Ancient Persia vs Ancient Greece: The Clash That Changed History — Fexingo History

The Battle of Mycale: The Naval Victory That Crushed Persia

6 min · 29 jun 2026
aflevering The Battle of Mycale: The Naval Victory That Crushed Persia artwork

Beschrijving

After the Greek triumph at Plataea in 479 BCE, a second battle on the same day—this time at sea—sealed Persia's fate in the Aegean. The Battle of Mycale, fought near Mount Mycale on the Ionian coast, saw a combined Greek fleet destroy the remnants of Xerxes' navy and spark the Ionian Revolt that ended Persian control of the eastern Aegean. Lucas and Luna explore the parallel campaigns of Plataea and Mycale, the role of the Spartan king Leotychidas, the Athenian commander Xanthippus (father of Pericles), and the strategic use of a rumored Greek victory to demoralize the Persian fleet. They also discuss how Mycale, often overshadowed by Marathon and Salamis, was the true turning point that ended Xerxes' invasion. The episode delves into the contested historiography—Herodotus vs. later sources—and the symbolic burning of Persian ships that echoed the fall of Persepolis decades later. A rare look at a decisive but forgotten naval clash that reshaped the ancient world. #Mycale #BattleOfMycale #Leotychidas #Xanthippus #Herodotus #Plataea #IonianRevolt #Achaemenid #GreekHistory #PersianWars #Xerxes #Samos #Ionia #Aegean #NavalHistory #ClassicalGreece #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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aflevering Persian Fire Temples: The Sacred Flames That Outlasted an Empire artwork

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aflevering The Persian Royal Road: The Highway That Held an Empire Together artwork

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Before the Roman roads, before the Silk Road, there was the Persian Royal Road — a 2,700-kilometer highway stretching from Susa in Persia to Sardis in Anatolia. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the Achaemenid Empire built and maintained this incredible infrastructure project, with relay stations every 25 kilometers, a courier system that could move messages from one end to the other in just nine days, and a network of guards and checkpoints that kept the road safe. They discuss how the road was used for military logistics, trade, and the famous 'King's Eyes' intelligence network. They also touch on the road's legacy, influencing later Roman and Chinese roads, and Herodotus's famous quote about Persian couriers: 'Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds' — a phrase later adopted by the US Postal Service. Learn about the royal stations, the riders, and how this single road helped hold the world's first great empire together. #PersianRoyalRoad #AchaemenidEmpire #AncientHighway #Susa #Sardis #Herodotus #Couriers #RelayStations #KingEyes #Infrastructure #AncientTrade #PersianEmpire #MiddleEasternHistory #AncientWorld #Roads #Logistics #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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aflevering Cyrus the Great's Siege of Babylon: A Bloodless Conquest artwork

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Gisteren6 min
aflevering The Achaemenid Court's Silent Power: Eunuchs in Ancient Persia artwork

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aflevering Darius vs Athens: How Persia's Navy Became the World's First Amphibious Force artwork

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