Fix deep scan: log output even on failure, capture exit code for debugging

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daniel
2026-02-23 12:30:19 +00:00
parent 34d444aa17
commit 517c8f2cd0
71 changed files with 6824 additions and 333 deletions

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@@ -15,31 +15,116 @@ King Darius I of Persia (r. 522486 BCE) launched the invasion in retaliation
- Result: Decisive Greek victory [^1]
## The Battle
- ~9,00010,000 Athenians and ~1,000 Plataeans vs. ~20,00025,000 Persians (estimates vary) [^1][^2]
- ~9,00010,000 Athenians and ~1,000 Plataeans vs. ~20,00025,000 Persians (estimates vary) [^1][^2] <!-- reviewed:2026-02-23 -->
- Greeks thinned their center to four ranks deep and strengthened the flanks to match the Persian line width (~1,500 m front)
- The Persian cavalry was conspicuously absent from the engagement — possibly embarked for a flanking move on Athens, or unable to deploy effectively on the terrain [^3]
- The Persian cavalry was conspicuously absent from the engagement — possibly embarked for a flanking move on Athens, or unable to deploy effectively on the terrain [^3] <!-- reviewed:2026-02-23 -->
- Greek wings enveloped the Persian center in a double envelopment; the Persian flanks broke and fled toward the ships across marshy ground
- Fierce fighting at the ships; Callimachus was killed in this phase; the Greeks captured seven Persian vessels [^3]
- Fierce fighting at the ships; Callimachus was killed in this phase; the Greeks captured seven Persian vessels [^3] <!-- reviewed:2026-02-23 -->
- Persian losses: ~6,400; Greek losses: ~192 (the Greek figure is likely an undercount) [^1]
## Aftermath
- After the battle, the Persian fleet sailed around Cape Sounion toward Athens; the Greek army force-marched back and arrived in time to deter a landing — the Persians withdrew to Asia [^3]
- ~2,000 Spartans arrived after the battle; delayed by the sacred Karneia festival and possibly a Messenian revolt [^1][^3]
- The Athenian dead were cremated and buried on the battlefield in the *soros* (burial mound), still visible today; a commemorative trophy column was erected (fragments in the Archaeological Museum of Marathon) [^3]
- Annual sacrifice of 500 goats to Artemis Agrotera was performed at the site for ~400 years [^3]
- Victory commemorated at Delphi with a bronze sculptural group by Phidias (including Apollo, Artemis, and Miltiades) and a Treasury of the Athenians; a colossal bronze Athena was erected on the Athenian Acropolis [^3]
- After the battle, the Persian fleet sailed around Cape Sounion toward Athens; the Greek army force-marched back and arrived in time to deter a landing — the Persians withdrew to Asia [^3] <!-- reviewed:2026-02-23 -->
- ~2,000 Spartans arrived after the battle; delayed by the sacred Karneia festival and possibly a Messenian revolt [^1][^3] <!-- reviewed:2026-02-23 -->
- The Athenian dead were cremated and buried on the battlefield in the *soros* (burial mound), still visible today; a commemorative trophy column was erected (fragments in the Archaeological Museum of Marathon) [^3] <!-- reviewed:2026-02-23 -->
- Annual sacrifice of 500 goats to Artemis Agrotera was performed at the site for ~400 years [^3] <!-- reviewed:2026-02-23 -->
- Victory commemorated at Delphi with a bronze sculptural group by Phidias (including Apollo, Artemis, and Miltiades) and a Treasury of the Athenians; a colossal bronze Athena was erected on the Athenian Acropolis [^3] <!-- reviewed:2026-02-23 -->
## Scholarly Notes
- **Date**: The conventional date of 12 September 490 BCE (established by August Boeckh using the Athenian calendar) has been challenged. Olson et al. (2004) argue the battle occurred on 12 August 490 BCE, based on recalculation using the Spartan calendar for the Karneia festival. [^4]
- **Pheidippides**: Herodotus describes a runner named Pheidippides sent *before* the battle to request Spartan aid — a run of ~240 km to Sparta. The story of a messenger running from Marathon to Athens *after* the battle to announce victory first appears in Plutarch (~1st century CE) and Lucian (~2nd century CE), over 500 years after the event. The modern marathon race (42.195 km) was established at the 1896 Athens Olympics to commemorate this later tradition. [^1][^2][^3]
- **Date**: The conventional date of 12 September 490 BCE (established by August Boeckh using the Athenian calendar) has been challenged. Olson et al. (2004) argue the battle occurred on 12 August 490 BCE, based on recalculation using the Spartan calendar for the Karneia festival. [^4] <!-- reviewed:2026-02-23 -->
- **Pheidippides**: Herodotus describes a runner named Pheidippides sent *before* the battle to request Spartan aid — a run of ~240 km to Sparta. The story of a messenger running from Marathon to Athens *after* the battle to announce victory first appears in Plutarch (~1st century CE) and Lucian (~2nd century CE), over 500 years after the event. The modern marathon race (42.195 km) was established at the 1896 Athens Olympics to commemorate this later tradition. [^1][^2][^3] <!-- reviewed:2026-02-23 -->
## Legacy
- First Greek land victory over Persia; proved the Persian army was not invincible
- Boosted Athenian democratic identity and confidence; veterans wore a bull-of-Marathon device on their shields [^3]
- Boosted Athenian democratic identity and confidence; veterans wore a bull-of-Marathon device on their shields [^3] <!-- reviewed:2026-02-23 -->
- Preceded the larger Persian invasion of 480 BCE (Thermopylae, Salamis, Plataea)
---
[^1]: Herodotus, *Histories* 6.94117 (~430 BCE)
[^2]: Krentz, P. *The Battle of Marathon* (Yale University Press, 2010)
[^3]: Cartwright, M. "Battle of Marathon." *World History Encyclopedia*, 19 May 2013. https://www.worldhistory.org/marathon/
[^4]: Olson, D. W. et al. "Battle of Marathon date revised." *Nature News*, 19 July 2004. https://doi.org/10.1038/news040719-1
[^4]: Olson, D. W. et al. "Battle of Marathon date revised." *Nature News*, 19 July 2004. https://doi.org/10.1038/news040719-1---
## Review Queue
<!-- factbase:review -->
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 12: "Location: Plain of Marathon, ~40 km northeast of Athens" - when was this true?
>
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 13: "Belligerents: Athens and Plataea vs. Persian Empire" - when was this true?
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- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 14: "Commanders: Callimachus (Athenian polemarch, overall command; killed in battl..." - when was this true?
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- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 15: "Result: Decisive Greek victory [^1]" - when was this true?
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- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 18: "~9,00010,000 Athenians and ~1,000 Plataeans vs. ~20,00025,000 Persians ..." - when was this true? @t[~2026-02-23]
>
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 19: "Greeks thinned their center to four ranks deep and strengthened the flanks to..." - when was this true?
>
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 20: "The Persian cavalry was conspicuously absent from the engagement — possibly..." - when was this true? @t[~2026-02-23]
>
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 21: "Greek wings enveloped the Persian center in a double envelopment; the Persian..." - when was this true?
>
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 22: "Fierce fighting at the ships; Callimachus was killed in this phase; the Greek..." - when was this true? @t[~2026-02-23]
>
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 23: "Persian losses: ~6,400; Greek losses: ~192 (the Greek figure is likely an und..." - when was this true?
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- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 26: "After the battle, the Persian fleet sailed around Cape Sounion toward Athens;..." - when was this true? @t[~2026-02-23]
>
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 27: "~2,000 Spartans arrived after the battle; delayed by the sacred Karneia festi..." - when was this true? @t[~2026-02-23]
>
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 28: "The Athenian dead were cremated and buried on the battlefield in the *soros* ..." - when was this true? @t[~2026-02-23]
>
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 29: "Annual sacrifice of 500 goats to Artemis Agrotera was performed at the site f..." - when was this true? @t[~2026-02-23]
>
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 30: "Victory commemorated at Delphi with a bronze sculptural group by Phidias (inc..." - when was this true? @t[~2026-02-23]
>
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 33: "**Date**: The conventional date of 12 September 490 BCE (established by Augus..." - when was this true? @t[~2026-02-23]
>
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 34: "**Pheidippides**: Herodotus describes a runner named Pheidippides sent *befor..." - when was this true? @t[~2026-02-23]
>
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 37: "First Greek land victory over Persia; proved the Persian army was not invincible" - when was this true?
>
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 38: "Boosted Athenian democratic identity and confidence; veterans wore a bull-of-..." - when was this true? @t[~2026-02-23]
>
- [ ] `@q[temporal]` Line 39: "Preceded the larger Persian invasion of 480 BCE (Thermopylae, Salamis, Plataea)" - when was this true?
>
- [ ] `@q[missing]` Line 11: "Date: ~1112 September 490 BCE @t[=490 BCE]" - what is the source?
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- [ ] `@q[missing]` Line 12: "Location: Plain of Marathon, ~40 km northeast of Athens" - what is the source?
>
- [ ] `@q[missing]` Line 13: "Belligerents: Athens and Plataea vs. Persian Empire" - what is the source?
>
- [ ] `@q[missing]` Line 14: "Commanders: Callimachus (Athenian polemarch, overall command; killed in battl..." - what is the source?
> Need to verify whether this claim has an explicit source citation in the document footnotes.
- [ ] `@q[missing]` Line 19: "Greeks thinned their center to four ranks deep and strengthened the flanks to..." - what is the source?
> Need to verify whether this claim has an explicit source citation in the document footnotes.
- [ ] `@q[missing]` Line 21: "Greek wings enveloped the Persian center in a double envelopment; the Persian..." - what is the source?
> Need to verify whether this claim has an explicit source citation in the document footnotes.
- [ ] `@q[missing]` Line 37: "First Greek land victory over Persia; proved the Persian army was not invincible" - what is the source?
> Need to verify whether this claim has an explicit source citation in the document footnotes.
- [ ] `@q[missing]` Line 39: "Preceded the larger Persian invasion of 480 BCE (Thermopylae, Salamis, Plataea)" - what is the source?
> Need to verify whether this claim has an explicit source citation in the document footnotes.