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The Battle of Marathon 490 B.C.: Miltiades, the Hoplite Charge, and the Birth of Strategic Defense. Epic Battles of Ancient History, #6
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8233578304
- EAN9798233578304
- Date de parution10/03/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurLinda Balsamo
Résumé
At Marathon in 490 B. C., the survival of Greece was decided in a single charge. The Persian Empire had already destroyed the city of Eretria and landed a powerful expeditionary force on the plain of Marathon. Athens faced the prospect of invasion, political collapse, and the return of tyranny under Persian authority. Against the might of the empire stood a single citizen army supported by a small contingent from Plataea.
This book examines the Battle of Marathon not as a patriotic legend, but as a decisive military problem. It analyzes how terrain, timing, and deliberate battlefield design allowed a smaller force to confront and defeat a numerically superior army. At the center of the study stands Miltiades, whose command decisions transformed a dangerous strategic situation into one of the most decisive victories in ancient warfare.
Through a structured reconstruction of the engagement, the book explores the geography of the Marathon plain, the deployment of the opposing armies, the famous hoplite charge across the battlefield, and the tactical maneuver in which the strengthened Greek wings overwhelmed the Persian flanks and turned inward against the center. Drawing on ancient sources and modern military analysis, this study presents Marathon as a case of disciplined command, strategic initiative, and the effective use of terrain against imperial power.
More than a famous battle, Marathon demonstrates a timeless principle of warfare: cohesion, leadership, and decisive action can overcome numerical superiority. This book is written for readers of ancient history, military strategy, and classical warfare who seek clear analysis beyond myth and legend.
This book examines the Battle of Marathon not as a patriotic legend, but as a decisive military problem. It analyzes how terrain, timing, and deliberate battlefield design allowed a smaller force to confront and defeat a numerically superior army. At the center of the study stands Miltiades, whose command decisions transformed a dangerous strategic situation into one of the most decisive victories in ancient warfare.
Through a structured reconstruction of the engagement, the book explores the geography of the Marathon plain, the deployment of the opposing armies, the famous hoplite charge across the battlefield, and the tactical maneuver in which the strengthened Greek wings overwhelmed the Persian flanks and turned inward against the center. Drawing on ancient sources and modern military analysis, this study presents Marathon as a case of disciplined command, strategic initiative, and the effective use of terrain against imperial power.
More than a famous battle, Marathon demonstrates a timeless principle of warfare: cohesion, leadership, and decisive action can overcome numerical superiority. This book is written for readers of ancient history, military strategy, and classical warfare who seek clear analysis beyond myth and legend.























