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Sparta
(modern Sparti, Greece)
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- Sparta
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- Modern Greek Spartí , historically
Lacedaemon ancient capital of the Laconia
district of the southeastern Peloponnese, Greece, and
capital of the present-day nomós (department) of
Lakonía on the right bank of the Evrótas
Potamós (river). The sparsity of ruins from
antiquity around the modern city reflects the austerity
of the military oligarchy that ruled the Spartan
city-state from the 6th to the 2nd century BC.
- Reputedly founded in the 9th century BC with a rigid
oligarchic constitution, the state of Sparta for
centuries retained as lifetime corulers two kings who
arbitrated in time of war. In time of peace, power was
concentrated in a Senate of 30 members. Between the 8th
and 5th century BC, Sparta subdued Messenia, reducing the
inhabitants to serflike status. From the 5th century the
ruling class of Sparta devoted itself to war and
diplomacy, deliberately neglecting the arts, philosophy,
and literature, and forged the most powerful army
standing in Greece.
- Sparta's single-minded dedication to rule by a
militarized oligarchy precluded any hope of a political
unification of classical Greece, but it performed a great
service in 480 BC by its heroic stand at Thermopylae and
its subsequent leadership in the Greco-Persian wars. The
Battle of Salamis (480) revealed the magnitude of
Athenian naval power and set in motion the deadly
struggle between the two powers that ended in Athenian
defeat at the close of the Peloponnesian War in 404 and
the emergence of Sparta as the most powerful state in
Greece. In the Corinthian War (395&endash;387) Sparta had
two land victories over Athenian allied states and a
severe naval defeat at Cnidus by a combined Athenian and
Persian fleet. Sparta's involvement in Persian civil wars
in Asia Minor under Agesilaus II (ruled 399&endash;360)
and the subsequent Spartan occupation (382) of the Theban
citadel, Cadmea, overextended Spartan power and exposed
the state to defeat at Leuctra (371) by the Theban
Epaminondas, who went on to liberate Messenia. A
century-long decline followed.
- Sparta's continued agitation spurred Rome's war on
the Achaeans (146) and the Roman conquest of the
Peloponnese. In AD 396 the modest city was destroyed by
the Visigoths. The Byzantines repopulated the site and
gave it the ancient Homeric name Lacedaemon. After 1204
the Franks built a new fortress city, Mistra, on a spur
of the Taygetus range southwest of Sparta; after 1259
Mistra was capital of the Despotate of Morea (i.e., the
Peloponnese) and flourished for about two centuries. From
1460 until the War of Greek Independence
(1821&endash;29), except for a Venetian interlude, the
region was under Turkish rule.
- The present-day town was built in 1834 on the ancient
site; it is called Néa (New) Spartí locally
to distinguish it from the ruins that were excavated in
1906&endash;10 and 1924&endash;29. A small commercial and
industrial centre of the European plain, the city trades
in citrus fruits and olive oil. As in antiquity, it is
served by the small port of Githion, modern Greek
Yíthion (q.v.), 28 miles (45 km) southeast, to
which it is linked by a paved road. Pop. (1981)
metropolitan area, 14,388.
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- "Sparta."
Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia
Britannica Online. 10 Feb. 2009
<http://www.search.eb.com/eb/article-9069009>.
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