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Download The Spartans and Women in Ancient Greece
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Or a Tale of Two Wars • The polis or city-state was the central focus of Greek life. • A strong identity and loyalty – kept the city-states divided Cities The Acropolis of Athens Spartan Values Strength Duty Discipline Athenian Values – Individuality – Beauty – Freedom A city of the wise Where: City located on southern portion of the Greek peninsula, not on the Peloponnesus Known For: A city run by thinkers and known for both its military might and wisdom in government and battle Named After: Athena, goddess of wisdom in battle and counsel Art & Beauty • Values art and beauty above all • Sculptures, buildings, keeping oneself beautiful very important • Art: culture, sculpture, paintings, vases, poetry, theater- ALL very important Schooling in Athens • Athenian boys are tutored at home until age 6-7 • Then sent to school for primary education until age 14 • Schools were private but tuition was low enough that even the most poor Athendians could afford to send their sons to school for a few years • Boys are taught ball games while older boys are taught running, boxing and wrestling. • All Athenian boys were expected to read heavily, because literature played a very important part in their education. • The national epic poems, Homer's Illiad and Odyssey, were mandatory teaching in all Athenian elementary schools. But What About the Girls? • Athenian girls were not officially schooled, • They were allowed to learn in the privacy of their own homes, but as a result, most Athenian women had primarily domestic educations Government • New, democratic ideas emerge from Athenian culture and society: – Direct Democracy: Citizens elect their representatives – Public Debate: Becomes an art in Athens to discuss and argue specifics of government – Duties of the Citizen: All citizens have responsibilities such as voting, participating in the government process Athenian Government • Athens’ government frequently changed. The move towards democracy started with Solon • He was an aristocrat who introduced democratic principles to Athenian government • His laws gave all free adult males the right to participate in the assembly • The assembly voted on new legislation and other major decisions Pericles • An aristocrat who brought democracy to its full measure • He made it possible for the poor to still be politically active • He asked for fees to be paid for those who served politically Freedom to: • Have a say in public business • Live a private life without interferences • Rise, by one’s own merits, from poverty and obscurity to renown and wealth Athenians used their freedom to freely: • Obey the laws and authorities • Refrain from injuring one another • Display valor to defend their city Practiced throughout Greece and in Athens • Slaves usually barbarians (nonGreeks), typically captured in war. • Others were born slaves or their free parents sold them into slavery for money. Image Credit: Σταύρος Citizens Perioikoi “Dwellers Around” Free Non-Citizens Helots Slaves (from Messenia) Map Credit: Jkan997 “Most Spartan institutions have always been designed with a view to security against the Helots.” – Thucydides Units of Social Organization GOVERNMENT EDUCATION FAMILY Legendary Lawgiver Credited with the development of Spartan institutions. Bas-relief of Lycurgus, one of 23 great lawgivers depicted in the chamber of the U.S. House of Representatives Until I return… Checks & Balances STABLE Government MIXED Government Separation of Powers LEGISLATIVE Gerousia (28) Apella (All) EXECUTIVE Kings (2) Ephors (5) JUDICIAL Gerousia (28) Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6d/SpartaGreatRhetra.png BICAMERAL BACK Gerousia (Upper House) 28 Members (Age 60+) Plus 2 Kings = 30 Aristocracy Gerontocracy BACK Apella (Lower House) All Spartan Citizens Debate BACK Kings (2) Diarchy Commanders-in-Chief ARMY Ephors (5) One Year Terms BACK Kings (2) “We swear to uphold the laws…” “We swear to support the kings… as long as they uphold the laws.” BACK Gerousia (Supreme Court) 28 Members (Age 60+) Plus 2 Kings = 30 Aristocracy Gerontocracy BACK Spartan Education • Physical training and fitness was considered to be an important part of a Spartan child’s education. • Girls did not fight in wars but they took part in physical activities because Spartans believed fit and strong women would have healthy babies that would be good soldiers. • Boys went to live at an army barracks at the age of 7. • Horrible Histories – PT Conference • ALL Spartan citizens were professional soldiers. • The lives of Spartan men were highly regimented from birth. Screenshot from the movie, 300, accessed here Birth A Spartan mother presents her child to the elders for a birth inspection. Age 7-20 “Raising” All Spartan males were required to go through the agoge (raising), where they received 13 years of military training. Image Credit: http://www.moddb.com/mods/the-peloponnesian-wars/images/the-new-and-final-agoge Age 18-20 SEDITION The most talented Spartan youths were selected for service in the Krypteia, a secret, elite band charged with terrorizing the Helot population. Image Credit: http://vixstar1314.wordpress.com/2011/05/18/and-so-night-falls/ Finally! At 21, the young Spartan male could take his place among the citizen hoplites... Spartan Shield (hoplon) Note the Lambda for Laconia, the Spartan homeland …and get married. NOT UNTIL YOU’RE 30! Although they got married at 21, Spartan men lived in the barracks until age 30. “It is better to marry than to BURN WITH PASSION.” -- St. Paul “A legal kiss is never as good as a stolen one.” -- Guy de Maupassant (19th century French author) The Spartan Woman Statue of a winner of the Heraia (footrace every four years to honor Hera) The Spartan Woman On being quizzed by an Athenian woman, ‘Why is it that you Spartan women are the only ones who rule your men?’, she replied ‘Because we are the only women too who give birth to men.’ -- From Plutarch, Sayings of Spartan Women, quoted in Cartledge, The Spartans (125) Statue of a winner of the Heraia (footrace every four years to honor Hera) Spartan Women “‘For it was not by imitating other states, but by devising a system utterly different from that of most others, that he [Lycurgus] made his country prosperous…he insisted on physical training for the female no less than for the male sex: moreover, he instituted races and trials of strength for women competitors as for men, believing that if both parents are strong they produce more vigorous offspring…’” – (Xenophon, 4th century B.C., Constitution of the Lacedaemonians http://people.uncw.edu/deagona/amazons/spartanwomen2.htm#Education “There are no adulterers in Sparta.” -- ancient saying With it… ...or ON it! CHILDBIRTH A Spartan Woman’s Glory CHILDBIRTH A Spartan Woman’s Glory A Spartan woman would be buried with a gravestone if she died in childbirth (men had to die in battle). Greek Women Compared EDUCATED? GYMNASTICS? HOUSEWORK? Own Property their own right? Short Skirts? Athenian Spartan NO NO YES YES YES NO (Helots did this) in NO YES NO YES Wife Swap • http://www.schooltube.com/video/f8836a3434a31a97579 b/HORRIBLE-HISTORIES-Wife-Swap-Spartans-andAthenians