As
a novelist, I have given considerable thought to what the Spartans in
the Age of Leonidas might have looked like, as well as how they would
have groomed themselves and dressed. From comments and correspondence, I
gather that this is a topic of interest to many of my readers as well,
so I thought it might be worth some joint speculation.
In
terms of physical build, I have not heard of any archeological evidence
based on skeletons, but would welcome any information you may have
heard or read about. In the absence of such forensic evidence, I remain dependent on mixing ancient sources with modern experience and common
sense.
Both
Plutarch and – more importantly Xenophon – stress that Spartan youth
(i.e. during the critical years of physical development and growth) were
not allowed to eat “too much.” Xenophon speaks of “just the right
amount for them never to become sluggish through being too full, while
also giving them a taste of what it is not to have enough. [Lycurgus']
view was that boys under this kind of regime would be better able, when
required, to work hard without eating, as well as to make the same
rations last longer, when so ordered; they would be satisfied with a
plain diet, would adapt better to accepting any type of food, and would
be in a healthier condition. [Lycurgus] also considered that a diet
which produced slim bodies did more to make them grow tall than one in
which the food filled them out.” (Spartan Society:2)
Plutarch,
the less reliable source, writes: “The aim of providing [Spartan boys
in the agoge] with only sparse fare is that they should be driven to
make up its deficiencies by resort to daring and villainy. While this is
the main purpose of their scanty diet, a subsidiary one is claimed to
be the development of their physique, helping them in particular to grow
tall. When people over-eat, their breathing is labored, thus producing a
broad, squat frame. In contrast, if breath suffers from only slight
delay and difficulty and has an easy ascent, the body is enabled to
develop freely and comfortably. Good looks are produced in the same way.
For where lean, spare features respond to articulation, the sheer
weight of obese, over-fed ones make them resist it.” (Lycurgus:17).
It
is startling the way Xenophon’s explanation of why the Spartans
restricted the diet of youth to the necessary is focused on virtues very
useful to an effective army in the field, while Plutarch’s speculation
is more about cheating and “villainy.” Indeed, if one follows Plutarch’s
reasoning, Spartan youth didn’t suffer any deprivation at all because
they simply stole what they didn’t get in their official rations and the
clever and better they were at theft, the fatter they would have
become, defeating any “secondary” aim of improving the physique.
Notable, however, is despite the different explanations of why
the Spartans instituted a regime of sparse rations for youth, both
authors suggest that it produced “tall” and (in Plutarch’s case)
handsome men. Modern science, however, proves that too little food in fact stunts
growth, not the reverse. Clearly the ancient commentators postulated a
causal effect where there was none, but such a thesis would presumably
have been based on two known facts: that Spartan youth ate less than
their Athenian etc. equivalents and Spartans were, on average, taller
than their enemies.
(The
modern observer should take careful note of the fact that if Spartans
were apparently on average taller than other Greeks, they probably did
not suffer any real deprivation as children. Whatever “short” rations
were common in the agoge, they were not so short that growth was in any
way impeded since even if some youth may have been adept at theft, most would not have been.)
Returning
to the theme of physical appearance, however, we clearly have a
reasonable indication that Spartans were on average notably taller than
most of their contemporaries. Since the ancient explanation (they
received too little to eat as children) is implausible, we need to look
for other possible explanations that would make the thesis (Spartans
were generally taller) credible.
Here the experience of modern Japan might be a useful corollary. As long as the Japanese diet was dependent almost exclusively on fish for protein, the Japanese were notoriously short; the introduction of meat led to the average height in Japan skyrocketing by roughly a foot in just two generations. If we remember that fish was the preferred food in Athens and the most readily available protein for all the island Greeks, while Spartans were envied for their rich pastures and game-filled forests, I think it is fair to postulate that the Spartan diet was more meat heavy than that of their major rivals. It is reasonable, therefore, to picture Spartans as unusually tall by contemporary standards.
Here the experience of modern Japan might be a useful corollary. As long as the Japanese diet was dependent almost exclusively on fish for protein, the Japanese were notoriously short; the introduction of meat led to the average height in Japan skyrocketing by roughly a foot in just two generations. If we remember that fish was the preferred food in Athens and the most readily available protein for all the island Greeks, while Spartans were envied for their rich pastures and game-filled forests, I think it is fair to postulate that the Spartan diet was more meat heavy than that of their major rivals. It is reasonable, therefore, to picture Spartans as unusually tall by contemporary standards.
It
would be wrong to conclude, however, that they were broader as well as
taller than their contemporaries. On the contrary, the ancient
commentators stress that Spartans were slim, something they
attributed to the fixed rations at the syssitia. Yet
men who are too tall and too thin would have been incapable of marching
long distances or fighting exceptionally well in a phalanx. So we are
talking about lean, not skinny, men.
While
it might be tempting to picture a Spartan in his prime looking
something like a linebacker, I would caution that Sparta’s military
successes were not solely a function of Spartan troops being able to push
harder, but also march more rapidly (and move at night) and to cover
difficult terrain. Likewise the emphasis on hunting, particularly for
men in the reserves, suggests to me that Spartans were not excessively
“top heavy,” but rather lithe and fleet of foot as well as broad
shouldered and strong-armed. In conclusion, I postulate that Spartans
had an all-round athletic build developed over decades of physical
activity from sports and hunting to military drill and combined with a
healthy, but protien-heavy diet that made them tough and lean but not
stocky.
Turning
to grooming, let me start by dismissing modern artistic depictions of
Spartans that show them as shaggy, unkempt men with scrawny, chest-long
beards and wild, tangled hair hanging to their shoulders alĂ Richard
Hook’s illustrations in Osprey’s The Spartan Army. Likewise, I
reject descriptions such as those of Otto Lendle, who describes Spartans
as stinking, filthy and slovenly. These images contradict the
historical record and existing archeological evidence.
Herodotus,
for example, makes a great point of how the Spartans groomed themselves
before Thermopylae, and no one would be tempted to stress the beauty of
Spartans as Plutarch does if they had been repugnant for their lack of
grooming and hygene. More important, a statue fragment found in the
heart of Sparta and dating from the early fifth century (commonly – or
affectionately – referred to as Leonidas) shows a man with a clipped
beard and neat hair. Earlier archaic artwork unanimously shows men with
short beards and long, but very neat, “locks” of hair. (Note, for
example the hoplites on the magnificent frieze of the Siphnian Treasure
at Delphi dating from Leonidas’ lifetime, the Krater of Vix also from
this period, and the figurines of known Laconian origin now displayed in
the Museum of Ancient History in Berlin or pictured in Conrad Stibbe’s Das Andere Sparta.)
In
addition to these sources, the admittedly dubious Plutarch claims
Spartan men took particular care of their hair especially in the face of
danger, and refers to an alleged quote from Lycurgus that long hair was
preferred because it rendered a handsome man better looking, and an
ugly one more frightening.
Whether
the locks depicted in ancient sculpture were in fact braided or plaited
is not possible to tell from the stylized nature of the evidence.
However, it is physically impossible to keep long hair in neat, orderly
strands when engaged in sports and other strenuous activities unless it
is carefully confined in some way. Thus, practical modern experience
suggests that Spartan men did braid their hair, something that is
consistent with – though not definitely proved -- by the archeological
evidence.
Braiding
has the added advantage of being something that can be done quickly and
alone if necessary, or done elaborately with help. Thus it could have
been a means for men to express individual taste and personality within
the rigid limits of the Spartan prohibitions against displaying wealth
in dress or personal ornament. I personally like to think of
conservative, “old-fashioned” men just braiding their hair to keep it
out of their faces, while the “dandies” of Spartan society creatively braided their hair at diagonals or in crossing patterns etc. – as in
Africa today. This gave a man a great deal of freedom for individual
expression – all without breaking any taboos about the use of jewelry or
other ornaments.
Experience Spartan Society more closely in my Leonidas' Trilogy:
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"while Plutarch's speculation is more about cheating and "villainy"."
ReplyDeleteTo be fair, I do not summarily dismiss this. One must consider . . . the Helots.
From everything I've read -- including your own essays, Professor -- Spartan men and women could not . . . grow their own food. They wouldn't know how.
So, call it "scavenging," or call it "foraging," this "villainy" would no doubt be important to Sparta men on campaign. So, while I wouldn't think it entirely the case, I wouldn't discount this particular function of the training. After all, it is highly unlikely that Xenophin is going to "brag" about how Sparta taught its young men the art of "stealing."
No people are ever honest about that.
Fascinating speculation. I think your conclusions on general "physical type" are likely correct. The builds of decathletes in the first three quarters of the 20th century would likely be very good models to go by as well.
ReplyDeleteNow, as to how tall the Spartans may have been? That is a relative term, yes? Iron Age Greeks were not -- and correct me if I'm wrong -- as tall as modern Western men.
Ethnicity: do you cover Iron Age Greek ethnicity elsewhere? That's a subject in and of itself.
Thank you! Regards ethnicity, I must admit I don't feel I know enough to even speculate.
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