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{{Short description|City-state in ancient Greece}}
'''Sparta''' was in ] the main alternative to the ]. Sparta was the partner of Athens in the Persian wars and its opponent in the ].
{{About|the ancient city-state|modern-day Sparta|Sparta, Laconia|other uses|Sparta (disambiguation)}}
{{Redirect|Spartan|other uses|Spartan (disambiguation)|the mythical people associated with Ares|Spartoi}}
{{Redirect|Lacedaemon|the king|Lacedaemon (mythology)}}
{{Pp|small=yes}}
{{Pp-move}}
{{Use dmy dates|cs1-dates=ly|date=October 2021}}
{{Infobox former country
| conventional_long_name = Lacedaemon
| native_name = {{small|{{native name|grc|Λακεδαίμων}}}}
| common_name = Sparta
| image_map = Spartan Territory Before 371 BC.png
| image_map_caption = Territory of ancient Sparta before 371 BC, with ]c cities in blue
| era = Classical antiquity
| year_start = 900s BC
| year_end = 192 BC
| life_span = 900s–192 BC
| event_start = ]
| event_end = ] by ]
| event1 = ]
| date_event1 = 685–668 BC
| event2 = ]
| date_event2 = 480 BC
| event3 = ]
| date_event3 = 431–404 BC
| event4 = ]
| date_event4 = 362 BC
| p1 = Greek Dark Ages
| s1 = Achaean League
| flag_s2 = Spqrstone.jpg
| capital = ]
| coordinates = {{coord|37|4|55|N|22|25|25|E|region:GR-J_type:city|display=title,inline}}
| common_languages = ]
| religion = ]
| government_type = ] ]
| title_leader = ]
| leader1 = ]
| year_leader1 = {{Circa|930}}–900 BC
| leader4 = ]
| year_leader4 = 207–192 BC
| legislature = {{plainlist|
* ]
* ]
}}
| symbol_type_article = Lambda (Λάμδα)
}}
{{Special characters}}
] on the left bank of the ] overlooking the future site of Dorian Sparta. Across the valley the successive ridges of Mount ] are in evidence.]]


'''Sparta'''<ref>({{Langx|grc-x-doric|{{linktext|Σπάρτα}}|Spártā}}; {{Langx|grc-x-attic|{{linktext|Σπάρτη}}|Spártē}})</ref> was a prominent ] in ] in ]. In antiquity, the city-state was known as '''Lacedaemon''' ({{langx|grc|{{linktext|Λακεδαίμων}}|Lakedaímōn|label=none}}), while the name Sparta referred to its main settlement on the banks of the ] in the ] of Laconia, in south-eastern ].{{sfn|Cartledge|2002|p=91}} Around 650 BC, it rose to become the dominant ] in ancient Greece.
= SPARTA =
Sparta was an ancient city in Greece, the capital of
Laconia and the most powerful state of the Peloponnese.
The city lay at the northern end of the central Laconian
plain, on the right bank of the river Eurotas, a little
south of the point where it is joined by its largest
tributary, the Oenus (mod. KelefIna). The site is
admirably fitted by nature to guard the only routes
by which an army can penetrate Laconia from the land
side, the Oenus and Eurotas valleys leading from Arcadia,
its northern neighbor, and the Langhda Pass over Mt Taygetus
connecting Laconia and Messenia. At the same time its distance
from the sea—Sparta is 27 miles from its seaport, Gythium—made it
invulnerable to a maritime attack.


Given its military pre-eminence, Sparta was recognized as the leading force of the unified Greek military during the ], in rivalry with the rising naval power of ].{{sfn|Cartledge|2002|p=174}} Sparta was the principal enemy of ] during the ] (431–404 BC),{{sfn|Cartledge|2002|p=192}} from which it emerged victorious after the ]. The decisive ] against ] in 371&nbsp;BC ended the ], although the city-state maintained its ] until its forced integration into the ] in 192 BC. The city nevertheless recovered much autonomy after the ] in ] and prospered during the ], as its antiquarian customs attracted many Roman tourists. However, Sparta was sacked in 396&nbsp;AD by the ] king ], and underwent a long period of decline, especially in the ], when many of its citizens moved to ]. ] is the capital of the southern Greek region of Laconia and a center for processing citrus and olives.
== History ==


Sparta was unique in ancient Greece for its ] and ], which were supposedly introduced by the semi-mythical legislator ]. His laws configured the Spartan ] to maximize military proficiency at all costs, focusing all ] on ] and physical development. The inhabitants of Sparta were stratified as ]s (citizens with full rights), ] (free non-Spartiate people descended from Spartans), ] (free non-Spartiates), and ] (state-owned enslaved non-Spartan locals). Spartiate men underwent the rigorous '']'' training regimen, and Spartan ] brigades were widely considered to be among the best in battle. ] enjoyed considerably more ] than elsewhere in ].


Sparta was frequently a subject of fascination in its own day, as well as in ] following the revival of classical learning. The admiration of Sparta is known as ]. ] wrote:<blockquote>Sparta had a double effect on Greek thought: through the reality, and through the myth.... The reality enabled the Spartans to defeat Athens in war; the myth influenced Plato's political theory, and that of countless subsequent writers.... ideals that it favors had a great part in framing the doctrines of ], ], and ].<ref>{{Cite book|title=History of western philosophy|last=Russell|first=Bertrand|isbn=978-1138127043|chapter=Chapter XII: The Influence of Sparta|oclc=931802632|date = 2015-08-27|publisher=Routledge }}</ref></blockquote>
===Prehistoric Period===
Tradition relates that Sparta was founded by
Lacedaemon, son of Zeus and Taygete, who called the city after
the name of his wife, the daughter of Eurotas. But Amyclae and
Therapne (Therapnae) seem to have been in early times of greater
importance than Sparta, the former a Minyan foundation a few miles
to the south of Sparta, the latter probably the Achaean capital
of Laconia and the seat of Menelaus, Agamemnon’s younger brother.
Eighty years after the Trojan War, according to the traditional
chronology, the Dorian migration took place. A band of
Dorians (q.v.) united with a body of Aetolians to cross the
Corinthian Gulf and invade the Peloponnese from the northwest.


==Names==
The Aetolians settled in Elis, the Dorians pushed up to the
]
headwaters of the Alpheus, where they divided into two forces,
one of which under Cresphonter invaded and later subdued Messenia,
while the other, led by Aristodemus or, according to another
version, by his twin sons Eurysthenes and Procles, made its
way down the Eurotas valley and gained Sparta, which became
the Dorian capital of Laconia.


The ] used one of three words to refer to the Spartan city-state and its location. First, "Sparta" refers primarily to the main cluster of settlements in the valley of the ].<ref>{{harvnb|Liddell|Scott|1940}}. {{LSJ|*spa/rth|Σπάρτη}}.</ref> The second word, "Lacedaemon" ({{lang|grc|Λακεδαίμων}}),<ref>{{harvnb|Liddell|Scott|1940}}. {{LSJ|*lakedai/mwn|Λακεδαίμων}}.</ref> was often used as an adjective and is the name referenced in the works of ] and the historians ] and ]. The third term, "Laconice" ({{lang|grc|Λακωνική}}), referred to the immediate area around the town of Sparta, the plateau east of the Taygetos mountains,{{sfn|Cartledge|2002|p=4}} and sometimes to all the regions under direct Spartan control, including ].
In reality this DOrian immigration probably consisted of
a series of inroads and settlements rather than a single
great expedition, as depicted by legend, and was aided by
the Minyan elements in the population, owing to their dislike
of the Achaean yoke.


The earliest attested term referring to Lacedaemon is the ] {{lang|gmy|{{script|Linb|𐀨𐀐𐀅𐀖𐀛𐀍}}}}, ''ra-ke-da-mi-ni-jo'', "Lakedaimonian", written in ] syllabic script,<ref name=Palaeolexicon-rakedaminijo>{{cite web|website=Palaeolexicon. Word study tool of Ancient languages|url=http://www.palaeolexicon.com/ShowWord.aspx?Id=16881|title=The Linear B word ra-ke-da-mi-ni-jo}}</ref>{{refn|group=n|Found on the following ]: ] Fq 229, TH Fq 258, TH Fq 275, TH Fq 253, TH Fq 284, TH Fq 325, TH Fq 339, TH Fq 382.<ref name=DamosDb/> There are also words like {{lang|gmy|{{script|Linb|𐀨𐀐𐀅𐀖𐀛𐀍𐀄𐀍}}}}, ''ra-ke-da-mo-ni-jo-u-jo'' – found on the TH Gp 227 tablet<ref name=DamosDb/> – that could perhaps mean "son of the Spartan".<ref name=ACttAGrL>{{cite book|pages=223|title=A Companion to the Ancient Greek Language|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oa42E3DP3icC&pg=PA195|editor-first=Egbert J.|editor-last=Bakker|year=2010|publisher= Wiley-Blackwell|isbn= 978-1-4051-5326-3|series=Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World|chapter=Mycenaean Greek|first=Rupert|last=Thompson}}</ref><ref name=Beekes>{{cite book|first=R.S.P.|last=Beekes|others=With the assistance of Lucien van Beek|title=Etymological Dictionary of Greek|volume=2|publisher=Brill|year=2010|place=Leiden, Boston|pages=1528|chapter=s.v. υἱός|isbn=9789004174184}}</ref> Moreover, the attested words {{lang|gmy|{{script|Linb|𐀨𐀐𐀅𐀜}}}} , ''ra-ke-da-no'' and {{lang|gmy|{{script|Linb|𐀐𐀅𐀜𐀩}}}}, ''ra-ke-da-no-re'' could possibly be Linear B forms of ''Lacedaemon'' itself; the latter, found on the ] Ge 604 tablet, is considered to be the ] form of the former which is found on the MY Ge 603 tablet. It is considered much more probable though that ''ra-ke-da-no'' and ''ra-ke-da-no-re'' correspond to the ] {{lang|grc|Λακεδάνωρ}}, ''Lakedanor'', though the latter is thought to be related etymologically to ''Lacedaemon''.<ref name=DamosDb>{{cite web|url=https://www2.hf.uio.no/damos/Index/item/chosen_item_id/5239|title=TH 229 Fq (305)}}
The newly founded state did not at once become powerful:
{{cite web|url=https://www2.hf.uio.no/damos/Index/item/chosen_item_id/5254|title=TH Fq 258 (305)}}
it was weakened by internal dissension and lacked the
{{cite web|url=https://www2.hf.uio.no/damos/Index/item/chosen_item_id/5260|title=TH 275 Fq (305)}}
stability of a united and well-organized community.
{{cite web|url=https://www2.hf.uio.no/damos/Index/item/chosen_item_id/5251|title=TH 253 Fq (305)}}
The turning-point is marked by the legislation of
{{cite web|url=https://www2.hf.uio.no/damos/Index/item/chosen_item_id/5265|title=TH 284 Fq (305)}}
Lycurgus (q.v.), who effected the unification of the
{{cite web|url=https://www2.hf.uio.no/damos/Index/item/chosen_item_id/5282|title=TH 325 Fq (305)}}
state and instituted that training which was its
{{cite web|url=https://www2.hf.uio.no/damos/Index/item/chosen_item_id/5285|title=TH 339 Fq (305)}}
distinguishing feature and the source of its
{{cite web|url=https://www2.hf.uio.no/damos/Index/item/chosen_item_id/5314|title=TH 382 Fq (305)}}
greatness.
{{cite web|url=https://www2.hf.uio.no/damos/Index/item/chosen_item_id/5410|title=TH 227 Gp (306)}}
{{cite web|url=https://www2.hf.uio.no/damos/Index/item/chosen_item_id/5573|title=MY 603 Ge + frr. (58a)}}
{{cite web|url=https://www2.hf.uio.no/damos/Index/item/chosen_item_id/5574|website=DĀMOS Database of Mycenaean at Oslo|publisher=]|title=MY 604 Ge (58a)}}
</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Raymoure|first=K.A.|title=ra-ke-da-no|work=Minoan Linear A & Mycenaean Linear B |publisher=Deaditerranean|url=http://minoan.deaditerranean.com/resources/linear-b-sign-groups/ra/ra-ke-da-no/ |access-date=2014-03-23|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131012022558/http://minoan.deaditerranean.com/resources/linear-b-sign-groups/ra/ra-ke-da-no/|archive-date=2013-10-12|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name=BARev-lakedanor>{{cite book|title=Black Athena Revisited|year=1996|page=193|editor1-first=Mary R.|editor1-last=Lefkowitz|author-link=Mary Lefkowitz |editor2-first=Guy|editor2-last=Rogers Maclean|first1=Jay H.|last1=Jasanoff|first2=Alan|last2=Nussbaum |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AClFWV6PE8wC&pg=PA193 |publisher=The University of North Carolina Press|isbn=0807845558}}</ref>}} the equivalent of the later ] {{lang|grc|Λακεδαιμόνιος}}, ''Lakedaimonios'' (]: ''Lacedaemonius'').<ref>{{harvnb|Liddell|Scott|1940}}. {{LSJ|*lakedai/mwn|Λακεδαιμόνιος, s.v. Λακεδαίμων}}.</ref><ref name=L&S-Lacedaemon>{{L&S|Lacedaemon|Lacedaemonius, s.v. Lacedaemon|ref}}</ref>


Herodotus seems to use "Lacedaemon" for the ] citadel at ], in contrast to the lower town of Sparta. This term could be used synonymously with Sparta, but typically it denoted the terrain in which the city was located.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia | title=Lacedaemon | encyclopedia=A Dictionary of Ancient Geography | first1=Alexander | last1=MacBean | author-link = Alexander Macbean | first2=Samuel | last2=Johnson | location=London | publisher=G. Robinson | year=1773 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EqwBAAAAYAAJ}}.</ref> In Homer it is typically combined with epithets of the countryside: wide, lovely, shining and most often hollow and broken (full of ravines),<ref>{{harvnb|Autenrieth|1891|loc=}}.</ref> suggesting the ]. "Sparta" on the other hand is described as "the country of lovely women", an epithet for people.
Nowhere else in the Greek world was the
pleasure of the individual so thoroughly subordinated to
the interest of the state.’ The ‘whole education of
the Spartan was designed to make him an efficient
soldier. Obedience, endurance, military success—these were
the aims constantly kept in view, and beside these all
other ends took a secondary place.


The residents of Sparta were often called Lacedaemonians. This epithet utilized the plural of the adjective Lacedaemonius (Greek: {{lang|grc|Λακεδαιμόνιοι}}; Latin: ''Lacedaemonii'', but also ''Lacedaemones''). The ancients sometimes used a ], referring to the land of Lacedaemon as ''Lacedaemonian country''. As most words for "country" were feminine, the adjective was in the feminine: ''Lacedaemonia'' ({{lang|grc|Λακεδαιμονία}}, ''Lakedaimonia''). Eventually, the adjective came to be used alone.
It is rare in the world’s history that a state so clearly
set a definite ideal before itself or striven so consistently
to reach it. But it was solely in this consistency and
steadfastness that the greatness of Sparta lay. Her
ideal was a narrow and unworthy one, and was pursued with
a calculating selfishness and a total disregard for the
rights of others, which robbed it of the moral worth it
might otherwise have possessed. Nevertheless, it is not
probable that without the training introduced by Lycurgus
the Spartans would have been successful in securing their
supremacy in Laconia, much less in the Peloponnese, for
they formed a small immigrant band face to face with a
large and powerful Achaean and autochthonous population.


"Lacedaemonia" was not in general use during the classical period and before. It does occur in Greek as an equivalent of Laconia and Messenia during the Roman and early Byzantine periods, mostly in ] and ] of place names. For example, ]'s ''Lexicon'' (5th century AD) defines Agiadae as a "place in Lacedaemonia" named after Agis.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia | title=s.v. Ἀγιάδαι | encyclopedia=Hesychii Alexandrini Lexicon | editor-first=Maurice | editor-last=Schmidt | location=Jena | publisher=Frederick Mauk | year=1863|url= https://archive.org/stream/hesychiialexand00schmgoog#page/n24/mode/1up|language=el}}. At the ]</ref> The actual transition may be captured by ]'s ''Etymologiae'' (7th century AD), an ]. Isidore relied heavily on ]' ''Historiarum Adversum Paganos'' (5th century AD) and ]'s '']'' (early 5th century AD), as did Orosius. The latter defines Sparta to be ''Lacedaemonia Civitas'',<ref>.</ref> but Isidore defines Lacedaemonia as founded by Lacedaemon, son of Semele, which is consistent with Eusebius' explanation.<ref>{{cite book |first=Leo |last=Wiener |title=Contributions toward a History of Arabico-Gothic Culture |series=Vol. III: Tacitus' Germania & Other Forgeries |location=Philadelphia |publisher=Innes & Sones |year=1920 |page=20}}</ref> There is a rare use, perhaps the earliest of "Lacedaemonia", in ]' The Library of History,<ref>Diodorus Siculus, ''Library'', .</ref> but probably with {{lang|grc|Χώρα}} (''chōra'', "country") suppressed.
=== The Expansion of Sparta ===


Lakedaimona was until 2006 the name of a ] in the modern Greek ] of ].
We cannot trace in detail the process by which Sparta
subjugated the whole of Laconia, but apparently the first
step, taken in the reign of Archelaus and Charillus,
was to secure the upper Eurotas valley, conquering
the border territory of Aegys. Archelaus’ son Teleclus
is said to have taken Amyclae, Pharis and Geronthrae,
thus mastering the central Laconian plain and the
eastern plateau which lies between the Eurotas and
Mt Parnon: his son, Alcamenes, by the subjugation of
Helos brought the lower Eurotas plain under Spartan
rule.


==Geography==
About this time, probably, the Argives, whose territory
included the whole east coast of the Peloponnese and
the island of Cythera (Herod. i. 82), were driven back,
and the whole of Laconia was thus incorporated in the
Spartan state. It was not long before a further
extension took place. Under Alcamenes and Theopompus
a war broke out between the Spartans and the Messenians,
their neighbors on. the west, which, after a struggle
lasting for twenty years, ended in the capture of
the stronghold of their home and the subjection of
the Messenians, who were forced to pay half the
produce of the soil as tribute to their Spartan
overlords.


]
An attempt to throw off the yoke resulted in a
second war, conducted by the Messenian hero
Aristomenes (q.v.); but Spartan tenacity broke down
the resistance of the insurgents, and Messenia was
made Spartan territory, just as Laconia had been,
its inhabitants being reduced to the status of helots,
save those who, as perioeci, inhabited the towns on
the sea-coast and a few settlements inland.


Sparta is located in the region of Laconia, in the south-eastern ]. Ancient Sparta was built on the banks of the ], the largest river of Laconia, which provided it with a source of fresh water. The ] was a natural fortress, bounded to the west by ] (2,407 m) and to the east by ] (1,935 m). To the north, Laconia is separated from ] by hilly uplands reaching 1000 m in altitude. These natural defenses worked to Sparta's advantage and protected it from sacking and ]. Though landlocked, Sparta had a vassal harbor, ], on the ].
This extension of Sparta’s territory was viewed with
apprehension by her neighbors in the Peloponnese.
Arcadia and Argos had vigorously aided the Messenians
in their two struggles, and help was also sent by
the Sicyonians, Pisatans and Triphyhans: only the
Corinthians appear to have supported the Spartans,
doubtless on account of their jealousy of their
powerful neighbors, the Argives. At the close of the
second Messenian War, i.e. by the war 631 at latest,
no power could hope to cope with that of Sparta save
Arcadia and Argos.


==Mythology==
Early in the 6th century the Spartan kings Leon and
] (Greek: {{lang|grc|Λακεδαίμων}}) was a ] king of Laconia.<ref name=PausaniasIII.1.2>{{harvnb|Pausanias|1918|loc= Description of Greece, }}.</ref> The son of ] by the nymph ], he married ], the daughter of ], by whom he became the father of ], ], and Asine. As king, he named his country after himself and the city after his wife.<ref name=PausaniasIII.1.2/> He was believed to have built the sanctuary of the ], which stood between Sparta and ], and to have given to those divinities the names of ] and ]. A ] was erected to him in the neighborhood of ].
Agasicles made a vigorous attack on Tegea, the most
powerful of the Arcadian cities, but it was not until
the reign of Anaxandridas and Ariston, about the
middle of the century, that the attack was successful
and Tegea was forced to acknowledge Spartan overlordship,
though retaining its independence. The final struggle
for Peloponnesian supremacy was with Argos, which had
at an early period been the most powerful state of
the peninsula, and even though its territory had been
curtailed, was a serious rival of Sparta.


], an archaic era Spartan writer, is the earliest source to connect the origin myth of the Spartans to the lineage of the hero ]; later authors, such as ], Herodotus, and ], also made mention of Spartans understanding themselves to be descendants of Heracles.<ref>Diodorus Siculus, 4.57-8</ref><ref>Apollodorus, 2.8.2-4</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=Kennel|first=Nigel|title=Spartans: A New History {{!}} Wiley|url=https://www.wiley.com/en-us/Spartans%3A+A+New+History-p-9781444360530|access-date=2021-02-03|website=Wiley.com|pages=37–39|language=en-us}}</ref><ref>Hdt., 9.26.2</ref>
But Argos was now no longer at the height of its power:
its league had begun to break up early in the century,
and it could not in the impending struggle count on the
assistance of its old allies, Arcadia and Messenia,
since the latter had been crushed and robbed of its
independence and the former had acknowledged Spartan
supremacy. A victory won about 546 B.c., when the
Lydian Empire fell before Cyrus of Persia,
made the Spartans masters of the Cynuria, the
borderland between Laconia and Argolis, for which
there had been an age-long struggle.


==Archaeology of the classical period==
The final blow was struck by King Cleomenes I. (q.v.),
] in the background.]]
who maimed for many years to come the Argive power and
] wrote:
left Sparta without a rival in the Peloponnese.
In fact, by the middle of the 6th century, and
increasingly down to , the period of the Persian Wars,
Sparta had come to be acknowledged as the leading
state of Hellas and the champion of Hellenism.
Croesus of Lydia had formed an alliance with her.
Scythian envoys sought her aid to stem the invasion
of Darius; to her the Greeks of Asia Minor appealed
to withstand the Persian advance and to aid the
lonian revolt; Plataea asked for her protection;
Megara acknowledged her supremacy; and at the time of
the Persian invasion under Xerxes no state questioned
her right to lead the Greek forces on land and sea.


<blockquote>Suppose the city of Sparta to be deserted, and nothing left but the temples and the ground-plan, distant ages would be very unwilling to believe that the power of the Lacedaemonians was at all equal to their fame. Their city is not built continuously, and has no splendid temples or other edifices; it rather resembles a group of villages, like the ancient towns of Hellas, and would therefore make a poor show.<ref name=EB1911>{{EB1911 |wstitle=Sparta |volume=25 |pages=609–14 |inline=1 |first=Marcus Niebuhr |last=Tod}}</ref><ref>Thucydides, i. 10</ref></blockquote>
Of such a position Sparta proved herself wholly unworthy.
As an ally ‘she was ineffective, nor could she ever
rid herself of her narrowly Peloponnesian outlook
sufficiently to throw herself heartily into the affairs
of the greater Hellas that lay beyond the isthmus and
across the sea. She was not a colonizing state, though
the inhabitants of Tarentum, in southern Italy, arid of
Lyttus, in Crete, claimed her as their mother-city.
Moreover, she had no share in the expansion of Greek
commerce and Greek culture; and, though she bore the
reputation of hating tyrants and putting them down
where possible, there can be little doubt that this
was done in the interests of oligarchy rather than
of liberty. Her military greatness and that of the states under
her hegemony formed her sole claim to lead the Greek race:
that she should truly represent it was impossible.


Until the early 20th century, the chief ancient buildings at Sparta were the ], of which, however, little showed above ground except portions of the ]s; the so-called Tomb of ], a quadrangular building, perhaps a temple, constructed of immense blocks of stone and containing two chambers; the foundation of an ancient bridge over the Eurotas; the ruins of a circular structure; some remains of late Roman ]s; several brick buildings and ]<ref name=EB1911/>
== Constitution ==
Of the internal development of Sparta down to this time
but little is recorded. This want of information was
attributed by most of the Greeks to “the stability of
the Spartan constitution, which had lasted unchanged
from the days of Lycurgus. But it is, in fact, due
also to the absence of an historical literature at
Sparta, to the small part played by written laws, which
were, according to tradition, expressly prohibited by an
ordinance of Lycurgus, and to the secrecy which always
characterizes an oligarchical rule. At the head of the
state stood two hereditary kings, of the Agiad and
Eurypontid families, equal in authority, so that one
could not act again.st the veto of his colleague,
though the Agiad king received greater honour in virtue
of the seniority of his family (Herod. vi. 5’).


The remaining archaeological wealth consisted of inscriptions, sculptures, and other objects collected in the local museum, founded by Stamatakis in 1872 and enlarged in 1907. Partial ] of the round building was undertaken in 1892 and 1893 by the ]. The structure has been since found to be a semicircular retaining wall of Hellenic origin that was partly restored during the Roman period.<ref name=EB1911/>
This dual kingship, a phenomenon unique in Greek history,
was explained in Sparta by the tradition that on
Aristodemus’s death he had been succeeded by his twin sons,
and that this joint rule had been perpetuated. Modern
scholars have advanced various theories to account for
the anomaly. Some suppose that it must be explained as
an attempt to avoid absolutism, and is paralleled by the
analogous instance of the consuls at Rome. Others think
that it points’ to a compromise arrived at to end the s
truggle between two families or communities, or that the
two royal houses represent respectively the Spartan
conquerors and their Achaean predecessors: those who hold
this last view appeal to the words attributed by
Herodotus (v. 72) to Cleomenes I.: “I am no Dorian, but an Achaean.”


]
The duties of the kings were mainly religious, judicial
In 1904, the ] began a thorough exploration of ], and in the following year excavations were made at ], ], and Angelona near ]. In 1906, excavations began in Sparta itself.<ref name=EB1911/>
and military. They were the chief priests of the state,
and had to perform certain sacrifices and to maintain
communication with the Deiphian sanctuary, which always
exercised great authority in Spartan politics. Their
judicial functions had at the time when Herodotus
wrote (about 430 B.C.) been restricted to cases dealing
with heiresses, adoptions and the public roads: civil
cases were decided by the ephors) criminal jurisdiction
had passed to the council of elders and the ephors.
It was in the military sphere that the powers of the
kings were most unrestricted.


A "small circus" (as described by ]) proved to be a theatre-like building constructed soon after 200&nbsp;AD around the altar and in front of the ]. It is believed that musical and gymnastic contests took place here, as well as the famous flogging ordeal administered to Spartan boys ('']''). The temple, which can be dated to the 2nd century BC, rests on the foundation of an older temple of the 6th century, and close beside it were found the remains of a yet earlier temple, dating from the 9th or even the 10th century. The ]s in clay, amber, bronze, ivory and lead dating from the 9th to the 4th centuries BC, which were found in great profusion within the precinct range, supply invaluable information about early Spartan art.<ref name=EB1911/>
Aristotle describes the
kingship at Sparta as “a kind of unlimited and perpetual
generalship “ (Pol. iii. I285a), while Isocrates refers
to the Spartans as “subject to an oligarchy at home,
to a kingship on campaign” (iii. 24). Here also,
however, the royal prerogatives were curtailed in
course of time: from the period of the Persian wars
the king lost the right of declaring war on whom he
pleased, he was accompanied to the field by two ephors,
and he was supplanted also by the ephors in the control
of foreign policy. More and more, as time went on, the
kings became mere figure-heads, except in their capacity
as generals, and the real power was transferred to the
ephors and to the gerousia (qv.). The reasOn for this
change lay partly in. the fact that the ephors, chosen
by popular election from the whole body of citizens,
represented a democratic element in the constitution
without violating those oligarchical methods which
seemed necessary for its satisfactory administration;
partly in the weakness of the kingship, the dual
character of which inevitably gave rise to jealousy
and discord between the two holders of the office,
often resulting in a practical deadlock; partly in the
loss of plestige suffered by the kingship, especially
during the 5th century, owing to these quarrels, to
the frequency with which kings ascended the throne as
minors and a regency was necessary, and to the many
cases in which a king was, rightly or wrongly, suspected
of having accepted bribes from the enemies of the
state and was condemned and banished.


]
=== Military Service and Training ===
In 1907, the location of the sanctuary of ] "of the Brazen House" (Χαλκίοικος, Chalkioikos) was determined to be on the ] immediately above the theatre. Though the actual temple is almost completely destroyed, the site has produced the longest extant archaic inscription in Laconia, numerous bronze nails and plates, and a considerable number of votive offerings. The ], built in successive stages from the 4th to the 2nd century, was traced for a great part of its circuit, which measured 48 stades or nearly {{convert|10|km|0|abbr=in}} (Polyb. 1X. 21). The late Roman wall enclosing the acropolis, part of which probably dates from the years following the Gothic raid of 262&nbsp;AD, was also investigated. Besides the actual buildings discovered, a number of points were situated and mapped in a general study of Spartan topography, based upon the description of ].<ref name=EB1911/>


In terms of domestic archaeology, little is known about Spartan houses and villages before the Archaic period, but the best evidence comes from excavations at ] in ] where postholes have been found. These villages were open and consisted of small and simple houses built with stone foundations and clay walls.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Cavanagh|first=William|title=A COMPANION TO SPARTA|publisher=Wiley Blackwell|year=2018|volume=1|location=Hoboken USA|pages=62|chapter=An Archaeology of Ancient Sparta with Reference to Laconia and Messenia}}</ref>
In the powers exercised by the assembly of the citizens
or apella (q.v.) we cannot trace any development,
owing to the scantiness of our sources. The Spartan
was essentially a soldier, trained to obedience and
endurance: he became a politician only if chosen as
ephor for a single year or elected a life member of
the council after his sixtieth year had brought freedom
from military service.


===Menelaion===
Shortly after birth the child was brought before the
{{main|Menelaion}}
elders of the tribe, who decided whether it was to be reared:
]]]
if defective or weakly, it was exposed in the so-called
The ] is a shrine associated with ], located east of Sparta, by the river Eurotas, on the hill ] (]: {{coord|37.0659|N|22.4536|E|type:landmark_region:GR_scale:500|display=inline}}). Built around the early 8th century BC, the Spartans believed it had been the former residence of Menelaus. In 1970, the British School in Athens started excavations around the Menelaion in an attempt to locate Mycenaean remains in the area. Among other findings, they uncovered the remains of two Mycenaean mansions and found the first offerings dedicated to ] and Menelaus. These mansions were destroyed by ] and fire, and archaeologists consider them the possible palace of Menelaus himself.<ref>The British School at Athens, .</ref>{{better source needed|date=November 2017}}
Training of Citizens.


] made from the early 1990s to the present suggest that the area around the Menelaion in the southern part of the Eurotas valley seems to have been the center of ].<ref>''The Mycenaean presence in the southeastern Eurotas valley: Vouno Panagias and Ayios Georgios'', by Emilia Banou.</ref> The Mycenaean settlement was roughly triangular in shape, with its apex pointed towards the north. Its area was approximately equal to that of the "newer" Sparta, but ] has wreaked havoc with its buildings and nothing is left of its original structures save for ruined foundations and broken ].<ref name=EB1911/>
Thus was secured, as far as could be, the maintenance of
a high standard of physical efficiency, and thus from
the earliest days of the Spartan the absolute claim of
the state to his life and service was indicated and
enforced. Till their seventh year boys were educated at
home: from that time their training was undertaken by the
state and supervised by the iraiöo~huos, an official
appointed for that purpose. This training consisted for
the most part in physical exercises, such as dancing,
gymnastics, ball-games, &c., with music and literature
occupying a subordinate position. From the twentieth
year began the Spartan’s liability to military service
and his membership of one of the av~peIa or /xilirta
(dining messes or clubs), composed of about fifteen
members each, to one of which every citizen must belong.


==History==
At thirty began the full citizen rights and duties.
{{main|History of Sparta}}
For the exercise of these three conditions were requisite:
Spartiate birth, the training prescribed by law, and
participation in and contribution to one of the dining-clubs.
Those who fulfilled these conditions were the
(peers), citizens in the fullest-sense of the word,
while those who failed were called routtoves (lesser men),
and retained only the civil rights of citizenship.


===Prehistory, "dark age" and archaic period===
The prehistory of Sparta is difficult to reconstruct because the literary evidence was written far later than the events it describes and is distorted by oral tradition.<ref name="Herodot, Book I, 56.3">Herodot, Book I, 56.3</ref> The earliest certain evidence of human settlement in the region of Sparta consists of ] dating from the Middle ] period, found in the vicinity of Kouphovouno some two kilometres ({{convert|2|km|abbr=off|disp=output only}}) south-southwest of Sparta.{{sfn|Cartledge|2002|p=28}}


This civilization seems to have fallen into decline by the late ], when, according to Herodotus, Macedonian tribes from the north (called ] by those they conquered) marched into the Peloponnese and, subjugating the local tribes, settled there.<ref name="Herodot, Book I, 56.3"/> The Dorians seem to have set about expanding the frontiers of Spartan territory almost before they had established their own state.{{sfn|Ehrenberg|2002|p=31}} They fought against the ] Dorians to the east and southeast, and also the ]n Achaeans to the northwest. The evidence suggests that Sparta, relatively inaccessible because of the topography of the Taygetan plain, was secure from early on: it was never fortified.{{sfn|Ehrenberg|2002|p=31}}
Spartiates were absolutely debarred by law from trade or
manufacture, which consequently rested in the hands of the
perioeci (q.v.), and were forbidden to possess either
gold or silver, the currency consisting of bars of
iron: but there can be no doubt that this prohibition
was evaded in various ways. Wealth was, in theory at least,
derives entirely from landed property, and consisted in
the annual return made by the helots (q.v.) who cultivated
the plots of ground allotted to the Spartiates. But this
attempt to equalize property proved a failure: from
early times there were marked differences of wealth
within the state, and these became even more serious
after the law of Epitadeus, passed at some time after
the Peloponnesian War, removed the legal prohibition
of the gift or bequest of land.


]]]
Later we find the soil coming more and more into the
possession of large landholders, and by the middle
of the 3rd century s.c. nearly two-fifths of Laconia
belonged to women. Hand in hand with this process
went a serious diminution in the number of full
citizens, who had numbered 8ooo at the beginning of
the 5th century, but had sunk by Aristotle’s day to
less than 1000, and had further decreased to 700 at
the accession of Agis IV. in 244 B.C. The Spartans
did what they could to remedy this by law: certain
penalties were imposed upon. those who remained
unmarried or who married too late in life. But the
decay was too deep’ rooted to be eradicated by
such means, and we shall see that at a late period
in Sparta’s history an attempt was made without
success to deal with the evil by much more
drastic measures.


Nothing distinctive in the archaeology of the Eurotas River Valley identifies the Dorians or the Dorian Spartan state. The prehistory of the Neolithic, the Bronze Age and the Dark Age (the Early Iron Age) at this moment must be treated apart from the stream of Dorian Spartan history.{{citation needed|date=June 2021}}
The 5th Century B.C—The beginning of the 5th century
saw Sparta at the height of her power, though her
prestige must have suffered in the fruitless attempts
made to impose upon Athens an oligarchical régime
after the fall of the Peisistratid tyranny in 510.
But after the Persian Wars the Spartan supremacy
could no longer remain unchallenged. Sparta had
despatched an army in 490 to aid Athens in repelling
the armament sent against it by Darius under the
command of Datis and Artaphernes: but it arrived
after the battle of Marathon had been fought and
the issue of the conflict decided.


The legendary period of Spartan history is believed to fall into the Dark Age. It treats the mythic heroes such as the ] and the ], offering a view of the occupation of the Peloponnesus that contains both fantastic and possibly historical elements. The subsequent proto-historic period, combining both legend and historical fragments, offers the first credible history.
In the second campaign, conducted ten years later
by Xerxes in person, Sparta took a more active share
and assumed the command of the combined Greek forces
by sea and land. Yet, in spite of the heroic defence
of Thermopylae by the Spartan king Leo’ nidas (qv.),
the glory of the decisive victory at Salamis fell
in great measure to the Athenians, and their patriotism,
self-sacrifice and energy contrasted strongly with
the hesitation of the Spartans and the selfish
policy which they advocated of defending the
Peloponnese only.


Between the 8th and 7th centuries BC the Spartans experienced a period of lawlessness and civil strife, later attested by both Herodotus and Thucydides.{{sfn|Ehrenberg|2002|p=36}} As a result, they carried out a series of political and social reforms of their own society which they later attributed to a semi-mythical lawgiver, ].{{sfn|Ehrenberg|2002|p=33}} Several writers throughout antiquity, including Herodotus, Xenophon, and Plutarch have attempted to explain Spartan exceptionalism as a result of the so-called Lycurgan Reforms.<ref>Xenophon, ''Constitution of the Lacedaemonians'', 1</ref><ref>Herodotus, 1.65-66</ref><ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Lycurgus'', 6.1-2</ref>
By the battle of Plataea (479 B.C.), won by a
Spartan general, and decided chiefly by the
steadfastness of Spartan troops, the state
partially recovered its prestige, but only so
far as land operations were concerned: the victory
of Mycale, won in the same year, was achieved by
the united Greek fleet, and the capture of
Sestos, which followed, was due to the Athenians,
the Peloponnesians having returned home before
the siege was begun. Sparta felt that an effort
was necessary to recover her position, and
Pausanias, the victor of Plataea, was sent
out as admiral of the Greek fleet. But though
he won considerable successes, his overbearing
and despotic behaviour and the suspicion that
he was intriguing with the Persian king alienated
the sympathies of those under his command: he was
recalled by the ephors, and his successor, Dorcis,
was a weak man who allowed the transference of
the hegemony from Sparta to Athens to take place
without striking a blow (see DELIAN LEAGUE). By
the withdrawal of Sparta and her Peloponnesian
allies from the fleet the perils and the glories
of the Persian War were left to Athens, who,
though at the outset merely the leading state
in a confederacy of free allies, soon began to
make herself the mistress of an empire.


===Classical Sparta===
Sparta
In the ], Sparta established itself as a local power in the Peloponnesus and the rest of Greece. During the following centuries, Sparta's reputation as a land-fighting force was unequalled.<ref>"A Historical Commentary on Thucydides". David Cartwright, p. 176</ref> At its peak around 500 BC, Sparta had some 20,000–35,000 citizens, plus numerous helots and perioikoi. The likely total of 40,000–50,000 made Sparta one of the larger Greek city-states;<ref>{{citation|last=Morris|first=Ian|title=The growth of Greek cities in the first millennium BC. v.1|date=December 2005|url=http://www.princeton.edu/~pswpc/pdfs/morris/120509.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/http://www.princeton.edu/~pswpc/pdfs/morris/120509.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live|series=Princeton/Stanford Working Papers in Classics}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oafCBYBbMRgC&pg=PA22|title=Once Again: Studies in the Ancient Greek Polis|last=Nielsen|first=Thomas Heine|date=29 December 2017|publisher=Franz Steiner Verlag|via=Google Books|isbn=9783515084383}}</ref> however, according to Thucydides, the population of Athens in 431 BC was 360,000–610,000, making it much larger.{{refn|group=n|According to Thucydides, the Athenian citizens at the beginning of the Peloponnesian War (5th century BC) numbered 40,000, making a total of 140,000 people when including their families. The metics, i.e. those who did not have citizen rights and paid for the right to reside in Athens, numbered a further 70,000, whilst slaves were estimated at between 150,000 to 400,000.<ref>{{cite book|title=Encyclopedia Of Ancient Greece|editor-first=Nigel Guy|editor-last=Wilson|publisher=Routledge (UK)|year=2006|isbn=0-415-97334-1|pages=|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofan0000unse_a6l6/page/214}}</ref>}}
took no steps at first to prevent this. Her
interests and those of Athens did not directly
clash, for Athens included in her empire only
the islands of the Aegean and the towns on its
north and east coasts, which lay outside the
Spartan political horizon: with the Peloponnese
Athens did not meddle. Moreover, Sparta’s attention
was at this time fully occupied by troubles nearer
home—the plots of Pausanias not only with the
Persian king but with the Laconian helots; the revolt
of Tegea ‘(c. 473—71), rendered all ‘the more
formidable by the participation of Argos; the earthquake
which in 464 devastated SDarta; and the rising of the
Messenian helots, which immediately followed. But there was a
growing estrangement from Athens, which ended at length
in an open breach. The insulting dismissal of a large
body of Athenian troops which had come, under Cimon, to
aid the Spartans in the siege of the Messenian stronghold
of Ithome, the consummation of the Attic democracy under
Ephialtes and Pericles, the conclusion of an alliance
between Atheu3 and Argos, which also about this time
became democratic, united with other causes to bring
about a rupture between the Athenians and the
Peloponnesian League.


In 480 BC, a small force led by King ] (about 300 full Spartiates, 700 Thespians, and 400 Thebans, although these numbers were lessened by earlier casualties<ref>Herodotus, 7.202, 7.228</ref>) made a legendary ] at the ] against the massive Persian army, led by ].{{sfn|Green|1998|p=10}} The Spartans received advance warning of the Persian invasion from their deposed king ], which prompted them to consult the Delphic oracle. According to Herodotus, the ] proclaimed that either one of the kings of Sparta had to die or Sparta would be destroyed.<ref>Herodotus, 7.220-7.225</ref> This prophecy was fulfilled after king Leonidas died in the battle. The superior weaponry, strategy, and ] armour of the Greek ]s and their ] fighting formation again proved their worth one year later when Sparta assembled its full strength and led a Greek alliance against the Persians at the ] in 479 BC.
In this so-called first Peloponnesian War Sparta
herself took but a small share beyond helping to
inflict a defeat on the Athenians at Tanagra in
457 B.c. After this battle they concluded a truce,
which gave the Athenians an opportunity of taking
their revenge on the Boeotians at the battle of Oenophyta,
of annexing to their empire Boeotia, Phocis and Locris,
and of subjugating Aegina. In 449 the war was ended by a
five years’ truce, but after Athens had lost her mainland
empire by the battle of Coronea and the revolt of Megara a
thirty years’ peace was concluded, probably in the winter
446—445 B.C. By this Athens was obliged to surrender
Troezen, Achaea and the two Megarian ports, Nisaea and
Pegae, but otherwise the status quo was maintained.


]
A fresh struggle, the great Peloponnesian War (q.v.),
The decisive Greek victory at Plataea put an end to the ] along with Persian ambitions to expand into Europe. Even though this war was won by a pan-Greek army, credit was given to Sparta, who besides providing the leading forces at Thermopylae and Plataea, had been the de facto leader of the entire Greek expedition.<ref>Britannica ed. 2006, "Sparta"</ref>
broke out in 431 B.c. This may be to a certain extent
regarded as a contest between lonian nd Dorian; it may with
greater truth be called a struggle b ween. the democratic and oligarchic
principles of government; but at bottom its cause was neither racial
nor constitutional, but economic.


In 464 BC, a violent ] occurred along the Sparta faultline destroying much of what was Sparta and many other city-states in ancient Greece. This earthquake is marked by scholars as one of the key events that led to the ].
The maritime supremacy of Athens was used for commercial
purposes, and important members of the Peloponnesian
confederacy, whose wealth depended largely on their
commerce, notably Corinth, Megara, Sicyon and Epidaurus,
were being slowly but relentlessly crushed. Materially
Sparta must have remained almost unaffected, but she was
forced to take action by the pressure of her allies and
by the necessities imposed by her position as head of the
league. She did not, however, prosecute the war with any
marked vigour: her operations were almost confined to an
annual inroad into Attica, and when in 425 a body of
Spartiates was captured by the Athenians at Pylos she was
ready, and even anxious, to terminate the war on any
reasonable conditions. That the terms of the Peace of Nicias,
which in 421 concluded the first phase of the war, were
rather in favour of Sparta than of Athens was due almost
entirely to the energy and insight of an individual Spartan,
Brasidas (qv.), and the disastrous attempt of Athens to
regain its lost land-empire. The final success of Sparta and
the capture of Athens in 405 were brought about partly by the
treachery of Alcibiades, who induced the state to send Gylippus
to conduct the defence of Syracuse, to fortify Decelea in
northern Attica, and to adopt a vigorous policy of aiding
Athenian allies to revolt. The lack of funds which would have
proved fatal to Spartan naval warfare was remedied by the
intervention of Persia, which supplied large subsidies, and
Spartan good fortune culminated in the possession at this time
of an admiral of boundless vigour and considerable military
ability, Lysander, to whom much of Sparta’s success is attributable.


In later Classical times, Sparta along with ], ], and ] were the main powers fighting for supremacy in the northeastern Mediterranean. In the course of the ], Sparta, a traditional land power, acquired a navy which managed to overpower the previously dominant flotilla of Athens, ending the ]. At the peak of its power in the early 4th century BC, Sparta had subdued many of the main Greek states and even invaded the Persian provinces in Anatolia (modern day Turkey), a period known as the ].


During the ], Sparta faced a coalition of the leading Greek states: ], ], ], and ]. The alliance was initially backed by Persia, which feared further Spartan expansion into Asia.<ref>"Dictionary of Ancient & Medieval Warfare". Matthew Bennett, p. 86</ref> Sparta achieved a series of land victories, but many of her ships were destroyed at the ] by a Greek-Phoenician mercenary fleet that Persia had provided to Athens. The event severely damaged Sparta's naval power but did not end its aspirations of invading further into Persia, until ] the Athenian ravaged the Spartan coastline and provoked the old Spartan fear of a ] revolt.<ref name=boardman>"The Oxford Illustrated History of Greece and the Hellenistic World" p. 141, John Boardman, Jasper Griffin, Oswyn Murray</ref>
=== The 4th Century ===
The fall of Athens left Sparta once again supreme in the
Greek world and demonstrated clearly its total unfitness
for rule. Everywhere democracy was replaced by a philo-Laconian
oligarchy, usually consisting of ten men under a harmost or
governor pledged to Spartan interests, and even in Laconia
itself the narrow and selfish character of the Spartan rule
led to a serious conspiracy. For a short time, indeed,
under the energetic rule of Agesilaus, it seemed as if
Sparta would pursue a Hellenic policy and carry on the
war against Persia. But troubles soon broke out in Greece,
Agesilaus was recalled from Asia Minor, and his schemes and
successes were rendered fruitless.


After a few more years of fighting, in 387 BC the ] was established, according to which all Greek cities of ] would return to Persian control, and Persia's Asian border would be free of the Spartan threat.<ref name=boardman/> The effects of the war were to reaffirm Persia's ability to interfere successfully in Greek politics and to affirm Sparta's weakened hegemonic position in the Greek political system.<ref>Fine, ''The Ancient Greeks'', 556–59</ref> Sparta entered its long-term decline after a severe military defeat to ] of Thebes at the ]. This was the first time that a full strength ] lost a land battle.
Further, the naval activity displayed by Sparta during the
closing years of the Peloponnesian War abated when Persian
subsidies were withdrawn, and the ambitious projects of
Lysander led to his disgrace, which was followed by his
death at Haliartus in 395. In the following year the
Spartan navy under Peisander, Agesilaus’ brother-in-law,
was defeated off Cnidus by the Persian fleet under Conon
and Pharnabazus, and for the future Sparta ceased to be a
maritime power.


As Spartan citizenship was inherited by blood, Sparta increasingly faced a helot population that vastly outnumbered its citizens. The alarming decline of Spartan citizens was commented on by ].
In Greece itself meanwhile the opposition to Sparta was
growing increasingly powerful, and, though at Coronea
Agesilaus had slightly the better of the Boeotians and
at Corinth the Spartans maintained their position, yet
they felt it necessary to rid themselves of Persian
hostility and if possible use the Persian power to
strengthen their own position at home: they therefore
concluded with Artaxerxes II. the humiliating Peace of
Antalcidas (387 B.c.), by which they surrendered to the
Great King the Greek cities of the ~sia Minor coast and
of Cyprus, and stipulated for the independence of all
other Greek cities. This last clause led to a long and
desultory war with Thebes, which refused to acknowledge
the independence of the Boeotian towns tinder its hegemony:
the Cadmeia, the citadel of Thebes, was treacherously seized
by Phoebidas in 382 and held by the Spartans until 379.


===Hellenistic and Roman Sparta===
Still more momentous was the Spartan action in crushing the
]'' (1493)]]
Olynthiac Confederation (see OLYNTHUS), which might have been
Sparta never fully recovered from its losses at Leuctra in 371 BC and the subsequent ]. In 338, ] invaded and devastated much of Laconia, turning the Spartans out, though he did not seize Sparta itself.<ref>{{Harvnb|Cartledge|2002|page=273}} "Philip laid Lakonia waste as far south as Gytheion and formally deprived Sparta of Dentheliatis (and apparently the territory on the Messenian Gulf as far as the Little Pamisos river), Belminatis, the territory of Karyai and the east Parnon foreland."</ref> Even during its decline, Sparta never forgot its claim to be the "defender of Hellenism" and its ]. An anecdote has it that when Philip II sent a message to Sparta saying "If I invade Laconia, I shall turn you out.",<ref>{{cite web |author1=Plutarch |author2=W.C.Helmbold |author1-link=Plutarch |title=De Garrulitate |url=http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A2008.01.0287%3Asection%3D17 |website=Perseus Digital Library |publisher=Tufts University |access-date=5 May 2021 |quote=ἂν ἐμβάλω εἰς τὴν Λακωνικήν, ἀναστάτους ὑμᾶς ποιήσω}}</ref> the Spartans responded with the single, terse reply: {{lang|grc|αἴκα}}, "if".{{sfn|Davies |1997|p=133}}<ref>{{harvnb|Plutarch|1874|loc=De garrulitate, }}.</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Plutarch|1891|loc=De garrulitate, }}; in Greek.</ref> When Philip created the ] on the pretext of unifying Greece against Persia, the Spartans chose not to join, since they had no interest in joining a pan-Greek expedition unless it were under Spartan leadership. Thus, upon defeating the Persians at the ], Alexander the Great sent to Athens 300 suits of Persian armour with the following inscription: "Alexander, son of Philip, and all the Greeks except the Spartans, give these offerings taken from the foreigners who live in Asia".
able to stay the growth of Macedonian power. In 371 a fresh
peace congress was summoned at Sparta to ratify the Peace of
Callias. Again the Thebans refused to renounce their Boeotian
hegemony, and the Spartan attempt at coercion ended in the
defeat of the Spartan army at the battle of Leuctra and the
death of its leader, King Cleombrotus. The result of the battle
was to transfer the Greek supremacy from Sparta to Thebes.


Sparta continued to be one of the Peloponesian powers until its eventual loss of independence in 192 BC. During Alexander's campaigns in the east, the Spartan king ] sent a force to Crete in 333 BC to secure the island for the Persian interest.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.livius.org/ag-ai/agis/agis_iii.html|title=Agis III – Livius|website=www.livius.org|access-date=2020-03-26|archive-date=2013-05-08|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130508045716/http://www.livius.org/ag-ai/agis/agis_iii.html|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Cartledge |first1=Paul |last2=Spawforth |first2=Antony |title=Hellenistic and Roman Sparta : a tale of two cities |date=2002 |publisher=Routledge |location=London |isbn=0415262771 |page=21 |edition=2nd}}</ref> Agis next took command of allied Greek forces against Macedon, gaining early successes, before laying siege to ] in 331 BC. A large ] under general ] marched to its relief and defeated the Spartan-led force in a pitched battle.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Agis III|first=E.|last=Badian|date=29 December 1967|journal=Hermes|volume=95|issue=2|pages=170–92|jstor = 4475455}}</ref> More than 5,300 of the Spartans and their allies were killed in battle, and 3,500 of Antipater's troops.<ref>Diodorus, ''World History''</ref> Agis, now wounded and unable to stand, ordered his men to leave him behind to face the advancing Macedonian army so that he could buy them time to retreat. On his knees, the Spartan king slew several enemy soldiers before being finally killed by a javelin.<ref>Diodorus, ''World History'', 17.62.1–63.4; tr. C.B. Welles</ref> Alexander was merciful, and he only forced the Spartans to join the League of Corinth, which they had previously refused.<ref>''Alexander the Great and his time''. By Agnes Savill. p. 44 {{ISBN|0-88029-591-0}}</ref>
In the course of three expeditions to the Peloponnese conducted
by Epaminondas, the greatest soldier and statesman Thebes ever
produced, Sparta was weakened by the loss of Messenia, which
was restored to an independent position with the newly built Messene
as its capital, and by the foundation of Megalopolis as the
capital of Arcadia. The invading army even made its way into
Laconia and devastated the whole of its southern portion;
but the courage and coolness of Agesilaus saved Sparta
itself from attack. On Epaminondas’ fourth expedition
Sparta was again within an ace of capture, but once more
the danger was averted just in time; and though at Mantinea
(362 B.c.) the Thebans, together with the Arcadians,
Messenians and Argives, gained a victory over the combined
Mantinean, Athenian and Spartan forces, yet the death of
Epaminondas in the battle more than counterbalanced the
Theban victory and led to the speedy break-up of their
supremacy.


During the ], Sparta was an ally of the ]. Spartan political independence was put to an end when it was eventually forced into the ] after its defeat in the decisive ] by a coalition of other Greek city-states and Rome, and the resultant overthrow of its final king ], in 192 BC. Sparta played no active part in the ] in 146 BC when the Achaean League was defeated by the Roman general ]. Subsequently, Sparta became a ] under Roman rule, some of the institutions of ] were restored,{{sfn|Cartledge|Spawforth|2001|p=82}} and the city became a tourist attraction for the Roman elite who came to observe exotic Spartan customs.{{refn|group=n|Especially the Diamastigosis at the Sanctuary of Artemis Orthia, Limnai outside Sparta. There an amphitheatre was built in the 3rd century AD to observe the ritual whipping of Spartan youths.<ref>{{cite book|author=Cicero|author-link=Cicero|title=Tusculanae Disputationes|chapter=II.34|chapter-url=https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A2007.01.0044%3Abook%3D2%3Asection%3D34|editor-first=M.|editor-last=Pohlenz|place=Leipzig|publisher=Teubner|year=1918|language=la |title-link=Tusculanae Disputationes}} At the Perseus Project.</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Sparta|first=Humfrey|last=Michell|page=175|year=1964|
But Sparta had neither the men nor the money to recover
publisher=Cambridge University Press}}</ref> Visiting Romans came to see Sparta as having degraded to a disgusting cult of fetish brutality.<ref>Thomas J. Figueira, "Population Patterns in Late Archaic and Classical Sparta", ''Transactions of the American Philological Association (1974-2014)'', Vol. 116 (1986), The Johns Hopkins University Press, pp. 165–213</ref><ref>Myke Cole, ''Legion versus Phalanx: The Epic Struggle for Infantry Supremacy in the Ancient World'', Osprey Publishing, 2018</ref>}}
her lost position, and the continued existence on her
borders of an independent Messenia and Arcadia kept
her in constant fear for her own safety. She did, indeed,
join with Athens and Achaea in 353 to prevent Philip of
Macedon passing Thermopylae and entering Phocis, but
beyond this she took no part in the struggle of Greece
with the new power which had sprung up on her northern
borders. No Spartiate fought on the field of Chaeronea.


In 214 AD, ] ], in his preparation for ] against ], recruited a 500-man Spartan ] ('']''). ] described this unit as a '']'', implying it fought like the old Spartans as hoplites, or even as a ]. Despite this, a gravestone of a fallen legionary named Marcus Aurelius Alexys shows him lightly armed, with a ] cap and a wooden club. The unit was presumably discharged in 217 after Caracalla was assassinated.{{sfn|Cartledge|Spawforth|2001|p=108}}
After the battle, however, she refused to submit voluntarily
to Philip, and was forced to do so by the devastation of
Laconia and the transference of certain border districts
to the neighboring states of Argos, Arcadia and Messenia.
During the absence of Alexander the Great in the East
Agis III. revolted, but the rising was crushed by Antipater,
and a similar attempt to throw off the Macedonian yoke
made by Archidamus IV. in the troublous period which
succeeded Alexander’s death was frustrated by Demetrius
Poliorcetes in 294 BC.


An exchange of letters in the ] ] expresses a ] claim to kinship with the Spartans:
Twenty-two years later the city was attacked by an immense
force under Pyrrhus, but Spartan bravery had not died out
and the formidable enemy was repulsed, even the women taking
part in the defence of the city. About 244 an Aetolian army
overran Laconia, working irreparable harm and carrying off,
it is said, 50,000 captives.


{{cquote|Areus king of the Lacedemonians to ] the high priest, greeting: It is found in writing, that the Lacedemonians and Jews are brethren, and that they are of the stock of ]: Now therefore, since this is come to our knowledge, ye shall do well to write unto us of your prosperity. We do write back again to you, that your cattle and goods are ours, and ours are yours.|author=Authorized King James Version ]}}
But the social evils within the state were even harder to
combat than foes without. Avarice, luxury and the glaring
inequality in the distribution of wealth, threatened to
bring about the speedy fall of the state if no cure could
be found. Agis IV. and Cleomenes III. (qqv.) made an
heroic and entirely disinterested attempt in the latter
part of the 3rd century to improve the conditions by a
redistribution of land, a widening of the citizen body,
and a restoration of the old severe training and simple
life. But the evil was too deep-seated to be remedied by
these artificial means; Agis was assassinated, and the
reforms of Cleomenes seem to have had no permanent effect.


The letters are reproduced in a variant form by ].<ref>Erich S. Gruen, ''Heritage and Hellenism: The Reinvention of Jewish Tradition'', 1998, p. 254, {{ISBN|0-520-23506-1}} (2002)</ref> Jewish historian Uriel Rappaport notes that the relationship between the Jews and the Spartans expressed in this correspondence has "intrigued many scholars, and various explanations have been suggested for the problems raised ... including the historicity of the Jewish leader and ] ]'s letter to the Spartans, the authenticity of the letter of Arius to Onias, cited in Jonathan's letter, and the supposed 'brotherhood' of the Jews and the Spartans." Rappaport is clear that "the authenticity of letter of Arius is based on even less firm foundations than the letter of Jonathan".<ref>Rappaport, U., ''47. 1 Maccabees'' in Barton, J. and Muddiman, J. (2001), {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171122193211/http://b-ok.org/dl/946961/8f5f43 |date=2017-11-22 }}, p. 729</ref>
The reign of Cleomenes is marked also by a determined effort
to cope with the rising power of the Achaean League (q.n.)
and to recover for Sparta her long-lost supremacy in the
Peloponnese, and even throughout Greece. The battle of
Sellasia (222 BC.), in which Cleomenes was defeated by the
Achaeans and Antigonus Doson of Macedonia, and the death of
the king, which occurred shortly afterwards in Egypt, put an
end to these hopes. The same reign saw also an important
constitutional change, the substitution of a board of patronomi
for the ephors, whose power had become almost despotic, and
the curtailment of the functions exercised by the gerousia;
these measures were, however, cancelled by Antigonus. It was
not long afterwards hat the dual kingship ceased and Sparta
fell under the sway of a series of cruel and rapacious
tyrants—Lycurgus, Machanidas, who was killed by Philopoemen,
and Nabis, who, if we may trust the accounts given by Polybius
and Livy, was little better than a bandit chieftain, holding
Sparta by means of extreme cruelty and oppression, and using
mercenary troops to a large extent in his wars.


Spartans long spurned the idea of building a ] around their city, believing they made the city's men soft in terms of their warrior abilities. A wall was finally erected after 184 BCE, after the peak of the city-state's power had come and gone.<ref></ref>
=== Intervention of Rome ===
We must admit, however, that a vigorous struggle was maintained
with the Achaean League and with Macedon until the Romans,
after the conclusion of their war with Philip V., sent an
army into Laconia under T. Quinctius Flamininus. Nabis was
forced to capitulate, evacuating all his possessions outside
Laconia, surrendering the Laconian seaports and his navy,
and paying an indemnity of 500 talents (Livy xxxiv. 33—43).
On the departure of the Romans he succeeded in recovering
Gythium, in spite of an attempt to relieve it made by the
Achaeans under Philopoemen, but in an encounter he suffered
a crushing defeat at the hands of that general, who for
thirty days ravaged Laconia unopposed.


===Postclassical and modern Sparta===
Nabis was assassinated in 192, and Sparta was forced by
In 396 AD, Sparta was sacked by ] under ].<ref name="urlA History of the Laws of War: Volume 2: The Customs and Laws of War with ... - Alexander Gillespie - Google Książki">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qIt6BAAAQBAJ&q=alaric+sacked+sparta&pg=PT204 |title=A History of the Laws of War: Volume 2: The Customs and Laws of War with ... |author=Alexander Gillespie |via= Google Książki |isbn=9781847318626 |date=2011-10-07 |publisher=Bloomsbury }}</ref><ref name="urlThe Oxford Companion to Classical Literature - Google Książki">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IVGcAQAAQBAJ&q=alaric+sacked+sparta+slavery&pg=PA535 |title=The Oxford Companion to Classical Literature |via= Google Książki |isbn=9780199548552 |last1=Howatson |first1=M. C. |date=2013-08-22 |publisher=OUP Oxford }}</ref>
Philopoenien to enroll itself as a member of the Achaean League
According to Byzantine sources, ] of the Laconian region remained ] until well into the 10th century. The ] still spoken in ] is the only surviving descendant of the ancient ].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Liosis |first1=Nikos |title=Tsakonian Studies: The State-of-the-Art |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/337949879 |website=researchgate |publisher=Institute of Modern Greek Studies |access-date=4 July 2022}}</ref> In the Middle Ages, the political and cultural center of Laconia shifted to the nearby settlement of ], and Sparta fell further in even local importance. Modern ] was re-founded in 1834, by a decree of King ].
(qv.) under a phil-Achaean aristocracy. But this gave rise
to chronic disorders and disputes, which led to armed
intervention on the part of the Achaeans,
who compelled the Spartans to submit to the overthrow of
their city walls, the dismissal of their mercenary troops,
the recall of all exiles, the abandonment of the old Lycurgan
constitution and the adoption of the Achaean laws and i
nstitutions (f 88 nc). Again and again the relations
between the Spartans and the Achaean League formed the
occasion of discussions in the Roman senate or of the
despatch of Roman embassies to Greece, but no decisive
intervention took place until a fresh dispute about the position
of Sparta in the league led to a decision of the Romans
that Sparta, Corinth, Argos, Arcadian Orchomenus and Heraclea
on Oeta should be severed from it. This resulted in an open
breach between the league and Rome, and eventually, in 146 B.C.,
after the sack of Corinth, in the dissolution of the league
and the annexation of Greece to the Roman province of Macedonia.


==Structure of Classical Spartan society==
For Sparta the long era of war and internal struggle had ceased
and one of peace and a revived prosperity took its place, as
is witnessed by the numerous extant inscriptions belonging to
this period. As an allied city it was exempt from direct taxation,
though compelled on occasions to make “voluntary “ presents to
Roman generals. Political ambition was restricted to the tenure
of tile municipal magistracies, culminating in the offices of n
omophylax, ephor and patronomus. Augustus showed marked favour
to the city, Hadrian twice visited it during his journeys in the
East and accepted the title of eponymous patronomus.


===Constitution===
The old warlike spirit found an outlet chiefly in the vigorous
{{main|Spartan Constitution}}
but peaceful contests held in the gymnasium, the ball-place,
]{{clear}}
and the arena before the temple of Artemi1 Orthia: sometimes
Sparta was an ]. The state was ruled by two ] of the ] ],{{sfn|Cartledge|2002|p=89}} both supposedly descendants of ] and equal in authority, so that one could not act against the power and political enactments of his colleague.<ref name=EB1911/>
too it found a vent in actual campaigning as when Spartans were
enrolled for service against the Parthian by the emperors Lucius
Verus, Septimius Severus and Cara calla. Laconia was subsequently
overrun, like so much of th Roman Empire, by barbarian hordes.


The duties of the kings were primarily religious, judicial, and military. As chief priests of the state, they maintained communication with the Delphian sanctuary, whose pronouncements exercised great authority in Spartan politics. In the time of Herodotus c. 450 BC, their judicial functions had been restricted to cases dealing with heiresses (]), adoptions and the public roads (the meaning of the last term is unclear in Herodotus' text and has been interpreted in a number of ways). ] describes the kingship at Sparta as "a kind of unlimited and perpetual generalship" (Pol. iii. 1285a), while ] refers to the Spartans as "subject to an oligarchy at home, to a kingship on campaign" (iii. 24).<ref name=EB1911/>
== Medieval Sparta ==


Civil and criminal cases were decided by a group of officials known as the ], as well as a council of ] known as the ]. The Gerousia consisted of 28 elders over the age of 60, elected for life and usually part of the royal households, and the two kings.<ref>''The Greeks at War'' By Philip De Souza, Waldemar Heckel, Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones, Victor Davis Hanson</ref> High state decisions were discussed by this council, who could then propose policies to the ''damos'', the collective body of Spartan citizenry, who would ].<ref>''The Politics By Aristotle'', Thomas Alan Sinclair, Trevor J. Saunders</ref><ref>''A companion to Greek studies''
In A.D. 306 Alaric destroyed the city an at a later period Laconia was
By Leonard Whibley</ref>
invaded and settled by Slavoni tribes, especially the Melings and Ezerits,
who in turn had to give way before the advance of the Byzantine power,
‘though preserving a partial independence in the mountainous regions.
The Franks on their arrival in the Morea found a fortified city named
Lacedaemonia occupying part of the site of ancient Sparta, and this
continued to exist, though greatly depopulated, even after Guillaume
de Villehardouin had in 1248—1249 founded the fortress and city of Misithra,
or Mistra, on a spur of Taygetus some 3 m. north-west of Sparta.


Royal prerogatives were curtailed over time. From the period of the Persian wars, the king lost the right to ] and was accompanied in the field by two ephors. He was supplanted by the ephors also in the control of foreign policy. Over time, the kings became mere figureheads except in their capacity as generals. Political power was transferred to the ephors and Gerousia.<ref name=EB1911/>
This passed shortly afterwards into the hands of the Byzantines, who
retained it until the Turks under Mahommed II. captured it in 146o.
In 1687 it came into the possession of the Venetians, from whom it
was wrested in 1715 by the Turks. Thus for nearly six centuries it
was Mistra and not Sparta which formed the centre and focus of
Laconian history.


An assembly of citizens called the ] was responsible for electing men to the Gerousia for life.
== The Modern City ==


===Citizenship===
In 1834, after the War of Independence had resulted in the
{{main|Spartiate}}
liberation of Greece, the modern town of Sparta was built on part of
The Spartan education process known as the '']'' was essential for full citizenship. However, usually the only boys eligible for the ''agoge'' were ], those who could trace their ancestry to the original inhabitants of the city.
the ancient site from the designs of Baron Jochmus, and Mistra
decayed until now it is in ruins and almost deserted. Sparta
is the capital of the prefecture (vouóc) of Lacedaemon and has
a population, according to the census taken in 1907, of 4456: but
with the exception of several silk factories there is but little
industry, and the development of the city is hampered by the
unhealthiness of its situation, its distance from the sea and the
absence of railway communication with the rest of Greece. As a
result of popular clamor, however, a survey for a railway was begun
in 1907, an event of great importance for the prosperity of Sparta
and of the whole Eurotas Plain.


There were two exceptions. '']'' or "foster sons" were foreign students invited to study. The Athenian general ], for example, sent his two sons to Sparta as trophimoi. Also, the son of a helot could be enrolled as a ''syntrophos''<ref>{{harvnb|Liddell|Scott|1940}}. {{LSJ|su/ntrofos|σύντροφος}}.</ref> if a Spartiate formally adopted him and paid his way; if he did exceptionally well in training, he might be sponsored to become a Spartiate.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Greek World|first=Anton|last=Powel |date=1987|publisher=]}}</ref> Spartans who could not afford to pay the expenses of the ''agoge'' could lose their citizenship.


These laws meant that Sparta could not readily replace citizens lost in battle or otherwise, which eventually proved near fatal as citizens became greatly outnumbered by non-citizens, and even more dangerously by helots.
= Archaeology =


===Non citizens===
There is a well-known passage in Thucydides which runs thus:
The other classes were the ], free inhabitants who were non-citizens, and the ],<ref name="ReferenceA">''Ancient Greece'' By ], Stanley M. Burstein, Walter Donlan, Jennifer Tolbert Roberts</ref> state-owned ]. Descendants of non-Spartan citizens were forbidden the ''agoge''.
“Suppose the city of Sparta to be deserted, and nothing left but
the temples and the ground-plan, distant ages would be very
unwilling to believe that the power of the Lacedaemonians
was at all equal to their fame.


====Helots====
Their city is not built continuously, and has no splendid
{{main|Helots}}
temples or other edifices; it rather resembles a group of
The Spartans were a minority of the Lakonian population. The largest class of inhabitants were the helots (in ] {{lang|grc|Εἵλωτες}} / ''Heílôtes'').<ref>Herodotus (IX, 28–29)</ref><ref>Xenophon, ''Hellenica'', III, 3, 5</ref>
villages, like the ancient towns of Hellas, and would
therefore make a poor show” (i. 10, trans. Jowett).
And the first feeling of most travellers who visit modern
Sparta is one of disappointment with the ancient remains:
it is rather the loveliness and grandeur of the situation
and the fascination of Mistra, with its grass-grown streets,
its decaying houses, its ruined fortress and its beautiful
Byzantine churches, that remain as a lasting and cherished
memory. Until ‘905 the chief ancient buildings at Sparta
were the theatre, of which, however, little shows above
ground except portions of the retaining walls; the so called
Tomb of Leonidas, a quadrangular building, perhaps a temple,
constructed of immense blocks of stone and containing two chambers;
the foundation of an ancient bridge over the Eurotas; the ruins
of a circular structure; some remains of late Roman fortifications;
several brick buildings and mosaic pavements. To these must be
added the inscriptions, sculptures and other objects collected
in the local museum, founded by Stamatakis in 1872 and enlarged
in 1907, or built into the walls of houses or churches. Though
excavations were carried on near Sparta, on the site of the
Amyclaeum in 1890 by Tsoun(as, and in 1904 by Furtwängler,
and at the shrine of Menelaus in Therapne by Ross in 1833 and
1841, and by Kastriotis in 1889 and 1900, yet no organized
work was tried in Sparta itself save the partial excavation
of the “round building” undertaken in 1892 and 1893 by the
American School at Athens; the structure has been since found
to be a semicircular retaining wall of good Hellenic work,
though ‘partly restored in Roman times.


The helots were originally free Greeks from the areas of ] and ] whom the Spartans had defeated in battle and subsequently enslaved.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sparta|url=https://www.history.com/topics/ancient-history/sparta|access-date=2021-08-03|website=HISTORY|language=en}}</ref> In contrast to populations conquered by other Greek cities (e.g. the Athenian treatment of Melos), the male population was not exterminated and the women and children turned into chattel slaves. Instead, the helots were given a subordinate position in society more comparable to serfs in medieval Europe than chattel slaves in the rest of Greece.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} The Spartan helots were not only agricultural workers, but were also household servants, both male and female would be assigned domestic duties, such as wool-working.<ref>Kennell, Nigel M. "Helots and Perioeci" ''Sparta: A New History.'' Wiley-Blackwell pp. 136. 2010</ref> However, the helots were not the private property of individual Spartan citizens, regardless of their household duties, and were instead owned by the state through the ''kleros'' system.<ref>Figueira, Thomas, "Helotage and the Spartan Economy," p. 566-574. In ''A Companion to Sparta,'' edited by Anton Powell, 565-589. Vol. 1 of ''A Companion to Sparta.'' Hoboken, NJ: Wiley Balckwell, 2018.</ref>
In 1904 the British School at Athens began a thorough
exploration of Laconia, and in the following year excavations
were made at Thalamae, Geronthrae, and Angelona near
Monemvasia while several medieval fortresses were surveyed.
In 1906 excavations began in Sparta itself with results of
great value, whici have been published in the British
School Annual, vol. xii. sqq


Helots did not have voting or political rights. The Spartan poet ] refers to Helots being allowed to marry and retaining 50% of the fruits of their labor.{{sfn|West|1999|p=24}} They also seem to have been allowed to practice religious rites and, according to Thucydides, own a limited amount of personal property.{{sfn|Cartledge|2002|p=141}}
Initially, helots couldn't be freed but during the middle ], some 6,000 helots accumulated enough wealth to buy their freedom, for example, in 227 BC.


In other Greek city-states, free citizens were part-time soldiers who, when not at war, carried on other trades. Since Spartan men were full-time soldiers, they were not available to carry out manual labour.{{sfn|Cartledge|2002|p=140}} The helots were used as unskilled ]s, tilling Spartan land. Helot women were often used as ]s. Helots also travelled with the Spartan army as non-combatant serfs. At the last stand of the ], the Greek dead included not just the legendary three hundred Spartan soldiers but also several hundred ] and ] troops and a number of helots.{{sfn|Ehrenberg|2002|p=159}}
A “small circus” described by Leake, but subsequently almost
lost to view, proved to be a theatre-like building constructed
soon after A.D. 200 round the altar and in front of the temple
of Artemis Orthia. Here musical and gymnastic contests took
place as well as the famous flogging-ordeal (diamastigosis).
The temple, which can be dated to the 2nd century B.C. rests
on the foundation of an older temple of the 6th century, and
close beside it were found the scanty remains of a yet earlier
temple, dating from the 9th or even the 10th century. The
votive offerings in clay, amber, bronze, ivory and lead found
in great profusion within the precinct range from the 9th to
the 4th century n.e. and supply invaluable evidence for early
Spartan art; they prove that Sparta reached her artistic
zenith in the 7th century and that her decline had already
begun in the 6th. In 1907 the sanctuary of Athena “of the
Brazen House” (XaXKLo~Kos) was located on. the Acropolis
immediately above the theatre, and though the actual temple
is almost completely destroyed, fragments of the capitals
show that it was Done in style, an.d the site has produced
the longest extant archaic inscription of Laconia, numerous
bronze nails and plates and a considerable number of
votive offerings, some of them of great interest.
The Greek city-wall, built in successive stages from
the 4th to the 2nd century, was traced for a great part
of its circuit, which measured 48 stades or nearly
6 m. (Polyb. 1X. 21). The late Roman wall enclosing the
Acropolis, part of which probably dates from the years
following the Gothic raid of A.D. 262, was also investigated.
Besides the actual buildings discovered, a number of points
were fixed which greatly facilitate, the study of Spartan.
topography, based upon the description left us by Pausanias.
Excavations carried on in 19f0 showed that the town of the
“Mycenean” period which lay on the left bank of the Eurotas
a little to the south-east of Sparta was roughly triangular
in shape, with its apex towards the north: its area is
approximately equal to that of’ Sparta, but denudation and
destruction have wrought havoc with its buildings and nothing
is left save ruined foundations and broken potsherds.


There was at least one helot revolt (c. 465–460 BC) that led to prolonged conflict. By the tenth year of this war the Spartans and Messenians had reached an agreement in which Messenian rebels were allowed to leave the Peloponnese.<ref>{{Citation|last1=Thucydides|title=Third year of the war, 429–28 |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9781139050371.014|work=Thucydides|pages=135–161|place=Cambridge|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-1-139-05037-1|access-date=2021-02-24|last2=Mynott|first2=Jeremy|year=2013|doi=10.1017/cbo9781139050371.014}}</ref> They were given safe passage under the terms that they would be re-enslaved if they tried to return. This agreement ended the most serious incursion into Spartan territory since their expansion in the seventh and eighth centuries BC.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Kennell|first=Nigel M.|title=Spartans: A New History|publisher=Wiley-Blackwell|year=2010|pages=122}}</ref> Thucydides remarked that "Spartan policy is always mainly governed by the necessity of taking precautions against the helots."<ref>Thucydides (IV, 80); the Greek is ambiguous</ref>{{sfn|Cartledge|2002|p=211}} On the other hand, the Spartans trusted their helots enough in 479 BC to take a force of 35,000 with them to Plataea, something they could not have risked if they feared the helots would attack them or run away. Slave revolts occurred elsewhere in the Greek world, and in 413 BC 20,000 Athenian slaves ran away to join the Spartan forces occupying Attica.<ref>Thucydides (VII, 27)</ref> What made Sparta's relations with her slave population unique was that the helots, precisely because they enjoyed privileges such as family and property, retained their identity as a conquered people (the Messenians) and also had effective kinship groups that could be used to organize rebellion.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}


As the Spartiate population declined and the helot population continued to grow, the imbalance of power caused increasing tension. According to ]<ref>Talbert, p. 26.</ref> of the middle 3rd century BC:
== References ==


{{blockquote|They assign to the Helots every shameful task leading to disgrace. For they ordained that each one of them must wear a dogskin cap ({{lang|grc|κυνῆ}} / ''kunễ'') and wrap himself in skins ({{lang|grc|διφθέρα}} / ''diphthéra'') and receive a stipulated number of beatings every year regardless of any wrongdoing, so that they would never forget they were slaves. Moreover, if any exceeded the vigour proper to a slave's condition, they made death the penalty; and they allotted a punishment to those controlling them if they failed to rebuke those who were growing fat.<ref>Apud Athenaeus, 14, 647d = ''FGH'' 106 F 2. Trans. by Cartledge, p. 305.</ref>}}
The above information was obtained from the 1911 version of the Encyclopedia Britannica.
See


Plutarch also states that Spartans treated the helots "harshly and cruelly": they compelled them to drink pure wine (which was considered dangerous – ] usually being cut with water) "...and to lead them in that condition into their public halls, that the children might see what a sight a drunken man is; they made them to dance low dances, and sing ridiculous songs..." during '']'' (obligatory banquets).<ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Lycurgus'' 28, 8–10. See also, ''Life of Demetrios'', 1, 5; ''Constitution of the Lacedemonians'' 30; ''De Cohibenda Ira'' 6; ''De Commmunibus Notitiis'' 19.</ref>


Each year when the Ephors took office, they ritually declared war on the helots, allowing Spartans to kill them without risk of ritual pollution.<ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Lycurgus'' 28, 7.</ref> This fight seems to have been carried out by ''kryptai'' (sing. κρύπτης ''kryptēs''), graduates of the ''agoge'' who took part in the mysterious institution known as the '']''.{{sfn|Powell|2001|p=254}} Thucydides states:

<blockquote>The helots were invited by a proclamation to pick out those of their number who claimed to have most distinguished themselves against the enemy, in order that they might receive their freedom; the object being to test them, as it was thought that the first to claim their freedom would be the most high spirited and the most apt to rebel. As many as two thousand were selected accordingly, who crowned themselves and went round the temples, rejoicing in their new freedom. The Spartans, however, soon afterwards did away with them, and no one ever knew how each of them perished.<ref>Thucydides (Book IV 80.4).</ref><ref>Classical historian Anton Powell has recorded a similar story from 1980s ]. Cf. Powell, 2001, p. 256</ref></blockquote>

====Perioikoi====
{{main|Perioeci}}

The Perioikoi came from similar origins as the helots but occupied a significantly different position in Spartan society. Although they did not enjoy full citizen-rights, they were free and not subjected to the same restrictions as the helots. The exact nature of their subjection to the Spartans is not clear, but they seem to have served partly as a kind of military reserve, partly as skilled craftsmen and partly as agents of foreign trade.{{sfn|Cartledge|2002|pp=153–155}} Perioikoic hoplites served increasingly with the Spartan army, explicitly at the ], and although they may also have fulfilled functions such as the manufacture and repair of armour and weapons,{{sfn|Cartledge|2002|pp=158, 178}} they were increasingly integrated into the combat units of the Spartan army as the Spartiate population declined.<ref>"Population Patterns in Late Archaic and Classical Sparta" by Thomas Figueira, ''Transactions of the American Philological Association'' 116 (1986), pp. 165–213</ref>

===Economy===
] of the Spartan artist known as the ] (Laconian ]d ], c. 550–530 BC)]]
Full citizen Spartiates were barred by law from trade or manufacture, which consequently rested in the hands of the Perioikoi.<ref name=EB1911/> This lucrative monopoly, in a fertile territory with a good harbors, ensured the loyalty of the perioikoi.<ref>Paul Cartledge, ''Sparta and Lakonia'', Routledge, London, 1979, pp. 154–59</ref> Despite the prohibition on menial labor or trade, there is evidence of Spartan sculptors,<ref>Conrad Stibbe, ''Das Andere Sparta'', Verlag Philipp von Zabern, Mainz, 1996, pp. 111–27</ref> and Spartans were certainly poets, magistrates, ambassadors, and governors as well as soldiers.

Allegedly, Spartans were prohibited from possessing gold and silver coins, and according to legend Spartan currency consisted of iron bars to discourage hoarding.<ref>Excel HSC ''Ancient History'' By Peter Roberts, {{ISBN|1-74125-178-8|978-1-74125-178-4}}</ref><ref name="48LawsPower420">{{Citation|last=Greene|first=Robert|title=The 48 Laws of Power|publisher=]|year=2000|page=420|isbn=0-14-028019-7|title-link=The 48 Laws of Power}}</ref> It was not until the 260s or 250s BC that Sparta began to mint its own coins.<ref>{{citation|last=Hodkinson|first=Stephen|title=Property and Wealth in Classical Sparta|year=2000|page=154}}</ref> Though the conspicuous display of wealth appears to have been discouraged, this did not preclude the production of very fine decorated bronze, ivory and wooden works of art as well as exquisite jewellery, attested in archaeology.<ref>Conrad Stibbe, ''Das Andere Sparta'', Verlag Philipp von Zabern, Mainz, 1996</ref>

Allegedly as part of the Lycurgan Reforms in the mid-8th century BC, a massive ] had divided property into 9,000 equal portions. Each citizen received one estate, a ''kleros'', which was expected to provide his living.<ref>A.H.M. Jones, ''Sparta'', Basel Blackwell and Mott Ltd.,1967, pp. 40–43</ref> The land was worked by helots who retained half the yield. From the other half, the Spartiate was expected to pay his mess (''syssitia'') fees, and the ''agoge'' fees for his children. However, nothing is known of matters of wealth such as how land was bought, sold, and inherited, or whether daughters received dowries.<ref>Stephen Hodkinson, ''Property and Wealth in Classical Sparta'', The Classical Press of Wales, Swansea, 2000. See also Paul Cartledge's discussion of property in Sparta in ''Sparta and Lakonia'', pp. 142–44.</ref> However, from early on there were marked differences of wealth within the state, and these became more serious after the law of ] some time after the ], which removed the legal prohibition on the gift or bequest of land.<ref name="EB1911" /><ref>''Social Conflict in Ancient Greece'' By Alexander Fuks, {{ISBN|965-223-466-4|978-965-223-466-7}}</ref> By the mid-5th century, land had become concentrated in the hands of a tiny elite, and the notion that all Spartan citizens were equals had become an empty pretence. By Aristotle's day (384–322 BC) citizenship had been reduced from 9,000 to less than 1,000, then further decreased to 700 at the accession of ] in 244 BC. Attempts were made to remedy this by imposing legal penalties upon bachelors,<ref name="EB1911" /> but this could not reverse the trend.

==Life in Classical Sparta==
], ''The Selection of Children in Sparta'', 1785. A ] imaging of what ] describes.]]

===Birth and death===
Sparta was above all a militarist state, and emphasis on military fitness began virtually at birth. According to Plutarch after birth, a mother would bathe her child in wine to see whether the child was strong. If the child survived it was brought before the Gerousia by the child's father. The Gerousia then decided whether it was to be reared or not.<ref name=EB1911/> It is commonly stated that if they considered it "puny and deformed", the baby was thrown into a chasm on ] known euphemistically as the ''Apothetae'' (Gr., ''ἀποθέται'', "Deposits").{{sfn|Cartledge|2001|p=84}}{{sfn|Plutarch|2005|p=20}} This was, in effect, a primitive form of ].{{sfn|Cartledge|2001|p=84}} Plutarch is the sole historical source for the Spartan practice of systemic infanticide motivated by eugenics.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bayliss |first1=Andrew J. |title=4. Raising a Spartan |journal=The Spartans: A Very Short Introduction |date=26 May 2022 |pages=59–76 |doi=10.1093/actrade/9780198787600.003.0004|isbn=978-0-19-878760-0 }}</ref> Sparta is often viewed as being unique in this regard, however, anthropologist Laila Williamson notes: "Infanticide has been practiced on every continent and by people on every level of cultural complexity, from hunter gatherers to high civilizations. Rather than being an exception, then, it has been the rule."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Williamson |first=Laila |contribution=Infanticide: an anthropological analysis |editor-last=Kohl |editor-first=Marvin |title=Infanticide and the Value of Life |pages=61–75 |publisher=] |place=NY |year=1978}}</ref> There is controversy about the matter in Sparta, since excavations in the chasm only uncovered adult remains, likely belonging to criminals<ref>{{cite journal |author=Theodoros K. Pitsios |url=http://www.anthropologie.ch/d/publikationen/archiv/2010/documents/03PITSIOSreprint.pdf |date=2010 |title=Ancient Sparta – Research Program of Keadas Cavern |journal=Bulletin der Schweizerischen Gesellschaft für Anthropologie|volume=16|issue=1–2|pages=13–22|url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131002192630/http://www.anthropologie.ch/d/publikationen/archiv/2010/documents/03PITSIOSreprint.pdf |archive-date=2013-10-02 }}</ref> and Greek sources contemporary to Sparta does not mention systemic infanticide motivated solely by eugenics.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Disability and Infanticide in Ancient Greece |journal=Hesperia: The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens |date=2021 |volume=90 |issue=4 |pages=747 |doi=10.2972/hesperia.90.4.0747 |last1=Sneed |s2cid=245045967 }}</ref>

Spartan burial customs changed over time. The Archaic Spartan poet ] spoke of the Spartan war-dead as follows:

<blockquote>Never do his name and good fame perish,<br>But even though he is beneath the earth he is immortal,<br>Young and old alike mourn him,<br>All the city is distressed by the painful loss,<br>and his tomb and children are pointed out among the people,<br>and his children's children and his line after them.<ref>Tyrtaeus, fr.12 lines 27-32</ref></blockquote>

When Spartans died, marked headstones would only be granted to soldiers who died in combat during a victorious campaign or women who died either in service of a divine office or in childbirth.<ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Lycurgus'' 27.2–3. However this may be conflating later practice with that of the classical period. See Not the Classical Ideal: Athens and the Construction of the Other in Greek Art ed. Beth Cohen, p. 263, note 33, 2000, Brill.</ref> These headstones likely acted as memorials, rather than as grave markers. Evidence of Spartan burials is provided by the Tomb of the Lacedaimonians in Athens.{{Citation needed|date=June 2023}} Excavations at the cemetery of classical Sparta, uncovered ritually pierced ]-like ceramic vessels, the ritual slaughter of horses, and specific burial enclosures alongside individual 'plots'. Some of the graves were reused over time.<ref>Tsouli, M. (2016). Testimonia on Funerary Banquets in Ancient Sparta. In: Draycott, C. M., Stamatopoulou, M., & Peeters, U. (eds.), Dining and Death: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the 'Funerary Banquet' in Ancient Art, Burial and Belief, Peeters, 353–383.</ref><ref name=":0">Christesen, P. (2018). The typology and topography of Spartan burials from the Protogeometric to the Hellenistic period: rethinking Spartan exceptionalism and the ostensible cessation of adult intramural burials in the Greek world. ''Annual of the British School at Athens'', ''113'', 307–363.</ref>

In the Hellenistic Period, grander, two-storey monumental tombs are found at Sparta. Ten of these have been found for this period.<ref name=":0" />

===Education===
{{main|Agoge}}
], 550–525 BC (])]]

When male Spartans began military training at age seven, they would enter the '']'' system. The ''agoge'' was designed to encourage discipline and physical toughness and to emphasize the importance of the Spartan state. Boys lived in communal ]es and, according to Xenophon, whose sons attended the ''agoge'', the boys were fed "just the right amount for them never to become sluggish through being too full, while also giving them a taste of what it is not to have enough."<ref name="Xenophon, Spartan Society, 2">Xenophon, Spartan Society, 2</ref> In addition, they were trained to survive in times of privation, even if it meant stealing.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Western Heritage|last1=Kagan|first1=Donald |last2=Ozment|first2=Steven|last3=Frank|first3=Turner|last4=Frank|first4=Alison|publisher=Pearson|year=2013 |pages=44, Spartan Society|chapter=The Rise of Greek Civilization}}</ref> Besides physical and weapons training, boys studied reading, writing, music and dancing. Special punishments were imposed if boys failed to answer questions sufficiently "]" (i.e. briefly and wittily).{{sfn|Cartledge|2001|p=85}}

Spartan boys were expected to take an older male mentor, usually an unmarried young man. According to some sources, the older man was expected to function as a kind of substitute father and role model to his junior partner; however, others believe it was reasonably certain that they had sexual relations (the exact nature of ] is not entirely clear). Xenophon, an admirer of the Spartan educational system whose sons attended the ''agoge'', explicitly denies the sexual nature of the relationship.{{sfn|Cartledge|2001|pp=91–105}}<ref name="Xenophon, Spartan Society, 2"/>

Some Spartan youth apparently became members of an irregular unit known as the '']''. The immediate objective of this unit was to seek out and kill vulnerable helot Laconians as part of the larger program of terrorising and intimidating the helot population.{{sfn|Cartledge|2001|p=88}}

Less information is available about the education of Spartan girls, but they seem to have gone through a fairly extensive formal educational cycle, broadly similar to that of the boys but with less emphasis on military training. Spartan girls received an education known as ''mousikē''. This included music, dancing, singing and poetry. Choral dancing was taught so Spartan girls could participate in ritual activities, including the cults of Helen and Artemis.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Millender|first=Ellen G.|title=A Companion to Sparta|publisher=Wiley-Blackwell|year=2018|editor-last=Powell|editor-first=Anton|pages=504}}</ref> In this respect, classical Sparta was unique in ancient Greece. In no other city-state did women receive any kind of formal education.{{sfn|Cartledge|2001|pp=83–84}}

===Military life===
{{main|Spartan army|Spartiate}}
] sculpture (5th century BC), ], Greece]]

At age 20, the Spartan citizen began his membership in one of the '']'' (dining messes or clubs), composed of about fifteen members each, of which every citizen was required to be a member.<ref name=EB1911/> Here each group learned how to bond and rely on one another. The Spartans were not eligible for election for public office until the age of 30. Only native Spartans were considered full citizens and were obliged to undergo the training as prescribed by law, as well as participate in and contribute financially to one of the ''syssitia''.<ref>{{cite book| title=Aristophanes and Athenian Society of the Early Fourth Century B.C| first=E.| last=David| year=1984| isbn=9004070621| publisher=Brill Archive}}</ref>

Sparta is thought to be the first city to practice athletic nudity, and some scholars claim that it was also the first to formalize pederasty.<ref>{{cite journal| last1=Scanlon| first1=Thomas F.| year=2005| title=The Dispersion of Pederasty and the Athletic Revolution in Sixth-Century BC Greece| journal=J Homosex| volume=49| issue=3–4| pages=63–85| pmid=16338890| quote=''Same-Sex Desire and Love in Greco-Roman Antiquity and in the Classical Tradition of the West'', pp. 64–70.| doi=10.1300/j082v49n03_03| s2cid=19140503}}</ref> According to these sources, the Spartans believed that the love of an older, accomplished aristocrat for an adolescent was essential to his formation as a free citizen. The '']'', the education of the ruling class, was, they claim, founded on pederastic relationships required of each citizen,<ref>], ''Die Dorische Knabenliebe: ihre Ethik und ihre Ideen'' (The Doric pederasty: their ethics and their ideas), <!-- NOTE: Google Translation --> Sauerländer, 1907, 441, 444. {{ISBN|978-3921495773}}</ref> with the lover responsible for the boy's training.

However, other scholars question this interpretation. Xenophon explicitly denies it,<ref name="Xenophon, Spartan Society, 2"/> but not Plutarch.<ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Lycurgus'' 18.</ref>

Spartan men remained in the active reserve until age 60. Men were encouraged to marry at age 20 but could not live with their families until they left their active military service at age 30. They called themselves "''homoioi''" (equals), pointing to their common lifestyle and the discipline of the ], which demanded that no soldier be superior to his comrades.<ref name=cowley>Readers Companion Military Hist p. 438. Cowley</ref> Insofar as ] warfare could be perfected, the Spartans did so.{{sfn|Adcock|1957|pp=8–9}}

Thucydides reports that when a Spartan man went to war, his wife (or another woman of some significance) would customarily present him with his ] (shield) and say: "With this, or upon this" (Ἢ τὰν ἢ ἐπὶ τᾶς, ''Èi tàn èi èpì tàs''), meaning that true Spartans could only return to Sparta either victorious (with their shield in hand) or dead (carried upon it).{{sfn|Plutarch|2004|p=465}} This is almost certainly propaganda. Spartans buried their battle dead on or near the battle field; corpses were not brought back on their shield.<ref name="Sons and Mothers"/> Nevertheless, it is fair to say that it was less of a disgrace for a soldier to lose his helmet, breastplate or ]s than his shield, since the former were designed to protect one man, whereas the shield also protected the man on his left. Thus, the shield was symbolic of the individual soldier's subordination to his unit, his integral part in its success, and his solemn responsibility to his comrades in arms – messmates and friends, often close blood relations.

According to Aristotle, the Spartan military culture was actually short-sighted and ineffective. He observed:

<blockquote>It is the standards of civilized men not of beasts that must be kept in mind, for it is good men not beasts who are capable of real courage. Those like the Spartans who concentrate on the one and ignore the other in their education turn men into machines and in devoting themselves to one single aspect of city's life, end up making them inferior even in that.{{sfn|Forrest|1968|p=53}}</blockquote>

One of the most persistent myths about Sparta that has no basis in fact is the notion that Spartan mothers were without feelings toward their off-spring and helped enforce a militaristic lifestyle on their sons and husbands.{{sfn|Pomeroy|2002|p={{page needed|date=September 2013}}}}<ref>''The Greeks'', H. D. F. Kitto, {{ISBN|0-202-30910-X|978-0202309101}}</ref> The myth can be traced back to Plutarch, who includes no less than 17 "sayings" of "Spartan women", all of which paraphrase or elaborate on the theme that Spartan mothers rejected their own offspring if they showed any kind of cowardice. In some of these sayings, mothers revile their sons in insulting language merely for surviving a battle. These sayings purporting to be from Spartan women were far more likely to be of Athenian origin and designed to portray Spartan women as unnatural and so undeserving of pity.<ref name="Sons and Mothers">{{cite journal| author=Helena P. Schrader | title=Sons and Mothers| journal=ΣPARTA: Journal of Ancient Spartan and Greek History| volume=7| issue=4| year=2011| url=http://www.sparta.markoulakispublications.org.uk/index.php?id=316| publisher= Markoulakis Publications| issn=1751-0007 | access-date=September 14, 2013}} {{subscription required}}</ref>

===Agriculture, food, and diet===
Sparta's agriculture consisted mainly of barley, wine, cheese, grain, and figs. These items were grown locally on each Spartan citizen's kleros and were tended to by helots. Spartan citizens were required to donate a certain amount of what they yielded from their kleros to their syssitia, or mess. These donations to the syssitia were a requirement for every Spartan citizen. All the donated food was then redistributed to feed the Spartan population of that syssitia.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Ceramics, Cuisine and Culture|last=Langridge-Noti|first=Elizabeth|publisher=Oxbow Books|year=2015|isbn=978-1-78297-947-0|editor-last=Spataro|editor-first=Michela|location=United Kingdom|pages=148–55|chapter=Unchanging Tastes: First Steps Towards Correlation of the Evidence for Food Preparation and Consumption in Ancient Laconia|editor-last2=Villing|editor-first2=Alexandra}}</ref> The helots who tended to the lands were fed using a portion of what they harvested.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Figueira|first=Thomas|date=1984|title=Mess Contributions and Subsistence at Sparta|journal=Transactions of the American Philological Association|volume=114|pages=87–109|doi=10.2307/284141|jstor=284141}}</ref>

===Marriage===
Plutarch reports the peculiar customs associated with the Spartan wedding night:

<blockquote>The custom was to capture women for marriage... The so-called 'bridesmaid' took charge of the captured girl. She first shaved her head to the scalp, then dressed her in a man's cloak and sandals, and laid her down alone on a mattress in the dark. The bridegroom – who was not drunk and thus not impotent, but was sober as always – first had dinner in the messes, then would slip in, undo her belt, lift her and carry her to the bed.<ref>Plutarch, ''The Life of Lycurgus''</ref></blockquote>

The husband continued to visit his wife in secret for some time after the marriage. These customs, unique to the Spartans, have been interpreted in various ways. One of them decidedly supports the need to disguise the bride as a man in order to help the bridegroom consummate the marriage, so unaccustomed were men to women's looks at the time of their first intercourse. The "abduction" may have served to ward off the ], and the cutting of the wife's hair was perhaps part of a rite of passage that signaled her entrance into a new life.{{sfn|Pomeroy|2002|p=42}}

==Role of women==
{{main|Women in ancient Sparta}}

===Political, social, and economic equality===
Spartan women, of the citizenry class, enjoyed a status, power, and respect that was unknown in the rest of the classical world. The higher status of females in Spartan society started at birth; unlike Athens, Spartan girls were fed the same food as their brothers.<ref name="Xenophon, Spartan Society, 1">Xenophon, Spartan Society, 1</ref> Nor were they confined to their father's house and prevented from exercising or getting fresh air as in Athens, but exercised and even competed in sports.<ref name="Xenophon, Spartan Society, 1"/> Most important, rather than being married off at the age of 12 or 13, Spartan law forbade the marriage of a girl until she was in her late teens or early 20s. The reasons for delaying marriage were to ensure the birth of healthy children, but the effect was to spare Spartan women the hazards and lasting health damage associated with ]. Spartan women, better fed from childhood and fit from exercise, stood a far better chance of reaching old age than their sisters in other Greek cities, where the median age for death was 34.6 years or roughly 10 years below that of men.{{sfn|Blundell|1999|p={{page needed|date=October 2021}}}}

Unlike ] who wore heavy, concealing clothes and were rarely seen outside the house, Spartan women wore dresses (]) slit up the side to allow freer movement and moved freely about the city, either walking or driving chariots. Girls as well as boys exercised, possibly in the nude, and young women as well as young men may have participated in the ] ("Festival of Nude Youths").<ref>Guttentag and Secord, 1983; Finley, 1982; Pomeroy, 1975</ref>{{sfn|Pomeroy|2002|p=34}}

Another practice that was mentioned by many visitors to Sparta was the practice of "wife-sharing". In accordance with the Spartan belief that breeding should be between the most physically fit parents, many older men allowed younger, more fit men, to impregnate their wives. Other unmarried or childless men might even request another man's wife to bear his children if she had previously been a strong child bearer.{{sfn|Powell|2001|p=248}} For this reason many considered Spartan women ] or ].{{sfn|Blundell|1999|p=154}} This practice was encouraged in order that women bear as many strong-bodied children as they could. The Spartan population was hard to maintain due to the constant absence and loss of the men in battle and the intense physical inspection of newborns.{{sfn|Powell|2001|p=246}}

Spartan women were also literate and numerate, a rarity in the ancient world. Furthermore, as a result of their education and the fact that they moved freely in society engaging with their fellow (male) citizens, they were notorious for speaking their minds even in public.<ref>Maria Dettenhofer, "Die Frauen von Sparta", Reine Männer Sache, Munich, Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag, 1994, p. 25.</ref> Plato, in the middle of the fourth century, described women's curriculum in Sparta as consisting of gymnastics and mousike (music and arts). Plato praised Spartan women's ability when it came to philosophical discussion.{{sfn|Pomeroy|2002|p=9}}

Most importantly, Spartan women had economic power because they controlled their own properties, and those of their husbands. It is estimated that in later Classical Sparta, when the male population was in serious decline, women were the sole owners of at least 35% of all land and property in Sparta.<ref name=Pomeroy1995/> The laws regarding a divorce were the same for both men and women. Unlike women in Athens, if a Spartan woman became the heiress of her father because she had no living brothers to inherit (an '']''), the woman was not required to divorce her current spouse in order to marry her nearest paternal relative.<ref name=Pomeroy1995>Pomeroy, Sarah B. ''Goddess, Whores, Wives, and Slaves: Women in Classical Antiquity''. New York: Schocken Books, 1995 pp. 60–62</ref>

===Historic women===
Many women played a significant role in the ].<ref>{{cite web|title=Gorgo and Spartan Women |url=http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Aegean/7849/spwomen.html |access-date=2011-08-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091027062542/http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Aegean/7849/spwomen.html |archive-date=2009-10-27 |date=2009-10-27}}</ref> ], heiress to the throne and the wife of ], was an influential and well-documented figure. Herodotus records that as a small girl she advised her father ] to resist a bribe. She was later said to be responsible for decoding a warning that the Persian forces were about to invade Greece; after Spartan generals could not decode a wooden tablet covered in wax, she ordered them to clear the wax, revealing the warning.<ref>{{cite web|author=Helena Schrader |url=http://www.elysiumgates.com/~helena/Women.html |title=Sparta Reconsidered—Spartan Women |publisher=Elysiumgates.com |date=2010-07-11 |access-date=2011-08-10}}</ref> Plutarch's '']'' contains a collection of "Sayings of Spartan Women", including a laconic quip attributed to Gorgo: when asked by a woman from ] why Spartan women were the only women in the world who could rule men, she replied "Because we are the only women who are mothers of men".{{sfn|Plutarch|2004|p=457}} In 396, ], sister of the Eurypontid king Agesilaos II, became the first woman in Greece to win an Olympic chariot race. She won again in 392, and dedicated two monuments to commemorate her victory, these being an inscription in Sparta and a set of bronze equestrian statues at the Olympic temple of Zeus.<ref>Pausanias, 6.1.6</ref><ref>Millender, Ellen G., "Spartan Women" p. 500-525. In ''A Companion to Sparta,'' edited by Anton Powell, Vol. 1 of ''A Companion to Sparta.'' Hoboken, NJ: Wiley Blackwell, 2018.</ref>

==Laconophilia==
]'', 1814 painting by ]]]
{{main|Laconophilia}}

Laconophilia is love or admiration of Sparta and its culture or constitution. Sparta was subject of considerable admiration in its day, even in rival ]. In ancient times "Many of the noblest and best of the Athenians always considered the Spartan state nearly as an ideal theory realised in practice."<ref>Mueller: ''Dorians'' II, 192</ref> Many Greek philosophers, especially Platonists, would often describe Sparta as an ideal state, strong, brave, and free from the corruptions of commerce and money. The French classicist ] in his 1933 book ''Le mirage spartiate'' (The Spartan Mirage) warned that a major scholarly problem is that all surviving accounts of Sparta were by non-Spartans who often excessively idealized their subject.<ref name="Hodkinson pages 222-281">Hodkinson, Stephen "The Imaginary Spartan ''Politeria''" pp. 22–81 from ''The Imaginary Polis: Symposium, January 7–10, 2004'' edited by Mogens Herman Hansen, Copenhagen: Danske Videnskabernes Selskab, 2005 p. 222.</ref> The term "Spartan Mirage" has come to refer to "idealized distortions and inventions regarding the character of Spartan society in the works of non-Spartan writers," beginning in Greek and Roman antiquity and continuing through the medieval and modern eras.<ref name="Hodkinson2002">{{cite book | author=Hodkinson S | title=Sparta: Beyond the Mirage | publisher=The Classical Press of Wales | chapter=Introduction | date=31 December 2002 | isbn=978-1-914535-20-8 | doi=10.2307/j.ctv1n357hd}}</ref> These accounts of Sparta are typically associated with the social or political concerns of the writer.<ref name="Hodkinson2002"/> No accounts survive by the Spartans themselves, if such were ever written.

]'' by ] (1834–1917)]]

With the revival of classical learning in ], Laconophilia re-appeared, for example in the writings of ]. The Elizabethan English constitutionalist ] compared the mixed government of ] to the Spartan republic, stating that "Lacedemonia the noblest and best city governed that ever was". He commended it as a model for England. The philosopher ] contrasted Sparta favourably with Athens in his '']'', arguing that its austere constitution was preferable to the more sophisticated Athenian life. Sparta was also used as a model of austere purity by Revolutionary and Napoleonic France.<ref name="The ">{{cite web|url=http://www.lacan.com/zizhollywood.htm|last = Žižek|first = Slavoj| author-link = Slavoj Žižek| title = The True Hollywood Left| publisher = www.lacan.com}}</ref>

A German ] strain of Laconophilia was initiated by ], who linked Spartan ideals to the supposed racial superiority of the Dorians, the ethnic sub-group of the Greeks to which the Spartans belonged. In the 20th century, this developed into ] admiration of Spartan ideals. ] praised the Spartans, recommending in 1928 that Germany should imitate them by limiting "the number allowed to live". He added that "The Spartans were once capable of such a wise measure... The subjugation of 350,000 Helots by 6,000 Spartans was only possible because of the racial superiority of the Spartans." The Spartans had created "the first racialist state".<ref name="un.org">{{cite web |last1=Kiernan |first1=Ben |title=Hitler, Pol Pot, and Hutu Power: Distinguishing Themes of Genocidal Ideology |url=https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/dpj_i.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/dpj_i.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live |access-date=28 April 2021 |page=19}}</ref> Following ] ], Hitler viewed citizens of the USSR as like the helots under the Spartans: "They came as conquerors, and they took everything", and so should the Germans. A Nazi officer specified that "the Germans would have to assume the position of the Spartiates, while... the Russians were the Helots."<ref name="un.org"/>

Certain early Zionists, and particularly the founders of ] movement in Israel, were influenced by Spartan ideals, particularly in education. ], a founding father of the Kibbutz movement and the ] strikeforce, prescribed that education for warfare "should begin from the nursery", that children should from kindergarten be taken to "spend nights in the mountains and valleys".<ref>''The Making of Israeli Militarism'', By Uri Ben-Eliezer, Indiana University Press, 1998, p. 63</ref><ref>''Land and Power: The Zionist Resort to Force, 1881–1948'', By Anita Shapira, Stanford University Press 1999, 300</ref>

In modern times, the adjective "Spartan" means simple, frugal, avoiding luxury and comfort.<ref>{{cite web |title=Spartan |work=Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary |publisher=Merriam-Webster |url=https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Spartan |access-date=2021-10-05}}</ref> The term "]" describes the very terse and direct speech characteristic of the Spartans.

Sparta also features prominently in modern ], most famously the ] (see ]).

==Notable ancient Spartans==
{{main|:Category:Ancient Spartans}}
* ] – king
* ] – king
* ] – king
* ] – philosopher
* ] (7th century BC) – athlete
* ] – mercenary in the army of the ].
* ] – king
* ] – king and reformer
* ] (4th century BC) – princess and athlete
* ] – queen and politician
* ] – princess in the Trojan War
* ] (c. 520–480 BC) – king, commander at the ]
* ] (quasi-mythical, century unclear) — lawgiver
* ] (3rd century BC) — abolished the diarchy
* ] (5th–4th century BC) – general
* ] – king during the Trojan War
* ] – king
* ] – Spartan mercenary in the First Punic War

==See also==
* ]

==Notes==
{{reflist|group=n}}

==References==
{{Reflist|22em}}

== Sources ==
{{refbegin|30em}}
* {{cite book |last= Davies |first=Norman |orig-year=1996 |year=1997 |title=Europe: A History |publisher=Random House |isbn=0712666338}}
* {{citation |last=Adcock |first=F. E. |title=The Greek and Macedonian Art of War |publisher=University of California Press |year=1957 |location=Berkeley |isbn=0-520-00005-6 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/greekmacedoniana0000adco }}
* {{cite book | first=Georg | last=Autenrieth | title=A Homeric Dictionary for Schools and Colleges | location=New York | publisher=Harper and Brothers | year=1891}}
* {{cite book |last=Blundell |first=Sue |title=Women in Ancient Greece |publisher=British Museum Press |place=London |year=1999 |isbn=978-0-7141-2219-9}}
* {{citation | last=Cartledge | first=Paul | author-link=Paul Cartledge |title=Sparta and Lakonia: A Regional History 1300 to 362 BC | edition=2nd | publisher=Routledge | year=2002 | location=Oxford | isbn=0-415-26276-3}}
* {{citation |last=Cartledge |first=Paul |author-link=Paul Cartledge |title= Spartan Reflections |publisher=Duckworth |year=2001 |location=London |isbn=0-7156-2966-2}}
* {{citation |last1=Cartledge |first1=Paul |author-link1=Paul Cartledge |last2=Spawforth |first2=Antony |edition=2nd |title=Hellenistic and Roman Sparta |publisher=Routledge |year=2001 |location=Oxford |isbn=0-415-26277-1}}
* {{citation |last=Ehrenberg |first=Victor |author-link=Victor Ehrenberg (historian) |title=From Solon to Socrates: Greek History and Civilisation between the 6th and 5th centuries BC |publisher=Routledge |edition=2nd |year=2002 |orig-year=1973 |location=London |isbn=978-0-415-04024-2}}
* {{citation |last=Forrest |first=W. G. |title=A History of Sparta, 950–192 B.C. |publisher=W. W. Norton & Co. |year=1968 |location=New York}}
* {{citation |last=Green |first=Peter |author-link=Peter Green (historian) |title=The Greco-Persian Wars |edition=2nd |publisher=University of California Press |year=1998 |location=Berkeley |isbn=0-520-20313-5}}
* {{cite book |last1=Liddell |first1=Henry George |first2=Robert |last2=Scott |title=A Greek-English Lexicon |editor-first=Henry Stuart |editor-last=Jones |location=Oxford |publisher=Clarendon Press |year=1940}}
* {{citation |last=Pomeroy |first=Sarah B. |author-link=Sarah B. Pomeroy |title=Spartan Women |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2002 |location=Oxford |isbn=978-0-19-513067-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=c3k2AN1GulYC}}
* {{citation |last=Powell |first=Anton |title=Athens and Sparta: Constructing Greek Political and Social History from 478 BC |edition=2nd |publisher=Routledge |year=2001 |location=London |isbn=0-415-26280-1}}
* {{cite book |author=Pausanias |author-link=Pausanias (geographer)|title=Description of Greece|url=https://archive.org/details/pausaniasgreece02pausuoft|others=with an English Translation by W.H.S. Jones, Litt.D., and H.A. Ormerod, M.A., in 4 Volumes|year=1918|isbn=9780674992078 }}
* {{citation |last=Plutarch |author-link=Plutarch|others=Translated from the Greek by several hands. Corrected and revised by. William W. Goodwin, PH. D.|title=Plutarch's Morals|year=1874 |place=Boston, Cambridge}}
* {{citation |author=Plutarch|editor-first=Gregorius N.|editor-last=Bernardakis|title=Moralia|year=1891 |series=Plutarch|place=Leipzig|publisher=Teubner|language=el}}
* {{citation |last=Plutarch |editor=Richard J.A. Talbert |title=On Sparta |edition=2nd |publisher=Penguin Books |year=2005 |location=London |isbn=0-14-044943-4}}
* {{citation |last=Plutarch |editor=Frank Cole Babbitt |title=Moralia Vol. III |series=Loeb Classical Library |publisher=Harvard University Press |location=Cambridge |year=2004 |isbn=0-674-99270-9}}
* {{citation |last=West |first=M. L. |author-link=Martin Litchfield West |title=Greek Lyric Poetry |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1999 |location=Oxford |isbn=978-0-19-954039-6}}
{{refend}}

==Further reading==
{{refbegin|30em}}
* {{citation |last=Bradford |first=Ernle |author-link=Ernle Bradford |title=Thermopylae: The Battle for the West |publisher=Da Capo Press |year=2004 |location=New York |isbn=0-306-81360-2}}
* {{citation |last=Buxton |first=Richard |title=From Myth to Reason?: Studies in the Development of Greek Thought |publisher=Clarendon Press |year=1999 |location=Oxford |isbn=0-7534-5110-7 |url=https://archive.org/details/whatwillidowitho00grin_0 }}
* {{citation |last=Cartledge |first=Paul |author-link=Paul Cartledge |title=What have the Spartans Done for us?: Sparta's Contribution to Western Civilization |magazine=Greece & Rome |volume=51 |issue=2 |date=2004 |pages=164–179}}
* David, Ephraim. 1989. . ''Ancient World'' 19:3–13.
* Flower, Michael A. 2009. "Spartan 'Religion' and Greek 'Religion{{'"}}. In ''Sparta: Comparative Approaches''. Edited by Stephen Hodkinson, 193–229. Swansea, UK: Classical Press of Wales.
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Hodkinson |editor1-first=Stephen |editor2-last=Gallou |editor2-first=Chrysanthi |title=Luxury and wealth in Sparta and the Peloponnese |date=2021 |publisher=Classical Press of Wales |location=Swansea |isbn=9781910589830}}
* Hodkinson, Stephen, and Ian MacGregor Morris, eds. 2010. ''Sparta in Modern Thought''. Swansea, UK: Classical Press of Wales.
* Low, Polly. 2006. "Commemorating the Spartan War-Dead". In ''Sparta and War''. Edited by Stephen Hodkinson and Anton Powell, 85–109. Swansea, UK: Classical Press of Wales.
* {{citation |last=Morris |first=Ian |title=Death-Ritual and Social Structure in Classical Antiquity |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1992 |location=Cambridge |isbn=0-521-37611-4}}
* {{cite book |last1=Pavlides |first1=Nicolette A. |title=The hero cults of Sparta: local religion in a Greek city |date=2023 |publisher=Bloomsbury Academic |location=London |isbn=9781788313001}}
* Rabinowitz, Adam. 2009. "Drinking from the Same Cup: Sparta and Late Archaic Commensality". In ''Sparta: Comparative Approaches''. Edited by Stephen Hodkinson, 113–191. Swansea, UK: Classical Press of Wales.
* {{citation |last=Thompson |first=F. Hugh |title=The Archaeology of Greek and Roman Slavery |publisher=Duckworth |year=2002 |location=London |isbn=0-7156-3195-0}}
* {{citation |last=Thucydides |author-link=Thucydides |editor=M.I. Finley, Rex Warner |title=History of the Peloponnesian War |publisher=Penguin Books |year=1974 |location=London |isbn=0-14-044039-9 |url=https://archive.org/details/historyofpelopo000thuc }}
{{refend}}

==External links==
{{Library resources box |by=no |onlinebooks=yes |others=yes |about=yes |label=Sparta |viaf= |lccn= |lcheading= |wikititle= }}
{{EB1911 poster|Sparta}}
* {{commons category-inline|Sparta}}
* {{In Our Time|Sparta|b00nvz72|Sparta}}
* {{cite web |first=Ellen |last=Papakyriakou-Anagnostou |title=History of Sparta |work=Ancient Greek Cities |date=2000–2011 |url=http://www.sikyon.com/sparta/history_eg.html |access-date=2007-12-04 |archive-date=2001-03-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20010305205126/http://www.sikyon.com/Sparta/history_eg.html |url-status=dead }}
{{Ancient Greece topics}}
{{Authority control}}

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Latest revision as of 02:10, 26 December 2024

City-state in ancient Greece This article is about the ancient city-state. For modern-day Sparta, see Sparta, Laconia. For other uses, see Sparta (disambiguation). "Spartan" redirects here. For other uses, see Spartan (disambiguation). For the mythical people associated with Ares, see Spartoi. "Lacedaemon" redirects here. For the king, see Lacedaemon (mythology).

LacedaemonΛακεδαίμων (Ancient Greek)
900s–192 BC
Territory of ancient Sparta before 371 BC, with Perioecic cities in blueTerritory of ancient Sparta before 371 BC, with Perioecic cities in blue
CapitalSparta
37°4′55″N 22°25′25″E / 37.08194°N 22.42361°E / 37.08194; 22.42361
Common languagesDoric Greek
Religion Greek polytheism
GovernmentDiarchic Monarchy
King 
• c. 930–900 BC Agis I
• 207–192 BC Nabis
Legislature
Historical eraClassical antiquity
• Foundation 900s BC
• Messenian War 685–668 BC
• Battle of Thermopylae 480 BC
• Peloponnesian War 431–404 BC
• Battle of Mantinea 362 BC
• Annexed by Achaea 192 BC
Preceded by Succeeded by
Greek Dark Ages
Achaean League
This article contains special characters. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols.
Hollow Lacedaemon. Site of the Menelaion, the ancient shrine to Helen and Menelaus constructed in the Bronze Age city that stood on the hill of Therapne on the left bank of the Eurotas River overlooking the future site of Dorian Sparta. Across the valley the successive ridges of Mount Taygetus are in evidence.

Sparta was a prominent city-state in Laconia in ancient Greece. In antiquity, the city-state was known as Lacedaemon (Λακεδαίμων, Lakedaímōn), while the name Sparta referred to its main settlement on the banks of the Eurotas River in the Eurotas valley of Laconia, in south-eastern Peloponnese. Around 650 BC, it rose to become the dominant military land-power in ancient Greece.

Given its military pre-eminence, Sparta was recognized as the leading force of the unified Greek military during the Greco-Persian Wars, in rivalry with the rising naval power of Athens. Sparta was the principal enemy of Athens during the Peloponnesian War (431–404 BC), from which it emerged victorious after the Battle of Aegospotami. The decisive Battle of Leuctra against Thebes in 371 BC ended the Spartan hegemony, although the city-state maintained its political independence until its forced integration into the Achaean League in 192 BC. The city nevertheless recovered much autonomy after the Roman conquest of Greece in 146 BC and prospered during the Roman Empire, as its antiquarian customs attracted many Roman tourists. However, Sparta was sacked in 396 AD by the Visigothic king Alaric, and underwent a long period of decline, especially in the Middle Ages, when many of its citizens moved to Mystras. Modern Sparta is the capital of the southern Greek region of Laconia and a center for processing citrus and olives.

Sparta was unique in ancient Greece for its social system and constitution, which were supposedly introduced by the semi-mythical legislator Lycurgus. His laws configured the Spartan society to maximize military proficiency at all costs, focusing all social institutions on military training and physical development. The inhabitants of Sparta were stratified as Spartiates (citizens with full rights), mothakes (free non-Spartiate people descended from Spartans), perioikoi (free non-Spartiates), and helots (state-owned enslaved non-Spartan locals). Spartiate men underwent the rigorous agoge training regimen, and Spartan phalanx brigades were widely considered to be among the best in battle. Spartan women enjoyed considerably more rights than elsewhere in classical antiquity.

Sparta was frequently a subject of fascination in its own day, as well as in Western culture following the revival of classical learning. The admiration of Sparta is known as Laconophilia. Bertrand Russell wrote:

Sparta had a double effect on Greek thought: through the reality, and through the myth.... The reality enabled the Spartans to defeat Athens in war; the myth influenced Plato's political theory, and that of countless subsequent writers.... ideals that it favors had a great part in framing the doctrines of Rousseau, Nietzsche, and National Socialism.

Names

Eurotas River

The ancient Greeks used one of three words to refer to the Spartan city-state and its location. First, "Sparta" refers primarily to the main cluster of settlements in the valley of the Eurotas River. The second word, "Lacedaemon" (Λακεδαίμων), was often used as an adjective and is the name referenced in the works of Homer and the historians Herodotus and Thucydides. The third term, "Laconice" (Λακωνική), referred to the immediate area around the town of Sparta, the plateau east of the Taygetos mountains, and sometimes to all the regions under direct Spartan control, including Messenia.

The earliest attested term referring to Lacedaemon is the Mycenaean Greek 𐀨𐀐𐀅𐀖𐀛𐀍, ra-ke-da-mi-ni-jo, "Lakedaimonian", written in Linear B syllabic script, the equivalent of the later Greek Λακεδαιμόνιος, Lakedaimonios (Latin: Lacedaemonius).

Herodotus seems to use "Lacedaemon" for the Mycenaean Greek citadel at Therapne, in contrast to the lower town of Sparta. This term could be used synonymously with Sparta, but typically it denoted the terrain in which the city was located. In Homer it is typically combined with epithets of the countryside: wide, lovely, shining and most often hollow and broken (full of ravines), suggesting the Eurotas Valley. "Sparta" on the other hand is described as "the country of lovely women", an epithet for people.

The residents of Sparta were often called Lacedaemonians. This epithet utilized the plural of the adjective Lacedaemonius (Greek: Λακεδαιμόνιοι; Latin: Lacedaemonii, but also Lacedaemones). The ancients sometimes used a back-formation, referring to the land of Lacedaemon as Lacedaemonian country. As most words for "country" were feminine, the adjective was in the feminine: Lacedaemonia (Λακεδαιμονία, Lakedaimonia). Eventually, the adjective came to be used alone.

"Lacedaemonia" was not in general use during the classical period and before. It does occur in Greek as an equivalent of Laconia and Messenia during the Roman and early Byzantine periods, mostly in ethnographers and lexica of place names. For example, Hesychius of Alexandria's Lexicon (5th century AD) defines Agiadae as a "place in Lacedaemonia" named after Agis. The actual transition may be captured by Isidore of Seville's Etymologiae (7th century AD), an etymological dictionary. Isidore relied heavily on Orosius' Historiarum Adversum Paganos (5th century AD) and Eusebius of Caesarea's Chronicon (early 5th century AD), as did Orosius. The latter defines Sparta to be Lacedaemonia Civitas, but Isidore defines Lacedaemonia as founded by Lacedaemon, son of Semele, which is consistent with Eusebius' explanation. There is a rare use, perhaps the earliest of "Lacedaemonia", in Diodorus Siculus' The Library of History, but probably with Χώρα (chōra, "country") suppressed.

Lakedaimona was until 2006 the name of a province in the modern Greek prefecture of Laconia.

Geography

Antique Map of Classical City of Sparta (based on ancient sources and not archaeology).

Sparta is located in the region of Laconia, in the south-eastern Peloponnese. Ancient Sparta was built on the banks of the Eurotas, the largest river of Laconia, which provided it with a source of fresh water. The Eurotas valley was a natural fortress, bounded to the west by Mt. Taygetus (2,407 m) and to the east by Mt. Parnon (1,935 m). To the north, Laconia is separated from Arcadia by hilly uplands reaching 1000 m in altitude. These natural defenses worked to Sparta's advantage and protected it from sacking and invasion. Though landlocked, Sparta had a vassal harbor, Gytheio, on the Laconian Gulf.

Mythology

Lacedaemon (Greek: Λακεδαίμων) was a mythical king of Laconia. The son of Zeus by the nymph Taygete, he married Sparta, the daughter of Eurotas, by whom he became the father of Amyclas, Eurydice, and Asine. As king, he named his country after himself and the city after his wife. He was believed to have built the sanctuary of the Charites, which stood between Sparta and Amyclae, and to have given to those divinities the names of Cleta and Phaenna. A shrine was erected to him in the neighborhood of Therapne.

Tyrtaeus, an archaic era Spartan writer, is the earliest source to connect the origin myth of the Spartans to the lineage of the hero Heracles; later authors, such as Diodorus Siculus, Herodotus, and Apollodorus, also made mention of Spartans understanding themselves to be descendants of Heracles.

Archaeology of the classical period

The theater of ancient Sparta with Mt. Taygetus in the background.

Thucydides wrote:

Suppose the city of Sparta to be deserted, and nothing left but the temples and the ground-plan, distant ages would be very unwilling to believe that the power of the Lacedaemonians was at all equal to their fame. Their city is not built continuously, and has no splendid temples or other edifices; it rather resembles a group of villages, like the ancient towns of Hellas, and would therefore make a poor show.

Until the early 20th century, the chief ancient buildings at Sparta were the theatre, of which, however, little showed above ground except portions of the retaining walls; the so-called Tomb of Leonidas, a quadrangular building, perhaps a temple, constructed of immense blocks of stone and containing two chambers; the foundation of an ancient bridge over the Eurotas; the ruins of a circular structure; some remains of late Roman fortifications; several brick buildings and mosaic pavements.

The remaining archaeological wealth consisted of inscriptions, sculptures, and other objects collected in the local museum, founded by Stamatakis in 1872 and enlarged in 1907. Partial excavation of the round building was undertaken in 1892 and 1893 by the American School at Athens. The structure has been since found to be a semicircular retaining wall of Hellenic origin that was partly restored during the Roman period.

Ruins of the Temple of Artemis Orthia

In 1904, the British School at Athens began a thorough exploration of Laconia, and in the following year excavations were made at Thalamae, Geronthrae, and Angelona near Monemvasia. In 1906, excavations began in Sparta itself.

A "small circus" (as described by Leake) proved to be a theatre-like building constructed soon after 200 AD around the altar and in front of the Temple of Artemis Orthia. It is believed that musical and gymnastic contests took place here, as well as the famous flogging ordeal administered to Spartan boys (diamastigosis). The temple, which can be dated to the 2nd century BC, rests on the foundation of an older temple of the 6th century, and close beside it were found the remains of a yet earlier temple, dating from the 9th or even the 10th century. The votive offerings in clay, amber, bronze, ivory and lead dating from the 9th to the 4th centuries BC, which were found in great profusion within the precinct range, supply invaluable information about early Spartan art.

Remaining section of wall that surrounded ancient Sparta

In 1907, the location of the sanctuary of Athena "of the Brazen House" (Χαλκίοικος, Chalkioikos) was determined to be on the acropolis immediately above the theatre. Though the actual temple is almost completely destroyed, the site has produced the longest extant archaic inscription in Laconia, numerous bronze nails and plates, and a considerable number of votive offerings. The city-wall, built in successive stages from the 4th to the 2nd century, was traced for a great part of its circuit, which measured 48 stades or nearly 10 km (6 miles) (Polyb. 1X. 21). The late Roman wall enclosing the acropolis, part of which probably dates from the years following the Gothic raid of 262 AD, was also investigated. Besides the actual buildings discovered, a number of points were situated and mapped in a general study of Spartan topography, based upon the description of Pausanias.

In terms of domestic archaeology, little is known about Spartan houses and villages before the Archaic period, but the best evidence comes from excavations at Nichoria in Messenia where postholes have been found. These villages were open and consisted of small and simple houses built with stone foundations and clay walls.

Menelaion

Main article: Menelaion
The Menelaion

The Menelaion is a shrine associated with Menelaus, located east of Sparta, by the river Eurotas, on the hill Profitis Ilias (Coordinates: 37°03′57″N 22°27′13″E / 37.0659°N 22.4536°E / 37.0659; 22.4536). Built around the early 8th century BC, the Spartans believed it had been the former residence of Menelaus. In 1970, the British School in Athens started excavations around the Menelaion in an attempt to locate Mycenaean remains in the area. Among other findings, they uncovered the remains of two Mycenaean mansions and found the first offerings dedicated to Helen and Menelaus. These mansions were destroyed by earthquake and fire, and archaeologists consider them the possible palace of Menelaus himself.

Excavations made from the early 1990s to the present suggest that the area around the Menelaion in the southern part of the Eurotas valley seems to have been the center of Mycenaean Laconia. The Mycenaean settlement was roughly triangular in shape, with its apex pointed towards the north. Its area was approximately equal to that of the "newer" Sparta, but denudation has wreaked havoc with its buildings and nothing is left of its original structures save for ruined foundations and broken potsherds.

History

Main article: History of Sparta

Prehistory, "dark age" and archaic period

The prehistory of Sparta is difficult to reconstruct because the literary evidence was written far later than the events it describes and is distorted by oral tradition. The earliest certain evidence of human settlement in the region of Sparta consists of pottery dating from the Middle Neolithic period, found in the vicinity of Kouphovouno some two kilometres (1.2 miles) south-southwest of Sparta.

This civilization seems to have fallen into decline by the late Bronze Age, when, according to Herodotus, Macedonian tribes from the north (called Dorians by those they conquered) marched into the Peloponnese and, subjugating the local tribes, settled there. The Dorians seem to have set about expanding the frontiers of Spartan territory almost before they had established their own state. They fought against the Argive Dorians to the east and southeast, and also the Arcadian Achaeans to the northwest. The evidence suggests that Sparta, relatively inaccessible because of the topography of the Taygetan plain, was secure from early on: it was never fortified.

Lycurgus

Nothing distinctive in the archaeology of the Eurotas River Valley identifies the Dorians or the Dorian Spartan state. The prehistory of the Neolithic, the Bronze Age and the Dark Age (the Early Iron Age) at this moment must be treated apart from the stream of Dorian Spartan history.

The legendary period of Spartan history is believed to fall into the Dark Age. It treats the mythic heroes such as the Heraclids and the Perseids, offering a view of the occupation of the Peloponnesus that contains both fantastic and possibly historical elements. The subsequent proto-historic period, combining both legend and historical fragments, offers the first credible history.

Between the 8th and 7th centuries BC the Spartans experienced a period of lawlessness and civil strife, later attested by both Herodotus and Thucydides. As a result, they carried out a series of political and social reforms of their own society which they later attributed to a semi-mythical lawgiver, Lycurgus. Several writers throughout antiquity, including Herodotus, Xenophon, and Plutarch have attempted to explain Spartan exceptionalism as a result of the so-called Lycurgan Reforms.Xenophon, Constitution of the Lacedaimonians, chapter 1

Classical Sparta

In the Second Messenian War, Sparta established itself as a local power in the Peloponnesus and the rest of Greece. During the following centuries, Sparta's reputation as a land-fighting force was unequalled. At its peak around 500 BC, Sparta had some 20,000–35,000 citizens, plus numerous helots and perioikoi. The likely total of 40,000–50,000 made Sparta one of the larger Greek city-states; however, according to Thucydides, the population of Athens in 431 BC was 360,000–610,000, making it much larger.

In 480 BC, a small force led by King Leonidas (about 300 full Spartiates, 700 Thespians, and 400 Thebans, although these numbers were lessened by earlier casualties) made a legendary last stand at the Battle of Thermopylae against the massive Persian army, led by Xerxes. The Spartans received advance warning of the Persian invasion from their deposed king Demaratus, which prompted them to consult the Delphic oracle. According to Herodotus, the Pythia proclaimed that either one of the kings of Sparta had to die or Sparta would be destroyed. This prophecy was fulfilled after king Leonidas died in the battle. The superior weaponry, strategy, and bronze armour of the Greek hoplites and their phalanx fighting formation again proved their worth one year later when Sparta assembled its full strength and led a Greek alliance against the Persians at the Battle of Plataea in 479 BC.

Ancient Sparta.

The decisive Greek victory at Plataea put an end to the Greco-Persian War along with Persian ambitions to expand into Europe. Even though this war was won by a pan-Greek army, credit was given to Sparta, who besides providing the leading forces at Thermopylae and Plataea, had been the de facto leader of the entire Greek expedition.

In 464 BC, a violent earthquake occurred along the Sparta faultline destroying much of what was Sparta and many other city-states in ancient Greece. This earthquake is marked by scholars as one of the key events that led to the First Peloponnesian War.

In later Classical times, Sparta along with Athens, Thebes, and Persia were the main powers fighting for supremacy in the northeastern Mediterranean. In the course of the Peloponnesian War, Sparta, a traditional land power, acquired a navy which managed to overpower the previously dominant flotilla of Athens, ending the Athenian Empire. At the peak of its power in the early 4th century BC, Sparta had subdued many of the main Greek states and even invaded the Persian provinces in Anatolia (modern day Turkey), a period known as the Spartan hegemony.

During the Corinthian War, Sparta faced a coalition of the leading Greek states: Thebes, Athens, Corinth, and Argos. The alliance was initially backed by Persia, which feared further Spartan expansion into Asia. Sparta achieved a series of land victories, but many of her ships were destroyed at the Battle of Cnidus by a Greek-Phoenician mercenary fleet that Persia had provided to Athens. The event severely damaged Sparta's naval power but did not end its aspirations of invading further into Persia, until Conon the Athenian ravaged the Spartan coastline and provoked the old Spartan fear of a helot revolt.

After a few more years of fighting, in 387 BC the Peace of Antalcidas was established, according to which all Greek cities of Ionia would return to Persian control, and Persia's Asian border would be free of the Spartan threat. The effects of the war were to reaffirm Persia's ability to interfere successfully in Greek politics and to affirm Sparta's weakened hegemonic position in the Greek political system. Sparta entered its long-term decline after a severe military defeat to Epaminondas of Thebes at the Battle of Leuctra. This was the first time that a full strength Spartan army lost a land battle.

As Spartan citizenship was inherited by blood, Sparta increasingly faced a helot population that vastly outnumbered its citizens. The alarming decline of Spartan citizens was commented on by Aristotle.

Hellenistic and Roman Sparta

Medieval depiction of Sparta from the Nuremberg Chronicle (1493)

Sparta never fully recovered from its losses at Leuctra in 371 BC and the subsequent helot revolts. In 338, Philip II invaded and devastated much of Laconia, turning the Spartans out, though he did not seize Sparta itself. Even during its decline, Sparta never forgot its claim to be the "defender of Hellenism" and its Laconic wit. An anecdote has it that when Philip II sent a message to Sparta saying "If I invade Laconia, I shall turn you out.", the Spartans responded with the single, terse reply: αἴκα, "if". When Philip created the League of Corinth on the pretext of unifying Greece against Persia, the Spartans chose not to join, since they had no interest in joining a pan-Greek expedition unless it were under Spartan leadership. Thus, upon defeating the Persians at the Battle of the Granicus, Alexander the Great sent to Athens 300 suits of Persian armour with the following inscription: "Alexander, son of Philip, and all the Greeks except the Spartans, give these offerings taken from the foreigners who live in Asia".

Sparta continued to be one of the Peloponesian powers until its eventual loss of independence in 192 BC. During Alexander's campaigns in the east, the Spartan king Agis III sent a force to Crete in 333 BC to secure the island for the Persian interest. Agis next took command of allied Greek forces against Macedon, gaining early successes, before laying siege to Megalopolis in 331 BC. A large Macedonian army under general Antipater marched to its relief and defeated the Spartan-led force in a pitched battle. More than 5,300 of the Spartans and their allies were killed in battle, and 3,500 of Antipater's troops. Agis, now wounded and unable to stand, ordered his men to leave him behind to face the advancing Macedonian army so that he could buy them time to retreat. On his knees, the Spartan king slew several enemy soldiers before being finally killed by a javelin. Alexander was merciful, and he only forced the Spartans to join the League of Corinth, which they had previously refused.

During the Punic Wars, Sparta was an ally of the Roman Republic. Spartan political independence was put to an end when it was eventually forced into the Achaean League after its defeat in the decisive Laconian War by a coalition of other Greek city-states and Rome, and the resultant overthrow of its final king Nabis, in 192 BC. Sparta played no active part in the Achaean War in 146 BC when the Achaean League was defeated by the Roman general Lucius Mummius. Subsequently, Sparta became a free city under Roman rule, some of the institutions of Lycurgus were restored, and the city became a tourist attraction for the Roman elite who came to observe exotic Spartan customs.

In 214 AD, Roman emperor Caracalla, in his preparation for his campaign against Parthia, recruited a 500-man Spartan cohort (lokhos). Herodian described this unit as a phalanx, implying it fought like the old Spartans as hoplites, or even as a Macedonian phalanx. Despite this, a gravestone of a fallen legionary named Marcus Aurelius Alexys shows him lightly armed, with a pilos-like cap and a wooden club. The unit was presumably discharged in 217 after Caracalla was assassinated.

An exchange of letters in the deutero-canonical First Book of Maccabees expresses a Jewish claim to kinship with the Spartans:

Areus king of the Lacedemonians to Onias the high priest, greeting: It is found in writing, that the Lacedemonians and Jews are brethren, and that they are of the stock of Abraham: Now therefore, since this is come to our knowledge, ye shall do well to write unto us of your prosperity. We do write back again to you, that your cattle and goods are ours, and ours are yours.

— Authorized King James Version 1 Maccabees 12.20

The letters are reproduced in a variant form by Josephus. Jewish historian Uriel Rappaport notes that the relationship between the Jews and the Spartans expressed in this correspondence has "intrigued many scholars, and various explanations have been suggested for the problems raised ... including the historicity of the Jewish leader and high priest Jonathan's letter to the Spartans, the authenticity of the letter of Arius to Onias, cited in Jonathan's letter, and the supposed 'brotherhood' of the Jews and the Spartans." Rappaport is clear that "the authenticity of letter of Arius is based on even less firm foundations than the letter of Jonathan".

Spartans long spurned the idea of building a defensive wall around their city, believing they made the city's men soft in terms of their warrior abilities. A wall was finally erected after 184 BCE, after the peak of the city-state's power had come and gone.

Postclassical and modern Sparta

In 396 AD, Sparta was sacked by Visigoths under Alaric I. According to Byzantine sources, some parts of the Laconian region remained pagan until well into the 10th century. The Tsakonian language still spoken in Tsakonia is the only surviving descendant of the ancient Doric language. In the Middle Ages, the political and cultural center of Laconia shifted to the nearby settlement of Mystras, and Sparta fell further in even local importance. Modern Sparta was re-founded in 1834, by a decree of King Otto of Greece.

Structure of Classical Spartan society

Constitution

Main article: Spartan Constitution
Structure of the Spartan Constitution

Sparta was an oligarchy. The state was ruled by two hereditary kings of the Agiad and Eurypontid families, both supposedly descendants of Heracles and equal in authority, so that one could not act against the power and political enactments of his colleague.

The duties of the kings were primarily religious, judicial, and military. As chief priests of the state, they maintained communication with the Delphian sanctuary, whose pronouncements exercised great authority in Spartan politics. In the time of Herodotus c. 450 BC, their judicial functions had been restricted to cases dealing with heiresses (epikleroi), adoptions and the public roads (the meaning of the last term is unclear in Herodotus' text and has been interpreted in a number of ways). Aristotle describes the kingship at Sparta as "a kind of unlimited and perpetual generalship" (Pol. iii. 1285a), while Isocrates refers to the Spartans as "subject to an oligarchy at home, to a kingship on campaign" (iii. 24).

Civil and criminal cases were decided by a group of officials known as the ephors, as well as a council of elders known as the Gerousia. The Gerousia consisted of 28 elders over the age of 60, elected for life and usually part of the royal households, and the two kings. High state decisions were discussed by this council, who could then propose policies to the damos, the collective body of Spartan citizenry, who would select one of the alternatives by vote.

Royal prerogatives were curtailed over time. From the period of the Persian wars, the king lost the right to declare war and was accompanied in the field by two ephors. He was supplanted by the ephors also in the control of foreign policy. Over time, the kings became mere figureheads except in their capacity as generals. Political power was transferred to the ephors and Gerousia.

An assembly of citizens called the Ekklesia was responsible for electing men to the Gerousia for life.

Citizenship

Main article: Spartiate

The Spartan education process known as the agoge was essential for full citizenship. However, usually the only boys eligible for the agoge were Spartiates, those who could trace their ancestry to the original inhabitants of the city.

There were two exceptions. Trophimoi or "foster sons" were foreign students invited to study. The Athenian general Xenophon, for example, sent his two sons to Sparta as trophimoi. Also, the son of a helot could be enrolled as a syntrophos if a Spartiate formally adopted him and paid his way; if he did exceptionally well in training, he might be sponsored to become a Spartiate. Spartans who could not afford to pay the expenses of the agoge could lose their citizenship.

These laws meant that Sparta could not readily replace citizens lost in battle or otherwise, which eventually proved near fatal as citizens became greatly outnumbered by non-citizens, and even more dangerously by helots.

Non citizens

The other classes were the perioikoi, free inhabitants who were non-citizens, and the helots, state-owned serfs. Descendants of non-Spartan citizens were forbidden the agoge.

Helots

Main article: Helots

The Spartans were a minority of the Lakonian population. The largest class of inhabitants were the helots (in Classical Greek Εἵλωτες / Heílôtes).

The helots were originally free Greeks from the areas of Messenia and Lakonia whom the Spartans had defeated in battle and subsequently enslaved. In contrast to populations conquered by other Greek cities (e.g. the Athenian treatment of Melos), the male population was not exterminated and the women and children turned into chattel slaves. Instead, the helots were given a subordinate position in society more comparable to serfs in medieval Europe than chattel slaves in the rest of Greece. The Spartan helots were not only agricultural workers, but were also household servants, both male and female would be assigned domestic duties, such as wool-working. However, the helots were not the private property of individual Spartan citizens, regardless of their household duties, and were instead owned by the state through the kleros system.

Helots did not have voting or political rights. The Spartan poet Tyrtaios refers to Helots being allowed to marry and retaining 50% of the fruits of their labor. They also seem to have been allowed to practice religious rites and, according to Thucydides, own a limited amount of personal property. Initially, helots couldn't be freed but during the middle Hellenistic period, some 6,000 helots accumulated enough wealth to buy their freedom, for example, in 227 BC.

In other Greek city-states, free citizens were part-time soldiers who, when not at war, carried on other trades. Since Spartan men were full-time soldiers, they were not available to carry out manual labour. The helots were used as unskilled serfs, tilling Spartan land. Helot women were often used as wet nurses. Helots also travelled with the Spartan army as non-combatant serfs. At the last stand of the Battle of Thermopylae, the Greek dead included not just the legendary three hundred Spartan soldiers but also several hundred Thespian and Theban troops and a number of helots.

There was at least one helot revolt (c. 465–460 BC) that led to prolonged conflict. By the tenth year of this war the Spartans and Messenians had reached an agreement in which Messenian rebels were allowed to leave the Peloponnese. They were given safe passage under the terms that they would be re-enslaved if they tried to return. This agreement ended the most serious incursion into Spartan territory since their expansion in the seventh and eighth centuries BC. Thucydides remarked that "Spartan policy is always mainly governed by the necessity of taking precautions against the helots." On the other hand, the Spartans trusted their helots enough in 479 BC to take a force of 35,000 with them to Plataea, something they could not have risked if they feared the helots would attack them or run away. Slave revolts occurred elsewhere in the Greek world, and in 413 BC 20,000 Athenian slaves ran away to join the Spartan forces occupying Attica. What made Sparta's relations with her slave population unique was that the helots, precisely because they enjoyed privileges such as family and property, retained their identity as a conquered people (the Messenians) and also had effective kinship groups that could be used to organize rebellion.

As the Spartiate population declined and the helot population continued to grow, the imbalance of power caused increasing tension. According to Myron of Priene of the middle 3rd century BC:

They assign to the Helots every shameful task leading to disgrace. For they ordained that each one of them must wear a dogskin cap (κυνῆ / kunễ) and wrap himself in skins (διφθέρα / diphthéra) and receive a stipulated number of beatings every year regardless of any wrongdoing, so that they would never forget they were slaves. Moreover, if any exceeded the vigour proper to a slave's condition, they made death the penalty; and they allotted a punishment to those controlling them if they failed to rebuke those who were growing fat.

Plutarch also states that Spartans treated the helots "harshly and cruelly": they compelled them to drink pure wine (which was considered dangerous – wine usually being cut with water) "...and to lead them in that condition into their public halls, that the children might see what a sight a drunken man is; they made them to dance low dances, and sing ridiculous songs..." during syssitia (obligatory banquets).

Each year when the Ephors took office, they ritually declared war on the helots, allowing Spartans to kill them without risk of ritual pollution. This fight seems to have been carried out by kryptai (sing. κρύπτης kryptēs), graduates of the agoge who took part in the mysterious institution known as the Krypteia. Thucydides states:

The helots were invited by a proclamation to pick out those of their number who claimed to have most distinguished themselves against the enemy, in order that they might receive their freedom; the object being to test them, as it was thought that the first to claim their freedom would be the most high spirited and the most apt to rebel. As many as two thousand were selected accordingly, who crowned themselves and went round the temples, rejoicing in their new freedom. The Spartans, however, soon afterwards did away with them, and no one ever knew how each of them perished.

Perioikoi

Main article: Perioeci

The Perioikoi came from similar origins as the helots but occupied a significantly different position in Spartan society. Although they did not enjoy full citizen-rights, they were free and not subjected to the same restrictions as the helots. The exact nature of their subjection to the Spartans is not clear, but they seem to have served partly as a kind of military reserve, partly as skilled craftsmen and partly as agents of foreign trade. Perioikoic hoplites served increasingly with the Spartan army, explicitly at the Battle of Plataea, and although they may also have fulfilled functions such as the manufacture and repair of armour and weapons, they were increasingly integrated into the combat units of the Spartan army as the Spartiate population declined.

Economy

Name vase of the Spartan artist known as the Rider Painter (Laconian black-figured kylix, c. 550–530 BC)

Full citizen Spartiates were barred by law from trade or manufacture, which consequently rested in the hands of the Perioikoi. This lucrative monopoly, in a fertile territory with a good harbors, ensured the loyalty of the perioikoi. Despite the prohibition on menial labor or trade, there is evidence of Spartan sculptors, and Spartans were certainly poets, magistrates, ambassadors, and governors as well as soldiers.

Allegedly, Spartans were prohibited from possessing gold and silver coins, and according to legend Spartan currency consisted of iron bars to discourage hoarding. It was not until the 260s or 250s BC that Sparta began to mint its own coins. Though the conspicuous display of wealth appears to have been discouraged, this did not preclude the production of very fine decorated bronze, ivory and wooden works of art as well as exquisite jewellery, attested in archaeology.

Allegedly as part of the Lycurgan Reforms in the mid-8th century BC, a massive land reform had divided property into 9,000 equal portions. Each citizen received one estate, a kleros, which was expected to provide his living. The land was worked by helots who retained half the yield. From the other half, the Spartiate was expected to pay his mess (syssitia) fees, and the agoge fees for his children. However, nothing is known of matters of wealth such as how land was bought, sold, and inherited, or whether daughters received dowries. However, from early on there were marked differences of wealth within the state, and these became more serious after the law of Epitadeus some time after the Peloponnesian War, which removed the legal prohibition on the gift or bequest of land. By the mid-5th century, land had become concentrated in the hands of a tiny elite, and the notion that all Spartan citizens were equals had become an empty pretence. By Aristotle's day (384–322 BC) citizenship had been reduced from 9,000 to less than 1,000, then further decreased to 700 at the accession of Agis IV in 244 BC. Attempts were made to remedy this by imposing legal penalties upon bachelors, but this could not reverse the trend.

Life in Classical Sparta

Jean-Pierre Saint-Ours, The Selection of Children in Sparta, 1785. A Neoclassical imaging of what Plutarch describes.

Birth and death

Sparta was above all a militarist state, and emphasis on military fitness began virtually at birth. According to Plutarch after birth, a mother would bathe her child in wine to see whether the child was strong. If the child survived it was brought before the Gerousia by the child's father. The Gerousia then decided whether it was to be reared or not. It is commonly stated that if they considered it "puny and deformed", the baby was thrown into a chasm on Mount Taygetos known euphemistically as the Apothetae (Gr., ἀποθέται, "Deposits"). This was, in effect, a primitive form of eugenics. Plutarch is the sole historical source for the Spartan practice of systemic infanticide motivated by eugenics. Sparta is often viewed as being unique in this regard, however, anthropologist Laila Williamson notes: "Infanticide has been practiced on every continent and by people on every level of cultural complexity, from hunter gatherers to high civilizations. Rather than being an exception, then, it has been the rule." There is controversy about the matter in Sparta, since excavations in the chasm only uncovered adult remains, likely belonging to criminals and Greek sources contemporary to Sparta does not mention systemic infanticide motivated solely by eugenics.

Spartan burial customs changed over time. The Archaic Spartan poet Tyrtaeus spoke of the Spartan war-dead as follows:

Never do his name and good fame perish,
But even though he is beneath the earth he is immortal,
Young and old alike mourn him,
All the city is distressed by the painful loss,
and his tomb and children are pointed out among the people,
and his children's children and his line after them.

When Spartans died, marked headstones would only be granted to soldiers who died in combat during a victorious campaign or women who died either in service of a divine office or in childbirth. These headstones likely acted as memorials, rather than as grave markers. Evidence of Spartan burials is provided by the Tomb of the Lacedaimonians in Athens. Excavations at the cemetery of classical Sparta, uncovered ritually pierced kantharoid-like ceramic vessels, the ritual slaughter of horses, and specific burial enclosures alongside individual 'plots'. Some of the graves were reused over time.

In the Hellenistic Period, grander, two-storey monumental tombs are found at Sparta. Ten of these have been found for this period.

Education

Main article: Agoge
Bronze appliqué of Spartan manufacture, possibly depicting Orestes, 550–525 BC (Getty Villa)

When male Spartans began military training at age seven, they would enter the agoge system. The agoge was designed to encourage discipline and physical toughness and to emphasize the importance of the Spartan state. Boys lived in communal messes and, according to Xenophon, whose sons attended the agoge, the boys were fed "just the right amount for them never to become sluggish through being too full, while also giving them a taste of what it is not to have enough." In addition, they were trained to survive in times of privation, even if it meant stealing. Besides physical and weapons training, boys studied reading, writing, music and dancing. Special punishments were imposed if boys failed to answer questions sufficiently "laconically" (i.e. briefly and wittily).

Spartan boys were expected to take an older male mentor, usually an unmarried young man. According to some sources, the older man was expected to function as a kind of substitute father and role model to his junior partner; however, others believe it was reasonably certain that they had sexual relations (the exact nature of Spartan pederasty is not entirely clear). Xenophon, an admirer of the Spartan educational system whose sons attended the agoge, explicitly denies the sexual nature of the relationship.

Some Spartan youth apparently became members of an irregular unit known as the Krypteia. The immediate objective of this unit was to seek out and kill vulnerable helot Laconians as part of the larger program of terrorising and intimidating the helot population.

Less information is available about the education of Spartan girls, but they seem to have gone through a fairly extensive formal educational cycle, broadly similar to that of the boys but with less emphasis on military training. Spartan girls received an education known as mousikē. This included music, dancing, singing and poetry. Choral dancing was taught so Spartan girls could participate in ritual activities, including the cults of Helen and Artemis. In this respect, classical Sparta was unique in ancient Greece. In no other city-state did women receive any kind of formal education.

Military life

Main articles: Spartan army and Spartiate
The so-called Leonidas sculpture (5th century BC), Archaeological Museum of Sparta, Greece

At age 20, the Spartan citizen began his membership in one of the syssitia (dining messes or clubs), composed of about fifteen members each, of which every citizen was required to be a member. Here each group learned how to bond and rely on one another. The Spartans were not eligible for election for public office until the age of 30. Only native Spartans were considered full citizens and were obliged to undergo the training as prescribed by law, as well as participate in and contribute financially to one of the syssitia.

Sparta is thought to be the first city to practice athletic nudity, and some scholars claim that it was also the first to formalize pederasty. According to these sources, the Spartans believed that the love of an older, accomplished aristocrat for an adolescent was essential to his formation as a free citizen. The agoge, the education of the ruling class, was, they claim, founded on pederastic relationships required of each citizen, with the lover responsible for the boy's training.

However, other scholars question this interpretation. Xenophon explicitly denies it, but not Plutarch.

Spartan men remained in the active reserve until age 60. Men were encouraged to marry at age 20 but could not live with their families until they left their active military service at age 30. They called themselves "homoioi" (equals), pointing to their common lifestyle and the discipline of the phalanx, which demanded that no soldier be superior to his comrades. Insofar as hoplite warfare could be perfected, the Spartans did so.

Thucydides reports that when a Spartan man went to war, his wife (or another woman of some significance) would customarily present him with his aspis (shield) and say: "With this, or upon this" (Ἢ τὰν ἢ ἐπὶ τᾶς, Èi tàn èi èpì tàs), meaning that true Spartans could only return to Sparta either victorious (with their shield in hand) or dead (carried upon it). This is almost certainly propaganda. Spartans buried their battle dead on or near the battle field; corpses were not brought back on their shield. Nevertheless, it is fair to say that it was less of a disgrace for a soldier to lose his helmet, breastplate or greaves than his shield, since the former were designed to protect one man, whereas the shield also protected the man on his left. Thus, the shield was symbolic of the individual soldier's subordination to his unit, his integral part in its success, and his solemn responsibility to his comrades in arms – messmates and friends, often close blood relations.

According to Aristotle, the Spartan military culture was actually short-sighted and ineffective. He observed:

It is the standards of civilized men not of beasts that must be kept in mind, for it is good men not beasts who are capable of real courage. Those like the Spartans who concentrate on the one and ignore the other in their education turn men into machines and in devoting themselves to one single aspect of city's life, end up making them inferior even in that.

One of the most persistent myths about Sparta that has no basis in fact is the notion that Spartan mothers were without feelings toward their off-spring and helped enforce a militaristic lifestyle on their sons and husbands. The myth can be traced back to Plutarch, who includes no less than 17 "sayings" of "Spartan women", all of which paraphrase or elaborate on the theme that Spartan mothers rejected their own offspring if they showed any kind of cowardice. In some of these sayings, mothers revile their sons in insulting language merely for surviving a battle. These sayings purporting to be from Spartan women were far more likely to be of Athenian origin and designed to portray Spartan women as unnatural and so undeserving of pity.

Agriculture, food, and diet

Sparta's agriculture consisted mainly of barley, wine, cheese, grain, and figs. These items were grown locally on each Spartan citizen's kleros and were tended to by helots. Spartan citizens were required to donate a certain amount of what they yielded from their kleros to their syssitia, or mess. These donations to the syssitia were a requirement for every Spartan citizen. All the donated food was then redistributed to feed the Spartan population of that syssitia. The helots who tended to the lands were fed using a portion of what they harvested.

Marriage

Plutarch reports the peculiar customs associated with the Spartan wedding night:

The custom was to capture women for marriage... The so-called 'bridesmaid' took charge of the captured girl. She first shaved her head to the scalp, then dressed her in a man's cloak and sandals, and laid her down alone on a mattress in the dark. The bridegroom – who was not drunk and thus not impotent, but was sober as always – first had dinner in the messes, then would slip in, undo her belt, lift her and carry her to the bed.

The husband continued to visit his wife in secret for some time after the marriage. These customs, unique to the Spartans, have been interpreted in various ways. One of them decidedly supports the need to disguise the bride as a man in order to help the bridegroom consummate the marriage, so unaccustomed were men to women's looks at the time of their first intercourse. The "abduction" may have served to ward off the evil eye, and the cutting of the wife's hair was perhaps part of a rite of passage that signaled her entrance into a new life.

Role of women

Main article: Women in ancient Sparta

Political, social, and economic equality

Spartan women, of the citizenry class, enjoyed a status, power, and respect that was unknown in the rest of the classical world. The higher status of females in Spartan society started at birth; unlike Athens, Spartan girls were fed the same food as their brothers. Nor were they confined to their father's house and prevented from exercising or getting fresh air as in Athens, but exercised and even competed in sports. Most important, rather than being married off at the age of 12 or 13, Spartan law forbade the marriage of a girl until she was in her late teens or early 20s. The reasons for delaying marriage were to ensure the birth of healthy children, but the effect was to spare Spartan women the hazards and lasting health damage associated with pregnancy among adolescents. Spartan women, better fed from childhood and fit from exercise, stood a far better chance of reaching old age than their sisters in other Greek cities, where the median age for death was 34.6 years or roughly 10 years below that of men.

Unlike Athenian women who wore heavy, concealing clothes and were rarely seen outside the house, Spartan women wore dresses (peplos) slit up the side to allow freer movement and moved freely about the city, either walking or driving chariots. Girls as well as boys exercised, possibly in the nude, and young women as well as young men may have participated in the Gymnopaedia ("Festival of Nude Youths").

Another practice that was mentioned by many visitors to Sparta was the practice of "wife-sharing". In accordance with the Spartan belief that breeding should be between the most physically fit parents, many older men allowed younger, more fit men, to impregnate their wives. Other unmarried or childless men might even request another man's wife to bear his children if she had previously been a strong child bearer. For this reason many considered Spartan women polygamous or polyandrous. This practice was encouraged in order that women bear as many strong-bodied children as they could. The Spartan population was hard to maintain due to the constant absence and loss of the men in battle and the intense physical inspection of newborns.

Spartan women were also literate and numerate, a rarity in the ancient world. Furthermore, as a result of their education and the fact that they moved freely in society engaging with their fellow (male) citizens, they were notorious for speaking their minds even in public. Plato, in the middle of the fourth century, described women's curriculum in Sparta as consisting of gymnastics and mousike (music and arts). Plato praised Spartan women's ability when it came to philosophical discussion.

Most importantly, Spartan women had economic power because they controlled their own properties, and those of their husbands. It is estimated that in later Classical Sparta, when the male population was in serious decline, women were the sole owners of at least 35% of all land and property in Sparta. The laws regarding a divorce were the same for both men and women. Unlike women in Athens, if a Spartan woman became the heiress of her father because she had no living brothers to inherit (an epikleros), the woman was not required to divorce her current spouse in order to marry her nearest paternal relative.

Historic women

Many women played a significant role in the history of Sparta. Queen Gorgo, heiress to the throne and the wife of Leonidas I, was an influential and well-documented figure. Herodotus records that as a small girl she advised her father Cleomenes to resist a bribe. She was later said to be responsible for decoding a warning that the Persian forces were about to invade Greece; after Spartan generals could not decode a wooden tablet covered in wax, she ordered them to clear the wax, revealing the warning. Plutarch's Moralia contains a collection of "Sayings of Spartan Women", including a laconic quip attributed to Gorgo: when asked by a woman from Attica why Spartan women were the only women in the world who could rule men, she replied "Because we are the only women who are mothers of men". In 396, Cynisca, sister of the Eurypontid king Agesilaos II, became the first woman in Greece to win an Olympic chariot race. She won again in 392, and dedicated two monuments to commemorate her victory, these being an inscription in Sparta and a set of bronze equestrian statues at the Olympic temple of Zeus.

Laconophilia

See caption
Leonidas at Thermopylae, 1814 painting by Jacques-Louis David
Main article: Laconophilia

Laconophilia is love or admiration of Sparta and its culture or constitution. Sparta was subject of considerable admiration in its day, even in rival Athens. In ancient times "Many of the noblest and best of the Athenians always considered the Spartan state nearly as an ideal theory realised in practice." Many Greek philosophers, especially Platonists, would often describe Sparta as an ideal state, strong, brave, and free from the corruptions of commerce and money. The French classicist François Ollier in his 1933 book Le mirage spartiate (The Spartan Mirage) warned that a major scholarly problem is that all surviving accounts of Sparta were by non-Spartans who often excessively idealized their subject. The term "Spartan Mirage" has come to refer to "idealized distortions and inventions regarding the character of Spartan society in the works of non-Spartan writers," beginning in Greek and Roman antiquity and continuing through the medieval and modern eras. These accounts of Sparta are typically associated with the social or political concerns of the writer. No accounts survive by the Spartans themselves, if such were ever written.

Young Spartans Exercising by Edgar Degas (1834–1917)

With the revival of classical learning in Renaissance Europe, Laconophilia re-appeared, for example in the writings of Machiavelli. The Elizabethan English constitutionalist John Aylmer compared the mixed government of Tudor England to the Spartan republic, stating that "Lacedemonia the noblest and best city governed that ever was". He commended it as a model for England. The philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau contrasted Sparta favourably with Athens in his Discourse on the Arts and Sciences, arguing that its austere constitution was preferable to the more sophisticated Athenian life. Sparta was also used as a model of austere purity by Revolutionary and Napoleonic France.

A German racist strain of Laconophilia was initiated by Karl Otfried Müller, who linked Spartan ideals to the supposed racial superiority of the Dorians, the ethnic sub-group of the Greeks to which the Spartans belonged. In the 20th century, this developed into Fascist admiration of Spartan ideals. Adolf Hitler praised the Spartans, recommending in 1928 that Germany should imitate them by limiting "the number allowed to live". He added that "The Spartans were once capable of such a wise measure... The subjugation of 350,000 Helots by 6,000 Spartans was only possible because of the racial superiority of the Spartans." The Spartans had created "the first racialist state". Following the invasion of the USSR, Hitler viewed citizens of the USSR as like the helots under the Spartans: "They came as conquerors, and they took everything", and so should the Germans. A Nazi officer specified that "the Germans would have to assume the position of the Spartiates, while... the Russians were the Helots."

Certain early Zionists, and particularly the founders of Kibbutz movement in Israel, were influenced by Spartan ideals, particularly in education. Tabenkin, a founding father of the Kibbutz movement and the Palmach strikeforce, prescribed that education for warfare "should begin from the nursery", that children should from kindergarten be taken to "spend nights in the mountains and valleys".

In modern times, the adjective "Spartan" means simple, frugal, avoiding luxury and comfort. The term "laconic phrase" describes the very terse and direct speech characteristic of the Spartans.

Sparta also features prominently in modern popular culture, most famously the Battle of Thermopylae (see Battle of Thermopylae in popular culture).

Notable ancient Spartans

Main page: Category:Ancient Spartans

See also

Notes

  1. Found on the following tablets: TH Fq 229, TH Fq 258, TH Fq 275, TH Fq 253, TH Fq 284, TH Fq 325, TH Fq 339, TH Fq 382. There are also words like 𐀨𐀐𐀅𐀖𐀛𐀍𐀄𐀍, ra-ke-da-mo-ni-jo-u-jo – found on the TH Gp 227 tablet – that could perhaps mean "son of the Spartan". Moreover, the attested words 𐀨𐀐𐀅𐀜 , ra-ke-da-no and 𐀐𐀅𐀜𐀩, ra-ke-da-no-re could possibly be Linear B forms of Lacedaemon itself; the latter, found on the MY Ge 604 tablet, is considered to be the dative case form of the former which is found on the MY Ge 603 tablet. It is considered much more probable though that ra-ke-da-no and ra-ke-da-no-re correspond to the anthroponym Λακεδάνωρ, Lakedanor, though the latter is thought to be related etymologically to Lacedaemon.
  2. According to Thucydides, the Athenian citizens at the beginning of the Peloponnesian War (5th century BC) numbered 40,000, making a total of 140,000 people when including their families. The metics, i.e. those who did not have citizen rights and paid for the right to reside in Athens, numbered a further 70,000, whilst slaves were estimated at between 150,000 to 400,000.
  3. Especially the Diamastigosis at the Sanctuary of Artemis Orthia, Limnai outside Sparta. There an amphitheatre was built in the 3rd century AD to observe the ritual whipping of Spartan youths. Visiting Romans came to see Sparta as having degraded to a disgusting cult of fetish brutality.

References

  1. (Doric Greek: Σπάρτα, romanized: Spártā; Attic Greek: Σπάρτη, romanized: Spártē)
  2. Cartledge 2002, p. 91.
  3. Cartledge 2002, p. 174.
  4. Cartledge 2002, p. 192.
  5. Russell, Bertrand (27 August 2015). "Chapter XII: The Influence of Sparta". History of western philosophy. Routledge. ISBN 978-1138127043. OCLC 931802632.
  6. Liddell & Scott 1940. Σπάρτη.
  7. Liddell & Scott 1940. Λακεδαίμων.
  8. Cartledge 2002, p. 4.
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  37. Ehrenberg 2002, p. 33.
  38. Xenophon, Constitution of the Lacedaemonians, 1
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  45. Herodotus, 7.202, 7.228
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  47. Herodotus, 7.220-7.225
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  49. "Dictionary of Ancient & Medieval Warfare". Matthew Bennett, p. 86
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  51. Fine, The Ancient Greeks, 556–59
  52. Cartledge 2002, p. 273 "Philip laid Lakonia waste as far south as Gytheion and formally deprived Sparta of Dentheliatis (and apparently the territory on the Messenian Gulf as far as the Little Pamisos river), Belminatis, the territory of Karyai and the east Parnon foreland."
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  94. Cartledge 2002, p. 211.
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  96. Talbert, p. 26.
  97. Apud Athenaeus, 14, 647d = FGH 106 F 2. Trans. by Cartledge, p. 305.
  98. Plutarch, Life of Lycurgus 28, 8–10. See also, Life of Demetrios, 1, 5; Constitution of the Lacedemonians 30; De Cohibenda Ira 6; De Commmunibus Notitiis 19.
  99. Plutarch, Life of Lycurgus 28, 7.
  100. Powell 2001, p. 254.
  101. Thucydides (Book IV 80.4).
  102. Classical historian Anton Powell has recorded a similar story from 1980s El Salvador. Cf. Powell, 2001, p. 256
  103. Cartledge 2002, pp. 153–155.
  104. Cartledge 2002, pp. 158, 178.
  105. "Population Patterns in Late Archaic and Classical Sparta" by Thomas Figueira, Transactions of the American Philological Association 116 (1986), pp. 165–213
  106. Paul Cartledge, Sparta and Lakonia, Routledge, London, 1979, pp. 154–59
  107. Conrad Stibbe, Das Andere Sparta, Verlag Philipp von Zabern, Mainz, 1996, pp. 111–27
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  113. Stephen Hodkinson, Property and Wealth in Classical Sparta, The Classical Press of Wales, Swansea, 2000. See also Paul Cartledge's discussion of property in Sparta in Sparta and Lakonia, pp. 142–44.
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  116. Plutarch 2005, p. 20.
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  118. Williamson, Laila (1978). "Infanticide: an anthropological analysis". In Kohl, Marvin (ed.). Infanticide and the Value of Life. NY: Prometheus Books. pp. 61–75 .
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  120. Sneed (2021). "Disability and Infanticide in Ancient Greece". Hesperia: The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. 90 (4): 747. doi:10.2972/hesperia.90.4.0747. S2CID 245045967.
  121. Tyrtaeus, fr.12 lines 27-32
  122. Plutarch, Life of Lycurgus 27.2–3. However this may be conflating later practice with that of the classical period. See Not the Classical Ideal: Athens and the Construction of the Other in Greek Art ed. Beth Cohen, p. 263, note 33, 2000, Brill.
  123. Tsouli, M. (2016). Testimonia on Funerary Banquets in Ancient Sparta. In: Draycott, C. M., Stamatopoulou, M., & Peeters, U. (eds.), Dining and Death: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the 'Funerary Banquet' in Ancient Art, Burial and Belief, Peeters, 353–383.
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  129. Cartledge 2001, p. 88.
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  136. Readers Companion Military Hist p. 438. Cowley
  137. Adcock 1957, pp. 8–9.
  138. Plutarch 2004, p. 465.
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  148. Blundell 1999, p. .
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  151. Powell 2001, p. 248.
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Sources

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  • Cartledge, Paul; Spawforth, Antony (2001), Hellenistic and Roman Sparta (2nd ed.), Oxford: Routledge, ISBN 0-415-26277-1
  • Ehrenberg, Victor (2002) , From Solon to Socrates: Greek History and Civilisation between the 6th and 5th centuries BC (2nd ed.), London: Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-04024-2
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  • Green, Peter (1998), The Greco-Persian Wars (2nd ed.), Berkeley: University of California Press, ISBN 0-520-20313-5
  • Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert (1940). Jones, Henry Stuart (ed.). A Greek-English Lexicon. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Pomeroy, Sarah B. (2002), Spartan Women, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-513067-6
  • Powell, Anton (2001), Athens and Sparta: Constructing Greek Political and Social History from 478 BC (2nd ed.), London: Routledge, ISBN 0-415-26280-1
  • Pausanias (1918). Description of Greece. with an English Translation by W.H.S. Jones, Litt.D., and H.A. Ormerod, M.A., in 4 Volumes. ISBN 9780674992078.
  • Plutarch (1874), Plutarch's Morals, Translated from the Greek by several hands. Corrected and revised by. William W. Goodwin, PH. D., Boston, Cambridge{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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  • West, M. L. (1999), Greek Lyric Poetry, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-954039-6

Further reading

  • Bradford, Ernle (2004), Thermopylae: The Battle for the West, New York: Da Capo Press, ISBN 0-306-81360-2
  • Buxton, Richard (1999), From Myth to Reason?: Studies in the Development of Greek Thought, Oxford: Clarendon Press, ISBN 0-7534-5110-7
  • Cartledge, Paul (2004), "What have the Spartans Done for us?: Sparta's Contribution to Western Civilization", Greece & Rome, vol. 51, no. 2, pp. 164–179
  • David, Ephraim. 1989. "Dress in Spartan Society". Ancient World 19:3–13.
  • Flower, Michael A. 2009. "Spartan 'Religion' and Greek 'Religion'". In Sparta: Comparative Approaches. Edited by Stephen Hodkinson, 193–229. Swansea, UK: Classical Press of Wales.
  • Hodkinson, Stephen; Gallou, Chrysanthi, eds. (2021). Luxury and wealth in Sparta and the Peloponnese. Swansea: Classical Press of Wales. ISBN 9781910589830.
  • Hodkinson, Stephen, and Ian MacGregor Morris, eds. 2010. Sparta in Modern Thought. Swansea, UK: Classical Press of Wales.
  • Low, Polly. 2006. "Commemorating the Spartan War-Dead". In Sparta and War. Edited by Stephen Hodkinson and Anton Powell, 85–109. Swansea, UK: Classical Press of Wales.
  • Morris, Ian (1992), Death-Ritual and Social Structure in Classical Antiquity, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-37611-4
  • Pavlides, Nicolette A. (2023). The hero cults of Sparta: local religion in a Greek city. London: Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 9781788313001.
  • Rabinowitz, Adam. 2009. "Drinking from the Same Cup: Sparta and Late Archaic Commensality". In Sparta: Comparative Approaches. Edited by Stephen Hodkinson, 113–191. Swansea, UK: Classical Press of Wales.
  • Thompson, F. Hugh (2002), The Archaeology of Greek and Roman Slavery, London: Duckworth, ISBN 0-7156-3195-0
  • Thucydides (1974), M.I. Finley, Rex Warner (ed.), History of the Peloponnesian War, London: Penguin Books, ISBN 0-14-044039-9

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