The Battle of Marathon (490 BCE) was a decisive Greek victory where approximately 10,000 Athenians and 1,000 Plataeans defeated the Persian Empire's invasion force of around 25,000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry on the plain of Marathon. Despite being outnumbered and facing Persian archers and cavalry, the Greeks won by strategically weakening their center while strengthening their wings, which then turned inward to collapse the Persian line. This victory was crucial because it was the first time in history that a Greek army defeated the Persian Empire in open battle, demonstrating that Persia was no longer invincible and paving the way for future Greek victories at Thermopylae, Salamis, and Plataea.
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The Brutal Reality of the Battle of MarathonAdded:
Three days before the battle, Athens still hoped the Persians might strike somewhere else.
Then survivors start arriving from Eretria. Burned.
Exhausted. Some barely able to walk.
Near the city gates, an Athenian officer catches a woman before she collapses.
“What happened?” “The ships…” “So many ships…” Behind her, more refugees stumble into the city carrying children, dragging carts, covered in ash.
“The Persians surrounded the city,” “The walls fell in days.”
Another refugee interrupts her. “They burned the temples first.”
"What happened to the rest of the city?" ““Those who escaped… are here......Those they found alive… were chained together…and taken to the ships.”
The officer looks toward Athens behind him. Around the Agora, panic is already spreading.
Citizens gather in shouting crowds. Merchants abandon their stalls.
Some begin dragging supplies toward the Acropolis. And everywhere, the same argument erupts.
“We should have never helped the Ionians!” “You burned Sardis and now Persia has come for us!” “Darius warned us this would happen!”
The fear is spreading faster than the refugees themselves.
Then hooves thunder through the streets. A scout rides into the city at full speed.
He nearly falls from the horse trying to dismount. “The Persian fleet has landed!”
The crowd freezes. “Where?”
“Marathon.” Now the panic becomes something worse.
Because everyone in Athens understands exactly what Marathon means.
The road to Athens is open. And standing above the chaos is a man named Miltiades. Unlike most Athenians… he has seen the Persians before. He knows how they fight.
How they move. How they destroy cities.
And when he looks east toward Marathon… He realizes something the others do not.
That night, the Athenian generals gather for council.
Ten commanders. Ten votes.
Half the room wants to stay defensive. “Force them to attack the walls.”
“Wait for Sparta.” “Do NOT fight Persian cavalry on open ground.”
Miltiades listens. Then he finally speaks.
“If we wait behind the walls,” he says, “we surrender the countryside, the roads, and the initiative.” Nobody interrupts him.
Because everyone in that room already knows the truth.
Athens is not built to survive a long siege. Miltiades points east — toward Marathon.
“There is only one place we can stop them before they reach the city.”
Some commanders still hesitate. The Persian army may outnumber them two to one.
Maybe more. “And if we lose?”
“If we refuse to fight, we lose anyway.” Silence.
Then another problem emerges. The vote is split.
Five for battle. Five against.
Everything now comes down to one man. Callimachus.
The polemarch of Athens. The deciding vote.
Miltiades turns toward him. “If we do not fight now, fear will divide this city before the Persians ever reach it.” Callimachus says nothing for a long moment.
Then finally: “We march.”
At dawn, the Athenian army leaves the city.
Around 10,000 Athenians.
Then, hours into the march— reinforcements appear on the road ahead.
One thousand Plataeans.
A small allied city sending nearly every soldier it can spare.
Not because they expect victory.
But because abandoning Athens means facing Persia alone later.
Miltiades rides forward to meet them. “Arimnestos… you came.”
“Plataea stands with Athens,” their commander replies. “Until the end.”
“Then Greece still has a chance.”
The army marches east toward Marathon.
Past farms already abandoned.
Past civilians fleeing inland with carts and livestock.
Past shrines where families stop to pray as the army passes.
Then finally— the Athenians reach the heights overlooking the plain.
And they see the Persian army below.
Ships covering the shoreline. Rows of tents stretching across the beach.
Archers. Infantry.
Cavalry moving across open ground.
The sheer scale of it is staggering.
The Greeks held the inland edge of Marathon, near the sanctuary of Heracles — close enough to watch the Persians, but protected by the rising hills behind them.
Then the scouts returned. “How many did you see?”
“Perhaps 25,000 infantry” “And the cavalry?”
“Around 1,000” Another greek says “We are doomed”.
“Hold position, we don’t need to attack yet” For a moment, nobody speaks.
Then Miltiades turns to one of the officers nearby.
“Send a runner to Sparta.” “You still believe they’ll come?”
“They must.” A young courier steps forward.
Pheidippides. “You know the road?”
The runner nods. “Then go. Tell Sparta Athens stands at Marathon alone.” Before sunset— the messenger disappears south toward the mountains.
Nearly 240 kilometers to Sparta. For several moments, the Greek line simply stares.
Because many of these men have never seen the Persian Empire before.
Only heard stories.
Now the empire is here.
And between Persia and Athens… there is only them.
The two armies settle into a tense stalemate. Neither side attacks.
The Athenians position themselves near the narrow exits leading inland toward Athens.
One flank protected by hills. The other by rough terrain and marshland.
Miltiades understands exactly what matters now: Hold the road to Athens until Sparta arrives. Down on the plain, the Persians wait.
A Persian scout approaches the command tent. “The Greeks remain in the hills.”
“Good. Let them watch.” “Should we prepare for an attack?”
“These are farmers with shields. Athens will fall when we decide it falls.”
And every morning, the Athenians wake to the same sight: Persian cavalry maneuvering across open ground below them.
A reminder of what happens if they fight in the wrong place.
Then the messenger finally returns. “The Spartans are coming.”
Relief spreads briefly through the camp. “We have the advantage my friend, How many days?”
“They cannot march yet.”
“What?” “The Carneia has begun.”
Spartan religious law forbids the army from marching until the festival ends.
“Then we stand alone.” Athens is alone for at least several more days.
And every day the Persians remain at Marathon creates new dangers.
The Persians can attack. Sail directly toward Athens.
Or simply wait for fear and exhaustion to destroy Greek resolve.
Inside the Athenian camp, tension starts spreading.
Some commanders begin reconsidering the decision to fight at all.
Then something changes. Some soldiers noticed unusual movement near the Persian ships. Horses being led toward the shoreline.
Crews shouting across the surf. Transport vessels repositioning offshore.
“What are they doing?” “They’re loading the cavalry.”
“Why?” No one knows.
Then a scout comes running from the flank. “The cavalry camps are empty.”
Historians still debate exactly what happened next.
Maybe the Persian cavalry was re-embarking onto ships.
Maybe part of the army was preparing to sail directly toward Athens.
But from the Greek position… the plain suddenly looks different.
Less movement. Fewer horses.
Miltiades immediately understands the opportunity. If the cavalry is absent, even temporarily… this may be the only moment the Athenians will ever get. He moves through the camp calling the commanders together. “We attack now.”
“Are you insane? Attack downhill?” “ Across open terrain into Persian archers?”
“Without Spartan support?” “Yes” Miltiades sees the alternative clearly. If the Persians regain mobility, Athens loses control of the battlefield forever. And if Persian ships reach Athens before the army can return— the city may fall without another battle.
There is no ideal option left. Only costly ones.
Miltiades chooses the course he judges most feasible.
The order spreads down the Greek line. Prepare to advance.
“Commander?” “What is it?”
“The Greeks are getting ready for an attack.” “What? Ready the men.”
The Greek army forms for battle. Miltiades makes one final adjustment.
He strengthens the wings. Weakens the center.
Not because he wants to. Because he has to.
The Greek line must stretch wide enough to avoid being surrounded.
It is a calculated risk. One that could destroy the army if the center collapses too quickly. Across the plain, Persian archers prepare.
Then the Greeks begin advancing. At first slowly.
Shields locked. Spears forward.
The Persians watch the line descending toward them.
Then suddenly— the Greeks accelerate.
An entire hoplite army charging directly into Persian missile fire.
According to Herodotus, the Persians believe the Athenians have gone mad.
The distance closes violently fast. Then bronze crashes into the Persian line.
Spears shatter on impact. Shields slam together across the front.
Men disappear beneath the crush almost instantly.
For a moment, the sheer violence of the Greek charge staggers the Persian line.
“Push forward!” Hoplites drive into the lighter Persian infantry with brutal force. “DO NOT break formation!”
But in the center— the resistance hardens.
Greek soldiers begin stumbling backward under mounting pressure.
“They’re holding!” “The center is giving way!”
And then— the Greek center starts collapsing.
Because the strongest Persian troops are positioned in the center.
And they begin forcing the weakened Greek center backward.
Dust explodes across the battlefield. Greek soldiers are driven uphill.
Formations buckle under pressure. For several terrifying minutes— It looks like Miltiades has made a catastrophic mistake.
The Persian breakthrough is happening exactly where the Greek line is weakest.
But on the wings… the battle is unfolding differently.
The heavier Greek hoplites begin crushing the Persian flanks.
The lighter Persian infantry cannot stop them in close combat.
Then the Greek wings make the decisive move. They do not chase the fleeing enemy.
They turn inward. And the Persian center, moments from victory, is suddenly exposed on both sides. “The flanks are collapsing!”
“Pull back!” What looked like victory turns into compression.
Confusion. Panic.
The Persian line folds inward on itself. And then it breaks.
The Persians run for the ships. Now the battle becomes slaughter.
Some flee into the marshes and disappear into the mud.
Others desperately try launching ships before the Greeks reach the shoreline.
The Athenians pursue them all the way to the sea.
“Stop those ships!” Fighting erupts in the surf itself.
“Launch now! LAUNCH NOW!” Greek soldiers grab ships before they can launch.
Broken hulls slam together along the beach. Eventually the surviving Persian ships finally pull away from shore. The Athenians have done the impossible.
They have defeated the Persian invasion force. Then Miltiades looks south.
A scout points toward the horizon. “The fleet is turning toward Athens.”
And realizes the worst possibility still remains. The Persian fleet can still reach Athens before the army does. The exhausted Athenians reform immediately.
No celebration. No rest.
Just another forced march. Because if the Persians land at Athens undefended— everything they achieved at Marathon means nothing.
The Athenian army reaches the city just in time.
When the Persian fleet appears offshore… it finds Athens waiting.
Armed. Organized.
Still standing.
The Persians turn away.
For the first time in history, the Persian Empire has been defeated in open battle by a Greek army.
And across Greece, the psychological shock is enormous.
Persia is no longer invincible.
Even Sparta arrives too late to fight.
The Spartans walk the battlefield at Marathon studying the Persian dead and acknowledging what the Athenians accomplished.
But Marathon does not end the war.
In Persia, King Darius immediately begins preparing a far larger invasion.
Then he dies.
His son Xerxes inherits the throne.
And ten years later… Persia returns with one of the largest armies the ancient world has ever seen.
The next time the Greeks face them… it will not be on an open plain.
It will be at a narrow pass called Thermopylae.
Watch it now.
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