Why is Sparta still relevant 2,000 years on

From the French Revolution and Nazi Germany, through the Cold War USA, and onwards to 21st century cinema screens and YouTube, ancient Sparta continues to resonate through Western thought, more than 2,000 years after the peak of its power.

Now, a new book — the result of a major University of Nottingham research project led by a world-leading expert on Sparta — examines the impact of this classical civilisation in modern times and our prolonged fascination with the politics, society and customs of its people.

Sparta in Modern Thought: Politics, History and Culture is the first book for more than 40 years to examine the significant modern influence of this ancient Greek city-state.

The book is the latest publication by the University’s research project, Sparta in Comparative Perspective, Ancient to Modern, directed by Professor Stephen Hodkinson, from the Department of Classics in the School of Humanities, and funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council.

Professor Hodkinson, who co-edited the book, said: “Images of ancient Sparta have had a major impact on Western thought. From the Renaissance to the French Revolution, Sparta was invoked by radical thinkers as a model for the creation of an ideal republic.”

“Since the 19th century, Sparta has typically been viewed as the opposite of advanced liberal and industrial democracies: a forerunner of 20th century totalitarian and militaristic regimes such as the Third Reich and the Soviet Union.”

“But positive views of the Spartans continue to flourish in contemporary democratic media and culture, especially in popular fiction and film.”

In the book, 11 leading international experts take readers across 10 centuries from the 12th century Renaissance through to early 21st century popular culture. Exploiting hitherto untapped sources, from medieval political tracts to declassified CIA documents and YouTube video clips, they reveal many previously unknown aspects of Sparta’s impact, shedding new light on the depth and importance of her role in Western politics, history and culture.

• Professor Hodkinson’s chapter exposes how American foreign policy and intelligence analysts used Sparta as a model for interpreting the Soviet Union, especially in support of President Ronald Reagan’s hard-line policies towards the USSR in the early 1980s.

• Dr Lynn Fotheringham, Lecturer in Classics, investigates the positive portrayal of Sparta in 1990s American popular fiction, such as Frank Miller’s graphic novel 300 (pictured above) and Steven Pressfield’s Gates of Fire, discussing how they deal with problematic elements of Spartan culture such as infant exposure.

• Dr Kostas Vlassopoulos, Associate Professor in Greek History, examines how early modern thinkers, such as Machiavelli and Montesquieu, compared Sparta politically with Rome and how her image changed from aristocratic republic to egalitarian democracy in the increasingly radical intellectual atmosphere of the 18th century.

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