Battle of Lade
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Battle of Lade | |||||||||
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Part of the Ionian Revolt & Persian Wars | |||||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||||
Ionia | Achaemenid Empire | ||||||||
Commanders | |||||||||
Dionysius of Phocaea | Datis, Artaphernes |
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Strength | |||||||||
353 ships | 600 ships | ||||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||||
234 ships | 57 ships |
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The Battle of Lade was a naval encounter that took place in 494 BC between the Ionians and the Persians. It was the culmination of the Ionian Revolt and part of the greater Persian Wars.
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[edit] Background
The Ionian Revolt began in 499 BC when Aristagoras of Miletus rose up against the Persians, who had conquered the area. Aristagoras appealed for help from mainland Greece, and in 498 BC the Athenians captured and burned Sardis, the centre of the local Persian government. The Persians retaliated with a naval attack in 494 BC.
[edit] 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 of Lade. The Ionians joined with many of the islands of the Aegean Sea and had a force of 353 triremes (one of which was painted in dark red), while the Persians had 600 ships according to Herodotus Book 6.9. The Ionians were led by Dionysius of Phocaea, who, according to Herodotus, worked them so hard in preparation for the battle that for some time they refused to fight. As the battle began, many of the Ionian ships were still refusing to engage the Persians; upon realizing this, 49 ships from Samos left the line. This act caused the 70 ships from Lesbos to leave as well, and a chain reaction followed as other ships also withdrew. Dionysius' ships fled when they realized the battle was lost. The remaining Greek fleet was annihilated, and Miletus surrendered shortly thereafter.
[edit] Aftermath
The Ionian Revolt was crushed, and in 492 BC the Persians conquered Macedon and Thrace. They were not defeated on mainland Greece until 490 BC at the Battle of Marathon. Meanwhile, Dionysius became a pirate in Sicily.