Sparta isn't my favorite among the Greeks but there's certainly an interesting history for it during the Hellenistic Age.
While Archaic and Classical Sparta gets the most attention I find that the Hellenistic Sparta and the "reactionary revolutionaries" who after Sparta's defeat to the Thebans sought to essentially take Sparta back in time by kicking it forward. I think of Spartans kings like Agis IV, Cleomenes III and Nabis, who sought to bring about progressively more reachings reforms, to win back the "Good Old Days". But every time Sparta seems to have regained its strength with the reforms, a much large power was ready to kick them down again. First it was the Macedonians and then the Romans who brought down the hammer to finally force Sparta to abandon its dreams of greatness.
So to start the discussion with a question, do you think the Spartans could have made it to at least temporarily, before the Roman tide would sweep them away, to wrestle control of Greece back to iself and keep it for some decades? Or had to much time past for a single city to wield such power again, even locally? And is there any Spartan leader after Leuctra which has captured your interest?
My own answers to the questions are; No, that time has passed and that Cleomenes III and Nabis are figured that I find more interesting than Spartan leaders from the Classical era.
And all other discussion about Hellenistic Sparta (and I suspect we'll drift into Archaic and Classical Spartas well) is welcome.
And yes, my interest and "insight" comes mostly from reading "In the Name of Lykourgos" by Miltiadis Michalopoulos. Which I can very much recommend.
While Archaic and Classical Sparta gets the most attention I find that the Hellenistic Sparta and the "reactionary revolutionaries" who after Sparta's defeat to the Thebans sought to essentially take Sparta back in time by kicking it forward. I think of Spartans kings like Agis IV, Cleomenes III and Nabis, who sought to bring about progressively more reachings reforms, to win back the "Good Old Days". But every time Sparta seems to have regained its strength with the reforms, a much large power was ready to kick them down again. First it was the Macedonians and then the Romans who brought down the hammer to finally force Sparta to abandon its dreams of greatness.
So to start the discussion with a question, do you think the Spartans could have made it to at least temporarily, before the Roman tide would sweep them away, to wrestle control of Greece back to iself and keep it for some decades? Or had to much time past for a single city to wield such power again, even locally? And is there any Spartan leader after Leuctra which has captured your interest?
My own answers to the questions are; No, that time has passed and that Cleomenes III and Nabis are figured that I find more interesting than Spartan leaders from the Classical era.
And all other discussion about Hellenistic Sparta (and I suspect we'll drift into Archaic and Classical Spartas well) is welcome.
And yes, my interest and "insight" comes mostly from reading "In the Name of Lykourgos" by Miltiadis Michalopoulos. Which I can very much recommend.