In 431 BC, the growing tensions between Athens and Sparta finally erupted into open hostilities. The ensuing struggle, which the Athenians called “the Peloponnesian War,” lasted on and off for twenty-seven years. It ended in 404 BC with the total defeat of Athens. Her empire was dismantled, her fleet destroyed and her democracy suspended. Although in the following century she would stage a spectacular recovery, Athens would never again be the predominant power in Greece.
Nor, after 371 BC, would Sparta. One hundred and eight years after Pausanias had won his great victory over Mardonius, the Spartan army was brought to sensational defeat by the Thebans at the village of Leuctra, barely five miles from Plataea. The Thebans, pressing home their advantage, then invaded Lacedaemon. The Peloponnesian League was abolished. Messenia was freed. Sparta, deprived of her helots, was reduced overnight from being the hegemon of Greece to a middle-ranking power.
Over the following decades, the Greek cities would continue to tear themselves apart. Meanwhile, to the north, a new predator was readying itself for the murderous struggle to be the greatest power in Greece. In 338 BC, King Philip II of Macedon, following in the footsteps of Xerxes, swept southward into Boeotia. An army of Athenians and Thebans, attempting to bar his way, was cut to pieces. “We lie here because we strove to give freedom to Greece.” So it was written on the tomb of the fallen. “The glory we enjoy will never age.”1 Proud words—but not even the most stirring epitaph could obscure the grim reality that Greek independence had effectively been brought to an end. Four years later, and Philip’s son, Alexander, crossed the Hellespont to assault the Persian Empire. Now it was the turn of the Great King to have his power humbled into the dust. Three great battles in succession were lost to the invader. Babylon fell. Persepolis was burned. The last King of Kings suffered a squalid and thirst-racked death. Alexander laid claim to the kidaris of Cyrus, and to an empire that stretched from the Adriatic to the Indus.
For the first time, Greece and Persia acknowledged the rule of a single master.
Even Nemesis, perhaps, might have permitted herself a smile.
All dates are BC.
c. 1250: The Trojan War.
c. 1200: The destruction of the royal palaces at Mycenae and Sparta.
c. 1200–1000: The migration of the Dorians into the Peloponnese.
c. 1000–800: The migration of the Medes and Persians into western Iran.
814: The foundation of Carthage.
750–700: The Assyrian kings establish their control over the Medes of the Zagros.
c. 750–650: Sparta invades and conquers Messenia.
c. 670: The loss of Assyrian control over Media.
632: The failure of Cylon’s attempt to become tyrant of Athens.
612: The Medes and Babylonians sack Nineveh.
608: The final collapse of the Assyrian Empire.
600: The exile of the Alcmaeonids from Athens.
594: Solon becomes archon.
586: Nebuchadnezzar sacks Jerusalem.
585: Astyages becomes King of Media. A peace treaty is signed with Lydia after an indecisive war.
566: Inauguration of the Great Panathenaea.
560: The first tyranny of Pisistratus. The return of the Alcmaeonids to Athens.
559: Cyrus becomes King of Persia.
556: Nabonidus becomes King of Babylon.
555: The second tyranny and exile of Pisistratus.
550: Cyrus conquers Media.
546: Cyrus conquers Lydia. The “Battle of the Champions” between Sparta and Argos. The Battle of Pallene: the third tyranny of Pisistratus; the Alcmaeonids return into exile.
545–540: Cyrus pushes into Central Asia.
539: Cyrus conquers Babylonia.
529: The death of Cyrus. Cambyses becomes King of Persia.
527: The death of Pisistratus. Hippias and Hipparchus become the tyrants of Athens.
525: Cambyses invades and conquers Egypt.
522: Bardiya revolts against Cambyses. The death of Cambyses. Darius and six accomplices assassinate Bardiya. Darius becomes King of Persia and puts down a revolt in Babylon.
521: Darius suppresses widespread rebellions across the empire.
520: Cleomenes becomes King of Sparta.
519: Athens at war with Thebes in defense of Plataea.
514: The assassination of Hipparchus.
513: Darius invades Scythia.
512–511: The Persian conquest of Thrace.
510: The expulsion of Hippias from Athens.
508: Isagoras becomes archon. Cleisthenes proposes democratic reforms.
507: The exile of Cleisthenes from Athens. Cleomenes and Isagoras are besieged on the Acropolis. Cleisthenes returns from exile and implements his reforms. Athenian ambassadors give earth and water to Artaphernes.
506: The defeat of Cleomenes’ invasion of Attica. Athens is victorious over Thebes and Chalcis.
499: The failure of the Persian attack on Naxos. Aristagoras leads an Ionian revolt and travels to Greece in search of support.
498: The Ionians, with Athenian and Eretrian support, burn Sardis.
497: The death of Aristagoras.
494: The Ionians are defeated at the Battle of Lade. Argos is defeated by Cleomenes at the Battle of Sepeia. The sack of Miletus.
493: Themistocles becomes archon. Miltiades escapes from the Chersonese to Athens.
492: The trial and acquittal of Miltiades. Mardonius conquers Macedonia.
491: Darius’ ambassadors tour Greece to demand earth and water; those who visit Athens and Sparta are put to death.
490: Datis and Artaphernes lead an expedition across the Aegean. Eretria is sacked. The Battle of Marathon.
487: The first ostracism in Athens.
486: Rebellion in Egypt. The death of Darius. Xerxes becomes the King of Persia.
485: Gelon becomes the tyrant of Syracuse.
484: Xanthippus is ostracized. Rebellion in Babylon.
483: A rich vein of silver is found in the mines at Laurium.
482: Aristeides is ostracized. Athens votes to build two hundred triremes.
481: Xerxes arrives in Sardis. A congress of Greek cities determined to resist the Persian invasion meets at Sparta. Envoys are sent to Gelon. Spies are sent to Sardis.
480: Envoys return empty-handed from Gelon. Xerxes crosses the Hellespont. The Athenians vote to evacuate their city. The battles of Thermopylae and Artemisium. The Battle of Himera. Athens is occupied and burned. The Battle of Salamis. Xerxes retreats to Sardis. Mardonius remains in Thessaly.
479: Athens is occupied a second time. The battles of Plataea and Mycale. Revolt in Babylon. Xerxes leaves Sardis.
472: Aeschylus stages The Persians.
470: Themistocles is ostracized.
469: The death of Pausanias. The flight of Themistocles to Susa.
466: The Battle of Eurymedon.
460: Athens sends an expedition to Cyprus and Egypt.
459: The death of Themistocles.
457: Aegina is forced to join the Delian League.
454: Destruction of the Athenian expedition to Egypt. The treasury of the Delian League is moved from Delos to the Acropolis.
449: Peace is signed between Athens and Persia. The Peloponnesians refuse an Athenian invitation to a pan-Greek conference. The Athenians vote to rebuild the burned temples on the Acropolis.
447: Work begins on the Parthenon.