At the head of Spartan society stood two kings from separate royal families, the Agiad and the Eurypontid, who reigned simultaneously. This was a unique arrangement in Greece and its purpose is unclear, although the existence of an alternative may have constrained an autocratically minded monarch from stepping out of line. Over time the kings saw their powers diminish. As a rule they could not initiate policy, although a man with a talent for politics could win over the
In military affairs, however, the kings remained supreme. One or other of them led the Spartan army and wielded absolute power on the battlefield. They were accompanied by a bodyguard of one hundred horsemen and could summarily execute any soldier for cowardice or treason. However, they were liable to prosecution for mishandling campaigns and a number of kings were convicted of bribery.
A king had another equally weighty and demanding duty. As religious leaders, he and his colleague were responsible for relations with the gods. They often consulted the oracle at Delphi and conducted frequent ceremonies on behalf of the state. Before setting out on a military campaign a king sacrificed to the gods to make sure that the enterprise had their approval. He did so again when crossing Sparta’s frontier, and sacrificed daily while on campaign and before a battle.
These matters were taken very seriously. A commander would not advance against an enemy if the omens were unfavorable—for example, unusual signs on an animal’s liver. The king might have to sacrifice again and again before getting the right result; in the meantime his men were forced to stand idly by. An earthquake or an eclipse was enough to send a Spartan army marching home.
In peacetime kings had comparatively little to do—except for enjoying their wealth. They owned large estates and were the only Spartans who were permitted to be rich; they were the first to be served at public banquets and were given double portions. They were entitled to decide whom heiresses should marry—a profitable occupation, we may surmise—and adoption ceremonies had to take place in their presence.
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The takeover of Messenia made Sparta the most powerful of the Greek city-states and its opponents thought twice before meeting their army in the field. But it was not naturally predatory or expansionist. Its primary concern was to control the Peloponnese and, above all, to ensure that the
Sparta would have liked nothing better than to be left alone, but its interests were to be challenged in future years by its polar opposite and rival, the changeable and creative city of Athens.
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Even today Delphi is an astounding place. The town is a series of headlong terraces perched dangerously on the limestone slopes of Mount Parnassus in central Greece. In classical times, it was almost inaccessible. Pausanias, the author of a guidebook to ancient Greece, who wrote in the second century A.D., walked along the craggy path that was the only way into the town. He found it hard going. He observed: “The highroad to Delphi gets more precipitous and becomes difficult even for an active man.”
It was here that the classical world’s leading oracle was located. Oracles were shrines where mortals could consult the immortals who warned, guided, and rewarded their worshippers. There were at least eight on the Greek mainland and many more around the Eastern Mediterranean. They were popular with foreigners, or “barbarians,” as well as true Hellenes.
Once the visitor was inside the town he found himself on the Holy Way, a street that wound its course uphill towards the great temple of Apollo. He passed numerous Treasuries: these were stone buildings, looking like tiny temples, with columns and pediments, where grateful states stored votive gifts to the god, often one tenth of the spoils of a military victory—gold or silver artifacts, tripods, and bullion. They were decorated with brightly painted sculpture and with metal ornaments, as was typical of Greek architecture. Everywhere stood statues of prizewinning athletes in their hundreds. Paintings celebrated antique myths and great historical events.