Sparta and the Spartans, Part I

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Sparta: A Social Experiment If you could live in a society where everyone was socially and economically equal, would you want to?

Transcript of Sparta and the Spartans, Part I

Page 1: Sparta and the Spartans, Part I

Sparta: A Social Experiment

If you could live in a society where everyone was socially and economically equal, would you want to?

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Where does this history begin? Lycurgus

Dates : Archaic Greece c. 700-500 BCE

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The Way of Life Basileus

Colonization vs. Agriculture

Xenophobia

Opposite of Athens

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Where was Sparta?See p. 92 of Ancient Greece for map In the south, on the Laconian plain

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A Cruel and Gloomy Reign Burn, rape and pillage

Helots 10:1

Avoid uprisings

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Who ruled Sparta? Two hereditary kings, 1st among equals Ran the military

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Societal Organization Top- Kings

Upper Middle – Citizens

Lower Middle - Perioikoi

Bottom - Helots

Plato: “The organization of your state is that of an army camp, not a town.”

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Spartan Government Kings

Gerousia

Assembly

Ephors

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Lifestyles of the Spartan Citizen Laconic

No jewelry

No precious metals

Only necessary possesions

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Values of the Spartan Citizen Unquestioning

Obedience

Courage

Indifference to pain, cold or heat

Contempt for other civilizations

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How did they live? As invincible warriors. From cradle to deathbed

Military caste

Never risked a battle they thought they could not win

Only distinction is military honor in battle

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What is Spartan Culture? Imagine a world where everything is

subordinate to war . . .

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What is Spartan art? Poetry incites warriors to fight

Music was for war and religion

Even art depicts the gods in chains

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Spartan vs. Non Spartan Poetry Is anything worth dying for? If so, what? “Shove your shield in the face of the enemy,

hating life and embracing death’s dark spirits like the sun’s rays . . .” Tyrtaeus

“Some Thracian is flaunting the shield I left thoughtlessly by the brush, an flawless piece. So what? I saved myself.” Archilochus

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Spartan “Childhood”

Only necessary schooling

Provoked to fight Taken from home at

seven Put in herds Only necessary food

and clothes

“To bring these things they steal, some going into gardens and others insinuating themselves dangerously and cautiously into the men’s messes. If anyone is caught, he is given many lashes with the whip”

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Helots – Sparta’s Problem Constantly feared uprising

Spartan boys spied on them

Attacked them regularly

Had to keep standing army to maintain them

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The Krypteia Secret warfare tactics “this is another form

of training for war: they sent each one out naked and ordered him to wander outside in the mountains for a year, maintaining himself by theft and avoiding detection

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Spartan Lore Philip of Macedon: “If I enter Laconia, I

will level Sparta to the ground.” Spartan reply: “If.”