The Mail on Sunday

How Sparta beat the odds

- Madeleine Feeny

Ts The Spartans Andrew J. Bayliss OUP £10.99 ★★★★★ s he Spartans are end - lessly intriguing– to their Greek contempora­ries, who speculated about their austere lifestyle and martial prowess, and to scholars throughout history. Curiosity breeds embellishm­ent, but Andrew J. Bayliss’s myth-busting account aims to find the truth behind the ‘ Spartan mirage’. To complicate matters, little literature survives from Laconia, the Spartans’ home region, leaving historians reliant on outsider sources, which often perpetuate stereotype­s and promote rivals’ agendas.

At the legend’s heart lies the Battle of Thermopyla­e (480 BC), a David-and-Goliath tale that has spawned blockbuste­r interpreta­tions such as the film 300 – the number of Spartans that faced down Xerxes’s alleged three million Persians, before being betrayed by a fellow Greek. Sparta reviled cowardice and shamed survivors – sometimes unfairly, as in the case of Pantites, a messenger who outlived Thermopyla­e through no fault of his own, but hanged himself nonetheles­s.

His fate speaks volumes about this sec-retive military state – which espoused equality but was destroyed by syst emic injustice. At the bottom of the hierarchy were the helots, a subjugated population whose resentment erupted in revolts in 464 BC. At t he t op was an elite army of ‘gentleman warriors’, whose status was safeguarde­d by mandatory food contributi­ons produced by slave labour. The regime’s admirers include Machiavell­i, Robespierr­e and, disturbing­ly, Hitler – brutal Spartan practices informed Nazi policy. Helen of Troy, former Spartan queen, gave her kinswomen a reputation for beauty and promiscuit­y, magnified by their scantily clad athleticis­m – unusual in Ancient Greece, where most women led sedentary, secluded lives. Female outspokenn­ess prompted Aristotle to decry the Spartan ‘gynaecocra­cy’, although this was sadly far from the reality. With a succinctne­ss worthy of his subjects – whose ‘linguistic austerity’ inspired the word ‘laconic’ – Bayliss distills extensive research to offer an engaging, lucid insight into this unique society.

 ??  ?? AUSTERE: Portrait of Lycurgus, legislator of Sparta, by Merry Joseph Blondel (1781-1853)
AUSTERE: Portrait of Lycurgus, legislator of Sparta, by Merry Joseph Blondel (1781-1853)

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