Prologue: Brasidas at Amphipolis -- Memory and mirage -- Warrior poets -- Few against many -- The freedom of the Greeks -- Remembering Sparta's other liberators -- Agesilaus, first king of Greece -- From Thermopylae to 300 -- Epilogue : "Dulce et Decorum Est"
Summary
The tough Spartan soldier is one of the most enduring images from antiquity. Yet Spartans too fell in battle - so how did ancient Sparta memorialise its wars and war dead? From the poet Tyrtaeus inspiring soldiers with rousing verse in the seventh century BCE to inscriptions celebrating the 300's last stand at Thermopylae, and from Spartan imperialists posing as liberators during the Peloponnesian War to the modern reception of the Spartan as a brave warrior defending the "West", Sparta has had an outsized role in how warfare is framed and remembered. This image has also been distorted by the Spartans themselves and their later interpreters. While debates continue to rage about the appropriateness of monuments to supposed war heroes in our civic squares, this authoritative and engaging book suggests that how the Spartans commemorated their military past, and how this shaped their military future, has perhaps never been more pertinent
Notes
Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on December 19, 2023)