List of kings of Sparta
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This list of kings of Sparta details the important rulers of the Greek city-state of Sparta in the Peloponnesus. Sparta was unusual among Greek city-states in that it maintained its kingship past the Archaic age. It was even more unusual in that it had two kings simultaneously, called Arkhagêtai,[1] coming from two separate lines. According to tradition, the two lines, the Agiads and Eurypontids, were respectively descended from the twins Eurysthenes and Procles, the descendants of Heracles who supposedly conquered Sparta two generations after the Trojan War. The dynasties themselves, however, were named after the twins' grandsons, the kings Agis I and Eurypon, respectively. The Agiad line was regarded as being senior to the Eurypontid line.[2] Although there are lists of the earlier purported Kings of Sparta, there is little evidence for the existence of any kings before the middle of the 6th century BC or so. Spartan kings received a recurring posthumous hero cult like that of the Dorian kings of Cyrene.[3] The kings' firstborns sons, as heirs apparent, were the only Spartan boys expressly exempt from the Agoge, however they were allowed to take part if they so wished, and this endowed them with increased prestige when they ascended the throne.
Legendary kings
The ancient Greeks named males before their fathers, producing a patronymic by infixing -id-; for example, the sons of Atreus were the Atreids. In the case of royal houses the patronymic formed from the founder or an early significant figure became the age of the dynasty. A ruling family might in this way have a number of dynastic names; for example, Agis I named the Agiads, but he was a Heraclid, and so were his descendants.
In cases where the descent was not known or was scantily known the Greeks made a few standard assumptions based on their cultural ideology. A people was treated as a tribe, presumed to have descended from an ancestor bearing its name. He must have been a king, who founded a dynasty of his name. This mythologizing extended even to place names. They were presumed to have been named after kings and divinities. Kings often became divinities, in their religion.
Lelegids
The Lelegid were the descendants of Lelex (a back formation), ancestor of the Leleges, a Pelasgian tribe inhabiting the Eurotas valley before the Greeks, who, according to the mythological descent, amalgamated with the Greeks.
Year | Lelegid | Other notable information |
---|---|---|
c. 1600 BC | Lelex | son of Poseidon or Helios, or he was said to be autochthonous |
c. 1575 BC | Myles | son of Lelex |
c. 1550 BC | Eurotas | son of Myles, father of Sparta |
Lacedaemonids
The Lacedaemonids contain Greeks from the age of legend, now treated as being the Bronze Age in Greece. In the language of mythologic descent, the kingship passed from the Leleges to the Greeks.
Year | Lacedaemonid | Other notable information |
---|---|---|
c. | Lacedaemon | son of Zeus, husband of Sparta |
c. | Amyklas | son of Lacedaemon. He founded Amyklai |
c. | Argalus | son of Amyklas |
c. | Kynortas | son of Amyklas |
c. | Perieres | son of Kynortas |
c. | Oibalos | son of Kynortas |
c. | Tyndareos | (First reign); son of Oibalos and father of Helen |
c. | Hippocoon | son of Oibalos and brother of Tyndareos |
c. | Tyndareos | (Second reign) |
- Years with no dates (only "c.") are unknown
Atreids
The Atreidai (Latin Atreidae) belong to the Late Bronze Age, or Mycenaean Period. In mythology these were the Perseids. As the name of Atreus is attested in Hittite documents, this dynasty may well be proto-historic.
Year | Atreid | Other notable information |
---|---|---|
c. 1250 BC | Menelaus | son of Atreus and husband of Helen |
c. 1200 BC | Orestes | son of Agamemnon and nephew of Menelaus |
c. | Tisamenos | son of Orestes |
c. 1200 BC | Dion | husband of Iphitea, the daughter of Prognaus |
- Years with no dates (only "c.") are unknown
Heraclids
The Spartan kings as Heracleidae claimed descent from Hercules, who through his mother was descended from Perseus. Disallowed the Peloponnesus, he embarked on a life of wandering. They became ascendant in the Eurotas valley with the Dorians who, at least in legend, entered it during an invasion called the return of the Heracleidae; driving out the Atreids and at least some of the Mycenaean population.
Year | Heraclid | Other notable information |
---|---|---|
c. | Aristodemos | son of Aristomachus and husband of Argeia |
c. | Theras (regent) | son of Autesion and brother of Aristodemos' wife Argeia;[4] served as regent for his nephews, Eurysthenes and Procles. |
- Years with no dates (only "c.") are unknown
Agiad dynasty
The dynasty was named after its second king, Agis.
Year | Agiad | Other notable information |
---|---|---|
c. 930 BC | Eurysthenes | Return of the Heracleidae |
c. 930 – 900 BC[5] | Agis I | Subjugated the Helots |
c. 900 – 870 BC | Echestratus | Expelled the Cynurensian[6] that were power. |
c. 870 – 840 BC | Labotas[7] | |
c. 840 – 820 BC | Doryssus | |
c. 820 – 790 BC | Agesilaus I | |
c. 760 – 758 BC | Teleclus | Killed by the Messenians |
c. 758 – 741 BC | Alcamenes | First Messenian War begins |
c. 741 – 665 BC | Polydorus | Second Messenian War begins; Killed by Athenian Archon Polemarchus[8] |
c. 665 – 640 BC | Eurycrates | |
c. 640 – 615 BC | Anaxander | |
c. 615 – 590 BC | Eurycratides | |
c. 590 – 560 BC | Leon | |
c. 560 – 520 BC | Anaxandridas II | Battle of the Fetters |
c. 520 – 490 BC | Cleomenes I | Greco-Persian Wars begins |
c. 490 – 480 BC | Leonidas I | Battle of Thermopylae |
c. 480 – 459 BC | Pleistarchus | First Peloponnesian War begins |
c. 459 – 409 BC | Pleistoanax | Second Peloponnesian War begins |
c. 409 – 395 BC | Pausanias | Helped restore democracy in Athens; Spartan hegemony |
c. 395 – 380 BC | Agesipolis I | Corinthian War begins |
c. 380 – 371 BC | Cleombrotus I | |
c. 371 – 369 BC | Agesipolis II[9] | |
c. 369 – 309 BC | Cleomenes II | Third Sacred War begins |
c. 309 – 265 BC | Areus I | Killed in battle against Aristodemus, the tyrant of Megalopolis. |
c. 265 – 262 BC | Acrotatus II | |
c. 262 – 254 BC | Areus II[10] | |
c. 254 – 242 BC | Leonidas II | |
c. 242 – 241 BC | Cleombrotus II | |
c. 241 – 235 BC | Leonidas II | |
c. 235 – 222 BC | Cleomenes III |
Eurypontid dynasty
The dynasty is named after its third king Eurypon. Not shown is Lycurgus, the lawgiver, a younger son of the Eurypontids, who served a brief regency either for the infant Charilaus (780–750 BC) or for Labotas (870–840 BC) the Agiad.
Year | Eurypontid | Other notable information |
---|---|---|
c. 930 BC | Procles | Return of the Heracleidae |
c. 890 BC | Soos[11][12] | Son of Procles and father of Eurypon |
c. 890 – 860 BC | Eurypon | |
c. 860 – 830 BC | Prytanis | |
c. 830 – 800 BC | Polydectes | |
c. 800 – 780 BC | Eunomus | |
c. 780 – 750 BC | Charilaus | Ward, pupil, and nephew of the Spartan reformer Lycurgus; War with the Argives and destroyed the border-town of Aegys; Battle of Tegea |
c. 750 – 725 BC | Nicander | First Messenian War begins |
c. 725 – 675 BC | Theopompus | Second Messenian War begins |
c. 675 – 645 BC | Anaxandridas I | |
c. 645 – 625 BC | Zeuxidamus | |
c. 625 – 600 BC | Anaxidamus | |
c. 600 – 575 BC | Archidamus I | |
c. 575 – 550 BC | Agasicles[13] | Contemporary with Leonidas I; End of the Messenian Wars. |
c. 550 – 515 BC | Ariston | Battle of the Fetters |
c. 515 – 491 BC | Demaratus | Greco-Persian Wars begins |
c. 491 – 469 BC | Leotychidas | |
c. 469 – 427 BC | Archidamus II | First Peloponnesian War; Second Peloponnesian War begins |
c. 427 – 401[14] BC | Agis II | Spartan hegemony; Attacked Epidaurus, Leuctra,[15] Caryao, Orchomenos, and Mantinela; Invaded the Argolis; Council of war[16] formed to check his powers; |
c. 401[14] – 360 BC | Agesilaus II | Corinthian War begins |
c. 360 – 338 BC | Archidamus III | Third Sacred War begins |
c. 338 – 331 BC | Agis III | |
c. 331 – 305 BC | Eudamidas I | |
c. 305 – 275 BC | Archidamus IV | |
c. 275 – 245 BC | Eudamidas II | |
c. 245 – 241 BC | Agis IV | |
c. 241 – 228 BC | Eudamidas III | |
c. 228 – 227 BC | Archidamus V | |
c. 227 – 221 BC | Eucleidas | Actually an Agiad installed by Cleomenes III[17] in place of Archidamus V. |
Republic monarchy
Following Cleomenes III's defeat against Antigonus III Doson of Macedon and the Achaean League in the Battle of Sellasia, the Spartan system began to break down. Sparta was a republic from 221 to 219 BC. The dual monarchy was restored in 219 BC.
Year | Monarch | Other notable information |
---|---|---|
c. 219 – 215 BC | Agesipolis III | last Agiad, deposed by Lycurgus |
c. 219 – 210 BC | Lycurgus | |
c. 210 – 206 BC | Pelops | son of Lycurgus and last king from either of the old dynasties |
Tyrants
Year | Tyrants | Other notable information |
---|---|---|
c. 210–207 BC | Machanidas | regent for Pelops |
c. 206–192 BC | Nabis | first regent for Pelops, then usurper, claiming descent from the Eurypontid king Demaratus |
c. 192 BC | Laconicus | last known king of Sparta |
The Achaean League annexed Sparta in 192 BC.
Citations and references
- ↑ Hall, Johnathan. A History of the Ancient Greek World. Blackwell.
- ↑ Cartledge, Paul, The Spartans, Vintage Books, 2003
- ↑ Pindar and the cult of heroes By Bruno Currie Page 245 ISBN 0-19-927724-9
- ↑ a Cadmid of Theban descent
- ↑ according to Apollodorus of Athens
- ↑ Said to have been colonized by Cynurus, Cynurensian bandits were common in the lands
- ↑ or Labotes, Leobotes
- ↑ A Classical Dictionary By John Lemprière. Pg 618
- ↑ Agesilaus II, distinguished king of Sparta, being asked which was the greater virtue, valor or justice, replied: "Unsupported by justice, valor is good for nothing; and if all men were just, there would be no need of valor".
- ↑ A Prosopography of Lacedaemonians, Part 396. By Alfred S. Bradford. Page 44.
- ↑ Of Sous is related an anecdote, which, though it manifest great patience and resolution, contains one of those deceptions which Cicero justly censures as inconsistent with integrity of mind. Being surrounded by his enemies in a spot where his army suffered very severely for want of water, he made a treaty with them, promising to restore all the places he had taken from them, on condition that he and all his men should drink of a spring at a small distance from the camp. Which treaty being ratified, he first endeavoured by the offer of no less a reward than his kingdom to prevail on some one of his soldiers to refrain from drinking; but when they all refused, he himself only sprinkled some water on his face, and then, as not having drunk, refused to perform the stipulated condition of restoring the places which he had taken: thus by a base evasion depriving his enemies of the benefit to which they were entitled by permitting him and his army to have access to the fountain to drink, if they would.
- ↑ Edward William Whitaker. A Complete System of Universal History, Volume 1. 1821. 417
- ↑ Plutarch's Lives: Marcus Crassus.-Sertorius.-Eumenes.-Agesilaus.-Pompeius. By Plutarch
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 or 400
- ↑ And, again, after the Carnean festival
- ↑ consisting of 10 Spartans
- ↑ Eucleidas's brother
Further reading
- The Cyclopædia, Volume 20. By Abraham Rees. Page 157+ (List of kings of Sparta on pg. 164).
- Sir William Smith, A New Classical Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography, Mythology, and Geography: Partly Based Upon the Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. Harper & Brothers, 1851.
- Sir William Smith. Abaeus-Dysponteus. J. Murray, 1890.
- Sir William Smith. A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology: Earinus-Nyx. J. Murray, 1876.
- William Smith (Ed.) A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology: Oarses-Zygia. J. Murray, 1880.
External links
- Livius
- Eurypontids and Agiads by Jona Lendering
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