Pericles

Leonidas I

Leonidas I was the Spartan king who died at Thermopylae in 480 BC while resisting Xerxes I's Persian invasion. His last stand became a lasting symbol of courage, discipline and sacrifice.

Born
540 BCE
Died
480 BCE
Role
King of Sparta

King of Sparta (c. 540–480 BC)

Portrait of Leonidas I, King of Sparta
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Also known as
Leonidas of Sparta
Facts

Leonidas I timeline facts

Selected specifics from this profile's life story.

c. 540 BC–520 BC
The agoge

Leonidas was born into Sparta's Agiad royal house, but as a younger son he passed through the agoge and was shaped by the same hard training as other Spartan citizens.

480 BC
The decision to hold Thermopylae

The Greeks chose Thermopylae because its narrow pass could reduce Persian numerical superiority, and Leonidas led the advance force that held it.

480 BC
The last stand

Leonidas and the remaining defenders fought to the death on the final day, and his body became the centre of a fierce struggle before the Persians took the pass.

After 480 BC
An eternal stand

Leonidas's legacy rests on the power of a chosen last stand, though the legend often says as much about later societies as about Sparta itself.

Life Journey

Agoge, kingship, and the pass

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c. 540 BC–520 BC

The agoge

Leonidas was born into Sparta's Agiad royal house, but as a younger son he passed through the agoge and was shaped by the same hard training as other Spartan citizens.

c. 490 BC

An unexpected accession

He became king unexpectedly after the deaths of his elder brothers, strengthening his position by marrying Gorgo, daughter of Cleomenes I.

490 BC–480 BC

The Persian threat

After the Persian defeat at Marathon in 490 BC, Xerxes I prepared a larger invasion, forcing Sparta and Athens into an uneasy Greek alliance.

480 BC

The decision to hold Thermopylae

The Greeks chose Thermopylae because its narrow pass could reduce Persian numerical superiority, and Leonidas led the advance force that held it.

480 BC

Two days of resistance

For two days, the Greek defenders used the narrow ground to blunt Persian attacks, including assaults by elite troops, and inflicted heavy losses.

480 BC

The betrayal

The defence collapsed when Ephialtes of Malis showed the Persians a mountain route around the pass, exposing the Greeks to encirclement.

480 BC

The last stand

Leonidas and the remaining defenders fought to the death on the final day, and his body became the centre of a fierce struggle before the Persians took the pass.

480 BC–479 BC

The war that followed

Thermopylae did not stop the invasion, but it bought time, strengthened Greek resolve and became part of the sequence that led to Salamis and Plataea.

After 480 BC

An eternal stand

Leonidas's legacy rests on the power of a chosen last stand, though the legend often says as much about later societies as about Sparta itself.

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Tertiary paths

Content note

This profile is written for educational use and connects to related Stories of History pages. Illustrations are original artistic interpretations.

References

Sources & Further Reading

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Further reading

  1. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Search results for Leonidas I,” accessed June 2026.Open source
  2. WorldCat, Books and library holdings for Leonidas I,” accessed June 2026.Open source

Primary sources

  1. Library of Congress, Search results for Leonidas I,” accessed June 2026.Open source

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