Xerxes and the Persian Wars: Why Greece Refused to Fall — Fexingo History
This episode of the Fexingo History podcast dives into the often-overlooked role of the helots — the enslaved population of Sparta — in the Persian Wars, particularly at the Battle of Plataea in 479 BC. While Leonidas and the 300 have become legendary, the helots who accompanied the Spartan army as light infantry and support troops were crucial to the Greek victory. Lucas and Luna explore the numbers (Herodotus tells us there were 5,000 Spartiates and 35,000 helots at Plataea), the tasks they performed (from digging trenches to foraging), and the uneasy relationship between Spartan citizens and their enslaved workforce. They also discuss the strange moment after the battle when helots were tasked with stripping the dead and the tensions that followed. The episode touches on broader Spartan society — the krypteia, the syssitia, and the mess halls — to show how the helot system both enabled Spartan military might and created a constant threat of rebellion. A fascinating look at the invisible army that helped save Greece. #Helots #Plataea #Sparta #PersianWars #Xerxes #Herodotus #Krypteia #Syssitia #BattleOfPlataea #AncientGreece #Spartiates #MessenianWars #Pausanias #Mardonius #Laconia #Achaemenid #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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