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| ("Who are you?") | | ("Who are you?") |
| *'''Herodotos:''' ''My name is Herodotos, and I am a traveler from [[Halikarnassos]]. I retrace the cause of various events, such as wars and great calamities. I describe what I see and record what I am told - all with the aim of providing a better understanding of why these things occur. Look for me to introduce you to many sites.'' | | *'''Herodotos:''' ''My name is Herodotos, and I am a traveler from {{Wiki|Halikarnassos}}. I retrace the cause of various events, such as wars and great calamities. I describe what I see and record what I am told - all with the aim of providing a better understanding of why these things occur. Look for me to introduce you to many sites.'' |
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| ("What do you think of this place?") | | ("What do you think of this place?") |
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| |-|The Shame of Thucydides= | | |-|The Shame of Thucydides= |
| | [[File:DTAG - Artistic map of Sparta, Athens, Amphipolis and Eion Port.png|thumb|250px|Artistic maps of Greece, with the location of Sparta, Athens and with details on Amphipolis, Strymon River & Eion Port / 2019]] |
| | Brasidas' march on Amphipolis blindsided the Athenians. |
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| | By the time they heard the news, and dispatched the general [[Thucydides]] to defend Amphipolis, Brasidas had already rallied several nearby cities to help him defend the region from Athens' so-called "tyranny". |
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| | After half-a-day's journey from Thasos, Thucydides arrived at the port of {{Wiki|Eion}}, but was unable to retake Amphipolis. |
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| | Athens held Thucydides responsible for the loss of Amphipolis, and forced the general into exile. |
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| | In spite of Brasidas' achievements, Sparta did not send him reinforcements, which forged the general to negotiate a truce with Athens to hold on to the ground he'd gained. |
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| | '''Learn More:''' |
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| | In the 8th century BCE, silver and gold mines were discovered in the region of Thrace, piquing the interest of both the Thracians and the Greeks. |
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| | This discovery had a significant impact on the region's population and political organization. The Thracians had the slaves necesary to mine resources, but they lacked the experts and technicians to do so efficiently. Fortunately for them, the Greeks had the mining expertise they required – as well as wine, which was very appreciated by the Thracians. An alliance was born and the Thracians and Greeks lived and worked together to profit off the land's rich resources. |
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| |-|Eion Port= | | |-|Eion Port= |
| | [[File:DTAG - Hydria scene of soldier and horseman.png|thumb|250px|Black-figure hydria with scene of soldier and horseman / 560 BCE (Archaic Greece)]] |
| | The matter of how to deal with Amphipolis divided Athens. |
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| | The politician [[Nikias]], as well as the city of Sparta, hoped that peace could be negotiated. |
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| | However, the popular Athenian statesmen and general Kleon wanted to continue fighting the war. |
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| | Indecision continued untill 422 BCE, when Kleon as one of Athen's strategists. This decision made it clear that the city's people were in favor of war. |
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| | The truce was ended, and Kleon began his journey to Amphipolis, retaking small towns that had been conquered by Brasidas along the way. |
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| | On arriving at the port of Eion, Kleon requested troops from the {{Wiki|Perdiccas II of Macedon|King}} of [[Makedonia]]. |
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| | He's also hired several Thracian mercenaries to bolster his force's numbers. |
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| | Afterwards, all Kleon could do was wait for the remainder of his reinforcements. |
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| | '''Learn More:''' |
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| | Eion was a port located around five kilometers from Amphipolis. Possibly built by the Persiansm it eventually became the residence of a Persian governor. |
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| | Despite the Persians general retreat from the region in 480 BCE, a Persian garrison remained in Eion until 476 BCE. This was when Athens laid siege to the port in the hopes of gaining access to the area's mines, forests, and hinterlands. |
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| | The Athenian general leading the siege offered the Persians the chance to freely withdraw, but the offer wasn't accepted. According to Herodotos, when the Persians ran out of food, their commander {{Wiki|Boges}} killed his wife, children, concubines, and servants, dumped Eion's riches into the water, and then threw himself into the water, and then threw himself into the raging flames of a giant pyre. |
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| | Afterwards, the Athenians occupied Eion, but they were unable to exploit the nearby mines until the construction of AMphipolis decades later. |
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| |-|Kleon's Strategy= | | |-|Kleon's Strategy= |
| |-|Brasidas' Defense= | | |-|Brasidas' Defense= |