Themistocles and the Trap at Salamis
Greek leaders bickered as Xerxes’ fleet loomed — then Themistocles sent a secret messenger to the enemy.

Jacques Louis David — "The Death of Socrates" (1787), public domain
A city in ruins, a council in chaos.
Athens was burning. The Persian king Xerxes had torched the city, and his fleet outnumbered the Greeks more than 2 to 1. The Greek admirals argued all night: fight, or flee to the Peloponnese?
Themistocles plays his hand — to the enemy.
While allies debated, Themistocles secretly sent a slave to the Persian admirals. The message: The Greeks are divided. Strike now, before they escape. Xerxes fell for it and ordered his massive fleet into the cramped waters off Salamis, exactly where Themistocles wanted them.
A bottleneck becomes a bloodbath.
Hemmed in, Persian warships could barely maneuver. The Greek triremes rammed them from all sides. By sunset, hundreds of Persian ships had sunk. It was the turning point of the war — won by a gamble and a lie.
With Athens under threat, Themistocles used deception to lure the Persian fleet into a narrow strait — handing the outnumbered Greeks their greatest naval victory.