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Strauss - The battle of Salamis : the naval encounter that saved Greece--and Western civilization

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Strauss The battle of Salamis : the naval encounter that saved Greece--and Western civilization
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An account of the 480 B.C. battle that rendered Athens the dominant power in Greece documents its importance as an event that made possible the foundation of western traditions, citing in particular the contributions of historys first woman commander. The battle of Salamis in 480 B.C. was the most important naval encounter of the ancient world. In the narrow strait between the island of Salamis and the Greek mainland, a heavily outnumbered Greek navy defeated the Persian armada in a brilliant victory that is still studied today. The Greek triumph at Salamis stopped the advancing Persians and saved the first democracy in history. It made Athens the dominant city in Greece, gave birth to the Athenian empire, and set the stage for the Age of Pericles. On the Persian side, the battle of Salamis also featured historys first female admiral and sailors from three continents. The Battle of Salamis features some of the most fascinating figures in the ancient world: Themistocles, the Athenian commander who masterminded the victory (and tricked his fellow Greeks into fighting); Xerxes, the Persian king who understood land but not naval warfare; Aeschylus, the Greek playwright who took part at Salamis and later immortalized it in drama; and Artemisia, the half-Greek queen who was one of Xerxes trusted commanders and who turned defeat into personal victory. In his riveting story of this clash on the Greek seas, classicist and historian Barry Strauss offers a new in-depth account of the ancient battle. Drawing on recent work in archaeology, meteorology, and forensic science as well as on his own experience as a rower (both navies were oar powered), Strauss revises our understanding of one of historys pivotal wars and of Herodotuss classic if underrated account of it. But in addition to being exciting military history, The Battle of Salamis is also a vivid analysis of ancient culture. A scholar who has reexamined the original sources for this stirring narrative presents an exciting, perceptive work of military history and a shrewd analysis of the cultural differences between and within the contending Persian and Greek factions. Read more...
Abstract: An account of the 480 B.C. battle that rendered Athens the dominant power in Greece documents its importance as an event that made possible the foundation of western traditions, citing in particular the contributions of historys first woman commander. The battle of Salamis in 480 B.C. was the most important naval encounter of the ancient world. In the narrow strait between the island of Salamis and the Greek mainland, a heavily outnumbered Greek navy defeated the Persian armada in a brilliant victory that is still studied today. The Greek triumph at Salamis stopped the advancing Persians and saved the first democracy in history. It made Athens the dominant city in Greece, gave birth to the Athenian empire, and set the stage for the Age of Pericles. On the Persian side, the battle of Salamis also featured historys first female admiral and sailors from three continents. The Battle of Salamis features some of the most fascinating figures in the ancient world: Themistocles, the Athenian commander who masterminded the victory (and tricked his fellow Greeks into fighting); Xerxes, the Persian king who understood land but not naval warfare; Aeschylus, the Greek playwright who took part at Salamis and later immortalized it in drama; and Artemisia, the half-Greek queen who was one of Xerxes trusted commanders and who turned defeat into personal victory. In his riveting story of this clash on the Greek seas, classicist and historian Barry Strauss offers a new in-depth account of the ancient battle. Drawing on recent work in archaeology, meteorology, and forensic science as well as on his own experience as a rower (both navies were oar powered), Strauss revises our understanding of one of historys pivotal wars and of Herodotuss classic if underrated account of it. But in addition to being exciting military history, The Battle of Salamis is also a vivid analysis of ancient culture. A scholar who has reexamined the original sources for this stirring narrative presents an exciting, perceptive work of military history and a shrewd analysis of the cultural differences between and within the contending Persian and Greek factions

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Praise for The Battle of Salamis First-rate military and political history - photo 1
Praise for The Battle of Salamis

First-rate military and political history.... Strausss reconstruction of the events of naval and classical history overflows with detail and writerly attention to a grand story.

Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

Barry Strauss is one of the best ancient naval historians alive, and in The Battle of Salamis he combines his classical expertise with his natural gifts as a storyteller to make the inexplicable Greek victory not just explicable, but captivating as well. The ensuing drama is as riveting as it is historically accurate.

Victor Davis Hanson, Senior Fellow, the Hoover Institute, and author of
Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise of Western Power

Led by a shrewd and bold commander, the sailors of the worlds first democracybadly outnumbered, their capital destroyeddrew strength from their freedom and crushed the forces of the massive Persian Empire to save the dawning of Western Civilization. Superbly told, and as dramatic as history gets.

R. James Woolsey, Vice President, Booz Allen Hamilton, and former Director of Central Intelligence

[Strausss] combination of erudite scholarship, well-paced storytelling and vivid color commentary make this an appealing popular history for the general reader.

Publishers Weekly

A ripping yarn of a world at the brink of annihilation and of the heroes (and fools) who brought it back from the edge. Strausss deep scholarship and clear prose bring the men and the era alive. We can see the ships and smell the action, but more importantly, we understand what it meantfor the Greeks then and for all of us now. This is the indispensable work on Salamis.

Steven Pressfield, author of The Virtues of War: A Novel of Alexander the Great

The Battle of Salamis is a modern classic. Based on ancient histories, plays and art, and incorporating the latest in naval technology, this book has it all: a significant historical event, a superb cast of characters and excellent technical descriptions of key military hardware.... Barry Strauss is a scholar with a flair for captivating narrative and penetrating insight into the personalities of ancient leaders and reflections on their leadership style.

Raymond Leach, The Virginian-Pilot

Barry Strausss brilliantly written and deeply insightful narrative of Salamis brings all the gloriesand the horrorsof this decisive naval battle vividly back to life (and multiple death).... Strausss firsthand topographical, nautical, and historical expertise is allied to a novelists eye and pen to produce a book to be savored by the general reader and the scholar alike.

Paul Cartledge, Professor of Greek History, University of Cambridge

Writers of maritime history sometimes founder by either erring on the side of minutiae or by being too general. Barry Strauss avoids both these perils. A professor of history and classics at Cornell, Strauss certainly knows his stuff. Moreover, he supplements his generally smooth writing style with good maps, an easily understood timetable, a fine bibliographic essay, and notes that clearly explain the types of vessels used in the battle for the neophyte and naval historian alike.

The Philadelphia Inquirer

In compelling fashion, Strauss imaginatively accentuates the local geography and the experience of battle; however, he is most evocative when outlining the strategic thought of the leaders, Xerxes for the Persian Empire and Themistocles for the Hellenic alliance.

Booklist (starred review)

Strauss has connected the abstract meaning of the war to its concrete reality: a sweaty, desperate effort in which over 100,000 men crammed into their ships, readied their oars, and rowed for their lives.

Bryn Mawr Classical Review

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CONTENTS

F OR S YLVIE

A NOTE ON SPELLING
AND ABBREVIATIONS

Greek, Persian, and other ancient names are spelled and abbreviated following the style of the standard reference work, The Oxford Classical Dictionary, 3rd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999).

I have translated all ancient Greek quotations myself unless otherwise noted. Citations from Old Persian have been translated by others as noted.

TIMETABLE OF EVENTS RELATING
TO THE BATTLE OF SALAMIS,
480 B.C.

Note: All dates approximate except full moon and eclipse.


May: Xerxes begins to move troops across the Hellespont.

June: Xerxes begins march from the Hellespont to Athens.

Third week of August: Greek men and ships take up positions at Thermopylae and Artemisium.

August 19, full moon: End of the Olympic Games and the Carnea Festival.

ca. August 2729: Battles of Thermopylae and Artemisium.

ca. September 1: Greek fleet returns from Artemisium and arrives at Phaleron Bay and at Salamis; Persian army begins march southward.

Early September: Peloponnesian armies in full force begin building wall at Isthmus of Corinth.

ca. September 16: Evacuation of Athens.

ca. September 4: Persian fleet moves southward.

ca. September 5: Persian advance guard reaches Attica.

ca. August 31September 20: Persian army conquers Phocis and Boeotia and regroups in Athens.

ca. September 7: Persian fleet reaches Phaleron Bay.

ca. September 2123: Siege of Athenian Acropolis.

ca. September 23: Persian army takes Athenian Acropolis; Greek war council on Salamis votes for fleet to retreat to Isthmus of Corinth.

Night of ca. September 2324: Mnesiphilus, Themistocles, and Eurybiades force Greek war council to change plans and remain at Salamis; debate between Themistocles and Adimantus.

Dawn, ca. September 24: Earthquake.

Evening of ca. September 24: Sicinnuss mission to the Persians.

Midnight, ca. September 24: Persian fleet enters straits of Salamis.

ca. September 25: Battle of Salamis.

End of September: Persians begin to withdraw from Athens.

October 2, partial eclipse of the sun: Spartan army leaves Isthmus.

AN IMPORTANT NOTE ABOUT THE SHIPS The battle of Salamis was fought with - photo 2
AN IMPORTANT NOTE ABOUT THE SHIPS The battle of Salamis was fought with - photo 3
AN IMPORTANT NOTE
ABOUT THE SHIPS

The battle of Salamis was fought with triremes, wooden warships. Triremes could be powered either by oar or by sail, but in battle only oars were used, because speed and maneuverability were everything. Trireme comes from the Greek trieres, which means three-rower ship, referring to the three levels of rowers seen in profile when looking along each side of the ship. The trireme represents an innovation in shipbuilding, probably dating to the century before Salamis. In 480 B.C. , the trireme embodied state-of-the-art naval technology in the Mediterranean. For two centuries, the trireme would reign as the queen of the seas; Salamis was its greatest battle.

Our information about the trireme is plentiful if incomplete. Unfortunately for the student of Salamis, most of that information comes from the period ca. 430320 B.C. , that is, at least fifty years after the Persian Wars. Fortunately, what little indications we have suggest that what was true of triremes in the later period was, by and large, true of the earlier period as well.

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