TheThemistoclean Wall (Greek:Θεμιστόκλειον τείχος),[1] named after theAthenian statesmanThemistocles, was built inAthens, Greece during the 5th century BC as a result of thePersian Wars and in the hopes of defending against further invasion.
The Persian Wars were waged by theAchaemenid Empire of Persia in an attempt to conquer the Greeks. KingDarius I was unsuccessful in his invasion attempt and was followed by his son,Xerxes I, who led theSecond Persian Wars which lasted from 480 to 479 BC. Xerxes saw more victories than his father, successfullyburning down Athens. Following the Persian Wars the Greek city states were left in disarray. Many buildings, statues, and fortifications of the Greek city states were destroyed.
The people of Athens were worried by a return of the Persians, and Themistocles advocated rebuilding the walls before anything else so they decided to act upon this plan. This project was opposed by theSpartans and their Peloponnesian allies alarmed by the increasing power of Athens, arguing that a walled Athens would be a useful base for an invading army, and that the defences of theIsthmus of Corinth would provide a sufficient shield against invaders. The Athenians went ahead to protect themselves from the Peloponnesians;[2]Thucydides, in his account of these events, describes a series of complex machinations byThemistocles through which he distracted and delayed the Spartans until the walls were built up high enough to provide adequate protection.[3]
The Themistoclean Wall was completed in 479 BC[4] and built withspolia, old materials, in this case destroyed temples, statues, and other ruins[4] because of the rushed nature of the work and the readily available material. It had a total length of 8500 m, height 8–10 m, width 3m and had at least 13 gates.
The wall bisected theKerameikos cemetery where all of the funerary sculptures were built into it and two large city gates facing north-west were erected.[5] TheSacred Way ran through theSacred Gate, on the southern side, toEleusis. On the northern side a wide road, the Dromos, ran through the double-archedDipylon Gate (also known as the Thriasian Gate) and on to the Platonic Academy a few miles away.
After their defeat in thePeloponnesian war in 404 BC the Athenians had to destroy all the walls. However, when democracy was re-establishedConon repaired the city walls in 394 BC. Facing theMacedonian invasion in 338 BC, a smaller wall, the Proteichisma, was built in front of the main one as an extra defence.
The walls were badly damaged whenSulla besieged and attacked the city in 86 BC. They were eventually rebuilt along some sections byValerian (253-260 AD).
The main visible remains are:[6]
The Themistoclean Wall had a number of gates, many of which have been excavated in whole or in part. The most important were: