Xenophon and Cyrus the Younger: Anabasis and Story of Ancient Monarchy in Persia

  November 21, 2020   Read time 1 min
Xenophon and Cyrus the Younger: Anabasis and Story of Ancient Monarchy in Persia
Xenophon provides his own account of the history of Ancient Persia. He allows us to know things of the time when the Persian governor Cyrus led a Greek expedition to revolt against the Persian King.

Xenophon (ca. 430–ca. 354 BCE) was a wealthy Athenian and friend of Socrates. He left Athens in 401 and joined an expedition including ten thousand Greeks led by the Persian governor Cyrus against the Persian king. After the defeat of Cyrus, it fell to Xenophon to lead the Greeks from the gates of Babylon back to the coast through inhospitable lands. Later he wrote the famous vivid account of this “March Up-Country” (Anabasis); but meanwhile he entered service under the Spartans against the Persian king, married happily, and joined the staff of the Spartan king, Agesilaus. But Athens was at war with Sparta in 394 and so exiled Xenophon. The Spartans gave him an estate near Elis where he lived for years writing and hunting and educating his sons. Reconciled to Sparta, Athens restored Xenophon to honor, but he preferred to retire to Corinth. Xenophon’s Anabasis is a true story of remarkable adventures (Source: Harvard University).

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