Monday, May 18, 2020
Names and Dates of Spartan Kings
The ancient Greek city of Sparta was ruled by two kings, one from each of the two founding families, Agaidai and Eurypontidae. Spartan kings inherited theirà roles, a job filled by the leader of each family. Although not much is known about the kings ââ¬â note how few of the kings listed below even have regnal dates ââ¬â ancient historians have pieced together general information about how the government worked. Spartan Monarchical Structure Sparta was a constitutional monarchy, made up of the kings, advised by and (supposedly) controlled by a college of ephors; a council of elders called the Gerousia; and an assembly, known as the Apella or Ecclesia. There were five ephors who were elected annually and swore fealty to Sparta rather than the kings. They were there toà call up the army and receive foreign envoys. The Gerousia was a council made up of men who were over the age of 60; they made decisions in criminal cases. The Ecclesia was made up of every Spartan male full citizen who had attained his 30th birthday; it was led by the ephors and theyà supposedly made decisions on when to go to war and who would be the commander in chief.à Dual Kingsà Having two kings share power was fairly common in several Bronze Age Indo-European societies; they shared power but had different roles. Like Mycenaean kings in Greece, the Spartans had a political leader (the Eurypontidae kings) and a war leader (the Agaidai kings). Priests were people outside of the regnal pair and neither of the kings was considered sacred ââ¬â although they could enable contact with the gods, they were never interpreters. They were involved in certain religious or cultic activities, members of the priesthood of Zeus Lacedaemon (a cult group based honoring the mythical king of Laconia) and Zeus Ouranos (Uranus, the primal sky god).à The Spartan kings werent believed to be supernaturally strong or sacred, either. Their role in Spartan life was shouldering certain magisterial and juridical responsibilities. Although this made them relatively weak kings and there was always input from the other pieces of the government on most of the decisions they made, most of the kings were fierce and acted independently most of the time. Remarkable examples of this include the famed firstà Leonidasà (ruled 490ââ¬â480 BCE for the house of Agaidai), who traced his ancestry to Hercules and was featured in the movie 300. Names Dates of the Kings of Sparta House of Agaidai House of Eurypontidai Agis 1 Echestratos Eurypon Leobotas Prytanis Dorrusas Polydectes Agesilaus I Eunomos Archilaus Charillos Teleklos Nikandros Alkamenes Theopompos Polydoros Anaxandridas I Eurykrates Archidamos I Anaxandros Anaxilas Eurykratidas Leotychidas Leon 590-560 Hippocratides 600ââ¬â575 Anaxandrides II 560ââ¬â520 Agasicles 575ââ¬â550 Cleomenes 520ââ¬â490 Ariston 550ââ¬â515 Leonidas 490ââ¬â480 Demaratus 515ââ¬â491 Pleistrachus 480ââ¬â459 Leotychides II 491ââ¬â469 Pausanias 409ââ¬â395 Agis II 427ââ¬â399 Agesipolis I 395ââ¬â380 Agesilaus 399ââ¬â360 Cleombrotos 380ââ¬â371 Agesipolis II 371ââ¬â370 Cleomenes II 370ââ¬â309 Archidamos II 360ââ¬â338 Agis III 338ââ¬â331 Eudamidas I 331ââ¬â ? Araios I 309ââ¬â265 Archidamos IV Akrotatos 265ââ¬â255? Eudamidas II Araios II 255/4ââ¬â247? Agis IV ?ââ¬â243 Leonidas 247?ââ¬â244;243ââ¬â235 Archidamos V ?ââ¬â227 Kleombrotos 244ââ¬â243 [interregnum] 227ââ¬â219 Kleomenes III 235ââ¬â219 Lykurgos 219ââ¬â ? Agesipolis 219ââ¬â Pelops(Machanidas regent) ?ââ¬â207 Pelops(Nabis regent) 207ââ¬â? Nabis ?ââ¬â192 Sources Chronology of Monarchical Rule (from the now-defunct Herodotus website)Adams, John P. ââ¬Å"The kings of Sparta.â⬠à California State University, Northridge.à à Lyle, Emily B. Dumezils Three Functions and Indo-European Cosmic Structure. History of Religions 22.1 (1982): 25-44. Print.Miller, Dean A. The Spartan Kingship: Some Extended Notes on Complex Duality. Arethusa 31.1 (1998): 1-17. Print.Parke, H. W. The Deposing of Spartan Kings. The Classical Quarterly 39.3/4 (1945): 106-12. Print.Thomas, C. G. On the Role of the Spartan Kings. Historia: Zeitschrift fà ¼r Alte Geschichte 23.3 (1974): 257-70. Print.
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