The common view of Sparta is of a society divided between
the wealthy, politically privileged (albeit underfed, cowed yet brutal etc.
etc.) Spartiates, and the oppressed, helpless, despised helots. As I have noted
in earlier entries, this ignores the vitally important role of perioikoi, but
today I wish focus on helot society, particularly the fact that it too was highly
differentiated. Not all helots were equal – nor equally miserable.
Historical sources make reference to helots in a variety of
positions. First and foremost, of course, the helots worked the land. But
helots also played a – singularly undefined – role in the Spartan army. Helots
accompanied the Spartan army to Plataea, for example, and they were ordered to
set fire to the sacred wood after the battle of Sepeia. These army helots
appear to be a collective body under the command of the king, not the
individual attendants of Spartan rankers.
However, each Spartan hoplite apparently also had a helot body servant to look after his kit and help him arm. We hear too of “Lacedaemonian” wet-nurses being highly valued, and finding service as far away as Athens, where such a nurse allegedly breast-fed the ultimate Athenian aristocrat Alcibiades. While not explicitly a helot, it is hard to imagine a Spartiate or even perioikoi woman taking a position that was usually held by a chattel slave.
The same is even more true of hereditary “town-criers, flute-players and cooks” listed by Herodotus (The Histories:6:60). Because all these functions were important to the army, I have argued elsewhere that they were not despised professions, but it is unclear whether the jobs were filled by perioikoi or helots; either interpretation is possible. Last but not least, although not explicitly mentioned, implicit in a highly civilized society with a very tiny elite such as Sparta, were people doing all the menial tasks necessary to keep a developed but still non-mechanized society functioning. In short, helots most likely did all those tasks done by chattel slaves in the rest of the ancient world. Someone in Lacedaemon built roads, dug ditches, cleaned latrines, quarried stones and extracted ore from mines etc., and I think it is safe to assume that these jobs were done by helots.
However, each Spartan hoplite apparently also had a helot body servant to look after his kit and help him arm. We hear too of “Lacedaemonian” wet-nurses being highly valued, and finding service as far away as Athens, where such a nurse allegedly breast-fed the ultimate Athenian aristocrat Alcibiades. While not explicitly a helot, it is hard to imagine a Spartiate or even perioikoi woman taking a position that was usually held by a chattel slave.
The same is even more true of hereditary “town-criers, flute-players and cooks” listed by Herodotus (The Histories:6:60). Because all these functions were important to the army, I have argued elsewhere that they were not despised professions, but it is unclear whether the jobs were filled by perioikoi or helots; either interpretation is possible. Last but not least, although not explicitly mentioned, implicit in a highly civilized society with a very tiny elite such as Sparta, were people doing all the menial tasks necessary to keep a developed but still non-mechanized society functioning. In short, helots most likely did all those tasks done by chattel slaves in the rest of the ancient world. Someone in Lacedaemon built roads, dug ditches, cleaned latrines, quarried stones and extracted ore from mines etc., and I think it is safe to assume that these jobs were done by helots.
As we look closer at helot society, let’s remember that rural
helots retained a substantial fixed portion (probably 50%) of the produce of
that land they worked. Allegedly, at the time of Lycurgus’ Great Reforms, there
was one adult male helot on each kleros, who tilled the land for the benefit of
himself and the Spartiate “master.” Officially, neither the Spartiate nor the
helot actually owned the land, which belonged to the state. Both were
hereditary “tenants.” As long as there
is only one male heir to each tenant, such a system is more or less sustainable
indefinitely. Unfortunately, however, human demographics do not produce perfect
replacement and even in countries with primogeniture (such as medieval England)
families die out in the male line on average every three generations. Without
primogeniture, however, an excess of heirs rapidly reduces a family to penury.
To avoid these consequences, societies evolve inheritance and marriage laws to regulate
the distribution of wealth over generations.
Stephen Hodkinson in his excellent study Property and Wealth in Classical Sparta (London, 2000) traces the impact of inheritence laws on the concentration of wealth in Spartiate society, but helots were not land-owners and could not buy or sell land. Rather, they were transferred with the land from one Spartiate owner to another. Still, the ancient historians tell us that some helots were wealthy enough by the end of the 5th century to buy their freedom. In short, the accumulation of wealth – albeit not land – was clearly possible even in helot society. Some helots were definitely richer than others. But how?
Stephen Hodkinson in his excellent study Property and Wealth in Classical Sparta (London, 2000) traces the impact of inheritence laws on the concentration of wealth in Spartiate society, but helots were not land-owners and could not buy or sell land. Rather, they were transferred with the land from one Spartiate owner to another. Still, the ancient historians tell us that some helots were wealthy enough by the end of the 5th century to buy their freedom. In short, the accumulation of wealth – albeit not land – was clearly possible even in helot society. Some helots were definitely richer than others. But how?
The key to understanding this is again demographics. Unlike chattel slaves in the rest of Greece,
helots had family units. In consequence,
the sexual relations and off-spring of helots were not controlled by their
masters for their own purposes, but developed more naturally. In Athens and elsewhere, the off-spring of
slaves were unwanted extra mouths to feed (that also reduced the concentration
and working life of a female slave) and so intercourse between slaves was
prevented to the extent possible. The fact that it was not always possible to
prevent slave women from getting pregnant would not have worried slave-owners
unduly because in the ancient Greek world it was common to expose unwanted
children – even of the children of citizens. The unwanted children of chattel slaves
would therefore simply have been left to die. Athens did not suffer from a
growing slave population, but could keep the slave population under control
effectively by these methods and by selling off anyone who had become a burden
or was unnecessary on the international market. Unwanted Athenians slaves,
therefore, could end up in Persia, Egypt or Italy.
In Lacedaemon, in contrast, Spartiates could not sell helots
outside of Lacedaemon, and more important helots lived in family units. As
everywhere else on earth where families exist, fathers would have taken pride
in at least their male off-spring. Male
children would have been nourished and raised to adulthood to the extent
possible. Females would have received less attention, food and affection (if
the evidence of societies across the globe is any guide), but enough girls would
have survived to adulthood to ensure survival of the family. Barring
catastrophes, populations grow over time. Thus we can hypothesize a growing
helot population from the age of Lycurgus (whenever that was) to the classical
period – that fateful age when the helot population outnumbered the Spartiate
population many times over (though probably not more than serfs outnumbered
noblemen in Medieval Europe, by the way.) This is an important dynamic that
explains why the imbalance between Spartiate and helot populations was so much
greater than the imbalance between the Athenian citizen and slave populations.
This simple demographic fact might also explain why helots,
who could not acquire land as their Spartiate masters clearly did, would have effectively
become poorer over the generations. After all, if all the descendants of the original
helot tenant of a kleros were tied to the same plot of land, then a finite plot
of land would have been required to sustain entire clans rather than just one
nuclear family by the time two hundred years had passed. In short, each
individual would have been much poorer than his ancestor. And while there may have been a general
tendency toward impoverishment, it was clearly not the fate of all helots or
there would have been no wealthy helots able to buy their freedom, and no one
doing all the other jobs noted above.
Instead it appears that some form of voluntary or
involuntary primogeniture ensured that only one man had the status of
“tenant-in-chief” on each kleros. He
might have many children and many sons, but he had only one “heir.” If there
were no sons, then very likely a son-in-law became the “tenant-in-chief,” and
if there were no surviving children at all, the kleros was “vacant” and the
Spartan state had to find new tenants from a pool of available helots.
In the more common case of a man having more than one son,
the non-heirs (most likely the younger sons) would have been “free” to pursue
their fortune elsewhere. As the property
of the Lacedaemonian state, of course, helots could not leave Lacedaemon, but
to my knowledge there is no reason to think they could not hire themselves out within
the boundaries of Lacedaemon.
Thus younger sons who were lucky or particularly clever might
have been apprenticed to learn a craft scorned by the wealthier perioikoi and
prohibited to the Spartiates. Through apprenticeship to those that had taken
this path before them, they would have become tanners and tinkers, cobblers and
coopers, masons and dyers. As a master craftsman, able to retain 100% of their
earnings, these helots would have been in a position to found families, build
houses and accumulate wealth. Meanwhile, young men unable or unwilling to
embark on such a slow, hard career, would have had the option of hiring out for
wages to the Spartan army or state, or to individuals. Thus they could have
become the personal attendants to Spartan hoplites, or worked directly for
wages as teamsters and mule-drivers for the Spartan army or as construction
workers or bath attendants, gardeners and repairmen for the Lacedaemonian
government. Helot girls unable to find
husbands would, like the daughters of the poor in every society across the
globe over the last three thousand years, have found work as nursemaids and
housemaids, waiting on the women and children of those better off than
themselves.
But, as I pointed out above, helot society was not
exclusively rural. Here too there would
have been different strata of helots living very different life-styles. Many helots, younger sons and sons of
landless fathers, who were unwilling or unable to learn a craft would have made
a living as attendants to Spartiates or laborers for the Spartan state and
army. Such helots probably lived in
barracks, on their employer’s estates, or in small rented rooms, and would have
formed a kind of urban proletariat similar to poor craftsmen in Athens and
elsewhere. However, there would also have
been skilled craftsmen with workshops and stores. While some of these might have barely scraped
by, living in miserable slums or dark attic rooms rented from their more
prosperous neighbors, others – as anywhere on earth – would have had a talent
for business and sales. Exceptional craftsmen would have been able to charge
more for their goods or found other ways to make money. These would have been
able to afford apprentices and even slaves of their own. The more they had, the
easier it would be for them to accumulate wealth by investing and lending. Such
men, like the privileged “tenants-in-chief” on the kleros, would have lived in
comparative luxury and would later be in the position to buy their freedom.
In short, in addition to the oppressed, abused and miserable
helots familiar to every student of Sparta, there were also large numbers of
comparatively well-off helots, who enjoyed considerable freedom, a reasonable
standard of living for their age, and were far from discontented with their lot
in life. These helots were what enabled
the Spartan state to function so well throughout the archaic period.
(This article was first published on this blog in May 2013.)
(This article was first published on this blog in May 2013.)
As interesting and informative as always, Professor. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThank you!
ReplyDeleteVery interesting and informative! I was wondering though, how do you think the general attitude of the Spartans would be towards those helots who were able to live so grandly? Do you think there would be some hostility and jealousy at those they felt were rising "above their station"? I guess some might use it as validation of Spartiate superiority due to their eschewing of flaunted luxury (at least publicly).
ReplyDeleteCarol,
ReplyDeleteI think as in any society, some people would have resented it, others looked down on them for being "frivolous," others outraged at "uppity helots," and others indifferent to it. No society is monolithic.
Thank you for taking the time to comment. Hope you'll read my Leonidas Trilogy.
Helena