The Spartans, Andrew J. Bayliss
The Spartans, Andrew J. Bayliss
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The Spartans

Author: Andrew J. Bayliss

Narrator: Shaun Grindell

Unabridged: 4 hr 32 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 07/31/2020


Synopsis

The image of Sparta, and the Spartans, is one dyed indelibly into the public consciousness: musclebound soldiers with long hair and red cloaks, bearing shiny bronze shields emblazoned with the Greek letter lambda. "This is Sparta!", bellows Leonidas on the silver screen, as he decides to lead his 300 warriors to their deaths at Thermopylae. But what was Sparta?

The myths surrounding Sparta are as old as the city itself. Even in antiquity, Sparta was a unique society, considered an enigma. The Spartans' often bizarre rules and practices have the capacity to horrify as much they do to fascinate us today. But the truth behind these stories of the exotic other can be hard to discover, lost amongst the legend of Sparta which was even perpetuated by later Spartans, who ran a thriving tourist industry that exaggerated the famed brutality of their ancestors.

As Andrew Bayliss explores in this book, there was also much to admire in ancient Sparta, such as the Spartans' state-run education system which catered even to girls, or the fact that Sparta was almost unparalleled in the pre-modern world in allowing women a clear voice, with no fewer than forty sayings by Spartan women preserved in our sources. This book reveals the best and the worst of the Spartans, separating myth from reality.

About Andrew J. Bayliss

Andrew J. Bayliss is a senior lecturer in Greek history at the University of Birmingham. He has published extensively on Sparta and Ancient Greece, including After Demosthenes: The Politics of Early Hellenistic Athens and Oath and State in Ancient Greece, which was cowritten with Alan H. Sommerstein. He has completed commentaries on the fragments of the lost Spartan authors Sosobius, Molpis, Nicocles, Hippasus, Phaestus, and Polycrates for Brill's New Jacoby Online, and is currently working on a database of ancient references to Spartan emotions, actions, and attitudes.


Reviews

Goodreads review by David on May 23, 2020

Sparta has always been this mystical warrior city, and it turns out to be for good reason. The Spartans left no legacy: not paintings, not writings, not monuments or cultural achievements. No one recorded its glories in books, scrolls or stories. This is the first clue as to how odd Sparta really wa......more

Goodreads review by Tomas on February 13, 2022

A brief and extensive overview of the Spartan society that helps to debunk some rather vivid myths and misconceptions about this city-state. The final chapter briefly discussing the reception of Sparta through modern centuries in Western culture is particularly intriguing. However, there is one thin......more

Goodreads review by Grant on January 31, 2021

Great intro to Spartan society. An ideal starting place as everything is just laid out, end to end, with no highbrow academic funny business. That said, it does offer enough critical analysis to give the reader an understanding of how modern scholars have come to their conclusions of the Spartans.......more

Goodreads review by Anita on February 23, 2024

I listened to this as an audiobook and I thoroughly enjoyed it. I didn't feel like the author was swaying from one opinion more than the other it was really about delivering the facts and the information and he made sure to provide a variety of accounts that really gave a full picture of what might......more

Goodreads review by Andrew on January 28, 2024

This is a good one. It’s straight to the point and clarifies popular misconceptions about the Spartiates and does a great job of describing their culture/civilization. Happy Reading, everybody!......more