Xerxes and the Persian Wars: Why Greece Refused to Fall — Fexingo History
In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Achaemenid royal road and postal relay system that enabled Xerxes to coordinate the largest invasion force the ancient world had ever seen. Drawing on Herodotus and Persian administrative texts, they unpack the network of 111 stations, fresh horses, and mounted couriers that could carry a message from Susa to Sardis in nine days. They discuss how the system was built on earlier Assyrian practices, how it handled logistics for Xerxes' army, and how a simple letter from Persia could reach Greece faster than a Greek messenger could cross Attica. They also consider the cultural impact of this infrastructure on subject peoples—and how the Greeks, despite their local autonomy, were awed by the speed and efficiency of Persian communications. The episode ends with a reflection on what it meant to have an empire that could think and act at a distance, and how that kind of speed shaped the very possibility of the Persian Wars. #Achaemenid #RoyalRoad #Xerxes #PersianWars #Herodotus #Susa #Sardis #angarium #postalrelay #PersianEmpire #ancientcommunications #logistics #FexingoHistory #MiddleEast #ancienthistory #couriers #infrastructure #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
156 episoder
Kommentarer
0Vær den første til at kommentere
Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af Xerxes and the Persian Wars: Why Greece Refused to Fall — Fexingo History-fællesskabet!