Battle of Eretria

The naval Battle of Eretria, between Sparta and Athens, took place in September 411 BC, off the coast of Euboea.

Battle of Eretria
Part of the Peloponnesian War
DateSeptember 411 BC
Location
off the coast of Euboea
Result Spartan victory
Belligerents
Athens Sparta
Commanders and leaders
Hegesandridas
Strength
36 ships 42 ships
Casualties and losses
22 ships Minimal

Background

During the spring of 411 BC, the Eretrians drove the Athenians out of Oropos with the help of the Boeotians. This city was a strategic point for Athens because it allowed them to control all of Euboea. Moreover, all the commercial traffic was made through the city. The Eretrians would hope that Sparta would help them to end the Athenian rule on Euboea.

Battle

By the end of the summer 411 BC, a large Spartan fleet sailed towards Euboea. The Athenians tried to prevent the Euboeans from switching sides by sending a squadron to Eretria. However, the Eretrians supported the Spartans. While the Athenians were in the harbour of Eretria in order to supply themselves, the Eretrians informed the Spartan admiral Hegesandridas by a signal fire that it was an appropriate time to attack. The Athenians hurriedly embarked but were defeated during the naval battle which followed. The Athenians who tried to take refuge in Eretria were killed by the town's inhabitants. Only those who decided to go to the Athenian fort in Eretria (which was likely on the Pezonisi Peninsula) survived.

Aftermath

Following the battle, almost all of Euboea switched sides. Then there was a huge debate as to whether the Athenians would take them back, ending up in a massacre of Eretrians.

Sources

gollark: As far as I'm aware, and my knowledge of this is very minimal, physics just gives you a probability distribution of what might happen in a quantum thing and there are a bunch of interpretations of how that actually translates into reality.
gollark: You could try GitHub Pages if your thing is lowish traffic.
gollark: I didn't either until I happened to run into it while duckduckgoing stuff.
gollark: It seems like it could work pretty easily as a simple static site.
gollark: I'm very bored and have some web design knowledge, so I'm kind of tempted to try and make a fixed modern version now...

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.