The Greatest Commanders and Warriors From Antiquity

The Greatest Commanders and Warriors From Antiquity

Khalid Elhassan - January 29, 2021

The Greatest Commanders and Warriors From Antiquity
King Xerxes. National Museum of Iran

16. A wily warrior who forced his reluctant allies to fight

As it became clear that the commitment of Athens’ Greek allies was shaky, Themistocles decided to force a battle as soon as possible. So he sent king Xerxes a secret message, claiming friendship, and informing him that the Greeks were demoralized. To bag them, Themistocles advised, the Persians should send a naval detachment to block the western exit of the strait, then attack from the east. The bottled-up Greeks would then either surrender, or put up a poor show. Either way, Xerxes would emerge victorious.

The Greatest Commanders and Warriors From Antiquity
The Persians commenced the Battle of Salamis by bottling up the Greek fleet. Circle of Ancient Iranian Studies

Xerxes followed Themistocles’ advice, and the Greeks went into a panic upon awaking the next day to discover that the Persians had bottled them up in the strait. Themistocles calmed them down, and devised a plan whereby the Greeks retreated far up into the narrows. The Persians fought a battle with their ships on an east-west line facing Salamis. That would have allowed them to attack the Greeks on a broad front, and take advantage of their numerical superiority to overlap and envelop their foes. Themistocles demonstrated his chops as a warrior with a counterplan that thwarted the Persians, then crushed them.

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