Social status of women in Ancient Sparta

Keywords: Ancient Greece, Sparta, Lycurgus, state, woman, education, marriage, family.

Abstract

The factors that determined the peculiarities of the social status of women in Ancient Sparta have been identified and analysed. It has been demonstrated that the establishment of community control over private life, namely: strict regulation of marriage and family relations, the compulsory nature of specific general education, which started for girls at the age of eight and lasted until marriage, determined that the national interests of women became a priority and dominated family values. It has been found that in Sparta, as in other polities of ancient Greece, childbearing was considered the most important function of women, as the offspring were to continue family traditions and take care of their elderly parents, conduct religious rites, etc. Only male children were seen as future citizens and defenders of the polis. In Lacedaemon, motherhood acquired a more accentuated meaning and was understood as service to the state. It became the basis of marriage and family relations, where polyandry was perceived as the norm. The Spartan woman was socially active. She was a direct participant in religious festivals and rituals, sports competitions. She publicly ridiculed the bachelors and cowards. If her own son turned out to be a coward, she could kill him herself. A mother did not bear any legal responsibility for the murder of a cowardly son. The economic rights of Spartans, which other women in ancient Greece did not have, have been investigated. Due to her husband’s military service, a Lacedaemonian woman managed not only his oikos, but also his cleris. Polyandry allowed a woman to unite two or more “houses” under her control and thus increase her influence in society. It has been noted that a strong economic foundation allowed wealthy women to have more freedom in society and even influence those in power in making responsible political decisions. With the loss of Messenia, women lose their economic freedom. The social status of women also changes, as they become more subordinate to men. It has been argued that in Sparta, the state minimised the private life of spouses. Under such conditions, a woman was socially active, knew the inner life of the polis well, and understood the foreign policy priorities of the state. She acted as a motivator and guide of Spartan ideology for the men of her family. And in this way, the Lacedaemonian woman was significantly different from other women in ancient Greece.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

I. A. Lohvynenko, Kharkiv National University of Internal Affairs

Candidate of Historical Sciences, Associate Professor.
Department of Theory and History of State and Law.

Ye. S. Lohvynenko, Kharkiv National University of Internal Affairs

Candidate of Law, Associate Professor.
Department of Constitutional and International Law.

References

Afinei (2010). A feast of wise men (N. T. Golinkevich, Trans.). Nauka.

Aristotle (1983). Works (vol. 4) (A. I. Dovatur, Ed.). Thought.

Bandurka, O. M., Holovko, O. M., Lohvynenko, I. A. et al. (2021). History of state and law of foreign countries (O. M. Bandurka, Ed.). Kharkiv National University of Internal Affairs.

Bandurka, O. M., Shvets, D. V., Burdin, M. Yu. et al. (2020). History of state and law of foreign countries (O. M. Bandurka, Ed.). Maidan.

Cartledge, P. (2002). Sparta and Lakonia. A regional history 1300–362 BC. London; New York.

Euripides (1969). Tragedies (Vol. 1) (I. Annenskii, Transl.). Fiction.

Figueira, T. (2018). Helotage and the spartan economy. In A. Powell (Ed.), A companion to Sparta (Vol. 2) (pp. 565–595). Wiley Blackwell.

Fleck, R., & Hanssen, A. (2009). “Rulers ruled by women”: an economic analysis of the rise and fall of women’s rights in ancient Sparta. Economics of Governance. Springer, 10(3), 221–245.

Gorbov, D. A., Nilender, V. O., & Preobrazhenskii, P. F. (Eds). (1935). Ancient Literature. Lyrics of ancient Hellas. ACADEMIA.

Gurevich, Ya. G. (1894). Greek and Roman History (systematic course). I. N. Skorokhodov Printing Office.

Herodotus (1993). Stories in nine books. Scientific thought.

Hodkinson, S. (2002). Female Property Ownership and Status in Classical and Hellenistic Sparta. The Center for Hellenic Studies.

Hodkinson, S. (2004). Female property ownership and empowerment in classical and hellenistic Sparta. In T. J. Figueira (Ed.), Spartan Society, Swansea (The Classical Press of Wales).

Hodkinson, S. (2018). Sparta: An Exceptional Domination of State over Society? In A. Powell (Ed.), A Companion to Sparta (Vol. 2). Wiley.

Joshua, M. (2021, June 14). Spartan Women. World History Encyclopedia. https://www.worldhistory.org/article/123/spartan-women/.

Kallistrov, D. P. (Ed.). (1964). Textbook of Ancient Greek History. Thought.

Kolisnichenko, А. І. (2013). History of the state and political and legal doctrines of Ancient Greece and Rome. N. Terletsky.

Lohvynenko, I. A., & Lohvynenko, Ye. S. (2021). The status of a woman in the ancient world: features of marital and family relations in Ancient Athens. Law and Safety, 83(4), 28–37. https://doi.org/10.32631/pb.2021.4.03.

Lohvynenko, Ye. S. (2017). Punishment of servicemen in ancient states. Law and Safety, 1(64), 31–35.

Lohvynenko, Ye. S., & Lohvynenko, I. A. (2019). Punishment in the Law of the Ancient World. FOP Panov A. M.

Lur’e, S. Ya. (1939). On the fascist idealisation of the police regime of ancient Sparta. Bulletin of Ancient History, 1(6), 98–106.

Myszkowska-Kaszuba, M. (2014). The only women that are mothers of men: Plutarch’s creation of the Spartan mother. Graeco-Latina Brunensia, 19(1), 77–92.

O’Pry, K. (2015). Social and Political Roles of Women in Athens and Sparta. The Saber and Scroll Journal, 1(2), 7–14.

Plato (2000). The state (D. Koval, Transl.). Foundations.

Plutarch (1990). Table talks. Science.

Plutarch (1994a). Comparative hagiographies (vol. 1). Science.

Plutarch (1994b). Comparative hagiographies (vol. 2). Science.

Polybius (1895). General History in Forty Books. Vol. II (Books VI–XXV) (O. G. Mishchenko, Transl.). Ye. G. Potapova Printing Office.

Pomeroy, S. (2002). Spartan Women. Oxford University Press.

Powell, А. (2015). Spartan education. In W. M. Bloomer (Ed.), A Companion to Ancient Education (pp. 90–111). Wiley Blackwell. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119023913.ch5.

Shama, О. І. (2015). History of Ancient Greece. Anthology. V. Hnatiuk ЕNPU.

Tetlow, E. M. (2005). Women, crime, and punishment in ancient law and society (vol. 2). Continuum.

Thucydides (1981). History (Ya. M. Borovskii, Ed.). Science.

Tsoukalidis, E. (2023). Women in Classical Sparta. https://www.academia.edu/26999526/.

Vinnichuk, L. (1988). People, manners and customs of ancient Greece and Rome (V. K. Ronin, Trans.). Higher school.

Xenophon (1998). The State System of the Athenians and Lacedaemonians (H. G. Dakyns, Transl.).

Zaikov, A. V. (1988). Periekians in the structure of the Spartan polis. Antiquity and the Middle Ages, 24, 19–29.

Zolotnikova, O. (2009). “Πολυάνωρ γυνή” (“Wife of many husbands”): ancient Greek polyandry as reflected in the mythic/epic tradition. Proceedings of the Danish Institute at Athens, 6, 57–72.

Published
2023-12-25
How to Cite
Lohvynenko, I. A. and Lohvynenko, Y. S. (2023) “Social status of women in Ancient Sparta”, Law and Safety, 91(4), pp. 106-118. doi: 10.32631/pb.2023.4.09.