Title: Spartan Society
1 Spartan Society
2Social Systems
- social organization the people in a society
considered as a system organized by a
characteristic pattern of relationships The
Social System is the parent system of
legal,economic , political and cultural systems - Stratification is instrumental in the belief
forming process. It not only places people above
others but proves legitimacy for the claim - Structural functional analysts suggest that
social stratification is beneficial in helping to
stabilize a society. Conflict theorists consider
the inaccessibility of resources and lack of
social mobility as a destabilizing factor.
3- The organization in the classical period of
Spartan Society can be summarized under three
headings First a political system in which power
and decision making were divided among the Kings,
ephors, Elders and Assembly - Secondly, a military and economic system
according to which full citizenship was extended
to a body of several thousand men who became full
time hoplites supported by produce delivered by
the helots who worked their lands - Thirdly a social and ritual system as part of
which every citizen was compelled, especially
during upbringing to accept a common public way
of life Stephen Hodkinson - The successful operation of these three systems
was to produce uniformity and the achievement of
Eunomia
4The Social System
- The way of life put into practice three
principles which had only played a minor role in
the aristocratic society of the 7th century. - Uniformity. Thucydides comments that it was the
Lakedaimonians who first began to dress simply
and that in general the rich as far as possible
adopted an equal style of life with the many - Secondly, the priority of collective interests
over private ones, enshrined in the compulsory
nature of the common messes - Conformity to regulations, specific types of
action and standards of behaviour - The compromise however with the influences of the
past was the influence of wealth, birth, personal
merit and seniority
5Equilibrium in society
6Social Hierarchy Sparta had a common way of
life based on a common education and training, a
shared way of life and an equal standard of
living D H KellyIn reality , however Spartan
society was anything but equal
Perioicoi
Perioicoi
Perioicoi
7Spartiates
- Spartiate Citizenship was based on four criteria
- Birth Proof of descent from original Dorian
conquerors - Training Submission to and completion of the
Agoge - Ownership of a plot of public land ( kleros )
- Membership of and continued payment of
contributions to a syssition
8Spartiates
- The original Dorian descendents, who never
numbered more than 10,000 - They were full time soldiers owing total
obedience to the state - The State supported them by giving them an
allotment of public land ( kleros ) and helots to
work it. - They were forbidden to engage in farming, trade
and industry - All equal under the law, there is some historical
controversy concerning an inner nobility based
either on wealth, prestige or valour.
9Loss of Citizenship
- Loss of citizenship, for whatever reason resulted
in social isolation. Special clothes were worn,
exercise was taken alone and they were excluded
from participation in religious festivals and the
Assembly meetings - Xenophon writes that Lycurgus excluded from the
citizen body anyone who shrank from the rigorous
customs of Spartan life
10InferiorsHypomeiones
11TresantesTremblers
- Loss of citizenship could result from crime or
more commonly cowardice in battle. - As well as the social exclusion, if they had
daughters no one would marry them and if they
wished to marry, themselves, no one would give
their daughter to them - A fear of the consequence of wholesale disgrace
was seen after Leuctra when the offenders were
too numerous, at a time when the State was in
need of soldiers. Agesilaus subsequently took the
unfortunates on an expedition when some plunder
was taken and a small town defeated. Honour was
thus redeemed and citizenship restored. There was
evidently limit to the stern discipline of Sparta
12Plutarch on Spartan Cowardice
- When sides are being picked for a ball game
that sort of man is left outand in dances he is
banished to the insulting places. Moreover in the
streets he is required to give way as well as to
give up his seat even to younger men. The girls
of his family he has to support at home and must
explain to them why they cannot get husbands. He
must endure having a household with no wife and
at the same time he has to pay a fine for this.
13Tyrtaeus
It is beautiful when a brave man of the front
ranks falls and dies, battling for his homeland,
and ghastly when a man flees planted fields and
city and wanders begging with his mother, ageing
father, little children and true wife. He will be
scorned in every village, reduced to want and
loathsome poverty and shame will brand his
family line, his noble figure. Derision and
disaster will hound him. A turncoat gets no
respect or pity so let us battle for our country
and freely give our lives to save our darling
children. Young men, fight shield to shield and
never succumb to panic or miserable flight.
14Mothaces or Mothones
- Mothaces were young helots who had been playmates
and training partners of Spartiate boys. They
would therefore have undergone some of the
training of the Agoge
15Neodamodeis
- These were helots who were given their freedom by
the State for some meritorious action - It seems they never attained the status of equal
but in return for their freedom were liable for
military service - Thucydides tells us that Agesilaus took 2,000 of
them to Asia - In earlier times helots had been employed as
batman, shield carriers or light armed
skirmishers. Herodotus, prone to numerical
exaggeration tells us that there 35,000 Helots at
the Battle of Plataea. They thus had ample
opportunity to achieve meritorious acts of
valour. - An exceptional group, 700 helots taken by
Brasidas in Chalcidice were given their freedom
for gallantry in the field. They were called
Brasideioi. They were allowed to live wherever
they pleased and were no longer tied to the
cleroi of their masters. Thucydides tells us that
they were settled on the borders of Laconia and
Elis, and is likely that they were absorbed into
the Perioicoi communities
16Parthenai
- Some time after the close of the First Messenian
War there occurred an incident called the
insurrection of the Parthenai and the
subsequent colonization of them at Tarentum. - The Spartans who had marched out to the war had
taken 19 years to return home victorious. Spartan
women were left alone and the birth rate fell
dramatically. It was decreed that they should
seek temporary unions and from these the numerous
Parthenai were born. After the war the Parthenai
sons were looked down upon and an uprising was
planned and led by Phalanthus. The plot was
revealed but the numbers so many that they were
forced to emigrate - The controversy in the story exists over exactly
who were the fathers of these illegitimate
children. Aristotle tells us that they were
Spartans who for whatever reason had not gone to
Messenia. Theopompus says they were helots who
were subsequently given citizenship, although
this seems highly doubtful.
17Helots
- Pre Dorian inhabitants conquered by Spartans, in
Laconia and Messenia - They had no rights and freedom could only be
granted by the State - They were state owned and lived with their
families on the lands of Spartiates. They could
not move without the states permission - Their main duty was to supply a fixed amount of
produce annually to Spartan masters. Once this
was done they were free to make a profit. - Often acted as servants and light armed
skirmishers in times of war - Tyrtaeus describes them as asses under great
loads under painful necessity to bring their
masters full half the fruits their ploughed land
produced
18Perioicoidwellers around
1. The very term perioikoi those who dwell
around connotes a subordinate relationship 2.Auton
omous and self governing in their own
communities, they were people of mixed origin.
Shipley makes the comment that distance from
Sparta was a limiting factor in the degree of
active intervention and control 3.Were not
allowed to intermarry with Spartiates 4.Their
chief contribution to the Spartans was
economic-engaged in trade and industry
particularly weapons and armour 5.Were expected
to contribute militarily in times of war