The purpose of this battle is to hold the Persians from advancing so that the Athenians had enough time to evacuate to the island of Salamis.It was clearly a suicide mission.
Another view:
The Athenians had known about the impending invasion for months and had plenty of time to evacuate their families whom they sent south to the Peloponnese cities for refuge. The pass was held to push the Persians to outflank the position by sea, and the combined Greek navies lay in wait in the nearby strait of Artemesion to defeat them in a sea battle, and eliminate the amphibious threat to their cities. Unfortunately the Persians won the sea battles over three days. The blocking of the Thermopylae Pass had no further purpose so the blocking force was withdrawn. The Spartan 300 plus their 2,100 light and the Thespian 1,400 stayed behind to cover the retreat of the other 7,000 city contingents and were killed - a noble sacrifice to protect their allies.
No, it was a holding operation, and when its purpose was comleted, the Greek coalition force was withdrawn.
The answer is no Because Thermopylae is a battle not a city.
king leonidas died by Persian archers in the battle of Thermopylae.
No , rhinos were not used during the battle .
Wicker.
The Battle of Thermopylae lasted for a little over 3 days, with Leonidas I, the main commander, falling on the final day.
The narrow coastal pass of Thermopylae . August or September 480 BC
Leonidas I was the leader of Battle of Thermopylae.
No, it was a holding operation, and when its purpose was comleted, the Greek coalition force was withdrawn.
The Battle of Thermopylae occurred , approximately , August or September 480BC .
the battle of Thermopylae took place in August 480 bc
The answer is no Because Thermopylae is a battle not a city.
king leonidas died by Persian archers in the battle of Thermopylae.
Yes, it was quite a famous battle.
Greece .
The Battle of Thermopylae .
The Battle of Marathon, the Battle of Salamis, and the Battle of Thermopylae were fought between Greek city-states and invading Persian Empire forces in the early Fifth Century BCE.