That he had asked the Spartans to send a force to help Athens repel the Persian invasionn. Having run the 200 km to Sparta and back, he died of exhaustion and was therefore not available to participate in the fairy tale that he was at the battle of Marathon and ran back the 26 mikes to Athens to announce the Athenian victory.
After that victory, the Athenian army realised that the Persian navy was about to capture Athens in their absence and all 18,000 ran back to protect the city, which is the real origin of today's marathon runs.
Pheidippides was sent to run from Marathon to Athens in under 36 hours to announce that there had been a victory against the Persians. He died when arriving to Athens after delivering the message.
pheidippides was just about 35 when he died
Pheidippides, a messenger from the Battle of Marathon to Athens.
Pheidippides is a character in a traditional Greek story who ran from Athens to Sparta to request help to battle the Persians. Afterward, he ran from Marathon to Athens to announce Greece's victory.
Nowhere. Athens sent Pheidippides to run to Sparta to summon them to help fight the Persians. The 120 mile return trip killed him.
The modern Athens Marathon commemorates the run of the soldier Pheidippides from a battlefield at the site of the town of Marathon, Greece, to Athens in 490 B.C., bringing news of a Greek victory over the Persians. Legend has it that Pheidippides delivered the momentous message "Niki!" ("victory"), then collapsed and died, thereby setting a precedent for dramatic conclusions to the marathon.
It was 18,000 Athenian warriors who ran back after their successful battle at Marathon to protect Athens from assault by sea in their absence. They ran back when they realised that the Persian cavalry was heading to Athens on ships. They ran the 26 miles, arriving just as the Persian cavalry was disembarking to take the city. There is a fake story that Pheidippides ran back to tell of the Marathon victory. He was already dead, dying from exhaustion after running to Sparta to summon them to held repel the Persian invasion.
Pheidippides, runner from Athens to Sparta to ask for help later from battle of marathon to Athens to report a victory
Pheidippides died after running 140 from Athens to Sparta to inform them that the Persians had invaded Greece. He later ran an additional 26 miles after which he died from exhaustion.
The battle of Marathon, Greece.
The historic 25-mile run of Pheidippides began at the Battle of Marathon, which took place in 490 BC. After the Greek forces achieved victory over the Persians, Pheidippides is said to have run from the battlefield to Athens to deliver news of the triumph. This legendary run is often cited as the inspiration for the modern marathon race.
Pheidippides ran 150 miles from Marathon to Sparta, then another 22 miles to Athens.