Other Definitions
miltiades (dict)

Miltiades

This article is about the Athenian general. For the Pope of the same name, see Pope Miltiades.
Miltiades (c.540 BC–c.488 BC) was an aristocrat from a major family of Athens. He made himself ruler of Gallipoli in Turkey, and probably fought against Darius I and his Persian forces. He was overthrown in 492 BC, after which he fled to Athens and soon served the city-state as a general. While leading a military expedition to the Crimean peninsula (a major source of grain for the Athenians) he married Hegesipyle, the daughter of Olorus the King of Thrace. Their son Cimon was a major figure of the 470s and 460s BC. Miltiades was elected one of the 10 generals (strategoi) for 490/489, and is often credited with the tactics that defeated the Persians in the Battle of Marathon that year. He was later branded as a traitor and sent to prison in 489 BC.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
malaria
lunar phase
metonic cycle
march 26
marcello malpighi
metadata (computing)
momentum
mood stabilizer
mere christianity
mathematical game
martin gardner
midi timecode
mass transfer
mafia
mayor mccheese
mossbauer spectroscopy
museum of jurassic technology
men at work
meconium aspiration syndrome
meconium
montreux convention regarding the regime of the turkish straits
michael jordan
musicology
movie junket
movie marketing
motherland
maggie out
m25 motorway
mohs scale of mineral hardness
murray gell mann
monogamy
magnetopause
magnetosphere
manama
movie studio
mance lipscomb
melbourne cup
messerschmitt me 163
mohammed atta
messerschmitt me 262
masovia
masuria
maryam jameelah
magnus