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The story of the Three Hundred Warriors of Sparta is synopsis:
In the 180th year of the 4th B.C., Xerxes I, the king of Persia, led an army of 500,000 to attack Greece, and Xerxes I also sent a letter of surrender to the Greek city-states, hoping that the small states would surrender without a fight; In order to resist a strong enemy, the brave king of Sparta, Leonidas, personally led a Greek coalition of about 7,000 troops assembled from all over the world, and took the lead in rushing to Thermopylae, holding the dangerous pass; Xerxes sent an elite army to attack the pass, the unprepared Greek defenders were quickly defeated, Leonidas in the case of the enemy, he personally led 300 Spartan warriors to the palace, and the surging tens of thousands of Persian troops changed the bloody fight to the death, and finally all 300 warriors were killed, and the Persian army also paid two in the battle of Thermopylae.
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Historical background: In 480 BC, Darius I's son Xerxes I personally led an army of 500,000 to conquer Greece, and the Greek city-states formed the Delian League led by Athens and the Peloponnesian League led by Sparta to resist strong enemies.
The Spartans were the main force in the land forces of the Greek coalition, and the Athenian fleet was the main force in the navy. The army was annihilated by the Persians at Thermopylae (300 Spartan warriors), but bought time for the build-up of the navy.
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In 480 B.C., the Persian army marched to Greece for the third time, and the Spartan king Leonidas led 300 warriors to defend the history of Thermopylae.
In 480 B.C., King Xerxes I of Persia led an army of 500,000 troops to attack Greece, all the way south to the Demobilee Pass. The king of Sparta, Leonidas, personally led the Greek coalition army to hold the terrain of Thermopylae, but the Greek defenders were quickly defeated, Leonidas ordered the main force of the Greek coalition to retreat quickly, and he personally led 300 Spartan warriors to the palace, and tens of thousands of Persian troops fought bloody to the death, in the end, these 300 warriors were all killed, and the Persian army paid a tragic price of 20,000 dead and wounded in the battle of Thermosciences.
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1. Which part of the history of the Spartan 300 warriors are talking about?
Answer: It is about the history of the third expedition of the Persian army to Greece in 480 BC, and the king of Sparta, Leonidas, led 300 warriors to defend the Thermopylae Pass.
2. Why did the Persians have Asian troops?
A: Ancient Iran formed the Persian Empire with Persia as the center.
3. What country is Persia? Is there still this home country now??
A: Ancient Persia is what is now Iran.
4. Greeks and Persians Who won the battle in the end?
Answer: Greece won the final victory, which was the battle of Salamis.
5. What book can you read about the history of Europe?
Answer: "Ancient History of Europe", "General History of the World".
Greco-Persian Wars Brief Overview:
In the 6th century BC, ancient Iran formed the Persian Empire centered on the Persians.
In the early 5th century BC, Persia wanted to control the Aegean region and made three expeditions to Greece, provoking the Greco-Persian Wars.
In 492 B.C., Persia made its first expedition, but due to its unfavorable birth, it retreated before reaching Greece.
In 490 BC, the Polish army made a second expedition and landed at Marathon. Athens hurriedly sent troops to Marathon to meet the enemy. The morale of the Athenian army was high, and they won the first battle with fewer victories.
They then sent their warrior Fidipitz back to Athens to report the good news. He ran the whole distance in one breath and told the Athenians that we were saved! Then he fell to the ground and died.
In honor of Fidipitz, today's Olympic Games have a special marathon running event.
In 480 BC, the Polish army made a third expedition to Greece, advancing from north to south on the Greek peninsula. King Leonidas of Sparta led the Greek army to stop the pass at Thermopylae, and finally he led 300 Spartan warriors to defend the pass. Due to the disparity in numbers, and because of the spies leading the way, the defenders died heroically.
The Persian army drove straight in, and Athens was in danger, evacuating the old and weak women and children, and mobilizing the navy to respond to the battle. Although Athens was lost, the Greek navy won a decisive victory in the straits west of Athens. The following year, the Persian army was driven out of Greece.
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In 480 BC, the Persians invaded Greece, and 300 Spartan soldiers went to the military fortress of Thermopylae, where they fought a bloody battle against invaders who were 100 times their size. The Persian soldiers pressed the border, and the Spartan soldiers were calm and calm, and after three days of bloody battle, all the warriors led by the Spartan king Leonidas died heroically. One legion, 300 warriors, the warrior spirit never dies!
There are many examples of fighting more with less in history, but the gap between the military strength of the two sides is so huge that they know that they can't do it, to paraphrase an old saying, "really a big husband" also. Shot in 1962, the picture quality is not bad. Remade in 2007.
In the Battle of Demobili in the Greco-Persian Wars, King Leonidas of Sparta defended the area with 300 warriors (along with about 2,000 slaves and auxiliaries) against the invasion of Xerxes in Persia. Later, due to the betrayal of the Greek traitors, it was copied by the Persian army.
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Persia wanted to occupy Sparta, and Leo (the leader of Sparta) became his subordinate (effort), and Sparta was a strong nation. They did not want to be slaves, so they selected 300 warriors to fight against the Persian army, and in the end all of them died, and only one came back to tell them that the sacrificed warriors had no complaints, and that their nation should unite against Persia.
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In 480 B.C., King Xerxes I (Rodrigo Santoro), king of Persia, led an army of 500,000 (claimed to be 5 million) and more than 1,000 warships to attack Greece. and all the way south to the Demobilly Pass.
Xerxes I also sent a letter of exhortation to the Greek city-states, hoping that the smaller states would surrender without a fight. This also includes the city of Sparta.
As a result, Xerxes's emissaries suffered from the revolt of many Greeks. At this time, in order to defend against a strong enemy, the brave king of Sparta, Leonidas (Gerard Butler), personally led about 7,000 Greek troops gathered from all over the world, and took the lead in rushing to Thermopylae, holding the dangerous pass.
On the other hand, the Persian army, which had already been greatly consumed in the fierce naval battle, was obviously unable to organize any strong offensive in a land battle in two days, so that the two armies were not on the verge of a close encounter.
But two days later, after the cunning Xerxes sent an elite force to attack the pass, the unprepared Greek defenders were quickly routed.
In order to preserve his strength, Leonidas ordered the main forces of the Greek coalition to retreat quickly in order to preserve his strength. He personally led three hundred Spartan warriors to the queen. Fought a bloody battle to the death against the surging tens of thousands of Persian troops.
In the end, all 300 warriors were killed, and the Persian army paid a heavy price of 20,000 dead and wounded in the battle of Thermopylae.
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The main historical deed of the Three Hundred Warriors is the Battle of Hot Springs.
Onsen Pass is a narrow passage that is easy to defend and difficult to attack, with the sea on one side and a steep mountain wall on the other. The village is near a hot spring, hence the name thermopylae. This is an inscription engraved on a lion-shaped monument that stands at the Demobil Pass (literally translated as Thermopylae Pass) in Greece and commemorates the Battle of Thermopylae Pass in 480 BC.
The Greek army relied on the advantageous terrain in this narrow pass and resisted for 3 days, blocking the Persian army, which was dozens of times larger than itself, but the Persian army was outnumbered, and after killing nearly 20,000 Persian troops (some records say 7,000), all 300 warriors died.
The Battle of Thermopylae was another historic confrontation between the Persian Empire and Ancient Greece 10 years after the Battle of Marathon in the First Polish-Greek War, and a famous battle in the Second Greco-Greek War.
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This is a real event, the famous Spartan Three Hundred Warriors, which took place at the Battle of Thermopuest.
Hot Springs Pass is a narrow passage that is easy to defend and difficult to attack. Because there is a hot spring near the village, it got the name thermopylae. This is an inscription engraved on a lion-shaped monument that stands at the Demobil Pass in Greece commemorating the Battle of Thermopylae Pass in 480 BC.
The Battle of Thermopylae was another historic confrontation between the Persian Empire and Ancient Greece after the Battle of Marathon, and it was also a famous battle in the Second Polish-Greek War. The Greek army relied on the advantageous terrain in this narrow pass and resisted for 3 days, blocking the Persian army, which was dozens of times larger than itself.
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。After killing nearly 20,000 Persian troops (some accounts say 7,000) at the Battle of Thermosciences, all 300 warriors were killed.
It is said that the Persians found only 298 corpses of Spartan citizens while cleaning up the battlefield. It turned out that there were two Spartans who did not participate in the battle. One is because of eye disease, and the other is because he is ordered to go out.
When they returned to Sparta after the war, the people of their homeland despised them and ignored them. One of them could not stand this humiliation and committed suicide. The other died in a later battle, but the Spartans refused to bury him in the graveyard of the glorious war dead.
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Yes, the Battle of Hot Springs Pass was a real thing, and the 300 warriors did die on the battlefield.
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Historically, there was indeed this battle, but not three hundred against hundreds of thousands, but seven thousand against twenty thousand.
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Based on the works of comic book master Frank Miller.
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No, but there are war elephant troops, and the Spartan 300 warriors are also changed according to history.
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To sum up, there is a lot of exaggeration, and there is also some fiction, of course, if it is completely realistic, no one will see it.
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Strange army? If you're not watching "This Is Not Sparta", it's true.
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