What were the medical wars?

The medical wars, also called the Median wars, were a  series of conflicts that occurred from 490 BC. C. to 449 a. C., between the Persian Empire and the Greek city-states , from the wishes of conquest of the territories of Ancient Greece (Hellas) by the Achaemenid emperors.

Faced with the advance of the Persian Empire on the Anatolian peninsula and the Balkans,  the Greeks were threatened and had to defend themselves militarily on three occasions :

  • First medical war: occurred in the year 490 a. C.
  • Second medical war: occurred between 480 a. C. and 479 a. C.
  • Third medical war: occurred between the years 471 a. C. and 449 a. C.

After these three wars,  the Greeks managed to stop the constant invasions by the Persian Empire, which had to give up its expansionist intentions.

In the year 449 a. C.  was signed a peace treaty called “Peace of Calias” , in which the two sides agreed not to attack again and the Persian Empire had to recognize the victory of the Greek city-states.

A Greek soldier attacks a Persian soldier, Triptolemus, National Archaeological Museum of Athens.

The three medical wars

The medical wars comprised 3 stages of war conflicts.

First medical war

The first medical war broke out in  490 BC. C. , when after a revolt of the Ionian cities of Asia Minor, the Persian Emperor  Darius I decided to attack Athens and Eretria for having supported the Ionian rebellion .

Eretria was raided and sacked by the Persians, who later went through the city of Athens. In that circumstance the  battle of Marathon took place , in which the Persians fought against the Athenians, who managed to stop the invasion and were victorious.

After their defeat, the Persians tried to invade the Athenian territory again, but when they saw the reinforcements incorporated into the Greek army they began to retreat.

In addition, Athens signed a treaty with Sparta in which they established a military support agreement against any new attack .

Second medical war

The second medical war took place between  480 a. C. and 479 a. C.  and it took place after the order of Xerxes, heir of Darío I, to the Greek city-states so that they abide by his power. Although several cops agreed for fear of being destroyed, Athens and Sparta again refused.

Then the second medical war began and, before the invasion, a large number of Greek cities united to face the Persian army. First, there was the Battle of Thermopylae , during which the Persians managed to overcome the heroic resistance of the Greeks. At the same time, the allied fleet contained the Persians in the naval battle of Artemisio.

After the Greek victory in the battle of Salamis , the second medical war came to an end with the battles of Plataea and Micala, in 479 BC. C., in which the Greek city-states again achieved victory over the Persians.

Third medical war

By the third medical war, the Greeks had a military alliance of almost every city-state in Hellas. In the year 467 a. C.  took place the  battle of Eurimedonte , in which the Greek military league, called ” Delos league “, led by Cimon, defeated the Persian fleet on the coasts of Asia Minor.

After repeated failed attempts to invade the Greek coasts, the Persian emperor Artaxerxes I agreed to sign the Peace of Calias , a treaty, in 449 BC. C. , In which the medical wars were ended  .

In that treaty the independence of the Hellenic colonies from the coasts of Asia Minor was recognized  , and  Greek control over the Aegean Sea ,  commercial pacts  between the Greeks and the populations of Asia Minor and the  end of the Persian invasions on the territories were established. Greeks .

Causes and consequences of medical wars

Causes

The main cause of medical wars consists of  the desire of the Persian Empire to conquer the world, devastating entire populations and imposing its ideology and political domination.

In addition, the conquest of new territories generated the Persian empire an increase in wealth and control over trade, which increased its political, economic and military power.

The  strong religious, political and ideological contradictions  between the Persian Empire and the Greek polis, added to  the military power  that each side had, led them to fight for more than 50 years for the dominance in the Aegean basin.

Consequences

The consequences of the medical wars were as follows:

  • The Greek polis preserved their independence and halted the advance of the Persian Empire
  • Athens became the most powerful city in Ancient Greece.
  • The economic and military dominance that Athens obtained in the medical wars  caused, years later, the  Peloponnesian War .
  • Macedonia, Thrace, and the Ionian cities of Asia Minor became independent from the Persian Empire.
  • The Persians were forbidden to navigate the Aegean Sea, which happened to be exclusively Greek.
  • The decline of the Persian Empire began.

Importance of medical wars

This conflict between Persia and ancient Greece is considered the  first confrontation between East and West. The medical wars demonstrated the superiority of the Greeks in their military tactics and strategies and the ability to  confront and stop a powerful opponent, such as the Persian Empire . In addition, these were decisive for Greek history, since after its victory, Athens lived a period of splendor of philosophy, literature, arts and sciences, and developed direct democracy as a form of government.

 

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