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Answer 1

The Athenians, who would dominate Greece culturally and politically through the fifth century BC and through part of the fourth, regarded the wars against Persia as their greatest and most characteristic moment.

The battle of Marathon (490 BC), is perhaps the single most important battle in Greek history. Had the Athenians lost, Greece would have eventually come under the control of the Persians and all the subsequent culture and accomplishments of the Greeks would probably not have taken the form they did.

For the Athenians, the battle at Marathon was their greatest achievement. From Marathon onwards, the Athenians began to think of themselves as the center of Greek culture and Greek power. This pride, or chauvinism, was the foundation on which much of their cultural achievements were built. The first great dramas, for instance, were the dramas of Aeschylus; the principle subject of these dramas is the celebration of Athenian greatness. The great building projects of the latter half of the fifth century were motivated by the need to display Athenian wealth, greatness, and power.

It's difficult to assess all the consequences of the Greek victory over the Persians. While the Spartans were principally responsible for the victory, the Athenian fleet was probably the most important component of that victory. This victory left Athens with the most powerful fleet in the Aegean, and since the Persians hadn't been completely defeated, all the Greeks feared a return. The majority of Greek city-states, however, didn't turn to Sparta; they turned, rather, to Athens and the Athenian fleet. The alliances that Athens would make following the retreat of the Persians, the so-called Delian League, would suddenly catapult Athens into the major power of the Greek city-states. This power would make Athens the cultural center of the Greek world, but it would also spell their downfall as the Spartans grew increasingly frightened of Athenian power and increasingly suspicious of Athenian intentions.

Answer 2

The first phase of the wars with Persia began with Persia's suppression of the Ionian Revolt in 499 BCE, continued with its failed attempt to punish and control Eretria and Athens for their interference in the Greek city uprisings in Asia Minor, then its failed invasion of peninsular Greece in 480-479 BCE attempting to incorporate it within the Persian empire to establish an ethnic frontier. Further confrontation in 466 and 450 ended in the Peace of Callias in 449 BCE, where both sides agreed to stay out of each others' areas of influence.

After the repulse of the 480-79 invasion Sparta wanted to repatriate Greeks from Asia to end the conflict. Adventurous Athens counter-proposed a defensive league and enlisted nearly 200 cities in it - they either provided warships or provided the money for them. Most paid.

Athens took leadership of this anti-Persian Delian League and used its funds to maintain a powerful navy. When peace with Persia was made in 449 BCE, Athens used the navy to continue to collect the funds, by force where necessary, and used them to dominate what became a virtual empire, and also enrich itself at their expense. The war chest paid for the beautification of Athens and half its citizens to be on the public payroll.

The Peloponnesian League led by Sparta, resisted increasing Athenian attempts to expand its influence and the collision resulted in a 27-year war which devastated the Greek world from Sicily to Asia Minor and saw Athens lose its empire. Persia reentered the fray, providing the funds for the Peloponnesian League to buy a fleet which could overpower the Athenian one. Athens became a lesser player without the other cities' money, and the Asia Minor Greek cities took the lead in science and culture.
It converted the Delian League which it had led against the Persian Empire into an empire of its own.

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Related Questions

Who was the leader of a powerful alliance of Greek city states after the Persian Wars?

Athens converted the Delian League into an empire of its own, and used the forces and money to attempt to dominate the Greek world.


Historical significance of the Persian Wars?

It put an end to Persian expansion to the west and led to the contest for power in the Greek world between Athens and its empire and the Spartan-led Peloponnesian League.


What affect of the Persian wars have role of the Athens in the Greek world?

Athens converted the Delian League which it had led in the later phase of the war with the Persian Empire into an empire of its own, and after peace with the Persians it used this power to interfere in the rest of the Greek world, resulting in the devastating 27-year Peloponnesian War.


The Persian wars were touched off by?

Ionia - the Greco-Persian Wars was a result of the Ionian revolt .The wars began when the Greek city-states in Asia Minor revolted against Persian rule. Athens interfered, bringing Persian reprisal, which widened the conflict to the rest of the Greek world.


What was the major effect of the Persian War?

The Greek city-states in Asia Minor were freed from Persian Empire rule and hoped for peace and independence, only to be swallowed up into an Athenian empire and plunged into the Peloponnesian War. This ongoing fighting within the Greek world brought Persia to re-absorb them into its empire sixty years later to stop these wars spilling over to its territory.


What two city state united to defeat the Persians in the Persian war?

If you mean Sparta and Athens, they were not rivals but supported each other. The rivalry came after the Persian invasion was repelled and Athens turned the Delian League it had led against the Persian Empire into an empire of its own and used its resources to try to dominate the Greek world.


How did the Persian war affect Greece?

They provided the impetus to form an anti-Persian alliance headed by Athens. When peace was made with Persia after 50 years of intermittent fighting, Athens converted this league into an empire of its own, and its expansionary tendencies brought it into confrontation with the Peloponnesian League, resulting in the 27-year Peloponnesian War which devastated the Greek world from Sicily to Asia Minor.


Which two city-states demonstrated military interdependence during the Persian Wars?

The city-states of Athens and Sparta joined forces along with the other southern Greek city-states to defeat the Persian invasion in 480-479 BCE, however they were not enemies - they were allies before and after the Persian invasion. Sparta had offered support to Athens against the Persian attack on Athens a decade before that, and Athens supported the Spartans when Messenia revolted against Spartan rule twenty years after the Persian invasion. Not exactly enemies. They became enemies when Athens set out to dominate the Greek world, resulting in the Spartan-led Peloponnesian League and Athens and its new empire clashed in a destructive Peloponnesian War 431-404 BCE. Athens lost, was stripped of its empire and became a second rate power.


Is Darius the capital of Greece?

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.


Why are Athens and Sparta city-states famous?

Through the 5th Century BCE they were the pre-eminent city-states in the Greek world, and after being allies to lead the resistence against the Persian invasion, became adversaries in the 27-year Peloponnesian War which devastated the Greek world.


What ended Athenian domination of the Greek world?

the Persian war


What result came out of the Persian Wars of the 5th century BC?

Athens, having established an anti-Persian league, continued it on after peace with the Persians, and used its funds to maintain its navy and turn the league into an empire. This brought it into conflict with the Peloponnesian League formed to counterbalance Athens' power. The result was a destructive 27 year war which devastated the Greek world.