Yeah I agree with you I think that you could have brought in everything you discussed.gracerawl88 said:i thought it was a good 10 mark question... if you know stuff bout women. it is spartan society, and women were a big part in society.. birthing, inheriting, control of house when husband not home, propagandists, singing, poetry. heaps of stuff. good question.
e=mc2 said:I mean there just isn't that much content comparing to kings, perioeci, government and social life.
all i said was child bearing child bearing child bearing, be a wife to citizen, xenophon says child bearing blah blah produce strong boy.
What else can someone write so much on spartan women, they have no political power and don't contribute much?
e=mc2 said:I mean there just isn't that much content comparing to kings, perioeci, government and social life.
all i said was child bearing child bearing child bearing, be a wife to citizen, xenophon says child bearing blah blah produce strong boy.
What else can someone write so much on spartan women, they have no political power and don't contribute much?
yes agreed!! seroiusly all i know is that lycurgus gave them their laws/great rhetra thing..s-p-a-c-e-d said:10 marks on Lykougous, I think I'd just die if I saw that.
I think they could have swapped the agoge and the women question around and it would have been more appropriate (in terms of marks), but there was enough to talk about either way.
Ussia said:they couldnt own land other greek women srry ..
leetom said:I had never seen the source before, and I didn't know much about the religious role of women other than their inclusion in some of the festivals. Did anyone notice the woman in the source had short hair? I thought perhaps she was conducting some ritual in preparation for marriage, thinking of the marriage customs.
I should have read the question properly. It says the 'significance of women in Spartan society", rather than just 'Spartan women', which meant it would have been ideal to write about perioeci and helot women as well.
I was a bit stunned by the agoge question. The 'role' in the education of the boys? I thought the agoge was everything, and took a line that the agoge was a constant feature of Spartan society, noting that even when gaining citizenship the boys changed from students to mentoring the new generations in the agoge. I finished by saying that in a way, Spartan society was the agoge. Which, looking back, doesn't describe the role at all.