The Spartan Regime_ Its Character, Origins, and Grand Strategy - Paul Anthony Rahe
Polıteía 45 port foodstuffs and to patrol and efficiently police their vast domain. With military necessity in mind, the dyarchs ...
46 Polıteía and not in time. One Athenian wag summed up the situation nicely: in public, he observed, the Lacedaemonians were cl ...
Polıteía 47 measure carried by Epitadeus, in effect, legalized the giving of dowries, and it also made possible a disguised sale ...
48 Polıteía caution is required regarding this matter, for things would have been much worse had there not been two circumstance ...
Polıteía 49 say that the ephors administered the government at Sparta with the advice and consent of the gerousía and the assemb ...
50 Polıteía they took office, they apparently subjected all of the retiring magistrates to the eúthuna. Thereafter, they had the ...
Polıteía 51 only three—Leonidas, his son Pleistarchus, and Archidamus—are not known ever to have been tried for a capital crime, ...
52 Polıteía on policy. But of this there is not a hint in our sources for the archaic and classical periods.^51 Thus, as board a ...
Polıteía 53 two kings for aid and comfort in their struggles against each other, the same is likely to have been true for the Sp ...
54 Polıteía fectively divorced from the exercise of power, the prestige of its members would have been sufficient to guarantee t ...
Polıteía 55 actively sought the office and openly canvassed—and scholars rightly suspect that the factions that tended to grow u ...
56 Polıteía events, learned much from experience, and then finally entered their twilight years. The result is a psychological p ...
Polıteía 57 ions dear.” In their early years, “they take delight in living together and do not yet judge anything with an eye to ...
58 Polıteía cause they are selfish in this fashion, “the old live for advantage and not for the noble,” and they prefer what is ...
Polıteía 59 more, in making peace and in preparing for war, the rulers of a community must neither love nor hate with any real v ...
60 Polıteía Greeks and the old is perhaps overdrawn; it may introduce more clarity into the matter than actually exists. But his ...
Polıteía 61 defined pool and endowed with broad probouleutic and judicial powers sug- gests oligarchy or even aristocracy. It is ...
62 Polıteía One would be hard put to charge John Stuart Mill with being a partisan of Sparta. Lacedaemon was, in his view, “memo ...
Polıteía 63 pears to have argued that the honors that Lycurgus received at Sparta, where he was revered, were nonetheless inferi ...
64 Chapter 3 Conquest The immense literature about Roman law has been produced by excogitation from a relatively small amount of ...
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