The Spartan Regime_ Its Character, Origins, and Grand Strategy - Paul Anthony Rahe

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18 Paıdeía


vant by deliberately humiliating the helots—making them appear in public in


a costume suggesting their kinship with animals, whipping them at regular


intervals for no apparent reason, getting them disgustingly drunk, and even


requiring that they sing degrading songs. The presence of a servile class, the


derisive treatment to which its members were forced to submit, and the man-


ner in which they actually comported themselves—these contributed much


to the education of the Spartan young. As Tyrtaeus seems to have recognized


at the start, the helots were a permanent reminder to the Spartans of their


own exalted status and a warning of the fate that might be theirs if they failed


to justify their claim to superiority and dominion by victory on the field of


battle.^39


Young Spartans could hardly fail to appreciate the point. While undergo-


ing the agōgē ́, they occupied a liminal status intermediate between that of the


helots and that of the hómoıoı, and they sampled both worlds. Much was done


to remind them of the distance separating them from the Spartiates and to


suggest at least the possibility of their kinship with those already set perma-


nently apart as their fathers’ inferiors. The hair of these young Spartans was


short-cropped, not long. They slept under the stars rather than in the men’s


house or with the women at home. Like country bumpkins, they were filthy


and rarely bathed, and they wore no tunic, just a cloak, which was replaced but


once a year. Like calves and colts, by which names they were known, they were


gathered in herds [agélaı] called Boúaı at Lacedaemon under the direction of


herdsmen [Bouagoí]. But like foxes living on the margins of a village or town,


with whom they were also deemed comparable, they stole food from the men’s


mess, as we have seen. If these boys learned the martial dances for which


Lacedaemon was famous, this was apparently not all. For, adorned with masks,


they are thought to have performed a great variety of less dignified dances—


some terrifying, some comic, some obscene, some violent. And if we can trust


the scattered testimonia and the evidence provided by the surviving ex-voto


terracotta masks, they mimed not just men but animals, satyrs, and grotesque


members of the female sex. These Spartan youths were sometimes armed, but


only with sickles and weapons of the sort issued to helots on campaign: for the


hoplite panoply was reserved for citizen-men. Like the helots of Tyrtaeus,


these neophytes were distressed with toil; and like that subject race, they had


ample experience of the whip. They suffered flagellation if judged soft or fat.


They were flogged if caught stealing food. In one famous ritual, which was


solemnly reenacted as an ordeal each year, two groups of boys waged battle

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