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      • In fact, in the seventh and sixth centuries B.C., and especially in the first half of the sixth century B.C., Sparta and its region, Lakonia, had its own workshops in several genres of artistic craft, such as vase painting, metalwork, ivory and bone carving, and even stone sculpture, in which artists created works in an original, often well-recognizable style with a distinct iconographic repertoire.
      www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/spar/hd_spar.htm
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  2. Spartans were devoted to all kinds of pleasurable pursuits, particularly the arts: It is widely believed that there were more poets in Sparta during the seventh and sixth centuries B.C. than in...

    • Ted Scheinman
  3. In the seventh and sixth centuries B.C., and especially in the first half of the sixth century B.C., Sparta and its region, Laconia, had its own workshops in several genres of artistic craft, such as vase painting, metalwork, ivory and bone carving, and even stone sculpture.

  4. The were three classes in Sparta: 1) Citizens-soldiers, the only people with political rights; 2) traders and merchants (Perioeci), who lived in surrounding villages and had no political rights; and 3) slaves (helots), who mostly worked the land and were treated brutally by their masters.

  5. Spartan sculptors were active in pan-European sites such as Delphi and Olympia. Spartan bronze works were coveted as gifts and imports. Spartan poets were admired throughout the ancient world – and it was one of these who wrote the first recorded heterosexual love poems known today.

  6. Spartan sculptors were active in pan-European sites such as Delphi and Olympia. Spartan bronze works were coveted as gifts and imports. Spartan poets were admired throughout the ancient world – and it was one of these who wrote the first recorded heterosexual love poems known today.

  7. Oct 15, 2022 · How did the Greeks defeat the Persians and what were the special qualities of Sparta, Athens and other Greek states that led to this incredible victory over the superpower, Persia? Too big a question to be answered briefly!

  8. August 22, 2019. In July 2019, Professor Milette Gaifman delivered the public lecture The Art and Myth of Ancient Sparta at Sparta’s Museum of the Olive and Greek Olive Oil. The well-received talk was hosted by Embracing Our Monuments in Sparta (EMIS), an initiative led by Yale Classics alum Daphne Martin and co-sponsored by the Classics ...

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