Thermopylae, Marathon: though fought 2,500 years ago in Ancient Greece,
the names of these battles are more familiar to many than battles fought
in the last half-century; but our concept of the men who fought in these
battles may be more a product of Hollywood than Greece.
Shaped by the landscape in which they fought, the warriors of Ancient
Greece were mainly heavy infantry. While Bronze Age Greeks fought as
individuals, for personal glory, the soldiers of the Classical city
states fought as hoplites, armed with long spears and large shields, in
an organized formation called the phalanx.
As well as fighting among themselves, notably the thirty-year
Peloponnesian War fought between Athens and Sparta and immortalized by
Thucydides, the city states came together to fight outside threats. The
Persian Wars lasted nearly half a century, and saw the Greek armies come
together to fend off several massive Persian forces both on land and at
sea.
This book sketches the change from heroic to hoplite warfare, and
discusses the equipment and training of both the citizen soldiers of
most Greek cities, and the professional soldiers of Sparta.