Yes, very different. Children in Sparta were modeledaround military service with little regular education. A baby would have been abandonded if defected. A boy started mandatory military training starting from year 7. They joined the army at 17 or 18. They stayed in the army until they were until they were 60. They were usually in school and were encouraged to learn in arts and to travel. The exact opposite of Sparta.
The Athenian women in ancient Athens were treated completely different from their men. They were mostly under educated and were mostly domesticated by being housewives.
They were treated differently in different city-states, such as Sparta (Which is where I am from) called them hoplites and didn't really care about their slaves, they were usually prisoners of war, they treated them harshly and were beaten on occasion when they did something bad or wrong, and they were at the bottom of the hierarchy. Athens treated slaves more respectfully but they were still at the bottom of the hierarchy.
they treated them okay not as good as a person now would but okay did you know the men were a property of the women in ancient Greece
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.
ancient athens
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.
The children in ancient Athens were taken to the many scholars and teachers like Socrates , Aristotle, and Plato to study for a few years in their early life, as they believed education was like a religion in Greece.
the goverment of ancient athens like a democracy
Ancient Sparta focused more on military achievements and ancient Athens thought more of academic knowledge. Athens were a democracy and Sparta was an oligarchy
Foreigners were not allowed to vote in ancient Athens.
Yes, ancient Athens was actually the birthplace of democracy.
They were treated as the property of the master of the house.