
any pronouns | anime | tv shows | anything queer tbh | fanfic | ya books | history and literature | anything worth obsessing over | the devil but in a fun way |
388 posts
And Sparta Was Not Militarily Excellent. Its Military Was Profoundly Mediocre, Depressingly Average.
And Sparta was not militarily excellent. Its military was profoundly mediocre, depressingly average. Even in battle, the one thing they were supposed to be good at, Sparta lost as much as it won. Judging Sparta as we should – by how well it achieved strategic objects – Sparta’s armies are a comprehensive failure. The Spartan was no super-soldier and Spartan training was not excellent. Indeed, far from making him a super-soldier, the agoge made the Spartans inflexible, arrogant and uncreative, and those flaws led directly to Sparta’s decline in power.
And I want to stress this one last time, because I know there are so many people who would pardon all of Sparta’s ills if it meant that it created superlative soldiers: it did not. Spartan soldiers were average. The horror of the Spartan system, the nastiness of the agoge, the oppression of the helots, the regimentation of daily life, it was all for nothing. Worse yet, it created a Spartan leadership class that seemed incapable of thinking its way around even basic problems. All of that supposedly cool stuff made Sparta weaker, not stronger.
This would be bad enough, but the case for Sparta is worse because it – as a point of pride – provided nothing else. No innovation in law or government came from Sparta (I hope I have shown, if nothing else, that the Spartan social system is unworthy of emulation). After 550, Sparta produced no trade goods or material culture of note. It produced no great art to raise up the human condition, no great literature to inspire. Despite possessing fairly decent farmland, it was economically underdeveloped, underpopulated and unimportant.
Athens produced great literature and innovative political thinking. Corinth was economically essential – a crucial port in the heart of Greece. Thebes gave us Pindar and was in the early fourth century a hotbed of military innovation. All three cities were adorned by magnificent architecture and supplied great art by great artists. But Sparta, Sparta gives us almost nothing.
Sparta was – if you will permit the comparison – an ancient North Korea. An over-militarized, paranoid state which was able only to protect its own systems of internal brutality and which added only oppression to the sum of the human experience. Little more than an extraordinarily effective prison, metastasized to the level of a state. There is nothing of redeeming value here.
Sparta is not something to be emulated. It is a cautionary tale.
https://acoup.blog/2019/09/27/collections-this-isnt-sparta-part-vii-spartan-ends/
-
damepacienca reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
sergeant-angels-trashcan liked this · 8 months ago
-
she-who-is-a-fangirl liked this · 8 months ago
-
vaguepositivity reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
letskeepthislo-ki liked this · 8 months ago
-
fralexion reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
superlynadventure liked this · 8 months ago
-
always-a-choice liked this · 8 months ago
-
captain-acab reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
lunat1cpixie liked this · 8 months ago
-
isolde-with-irises liked this · 8 months ago
-
anonymous-scapegoat liked this · 8 months ago
-
logo-comics reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
bidrums reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
vodkasquip liked this · 8 months ago
-
slidewhistlebj reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
slidewhistlebj liked this · 8 months ago
-
maidenvault reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
smoresareforwhores reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
louisianna liked this · 8 months ago
-
chamerionwrites liked this · 8 months ago
-
salmaciansalix reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
mehanios reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
annietheseawitch liked this · 8 months ago
-
morningfern87 liked this · 8 months ago
-
wantongoodsoup reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
wantongoodsoup reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
vivacia-18 liked this · 8 months ago
-
brendaonao3 liked this · 8 months ago
-
thotifypremium liked this · 8 months ago
-
mildlysuceeding liked this · 8 months ago
-
adragonsnappersthings reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
innerwitchlove reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
innerwitchlove liked this · 8 months ago
-
softly-falling-stars liked this · 8 months ago
-
glorious-spoon liked this · 8 months ago
-
piratekenway reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
uncomfortablyanonymous reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
ileah-the-awesome liked this · 8 months ago
-
phynaofithilien reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
ileah-the-awesome reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
in-the-drowning-deep reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
itsthekiks reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
quite-possibly-haunted liked this · 8 months ago
-
alonza-alzimora liked this · 8 months ago
-
gallaghergirl97 liked this · 8 months ago
-
aeternumregina reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
aeternumregina liked this · 8 months ago
More Posts from Devilsbiggestmistakeblr

Cartoon character lookin ass
Imagine living in the Succverse and it’s announced that the weirdo from the Congressional hearing who is obviously having an affair with his assistant is taking over one of the most influential megacorporations in the world. Do you think the general public has forgotten “You can’t make a Tomelette without breaking some Greggs”?





literally addicted to pics like this.

when greg “betrays” tom it’s sad at first, but then it’s funny because tom is in completely disbelief. he is in shock. he’s like “babe this isn’t you!!!!!” and it’s exactly who he is! all greg has been doing since he entered the picture is getting intel on people to advance his position.
GREG DOING COKE OFF TOM'S HAND oh i dreamed of days like these
