When the Spartan’s hit hard times and needed more resources they defeated Messenia during the First Messenian War. They were unable to keep control over the Messenians by making them Helots. Due to the Helot’s outnumbering the Spartan’s they rebelled and almost took down the entire Spartan Empire during the Second Messenian War. After their almost defeat, the Spartans decided to turn their empire into basically a military school. The people they conquered, had to abide by Spartan laws and rules.…
-The whole Spartan society was aimed at producing a strong fighting force of great warriors who were willing to die for Sparta. The Spartans developed the militaristic society changing their lifestyle due to their defeat against the Argives.…
The strengths of Sparta are that they had an advanced military, they respected and trained the women, and they trained the soldiers when the soldiers when they were young. The phalanx was a very large rectangular mass which was composed with with heavy armory,spears, and all other weapons whilst pushing forward. Although they lacked formal education, they took down all of the strongest city states…
Sparta is known for its military dominance. What gave it this reputation was defeating its rival city state Athens in the Peloponnesian War. Sparta had very brutal training of their warriors, in fact, most the culture was based around its military and the training of its warriors. They started this process at birth, where they picked the healthiest and strongest babies they could find. If the officers did not think the baby was healthy or strong enough to endure the training of a Spartan warrior they would leave it for death…
The first reason why I think that Sparta’s weaknesses outweighed their strengths was because of all the cruelty and harshness. The krypteia, Spartan law enforcement officers, would go out and kill all of the innocent helots.(Doc C) Another reason is how the Spartans would whip the boys for their enjoyment.(Doc D) Document D states,” The boys were lashed with whips during the entire day at the altar of Artemis Orthia,frequently to the point of death, and they bravely endured this, cheerful and proud, vying with one another…..as to which one of them could endure being beaten for the longer time and the greater number of blows.” That was the first reason why I think…
Even Sparta’s enemies respected their military prowess. From this statement, it is almost proof of how ultimate they really were.…
Sparta, a city in Southern Greece, was a militarist state, whose territory included all Laconia and Messenia, and was the most powerful state in Peloponnesus. Having the army to conquer and then command such a vast range of land must be put down to the high skill and tactical minds of the army. If it were not for their formidable attacking and defensive capabilities, which they had trained for so many years to perfect, Sparta would not have been the power we know it once was. Source 1 depicts a Spartan soldier travelling. It unclear what his purpose is however. The pottery has been dated to around 490bc, which is the time Sparta was becoming a true force in the world.…
After the helots revolted, the Spartans had to develop a new way of life. There were almost 10 times the amounts of helots as compared to the free citizens. To do this, the Spartans made changes that turned their city into a military academy and camp. An official would decide if an infant was fit to survive, and if he was, he was taken from his home at age seven, and trained to become a warrior. Their constitution was mixed, with various parts of monarchy, oligarchy, and democracy. The goal of the new government in Sparta was to “win glory in war”.…
Sparta became a militaristic society because city states at that time had to become good in military matters to be able to defend themselves and able to expand to remain self-sufficient. The Helot rebellion also caused them to ramp up their military standard to be able to control the helots and to protect them from invaders. Sparta was forced to become a self-sustaining society because they would not be able to get any help from other countries. The training of Spartan warriors started when they were boys. The selection of Spartan warriors started before their birth.…
Sparta was an important part of Greece during the Archaic and Classical periods. Sparta was famous for the sheer power and strength of its military. Spartan hoplites (high-ranking soldiers) were professionally trained and sported distinctive red cloaks, long hair, and the lambda-emblazoned shields. Spartan warriors were among the most feared fighters in all of Greece. They fought with distinction at battles such as Thermopylae and Plataea in the early 5th century BCE. In Greek mythology, the founder of Sparta was Lacedaemon, a supposed “son of Zeus.”…
Any society that abuses children should deserve to crumble. It was an ancient Greek city state known as Sparta. In Sparta, they would whip the boys as an athletic contest. Whoever could withstand the most pain won. Do the strengths of Sparta outweigh the weaknesses? No, the strengths do not outweigh the weaknesses because they were abusive, lacked education, and the boys were taken from their families at a young age.…
The Spartan Military was one of the most feared militaries of its time. Located in the southern region of the Peloponnesus, Sparta was centralized around military dominance. Beginning at a young age, Spartan boys were pushed both physically and mentally. Every day was a test. Lycurgus, a Spartan Tyrant, was revered as God with his reforms to transform Sparta into the ultimate weapon, militarization. The Spartan military was the most feared military in the world for their way of life, ruthless training, and strategic tactics.…
One reason that Sparta was weak is that they lacked education, learning only basic reading and writing. They also banned all other forms of education including foreign teachers,books,treatises and more because they were not to learn of other ways of living. Evidence of this is in document D in which it states”Learned to read and write for purely practical reasons:but all other forms of education they banned from the country”. This supports…
In Sparta, the influence of the military on society was quite significant. In 650BC, Sparta became the dominant military force in Ancient Greece. Sparta achieved this through military cost, proficiency, their exceptional focus on training and excellence within their military. Sparta was a very strict society compared to others at that time in history. Males had strict rules growing up, yet it was even stricter for the everyday life of a soldier.…
When one speaks of a mighty nation, one of the first names that comes to mind is the Grecian city-state of Sparta. The great Spartan state prospered for many centuries using their cutting-edge, albeit small, militia, and created one of the fiercest and most feared empires on the Grecian sub-continent; but, did the Spartan education system’s strengths necessarily outweigh its weaknesses? The Educations’ strengths definitely outweighed its weaknesses, because of their obedience and coordination between their peers and superiors, their sheer physical strength, and their use of cunning and wit to their advantage. Firstly, the Spartans excelled in their obedience and coordination to their peers and superiors, an example being a Spartan…