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fleet. When they arrived the Greeks found that the
Persians were already there, and Eurybiades ordered a retreat, although the Euboeans begged him to stay. Instead, they bribed Themistocles to keep the fleet there, and Themistocles used some of his bribe to pay off Eurybiades (at least according to
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saw the benefits of fighting at
Salamis and wanted to force a naval battle there. Eurybiades was insistent, and Themistocles had to threaten to withdraw the Athenian fleet (the largest contingent of the Greek forces) in order to make Eurybiades stay. After Themistocles tricked the Persian king
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into separating his fleet by sending part around the island to blockade the Greek fleet in the
Straits of Salamis, Eurybiades was forced to accept Salamis as the battlefield. The
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that Xerxes had built there. He wanted Xerxes to be able to escape rather than have him remain in Greece where he would possibly renew the land war.
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was a decisive victory for the Greeks. After the battle
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Eurybiades was the son of
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Lords of the Sea: The
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was indecisive, and the Greeks removed their fleet to
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Spartan commander in a Greco-Persian War (480–479 BC)
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