Spartan , a sculpture ( 475 BCE) unearthed in Sparta in 1926 (
Archaeological Museum of Sparta) • A
witticism attributed to
Lycurgus, the possibly legendary lawgiver of Sparta, was a response to a proposal to set up a
democracy there: "Begin with your own family." • On another occasion, Lycurgus was reportedly asked the reason for the less-than-extravagant size of Sparta's
sacrifices to the
gods. He replied, "So that we may always have something to offer.") • Responding to a visitor who questioned why they put their fields in the hands of the
helots rather than cultivate them themselves,
Anaxandridas explained, "It was not by taking care of the fields, but of ourselves, that we acquired those fields." • King
Demaratus, being pestered by someone with a question concerning who the most exemplary Spartan was, answered "He that is least like you." • Two examples from the Spartans (recorded by
Herodotus), both concerning the
Battle of Thermopylae, which have been featured in modern depictions of that battle, including the films
The 300 Spartans and
300. The first is a boast from one of the Persians that when battle is joined, "our arrows will block out the sun!" The Spartans nonchalantly responded: "then we will fight in the shade." The second concerns a Persian commander's demand that the Spartans and their allies surrender and lay down their weapons. The Spartans, deployed for battle, responded: "
Come and take them!" • In an account from Herodotus, "When the banished
Samians reached Sparta, they had audience of the magistrates, before whom they made a long speech, as was natural with persons greatly in want of aid. When it was over, the Spartans averred that they could no longer remember the first half of their speech, and thus could make nothing of the remainder. Afterwards the Samians had another audience, whereat they simply said, showing a bag which they had brought with them, 'The bag wants flour.' The Spartans answered that they did not need to have said 'the bag'; however, they resolved to give them aid." • Polycratidas was one of several Spartans sent on a diplomatic mission to some Persian generals, and being asked whether they came in a private or a public capacity, answered, "If we succeed, public; if not, private." ==See also==