How 10,000 Greeks Defeated an Empire: The Epic Battle of Marathon 490 BC | DOCUMENTARY

Step back in time to 490 BC and witness one of history's most legendary battles - the Battle of Marathon. Discover how 10,000 Greek hoplites faced off against the might of the Persian Empire and emerged victorious against overwhelming odds.
In this video, we delve deep into the strategies, heroes, and aftermath of this pivotal clash that shaped Western civilization. Learn about the ingenious tactics of Miltiades, the bravery of the Greek soldiers, and the dramatic run of Pheidippides that inspired the modern marathon.
The Battle of Marathon was more than just a military engagement; it was a defining moment that showcased the resilience and tactical brilliance of the Greek forces. This victory not only safeguarded Athens but also laid the groundwork for the rise of Classical Greece, influencing the course of Western history.
This battle was created using Rome 2 Total War game engine and the following modifications:
Divide Et Impera
Legendary Empires HD - Greece
Larger Battlefield And Further Deployment Zones
DEI - Realistic Charges, Speed, And Mass
Orbis Terrarum II
Improved Environments
True Bronze ALPHA
More Realistic Units for DEI
Timecodes:
00:00 Introduction
00:34 The Persian Invasion
01:16 Composition of the Armies
02:49 Battle Strategies and Tactics
03:23 The Battle at Marathon
04:46 The Phalanx clash with the Persians
06:00 Greek center gives ground
08:12 Persian flanks collapse
08:44 Persian center retreats to the ships
10:18 Persian defeat
10:53 Marathon aftermath
Keywords:
Battle of Marathon, Greek history, Persian Empire, Miltiades, Pheidippides, Greek hoplites, ancient battles, historical battles, Greek-Persian Wars, Marathon 490 BC, military strategy, Greek victory, Western civilization.
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• The Battle of Thermopy...
Granicus: Where Alexander made history against the Persian Empire
• Battle of Granicus 334...
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Пікірлер: 79

  • @AdituLaudisMMXXI
    @AdituLaudisMMXXI10 күн бұрын

    Thanks for watching! Please comment, subscribe and hit that notification button to help out the channel!

  • @grahamcarter-nv1rm
    @grahamcarter-nv1rm3 күн бұрын

    As an example of how drastic and dire and critical the Greeks felt the situation was the skeleton of a 13 year old Plataean boy was found in the small burial mound for the Plataeans near the much larger Athenian burial mound Every man and boy was sent,it was life or death,freedom or slavery,freedom or death

  • @infoscholar5221
    @infoscholar522110 күн бұрын

    Who knew that the Ancients fought their battles to such sick beats!?

  • @wiscosteve
    @wiscosteve10 күн бұрын

    Greeks were awesome Alexander is my Hero

  • @suzukimethracer7796

    @suzukimethracer7796

    3 күн бұрын

    Alexander was a Macedonian close but not quite

  • @wiscosteve

    @wiscosteve

    3 күн бұрын

    @@suzukimethracer7796 ok he a Macedonian still my hero

  • @nikostheocharis592

    @nikostheocharis592

    2 күн бұрын

    @suzukimethracer7796 Macedonians were another Greek tribe. It was a bit different back then. Different tribes sharing same gods, same religion & same mentality. His father Phillip when he came to Athens to convince the Athenians to follow his to the war against the Persians, didn't use a translator, Spoke Greek and came to a debate with Dimosthenes, one of the Athenian leaders. If you ever be lucky and visit Phillip's grave at Aegae, everything is writers in ancient Greek. Aristotle taught Alexander and the other young aristocrat boys using Greek language and not Japanese or some other language. If you are referring to the Slavs of North Macedonia, they arrived in the area in 580AD more than 10000 years after. Have a look to the restoration of Phillip's palace. Everything is Greek.

  • @ioannispapaioannou6797

    @ioannispapaioannou6797

    2 күн бұрын

    ​@@suzukimethracer77963:14 And Aristotle's was speaking slavobulgarian bozo

  • @damnyourpasswords

    @damnyourpasswords

    13 сағат бұрын

    @@suzukimethracer7796 are you North Macedonian? you are the only ones in the world and history that say these incredible things. You are Slavs, that came centuries AFTER Alexander had died.

  • @mhoadievdelapaz3703
    @mhoadievdelapaz37038 сағат бұрын

    Simple:longer spears,metal armors/head gear and shields vs shorter spears,inferior armor and wooden shields.It's pointed out in the great book "The Soaring Spirit".

  • @RomulusBattles
    @RomulusBattles10 күн бұрын

    Awesome video, man 🔥 Keep up the good work 👍

  • @truckingmogul3254
    @truckingmogul32549 күн бұрын

    Another great video my friend! I love how you implemented facial closeups of the main characters. Keep up the great work!

  • @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    9 күн бұрын

    Thanks a bunch my friend!

  • @djcoolsymi4799
    @djcoolsymi47998 күн бұрын

    Miltiades was the first coach who play overlap by using side backs and wingers, 3-0 from first half

  • @user-dq2ve7sw7r
    @user-dq2ve7sw7r10 күн бұрын

    Nice video

  • @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    10 күн бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @giannisaussie1970
    @giannisaussie197012 сағат бұрын

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ Μπράβο στους αρχαίους Έλληνες προγόνους μας!!!

  • @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    9 сағат бұрын

    Hail

  • @axelfricotte
    @axelfricotte8 күн бұрын

    these ancient greecs are astounding , living in cities that could be ennemies and I don't understand how they constitued a civilisation finally .

  • @nikolaosmarkouizos4597

    @nikolaosmarkouizos4597

    Сағат бұрын

    progress comes through competition lol

  • @albertocastillo5763
    @albertocastillo57634 күн бұрын

    The greek strategy was flawless. They waited until the cavalry and part of the infantry were on board to attack.

  • @LetsSeeYourKungFu
    @LetsSeeYourKungFu10 күн бұрын

    always an amazing presentation. well done. though your AI butchered Milthiades name, lol. still awesome

  • @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    10 күн бұрын

    My bad

  • @henrykneczaj3594
    @henrykneczaj35942 күн бұрын

    Nice

  • @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    2 күн бұрын

    Thanks

  • @drahonmapping
    @drahonmapping9 күн бұрын

    Bir şey soracağım. İstanbulun fethi animasyonunu hangi uygulamadan yaptın?

  • @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    7 күн бұрын

    Attila Total War

  • @494sotos

    @494sotos

    Күн бұрын

    CONSTANTINOPLE IS OUR PERMANENT AND TRUEL CAPITAL.YOU KNOW BETTER THEN US THAT YOUR PRESENCE IN THE ENTIRE ANATOLIA IS TEMPORARY .JUST PREPARE FOR YOUR SELFS TO FUCKING GO BACK TO MONGOLIA WHERE CAME FROM .JUST REMEMBER WHAT HAPPENED TO YOU IN THE AEGEAN DURING THE SYMMER 2020.YOUR COUNT DOWN HAS BEGAN.BY THE WAY WHY DON'T YOU ALL APPLY FOR A DNA TEST TO FIND OUT WHO REALLY ARE?I KNOW SUCH A TEST IS STRICTLY FORBITTEN BY THE TURKISH RAGIME .TO BE TAKEN.AND MY QUESTION IS:WHY?SCIENTIFIC RECERCHES FROM ALL OVER THE GLOBE PROVE THAT WE ARE SOLID HELLINES BY 99% .HARD TO BE ACCEPTED BUT ENTIRELY TRUE .

  • @sandybeach3576
    @sandybeach3576Күн бұрын

    The good old days 😅

  • @mrlodwick
    @mrlodwick10 күн бұрын

    mIGHTY gREEKS

  • @samym1694
    @samym169410 күн бұрын

    Soo when's Battle of Kadesh under Total War:Pharaoh engine?

  • @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    10 күн бұрын

    It will be a while. I just did this battle

  • @mohsenmoradi7752
    @mohsenmoradi775210 күн бұрын

    Long live freedom and peace Friendship and competition should be permanent

  • @max-palmer-adj
    @max-palmer-adj10 күн бұрын

    Cannae ahh strategy

  • @RickGamer123
    @RickGamer12310 күн бұрын

    Hello.!

  • @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    10 күн бұрын

    What's up?

  • @petersclafani4370
    @petersclafani43708 сағат бұрын

    I was station 8 mi from marathon

  • @ramazannkorkmaz
    @ramazannkorkmazКүн бұрын

    güzel video. ama bir hiç bir yunan bir TÜRK kadar olamaz. ηρέμησε γείτονα 💐

  • @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    Күн бұрын

    This video is not about turks my friend

  • @ramtin5152
    @ramtin515210 күн бұрын

    If Darius The Great really wanted to conquer the whole Greece he wouldn't have sent only 26,000-30,000 men Conquering Greece was actually Xerxes' (his son) goal That army was there for Eretrians, Athens and some other minor cities or islands that aided the Ionians in their revolt Not only they'd interfered in the matters of his own empire but one of Darius son in laws (if I'm not mistaken) died fighting the rebels Maybe the Greeks saw it natural for them to help a fellow Greek (even though almost all of their city states were at war for centuries) but they had no right, lands or territories in Ionina both in reality and in Darius eyes Him sending an army to retaliate was a logical action not something he did out of greed

  • @ReZw7a

    @ReZw7a

    10 күн бұрын

    facts

  • @wardafournello

    @wardafournello

    10 күн бұрын

    Ionia was colonized from the Bronze Age, by Greek colonists, free people. The Achaemenid Empire was founded 1000 years later. The Persians paid dearly for their audacity to violate the freedom of these people. Facts.

  • @ramtin5152

    @ramtin5152

    10 күн бұрын

    @@wardafournello Ionians were conquered by the Lydians first, not the Persians And don't act as if Greeks didn't conquer or took other people's freedom from them The Achaemenids were tolerant rulers who allowed their subjects, Persian or not, to practice their cultures and religions while Greeks were the true slavers who saw themselves superior to everyone including the Macedonians (who were also Greek) and later even Romans They tried to Hellenise the people they conquered unlike the Persians who didn't force their culture or religion on others Cyrus The Great offered Ionians a chance to fight against their overlords when the Lydians invaded his empire, they refused and helped the Lydians and naturally, a ruler wouldn't have turned a blind eye on that The Persians conquered the Ionians along with their overlords And the Greeks paid a heavier price by invading Iranian lands Remember the Parthians The semi nomadic people from a small kingdom who destroyed the largest Greek empire (Seleucid empire) and the largest Hellenic kingdom (Greco Bactria) after Alexander After that, the Greeks went under Iranian, Roman and Turkish rule for over 2,000 years

  • @wardafournello

    @wardafournello

    9 күн бұрын

    @@ramtin5152 "Persians tolerant rulers"??!!! lol . "Greeks took other people's freedom"??!! lol. The Greeks taught other peoples what freedom is. Divine Greece ,long live Hellas.

  • @ramtin5152

    @ramtin5152

    9 күн бұрын

    @@wardafournello Yes and it's literally one of many things that the Achaemenid empire is known for ever since the reign of Cyrus The Great who was respected even by Alexander Plus they respected and gave their women way more rights than Greeks gave to their own If they weren't tolerant rulers then they would have done what arab muslims and Mongols did to the conquered people Yes, they were not innocent and not kind to the ones who rebelled but Alexander, Romans and others were the same if not more brutal Oh please don't try to make it seem as if ancient Greeks were saints Claiming that they were innocent pacifist people whether before or after the Persians arrived is the most delusional thing someone could say They either conquered each other or other people Greeks slavery was way more brutal than any kind of slavery in the Achaemenid empire Take a look at what the slaves in Sparta went through It's just one example out of many

  • @ReZw7a
    @ReZw7a10 күн бұрын

    as persian i think Datis is even more fool than Crassus. he rather didnt see the flanks that were obviously collapsing and didnt use the man in reserve that he have in center to strength the flanks or he is just and idiot. but NGL good play by the greeks though.

  • @suzukimethracer7796

    @suzukimethracer7796

    3 күн бұрын

    Yes you had the numbers definitely lucky Sparta could not make it or could have been worse

  • @ReZw7a

    @ReZw7a

    3 күн бұрын

    @@suzukimethracer7796 you? lol talking like i was in command. its not about sparta or athens or any other greek city states they had bad general every body with little knowledge of ancient/medieval warfare knows that if you get attacked in rear you are done even the army will lose moral dosent matter in numbers.

  • @petrosstayroy6115
    @petrosstayroy611510 күн бұрын

    ΕΧΕΤΛΤΑΙΟΣ

  • @tabularasa7350
    @tabularasa73504 күн бұрын

    Sparta was corrupt to the core, Athenians had to fend for themselves several times in that war.

  • @Ulises-Gonzalez-3131
    @Ulises-Gonzalez-313110 күн бұрын

    ¡Ajú, ajú! ggg.

  • @nezperce2767
    @nezperce27672 күн бұрын

    In Marathon battle were 600 ships. Should you do the maths that's 42 soldiers on every ship. I do believe that us something missing. Eitger they were more ( army) or someone lost counting. At any rate, they were stpped there thus no farsi belly dance or knees and foreheads on the ground until the king of kings decision who is going to live and who's going to die, for all of us in europe. Main reason the greejs went to persia a few times after that. Last time just before the romans. Whenever the easteners aren't dealt with turks are to be found outside vienna

  • @milkmonster2310
    @milkmonster231010 күн бұрын

    Video title is somewhat hyperbolic. The Greeks didn't "defeat an empire" at Marathon as Alexander would do that later. Darius I was a solid general and it would have been interesting had he attempted to take all of Greece rather than his idiot son Xerxes.

  • @persimmontea6383
    @persimmontea638310 күн бұрын

    this doesn't have much to do with the story as told by Herodotus ....

  • @albertocastillo5763
    @albertocastillo57634 күн бұрын

    Wrong. Both armies formed perpendicular to the shoreline

  • @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    2 күн бұрын

    interesting

  • @amindadashtorkmen
    @amindadashtorkmen8 күн бұрын

    😂Alexander is a legend, Herodotus says he reached Iran in 4 days, it was winter, how is it possible for him to cross the mountains, before conquering the cities of Syria, Lydia, and so on. It took him 4 days to reach Persepolis, so let's be honest! Was Persepolis the capital of Cyrus?! Susa was the center of the Achaemenid Empire. Alexander grew up in Cyrus's palace as a child, and Cyrus was taken hostage by the son of Emperor Cyrus. In order not to rebel against him, this is also true!!! The name of the empire was Esi Kochuluchi😂

  • @francoguerrieri286
    @francoguerrieri2864 күн бұрын

    chi difende la propria terra ha una forza in più vedi i russi a stalingrado

  • @salvatoretotoriina9523
    @salvatoretotoriina95233 күн бұрын

    Drapaj si mevot

  • @brucepoole8552
    @brucepoole855210 күн бұрын

    Proof that slavery dosnt do well

  • @ramtin5152

    @ramtin5152

    9 күн бұрын

    Greeks were practicing slavery way more than the Achaemenids The whole Greco Persian war started because Athens and Eretrians interfered in the matters of the Achaemenid empire If Darius The Great really wanted to conquer the whole Greece he wouldn't have sent only 26,000-30,000 men Conquering Greece was actually Xerxes' (his son) goal That army was there for Eretrians, Athens and some other minor cities or islands that aided the Ionians in their revolt Not only they'd interfered in the matters of his own empire but one of Darius son in laws (if I'm not mistaken) died fighting the rebels Maybe the Greeks saw it natural for them to help a fellow Greek (even though almost all of their city states were at war for centuries) but they had no right, lands or territories in Ionina both in reality and in Darius eyes Him sending an army to retaliate was a logical action not something he did out of greed

  • @vansfix7013
    @vansfix7013Сағат бұрын

    Why did the Greeks win? Because 10000 free people fought against 30000 slaves...

  • @augustiniumihaila4466
    @augustiniumihaila44665 күн бұрын

    My friend ..... when on earth persians rulled over odrysians and getians? They got their asses kicked harder than Marathon when they tried to invade... Stop forging history!

  • @awaragard-mu8mv
    @awaragard-mu8mvКүн бұрын

    How they created fabricated stories

  • @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    Күн бұрын

    Such as?

  • @hamid.r.salehi
    @hamid.r.salehi10 күн бұрын

    Die Griechen waren sehr tapfer, aber solange die Geschichte nur aus den griechischen Quellen sind 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @ilipap3695

    @ilipap3695

    10 күн бұрын

    why the story only comes from the Greek sources ? The persians didnt write anything for the grecopersian wars ? unfortunately for you, Muhammad was not born yet. to write history as he wants.

  • @hamid.r.salehi

    @hamid.r.salehi

    10 күн бұрын

    @@ilipap3695 Doch, die Iraner hatten die größte Bibliothek der damaligen Zeit, die Alexander der Schwanzlitscher in Brand gesteckt hat. Nur seltsam ist, so bald aber die Geschichte nicht mehr von nur einer einzigen Quelle, nämlich nur griechische Quellen, berichtet wird, hat man ein anderes Bild von Iranern. Aber nebenbei erwähnt .... wenn die Griechen so tapfer waren, wieso haben sie nicht mehr tapfer gekämpft gegen Römer, Araber und Türken, während Iraner 750 Jahre gegen die Römer, über 200 Jahre gegen die Araber und 500 Jahre gegen die Türken Krieg geführt haben ??? Eine Frage eben 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔

  • @amindadashtorkmen
    @amindadashtorkmen8 күн бұрын

    Please laugh at me, which Greek army has been able to defeat Iran so far?! My friend, Byzantium, don't lie to me, don't trust anyone's words, refer to your intellect, see our documents and then talk, ten thousand people were fighting against a hundred thousand people, field warriors, and cavalry, whoever you are.😂

  • @tommymorrison6478
    @tommymorrison647810 күн бұрын

    Superficial BS from amateurs eager to make a few dollars. We get too much of this stuff.

  • @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    @AdituLaudisMMXXI

    10 күн бұрын

    Do better

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