Sparta

Apropos of my comment about sex & civilization, a reader brought up Sparta, and over @ 2 Blowhards there's a nice post, Case Studies in State Formation - Sparta:

There was an extreme egalitarianism on the surface in Sparta, where all men ate in messes and dressed identically until getting married in middle age. Indeed, the Spartans called themselves the homoioi, those who are alike. While egalitarianism was a very strong trend throughout the Greek world during the archaic and classical eras, in Sparta the appearance of egalitarianism was deceptive, at least in a politically. Spartan egalitarianism was the result of military necessity rather than an expression of the economic or social equality. The Spartan aristocracy never surrendered political control of Spartan politics.

Tags

More like this

Classical literature has judged Helen of Troy harshly. Because she chose Paris after having children with Menelaus, her chroniclers condemn her for the destruction of a great society. In Homer's Odyssey the bard writes: Helen would never have yielded herself to a man from a foreign country, if she…
This is two years old (February 16, 2005) but still as provocative....(also my belated contirbution to the Blog For Choice Day) and I'll repost the second part of it next Friday. ----------------------------------------------- William Raspberry wrote an editorial in Washington Post last weekend (I…
This was an early post of mine building upon George Lakoff analysis of the psychology underlying political ideology. It was first published on September 04, 2004 (mildly edited): I keep going back to George Lakoff's "Moral Politics", as I did "here" and "here", because I believe this book…
This was an early post of mine building upon George Lakoff analysis of the psychology underlying political ideology. It was first published on September 04, 2004 (mildly edited): I keep going back to George Lakoff's "Moral Politics", as I did "here" and "here", because I believe this book…

This egalitarianism was only for the warrior class (agoge). Also note that the Spartans had a slave or serf class of farmers who had no rights, the helots, and a class of ordinary non-military civilians, the periokoi. Citizenship could be lost of you were a periokon, or an unsuccessful agagon. The helots were conquered Hellenic tribes who weren't from Sparta originally, and could never have citizenship.

Didn't Bettany Hughes do a TV series on the Spartans? You might bear this in mind (nudge nudge, wink wink).