The Greco-Persian Wars are a series of…
621 BCE to 478 BCE
The Greco-Persian Wars are a series of conflicts between several Greek city-states and the Persian Empire that start in 499 BCE and last until 448 BCE.
The Ionian cities, with the nominal support of Athens and other mainland Greek cities, revolt against Persia, killing or expelling many of the Persian-installed tyrants.
The Persians sack Miletus, thus gaining control of the Aegean and suppressing the six-year rebellion.
Groups
Phoenicians
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Medes
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Ionians
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Dorians
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Aeolians
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Hallstatt culture
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Cimmerians
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Greece, classical
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Persian people
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Assyrian people
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Carthage, Kingdom of
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Scythians, or Sakas
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Chinese Kingdom, Zhou, or Chou, Eastern Dynasty
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Roman Kingdom
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Assyria, (New) Kingdom of (Neo-Assyrian Empire)
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Etruria
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Neo-Babylonian, or Chaldean, Empire
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Medes, Kingdom of the
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Roman Republic
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Topics
Younger Subboreal Period
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Iron Age, Near and Middle East
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Iron Age Europe
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Greek colonization
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Iron Age Cold Epoch
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Spring and Autumn Period in China
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Classical antiquity
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Assyrian Wars of c. 745-609 BCE
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Iron Age China
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Babylonian Captivity
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Roman-Etruscan Wars, Early
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Persian Conquests of 559-509 BCE
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Pre-Roman Iron Age of Northern Europe
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Greco-Persian Wars, Early
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Sicilian Wars, or Carthaginian-Syracusan Wars
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