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Sparta - Archaeology | A Wisdom Archive on Sparta - Archaeology |  | Sparta - Archaeology A selection of articles related to Sparta - Archaeology |  |
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Sparta, Sparta - Archaeology, Sparta - Constitution, Sparta - History, Sparta - Military service and training, Sparta - Modern Sparta, Sparta - Nearest places, Sparta - The Spartan world, Kings of Sparta, Gymnopaedia
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Sparta - Archaeology |  |  |  | Sparta - Archaeology: Encyclopedia II - Sparta - ArchaeologyThere is a well-known passage in Thucydides which runs thus:
"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 poo ...
See also:Sparta, Sparta - Nearest places, Sparta - History, Sparta - Constitution, Sparta - Military service and training, Sparta - Archaeology, Sparta - The Spartan world, Sparta - Modern Sparta Read more here: » Sparta: Encyclopedia II - Sparta - Archaeology |
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 |  |  | Sparta - Archaeology: Encyclopedia II - Sparta - Military service and trainingThe origins of the powers exercised by the assembly of the citizens, or apella, are virtually unknown, due to the paucity of historical documentation. The ordinary Spartan was essentially a soldier, trained to obey and endure; he became a politician only if chosen as ephor for a single year. He could be elected a life member of the council after his sixtieth year, in which he would be free from military service.
Sparta was, above all, a military state, and emphasis on military fitness began virtually at birth. Shortly after bir ...
See also:Sparta, Sparta - Nearest places, Sparta - History, Sparta - Constitution, Sparta - Military service and training, Sparta - Archaeology, Sparta - The Spartan world, Sparta - Modern Sparta Read more here: » Sparta: Encyclopedia II - Sparta - Military service and training |
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 |  |  | Sparta - Archaeology: Encyclopedia II - Sparta - Modern SpartaPrior to modern times, the site of Sparta was occupied by a relatively small village that lay in the shadow of Mystras, a more important (Byzantine) settlement nearby. In 1834, after the Greek War of Independence, King Otto of Greece decreed that a city was to be built on the site of Sparta and bear its name (pronounced Sparti in Modern Greek). The city was designed with the intention of creating one of the most beautiful cities in Greece through the use of tree-lined boulevards and parklands. At present, Sparta is the administrati ...
See also:Sparta, Sparta - Nearest places, Sparta - History, Sparta - Constitution, Sparta - Military service and training, Sparta - Archaeology, Sparta - The Spartan world, Sparta - Modern Sparta Read more here: » Sparta: Encyclopedia II - Sparta - Modern Sparta |
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 |  |  | Sparta - Archaeology: Encyclopedia II - Sparta - The Spartan worldAround the middle of the 6th century BC, the southern Peloponnese was Spartan territory. With an area of 8,050 square kilometres, it was the largest state in Greece. The territory was divided into two parts, Laconia and Messenia, which were separated by the Taygetos mountain range. Unlike other Greek cities, Sparta controlled much arable land. Earliest archeological evidence testifying settlement in Sparta dates from around 950 BC.
Classical sources tell us that Sparta was founded in the 10th century BC. It consisted of the four villages of Pitane, Mesoa, Limnai and Konooura, w ...
See also:Sparta, Sparta - Nearest places, Sparta - History, Sparta - Constitution, Sparta - Military service and training, Sparta - Archaeology, Sparta - The Spartan world, Sparta - Modern Sparta Read more here: » Sparta: Encyclopedia II - Sparta - The Spartan world |
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 |  |  | Sparta - Archaeology: Encyclopedia II - Sparta - ConstitutionWe know little of the internal development on Sparta. Many Greeks believed there had been none, and that "the stability of the Spartan constitution" had lasted unchanged from the days of Lycurgus. The Spartans had no historical literature or written laws, which last were, according to tradition, expressly prohibited by an ordinance of Lycurgus. The Doric state of Sparta, copying the Doric Cretans, developed a mixed governmental state. The state was ruled by two hereditary kings of the Agiad and Eurypontid families, equal in authority, so tha ...
See also:Sparta, Sparta - Nearest places, Sparta - History, Sparta - Constitution, Sparta - Military service and training, Sparta - Archaeology, Sparta - The Spartan world, Sparta - Modern Sparta Read more here: » Sparta: Encyclopedia II - Sparta - Constitution |
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 |  |  | Sparta - Archaeology: Encyclopedia II - Sparta - HistoryMain article: History of Sparta
Sparta had the best army in ancient Greece; and was the most powerful state before the rise of Athens, a naval power, after the Persian Wars. Sparta and Athens were reluctant allies against the Persians, but became rivals thereafter. The greatest series of conflicts between the two states, which resulted in the dismantling of the Athens Empire, is called the Peloponnesian War. Athenian attempts to control Greece and take over the Spartan role of 'guardian of Hellenism' ended in failure. Th ...
See also:Sparta, Sparta - Nearest places, Sparta - History, Sparta - Constitution, Sparta - Military service and training, Sparta - Archaeology, Sparta - The Spartan world, Sparta - Modern Sparta Read more here: » Sparta: Encyclopedia II - Sparta - History |
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