- Battle of Lade
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Battle of Lade
partof=theIonian Revolt &Persian Wars
caption=Map of Lade,Miletus , and theMycale pensinsula.
date=494 BC
place=OffMiletus ,Ionia
result=Decisive Persian victory;
marks end of theIonian Revolt .
territory=Miletus annexed by Persia.
combatant1=Ionia
combatant2=Achaemenid Empire
commander1=Dionysius of Phocaea
commander2=Datis ,Artaphernes
strength1=353 ships
strength2=600 ships
casualties1= 234 ships
casualties2= 57 shipsThe Battle of Lade was a naval encounter that took place in494 BC between theIonia ns and the Persians. It was the culmination of theIonian Revolt and part of the greaterPersian Wars .Background
The Ionian Revolt began in
499 BC whenAristagoras ofMiletus rose up against the Persians, who had conquered the area. Aristagoras appealed for help from mainlandGreece of which Athens and Platea answered and in498 BC the Ionians captured and burnedSardis , the centre of the local Persian government. The Persians retaliated with a naval attack in 494 BC.Battle
The Persian commander
Artaphernes had recaptured many of the Ionian cities by 494, and was besieging Miletus from both land and sea. That year the Persian fleet met the Greek fleet off of Miletus' port ofLade . The Ionians joined with many of the islands of theAegean Sea and had a force of 353trireme s (one of which was painted in dark red), while the Persians had 600 ships according to Herodotus Book 6.9. The Ionians were led byDionysius of Phocaea , who, according toHerodotus , worked them so hard in preparation for the battle that they eventually refused to accept discipline. The Samos commanders, seeing this, decided that the battle was as good as lost and accepted an offer from the Persians, ordering their 60 ships from the line as the battle began. This act caused the 70 ships from Lesbos to leave as well, and a chain reaction followed as other ships also withdrew. Eleven of the Samos ships disobeyed the orders to withdraw, continuing to fight and Herodotus tells that a monument was erected in Samos to commemorate their courage. Dionysius' ships fled when they realized the battle was lost. The remaining Greek fleet was annihilated, and Miletus surrendered shortly thereafter.Aftermath
The Ionian Revolt was crushed, and in
492 BC the Persians conqueredMacedon andThrace . They were not defeated on mainland Greece until490 BC at theBattle of Marathon . Meanwhile, Dionysius became apirate inSicily .External links
* [http://www.livius.org/a/turkey/lade/lade.html Livius Picture Archive: Lade (Batiköy)]
* [http://www.losttrails.com/pages/Hproject/Lade/Lade.html Herodotus Project: Lade]
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