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The '''[[Battle of Thermopylae]]''' of 480 BC has long been the topic of cultural inspiration, as it is perhaps the most famous military [[last stand]] of all time. This "against all odds" story is passed to us from the writings of the Greek [[Herodotus]], who was not present at the battle himself. He relates the story of 300 Spartans and 700 Thespians defending the Pass of [[Thermopylae]] against almost "2 million" Persians on the third day of the battle.<ref>''[[Histories (Herodotus)|Histories]]''</ref> (For the first two days, the Greek force had numbered somewhere between 5,000 and 7,000.)
[[File:Leónidas en las Termópilas, por Jacques-Louis David.jpg|alt=See caption|thumb|''[[Leonidas at Thermopylae]]'', 1814 painting by [[Jacques-Louis David]]]]
The [[Battle of Thermopylae]] in 480 BCE was a [[last stand]] by a Greek army led by King [[Leonidas I]] of [[Sparta]] against an [[Achaemenid Empire|Achaemenid Persian]] army led by [[Xerxes I]] during the [[Second Persian invasion of Greece]]. There is a long tradition of upholding the story of the battle as an example of virtuous self-sacrifice.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Levene |first=D. S. |title=Cultural Responses to the Persian Wars: Antiquity to the Third Millennium |date=2007 |publisher=OUP Oxford |isbn=978-0-19-155751-4 |editor-last=Bridges |editor-first=Emma |pages=383 |language=en |chapter=Xerxes Goes to Hollywood |editor-last2=Hall |editor-first2=Edith |editor-link2=Edith Hall |editor-last3=Rhodes |editor-first3=P. J. |editor-link3=P. J. Rhodes |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uxZREAAAQBAJ&pg=PA383}}</ref>


== Antiquity ==
Although modern historians have questioned the numbers presented by Herodotus, with most at around 100,000 to 250,000 invaders, the story has resonated with authors and poets for centuries over the inspiring bravery and resolution of the Spartans.
The battle's earliest known appearance in culture is a series of [[epigram]]s commemorating the dead written by [[Simonides of Ceos]] in the battle's aftermath.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Clough |first=Emma |title=Spartan Society |date=2004 |publisher=ISD LLC |isbn=978-1-914535-21-5 |editor-last=Figueira |editor-first=Thomas J. |pages=363 |language=en |chapter=Loyalty and Liberty: Thermopylae in the Western Imagination |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0hctEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA363}}</ref> Already by the fourth century BCE, the battle had been reframed as a victory of sorts in Greek writing, in contrast to how it was described by fifth-century BCE Greek historian [[Herodotus]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Marincola |first=John |title=Cultural Responses to the Persian Wars: Antiquity to the Third Millennium |date=2007 |publisher=OUP Oxford |isbn=978-0-19-155751-4 |editor-last=Bridges |editor-first=Emma |pages=122–123 |language=en |chapter=The Persian Wars in Fourth-Century Oratory and Historiography |editor-last2=Hall |editor-first2=Edith |editor-link2=Edith Hall |editor-last3=Rhodes |editor-first3=P. J. |editor-link3=P. J. Rhodes |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uxZREAAAQBAJ&pg=PA122}}</ref>


== 18th century ==
The performance of the defenders at the battle of Thermopylae is often used as an example of the advantages of training, equipment, and good use of terrain to maximize an army's potential,<ref name=usarmy>[http://www.carlisle.army.mil/usawc/Parameters/96summer/eiken.htm PARAMETERS, US Army War College Quarterly - Summer 1996<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> and has become a symbol of courage against overwhelming odds.<ref name=usarmy/> Even more, both ancient and modern writers used the Battle of Thermopylae as an example of the superior power of a volunteer army of freemen defending native soil.<ref>... almost immediately, contemporary Greeks saw Thermopylae as a critical moral and culture lesson. In universal terms, a small, free people had willingly outfought huge numbers of imperial subjects who advanced under the lash. More specifically, the Western idea that soldiers themselves decide where, how, and against whom they will fight was contrasted against the Eastern notion of despotism and monarchy — freedom proving the stronger idea as the more courageous fighting of the Greeks at Thermopylae, and their later victories at Salamis and Plataea attested. http://www.victorhanson.com/articles/hanson101106.html</ref> The sacrifice of the Spartans and the Thespians has captured the minds of many throughout the ages and has given birth to many cultural references as a result.<ref>"Thermopylae: The Battle That Changed the World", Paul Cartledge</ref>
In Europe, interest in the battle was revitalized in the 1700s with the publication of the poems ''[[Leonidas, A Poem]]'' by [[Richard Glover (poet)|Richard Glover]] in 1737 and ''[[Leonidas (poem)|Leonidas]]'' by [[Willem van Haren]] in 1742.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Morris |first=Ian Macgregor |title=Cultural Responses to the Persian Wars: Antiquity to the Third Millennium |date=2007 |publisher=OUP Oxford |isbn=978-0-19-155751-4 |editor-last=Bridges |editor-first=Emma |pages=231–232 |language=en |chapter='Shrines of the Mighty': Rediscovering the Battlefields of the Persian Wars |editor-last2=Hall |editor-first2=Edith |editor-link2=Edith Hall |editor-last3=Rhodes |editor-first3=P. J. |editor-link3=P. J. Rhodes |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uxZREAAAQBAJ&pg=PA231}}</ref> Glover's poem uses the story to exemplify the proper virtues of a good monarch.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Clough |first=Emma |title=Spartan Society |date=2004 |publisher=ISD LLC |isbn=978-1-914535-21-5 |editor-last=Figueira |editor-first=Thomas J. |pages=365–371 |language=en |chapter=Loyalty and Liberty: Thermopylae in the Western Imagination |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0hctEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA365}}</ref>


Several stage plays about the battle were produced during the [[French Revolution]], including the 1794 play ''[[Le Combat de Thermopyles, ou l'école des guerriers]]'' by {{Interlanguage link|Joseph Marie Loaisel de Tréogate|fr}} and the 1799 play ''[[Léonidas, ou le départ des Spartiates]]'' by [[René-Charles Guilbert de Pixérécourt]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Clough |first=Emma |title=Spartan Society |date=2004 |publisher=ISD LLC |isbn=978-1-914535-21-5 |editor-last=Figueira |editor-first=Thomas J. |pages=372 |language=en |chapter=Loyalty and Liberty: Thermopylae in the Western Imagination |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0hctEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA372}}</ref>
[[Image:Molon labe.jpg|right|thumb|The words "MOLON LABE" (ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ) in Greek as they are inscribed on the marble of the modern era monument at Thermopylae.]]


== 19th century ==
==Cultural references==
[[Jacques-Louis David]] painted ''[[Leonidas at Thermopylae]]'' during the reign of [[Napoleon]] and eventually finished the painting in 1814, depicting Leonidas and the soldiers in the moments leading up to the battle as a positive example of [[patriotism]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Clough |first=Emma |title=Spartan Society |date=2004 |publisher=ISD LLC |isbn=978-1-914535-21-5 |editor-last=Figueira |editor-first=Thomas J. |pages=372–373 |language=en |chapter=Loyalty and Liberty: Thermopylae in the Western Imagination |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0hctEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA372}}</ref>
[[Image:Léonidas aux Thermopyles (Jacques-Louis David).PNG|thumb|right|300px|Leonidas at [[Thermopylae]], by [[Jacques-Louis David]] (1814)]]
* Perhaps the best known poem on the Battle of Thermopylae is the [[epigram]] attributed to [[Simonides]]:
{{quotation|ὦ ξεῖν', ἀγγέλλειν Λακεδαιμονίοις ὅτι τῇδε<br>κείμεθα τοῖς κείνων ῥήμασι πειθόμενοι.<br>
<br>Stranger passing by, tell the Lakedaimonians <br>Here we lie, having obeyed their orders.|align=center}}


German poet [[Theodor Körner (author)|Theodor Körner]] referenced Thermopylae to inspire his fellow countrymen to fight against Napoleon in the 1812 poem ''[[Auf dem Schlachtfelde von Aspern]]''.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rebenich |first=Stefan |title=Sparta: Beyond the Mirage |date=2002 |publisher=ISD LLC |isbn=978-1-914535-20-8 |editor-last=Hodkinson |editor-first=Stephen |pages=326 |language=en |chapter=From Thermopylae to Stalingrad: The Myth of Leonidas in German Historiography |editor-last2=Powell |editor-first2=Anton |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0BctEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA326 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220303181246/https://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/propylaeumdok/58/1/Rebenich_Thermopylae_2002.pdf |archive-format=PDF of stand-alone book chapter |archive-date=2022-03-03 |url-status=live}}</ref> Thermopylae was often invoked as an example to be emulated in the lead-up to the [[Greek War of Independence]] against the [[Ottoman Empire]], for example in the 1798 hymn ''{{Interlanguage link|Thourios|el|Θούριος}}'' by [[Rigas Feraios]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Clough |first=Emma |title=Spartan Society |date=2004 |publisher=ISD LLC |isbn=978-1-914535-21-5 |editor-last=Figueira |editor-first=Thomas J. |pages=374 |language=en |chapter=Loyalty and Liberty: Thermopylae in the Western Imagination |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0hctEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA374}}</ref> In the United States, the [[Battle of the Alamo]] in 1836 during the [[Texas Revolution]] was compared to Thermopylae only weeks after its conclusion, and a battle memorial erected in [[Austin, Texas]] in 1843 references Thermopylae.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Levene |first=D. S. |title=Cultural Responses to the Persian Wars: Antiquity to the Third Millennium |date=2007 |publisher=OUP Oxford |isbn=978-0-19-155751-4 |editor-last=Bridges |editor-first=Emma |pages=394–395 |language=en |chapter=Xerxes Goes to Hollywood |editor-last2=Hall |editor-first2=Edith |editor-link2=Edith Hall |editor-last3=Rhodes |editor-first3=P. J. |editor-link3=P. J. Rhodes |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uxZREAAAQBAJ&pg=PA394}}</ref>
* Thermopylae has been used as a name for ships; for example, a clipper ship 212 feet in length displacing 991 tons was launched in Aberdeen in 1868. Christened [[Thermopylae (clipper)|''Thermopylae'']], it established speed records and was also notable for having a male figurehead wearing Greek armor, helmet, shield and sword.
* The Greek phrase ''"[[molon labe|Μολών λαβέ]]"'' (''"molon labe"'', or ''"come and take them"''), a quote attributed to Leonidas at the battle, has been repeated by many later generals and politicians in order to express an army's or nation's determination to not surrender without a battle. The motto ''"ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ"'' is on the emblem of the Greek First Army Corps. Both the original Greek phrase and its English translation are often heard from pro-gun activists as a defense of the [[Second Amendment to the United States Constitution|US constitutional]] [[right to arms|right to keep and bear arms]].
*The [[Battle of Tirad Pass]], fought on December 2, 1899, is sometimes called the "Philippine Thermopylae."<ref>{{cite book |last=Tucker |first=Spencer |date=2009 |title=The Encyclopedia of the Spanish-American and Philippine-American Wars: A Political, Social, and Military History|volume=Volume 1 |url=http://books.google.com.au/books?id=8V3vZxOmHssC&pg=PA643&dq=American+casualties+Tirad+Pass&hl=en&sa=X&ei=vHR9VMrKKJSD8gXjtIJA&ved=0CCUQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=American%20casualties%20Tirad%20Pass&f=false |location= |publisher=ABC-CLIO |page=643 |isbn=9781851099528}}</ref>
* The [[Battle of Wizna]], fought on September 7–10, 1939, is often called the [[Polish Thermopylae]].
* The phrase was written on the flag fashioned by the Texans during the [[Battle of Gonzales]].
* The name "Leonidas" passed into [[Russian language|Russian]] as well as [[Ukrainian language|Ukrainian]] (shortened to "Leonid"), and remains a fairly common male name among the speakers of these languages. Among the prominent persons of that name are [[Soviet Union]] premier [[Leonid Brezhnev]] and [[Leonid Kuchma]], president of the post-Soviet [[Ukraine]].
* The name "Leonidas" exists also among speakers of [[English language|English]], [[Spanish language|Spanish]], and [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]] - as well as, of course, modern [[Greek language|Greek]] (see [[Leonidas (disambiguation)]]).
* Asteroid [[2782 Leonidas]] is named for the Spartan king.
* The Luftwaffe [[Leonidas Squadron]] under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Heiner Lang, flew "Self-sacrifice missions" (''Selbstopfereinsatz'') against Soviet held bridges over the [[Oder River]] from 17 April until 20 April 1945 during the [[Battle for Berlin]].
* [[Australia]]n groups seeking to get greater recognition for the heroic acts of soldiers in the [[World War II]] [[Kokoda Track campaign#Battle of Isurava|Battle of Isurava]] (September 1942, in New Guinea) have dubbed that battle "Australia's Thermopylae" and established a website setting out in detail the grounds for making such a comparison (see [http://www.users.bigpond.com/battleforaustralia/battaust/KokodaCampaign/Isurava/IsuravaIndex.html]).
* The Battle of Thermopylae has also been compared to various battles of the Anglo-Zulu War.<ref>J. Murray, 'An African Thermopylae? The Battles of the Anglo-Zulu War, 1879' Akroterion 54 (2009), 51-68.</ref>


==Poetry and song==
== 20th century ==
The 1962 film ''[[The 300 Spartans]]'' depicts the battle and the broader conflict as a parallel of the then-ongoing [[Cold War]], with Greeks and Persians representing [[NATO]] and the [[Soviet Bloc]] respectively, and Sparta representing the US.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Clough |first=Emma |title=Spartan Society |date=2004 |publisher=ISD LLC |isbn=978-1-914535-21-5 |editor-last=Figueira |editor-first=Thomas J. |pages=374–378 |language=en |chapter=Loyalty and Liberty: Thermopylae in the Western Imagination |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0hctEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA374}}</ref> The 1998 novel ''[[Gates of Fire]]'' by [[Steven Pressfield]] is unusual in depicting the battle as gruesome rather than glorious.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bridges |first=Emma |title=Cultural Responses to the Persian Wars: Antiquity to the Third Millennium |date=2007 |publisher=OUP Oxford |isbn=978-0-19-155751-4 |editor-last=Bridges |editor-first=Emma |pages=411–419 |language=en |chapter=The Guts and the Glory: Pressfield's Spartans at the ''Gates of Fire'' |editor-last2=Hall |editor-first2=Edith |editor-link2=Edith Hall |editor-last3=Rhodes |editor-first3=P. J. |editor-link3=P. J. Rhodes |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uxZREAAAQBAJ&pg=PA411}}</ref>
{|class="wikitable"
|+
!Style="width: 50%"|Verse(s)||Notes
|-
|<br>''Earth! render back from out thy breast<br>A remnant of our Spartan dead!<br>Of the three hundred grant but three,<br>To make a new Thermopylae!''
<br>
|[[Lord Byron]]<br>Don Juan<br>Canto iii, Stanza 86, 7
|-
|<br>''The King with half the East at heel is marched from land of morning;<br>Their fighters drink the rivers up, their shafts benight the air,<br>And he that stands will die for nought, and home there's no returning.<br>The Spartans on the sea-wet rock sat down and combed their hair.''
<br>
|[[A. E. Housman]],<br>''[[s:Last Poems (Housman)#XXV. THE ORACLES|The Oracles]]'' (last verse)<br>from his book "Last Poems".
|-
|<br>''I was neither at the hot gates<br>Nor fought in the warm rain<br>Nor knee deep in the salt marsh, heaving a cutlass,<br>Bitten by flies, fought.''
<br>
|Observation by<br>the decaying, regretful speaker<br>of [[T. S. Eliot|T. S. Eliot's]] "Gerontion".
|-
|<br>''O love, O celibate.<br>Nobody but me<br>Walks the waist high wet.<br>The irreplaceable<br>Golds bleed and deepen, the mouths of Thermopylae.
<br>
|[[Sylvia Plath]],<br>suicide at 31,<br>faces her own Thermopylae<br>walking in the garden<br>in the poem<br>"Letter in November".
|-
|<br>''"Go tell it"—What a Message --<br>To whom—is specified --<br>Not murmur—not endearment --<br>But simply—we—obeyed --<br>Obeyed—a Lure—a Longing?<br>Oh Nature—none of this --<br>To Law—said sweet Thermopylae<br>I give my dying Kiss --
<br>
|In [[Emily Dickinson]]'s <br>"'Go tell it' — what a message".
|-
|<br>''When boyhood's fire was in my blood<br>I read of ancient free men<br>In Greece and in Rome where bravely stood<br>300 men and 3 men''
<br>
|The first verse of<br>[[Thomas Osborne Davis (Irish politician)|Thomas Osborne Davis]]'<br>"[[A Nation Once Again]]".
Now considered a prime example of [[Irish rebel music]] and sung by the [[Wolfe Tones]] and many other Irish singers. The "3 men" are the [[Horatii]]
|-
|''When You Go Home,<br>Tell Them Of Us And Say,<br>For Their Tomorrow,<br>We Gave Our Today''
|The epitaph inscribed on<br>the [[Commonwealth of Nations|Commonwealth]] [[Commonwealth War Graves Commission|cemetery]] [[war memorial]] at [[Kohima]].<ref>It was also engraved near entrance the 5th Marine Division's temporary cemetery on the island of Iwo Jima.</ref><br> It was probably inspired by the epitaph of Simonides and is attributed to [[John Maxwell Edmonds]].
|}

{|class="wikitable"
|+
!Verse original||Verse translation||Notes
|-
|''“Exercitus noster est magnus,” Persicus inquit, “et propter<br> numerum sagittarum nostrarum caelum non videbitis!”<br> Tum Lacedaemonius respondet: “In umbra, igitur, pugnabimus!”<br> Et Leonidas, rex Lacedaemoniorum, exclamat: “Pugnate cum animis,<br> Lacedaemonii; hodie apud umbras fortasse cenabimus!”''
|''“Our army is great,” the Persian says, “and because<br> of the number of our arrows you will not see the sky!”<br> Then a Spartan answers: “In the shade, therefore, we will fight!”<br> And Leonidas, king of the Spartans, shouts: “Fight with spirit,<br> Spartans; perhaps we will dine today among the ghosts!”''
|Wheelock's Latin<br>Inspired by [[Cicero]]'s, Tusculanae Disputationes, 1.42.101
|-
|''Τιμή σ' εκεινους όπου στην ζωή των<br>ώρισαν να φυλάγουν Θερμοπύλες.<br>Πότε από το χρέος μη κινούντες΄<br>δίκαιοι κ' ίσοι,σ'ολες των τες πράξεις,<br>αλλά με λύπη κιόλας κ' ευσπλαχνία,<br>γενναίοι οσάκις είναι πλούσιοι κι όταν<br>είναι πτωχοί, πάλ' εις μικρόν γενναίοι,<br>πάλι συντρέχοντες, όσο μπορούνε΄<br>πάντοτε την αλήθεια ομιλούντες,<br>πλην χωρίς μίσος για τους ψευδωμένους.
<br>Και περισσότερη τιμή τους πρέπει<br>όταν προβλέπουν (και πολλοί προβλέπουν)<br>πως ο Εφιάλτης θα φανεί στο τέλος,<br>και οι Μήδοι επί τέλους θα διαβούνε.''
|''Let honor be to those in whose life<br>it was set to guard Thermopylae.<br>Never moving away from duty;<br>Just and equals in all of their acts<br>But with sadness and compassion<br>Brave once they are rich and when<br>They are poor, again brave<br>Coming to aid as much as they can;<br>Always speaking the truth<br>But without hate for those who lie.
<br>''And even more honor they deserve<br>When its predicted (and many predict)<br>That Ephialtes will appear in the end<br>And the Medes will finally pass through''
| The Greek poet [[Kavafis]] who lived in [[Alexandria]]<br>
of [[Egypt]] at the turn of the 20th century<br>
wrote one of his more famous poems entitled<br>
''Thermopylae'' in 1903. The poem actually created<br>
the expression ''guarding Thermopylae'' and has been<br>
told in honor of other dead, such as those of<br>
the [[Imia crisis]].
|-
|''Przechodniu powiedz Polsce<br>żeśmy polegli<br>wierni w jej służbie''
|''Passerby, tell Poland<br>that we fell<br>faithfully in her service''
|Inscription on the [[Poland|Polish]] war cemetery at [[Battle of Monte Cassino|Monte Cassino]]:
|-
|''La patria así se forma<br>Termópilas brotando;<br>constelación de Cíclopes<br>su noche iluminó''
|''And so the nation forms<br>Thermopylae springing;<br>a Cyclops constellation<br>its night enlightened
|The [[National Anthem of Colombia]], IX Stanza IX:
|-
|''... едно име ново, голямо антично,''<br>
''като Термопили славно, безгранично,''<br>
''що отговор дава и смива срамът,<br>
''и на клеветата строшава зъбът.''
|''... A new name, its roots to antiquity tracing,''<br>
''As great as Thermopylae, all fame embracing,''<br>
''A name to wipe shame away, with its plain truth''<br>
''Smashing to smithereens calumny's tooth.''
|The volunteers at Shipka, by [[Ivan Vazov]]
|}

* [[Dimitris Varos]] ''Ω ξείν…'' (O stranger) is a poetic book written in 1974.

==Literature==
{|class="wikitable"
!'''Author'''
!'''Novel'''
!'''Description'''
|-
|[[Heinrich Böll]]
|''Wanderer, kommst Du nach Spa...''
|This short story takes its title from the German translation of the inscription on the Spartans' tomb. In it a young German soldier at the end of the [[Second World War]] is wounded on the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]] and is brought to a [[field hospital]], which had been a school. He wonders if it could be his school, which he had only recently left to become a soldier. On seeing in his own writing the truncated quotation of the title on a chalkboard, his question is answered. ("Sparta" was truncated because the narrator had run out of room at the edge of the board.)
|-
|[[David Gemmell]]
|''Lion of Macedon''
|Discusses the Battle of Thermopylae several times as part of the studies of the lead character, a Spartan named [[Parmenion]] who idolizes Leonidas and owns his sword.
|-
|
|''[[The First Chronicles of Druss the Legend]]''
|The Battle of Thermopylae very lightly re-sprayed{{ clarify | date = September 2015 | reason = Do you mean "incorporated"? }} into Gemmell's Drenai fantasy setting.
|-
|[[Stephen King]]
|''[[The Dark Tower VII: The Dark Tower|The Dark Tower]]''
|Includes a comparison with the Battle of Thermopylae when a character fights alone against a series of enemies coming through a single doorway.
|-
|[[Valerio Massimo Manfredi]]
|''The Spartan''
|Gives an account of the Battle of Thermopylae. The novel uses the battle to set up one of the protagonists who is apparently sent out on a mission by King Leonidas before the final Persian attack.
|-
|[[Steven Pressfield]]
|''[[Gates of Fire]]''
|Depicts the battle as told by the Spartan helot Xeones, who had been wounded during the fight, but was revived to tell Xerxes of the Spartans' heroism.
|-
|[[Mary Renault]]
|''The Lion in the Gateway''
|Tells the story of the conflict between the Persians and Greeks across the reigns of Darius and Xerxes, including Marathon, Salamis and Thermopylae.
|-
|[[John Ringo]]
|''[[Ghost (John Ringo novel)|Ghost]]'', 2004
|Includes a description of the battle fought at Thermopylae and a quote of the epigram by Simonides'.
|-
|[[Eric Nylund]]
|''[[Halo: The Fall of Reach]]'', 2001
|The series' main protagonist, John, is one of 75 children selected for the SPARTAN-II program, a secret project to create an elite corps of supersoldiers. Also, a direct reference to the 300 is made in 2 situations: First where they are watching a holographic image of the battle in their class, and when Dr. Halsey thinks of the Spartans as 'more effective than Homer's gods had ever been' incorrectly labeling them as gods.
|-
|[[Greg Donegan]] (pen name of [[Bob Mayer]])
|''Atlantis: Gate''
|In the fourth volume (2002) of a [[Science Fiction]] series, Leonidas and Thermopylae are part of an interdimensional battle to save all earths from a trans-dimensional race bent on stealing resources from other worlds and destroying them in the process.
|-
|[[John Ringo]]
|''The Hot Gate'' (''Troy Rising'', book three)
|The second "troy"-class massive SAPL-converging-point nickel-iron inflated asteroid battlestation is called Thermopylae, and the name of the third book in the series is named after the translation of Thermopylae.
|-
|[[Eric Nylund]]
|''[[Halo: Ghosts of Onyx]]'',2006
|In the book the SPARTAN-III program,orphans of the raging war with the Covenant are conscripted into three companies: Alpha, Beta, and Gamma. Each company contained around 300 SPARTANs, and both Alpha and Beta companies were slaughtered in a last stand, with the exception of those pulled out before the suicide operation, as well as two other survivors from Beta company.
|}

==Comic==
{|class="wikitable"
!'''Author'''
!'''Title'''
!'''Description'''
|-
|[[Frank Miller (comics)|Frank Miller]]
|''[[The Big Fat Kill|Sin City: The Big Fat Kill]]''
|[[Dwight McCarthy]], facing a fight against a large number of enemies, mulls on the Battle of Thermopylae, concluding that "a careful choice of where to fight" saved Greek civilization.
|-
|[[Frank Miller (comics)|Frank Miller]]
|''[[Hell and Back (A Sin City Love Story)]]''
|During the comic, [[Wallace (Sin City)|Wallace]] hallucinates and sees his friend appear as King Leonidas as portrayed in Miller's ''300''.
|-
|[[Frank Miller (comics)|Frank Miller]]
|''[[Batman: The Dark Knight Returns]]''
|In Frank Miller's tale of an aging [[Batman]], the translation of the name Thermopylae ("Hot Gates") shows up as the name of a porn star who is doing a new film version of [[Snow White]] "for the kids". In the sequel, ''[[Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes Again|The Dark Knight Strikes Again]]'', Hot Gates makes herself "Dictator of Ohio".
|-
|[[Frank Miller (comics)|Frank Miller]]
|[[300 (comics)|''300'']]
|A 1998 [[graphic novel]] series (later collected into a single hardcover issue) written and illustrated by [[Frank Miller (comics)|Frank Miller]] with painted colors by [[Lynn Varley]], a retelling of the [[Battle of Thermopylae]] and the events leading up to it from the perspective of [[Leonidas|Leonidas of Sparta]]. ''300'' was particularly inspired by the 1962 film ''[[The 300 Spartans]]'', a movie that Miller watched as a young boy.
|-
|[[Héctor Germán Oesterheld]]
|[[Mort Cinder]]
|A comic book from Argentina (1964) featuring an immortal character who had lived at many historical ages. He tells about the battle as having been a spartan warrior at it, who also would have been the one to say the famous quote of "In the shade, therefore, we will fight!". The author, however, focus the narrative more in the humanity of the small and unknown soldiers rather than in the main battle itself.
|-
|Max Bunker ([[Luciano Secchi]]) and Magnus ([[Roberto Raviola]])
|''[[Alan Ford (comics)|Alan Ford]]''
|In these Italian comic book series, Number One tells the story about Leonidas being fat, and the Persians were stopped when he got stuck in Thermopylae.
|}

==Films==
{|class="wikitable"
!'''Film'''
!'''Date'''
!'''Description'''
|+
|-
|''[[The 300 Spartans]]''
|1962
|Depicts the Battle of Thermopylae. Starring [[Richard Egan (actor)|Richard Egan]] and [[Ralph Richardson]]
|-
|''[[Patton (film)|Patton]]''
|1970
|General Patton refers to the Battle of Thermopylae when talking with his generals and aides but does not tell them the result of the battle (defeat and massacre of the heroes) until after the U.S. troops have already been sent off to fight.
|-
|''[[Go Tell the Spartans]]''
|1978
|Set in Vietnam, the film includes a scene in which US troops come across the grave of French defenders of a Vietnamese village which has the famous epitaph to the Spartans written over its entrance and, by implication, forecasts the same result for a later generation of American soldiers.
|-
|''[[Rambling Rose (film)|Rambling Rose]]
|1991
|[[Robert Duvall]]'s character refers to Thermopylae as he resists Rose's sexual advances.
|-
|''[[Don't Tempt Me]]''
|2001
|In a scene at the end, [[Fanny Ardant]]'s and [[Gael García Bernal]]'s characters refers to Thermopylae as a legal defense, where [[Demián Bichir]]'s character chooses to fight for good and die, knowing that he won't win the battle.
|-
|''[[The Last Samurai]]''
|2003
|The main characters refer to the battle of Thermopylae twice, including right before engaging in a battle they are almost certain to lose. The Battle of Thermopylae parallels the main characters' situation, in which they are outnumbered and realize that victory is unattainable but choose to fight for a purpose beyond the battle itself.
|-
|''[[300 (film)|300]]''
|2007
|Based on Frank Miller's graphic novel ''[[300 (comics)|300]]'', a retelling of the battle from the perspective of Leonidas. The original graphic novel was a mythical retelling of the story, told as if by the point of view of a Spartan reciting a story around a campfire.
|-
|''[[Last Stand of the 300]]''
|2007
|Documentary. Broadcast on [[History (U.S. TV channel)|The History Channel]].
|-
|''[[Meet the Spartans (film)|Meet the Spartans]]''
|2008
|A parody movie of 300 in which the Spartans led by King Leonidas win the first day of battle against the Persians in a hip-hop dance competition.
|}

==Television==
{|class="wikitable"
!'''Show'''
!'''Episode'''
!'''Description'''
|+
|-
|[[Samurai Jack]]
|"Jack and the Spartans"
|A group of warriors, similar in appearance to Spartans, defend a narrow gateway against a vast robot army. Jack shows the Spartans the narrow path to allow them to obtain victory after 6 generations. At the end of the episode the King remarks the 300 and 1 (300 warriors and Jack) when retelling the tale on his death bed.
|-
|[[Xena: Warrior Princess]]
|"One Against an Army"
|Xena and Gabrielle have to defend the pass of Thermopylae from the invading Persian army. However, in this version of the story, Xena herself is up against 300 Persian soldiers, and not 300 Spartans against thousands of Persians.
|-
|[[Robot Chicken]]
|[[Moesha Poppins]]
|A highly stylized [[trailer (vehicle)|trailer]] for [[1776 (film)]] that parodies the trailer for ''300.'' Includes the line [[THIS IS SPARTA|This! Is! AMERICA!]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.weshow.com/us/p/20903/1776_robot_chicken_300_spoof |title="Moesha Poppins", Robot Chicken episode #50}}</ref><ref>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ANpnPSlwm1M&feature=related</ref> Another Episode has [[Leonidas]] saying [[THIS IS SPARTA]]-like quotes in mundane situations, such as watching [[Two and a Half Men]].<ref>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BqQ-4DeUj8U&feature=related</ref>
|-
|[[seaQuest DSV]]
|"Spindrift"
|After being shot during a rescue mission of his shipmate Loonie Henderson, SeaQuest's chief of security Jim Brody's last dying words are "With your shield or on it", a reference to a saying attributed to mothers of Spartan men as they went to war. Captain Hudson later explains to Henderson that Brody meant his sacrifice for her, just like the Greeks at Thermopylae, was worth it.
|-
|''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]]''
|"[[What You Leave Behind]]"
|Dr. [[Julian Bashir]], who has a penchant for [[last stand]]s, offers to take [[Ezri Dax]] on a date in a [[holosuite]] program depicting the Battle of Thermopylae.
|-
|[[South Park]]
|"[[D-Yikes!]]"
|In a parody of the aforementioned film ''[[300 (film)|300]]'', Mrs. Garrison goes to a "girl bar" which is being bought out by Persians. She is indignant about it, especially their tacky blue carpet and gold curtain rods. When the representative comes, she kicks him in the testicles and starts a war. They go tell their boss, Xerxes, who sends many more Persians in a wave. The Lesbians are able to fend them off, and they retreat. Mrs. Garrison then gets Mexicans, disguised as Persians, to infiltrate the Persian club. They find out that Xerxes is a woman and they use that to get him to keep Les Bos a girl bar. [[Lesbos]] is an actual island in [[Greece]].<ref>[[Lesbos]]</ref>
|-
|''[[Deadliest Warrior]]''
|"[[Deadliest Warrior#Episode 3: Spartan vs Ninja|Spartan vs. Ninja]]"
|During the explanation of the Spartan specs, Team Spartan talks about the Battle of Thermopylae, being a "rear guard action" similar to a "Greek [[Alamo]]".
|-
|}
<!--* An episode of [[Samurai Jack]], "Jack and the Spartans", depicts a group of warriors, similar in appearance to Spartans, defending a narrow gateway against a vast robot army. They have been in combat for 300 years.

* In an episode of [[Xena: Warrior Princess]], "One Against an Army", Xena and Gabrielle have to defend the pass of Thermopylae from the invading Persian army. However in this version of the story, Xena herself is up against 300 Persian soldiers, and not 300 Spartans against thousands of Persians.
* In the final episode of [[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]], Dr. [[Julian Bashir]], who has a penchant for [[last stand]]s, offers to take [[Ezri Dax]] on a date in a [[holosuite]] program depicting the Battle of Thermopylae.-->

==Video games==
{|class="wikitable"
!'''Developer'''
!'''Year'''
!'''Video Game'''
!'''Description'''
|-
|[[Bungie Studios]]
|
|''[[Marathon (computer game series)]] and [[Halo (series)]]''
|Bungie games often contain classical references. Among the references to Sparta, [[Marathon 2]] contains a level called "My Own Private Thermopylae" and in the Prologue of the Halo novel [[Ghosts of Onyx]], Operation TORPEDO has 300 Spartans from the SPARTAN-III program, Beta Company, fighting against a Covenant force of more than 1000 ground troops supported by 10 Cruisers.
|-
|[[Collision Studios]]
|2007
|''[[300: March to Glory]]''
|Based on the film ''[[300 (film)|300]]''.
|-
|[[Realtime Games Software]]
|1988
|''[[Carrier Command]]''
|The Action mode starts with the opposing carriers facing off over an island named Thermopylae.
|-
|[[Slitherine]]
|2004
|''[[Gates of Troy]]''
|One of the scenarios is the battle of Thermopylae where you have to resist for 20 turns against the Persian army.
|-
|[[Red Storm Entertainment]]
|2005
|''[[Rainbow Six Lockdown]]''
|In the cutscene before the last mission, Rainbow sniper Dieter Weber briefly explains about the battle before getting himself into position, saying the Spartans were "outnumbered 800 to one, but they went down fighting."
|-
|[[Blizzard Entertainment]]
|2008
|''[[World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King]]''
|The Battle of Light's Hope Chapel, as played out in the quest "[[wowwiki:Quest:The Light of Dawn|The Light of Dawn]]" (one of the last of the [[wowwiki:Death knight|death knight]] starter quests), pits 300 Defenders of the Light against 10,000 undead of the Scourge, including player-character death knights. However, unlike history, the 300 defeat the much larger force, due to fighting on holy ground (Light's Hope Chapel).
|}


==See also==
==See also==
*{{annotated link|300 (comics)|''300'' (comics)}}
* [[Laconophilia]]
*{{annotated link|300 (film)|''300'' (film)}}
* [[Sparta in popular culture]]
*{{annotated link|Gates of Fire (album)|''Gates of Fire'' (album)}}
* [[The 300 Spartans]]
* [[300 (film)]]
* [[List of last stands]]


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}


== Further reading ==
{{Reflist}}


* {{Cite thesis |title=The Battle of Thermopylae (480 BC) in American Popular Culture |url=https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1529323/ |publisher=UCL (University College London) |date=2016 |degree=Doctoral |first=M. J. |last=Datiles}}
{{coord|38|48|0|N|22|32|0|E|display=title}}
* {{Cite book |last=Fotheringham |first=Lynn S. |title=Sparta in Modern Thought: Politics, History and Culture |date=2012 |publisher=ISD LLC |isbn=978-1-910589-18-2 |editor-last=Hodkinson |editor-first=Stephen |pages=393–428 |language=en |chapter=The Positive Portrayal of Sparta in Late-Twentieth-Century Fiction |editor-last2=Morris |editor-first2=Ian Macgregor |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=M_hODgAAQBAJ&pg=PA393 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20220422155914/https://www.academia.edu/42682519/The_positive_portrayal_of_Sparta_in_late_twentieth_century_fiction |archive-format=PDF of stand-alone book chapter |archive-date=2022-04-22 |url-status=live}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Kilby |first=Kelsey |date=2018 |title=Subversions of the Thermopylae Myth in Modern Literature |url=https://journals.uvic.ca/index.php/albatross/article/view/18178 |journal=The Albatross |volume=8 |pages=76–88}}
* {{Cite thesis |title=The Age of Leonidas: The Legend of Thermopylae in British Political Culture, 1737–1821 |url=https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.582623 |publisher=University of Manchester |date=2000 |degree=Ph.D. |first=Ian MacGregor |last=Morris}}
* {{Cite thesis |title=Few Against Many: The Reception of the Battle of Thermopylae in Popular Culture, South Africa and Children's Literature. |url=https://researchspace.ukzn.ac.za/handle/10413/838 |date=2009 |degree=Masters |language=en |first=Jeffrey |last=Murray |publisher=[[University of KwaZulu-Natal]]}}
* {{Cite book |last=Rawson |first=Elizabeth |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DgRmAAAAMAAJ |title=The Spartan Tradition in European Thought |date=1969 |publisher=Clarendon P. |isbn=978-0-19-814350-5 |language=en |author-link=Elizabeth Rawson}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Stafford |first=Emma |author-link=Emma Stafford |date=2016 |title=The Curse of ''300''? Popular Culture and Teaching the Spartans |journal=Journal of Classics Teaching |language=en |volume=17 |issue=33 |pages=8–13 |doi=10.1017/S2058631016000052 |issn=2058-6310|doi-access=free }}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Thermopylae, Battle of}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Thermopylae, Battle of}}
[[Category:Battle of Thermopylae|Culture]]
[[Category:Battle of Thermopylae|Culture]]
[[Category:Places in popular culture]]
[[Category:Places in popular culture]]
[[Category:Greek Antiquity in art and culture]]
[[Category:Ancient Greece in art and culture]]
[[Category:Battles in popular culture|Thermopylae]]

Latest revision as of 20:28, 29 June 2024

See caption
Leonidas at Thermopylae, 1814 painting by Jacques-Louis David

The Battle of Thermopylae in 480 BCE was a last stand by a Greek army led by King Leonidas I of Sparta against an Achaemenid Persian army led by Xerxes I during the Second Persian invasion of Greece. There is a long tradition of upholding the story of the battle as an example of virtuous self-sacrifice.[1]

Antiquity

[edit]

The battle's earliest known appearance in culture is a series of epigrams commemorating the dead written by Simonides of Ceos in the battle's aftermath.[2] Already by the fourth century BCE, the battle had been reframed as a victory of sorts in Greek writing, in contrast to how it was described by fifth-century BCE Greek historian Herodotus.[3]

18th century

[edit]

In Europe, interest in the battle was revitalized in the 1700s with the publication of the poems Leonidas, A Poem by Richard Glover in 1737 and Leonidas by Willem van Haren in 1742.[4] Glover's poem uses the story to exemplify the proper virtues of a good monarch.[5]

Several stage plays about the battle were produced during the French Revolution, including the 1794 play Le Combat de Thermopyles, ou l'école des guerriers by Joseph Marie Loaisel de Tréogate [fr] and the 1799 play Léonidas, ou le départ des Spartiates by René-Charles Guilbert de Pixérécourt.[6]

19th century

[edit]

Jacques-Louis David painted Leonidas at Thermopylae during the reign of Napoleon and eventually finished the painting in 1814, depicting Leonidas and the soldiers in the moments leading up to the battle as a positive example of patriotism.[7]

German poet Theodor Körner referenced Thermopylae to inspire his fellow countrymen to fight against Napoleon in the 1812 poem Auf dem Schlachtfelde von Aspern.[8] Thermopylae was often invoked as an example to be emulated in the lead-up to the Greek War of Independence against the Ottoman Empire, for example in the 1798 hymn Thourios [el] by Rigas Feraios.[9] In the United States, the Battle of the Alamo in 1836 during the Texas Revolution was compared to Thermopylae only weeks after its conclusion, and a battle memorial erected in Austin, Texas in 1843 references Thermopylae.[10]

20th century

[edit]

The 1962 film The 300 Spartans depicts the battle and the broader conflict as a parallel of the then-ongoing Cold War, with Greeks and Persians representing NATO and the Soviet Bloc respectively, and Sparta representing the US.[11] The 1998 novel Gates of Fire by Steven Pressfield is unusual in depicting the battle as gruesome rather than glorious.[12]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Levene, D. S. (2007). "Xerxes Goes to Hollywood". In Bridges, Emma; Hall, Edith; Rhodes, P. J. (eds.). Cultural Responses to the Persian Wars: Antiquity to the Third Millennium. OUP Oxford. p. 383. ISBN 978-0-19-155751-4.
  2. ^ Clough, Emma (2004). "Loyalty and Liberty: Thermopylae in the Western Imagination". In Figueira, Thomas J. (ed.). Spartan Society. ISD LLC. p. 363. ISBN 978-1-914535-21-5.
  3. ^ Marincola, John (2007). "The Persian Wars in Fourth-Century Oratory and Historiography". In Bridges, Emma; Hall, Edith; Rhodes, P. J. (eds.). Cultural Responses to the Persian Wars: Antiquity to the Third Millennium. OUP Oxford. pp. 122–123. ISBN 978-0-19-155751-4.
  4. ^ Morris, Ian Macgregor (2007). "'Shrines of the Mighty': Rediscovering the Battlefields of the Persian Wars". In Bridges, Emma; Hall, Edith; Rhodes, P. J. (eds.). Cultural Responses to the Persian Wars: Antiquity to the Third Millennium. OUP Oxford. pp. 231–232. ISBN 978-0-19-155751-4.
  5. ^ Clough, Emma (2004). "Loyalty and Liberty: Thermopylae in the Western Imagination". In Figueira, Thomas J. (ed.). Spartan Society. ISD LLC. pp. 365–371. ISBN 978-1-914535-21-5.
  6. ^ Clough, Emma (2004). "Loyalty and Liberty: Thermopylae in the Western Imagination". In Figueira, Thomas J. (ed.). Spartan Society. ISD LLC. p. 372. ISBN 978-1-914535-21-5.
  7. ^ Clough, Emma (2004). "Loyalty and Liberty: Thermopylae in the Western Imagination". In Figueira, Thomas J. (ed.). Spartan Society. ISD LLC. pp. 372–373. ISBN 978-1-914535-21-5.
  8. ^ Rebenich, Stefan (2002). "From Thermopylae to Stalingrad: The Myth of Leonidas in German Historiography". In Hodkinson, Stephen; Powell, Anton (eds.). Sparta: Beyond the Mirage. ISD LLC. p. 326. ISBN 978-1-914535-20-8. Archived (PDF of stand-alone book chapter) from the original on 2022-03-03.
  9. ^ Clough, Emma (2004). "Loyalty and Liberty: Thermopylae in the Western Imagination". In Figueira, Thomas J. (ed.). Spartan Society. ISD LLC. p. 374. ISBN 978-1-914535-21-5.
  10. ^ Levene, D. S. (2007). "Xerxes Goes to Hollywood". In Bridges, Emma; Hall, Edith; Rhodes, P. J. (eds.). Cultural Responses to the Persian Wars: Antiquity to the Third Millennium. OUP Oxford. pp. 394–395. ISBN 978-0-19-155751-4.
  11. ^ Clough, Emma (2004). "Loyalty and Liberty: Thermopylae in the Western Imagination". In Figueira, Thomas J. (ed.). Spartan Society. ISD LLC. pp. 374–378. ISBN 978-1-914535-21-5.
  12. ^ Bridges, Emma (2007). "The Guts and the Glory: Pressfield's Spartans at the Gates of Fire". In Bridges, Emma; Hall, Edith; Rhodes, P. J. (eds.). Cultural Responses to the Persian Wars: Antiquity to the Third Millennium. OUP Oxford. pp. 411–419. ISBN 978-0-19-155751-4.

Further reading

[edit]