Xerxes and the Persian Wars: Why Greece Refused to Fall — Fexingo History

Xerxes and the Persian Wars The Greek Spy Network at Salamis

7 min · 12. juni 2026
episode Xerxes and the Persian Wars The Greek Spy Network at Salamis cover

Description

In this episode, Lucas and Luna uncover the shadowy world of Greek intelligence during the Persian Wars. While we often focus on battles like Thermopylae and Salamis, the Greeks had a sophisticated spy network that tracked Persian movements, sabotaged supply lines, and even turned Persian agents into double agents. We explore the role of the peripoloi, scouts who operated behind enemy lines, and the mysterious figure of Sicinnus, the slave-turned-diplomat who delivered Themistocles' fateful message to Xerxes. We also look at how the Persians used their own spies, including the infamous Alabanda, a Carian who infiltrated the Greek camp. This episode sheds light on the intelligence war that ran parallel to the famous battles, revealing a side of the conflict that is often overlooked. It changes how we think about Greek victory—not just as a triumph of hoplites and triremes, but as a victory of information and deception. #PersianWars #GreekSpies #Salamis #Themistocles #Sicinnus #Xerxes #Alabanda #Peripoloi #Intelligence #AncientEspionage #Herodotus #Achaemenid #480BCE #BattleOfSalamis #DoubleAgent #AncientGreece #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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153 episodes

episode The Immortals: Xerxes' Elite Guard and Persian Military Myth artwork

The Immortals: Xerxes' Elite Guard and Persian Military Myth

In this episode of Xerxes and the Persian Wars, Lucas and Luna unravel the history and legend of the Achaemenid Immortals—the 10,000-strong elite infantry that formed the backbone of the Persian army. We explore their origins under Cyrus the Great, their role at the battles of Thermopylae and Plataea, the famous replacement myth (Herodotus's claim that their ranks were immediately refilled), and the archaeological and textual evidence that complicates the story. Did the Immortals actually exist as a unit, or is the name a Greek invention? We examine the Persian word anusiya (companions) and the administrative tablets from Persepolis that mention a unit called the 'apple-bearers.' We also discuss their equipment—spears, wicker shields, and the famous golden apples on their spear butts—and how their reputation shaped both Greek propaganda and later European art. Finally, we consider whether the Immortals survived the war or were disbanded after Xerxes's defeat. A must for anyone curious about the real soldiers behind the myth. #Achaemenid #Immortals #Xerxes #PersianWars #Thermopylae #Plataea #Herodotus #CyrusTheGreat #EliteGuard #Persepolis #AppleBearers #AncientHistory #MilitaryHistory #PersianArmy #GreekHistory #AncientWarfare #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday9 min
episode Xerxes and the Persian Wars: The Achaemenid Siege of Miletus artwork

Xerxes and the Persian Wars: The Achaemenid Siege of Miletus

In 494 BCE, the Achaemenid Persian army and navy crushed the Ionian Revolt by capturing Miletus, the richest Greek city in Anatolia. This episode examines the siege itself—how Persian engineers breached the walls, the role of Phoenician ships in blockading the harbor, and the brutal aftermath: the city was razed, its men killed, and its women and children enslaved. We also explore the cultural and political significance of Miletus as the birthplace of philosophy (Thales, Anaximander), and how its fall reshaped the balance of power in the Aegean. Lucas and Luna discuss the Persian strategic use of terror to quell rebellion, the fate of refugees who fled to Sicily, and how the tragedy became a cautionary tale in Greek theater. A fresh angle that connects the Ionian Revolt directly to the larger Persian Wars, showing why Miletus mattered—and why its destruction was a propaganda victory for Darius I before Xerxes ever crossed the Hellespont. #Miletus #IonianRevolt #Achaemenid #Xerxes #DariusI #PersianWars #AncientGreece #PhoenicianNavy #SiegeWarfare #Thales #Anaximander #IonianPhilosophy #Phrynichus #TheFallOfMiletus #History #FexingoHistory #Persepolis #Aegean Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday5 min
episode Xerxes and the Persian Wars: The Achaemenid Courier System artwork

Xerxes and the Persian Wars: The Achaemenid Courier System

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the Achaemenid Persian courier system—the network of riders and relay stations that held the empire together during Xerxes' invasion of Greece. They discuss the Royal Road, the angarium (the state-run express messenger service), and how riders could cover 1,500 miles in nine days. The conversation touches on the Greek historian Herodotus' famous line, "Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds"—a phrase later adapted by the U.S. Postal Service. Lucas explains how the system drew on earlier Assyrian and Urartian models, how relay stations called stathmoi provided fresh horses and supplies, and how the network enabled Xerxes to coordinate his vast army and navy across three continents. They also discuss the political implications: control of information meant control of the empire, and the courier system was the circulatory system of Achaemenid power. The episode closes with a reflection on how this infrastructure outlasted the empire itself, influencing later Roman and Mongol communication networks. #Achaemenid #Xerxes #PersianWars #RoyalRoad #Angarium #Herodotus #CourierSystem #AncientPersia #RelayStations #Stathmoi #Hellespont #Sardis #Susa #AncientInfrastructure #FexingoHistory #History #AncientGreece #Logistics Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

10. juli 20269 min
episode Xerxes and the Siege of Eion: Persia's First Greek Fortress Falls artwork

Xerxes and the Siege of Eion: Persia's First Greek Fortress Falls

In 476 BCE, only three years after the great Persian defeat at Plataea, a young Athenian general named Cimon led a coalition force to the strategic fortress of Eion at the mouth of the Strymon River in Thrace. The Persian commander Boges — whose name appears briefly in Herodotus and later in Plutarch's biography of Cimon — chose a spectacular and grisly end rather than surrender. This episode unpacks the siege of Eion, Cimon's first major victory, and the grisly fate of Boges and his garrison. We explore the fortress's strategic importance as a Persian supply depot, the brutal mechanics of the siege, the controversial massacre that followed, and how this obscure victory set the stage for Athens' transformation from defender to imperial power in the Aegean. Along the way we confront a stark historical question: when does heroic resistance become pointless slaughter? And what does a willingness to burn everything say about the men who fought for both sides? #SiegeOfEion #Cimon #Boges #PersianWars #Achaemenid #Thrace #StrymonRiver #Athens #DelianLeague #Plutarch #Herodotus #Massacre #SiegeWarfare #GreekPersianWars #Xerxes #AncientGreece #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

10. juli 202611 min
episode Xerxes and the Greek Cunning at Mycale artwork

Xerxes and the Greek Cunning at Mycale

After the Persian defeat at Salamis in 480 BCE, Xerxes retreated to Asia, leaving his general Mardonius in Greece. The following year, the Hellenic League scored a decisive victory at the Battle of Plataea, but a parallel naval battle at Mycale on the Ionian coast proved equally crucial. Lucas and Luna explore the Battle of Mycale, where the Greek fleet under King Leotychidas of Sparta and Xanthippus of Athens destroyed the remnants of the Persian navy and sparked the Ionian revolt. They discuss the strategic timing (the same day as Plataea according to legend), the role of the Ionians in the Persian fleet, the battle's aftermath including the siege of Sestos, and how Mycale opened the way for Greek offensives into the Aegean and Asia Minor. This episode covers the specific maneuvers, the Greek use of deception and rallying cries, and the shifting loyalties of the Ionian Greeks. The hosts also consider Herodotus's account and modern scholarly debates about the battle's exact location and its significance in ending the Persian Wars. #BattleOfMycale #Xerxes #Leotychidas #Xanthippus #IonianRevolt #Herodotus #Achaemenid #PersianWars #HellenicLeague #Samos #Sestos #Ionia #Trireme #AncientGreece #AncientPersia #NavalBattle #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

9. juli 20264 min