It did not. Athens was occupied by the Persians, its people evacuated and given refuge in southern Greek cities and its forces were embarked on its fleet to help defeat the Persians at sea.
The Greeks lost in the battle of the hot gates, but the 300 held the place for the rest of the army and navy to win now that the 3 days that were forbidden to fight were over.
The Persians greatest army was The Immortals. There were about 10,000 of them and as soon as one died another Immortal replaced him. They were all specially trained warriors. They also had smaller weaker army that were defeated at Thermopylae. The Greeks and Spartans were defeated though because a Greek spy told the Persians a way around the pass of Thermopylae and the Greeks and Spartans were surrounded.
The Trojans were not Greeks, though their culture is believed to have been similar.
There was a huge battle between the Greeks and Troy over a girl. it lasted about 20 years before they thought of it. the Greeks were laying seige to troy. almost all the Greeks left leaving a huge wooden horse with elite greek soldiers in it. troy thought it was a gift to apologize for the destruction and took it the center of the city to display it. then at night the soldiers came out of it and signaled their ships to and help. the Greeks killed everyone in the city. The wooden horse of Troy is when the Greeks and the city of troy where having a battle, one night a huge hollow wooden horse came into the city of troy the people though it was a gift from the Greeks to say they had won the battle so they partyed and then went to bed drunk .Although they did not relize it but the Greeks were in the hotse and at night they came into the place and killed all the people of troy. t
The Macedonians. Double check though~
it did not help them. They had already evacuated Athens and after the Persians advance frof Thermopylai they burnt and looted the city.
The Greeks lost in the battle of the hot gates, but the 300 held the place for the rest of the army and navy to win now that the 3 days that were forbidden to fight were over.
Athens was not involved in the delaying action at Thermopylae Pass. Its manpower was fully occupied manning its fleet as part of the southern Greek fleet at the battle of Artemisia Holding the Pass at Thermopylae was designed to force the Persians to try to outflank the bottleneck by sea, and the Greek fleet was waiting to pounce. The Greeks lost the sea battle and the Thermopylae force, its mission no longer relevant, was withdrawn. This exposed Athens to the advancing Persian army. They evacuated the city and it was occupied by the Persians. So Athens was not helped by Thermopylae.
It did not. Athens was occupied by the Persians, its people evacuated and given refuge in southern Greek cities and its forces were embarked on its fleet to help defeat the Persians at sea.
It bought time. If the battle hadn't taken place then the Athenians would not have been able to retreat around the coast and eventually use its navy to mount a counter-attack.
It did not. Athens was occupied by the Persians, its people evacuated and given refuge in southern Greek cities and its forces were embarked on its fleet to help defeat the Persians at sea.
It didn't help them as it failed in its purpose. Athens had been evacuated, and the Persians looted and burned the city in reparation for the Athenians having been involved in the burning of the Persian provincial capital of Sardis nearly 20 years earlier.
The Battle of Thermopylae and Marathon. The marathon we know today is because the runner from the battle ran all the way back to Athens which was twenty-six miles. These battles were against the Persians though.
Greeks, most notably Athens; though only males citizens could participate.
The Persians greatest army was The Immortals. There were about 10,000 of them and as soon as one died another Immortal replaced him. They were all specially trained warriors. They also had smaller weaker army that were defeated at Thermopylae. The Greeks and Spartans were defeated though because a Greek spy told the Persians a way around the pass of Thermopylae and the Greeks and Spartans were surrounded.
180,000, though not all were commtted as the pass was narrow and only a few thousand could be deployed at any one time.
It succeded in its purpose to provoke a sea battle in the nearby Artemesion strait, though the sea battle failed. The Spartan decision to stay and die holding the pass to allow their allies to retreat safely stands as a symbol of self-sacrifice for others.