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Q: How old were soldiers trained in Athens how old were soldiers trained in Sparta?
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How old were the athens when they were trained?

7 or 8


Did Athens or Sparta have the Council of Elders?

Sparta was an aristocracy that had a Council of Elders. Athens was a democracy. It had a council too, of 500 men over 30 years old.


Which greek city-state trained boys for the army?

In the greek city-state of sparta, the training of soldiers started in the age of 7 years old but they didnt fight until they were 18 years old.


Differences between Athens and Sparta?

Athens treated the children differently, for example... Boys were taught reading, writing, mathematics, music, poetry, and sports. While in Sparta, they took them away from their parents at 7 yrs. old, to train for war.


Describe two differences between the cultures of Athens and Sparta?

Athens valued education, arts, and democracy while Sparta focused on military discipline and physical strength. Athens was a democracy where citizens had a say in government, while Sparta had a militaristic society governed by a small group of elite warriors.


Did Athens or Sparta have there Boys leave home at age seven to attend school and get training?

Sparta. At just seven years old, boys would be stripped away from their families and plunged into training. In this brutal training, boys were taught to be ruthless killers and soldiers of war. One of the most merciless drills was at the end of their training; they were to sneak away from their quarters to strangle and kill a slave. The trick was that they could not get caught in the act. No matter the cause for it, they were harshly punished for the action. The reason for this rule it that they have been taught not to get caught. They have been trained for being stealthy in spying and if they are caught, then they are considered not fit.


What is the difference between Sparta and Athens.?

The difference between Sparta and Athens is that in Sparta, the ruling government was a military government, while in Athens, the ruling government was a democracy. In Sparta, the people focus on military matters. That is because of the fear of an uprising by their helots. In Athens, a democracy ruled. People voted on many matters such as which one they thought was the most dangerous to their testate and even military and naval expeditions against rival statutes. The different arts such as sculpture and poetry also flourished more in Athens. Athenians believed that one should also focus themselves on matters other than military ones. Athens focused on trades, technologies, civilizations, studies,... while Sparta focused on the military. That's why Spartan warriors were the most fierce warriors in Ancient Greece. Athens also treated their children differently. For example: Boys were taught reading, writing, mathematics, music, poetry, and sports. While in Sparta, they took them away from their parents at 7 yrs. old, to train for war. Further, in Sparta, both - boys and girls went to school, but in Athens, boys went to school but the girls did not, but attended basically, house work.


Why was Sparta more warlike Athens was primarily focused on learning?

Sparta's very society was based on a war culture. Infants who were ill or born with birth defects were allowed to die. Only the strong survived. At nine years old, boys became wards of the state, taken from their parents, and trained as soldiers. They considered themselves in a perpetual state of war against the Helots, their slave population. Some believe that this is because the Spartans were interlopers who invaded the Greek territories and settled there. By contrast, Athens was a democracy which existed by maritime trade. That opened them up to exposure to and acceptance of other cultures and views.


Who helped Sparta defeat Athens in the Peloponnesian Wars?

the macedonians of course... No, not the Macedonians. Sparta had many cities aligned in a league to defeat Athens, and some had formerly been Athenian allies who turned their coats because Athens treated them too harshly. Also, Sparta later formed an alliance with an old enemy, Persia, which continued to meddle in Greek affairs after their defeat by Sparta and Athens many years earlier. Persia gave Sparta money for a fleet. nobody helped them Yes, somebody helped them. They could not have done it without help, especially from the Persians and the Syracusans. Read the history.


Who fought who in the penloponesian war?

The war was fought between Athens and Sparta, but both cities had many allies in other parts of Greece, some of whom were forced to fight. Toward the end of the war, Sparta allied with an old enemy, the Persian Empire, against Athens.


How were Athens ans Sparta different?

In term of politics, Athens was a experimental democracy and Spartan an "agonistic" society. See "Agon" a Greek concept having to do with excellence. In short, Sparta was the polar opposite of Athens. In Athens women had no role in sports or athletics. In Sparta, 7-year old girls (like their male counterparts) were removed by the state from the home and placed in barracks were they were trained as warriors. Citizenship, In Sparta, citizenship was achieved by state-tests. In Athens by birth and land ownership. In an agonistic society, everything is about competition and war is the ultimate competition, ergo, everything in Sparta was about military supremacy. Concepts of love, softness, or affection were considered weaknesses and taboo. Marriages were state-arranged; marriage was for procreation of strong soldiers. Married couples in Sparta met only a few times a year for the purpose of procreation. Period. If a man went to battle his wife warned him to win or die on the battlefield. If he looses, don't bother coming home. Men remained in barracks most of their adult lives. Training included frequent beating to "toughen" them up. Meals might consist of burnt grain and pigs blood so as to teach them endurance on the battlefield. This was very different from Athenian family life and politics.


How did the system of education differ between Athens and Sparta?

Sparta had a warrior society and the Athens had a a democratic government. Sparta boys began training a 7 years old for a lifetime. Athenian boys attended school if their families could afford it.