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  2. Battle of Aegospotami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Aegospotami

    The Athenian fleet was obliterated; only nine ships escaped, led by the general Conon. Lysander captured nearly all of the remainder, along with some three or four thousand Athenian sailors. One of the escaped ships, the messenger ship Paralus, was dispatched to inform Athens of the disaster.

  3. Battle of Naupactus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Naupactus

    Attacking suddenly, the Peloponnesians drove nine Athenian ships ashore and pursued the others towards Naupactus; victory seemed securely in their hands. At the entrance to the harbor of Naupactus, however, the last Athenian ship to reach the harbor turned the tide by circling around an anchored merchant ship to ram and sink its leading pursuer.

  4. Mytilenean revolt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mytilenean_revolt

    The Mytilenean representatives in Athens offered a sizable reward to the crew if the ship arrived in time to prevent the executions. Rowing day and night, sleeping in shifts, and eating at their oars, the rowers of the second trireme managed to make up the first ship's one day lead and arrive at Mytilene just as Paches was reading the original ...

  5. Athenian sacred ships - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Athenian_sacred_ships

    For the philosophical question of the ship's identity, see Ship of Theseus.) After the reforms of Cleisthenes, a ship was named for each of the ten tribes that political leader had created; these ships may also have been sacred ships. [4] Another known sacred ship was the Theoris (θεωρίς), a trireme kept for sacred embassies. [5]

  6. Paralus (ship) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paralus_(ship)

    The Paralus or Paralos (Greek: Πάραλος, "sea-side"; named after a mythological son of Poseidon), was an Athenian sacred ship and a messenger trireme of the Athenian navy during the late 5th century BC. Its crew were known for their vehement pro-democracy views.

  7. Olympias (trireme) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olympias_(trireme)

    Olympias achieved a speed of 9 knots (17 km/h) and was able to perform 180 degree turns within one minute, in an arc no wider than two and a half (2.5) ship-lengths. These results, achieved with an inexperienced, mixed crew, suggest that ancient historians like Thucydides were not exaggerating about the capabilities of triremes.

  8. Battle of Sybota - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Sybota

    The Athenian ships, although they were part of the line, did not at first join the battle, as the Corinthians had not attempted to land. The Corcyraean ships on the left routed the Corinthian right wing, chasing them all the way back to their camp on the coast, which they then burned.

  9. 420s BC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/420s_BC

    The Athenian admiral Phormio has two naval victories, the Naupactus and the Battle of Rhium at the mouth of the Corinthian Gulf. In the first battle, his 20 ships defeat 47 Corinthian ships commanded by Machaon, Isocrates, and Agatharchidas that were advancing to reinforce the Spartan general, Cnemus's campaign in Acarnania. In the second ...