Battle of Cnidus

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Battle of Cnidus
Part of Corinthian War

A Greek trireme
Date 394 BC
Location Off the coast of Cnidus, in the Aegean Sea
Result Decisive Athenian victory
Combatants
Athens
Persia (with a subdued Phoenician, Cilician, and Greek fleet)
Sparta
Commanders
Conon,
Pharnabazus[citation needed]
Peisander
Strength
90 triremes 85 triremes
Casualties
Minimal Entire fleet
Corinthian War
HaliartusNemeaCnidusCoroneaLechaeum

The Battle of Cnidus (394 BC), was a joint Athenian and Persian and operation against the Spartan naval fleet in the Corinthian War. A combined Athenian-Persian fleet, led by the former Greek admiral Conon, destroyed the Spartan fleet led by the inexperienced Peisander, ending Sparta's brief bid for naval supremacy.

The battle outcome was a significant boost for the anti-Spartan coalition that resisted Spartan hegemony in the course of the Corinthian War.

Contents

[edit] Prelude

In 394 BC, King Agesilaus II of Sparta and his army were recalled from Ionia to the Greek mainland to help fight the Corinthian War. The Spartan fleet, under Peisander, also began to return to Greece, sailing out from its harbor at Cnidus.

Meanwhile, the Athenian-Persian fleet, under the joint command of Conon and the Persian satrap Pharnabazus[citation needed] sailed out from the Chersonese to oppose the Spartans. The fleets met near Cnidus.

[edit] The battle

Sources are vague for the events of the battle itself. It appears that the Spartan fleet encountered advance elements of the Athenian fleet and engaged them with some success. Then the main body of the Persian fleet arrived and put the Spartans to flight, forcing them to beach many of their ships. The Spartans lost their entire fleet, with heavy casualties; 50 Spartan triremes were captured by the Persians. Peisander was killed while fighting to defend his ship.

[edit] Aftermath

This battle ended the Spartans' attempt to establish a naval empire. Sparta never again engaged in major military efforts at sea, and within a few years Athens had reclaimed her place as the preeminent Greek sea power.

Following his victory, Conon took his fleet to Athens, where he supervised the rebuilding of the long walls, which had been destroyed at the end of the Peloponnesian War.

With Sparta removed from the scene, Persia reestablished its dominance over Ionia and parts of the Aegean. The Peace of Antalcidas in 387 BC officially ceded control of these areas to Persia; it would continue to hold them until the arrival of Alexander the Great half a century later.

[edit] References

  • Xenophon, Hellenica
  • Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca Historia

[edit] External links

  • The relevant passage from Xenophon.
  • The relevant passage from Diodorus Siculus.
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