Returning from Kythera, my
husband and I spent a night in Sparta (“Sparti,” as the modern town is
designated on most maps and signs nowadays, is Ionian; I prefer to use Doric,
which shows up now and again on local signs). The modern city, full of students, traffic
clogging the main street and disco music filling the night air, is not always
the best place to evoke ancient Sparta, but it has charm of its own. The palms
of the main avenue remind one of the more trendy cities on the Riviera, but the
backdrop of snowy Taygetos is more beautiful. There are good restaurants, good
hotels, a pretty square with a monument to the Three Hundred, and a charming
little museum with some excellent pieces of Lacedaemonian sculpture. The
ancient acropolis is far enough away from the heart of the modern town to allow
a stroll in contemplative silence, and I am always pleased to see the Leonidas
standing guard in front of the soccer stadium.
In short, I always enjoy a stop in Sparta on our way to or from Kythera.
Particularly interesting this
trip was that the Eurotas was running black. Usually, when I have been in
Sparta, it has been muddy and lazy. This trip is was running fast and deep. This
suggests that in ancient Sparta as well the river ran deep and fast at least
some of the time. Indeed, I’ve heard theories that the climate of Greece was
generally cooler and wetter in the archaic and classical periods. Certainly,
the population density was lower and so the consumption of water less. Less
water consumption nearer the source of the Eurotas would have meant greater
volumes of water flushing down through Sparta. Certainly, it looked more
inviting this time around, and I could easily imagine the boys of the agoge cavorting
around in it and young citizens plunging in to refresh themselves after drill.
Since pictures are worth a
thousand words, however, I think I’ll stop writing here and just upload some of
the pictures I took this year. I end with a picture of me at Leonidas feet.
If you look hard you can read the
“Μολαν Λαβε” on the base of the statue.
In other news, I submitted the manuscript
for the third book of the Leonidas Trilogy, Leonidas
of Sparta: A Heroic King to the
publisher today. If all goes well, the book will be released on schedule in
early September.
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