Ancient city,
Boeotia, east-central Greece, one of the chief Greek city-states. Traditionally said to have been founded by
Cadmus, it was the seat of the legendary
Oedipus and the setting for many classic Greek tragedies. The building of its celebrated seven-gated wall is usually attributed to
Amphion. It was a centre of
Mycenaean power in the Bronze Age (
c. 1500 – 1200
BC). Hostility to
Athens led it to side with the Persians in the
Persian Wars and with
Sparta in the
Peloponnesian War. Thebes and Sparta subsequently clashed, and the victorious Spartans occupied it. It revolted
c. 380
BC and defeated Sparta at the battles of Tegyra (375
BC) and Leuctra (371
BC). For the next 10 years it was the chief military power in Greece. It joined Athens against
Philip II of Macedon and shared the defeat at the Battle of
Chaeronea in 338
BC. It was sacked by
Alexander the Great in 336 and eventually fell to Rome in the 1st century
BC. Among the few ancient remains are remnants of the city walls, the Mycenaean palace (
c. 1450 – 1350
BC), and a temple of
Apollo.
For more information on Thebes, visit Britannica.com.