answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

The roots of the war started between two Grecian cities, Epidamnus and Corinth, in 436 BC.

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: When did the Peloponesian war start?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Who won the Peloponesian War?

The Spartans


Who fought who in the Peloponesian War?

Athens and Sparta


What war led to the peloponesian war?

mcdonalds/burger king/wendys


What two countries were involved in the Peloponesian War?

Athens and Sparta


What was Sparta's role in the Peloponesian War?

The war was basically between Sparta and its allies and Athens and its empire.


Who fought the Peloponesian War?

the peloponnesian wars were fought by Athens (with the little countries with them) and Sparta


How many rich people were there in ancient Greece?

over 300,000 after The Great Peloponesian War


Which two ancient Greek city-states fought in the Peloponesian War?

The Peloponesian Wars were a series of three wars between the Delian League led by Athens and the Peloponesian League, led by Sparta. In the end, Sparta triumphed. Although many cities fought in the war, Athens and Sparta led the two sides. Hundreds of the Greek city-states were embroiled, whether they liked it or not, in the 27-year war. The war was between Sparta and its allies and Athens and its empire.


Who won the peloponesian war athenians or spartens?

Although the Athenians were very successful in the beginning, the Spartans eventually won the Peloponnesian War.


What were the results of the peloponesian war?

the athenians lost their power and their city-state fell eventually leading to the downfall of greece.


What did the Persian and Peloponesian war lead to?

They led to the ascendancy of Sparta, displaced by Thebes, the dominance of Macedonian and its takeover of the Persian Empire.


Which two ancient Greek city states fought in the Peloponesian War?

About 300 city-states fought the war, one side led by Athens, the other by Sparta.