Why the Persian Empire Fell to Alexander the Great — Fexingo History

Why the Persian Empire's Navy Never Fought Alexander

8 min · 13 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio Why the Persian Empire's Navy Never Fought Alexander

Descripción

Why didn't the Persian navy, once the terror of the Aegean, ever face Alexander's fleet in a major battle? This episode traces the decision-making behind the Great King's naval strategy from 334 BC to 332 BC. We follow Memnon of Rhodes, the Greek mercenary commander who proposed a scorched-earth campaign and a naval war to cut Alexander off from Macedonia. After Memnon's death at the siege of Halicarnassus, command passed to Pharnabazus and Autophradates, who recaptured several Aegean islands but never pressed their advantage. Why? We examine the Persian reliance on Phoenician and Cypriot triremes, the slow erosion of loyalty among those allies as Alexander advanced down the Levantine coast, and the strategic paralysis that left the fleet idle at Samos and Miletus. Finally, we consider what might have happened if the Persians had attacked the Hellespont in force — and why they didn't. A deep dive into one of history's great naval might-have-beens. #History #FexingoHistory #PersianEmpire #AlexanderTheGreat #AncientNavalWarfare #MemnonOfRhodes #Halicarnassus #PhoenicianTriremes #Achaemenid #Granicus #Hellespont #Samos #Miletus #Pharnabazus #Autophradates #CypriotShips #AncientGreece #MilitaryHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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