Athens led the Delain League of the 180 Greek city-states in Asia Minor and the Islands during the second half of the Persian War.
After the Persians agreed to leave them alone, Athens opportunistically turned the League into an empire of its own, and lived high on the annual tax it levied, by force where necessary, from those city-states. This money allowed Athens to maintain a large war fleet, which together with it walled city and port, gave it both raiding power and home security. Athens abused this power, bringing it into conflict with the Peloponnesian League led by Sparta in a destructive 27-year war which Athens lost and was stripped of its empire.
Socrates was from the city-state of Athens in ancient Greece.
Greece was dominated by Athens after the Persian wars.
Contrast the results of the Persian and Peloponnesian war with regards to Athens greece
Contrast the results of the Persian and Peloponnesian war with regards to Athens Greece
Athens.
Salamis Bay
The first Persian invasion of Greece was during the Persian Wars in 492 BCE. It was ordered by the Persian King Darius I to punish the city-states of Athens and Eretria.
Athens.
The Persian army went on to torch the city of Athens .
The naval Battle of Salamis won a victory for the Greek allies, primarily Athens. It, in effect, stranded the Persian Army in Greece, forcing it to make a fighting retreat home, leading to its defeat at Plataea. After the war, Athens formed a naval defense league to prevent any further Persian incursions. Athens became he leading cultural center of its time, leading the world in architecture, sculpture, and theater. In time, Athens began to use the treasury of the league as its personal resource, and behaved as an imperial power, bringing it into conflict with its former ally, Sparta, and sparking the Peloponnesian War, which eventually led to Athens' defeat and the fall of democracy in Ancient Greece.
The Delian League led by Athens and the Peloponnesian League led by Athens.
The Persian expeditionary force was defeated by the army of Athens and its ally Plataea at Marathon in 490 BCE.