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Young Spartans Exercising , also known as Young Spartans and as Young Spartan Girls Challenging Boys , is an early oil on canvas painting by French impressionist artist Edgar Degas . The work depicts two groups of male and female Spartan youth exercising and challenging each other in some way. The work was purchased by the trustees of the Courtauld fund in 1924 and is now in the permanent collection of the National Gallery in London .

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90-464: The painting depicts as its subject matter two groups of adolescents, five girls (one of which is almost entirely obscured by the others) and five boys, with the girls apparently taunting or beckoning the boys. The girls are positioned on the left side of the painting and the boys on the right, while in the background stands a group of women and one man (identified as the mothers of the children and Lycurgus ) watching them. The women are fully clothed, while

180-674: A ban also likely emerged in the sixth century, since Spartan citizen sculptors are attested to prior to that time. The inequality of Spartan society also implies that trade must have occurred; the second dinner in the syssitia involved bread, meat, fish, and other produce which were bought or donated by wealthy Spartans. Plutarch, who claims Spartan did not dispute or talk about money, is also internally inconsistent when elsewhere notes Spartan commercial contracts and Sparta's delegation of such matters to expert resolution. Plutarch also claims that Lycurgus imposed sumptuary legislation, prohibiting foreign artisans from residing at Sparta and restricting

270-443: A common citizen, a second as President, a third for the house or building, a fourth for the furniture", which seems to imply that the care of the building and the provision of the necessary utensils and furniture were his responsibility. A free-born woman managed the tables and service; she openly took the best portion and presented it to the most eminent citizen present. She had three or four male assistants under her, each of whom again

360-543: A grave, also c.  600 BC , containing pottery grave goods. Further claims that Lycurgus required the burial of fallen Spartan soldiers abroad are not compatible with archaeological evidence showing that the first certain mass grave for Spartan battlefield losses was at Plataea . The education of Spartan boys in the agoge , less anachronistically the paideia , was also attributed to an initiative of Lycurgus to equalise Spartan citizens socially, by raising them without outside family and clan loyalties. Though

450-403: A little ball of soft bread, which they were to throw into a deep basin, which a waiter carried round upon his head; those that liked the person to be chosen dropped their ball into the basin without altering its figure, and those who disliked him pressed it between their fingers, and made it flat; and this signified as much as a negative voice. And if there were but one of these pieces in the basin,

540-675: A locus of heroism, physicality, racial purity, and struggle. Such themes complemented fascist and Nazi ideology , painting Sparta as a "proto-National Socialist state". Defeat in the Second World War largely ended such hagiography. Syssitia The syssitia ( Ancient Greek : συσσίτια syssítia , plural of συσσίτιον syssítion ) were, in ancient Greece , common meals for men and youths in social or religious groups, especially in Crete and Sparta , but also in Megara in

630-498: A return to Lycurgus' "true" Spartan traditions, deviations from which explained all problems of latter-day Sparta. Finally, in Plutarch's version, after Lycurgus' recall to Sparta to institute new laws, he has the community swear not to change the laws until he returns from Delphi. Upon reaching Delphi he dies so to enshrine the laws forever. Lycurgus' laws are supposed to have touched the whole of Spartan society. At various times,

720-515: A sacrifice. Lesser excuses, such as being away on a hunt, implied a requirement to provide a present to the table (Smith 1870). The participation at the syssition was, as for other aspects of agoge , obligatory for membership in the Homoioi , the Peers. Spartans were admitted from the age of twenty after a ritual described by Plutarch in his Life of Lycurgus (ch 12): Each man in the company took

810-475: A stable polity dedicated to simplicity, unity, and the communal interest – attributing to the Spartans, not necessarily rightly, universal education and equality among citizens – while also noting the cruelty of the agoge and denigration of autonomy, especially in contrast to democratic Athens . Charles Rollin , a French educator, produced an enduring and admiring conception of Lycurgus as having created

900-520: A strong bond was formed. The syssition effectively became an extended family in which all were "children of the state". They also ensured a separation between subject classes and citizens and, in Sparta, additional separation based on station and wealth and so were a strong tool for developing nationalism. Herodotus (I, 65) remarked that the Spartan syssition led to troops "who fought with more bravery and

990-417: A temple to Zeus.. and Athena..., forming phylai and creating obai , and instituting a gerousia of thirty including the kings, then hold an apella from time to time. Thus bring in and set aside [proposals]. The people are to have the right to respond, and power ... but if the people speak crookedly, the elders and kings are to be setters-aside. Plutarch states that the provision that

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1080-414: Is "probably mythical". Others have attempted to glean from the myths that survive some kernel of truth. But most historians "would subscribe to the stark judgement of Antony Andrewes: 'if there was a real Lycurgus, we know nothing of him ' ". There is no consensus as to when a historical Lycurgus lived, neither today or in the ancient world (Plutarch, in his Life of Lycurgus , in fact makes this remark in

1170-421: Is also said to have banned lamentations and allowed burials near temples. Burials near temples were common in archaic Greece before being prohibited by most cities; Sparta merely retained the practice. The earliest Spartan art and poems also still mention lamenting mourners, implying that such a ban likely postdates Lycurgus and was introduced c.  600 BC ; moreover, any ban on grave goods must postdate

1260-459: Is also said to have instituted a system of wife sharing as a pronatalist and eugenicist policy; if such wife sharing existed, it is likely a product of Spartan population decline in the fifth century BC. Plutarch also credits Lycurgus with sumptuary laws on burials. Archaeological evidence broadly supports the notion that Spartans practiced uniform burial without grave goods, albeit with exceptions for generals and Olympic victors. However, Lycurgus

1350-635: Is also supposed to have instituted the Spartan practice of staged bride capture where the bride, rather than being processed to the groom's home for a wedding ceremony with feast, was instead ritually seized by the groom, and the marriage consummated without feast. The seventh century Spartan poet Alcman makes no mention of such customs, and composed wedding hymns reflecting the more common Greek wedding processions; Spartan wedding customs therefore also postdate Lycurgus, emerging some time before 500 BC. The further claim in Plutarch's Moralia that Lycurgus prohibited dowries altogether has no basis. Lycurgus

1440-579: Is it clear when the political reforms attributed to him, called the Great Rhetra, occurred. Ancient dates range from – putting aside the implausibly early Xenophonic 11th century BC – the early ninth century ( c.  885 BC ) to as late as early eighth century ( c.  776 BC ). There remains no consensus as to when he lived; some modern scholars deny that he existed at all. The reforms at various times attributed to him touch all aspects of Spartan society. They included

1530-484: Is probably a corruption of philitia ( φιλίτια , "love-feast"), a word corresponding to the Cretan Hetairia . It was a daily obligatory banquet comparable to a military mess . Before the 5th century BC, the ritual was also referred to as the ὰνδρεῖα andreia , literally, "belonging to men". Obligation was total; no person, not even the two kings , could be absent without good excuse, such as performance of

1620-595: Is supposed also to have established the Spartan mess halls called syssitia or phiditia . Such halls were public, where all citizen men were required to eat dinner. Citizens were required to contribute to the mess hall's pantries with a substantial amount of food, wine, and money; failure or inability to do so would entail loss of citizenship. A relatively old tradition, predating the Hellenistic Spartan reformers Agis IV and Cleomenes III as well as likely Herodotus, claimed that Lycurgus' imposition of

1710-450: Is that he undertakes the regency until his ward came of age. The second is that he resigns, to protect his ward, amid rumours that he wishes to supplant the ward as king. Plutarch's version of the story includes the ward's mother seeking Lycurgus' hand in marriage to facilitate his accession. In this version, Lycurgus leaves to prevent himself from being used as a pawn in politics against his nephew. The tradition where Lycurgus continues in

1800-630: Is that of Herodotus, who wrote in the latter half of the fifth century BC. His account is likely based on oral accounts from both Spartans and non-Spartans in Greece. The two royal dynasties of Sparta, the Agiads and Eurypontids , both claimed Lycurgus in their ancestries. However, Lycurgus does not feature in the earliest preserved Spartan source – the poet Tyrtaeus  – which has led many historians today to doubt his historicity: for example, Massimo Nafissi in A companion to Sparta writes he

1890-459: Is that this never happened. The seventh century Spartan poet, Tyrtaeus , already opposed land distribution in the poem Eunomia , attesting to land inequality at the earliest times. Lycurgus is also supposed to have ensured the austere lifestyle of the Spartans by banning the use of gold and silver coins, requiring a currency made of iron . Xenophon claimed that this meant acquisition of wealth became too bulky to hide; Plutarch believed that this

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1980-522: The Encyclopédie but this was not shared by all authors. Diderot , the main editor of the Encyclopédie , was more pessimistic, saying that Lycurgan laws "created monks bearing arms" while branding the system as a whole "an atrocity" and "incompatible with a large... [or] commercial state". The branding of Lycurguan Sparta as a "dismal monastery" was widely, but not universally, shared among

2070-541: The syssitia ); economic freedom for citizens by their possession of sufficient land and helots to meet their needs; and austere politics for the common good. The republican views of Niccolò Machiavelli trended toward the Lycurgan "mixed constitution" but this was not necessarily a through-line in Renaissance European political thought. Other thinkers of the period hailed Lycurgan politics as building

2160-471: The paired lives of Lycurgus and Numa (the early Roman lawgiver and king), for example, judged Lycurgus favourably compared to the Roman by emphasising Lycurgan education and pronatalism. Another argument for Lycurgan superiority was also that Sparta declined as it supposedly deviated from Lycurgus' settlements while Rome flourished as it similarly deviated from Numa's ideals. In the end, for Plutarch, Lycurgus

2250-905: The philosophes . Similar negative views were expressed by the American founder John Adams who saw Lycurgus as having doomed his own people to poverty and futile militarism; however, he also praised the Lycurgan ;– as well as the Polybian  – mixed constitution in Defense of the Constitutions as did James Madison in the Federalist Papers (number 63). Nationalist views of Spartan society, which praised Spartan eugenicism and militarism became common in Germany in

2340-636: The syssitia (the mess halls to which each Spartan belonged). In Xenophon's telling, the legend of Lycurgus expanded even further, ascribing to him not only reforms but also the creation of the Lacedaemonian dual monarchy and state as well. The description of Lycurgus as a regent or guardian who establishes the laws characterises him as a selfless figure who places the good of his king and community before his own. To that end there are two main traditions relating to his regency. The first, in Herodotus,

2430-600: The "Spartan mirage", also drove praise of Lycurgus in other Greek states. The tradition of a timeless legislator with his divinely-inspired (or at least sanctioned) laws gave Sparta's constitution greater legitimacy while also making it inflexible. Even attempts to reform Spartan life during the Hellenistic period, by Spartan monarchs Agis IV and Cleomenes III , were viewed in their time as returning to Lycurgan tradition rather than an innovation. The stories of Lycurgus were constantly reinvented for each Spartan generation;

2520-466: The 5th century BC Greek historian Thucydides ' Archaeology indicates that the reforms were instituted some four hundred years prior to the end of the Peloponnesian war, placing them to 804 or 821 BC. The 4th century BC Greek general Xenophon, on the other hand, claimed that he was also responsible for the creation of the Lacedaemonian dual monarchy, placing him during the reign of

2610-638: The Heraclid kings Eurysthenes and Procles , dated to c.  1003 BC . Modern scholars generally date the Great Rhetra to before the First Messenian War , placing it prior to 736 BC. Little consensus exists for any more specificity. Nor should Lycurgus necessarily be credited with, and therefore dated to, the rhetra: it may have been a charter created some time in the seventh century to justify and ennoble with antiquity Sparta's institutions, especially after Sparta's emergence as

2700-566: The Lycurgan agoge as a form of universal education especially in the way it supported the stability of the Spartan state. Into the Roman period, Sparta received privileged treatment from the Romans as in part a means to preserve Greek traditions to display to tourists: while this touristic Sparta at times veered toward the extreme, it also cultivated its Lycurgan inheritance by means of architecture, theatre, and retention of distinctive political institutions. The Plutarchian comparison between

2790-632: The Phoenician origin " marzēaḥ ". The origin of the syssítia is attributed to Rhadamanthus , the legendary lawgiver of Knossos of Crete. This is explained by Cleinias of Crete in conversation with an Athenian and a Spartan, in Plato's dialogue the Laws . Lycurgus of Sparta certainly made use of the practice in Sparta. In Sparta, where the system was most evolved, they were also called pheiditia ( φειδίτια , from ἔδω edō , to eat). The term

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2880-569: The Spartan citizens. The economic reforms, which are supposed to have made Spartan citizens equal, never happened and were invented to legitimise redistributive policies in the Hellenistic period. Lycurgus' political reforms were supposedly promulgated in a Great Rhetra that he received from the Pythia . It, however, is not genuine and contains anachronistic contents. Regardless, Plutarch records it as having included provisions related to Sparta's religious and political practices: After dedicating

2970-418: The Spartans attributed every one of their institutions to him, except the institution of the dual monarchy. Because the Spartans attributed all manner of laws and customs to him, it is impossible to determine which laws (if any) are his in actuality. However, it is clear today, from comparisons with other archaic Greek states, that Spartan institutions such as men's dining halls, organisation of age cohorts, and

3060-436: The accounts of the Great Rhetra, Lycurgus is not credited with a radical reorganisation of Spartan life or with the institution of the ephorate . These early oral traditions – contra the written accounts – are "far from uniform". The earliest surviving written account on Lycurgus is in Herodotus, placing him as the guardian and regent of the early Argiad king Leobotes. Later accounts of Lycurgus' activities associate him with

3150-458: The alleged ban on precious metals to after Lycurgus and to different men. Ancient authors claimed of the Spartans a general aversion to commerce, which was also attributed to Lycurgus, who was supposed to have "forbade free men to touch anything to do with making money". This likely emerged from the fact that Spartan citizens, the spartiates or homoioi , were a leisurely class of land owners who looked down on manual labourers and craftsmen. Such

3240-412: The artist's death. X-rays taken of the work during the early 21st century have revealed that Degas changed the positioning of the youths, their faces, and even their number; this last change resulted in the strange image of the four women in the foreground having ten legs among them. Degas' revisitation of the faces of the young people is often mentioned in art criticism, as it is believed the artist changed

3330-437: The cities of Crete. In Lyctus , for instance, a colony from Sparta, the custom was different: the citizens of that town contributed to their respective tables a tenth of the produce of their estates, which may be supposed to have obtained in other cities, where the public domains were not sufficient to defray the charges of the syssitia. However, both at Lyctus and elsewhere, the poorer citizens were in all probability supported at

3420-420: The classical syssitia after sumptuary restrictions, compulsory contributions from poorer citizens who previously abstained, and intermixture of rich and poor shortly before 500 BC. The silence of the rhetra, a text meant to describe and legitimise the Spartan political system of the seventh century, with regard to Sparta's ephors suggests that the ephorate was a product of a later reform at Sparta and

3510-492: The creation of the Spartan constitution (in most traditions after the dual monarchy), the imposition of the Spartan mess halls called syssitia , the redistribution of land to each citizen by head, Spartan austerity and frugality, and Sparta's unique wedding and funerary customs. None of these reforms can be concretely attributed to Lycurgus. Most of the reforms likely date to the late sixth century BC (shortly before 500 BC), postdating his supposed life by centuries; some of

3600-722: The custom of reclining had been introduced in Sparta. The entertainment began with prayer to the gods and libations. Each of the adult citizens received an equal portion of fare, with the exception of the Archon , or "Master of the Tables", who was perhaps in ancient times one of the Kosmoi , the highest officials in Cretan poleis before the 3rd century BCE, and more recently a member of the Gerousia . The Archon received four portions: "one as

3690-574: The decline of Sparta through to Hellenistic times saw Lycurgus' praise extended to praise him for having creating an ideal Sparta, free from the moral and political decay of the real one. Admiration of the customs of Sparta, supposed to be established by Lycurgus, survived – with a break during the second century when Sparta was part of the Achaean League – continuously into the Sparta of the Roman Empire . Aristotle, for example, praised

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3780-475: The elders and kings could set aside decisions of the apella, called the " rider ", was a later addition. However, the grammatical construction of preserved rhetra is consistent with it being part of the original text, a view taken by Massimo Nafissi in Companion to archaic Greece , believing that the idea that the set-aside provision was later inserted was itself a fabrication of the fourth century BC. Lycurgus

3870-538: The expensive sport of chariot racing at pan-Hellenic games. While most male Spartan citizens affected a generally consistent and relatively inexpensive form of dress at home, Spartans on campaign showed extreme wealth from the expense of their crimson dyes to the polish of their armour. However, while Xenophon claims this austere dress also came from Lycurgus, art from Laconia implies adoption after 500 BC, consistent with Thucydides claim that Spartans wore complex and luxurious clothing until "not long ago". Lycurgus

3960-407: The features of the youths from the classic handsome Greek ideal, to a more urban modernistic look. The French art historian André Lemoisne, was first to note on this fact, remarking that the subjects had a contemporary Parisian look, more akin to the "gamins of Montmartre". More recent critics agree with Lemoisne, believing Degas was attempting to "update" his painting. A second full-scale version of

4050-440: The gerousia. Xenophon instead has Lycurgus forging an alliance with the most powerful non-royal citizens and forcing the laws through. Plutarch's narrative presented in his own voice instead consolidates prior disparate stories into a general upsurge of support from the kings, the people, and the aristocracy. In Plutarch's narrative, Lycurgus' laws cause backlash among the wealthy, who attempt to have him stoned. After he flees to

4140-416: The girls and the man are topless and the boys are entirely nude. Behind the onlookers stands the city of Sparta, dominated by Mount Taygetus , from which the bodies of the society's unfit children were supposedly thrown into a ravine to die from trauma or exposure. The painting was begun in 1860 with Degas returning to the canvas to rework the piece over the following years, though it remained unfinished upon

4230-404: The king divides his 4,500 citizens into 15 phidites of 400 or 200 members, that is 7 phidites of 400, 7 of 200, and 300 hippeis (elite Spartan guards). The ancient Cretan name for the syssitia was also andreia , the singular of which ( ἀνδρεῖον ( andreion ) was used to denote the building or public hall in which they were given. The name ἑταιρίαι hetairiai was also used. As in Sparta,

4320-503: The kings were fined in drachma and talents as well as by Spartan state rewards and ransoms. Plutarch's attempted to reconcile the evidence by depicting the Spartans allowing gold and silver for public use but retaining the allegedly Lycurgan restrictions on private use. Such a depiction, however, is not consistent with actions by Spartan generals during the Peloponnesian War . Other ancient authors were more equivocal, dating

4410-417: The late seventh or early sixth century. It likely emerged from Spartan success in that period and a desire to explain it. His legend was also constantly reworked and expanded through the course of the classical Greek period by securing for Spartans in their times divine sanction and greater legitimacy for actions which they claimed to be a return to Lycurgus' laws. In the earlier legends of Lycurgus, namely in

4500-528: The later nineteenth century through to the Nazi regime . Such views, however, were not unanimous. The German classicist Karl Julius Beloch , for example, was one of the first to take a highly critical view of Sparta, suggesting that Lycurgus was a fiction and his Great Rhetra was a fabrication. In the aftermath of the First World War German nationalism embraced Sparta and Lycurgus, seeing it as

4590-465: The later-more-influential Eurypontid dynasty instead, specifically as regent of Charilaus ; the disputes indicate that the two royal houses by the historical period attempted to associate themselves by blood with the figure. Herodotus provides two accounts for how the laws which Lycurgus enacted came to him: in the first version, Lycurgus receives those laws from Apollo through the Pythia at Delphi; in

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4680-567: The main dish, the black soup, of which Athenaeus noted the ingredients: pork, salt, vinegar and blood. The kleros , the allotment given to each Spartan and cultivated by helots , was supposed to allow all citizens to pay their share. If that proved impossible, they were excluded from the syssitia. ( Aristotle , Politics , II, 9). The number of members in each syssition remains vague. According to Plutarch in Life of Lycurgus , there were approximately 15 men in each syssition, but in his Life of Agis ,

4770-474: The meals were for male citizens and youths only. Based on at least one source, however, ( Pindar , Pythian Odes , IX, 18), it is possible that in some of the Dorian states, there were also syssitia of young unmarried women. The citizens were divided into messes that originally appear to have been along kinship lines, but vacancies were later filled at the discretion of the members. Ζεὺς Ἑταιρεῖος ( Zeus Hetaireios )

4860-442: The mess halls created a citizen body of some 9,000 men. Each of these mess halls also played a role in military organisation: each likely had 15 men with three mess halls forming a "sworn band"; but after the perioikoi were merged into the Spartan army, each mess hall likely formed its own band. Such messes were likely preceded in the seventh century BC poet Alcman's time with andreia (private men's eating clubs). They became

4950-401: The most powerful state in Greece, Lycurgus was honoured with a hero cult , which may have developed slowly into the Roman imperial period into full godhood. His temple and sanctuary, according to Pausanias , included a grave for his son with the name Eukosmos (referring to good order) with the graves of the Spartan dual monarchy's founders' wives nearby. The idealisation of Sparta, called

5040-568: The most powerful state in Greece. One artefact, the Disc of Iphitos , also allegedly documents Lycurgus' involvement with the formation of the Olympic Games and would therefore place him c.  776 BC , per the philosopher Aristotle . The disc, however, is likely a forgery from the fourth century BC. The ancients had two solutions for this lack of chronological clarity: the historian Timaeus posited two Lycurguses: one who did

5130-445: The opening paragraph). Most attempts to date his life are based on when the Great Rhetra, which promulgated Lycurgus' reforms, occurred. The most accepted date in the ancient world was that based on the genealogy of Ephorus and the chronology of Eratosthenes, which dated the rhetra to 118 years after the reign of one of Sparta's founding kings, Procles , which corresponds to c.  885 BC . Alternatively, an excursus in

5220-482: The painting exists, held by the Art Institute of Chicago . This version is much less finished, but it shows a vastly different background, with a more detailed landscape and a large architectural structure, around which the characters in the background are resting. The work also shows how Degas changed the number of foreground figures with an additional boy on the right of the painting. Young Spartans Exercising

5310-403: The poorer citizens were, over time, removed from the citizen rolls, for inability to pay dues to the syssitia . Demands for redistribution, heard by the reformist Spartan monarchs Agis IV and Cleomenes III , led to the creation of a myth that Lycurgus redistributed the land of Laconia and Messenia equally among the homoioi with the helots as bound tenants. The consensus among scholars

5400-593: The public cost. The principal question is how one building would accommodate the adult citizens and youths of towns like Lyctus and Gortyna . Either the information is incorrect, and there was more than one andreion in larger towns, or the number of citizens in each town was small, a hypothesis supported by Xenophon (Hellenica, III, 3), who reported only 40 citizens in a crowd of 4,000 in Sparta. Crete had similar massive numbers of noncitizens. The syssitia patently served to bring kinship groups together. In having those who would fight together eat together in peacetime,

5490-519: The reformist Spartan monarchs Agis IV and Cleomenes III who sought to redistribute Sparta's land. The reforms attributed to Lycurgus, however, have been praised by ancients and moderns alike, seeing at various times different morals projected on a figure of which so little concrete can be known. A multitude of ancient sources mention Lycurgus; it is, however, troubling inasmuch as those accounts evolved according to then-contemporary political priorities and that they are profoundly inconsistent. The oldest

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5580-482: The reforms and a later one with the same name who was present at the first Olympics. Eratosthenes instead posited the disc reflected informal Olympics held before 776 BC. The tradition in Sparta of Lycurgus' existence dates to some time between the archaic age and the fifth century. Inasmuch as no Lycurgus is mentioned in Tyrtaeus, it is likely that the legend dates to shortly after Tyrtaeus' time, and therefore

5670-400: The reforms, such as for the redistribution of land, are fictitious. The extent of the Lycurgan myth emerges from Sparta's self-justification, seeking to endow its customs with timeless and divinely sanctioned antiquity. That antiquity was also malleable, reinvented at various times to justify the new as a return to Lycurgus' ideal society: his land reforms, for example, are attested only after

5760-405: The regency has little difficulty in placing him in a position to promulgate his laws. But the latter tradition where he leaves the city requires him to be recalled. In Aristotle's version, recounted by Plutarch, Lycurgus leads his followers into the city and occupies the agora to impose his laws; backed by Apolline divine approval, he forces the tyrannical Charilaus to accede to them and institutes

5850-445: The rule of law, the mixed constitution, equality, and universal education. The philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau , who derived most of his knowledge of Lycurgus from Plutarch's biography, viewed the figure positively as standing for an austere civil morality acting for the collective good . This view of Lycurgus and Sparta saw him associate Lycurgus' reforms with the " general will ". Positive views of Sparta pervaded some articles in

5940-500: The second, based on Sparta's own traditions, Lycurgus bases the reforms off of existing laws in Crete. Spartan and Cretan institutions did indeed have common characteristics, but, though some direct borrowing may have occurred, such similarities are in general more likely to be because of the common Dorian inheritance of Sparta and Crete rather than because some individual such as Lycurgus imported Cretan customs to Sparta. Some versions of

6030-451: The service of the state, and another to the common meals, so that men, women, and children are all supported out of a common stock. ( Aristotle Politics II. 10; Bekker 1272a ) Based on Aristotle and Athenaeus, it appears that citizens received their share directly to pay part to the public table and another part to feed the females of the family. That practice, however, does not appear to have prevailed exclusively at all times and in all

6120-463: The story is rejected by Plutarch, Lycurgus is also said to have instituted the crypteia , a select group of young men tasked with clandestinely killing helots in the night. Both the agoge and crypteia likely emerged some time during the seventh century alongside the institution of the ephorate. The education of Spartan women, mainly focusing on physical fitness, or, supposedly, physical fitness to produce healthy children for eugenic purposes,

6210-420: The story say that Lycurgus subsequently traveled as far as Egypt, Spain, and India. In the narrative of Lycurgus' reforms in Herodotus, Lycurgus is supposed to have created much of the Spartan constitution, including the gerousia and the ephorate (respectively, the Spartan council of elders and annually-elected overseeing magistrates). He also is supposed to have reorganised Spartan military life and instituted

6300-422: The suitor was rejected, so desirous were they that all the members of the company should be agreeable to each other. The basin was called caddichus, and the rejected candidate had a name thence derived. It was also possible for the young man to be presented by his erastes (lover), a teacher figure who was the elder in a typically pederastic relationship . Each person was supplied with a cup of mixed wine, which

6390-412: The supervision of the polemarch . Each member was required to contribute a monthly share to the common pot, the φιδίτης phidítes , of which the composition has been noted by Dicaearchus (through Athenaeus and Plutarch ibid. , 12): 77 litres of barley , 39 litres of wine, three kilograms of cheese, 1.5 kilograms of figs, and ten Aegina obols , which served to purchase meat. That served to prepare

6480-462: The temple of Athena Chalcioecus and has one of his eyes put out by an adolescent, his opponents back down and he forgives the adolescent. The extent to which this story of revolution and conflict with the wealthy is driven by – or a retrojection from – the experiences of the reformist Spartan kings Agis IV and Cleomenes III is unclear; the two later Spartan kings used the Lycurgan legend to justify their redistributive policies (and violent means) as

6570-596: The time of Theognis of Megara (sixth century BCE) and Corinth in the time of Periander (seventh century BCE). The banquets spoken of by Homer relate to the tradition. Some reference to similar meals can be found in Carthage and according to Aristotle ( Politics VII. 9), it prevailed still earlier amongst the Oenotrians of Calabria . The syssitia in the Carthginian constitution may have been called in

6660-448: The tools with which Spartan houses could be built, to encourage simplicity. Archaeological evidence of foreign wares postdates the eighth century, with a decline in imports met by local production by the sixth century. The alleged simplicity of Spartan dwellings evidently did not extend to their interiors; and Spartans were famous across Greece for the jewellery worn by Spartan women, their number of slaves and horses, and their dominance at

6750-589: The use of iron money were not entirely out of the norm and had previously existed in other Greek cities: what made them distinctive was for how long they had been preserved at Sparta. The character of many of the economic and social reforms attributed to Lycurgus was allegedly to ensure that citizens competed with each other only in merit rather than in wealth. However, many of the social reforms which are attributed to Lycurgus postdate him by centuries, occurring between 600–500 BC after various Spartan conquest of Messenia and Cynuria made landholdings available for

6840-544: The viewer to interpret the work to their own merit. This view is echoed by Christopher Riopelle, curator of 19th-century painting at the National Gallery, who in 2004, stated that the painting "starts as a traditional historical painting, closely based on classical accounts and meticulous research. It ends as something much more enigmatic." Lycurgus of Sparta Lycurgus ( / l aɪ ˈ k ɜːr ɡ ə s / ; ‹See Tfd› Greek : Λυκοῦργος Lykourgos )

6930-412: The work "has traditionally been interpreted as representing young women challenging young men to wrestle or race, is instead a presentation of Spartan courtship rites". This position was challenged in the same publication the following year, with Linda Nochlin arguing that the work could encompass a variety of meanings, and by referring to Degas' own reluctance to explain the work in any great detail, allows

7020-408: The youngest of the orphans waited on the men; in others, that was done by all the boys. When not thus engaged, they were seated near to the men on a lower bench and received only a half portion of meat: the eldest of the orphans appear to have received the same quantity as the men but of a plainer description of fare (Athenaeus IV, 143). The boys and the men had also a cup of mixed wine in common, but it

7110-412: Was filled again when required, although drunkenness was not tolerated. Following a main meal of black soup ( μέλας ζωμός melas zōmos ), an ἐπάϊκλον ( epaiklon , or after-meal) was served, which consisted of game, fruit, poultry and other delicacies. Alcman (Frag. 31) tells, "at the banquets and drinking entertainments of the men it was fit for the guests to sing the paean". The arrangements were under

7200-455: Was not Lycurgan – pace Herodotus and Plutarch – in origin. In fact, archaeological discoveries at Sparta – showing the decline of Spartan art expressed on vases as well as a sudden expansion of agricultural labour in the mid-sixth century BC – suggest that much of the communitarian reforms attributed to Lycurgus may date to that time. One of the illusions of the Spartan mirage

7290-460: Was not replenished when emptied. The meals were generally cheerful, and accompanied by music and singing. It was followed by conversation, which was first directed to the public affairs of the state and afterwards turned on valiant deeds in war and the exploits of illustrious men, whose praises might animate the younger hearers to an honourable emulation. While listening to that conversation, the youths seem to have been arranged in classes, each of which

7380-511: Was placed under the superintendence of an officer especially appointed for that purpose. The syssitia were thus made to serve important political and educational ends. Unlike the Spartan format ( see above ), in most Cretan cities, ...of all the fruits of the earth and cattle raised on the public lands, and of the tribute which is paid by the Perioeci , one portion is assigned to the Gods and to

7470-473: Was provided with two menial servants. Strangers were served before citizens and even before the Archon. On each of the tables was placed a cup of mixed wine from which the messmates of the same company drank. At the close of the meal, it was replenished, but all intemperance was strictly forbidden by a special law. Youths under eighteen accompanied their fathers to the syssitia, along with orphans. In some places,

7560-524: Was purchased by the National Gallery in 1924. Though at one time it was displayed in Room 41, as of May 2020, it was not on display in the museum. In 1879, Italian art critic Diego Martelli described the unfinished work as "one of the most classicizing paintings imaginable"; though after Martelli's remarks, Degas returned to the painting and removed the classicizing architecture. In a 1985 edition of The Art Bulletin , art critic Carol Salus hypothesises that

7650-472: Was seen as a more important political theorist than Plato and as one of the most famous, moral, and effective legislators of the Greek tradition. The main elements of Lycurgus' legacy are through the laws attributed to him. In the modern world this took on a number of aspects: the stability of the Lacedaemonian state from Lycurgus' balanced constitution; universal male citizen conscription and contribution (via

7740-410: Was similarly attributed to Lycurgus. In Spartan society, Lycurgus and his laws were received as the creator of the Spartan way of life. Xenophon's pro-Spartan Spartan Constitution "unreservedly regard[s Lycurgus] as the Spartan legislator par excellence , who arranged the Spartan way of life once and for all". For these achievements, which they viewed as having facilitated the emergence of Sparta as

7830-420: Was the illusion that Spartan citizens were economically equal: that no citizen owned more land than another. There is, however, no evidence of equal land ownership at Sparta, with exception of Cleomenes' five-year regime . Land inequality increased through Spartan history, mediated by conquests abroad which allowed poorer citizens to retain a reasonable standard of living. When conquests ended after 550 BC,

7920-536: Was the legendary lawgiver of Sparta , credited with the formation of its eunomia ( ' good order ' ), involving political, economic, and social reforms to produce a military-oriented Spartan society in accordance with the Delphic oracle . The Spartans in the historical period honoured him as god. As a historical figure, almost nothing is known for certain about him, including when he lived and what he did in life. The stories of him place him at multiple times. Nor

8010-592: Was the presiding deity. According to Dosiadas , cited in Athenaeus , each town in Crete had two public buildings; one for lodging strangers ( koimeterion ), as well as the andreion , where the syssitia took place. The upper part had two tables for foreign guests, tables for the citizen members and a third table to the right of the entrance for Zeus Xenios , likely used for offerings and libations . Cretan syssitia were distinguished by simplicity and temperance. They always sat at their tables, even in later times, when

8100-399: Was to make it impossible, or at least difficult, for Spartans to purchase luxury goods. Coinage came to Greece in the 550s BC; it is not possible that any law mentioning coins dates to the eighth century BC (or earlier), when Lycurgus is supposed to have lived. Nor is any ban on gold and silver mentioned in Herodotus. Usage of gold and silver at Sparta is implied by other reports that

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