130 Years Before The Battle
This isn't like last time, it'll be more horrible than lovely, so be prepared. My great, great, great, great, great grandpa was a mean man. While fighting, he took a girl hostage and gave her a choice, marry me or die. She wanted to live, so that's how he got a wife. His name, by the way, was Achilleus, which means "pain", which fits him well. Achilleus's brother, Akakios, was the opposite. His name means "innocent, not evil", but while he was fighting, he was killed.
This war is all about essential conflict between Athens and us for supremacy. Although the leaders of Sparta then thought this war was worth all the lives lost I don't, it was stupid and shouldn't have happened. In other words, so many more people could've had a family, so many more could've had a life.
This is city-state on city-state battle. It is between the Athenian dominated Delian League and the Spartan dominated Peloponnesian League. The Peloponnesian war soon turned into an all-out city-state struggle, devastating vast country sides, and taking whole cities! It was quite an uneven war. We dominated land, while Athenians leaned toward sea, they knew if they were challenged on land many of their soldiers would die. All-in-all, the Athenians had no chance but to surrender, so we stripped them of their city walls, overseas possessions, and navy. In the end, we remained Greece’s dominant force for three decades. The peace treaty that ended the Peloponnesian war left us the "De Facto" ruler of Greece. De Facto means in reality or actually. This war took place 431-404 BC.
This war is all about essential conflict between Athens and us for supremacy. Although the leaders of Sparta then thought this war was worth all the lives lost I don't, it was stupid and shouldn't have happened. In other words, so many more people could've had a family, so many more could've had a life.
This is city-state on city-state battle. It is between the Athenian dominated Delian League and the Spartan dominated Peloponnesian League. The Peloponnesian war soon turned into an all-out city-state struggle, devastating vast country sides, and taking whole cities! It was quite an uneven war. We dominated land, while Athenians leaned toward sea, they knew if they were challenged on land many of their soldiers would die. All-in-all, the Athenians had no chance but to surrender, so we stripped them of their city walls, overseas possessions, and navy. In the end, we remained Greece’s dominant force for three decades. The peace treaty that ended the Peloponnesian war left us the "De Facto" ruler of Greece. De Facto means in reality or actually. This war took place 431-404 BC.