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Tom Holland

πŸ‘€ Speaker
31680 total appearances
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The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

And so for the first and only time in Athenian history, they are buried on the field where they had fallen.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

And a great tomb is raised over the ashes of the 192 dead Athenians, and it's adorned with marble slabs listing the fallen.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

And you can still visit the site of that mound to this day.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

It's a very moving place to visit.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

And on the Acropolis, a great new temple is begun,

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

which effectively is designed as a colossal war memorial.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

Yeah, because that sense, I think, of a kind of instinctive cringe before the Persians has gone.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

And although there remains fear of what the Persians might be able to do, that fear is now kind of tinged with a sense of contempt.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

And it's telling that in the wake of Marathon, the Athenians start applying a new word to the Persians that they hadn't previously used.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

And this is barbaroi or barbarians.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

And literally, it means kind of the speakers of gibberish, people who don't speak gibberish.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

Greek, and it conveys a sense of these gibberish speakers as kind of numberless, alien, jabbering, a reflection of what the Athenians had seen on the heights above Marathon when they looked down at the plain and gazed at the Asiatic hordes.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

And it's not just the Athenians who have had their confidence boosted.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

I think the whole of Greece has learned an invaluable lesson, which is that the Persians aren't invincible, that the barbarians can be defeated, that the Colossus has feet of clay.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

You know, you defeat a superpower and inevitably it's going to convince you that even if the superpower comes back at you again, you might be able to see them off.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

And this, of course, is what duly happens, because on one level, plainly, the Battle of Marathon isn't decisive at all, because 10 years later, in 480 BC, the Persians are back, and this time with a vastly greater force and led in person by their king, the son of Darius Xerxes.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

And this time the Athenians do not meet the Persians with their infantry.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

They meet them with a fleet at the battle of Salamis.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

And they're commanded at Salamis by Themistocles, the young general who had been in command of his tribe at the center of the weakened Athenian battle line at Marathon.

The Rest Is History
669. Greece vs. Persia: The Battle of Marathon (Part 2)

And you could say that Salamis, because it's a great victory for Athens and for the Greeks, and it effectively destroys the hopes of the Persians of conquering Greece, that that's more decisive than Marathon.