He launched a punitive expedition against the city-states of Eretria and Athens for sending contigents to Asia Minor during the Ionian revolt. While there, they sacked the Persian provincial capital and destroyed the statues of the gods. His object was to appoint local tyrants in the two city-states to keep them under control and stop them stirring up discontent in the Greek city-states within the Persian Empire.
Darius I in 490 BC, and his son Xerxes in 480 BC.
Darius I sent a punitive expedition against Eretria and Athens in 490 BCE. When this failed at Marathon, he determined to beinf all of peninsular Greece into his empire to stop the cities there interfering in the Greek cities already in his empire and breaking its peace. He died before he could execute this plan.His son Xerxes I took over this mission invading in 480-479 BCE. It failed after defeats at Salamis, Plataia and Mykale.
Bulgaria fought with the Nazis invading Greece in 1940 and the Soviet Union in 1941 with the Germans.
By invading Albania Mussolini gained control over the Strait of Otranto, that connects the Adriatic Sea with the Ionian Sea. That allowed Italy to achieve the sea dominance in the Adriatic and its influence upon Yugoslavia and Greece.
Xerxes I of Persia became king of Persia in 486BC and continued his father's campaigns against Greece in the Persian Wars.
The Battle of Marathon in 490 BCE was where Athens fought off the Persian King Darius. The Persians kept invading Greece for personal gain, and eventually Greece had enough and attacked the Persians back.
they where mad at Greece
He was a king of Greece
Greece support rebellion in Persia
Darius, king of Persia.
Persian King Darius I
These were the provinces of Darius I
Xerox's invasion of Greece could be driven by strategic interests, such as expanding their market presence and increasing sales in the region. Additionally, Greece's geographical location could serve as a gateway for further penetration into the European market. Enhancing brand visibility and establishing partnerships with local businesses might also be key motivations behind such a move.
Cyrus the Great's successors included his son Cambyses II, who continued his father's conquests by invading Egypt. After Cambyses, Darius I ascended to the throne, known for consolidating the empire and implementing administrative reforms. Following Darius, Xerxes I, his son, is noted for his invasion of Greece, particularly during the Battle of Thermopylae and the subsequent naval engagement at Salamis.
Darius I in 490 BC, and his son Xerxes in 480 BC.
There were three kings of Persia called Darius in the 6th, 5th and 4th Centuries BCE. Greece was not a unified country - the Greek world was comprised of 2,000 independent city-states, including Sparta, Thebes, Corinth, Athens. So there was no capital of the Greek world.
King Darius I the Great.