Author: * Nikolaos Cleomenes -
12 Posts
on this thread out of
545 Posts
sitewide.
Date: Aug 11, 2003 - 11:26
Cairetw,
The below
text is reposted by the PBS program
production organization regarding “The Spartans”. I reposted for giving more
information for the program. Unfortunately I do not have the opportunity to watch
it just wait for your comments later on!
“THE
SPARTANS shows the rise and fall of one of the most intriguing and extreme
civilizations of the ancient world. Classical historian Bettany Hughes reveals
this secretive, surprising society of battle-hardened warriors, weak babies
left exposed on hillsides to die and powerful, liberated women. The story
unfolds against the spectacular mountain scenery of Sparta in the Peloponnese
and the stunning landscape and archaeology of classical Greece. Unlike its more
famous rival, Athens, Sparta can’t boast of philosophers, playwrights or
politicians. It’s famous for its frugality and its fighters — reputed to be the
best in the whole of ancient Greece.
• Episode
1 — The first program explores the birth of the unique Spartan social system.
Militaristic, communal and disciplined, the state enforces eugenics and
euthanasia. Priests decide which babies should live and which should be left to
die. Seven-year-old boys are forced to fend for themselves on the harsh
mountainside. Policed by secret spies, the society is supported by a nation of
slaves. Sparta can be seen as a premonition of modern-day totalitarianism, but
Sparta is the first Greek city to define the rights of its citizens. And in the
pass of Thermopylae, its warriors fight bravely to their deaths, living up to
the boast of their city in a heroic last stand against the Persian invader.
• Episode 2 — The second episode explores the bitter rivalry between Sparta and
Athens and their startlingly different views of women. They are two cities with
opposite views of the “good life.” For Athens, Sparta is a frightening place
that turns its children into fighting machines. Worse still are Sparta’s women:
liberated, independent, opinionated, they take an active part in sport, race
horses and chariots, celebrate nudity and wield power in the absence of their
men. They are unique in the ancient world — and an affront to Athenian notions
of femininity. When war between Sparta and Athens finally comes, it rages for
decades and splits the Greek world — until on the island of Sphacteria, the
reputation for fearlessness of Sparta’s famed warriors is shockingly
undermined.
• Episode 3 — The war between Sparta and Athens reaches a brutal and bloody
climax in Sicily. Sparta finally emerges as victorious. Now the most powerful
city-state in Greece, Sparta is an imperial power. But under the fascinating,
flawed King Agesilaus, the dreams of the Spartan utopia come crashing down. By
setting out to create a perfect society protected by perfect warriors, Sparta
makes an enemy of change. A collapsing birth rate, too few warriors, rebellious
slaves and outdated attitudes to weaponry and warfare combine to sow the seeds
of Sparta’s destruction, until eventually the once-great warrior state is
reduced to a stop for Roman tourists who came to view bizarre sadomasochistic
rituals. Yet even today, centuries later, the Spartan ideal continues to
inspire, fascinate and influence.
A specialist in classical and ancient history, Bettany Hughes won a scholarship
to read Ancient History at Oxford. She has written on a wide range of subjects,
including Minoan Crete and the hidden history of London.”
By the PBS production organization – reposted.
|