- women", an
epithet for people. The
residents of
Sparta were
often called Lacedaemonians. This
epithet utilized the
plural of the
adjective Lacedaemonius (Gr****:...
- Πολιτεία),
known in
English as the Polity, Constitution, or
Republic of the
Lacedaemonians, or the
Spartan Constitution, is a
treatise attributed to the ancient...
- (which was more
characteristically known to its
contemporaries as "the
Lacedaemonians and
their allies"). By the late 6th
century BC,
Sparta was recognized...
- In Gr**** mythology,
Hyacinthus (Ancient Gr****: Ὑάκινθος) was a
Lacedaemonian who is said to have
moved to Athens. In
compliance with an oracle, to have...
- Fidius). In
another account mentioned in Dionysius's work, a
group of
Lacedaemonians fled
Sparta since they
regarded the laws of
Lycurgus as too severe....
-
biography of the
Spartan king
Agesilaus and the
Constitution of the
Lacedaemonians.
Xenophon is
recognized as one of the
greatest writers of antiquity...
- Karl
Polanyi ed. G. Dalton,
Boston 1971, 78–115. "Where, as
among the
Lacedaemonians, the
state of
women is bad,
almost half of
human life is spoilt." "When...
-
largest land
battle within Greece during the
Peloponnesian War. The
Lacedaemonians, with
their neighbors the Tegeans,
faced the
combined armies of Argos...
-
indication of servitude:
Antiochus of
Syracuse writes: "those of the
Lacedaemonians who did not take part in the
expedition were
adjudged slaves and were...
- Plato. The Statesman. Xenophon. The
Polity of the
Athenians and the
Lacedaemonians. Plutarch. "The Life of Lycurgus". The
Parallel Lives of the
Noble Gr****s...