late Archaic House Near the Athenian Agora ASCSA pp 20 21 and Note 37 ISBN 9780876615461 Holland pp 305 306 Barringer Judith M Hurwit Jeffrey M 2010 Periklean Athens and Its Legacy Problems and Perspectives University of Texas Press p 295 ISBN 9780292782907 LacusCurtius Herodotus Book VIII Chapter 53 Herodotus VIII 97 Herodotus VIII 100 a b Holland pp 327 329 a b LacusCurtius Herodotus Book VIII Chapters 97 144 p Herodotus VIII 113 a b Shepherd William 2012 Plataea 479 BCE The most glorious victory ever seen Bloomsbury Publishing p 25 ISBN 9781849085557 a b c Tola Fernando 1986 India and Greece before Alexander Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute 67 1 4 165 JSTOR 41693244 LacusCurtius Herodotus Book IX Chapters 1 89 pp IX 31 32 The Histories Penguin UK 2013 p 484 ISBN 9780141393773 Holland pp 333 335 a b c Holland pp 336 338 LacusCurtius Herodotus Book IX Chapter 13 D Ooge Martin Luther 1909 The acropolis of Athens New York Macmillan p 64 Shepherd William 2012 Plataea 479 BC The most glorious victory ever seen Bloomsbury Publishing p 88 ISBN 9781849085557 D Ooge Martin Luther 1909 The acropolis of Athens New York Macmillan pp 60 80 D Ooge Martin Luther 1909 The acropolis of Athens New York Macmillan pp 64 65 D Ooge Martin Luther 1909 The acropolis of Athens New York Macmillan p 66 Sources editHolland Tom 2006 Persian Fire The First World Empire and the Battle for the West Abacus ISBN 0 385 51311 9 External links editShear Leslie 1993 The Persian destruction of Athens PDF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Achaemenid destruction of Athens amp oldid 1219084343, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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