The Locator -- [(subject = "Greece--History--History")]

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Author:
Bayliss, Andrew J., author.
Title:
The Spartans / Andrew J. Bayliss.
Edition:
First edition.
Publisher:
Oxford University Press,
Copyright Date:
2020
Description:
x, 166 pages : illustrations, maps ; 18 cm
Subject:
Sparta (Extinct city)--Civilization.
Greece--History.--History.
Greece--History.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 153-164) and index.
Summary:
The image of Sparta, and the Spartans, is one dyed indelibly into the public consciousness: musclebound soldiers with long hair and red cloaks, bearing shiny bronze shields emblazoned with the Greek letter lambda. 'This is Sparta!', bellows Leonidas on the silver screen, as he decides to lead his 300 warriors to their deaths at Thermopylae. But what was Sparta? The myths surrounding Sparta are as old as the city itself. Even in antiquity, Sparta was a unique society, considered an enigma. The Spartans who fought for freedom against the Persians called themselves 'equals' or peers, but their equality was reliant on the ruthless exploitation of the indigenous population known as helots. The Spartans' often bizarre rules and practices have the capacity to horrify as much they do to fascinate us today. Athenian writers were intrigued and appalled in equal measure by a society where weak or disabled babies were said to have been examined carefully by state officials before being dumped off the edge of a cliff. Even today their lurid stories have shaped our image of Sparta; a society in which cowards were forced to shave off half their beards, to dress differently from their peers, and who were ultimately shunned to the extent that suicide seemed preferable. Equally appalling to us today is the brutal krypteia, a Spartan rite of passage where teenagers were sent into the countryside armed with a knife and ordered to eliminate the biggest and most dangerous helots. But the truth behind these stories of the exotic other can be hard to discover, lost amongst the legend of Sparta which was even perpetuated by later Spartans, who ran a thriving tourist industry that exaggerated the famed brutality of their ancestors.
ISBN:
0198853084
9780198853084
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1112277927
Locations:
BAPH771 -- Des Moines Public Library (Des Moines)

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