The Battle of Plataea: 479 BC Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in The Battle of Plataea: 479 BC Deck (10)
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1
Q

What did the Peloponnesians finish over the winter months before Plataea?

A
  • They completed their fortification of the Isthmus of Corinth
2
Q

With the reassurance that came with the completion of the fortification of the Isthmus of Corinth, what did the Peloponnesian armies then do?

A
  • They marched out towards Boeotia to fight the Persians
3
Q

What is the Serpent Column? What does Herodotus claim it was made of? Where was it placed?

A
  • A victory monument that was erected by the Greeks after Plataea
  • The melted weapons of the Persian soldiers
  • It was placed in the sanctuary at Delphi, where the oracles for the war had been uttered
4
Q

What does Herodotus claim were the belligerents of the Persians and the Greeks at Plataea? What is the modern estimation? Who were the commanders on each side?

A
  • Herodotus claims 110,000 Greeks and 300,000 Persians
  • Modern estimation is 80,000 Greeks and 80-120,000 Persians
  • Pausanias was the Greek commander (regent for the young king Pleistarchus, Leonidas’ son)
  • Mardonius was still the commander of the Persians
5
Q

What was the battlefield at Plataea like? What were the positions of each army?

A
  • A large, open plain that was ideal for massive military operations and cavalry manoeuvres (largely flat, broken up by a series of small streams and rivers)
  • Mardonius and the Persians in the north at the river Asopus
  • Greeks in the foothills near the city of Plataea to the south
6
Q

Outline the events immediately before the battle. What happened in the first few days? Did they receive good omens? What was Mardonius’ worry? What was Pausanias anxious about?

A
  • For days a stalemate ensued, with both sides trying to position their forces in a way that would best suit their fighting style. Neither side received favourable omens that would convince them to fight
  • Mardonius was anxious at the sight of new Greek reinforcements every day
  • Pausanias was anxious that his forces were too exposed in the great plain
7
Q

What happened in the night before the battle of Plataea? What did Pausanias then do? What problem followed? What did Mardonius do as a result?

A
  • Alexander of Macedon secretly entered the Greek camp and told the Greeks of Mardonius’ plan to attack to try and force the Greeks into fighting
  • Pausanias became terrified at this news and ordered a retreat under the cover of darkness
  • The communication lines failed in the dark and by the morning the Greek forces were separated by divisions across the plain
  • Mardonius, seeing this error, ordered a full assault and the battle began
8
Q

What reasons does Herodotus give for the Greek victory at Plataea? (3)

A
  • “they (Persians) had no armour” + “naked against men fully armed”
  • “they were unskilled and no match for their adversaries in craft”
  • “When Mardonius was killed and his guards…had also fallen, then the rest too yielded”
9
Q

What does Herodotus say of the victory at Plataea?

A
  • “the most glorious of victories of all which we know, won by Pausanias”
10
Q

What effect did the battle of Plataea have on the Spartans? (3)

A
  • The Spartans gained their revenge for Leonidas
  • The Spartans earned all of the credit
  • They were given the prize of valour because they fought and killed the best of the Persians (Mardonius and the Immortals)