Cyrus the Great
ruled a small kingdom known as Persia
in modern Iran. He and his son, Darius, created a huge
empire that eventually stretched from Asia Minor (modern
Turkey) in the west to Babylon (modern Iraq) in the east.
In 490BC, Darius tried to expand
his empire into Greece by defeating the Athenians. The
Persians landed at Marathon, twenty-six miles from
Athens. The Athenian army forced the Persians back to
their ships. A messenger named Pheidippides ran to Athens
without stopping to prepare the Athenians for the
invasion. Pheidippides died from exhaustion shortly after
gasping out his news. Today runners call long races
Marathons in honor of Pheidippides' run.
The Persian invasion
united the Greek poli. Many poli sent soldiers to fight
the Persians, including fierce warriors from Sparta. The
Greek soldiers were outnumbered, but they managed to
defeat the larger Persian army. Ten years later, Darius'
son Xerxes, sent about 200,000 soldiers and 800 ships to
fight the Greeks at the Battle of Salamis. The king
watched from a mountaintop in horror as the Greeks again
managed to destroy more than 200 ships and kill 20,000
sailors. Xerxes was so enraged that he beheaded the few
captains who were able to escape the wrath of the Greek
armies.
After the wars with the
Persians, the Greeks felt a tremendous pride in their
culture. This pride was especially strong in Athens
because Athens was able to unify many poli to defeat the
foreign invaders. The poli cooperated in leagues of
cities. The artists, poets, sculptures, and architects
developed a culture that was unique to Greece. They were
no longer awed by the great Persian kingdom. The
thirty-year period after the wars (460
BC to 430
BC) was known as the "Golden Age
of Greece."