<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LII">CHAPTER LII<br/> <span class="subhead">THE BATTLE OF PLATAEA</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">Mardonius</span> stayed with his troops in Thessaly during the
winter months. But in the spring of 479 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> he determined
to win Athens from the league which she had formed with
the other Greek states, or if he failed to do this, to drive the
citizens once again away from their city and occupy it
himself.</p>
<p>So he sent an ambassador to the Athenians to offer, in the
name of Xerxes, not only to repair all the harm that the
Persians had done to Athens and to the country round about
the city, but to give them new lands and to treat them as
independent allies, if they would make a treaty with the
great king.</p>
<p>The Spartans were afraid that the Athenians would
accept so generous an offer, and they knew that alone they
could not hope to conquer the large Persian army which
Mardonius commanded. So they sent to the Athenians to
beg them to be true to the league, promising that if they were
so, Spartan soldiers would be sent to help them against the
attacks of the enemy.</p>
<p>But the Athenians did not need to be entreated to refuse
the offer of the great king, for they loved their city and their
liberty.</p>
<p>‘Tell Mardonius,’ they said to the ambassador whom
the Persian general had sent, ‘so long as the sun moves in
his present course we will never come to terms with Xerxes.’</p>
<p>After receiving this defiant message, Mardonius marched
with his army against Athens. The Spartans, in spite of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
their promises, sent no troops to defend the city, and
the Athenians were forced once again to take refuge at
Salamis.</p>
<p>Then they reproached the Spartans, and in bitter anger
they declared that if an army was not sent at once to Attica
to attack Mardonius, they would be forced to make an
alliance with the enemy.</p>
<p>Again the Spartans grew alarmed for their own safety.
Without further delay they sent a force of five thousand
citizens, each attended by seven helots. Other troops soon
followed, and all were under the command of Pausanias,
who was a relation of Leonidas, the hero of Thermopylae.</p>
<p>The Persians had reached the province of Boeotia and
were encamped on the plain of Plataea, while the Athenians
and the Spartans set up their camp on a hill above the
enemy.</p>
<p>Masistius, the favourite and most famous officer of the
Persians, led his cavalry against the cavalry of the enemy and
soon a fierce conflict was raging. Only after their leader fell
wounded from his horse and was slain, were the Persians
repulsed. The armour of Masistius could not be pierced
by any weapon, but a spear which was thrust into his eye
caused his death. In vain the soldiers tried to recover the
body of their general, again and again they were driven
back.</p>
<p>‘Then there was a great mourning throughout the army
of the Persians, for all lamented for Masistius, shaving
themselves and their horses, and their beasts of burden.
And there was a great cry through all the host, and the
sound of it went through all Boeotia, as for the death of one
who next to Mardonius was of most note among the Persians
and with the king.’</p>
<p>As for the Greeks, after having driven the Persian
cavalry from the field, they ‘became much more bold and
cheerful, and putting the dead body of Masistius on a car,
they drew it along their ranks; and so wonderful was it for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span>
its stature and its beauty, that the men left their places and
came forward to look upon Masistius.’</p>
<p>Pausanias now determined to lead his troops down to the
plain. Here he encamped, opposite the Persians, with only
the little river Asopus between the two armies.</p>
<p>The oracles had foretold that the side which began the
attack would be conquered; so day after day passed, neither
army daring to move.</p>
<p>But although the Persians dared not attack the Greeks,
they did them all the harm that they could, for they filled
up the springs to which the enemy went for water, and cut
off several convoys with provisions.</p>
<p>Pausanias was in despair when the water supply was
stopped, and he determined to withdraw and take up a
position nearer to Plataea, where both food and water would
be secure.</p>
<p>Discipline had grown slack in the Greek camp, and the
retreat, which began at night, was carried out in a disorderly
manner.</p>
<p>One company set off in haste, but did not halt where
Pausanias had arranged that it should. The Spartans
refused to move at all. One of their captains, ‘lifting a
piece of rock with both hands and flinging it at the feet of
Pausanias, cried, “Thus do I cast my vote against the counsel
of flying from the strangers.”’ Only when the retreat was
nearly ended did the Spartans tardily obey the order to
withdraw. This was how it happened that, when morning
dawned, the Persians found that the enemy had disappeared,
all but the Spartans, whose captain had delayed to follow
the orders of Pausanias.</p>
<p>When Mardonius caught sight of the loiterers he ordered
his men to set out in pursuit of them, and before the Spartans
could get into position the Persians were upon them. But
Pausanias soon learned what was taking place in his rear,
and he hastened back with the troops that were with him
to aid the disobedient Spartans.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span></p>
<p>The Persians had thrust their shields into the ground to
form a rough barrier between them and the Spartans, while
they sent shower after shower of arrows upon the loiterers.
The Spartans soon tore down the breastwork of shields,
and with their swords in their hands advanced upon the
enemy.</p>
<p>Mardonius did all he could to encourage his men, but
they had no armour to protect them from the blows of the
Spartans, and they were forced back toward the river,
throwing into confusion those of their own army who were
still advancing.</p>
<p>In the thick of the battle Mardonius rode on a white
horse, surrounded by ten thousand chosen Persians. He
was easily known by his white charger, and many were the
spears that were aimed at him by the angry Spartans. At
length one smote him so that he fell dead to the ground.
‘Thus,’ says Herodotus, ‘Mardonius paid the recompence
for the murder of Leonidas.’</p>
<p>No sooner was their leader slain than the Persians fled
in utter confusion, all but forty thousand who were led off
the field by one of the generals, and these marching north
reached the Hellespont and crossed over to Asia in safety.</p>
<p>Those who fled from the field took refuge in their camp,
where the Spartans attacked them. But the barricades were
strong, and the camp was not taken until the Athenians had
returned and joined in the assault.</p>
<p>As the Greeks swarmed into the camp they slaughtered
the enemy without mercy. So severe was the defeat of
Plataea that the Persians were utterly crushed.</p>
<p>The spoil in the camp was enormous. Gold and silver
dishes were there in abundance, rich carpets too, and weapons
inlaid with precious stones. Horses, camels, mules were
captured in great numbers.</p>
<p>It is told that the great king had left his own magnificent
war camp for Mardonius to use.</p>
<p>When Pausanias saw it ‘all blazing with gold and silver<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span>
and embroidered hangings, he commanded the cooks and
bakers to make ready for him a banquet, as they had been
used to do for Mardonius.</p>
<p>When all was ready, he saw couches and tables of gold
and silver, all fairly spread and a banquet splendidly set
forth; and then, marvelling at this magnificence and glory,
he charged his own servants, by way of mockery, to prepare
a Spartan feast.</p>
<p>So the meal was made ready, but it looked not much like
the other, and Pausanias laughed, and sending for the generals
of the Greeks, pointed to the two banquets, saying, ‘Men of
Hellas, I have brought you together that ye may see the
madness of the Medes, who faring thus sumptuously came to
rob us of our sorry food.’</p>
<p>While the battle of Plataea was being fought, the Greek
fleet was lying at Delos, an island in the Ægean Sea. The
Persian fleet was near Samos, which is not far from the coast
of Africa, while close at hand, at Cape Mycale, the Persian
land forces were encamped.</p>
<p>The Samians were afraid when they saw the Persian
army, and begged the Greeks to come to their aid. This
they readily agreed to do, and sailing to Cape Mycale
they landed and attacked and burned the Persian camp.
The victory would have been harder to win had not the
Ionian Greeks who were with the Persians deserted and
fought with those of their own race.</p>
<p>Both the victory of Plataea and that of Mycale were said
to have been gained on the same day in August 479 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span></p>
<p>Bands of Persians had still to be driven from some of
the islands of the Ægean and from some of the Greek cities
in Asia. But the victory of Mycale freed the Ionians from
the rule of the great king, ended the Persian war, and laid the
foundations of the Athenian Empire.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span></p>
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