The Agoge, where they would train to be soldiers.
Seven
They were trained to be soldiers from age 7.
In ancient Sparta, boys at the age of 7 were taken from their mothers and went to live in barracks to begin military training. At age 20, they were declared fully-trained soldiers and put on active duty. At age 30, Spartan soldiers no longer had to live in the barracks.At age 7, Spartan boys were taken from their mother and began military training. They lived in barracks with other boys.
They started training at the age of between 5 and 7.
They started training at the age of between 5 and 7.
At the age of 7 they were sent up into the mountains to survive until they were 15.
At the age of 7 they were sent up into the mountains to survive until they were 15.
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.
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, 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 were sent off to a boarding school called the agoge at the age of 7.
Spartan girls and boys were at the ages of six and seven years old when first starting training.