2012:fall-of-miletus
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====== Fall of Miletus ====== | ====== Fall of Miletus ====== | ||
- | For the fall of Miletus, Herodotus employs dramatic narrative | + | < |
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+ | ==== Authored by Frank Redmond, 2006 ==== | ||
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+ | For the fall of Miletus, Herodotus employs dramatic narrative. He tells us that Miletus is expecting to be heavily attacked by the Persians both by land and sea. The Persians are uniting their forces together to attack Miletus, which means they are ignoring smaller engagements. Meanwhile the Ionians gather together and decide to uniformally defend Miletus by taking up position on the island of Lade, which is opposite the coast of Miletus. Upon arrival, the Persians see that the Ionians have a greater force than they expected, so they try to use the former tyrants of the Ionians to convince the Ionian people to surrender or else their towns will all be reduced to rubble and slavery. The narrative heightens as the Ionians firmly refuse the offer. The Ionian leader Dionysius says that "our fate balances on a razor' |
2012/fall-of-miletus.1347414063.txt.gz · Last modified: 2014/01/14 22:46 (external edit)