Why the Persian Empire Fell to Alexander the Great — Fexingo History
In 334 BCE, Alexander the Great invaded the Persian Empire with a tiny fleet. Instead of destroying it, he simply disbanded it. Meanwhile, the Persian navy—the most powerful in the Mediterranean—sat idle in its home ports. Why didn't Darius III use his 400 ships to cut Alexander's supply lines or attack Greece? This episode traces the forgotten naval dimension of Alexander's conquest: the Persian fleet of over 400 triremes and quinqueremes, the Cypriot and Phoenician squadrons, the Athenian admiral Phocion's advice, and the critical moment at the siege of Halicarnassus when Memnon of Rhodes urged a naval offensive. We explore the logistics of ancient galley warfare, Darius III's fatal hesitation, and how Alexander's land victories made the Persian fleet irrelevant before a single sea battle occurred. A story of missed opportunities, strategic inertia, and the paradox of overwhelming naval power that never fired a shot. #AchaemenidNavy #PersianFleet #AlexanderTheGreat #DariusIII #Triremes #MemnonOfRhodes #Halicarnassus #NavalHistory #AncientWarfare #Mediterranean #PhoenicianNavy #CypriotShips #Phocion #GalleyWarfare #MacedonianConquest #314BCE #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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