None, they were regarded as property which the owner could do as he pleased with.
Every resident, including women and foreigners, had equal rights in Ancient Athens.
In ancient Athens, women and slaves were treated as inferior to free men. Women had limited rights and were expected to stay at home and take care of the household. Slaves were considered property and had no rights or freedoms. They were often mistreated and had to work hard for their owners.
Slavery played a huge role in ancient Athens. Slaves did most jobs, from working in the fields to building and mining. Slaves even made up most of Athens' police force. Slaves were not generally mistreated though, and even had some rights by law.
There were 300,000 Athens..
Adult male citizens. Women, children, slaves had no rights, being subject to their family or owners.
Slaves in Athens and Sparta did not have a lot of rights. They where not even allowed to go to religious festivals and they had to ask their master's permission to even go to the bathroom!
Probanly not because the had slaves then
Tradesmen and public slaves.
Women weren't educated in ancient Athens. They were taught domestic, household duties by the mother and the slaves.
Unlike eg Athens whose population was one third slave, Sparta did not have slaves - it had serfs who were bound to the land but otherwise free, and delivered half their produce to the state.
It was different for them because they had rights unlike in Athens, where they were slaves.
In ancient Athens, full political rights were granted exclusively to male citizens who were born to Athenian parents. These citizens could participate in the assembly, hold public office, and engage in the political life of the city-state. Women, slaves, and foreign residents (metics) were excluded from these rights and could not participate in the democratic processes of Athens.