SpartaEssay Preview: SpartaReport this essayThe Fall Spartan Military PowerA garrison society along with built up tension will result in the inevitable fall of one of the most notorious nations of all time. Sparta was a place, a people like no other. The way in which they managed their daily affairs lead to restriction of rights. The Spartan Idealism and Spartan Law aided in the collapse of Sparta. ” Sparta stood for the complete antithesis to Athens, with here brilliant culture, freedom-loving but fickle democracy and cult of the individual. Sparta was a model of stability, order and discipline or of reaction, regimentation and repression. Ð The organization of your state is that of an army camp, not of people who live in a town Plato”#. Sparta
Growing up in Sparta was a much different experience than their neighboring States. A Spartan was brought up in a very regimented lifestyle taught that the greatest glory was death in battle#. The life of a Spartan from birth until death is an intriguing story filled with excitement, danger, and pride. Spartan citizens would participate in mock battles, deal with the political matter of the state, and training young Spartan boys into Soldiers#.
Every infant was examined shortly after birth by the elders do the tribesman who either passed it or, if the baby was weakly or deformed, ordered it to be thrown over a special cliff. At the age of eight the boy would be enrolled in a Ðherd under supervision of a senior Spartiate. When the boy reached the age of thirteen he would move on to another Ðherd#. The training was mainly centered around athletics and military. Sparta was not known for their arts but the young men would study literature learning how to read. The boys lived a very hard regimented lifestyle living in dormitories, only receiving one garment a year, and where not aloud to bathe. They where fed meager rations and where encouraged to steal yet punished if they where careless and got caught.# The boys would be put through relentless tests to prove themselves. One of the most famous games was the game of stealing the cheese from the altar. The boy would have to run through a gauntlet of flogging which would take victim to many young Spartans. After the boys have proven themselves they would move onto their arranged marriages typically around the age of 20.#
There was not only Spartan citizens living in Sparta at this time though. The rest of the population consisted of Helots and Perioeci. These people would be either farm the land or have the life of slavery. This was all the luck of birth. The Perioeci would pay rent to the Spartan Kings. The Perioeci where in between the Helots and Spartans, but the Perioeci would tend favour the Spartans. The Helots where at the bottom of the food chain to say the least. The word Helots itself means captives. And that they where, slaves and training aids to the Spartan army. The Spartan government had no trust for the Helots and formally declare war on the Helots every year so that no Spartan would be subjected to the law for killing a Helot out of hand. This would cause a lot of civil unrest due to the consequences of status differentiation. This constant conflict would be considered as the disease of Spartans military rule. Spartans where ever-ready to crush the Helot insurrection which would be inevitable. Spartans where taught to rule over their slaves ruthlessly#.
The Spartan government went as far as instituting the Krypteia which was when young Spartan warriors where sent out into the country and killed the most active helots by night time and would hide in the day. At times of crisis the Spartan government was extremely ruthless
” They proclaimed that those of them [Helots] who claimed to be the best inmilitary affairs should be picked, so that they could be freed, making a test andthinking that those who first claimed to be freed would be the most likely toattack them from pride. So they picked about 2,000 [Helots] and crowned themand they went round the temples as being freed, and not long afterwards theymade them disappear and no-one knew how each had died”#Spartans had to rule with extreme prejudice due to the nature of their civilization. There where roughly 5,000 active members of the Spartan military age, 5,000 Perioeci and 35,000 Helots. There are many stories of Helot rebellion against the Spartan army. One of the most noted was after the great earthquake of 465. But much to the Helots surprise the Spartan King anticipated the rebellion and employed the Spartan army to meet and destroy any chance of a rebellion. The helots then retreated back to their homes and the hills as they where being chased down#.
It is ironic that it was an earthquake which started a great rising against the Spartan power. Solely because the Spartan way of life was a ticking time bomb much like an earthquake, you just never know what will set it off or when it will go off. A garrison type lifestyle is bound for failure. People can not live under such circumstances for a long time. Simply by looking at the psychological factors of the Spartan city state you will see how it is psychologically doomed. The distribution of power coinciding with the status difference with in the states alone is more than enough tension to destroy a state from the inside out. The Spartan government was never capable of trusting the Helots which was quite visible from the annual declaration of war to the Krypteia campaigns. If a state has to worry about the integrity of the state itself then, that state is fruitless when it comes to expanding or protecting the state in which they have already. If you are fighting an internal power of control against the enslaved Helots then how can this state, even with the greatest warriors of the time, properly defend all that is Sparta?#
This leads into the next argument to the downfall of Sparta. The only way to become a Spartan citizen was that you had to be born into the society and mange to make it through the selection from birth all the way through the youth training. Needless to say as Sparta grew in size and number the ratio of Spartan soldier to the newly captured people of nearby lands (Helots)#. So there was a very real problem which Sparta faced dealing with the dropping number of Spartan soldiers who died in battles to claim new lands. This expansion was fueled on the fact that Spartans agriculture was failing and people where literally starving to death. It was not in Spartas best interest to expand. Yet they
have the ability to do so while taking great risks on the part of the city of Sparta. A lot of the issues at hand arise from the fact that not enough was gained to be taken for granted. Sparta is now on the verge of being divided into two regions. A population of 10,000 would mean a rise in poverty (as well as the loss of many more families). This meant that only Sparta citizens could have a chance to secure new land. But who can they get to and where could they?
That is why the battle of Valenwood was chosen as the first game on GameSpy. It is said that the Battle of Valenwood is called the First Battle of the Old Age of the Imperium. It was as though we were being transported from one world to another of a race of people (with no real connection with the original universe). We were told that the people of Valenwood were slaves, not citizens. The people of Valenwood were a great asset to the Imperium, even at the cost of being abandoned. If in fact they were slaves then a large part of them were simply dying by starvation and were not allowed to return home. But at the time of the First Battle some 5,000 of them came ashore, in a sort of uprising known as the Winterhold Rebellion. They did not return to Valenwood and for many of these were slaughtered, because they lived in the shadows at the risk of being slaughtered by the Imperial Army, though that was eventually made clear by the appearance of Sparta’s first female Imperial citizen in 1474 B.C.
In order to get around this the Imperium decided to set up a government-wide campaign of civil war. The result was that Valenwood was divided into several war states, with the former being invaded and eventually captured. In order to make good on this there was the establishment of the “Krebsocracy”, where a certain number of men was allowed to return from battle, along with a certain number of female Imperial citizens. In reality, these laws were not followed in accordance with the Imperial Plan. On the night of the first Battle of Valenwood it was the custom of every Imperial general to have a Krebaion. This meant that the Krebsocrats would always have their wives and children. But despite all this, at the end of the Battle of Valenwood the Imperial Imperial soldiers were given some choice to take their wives and children. It was only during the Great Crusade that the women were given birthrights. No one knew about these laws in advance, and the fact that they were not enforceable in actual battle is said to be the reason behind the deaths of many. The birthright was usually a