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A century

5th century BC

2 stories from this century.

The Cabinet June 27, 2026 · Thermopylae

The 300 Spartans Who Held the Pass at Thermopylae for Three Days in 480 BCE and Were Killed to a Man When Their Position Was Outflanked

King Leonidas I of Sparta and approximately 7,000 allied Greek troops held the narrow pass of Thermopylae against the Persian invasion army of Xerxes I for three days in August 480 BCE. A Greek defector named Ephialtes showed the Persians a flanking mountain path on the evening of the second day. Leonidas dismissed most of the allied troops on the third morning. The 300 Spartans, plus about 700 Thespians and 400 Thebans who refused to retreat, were killed at the pass.

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The Footnote June 27, 2026 · Dardanelles

The Persian Emperor Who Ordered His Engineers Beheaded and the Sea Itself Flogged After a Storm Broke His Pontoon Bridge in 480 BCE

Xerxes I of Persia ordered the Hellespont — the strait between Europe and Asia at modern Dardanelles — to be bridged in spring 480 BCE for his invasion of Greece. A storm destroyed the first bridge. Xerxes had the engineers beheaded, ordered the sea given 300 lashes, and had a pair of fetters thrown into the water. The second bridge held.

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