No, there was no school for spartan boys. From the age of six; legitamate, pure spartan boys started their rigorous training for the army.
Spartan boys were trained to be warriors from an early age. This culminated in a test where they were tasked to kill a slave by hand to prove their manhood. At this point they were accepted into the Spartan army.
The Athenian boys are more free than the Spartan boys. The Athenians are not mandated to join the army nor the navy. They can go to school to pursue education in arts and sciences. The Spartans are only focused on the war and that they are to be trained in military service only.
Roman boys left school at the age of 12 or 13, but if they were chosen to go to a special school, left that at the age of 14.Hope this helps.
yes- they went to a type of "agoge" like the spartan boys but they did not focus on military. they did wrestling and gymnastics and various calisthenics
athenian boys went to school ;spartan boys served in the military
because they needed to have known military things to be a soldier its pretty obvious
Both boys and girls were raised by women until the age of seven At 7 boys were taken from their mothers and grouped together in "packs" and were sent to what is almost equivalent to present-day military boot camp. At age 20, they became a soldier in the Spartan Army.
Spartan boys were sent off to a boarding school called the agoge at the age of 7.
Spartan boys were taught to fight, kick, spit, bite, scratch and get into fights with other boys. Athenian boys were learnt to be polite and to be civilised.
Spartan boys began their military training at the age of seven. They entered the agoge, a rigorous education and training program designed to develop discipline, physical fitness, and combat skills. This training continued until they were around 20 years old, after which they could join the ranks of the Spartan army as full soldiers.
Yes, Spartan boys were sent to military school called the Agoge at the age of 7 to undergo physical and military training, while also receiving education in warfare, survival skills, discipline, and Spartan values.
spartan boys leaned how to read and write but a majority of what they learned was training to be a solider.