Betwixt The Sheets: The History of Sex, Scandal & Society - Sex Lives of Spartans

Episode Date: February 4, 2025

When you hear the word Sparta, what do you picture?Well, put aside the images of the rippling six packs for just a moment, as there's a lot more to this workout-obsessed state of the ancient world tha...n you might imagine.Joining Kate today to get to know the Spartans is the master of all things Ancient Greece, Helen King. You can check out Helen's book, Immaculate Forms: Uncovering the History of Women's Bodies, here.What were the Spartans views on same-sex relationships? Were they really as ripped as 300 made out? And did Spartan women invent the mini skirt?This episode was edited by Nick Thomson and produced by Stuart Beckwith. The senior producer was Charlotte Long.All music from Epidemic Sounds/All3 Media.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe.  You can take part in our listener survey here.Betwixt the Sheets: History of Sex, Scandal & Society is a History Hit podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:25 Sign up to join me in locations around the world and explore the past. Just visit historyhit.com forward slash subscribe. Hello, my lovely betwixters. How the hell are you doing? But I'm fine. Thank you very much for asking. And we are both here together to listen to Betwixters sheets. But I do have to let you know.
Starting point is 00:00:46 This is an adult podcast spoken by adults to other adults about adult things in an adult way covering a range of adults' subjects and you should be an adult too. And we have to tell you that, even though, quite frankly, you should have worked out by now that this is a podcast of an adult nature. But if you hadn't, well, that fair day, do's warning was for you. Right, on with the show. I don't know how your morning is playing out,
Starting point is 00:01:13 but I am back in ancient Greece, seeing how the next generation of Spartan fighters' training is coming along. It's pretty brutal, but certainly more brutal than a Zumba class, that's for sure. There's a whole lot of pain and endurance going on, and some of them are as young as seven. I mean, come on, lads, take a day off. And it's not just the fellas either. Spartan women women are pretty hench too, you know. But what was all this excessive military? training in aid of anyway. With all this sweat and machismo, how did Spartan society
Starting point is 00:01:47 take to same-sex relationships? Well, stick around, and we will find out. What do you look for a man? Oh, money, of course. You're supposed to rise when an adult speaks to you. I make perfect copies of whatever my boss needs by just turning enough and pushing the fun. Yes, social courtesy does make a difference.
Starting point is 00:02:20 Goodness for a beautiful time. Goodness has nothing to do with it, Dary. Hello and welcome back to Betwigs the Sheets, the history of sex scandal in society, with me, Kate Lister. Let's address the elephant in the room right away. We've all seen the film 300 and all of those whippling biceps and abs. And frankly, if that's all you know about Spartan culture, you may not want to keep listening, you may want to hold on to that fantasy. Don't get me wrong, I'm not complaining.
Starting point is 00:02:50 But was any of that based on what really happened to Spartans in ancient Greece? Did they really look that good? Did their elite views of what the human... body is capable of, influence their views on sex and sexuality, and did the Spartan woman invent the miniskirt? Joining me today is a friend of the show and an absolute master of all things ancient and Greek, Professor Helen King, and she is going to help us get to know the Spartans a little bit better. Shields and Spears are the ready, guys. Let's do this. Hello, and welcome back to the Twix the Sheets. It's only Helen King. How are you doing? I'm doing great, thanks, Kate.
Starting point is 00:03:31 Well, thank you so much for coming back because we are going to talk about this is a fascinating subject, the Spartans. Possibly of all the Greeks, of all the Greek culture, they have got that reputation. Do I want to say sexy?
Starting point is 00:03:48 I might say sexy. Kind of like warrior-like. Maybe I'm just thinking of 300. We're all thinking of 300. We've never recovered from seeing 300. Is this a reputation? that is well deserved. Were they a particularly sexy race? I'm getting ahead of myself. I'm getting well ahead of myself. We should first of all start with before we get to 300 and were they sexy. Who were they? Who were the Spartans?
Starting point is 00:04:15 Okay, well, that's a great question. So the Spartans are just one of the Greek city-states. They're one of the big famous ones from classical Greece, the sort of fifth century to fourth century period. and they're the big rivals of Athens. So it's always Athens versus Sparta. But then Athens and Sparta unite together with other Greek city states against Persia, who's like the really big enemy. As if you've seen 300, of course, the Persian king is the guy with all the piercings, which are not very historical, but they're quite fun.
Starting point is 00:04:48 So it's sort of Athens versus Sparta, the big enemies, but then sometimes they'll unite against Persia as the... even bigger enemy. That sort of summarise it. So they're basically like any other, they're like any other Greek city state. You know, they have their own territory. They defend it.
Starting point is 00:05:04 They have their own army. They will sometimes unite with other city states against another one because they're always in flux. You know, Greek history is all about different city states overcoming each other. The thing about Sparta is we actually haven't got a lot of archaeological evidence for it, rather less than for some other parts of Greece. I was going to ask, does it still exist today? It does, yeah, it does. It does still exist today, but it's not like Athens where you go and you've got the path and then on the acropolis, you've got all the big stuff. Modern Sparta is quite low key. And that's one of the problems because in Athens they're always digging things up to build a new underground station system or something. So they keep finding stuff, archaeological stuff. Sparta has not been excavated to the same extent. Therefore, we don't know as much about it in terms of its material culture. It's artifacts, it's
Starting point is 00:05:55 art and so on. And when were they knocking around the Spartans? When was their heyday? The heyday seems to be anything from the 7th century BC up to the 5th century. So we know a lot more about them in the 5th century because that's when Athens and Sparta went to war. So they start to talk about each other more or at least Athens talks about Sparta. The other problem with Sparta is we haven't got much in the way of texts from Sparta. They don't write their history. We've only got what Athens says about it. Oh, and they were always fighting each other. That's a tricky one. Bit of a bias issue there, I think. But what the Spartans appear to have had was an ancestral law giver, a guy called Lycurgus, who was supposed to be responsible for giving them all their
Starting point is 00:06:40 customs and laws and everything, sometime in the distant, distant past. We don't know anything about him, except we do have a life of Lycurgus by the Roman writer Plutarch, who was writing in the Roman Empire, so centuries ahead. Right. And quite where he got his information from remains a mystery. So there's a sort of a myth of this lawgiver who sets up the whole system in Sparta. We don't know how much of that has got any historical accuracy or indeed when a lot of it was constructed as a story. So there's a really big source problem which we'll keep coming up against. And I suppose when you've got a source problem, it creates a vacuum into which you can put any old thing that sounds interesting and flashy.
Starting point is 00:07:23 They have a reputation that when you say something Spartan today, we mean like there's no frills, it's basic, but a bit more than that, like it's rough and brutal, like, oh, it's Spartan. Where did that reputation come from? And is that deserved? We're back to the source problem. So because we really don't have much in the way of Spartan artwork, we tend to think, oh yeah, they didn't really like culture. They like simplicity and sort of raw stuff.
Starting point is 00:07:51 But actually, there are a few artifacts from ancient Sparta that survive, like some really beautiful mirror handles. Because ancient mirrors were sort of burnished metal and decorated handles. And they were gorgeous. And you think, well, that doesn't look like Sparta. And then things like poetry and theatre, which we associate mostly with Athens, we do have names for a couple of Spartan poets. It's just that we don't have the evidence.
Starting point is 00:08:18 The only poet we have evidence for is a guy called Alkman. and he's most famous for songs which maidens would sing, young girls would sing, as they sort of learnt to dance and sort of generally show off their gorgeousness. So dancing, there you see, Spartans did dancing. They weren't that Spartan. No, they don't seem to have been that Spartan. So who's saying that then? Is that an Athens thing?
Starting point is 00:08:44 Is that them defining themselves against the Spartans? Like we're all luxurious and beat up. and kind of sexy and they're just kind of, you know, living in mud huts. Yeah, exactly. It's the Athenians try to create an other against which they can set themselves. We are what systems should be like. We are proper civilisation. They are just sort of raw, basic mud huts, you know, crude.
Starting point is 00:09:08 And of course, the other thing there is that the Athenian view of Sparta, which again we have inherited, is that they're all about the army. Yes. The simplicity is all about military strength. and not faffing about with things like poetry and theatre because you've got to just get on with being a soldier. How true is that then? Because if anyone knew about fighting the Spartans,
Starting point is 00:09:31 it would be the Athenians. So even though they're biased, they might have a bit of insider knowledge of that one then. And they do have that reputation as being a bunch of badasses who you wouldn't want to come up against in a fight. Yeah, and I think that's absolutely right. So I think that the Athenians were in awe. of how good the Spartans were at war
Starting point is 00:09:53 and therefore had to find some sort of theory as to why they were so good at it. Yeah, arts of being, they devoted their entire lives to it. That's why they kicked our asses. Not just because we're not very good. Exactly. They've been training since the age of seven, allegedly. Does anyone else tell us anything about this military side of Spartans?
Starting point is 00:10:12 Is it just Athenian writers? It's the Romans too later on. The Romans were also very hooked on Sparta as a concept of a sort of totally military society. And it's interesting, there's a sort of odd flirtation with the idea of the military society. It's like it's a really good thing, really good at it. But it's not what we really want to be. That's not what being a proper human being should be about.
Starting point is 00:10:35 We should have art and culture and theatre. It's a very difficult relationship there. They want to be like them, but they don't want to do the things that they do to get there. It's a very unfair question that I'm about to ask you. but how much of this do you think is true? Do you think that the Spartans really were this military, army-obsessed group of people, or do you think that that is largely propaganda?
Starting point is 00:11:00 I think they probably were. I know all we have from the ancient world is from other people talking about Spartans. But nevertheless, when you think about what we do know, ish, you know, it's always an ish here. There's a consistent story here, and they were very good at fighting. Yes.
Starting point is 00:11:17 Something went badly wrong in the fourth century, and they lost a major battle to another city state, Thebes, in 371 BC, at the Battle of Lucre. That was the big no for Sparta. They've been doing really well till then, and they then lost. So another thing which people in the ancient world, and indeed modern scholars, are quite interested in, was why did it suddenly go wrong? And again, that's hard to answer. Is it just the Theban's got better at fighting, or that the Spartans said, somehow lost it. And one of the things about this is the Spartans had a sort of class of people called the Spartiates who were like the hardcore citizen Spartans. And there were not that many of them by the time that we get to the Battle of Uptuary in 371. There were only around 1,000 apparently of sort of hardcore Spartans who'd had the full military training from childhood. Whereas before sort of end of the 5th century, 490s, we are told there around 8,000. of them. What was going on there? Now, they had to have some sort of property qualification. Was it that they just hadn't got enough property to qualify as a Spartiate with a sort of criteria
Starting point is 00:12:27 too narrow, so not enough people qualified? Or was actually some sort of decline thing going on? So very hard to know, but something went a bit wrong by 371. So what was the sort of the power structure in Sparta then? I'd assume that there was just one person, probably a king who was in charge and everyone else was a minion? It's a real mess, actually, Kate. It's a mixture of the three types of constitution in the ancient world. Monarchy, oligarchy, democracy. So monarchy, yes, there's a king, but actually there are two.
Starting point is 00:12:59 There are two royal families. I know. Two royal families. So there, concepts of whose family and who isn't really matter, which is funny in a society that's trying to play down the family. But there really does matter. So two kings, then there's the sort of oligarchy element. So the Spartiates, the ruling elite, the full citizens, if you like, and they don't believe in elections.
Starting point is 00:13:22 They do things by lot. They just pick a name at random for the magistrates, the ethos, who also run it. And then there's the democracy element, which is the sort of equality of all the Spartiates. None is more equal than another. And also things like the public messes, the eating together in your barracks, sort of all chaps together, all equal. So there's a mixture, monarchy, well, oligarchy, really. That is a mess, isn't it? It is a mess, yes.
Starting point is 00:13:52 And did the two kings, were they related? Were they like brothers? Allegedly, it's always allegedly, the reason why they were two was that an earlier king, like a long, long time ago had had two sons and couldn't decide which one was the air. So you made them both. So they're sort of, they are related, but yeah, that was a long time ago. That sounds insanely complicated. No wonder they were so angry all the time. When you think about
Starting point is 00:14:17 how they're perceived in general culture and certainly within films there's this idea that, and you can tell me how true of this is, that at the age of, like, I don't know,
Starting point is 00:14:26 10 days old or something, the little boys were taken away from their mum and they were just thrown into this military service and then they were just basically kicked by big men until they were better at fighting
Starting point is 00:14:35 and all the women, if they cared at all, were just like, get on with it, your bunch of jessies. But when you actually think about it, that isn't actually a sound basis for a system of government. You can't have a system where every single man is dragged away
Starting point is 00:14:49 from home. I think, well, maybe you could, but does that just mean the women were in charge? Was every single man, all of them gone off doing military stuff? Well, that's what the Athenians would have us believe. The whole thing rests on these guys are so busy doing the fighting and the training that they let women run things in a way they don't in other Greek city states. And that clearly, for the Athenians, that is a bad thing, because Athenians think women women don't have the vote, women have the place, whereas the stories that Athenians tell about Spartan women
Starting point is 00:15:22 have them as really badass women who are running the show because their men are too busy doing the fighting. It's probably none of that's probably true. They also had a group called the Helots and the helots were like serfs, somewhere between serfs and slaves. I was going to ask, where are the slaves in all of this?
Starting point is 00:15:39 Are they being trained in the military as well? Nope, absolutely not. So they're getting on with the everyday stuff and actually keeping the pace going. So we know who they are. The Helots, they might be another racial group that was subjugated by the Spartans, but they're basically not proper Spartans and they do the work. And there's another lot who are sort of traders and people from other cities who happen to live in Sparta. And they're also involved in running the economy and so on.
Starting point is 00:16:08 So there's actually rather more going on to it than the Spartiates themselves. But allegedly all the Spartates are equal and they're all fighting together. And as you say, they start young. The story has them going to learn to fight from the age of seven and basically being torn away from their mothers and sent into barracks. Some scholars would say, yeah, but they probably met home in the evenings, which isn't quite the same. They left that out. Yes. So it's hard to know whether just how totally single-minded this focus on military training was.
Starting point is 00:16:42 because of the nature of the sources. There's also an earlier stage, which is found in lots of Greek cities, that if they were not looking fit and healthy as babies, they could be thrown off the rock. Yeah, the throwing off the rock story. Now, there's trouble with that is that the rocking question, there is no evidence of vast numbers of small bones at the bottom. Oh, well, it is good.
Starting point is 00:17:07 It is good, but it's not good for the sources. So no evidence that the place is full of evidence of bones. So actually maybe they didn't throw them off But then Athens too You know had a ceremony where Shortly after birth The father has to lift the child up from the earth To show that he's prepared to rear this baby
Starting point is 00:17:25 That it doesn't look iffy to him So they're all quite into this So this sort of I don't know eugenics Birth control after the event or something This is actually a Greek thing Rather than a Spartan thing I've certainly
Starting point is 00:17:40 It's one of the first things I ever read about the Spartans as a small child and it really upset me. I'd never heard anything quite like it was that they just left babies out on the hillside if they just didn't like the look of them. But when you actually think about that, that's a bit of a mad practice if it's just any baby that you're like,
Starting point is 00:17:57 because babies are very precious commodities, especially if you're in the military. So I've always wondered just how true that was or if that was part of that Spartan mythology of like, we're so hardcore, we're just going to kill babies. Yeah, or it's the Athenians. saying that the swans are so hardcore, but then the Athenians are doing it too.
Starting point is 00:18:16 Exposure of infants all over the Greek world, if you don't think they're going to make it, is sort of normal. On the other hand, we also have evidence from things like Athenian vase painting of people with quite obvious bodily issues who were nevertheless alive. They hadn't been thrown off a rock
Starting point is 00:18:34 or thrown out onto the hillside or something. So there were people with disabilities in antiquity. Yeah. And there was a character in the 300 film, wasn't they, who had a disability, had a hunchback. Not that that has to be historically accurate, but I'm just as we're on the conversation. You're all getting us towards 300, aren't you? Slowly but steadily. I can't help it.
Starting point is 00:18:54 They're just so pretty. They have such nice legs. So the kind of idea that like every single man was out training all day long and just being beaten up, it's somewhat true. But probably if you went to Sparta, there would be like lots of men there. Maybe it was like a certain class of Spartans that were doing it. The other thing they have a reputation for is that it was brutal this training. I think I read somewhere like when I was a kid that they would drink blood and vinegar. Okay.
Starting point is 00:19:22 I haven't met that one. No, it was sort of like in the ladybird book of Greek history or something mad. But I do remember reading it going, ew. It's the sort of story you tell about Spartans, isn't it, really? Yes. So the absolute classic one about the brutality has to be the story of the young, young boy in training, he's been sent off to do his military training. One of the things they were taught to do was to steal things, which is an interesting form of
Starting point is 00:19:46 education. We don't tend to get that today. They were taught to steal, and the idea was that they could sort of live in the wild because they could find food somewhere, you know, sort of survival skills. And this young boy, for some reason, has got a fox. Don't ask, I mean, I don't know why you put a fox up your, well, up your jumper, basically. he's got a fox under his clothing and they're saying, have you got something there?
Starting point is 00:20:10 And he's like, no, absolutely not. Nothing to see here. I'm fine. And meanwhile, the fox is busy biting him to death. And this is praised because the boy never cries out. Wow. So sticking your fox up your jumper
Starting point is 00:20:26 and letting it eat you, you just don't react. And that's the typical Spartan sort of thing. Wow. Part of their training as well that they had to kill a slave. Is that true? Or is that my ladybird book of Greek history?
Starting point is 00:20:42 There is evidence. This is group of helots, the sort of serf-type slaves, the subjugated group in Sparta. There was supposed to be an annual helot cull where the Spartiates go out and just kill a few helots. Wow, okay. But again, you know, it's not a terribly wise move, is it bearing in mind that they're doing all the work?
Starting point is 00:21:03 They're expensive. Yeah, you need them. You do need them. Right, okay. So they're sent away, and how long are they training for from the age of seven until? Until they dropped out, really. I'm not sure they get a retirement. Yeah, I'm not sure they get a retirement age.
Starting point is 00:21:22 Once the Sparty eight, always the Sparty eight, really. The Sparty eight are supposed to all eat together in a sort of public mess. Right. So it's like a barracks, sort of army system. They go through a special education system, called the Agogay, which is supposed to be playing down the importance of family and playing up the importance of the state. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:43 Yeah, it is really. It is. But again, that's what the Athenians are telling us. We don't know if it was actually a lot more fun if you were in it. I don't know. I'll be back with Helen after this short break. Let's talk about gayness then. You let's.
Starting point is 00:22:25 They weren't allowed to get married with it, the men, until quite late on. I'm going to say 30, but I might have just imagine that. So all these boys in together in their barracks, what was their attitude to same-sex relationships? Well now. Again, Penta, you believe. So there's evidence in terms of what other people say about them. Whenever I say there's evidence, it's not from Sparta. It's from someone else talking about Spartans, right? So there's evidence that they had sex with the older men and the younger boys because, of course, that's also what happens in Athens. Yeah. In Athens there is an institutionalised paederosity basically where an older man and a younger boy have a relationship. And it's a sort of educational relationship where the older man teaches the young boy stuff about life, life, the universe and everything. It acts as a mentor, a guide. And also maybe has sex with them. Although whether that's actually anal or whether it's between the thighs is another one of those tricky ones. You know, how do you tell from a vase painting where everything actually is, you know? And it's not shameful. I mean, today there would be pitchforks and, you know,
Starting point is 00:23:37 there'd be an absolute outcry about this and rightly so. But I'm just trying to get an understanding of this wasn't like it was an open secret or people were ashamed of it. This was completely normal. Completely normal, yes, exactly. So in Athens, the point was that the young boy would eventually grow up. And it's usually when he gets facial hair, he's considered, like he's going to be a man now.
Starting point is 00:23:59 And then you stop the relationship. I know, I know. Then you stop the relationship. And then he will go on to have relationships with women and eventually to marry. And then he will also find a young boy who will be his sort of protege. So it's that sort of system.
Starting point is 00:24:15 And that's Athens. So if Athens is saying, well, Sparta does this. Yeah, Athens does it too. It has been argued by modern scholars that what's going on with the Spartan system is some sort of idea that the sperm of the older man is somehow making the younger boy big and strong. Oh my God. Sorry.
Starting point is 00:24:35 Sorry, Kate. That's a man thought that one up. All right, go on. Explain to me the logic of that one then. There's always a logic no matter how mad. Well, you know, again, we're back to the ancient Greek medical things, which I've talked about with you before. So the idea that semen is the superior fluid of the human body. You start with medstrel blood, which is a bit weird, and then that gets cooked in the body by your internal heat to make breast milk when you're feeding a baby.
Starting point is 00:25:04 But if you're a man, you can heat it even more because men's bodies are hot and it becomes semen. So it becomes this superior fluid. And if you pass it onto someone else, that's got to be somehow good for them. Right. Okay. Honest, my God. Right. So this is what they're doing.
Starting point is 00:25:20 It's all completely normal. Can I ask, where are women feeling? in this all boys together, my Siemens magic world. Okay. Well, now, so we've said already women are powerful in Sparta, according to the Athenians, and that is supposed to be, according to the Athenians, one reason why Sparta is a bad thing. Terrible.
Starting point is 00:25:42 There are all these men busy fighting, and the women have too much power. When the men and the women get together marriage, this gets a bit tricky. So we've also got sources that say that there's a special marriage ritual, where the bride shaves her head, dresses as a man. Right. And then her husband
Starting point is 00:26:01 comes in to see her in the dark, which, yeah, could be interpreted to me and he's sort of more used to boys than he is girls. Oh, no.
Starting point is 00:26:09 I'm sorry. No. I'm sorry. Oh, could you even imagine having that conversation with your fiancé? Do you want me to do what?
Starting point is 00:26:18 I think not. I think not. So there's an idea that a Spartan marriage is somehow not like normal marriage. Athenian marriage, you know, man, one of negotiations between the two families. But even there, in Athenia marriage, the classic image on vase painting, is of the man
Starting point is 00:26:34 clutching the wrist of the wife as he sort of leads her away. Like, they're not holding hands. He's grabbing her by the wrist and pulling. So there's a sort of violence thing going on there. But then there's other things with the wife. So there's also stories that men would sneak out to impregnate their wives, sneak out from the barracks, get home secretly in the dark, you know, nip in, have a quickie, and then sneak back again. And the thing that we're told by Athenians here about why they do that is because
Starting point is 00:27:06 if you don't have too much sex, your semen, here we go again, is stronger. Because it's stronger, it'll make better babies. So sneaking out to see the wife for a quickie, not very often, is going to lead to better babies. So again, we're on to eugenics. We're on to how to make really strong soldiers. Interesting. So they would be married and he'd still be in the army. Yes, absolutely. You're not going to get out of it for marriage.
Starting point is 00:27:34 Military wives then. Military wives. Today we have military wives choirs. Interestingly, Spartan women do a certain amount of song and dance as far as we can see. What do they? Yeah, so there's definitely some dancing going on. Okay. So I'm trying to wonder what it would be like.
Starting point is 00:27:50 So if the men are all, you know, my semen is magical. and special, would you like some? Is there any evidence, I ask in vain hope, that the women were having sex with one another? Is there any lesbian evidence at all? There are little suggestions lurking in the sources that women were also, because they were all around together, the men were there, so what's the girl going to do? There are sources that claim that it's both sexes who are doing this. Oh, that's interesting because the evidence of women having sex with each other is pretty rare in the ancient world. It is, and it tends to be allegations rather than evidence.
Starting point is 00:28:27 But yeah. Oh, and then there's the group marriage. You mustn't forget the group marriage. Group marriage? Group marriage. There's been a suggestion that you should call it group marriage. I'm not sure it's really groups, but men could go out and get another woman pregnant
Starting point is 00:28:41 other than their wife if the husband gave permission. So you say, you as a bloke, say, really like the look of your wife, you know, any chance. And the husband would be able to say, yeah, sure, go for it. You seem like a nice guy. Why? Why? Why? Why? Well, it's reducing the family, I think. That's what the sources from the Athenians and the Romans are trying to tell us that this society doesn't really do family in the way that everybody else does. So it's like, we're a marriage. Yeah, they have it. But it's not like our marriage. It's kind of weird. It's kind of weird. It's all kind of weird. And you could also, if you couldn't get your wife pregnant, you could sort of pick a man and say, you look like you could do the job.
Starting point is 00:29:20 you know, like you've got the magic seaman, would you like to come in and just do it for my wife? And that was fine. So I think this is again saying that they don't do the family properly. Okay. I'm leaning towards Athenian propaganda, but I mean I could be horribly wrong with that one. But let's talk about Spartan women in general because they seem to have fascinated the rest of Greece and the ancient, well, the Romans certainly had a thing about them. They're kind of fetishized at the same time as being like, oh my God. This is awful.
Starting point is 00:29:52 Like they're doing stuff and talking out loud. It's terrible. What is going on there? How are they perceived? Because you do get the sense that they were pretty hot. Well, so one of the great sources here is from the Roman Empire, Plutarch, sayings of Spartan women. He collected things Spartan women say.
Starting point is 00:30:12 Now, if you bear in mind that Spartan attitude to words is quite interesting. So you talked about Spartan meaning basic, primitive, whatever. laconic and the area around Sparta is Laconia. So this is the same things. Laconic is Spartan. Laconic means that you just don't use very many words. You say something in a really short, pithy way. So the words of Spartan women, or the alleged words, have been preserved and they're things like, come home with your shield or on it. Yes. We are the only women who give birth to men. That's a good soundbite. It's not bad, is it? So this is sort of thing, soundbites, laconic soundbites, are really a speciality here.
Starting point is 00:30:52 So that's the sort of thing Spartan when I'm supposed to say. They uphold the status quo. Right. They don't resist it. They're actually even more into the military culture than the men are.
Starting point is 00:31:01 Yeah. Which is saying something. So yeah, they're very inter-military. They're also supposedly have lots of knowledge about bodies. This is one of those, again, really interesting claims
Starting point is 00:31:15 you will love this. Abortion, right? Right. Basic method of contraception in the ancient world after the event, abortion. So there's this very famous play by Aristophanes, Lysistrita, in which the women sort of go on strike because the men are just failing to bring a war to an end. And there's a character in that called Lampito, which is a spartan name.
Starting point is 00:31:41 And Lampito says she can touch her buttocks with her feet when she jumps. Right. So don't try this at home, listeners. Well, I don't know, maybe you will, but it sounds challenging to me. So this is actually about doing a dance that she's showing. She's really fit. Spartan women are fit. Hyper fit.
Starting point is 00:32:02 Yeah. So she's saying, we are really strong women. It's not just we're the women who give birth to men. We do that because we're really strong. Yeah, yeah. Good thigh muscles. That's what Spartan women have. So she's just saying that in a dancing context.
Starting point is 00:32:15 Look, I can do this thing. I'm really good at it. But then there's also a medical text, Hippocratic medical text, which talks about a slave girl who became pregnant. And she was employed as an entertainer, so we don't know whether that means a sex worker, probably. And because she was pregnant, she knew she wouldn't be able to do her job. So she went to her employer, who I assume is a slave owner, and said, look, I got pregnant the last time I did this. and the mistress of this enslaved woman goes to a family member who happens to be a Hippocratic doctor
Starting point is 00:32:50 and says, what do I do? And the doctor says, tell her to jump up and down with her heels touching her buttocks. Okay. I know, I know. So the girl does it and something plops out. Oh, no. Oh, right. She's only supposed to have been pregnant for six days. So it's absolutely no way, right? Yeah, yeah. Whatever plops out is supposed to look like the inside of an Egg. Goodness knows what the Hippocratic doctor who witnesses this is supposed to be seeing. But people then link that with Lampitoe in the play, jumping up and down, and say,
Starting point is 00:33:25 ah, this manoeuvre for abortion is called the Lacedaimonian leap. And Laconia, area where Sparta is Lacedaimonian, another word for Spartan, the Lackadiamonian leap. So if you Google Lackadiamon leap, you will find people say, oh, Hippocrates describes the Lackadiamonian, leap. Well, he doesn't. He talks about one girl jumping up and down, but then people have subsequently linked that to the play and said, oh yeah, it's a Spartan woman who does it.
Starting point is 00:33:52 So Spartan women are really good at this. They can control their fertility. Wow. Do we have any evidence, not that they're doing this leapy thing, that sounds bonkers, but that the Spartan women were more aware of medicine and better awareness of their body than anyone else?
Starting point is 00:34:10 Well, again, if you go back to that Plutoc, sayings of Spartan women collection. There's one in there about a young girl who's a virgin, loses her virginity and decides to bring on an abortion and does it so quietly, no one realizes she's doing it. So it's like that boy with the fox at the jumper. Wow. It's that bearing pain without actually showing pain.
Starting point is 00:34:33 That's what Spartans are known for. I'll be back with Helen after this short break. Is it true that Spartan women were buried as warriors if they died during childbirth or have I mixed that up with someone else? No, you've got it because there's this basic parallel between women who die in childbirth and men who die in war as equivalent. And that again is a Greek thing.
Starting point is 00:35:24 To actually bury them like that is another matter, who knows. But the idea of those are the two ways that a man and a woman defend their country. Women produce babies, more soldiers, men die in battle. So it isn't really a Spartan thing. It's actually what all Greeks do. It's just that the Spartans are used to sort of big it up. So remember, it's not just people who think Sparta is really weird who are trying to defend Athens as the proper civilised place.
Starting point is 00:35:53 There are also people who live in Athens and think Athens is a bit rubbish. Yeah. And we could do a lot better if people like Sparta. So there's always people who are Athenians who go and stay in Sparta, have friends in Sparta, hang out in Sparta, live in Sparta, because they think it's better. So the opposition between the two is quite interestingly connected. And Spartan women were said to be able to exercise.
Starting point is 00:36:20 They would have their keep-fit regimes as well, possibly in the nip. In the nip, indeed. So again, one of the few things we have from Sparta in terms of artifacts is this beautiful little statuette of a young girl who could be dancing, could be running, Hard to know. Her legs are sort of like she's on the move. And she's got a really short skirt on and one breast bear. And this thing about the short skirt, lots and lots of sources talk about the Spartans as women exercised wearing this short thing. They were known as thigh flashes, which is rather wonderful. Spartan women are thigh flashes. They wear this short skirt and sometimes, yeah, they will exercise completely in the nude. And the trouble with that is it's such. an image. It's a good excuse to show naked women, right? Yeah. You know, that's an awful lot of those. So that means we have fairly modern works of art, like there's one by Degar,
Starting point is 00:37:18 showing Spartan girls exercising, and he's got them in the nude, because it's a great excuse to show naked girls. Yeah. So, who knows where the truth is there? But again, the purpose of the exercising is not because they want to be sports women or because they just want to do it because it's fun, the purpose of the exercise, according to our ancient sources, is always to have better babies, stronger babies. It's all about the military again. Build that pelvic floor. Build that pelvic floor, yes.
Starting point is 00:37:50 Is it significant then that Helen of Troy was actually Helen of Sparta? She was Spartan the face that launched a thousand ships. Yeah, it's quite a shock to the system, isn't it? Because you brought up on this idea of Spartan as primitive and basic and, you know, ugly, horrible. And then you find out that the most beautiful woman in the world was actually from Sparta. Wow, those exerciser regimes are clearly doing them good. Yes, they must have done, right? I mean, is that, I mean, Sparta sounds like it was known for beautiful women, or at least women that were, you know, they exercised, they took care of their bodies and they were depicted as such as well.
Starting point is 00:38:32 Yes, and think back to the fact we actually have. Mirrors from ancient Sparta, you know, they cared what they look like. They looked at themselves. It's more vain, maybe, than whether we think. Yeah. It's fascinating. Spartan women are doing pretty well here. They are, aren't they? And Helen was the most beautiful woman in the world. Ever? Ever? She didn't get kidnapped, did she? She went quite willingly. She did indeed. So she wasn't a faithful woman. No. No. And a Spartan woman should have been a bit more faithful than that, really.
Starting point is 00:39:01 Should have been staying back home and having those babies, really. Let's think about 300 now, because I've been circling that one for a while. That depicts our very modern understanding of what Sparta's like. And I thought it was really interesting that it went full into that military, stoic, the ripped bodies and all the rest of it. It still with us this idea of the Spartans. Do you think it's ever going to change? Are we ever going to accept?
Starting point is 00:39:31 a Spartan that is less than a military genius. Wouldn't it be fun to make a film about the Spartan who really didn't like fighting? Yes, she would. Completely rubbish. Yeah, completely rubbish of hiding foxes up his jumper. And just really didn't want to do it. He just hated the outside, hated the rain. It's shit I hated it.
Starting point is 00:39:53 Hated it. Wrote poetry in his spare time. I think it would be great. But 300, okay, the six packs, the oiled bodies. They wouldn't have looked quite like that, would they? Probably not. I don't think anyone looks quite like that. Nobody actually looks like that.
Starting point is 00:40:09 But it's a great movie, not least, because it's really very aware of all those sayings of Spartan women. You know, we have with your shielder on it. And also there's a point, the famous point, where King Leonidas chucks these Persian envoy down the well. Yes.
Starting point is 00:40:26 And says, this is Sparta. Wonderful moment. And before he does it, it. What does he do? He looks at his wife, Gorgow, and she gives him a short, a little bit of a nod, a little bit of an eyebrow. Yep, do it. It's the woman supporting the male ideal. The woman who's actually the power of Sparta. I think that's really fun. Yeah. There really was a scene in which, in history where Persian envoy turns up and the Spartans kill the messenger. I mean, you never kill the messenger, right? No, never, never. Basic diplomacy. So as a final question then, if I could time travel you back to ancient Sparta in its heyday, where would you want to go? What would you want to find out? You can come back again, but you've only got like a few hours.
Starting point is 00:41:13 It's very hard, isn't it? So I think I'd be really quite interested in seeing what it's like in the court. So the fact they have two kings, two royal families at the same time, and I would want to be hanging out in the court. Probably not as one of the rulers, but I quite fancy being a waiting girl. You know, just behind the scenes, seeing what's going on there, observing. Because I really want to know how those two royal families function. Because ideally they've got two kings at a time. One is in charge of war and the other one's in charge of keeping things going at home while they're out doing the war. How does that work?
Starting point is 00:41:49 You know, what if one of them isn't much good at the job they're supposed to have? But it's fascinating. And can I tell me the story of Alcibiades? Please. Okay, so Alcibiades, incredibly famous Athenian. general, who is supposedly had a fling with the wife of one of the Spartan kings. I would love to know what's going on there. She's supposed to have said, this is Queen Timea, wife of King Aegis, she's supposed to have said, oh, the kid's definitely Alcibiades kid. How did, what does she think
Starting point is 00:42:19 that? So is this suggesting knowledge of contraception or just that she didn't actually have sex with her husband very much? Or what? Because Alcibiades, Athenian general. gets into trouble in Athens for allegedly some ritual act. Might be he profaned the Elysinian mysteries, there's a whole story there, might be that he was responsible for the mutilation of the Hermes, which is where these square-cut statues with a sort of head were found at crossroads and things in ancient Athens, and they all had an erection, a large erection. I see.
Starting point is 00:42:57 So it's like a garden gnome, think garden gnome, but with a a very big hard on. I'm sorry, Kate. I knew I knew this would go with you. So, okay, and so one morning the Athenians wake up and all the erections have been knocked off. No. Yes, no penises. So who did that? And because Alcibades was a bit of a lad and because some people didn't like him because he was actually also a whizzy general and a sort of sex on legs type character, they reckoned it was him. Now, he'd already left. He'd left with the fleet. to, as part of the war against Sparta that was going on at that time, this end of the fifth century. And they sent a ship to say, come back home, we need you to stand trial for possibly knocking the
Starting point is 00:43:43 wretches off the homes. Exactly. And he obviously, he's not an idiot. He said, well, blow that. And he went to Sparta and said, hello, I'm Alcibiades, the leading general of Athens. Would you like me to be your military advisor? Because I know a three. Smart move. And so he did. So while he was there, he's supposed to have had a fling with the queen. He sounds like a right chance for Disney. Yeah, he was. And then when he fell out with Sparta, he went to Persia, the ancestral enemy of the whole of Greece, and said, Hello, I know a thing about the Spartans and the Athenians.
Starting point is 00:44:17 Could I be your military advisor? And they went, yeah, that'll be nice. Scaliwag. Yeah. I need to know what's going on, particularly with this thing with the king. What was coming on there? Do you really have a relationship with the queen? Was it his baby?
Starting point is 00:44:31 Did he really knock the willies off all the gnomes? Did he really knock the willies off the gnomes? Exactly. I really need to know. Now I need to know too. Oh, Helen, you have been wonderful to talk to. You always are. If people want to know more about you and your research, where can they find you?
Starting point is 00:44:46 Well, the most recent book is Immaculate Forms, which is coming up. In the US on the 28th of January, having been out in the UK since September. I have a blog called Mistaking Histories, all one word, and just, yeah, Google me. I'm all over, I'm afraid. It's absolutely fabulous that you are.
Starting point is 00:45:03 Thank you so much. Will you come back and talk to us again? I certainly will, Kay. It's always a real pleasure. Thank you for listening and thank you so much to Helen for joining us. And if you like what you heard, please don't forget to like with you and follow along whatever it is that you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:45:23 If you like us to explore a subject or maybe you just wanted to say hello, then you can email us at betwixt at history hit.com. We've got episodes on Quack Doctors with the Cautionary Tales podcast and Valentine's Day in Ancient Room, coming your way. This podcast was edited by Nick Thomas and produced by Stuart Beckwith, the senior producer, was Charlotte Long. Join me again betwixt the sheets, The History of Sex Scandal in Society, a podcast by History Hit. This podcast contains music by Epidemic Sound.

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