Much of the credit goes to the Greek navy which won the majority of sea-land battles, which kept the Persians on the defensive and brought them to agree to a peace after 50 years of fighting.
The battle of Thermopylae where Persian forces were able to use a little known mountain trail to outflank the Greeks during the battle .
The Battle of Marathon was a turning point during the first Persian invasion of Greece. The Persians vastly outnumbered the Greeks on the battlefield, but the Greeks were able to defeat them. The Greeks charged the Persian troops with a thin weaker line, while the Greeks' left and right flanks consisted of stronger troops who quickly surrounded the Persian troops and attacked them on both sides. It was a crushing defeat for the Persians, and the battle convinced the Greeks that while the Persian Empire had vast armies and archers, it was possible to defeat them.
It was not the Greeks, it was Athens and its ally Plataia. The Athenians waited on the edge of the Plain of Marathon for reinforcement from Sparta. Then saw the superior Persian cavalry being embarked on ships and ran down and defeated the unsupported inferior Persian infantry.
It was the Athenian and Plataian armies, which defeated the inferior Persian infantry caught without its cavalry support.
The overall Greek strategy was to thwart the Persian advance at the narrow pass of Thermopylae using a Spartan/Thespian/Theban blocking force , while at sea the Athenian Admiral Themistocles was to prevent Persian naval forces from outflanking the Greek land contingent by making an amphibious landing behind the Spartan King Leonidas and the Greeks . Themistocles was able to defeat the Persians at the sea battle of Salamis and the Greeks were able to withstand the Persian infantry assaults only to be outflanked on the land because the traitor Ephialtes had shown the Persians a way of outflanking the Greeks by showing the Persians a way around the pass of Thermopylae .h
The Greeks were able to unite during the Persian Wars primarily due to the common threat posed by the Persian Empire, which prompted a sense of shared identity among the various city-states. Key leaders, such as Themistocles and Miltiades, emphasized the need for collaboration, leading to the formation of alliances like the Hellenic League. Additionally, cultural ties and a legacy of rivalry with Persia fostered a collective resolve to defend their autonomy and way of life. This unity, although temporary, was crucial in achieving significant victories at battles such as Marathon and Salamis.
The battle of Thermopylae where Persian forces were able to use a little known mountain trail to outflank the Greeks during the battle .
The Battle of Marathon was a turning point during the first Persian invasion of Greece. The Persians vastly outnumbered the Greeks on the battlefield, but the Greeks were able to defeat them. The Greeks charged the Persian troops with a thin weaker line, while the Greeks' left and right flanks consisted of stronger troops who quickly surrounded the Persian troops and attacked them on both sides. It was a crushing defeat for the Persians, and the battle convinced the Greeks that while the Persian Empire had vast armies and archers, it was possible to defeat them.
The Battle of Salamis was brought on by the Greeks in order to end the Persian amphibious threat to the Greek city-states. This threat made the cities keep their armies at home in self defence. The defeat of the Persian navy at Salamis ended that threat, and the cities were then able to send out their armies to unite and defeat the Persian army at Plataea, ending the Persian invasion.
theyre able because they had a bigger army and more supplies
Control of the sea and blockade of the Persian sea resupply from Asia Minor.
It was not the Greeks, it was Athens and its ally Plataia. The Athenians waited on the edge of the Plain of Marathon for reinforcement from Sparta. Then saw the superior Persian cavalry being embarked on ships and ran down and defeated the unsupported inferior Persian infantry.
In the beginning of the 5th century BC, the Greeks had to unite against their common enemy, the Persians.
By an obsession for conquest and self aggrandisement, he was able to mobilise his Macedonians and the Greeks to join and stay with him for his conquest of the Persian Empire.
The primary factor was thee destruction of the Persian fleet at the Battle of Salamis. The Greeks thus established dominance of the sea. and the Persians could not import enough food by sea, and had to send half their army home. They also could no longer threaten the southern Greek cities with amphibious invasion, which had made those cities keep their armies defensively at home, so the cities were now able to send out their armies the following year to unite and defeat the Persian army at Plataea.
The Greeks were prolific breeders, which is why they established colonies all around the Mediterranean and Black Seas to provide for their excess population which could not be maintained in such a poor countryside as mainalnd Greece. The Persian War lasted spasmodically for fifty years, and the casualties in the war were no more able to absorb the excess population than had the normal internal wars before and after the Persian War. So the colonies continued to be established, then and later.
After destroying Persian sea power at the battle of Salamis, they were able to defeat their army, and so end the attempt by the Persians to incorporate the cities of mainland Greece into the Persian Empire.