<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII<br/> <span class="subhead">LYCURGUS AND HIS LITTLE NEPHEW</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> Dorians were a brave and sturdy race, braver, perhaps,
than any other of the Greek tribes. Apollo, the Sun-God, one
of the noblest of the Olympians, was the god they held in
greatest reverence.</p>
<p>A band of these Dorians came from the north and settled
in the valley of Laconia, through which flows the river
Eurotas. Here they built villages and called themselves
Lacedaemonians.</p>
<p>Before long five of these villages joined together to form a
city, which was named Sparta. Sparta became the capital
or chief city in Laconia.</p>
<p>At first the new city was weak, scarcely able to hold her
own against the neighbouring tribes, and much less able to
add to her dominion. She was indeed hardly able to keep
order within her own borders.</p>
<p>Sparta was ruled not by one king but by two, and so you
might perhaps think that she would be governed better than
any other city or state, but this was not so.</p>
<p>The first kings were twin brothers, for an oracle had
bidden the Spartans ‘to take both as kings, but to give
greater honour to the elder.’</p>
<p>Instead of helping each other to improve their country,
the two kings often disagreed, and then spent their days in
quarrelling. The people were content that they should do
so, for while the kings quarrelled they had no time to frame
stricter laws or to punish those who disturbed the peace of
the city.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span></p>
<p>It soon became clear that if Sparta was to grow great
and prosperous a strong man must be found to guide the
kings as well as the people. This strong man was found
in Lycurgus the famous lawgiver.</p>
<p>History tells little about the life of the lawgiver, but
many legends cluster around his name. It is told that
Lycurgus belonged to one of the royal houses, and that when
his elder brother died he became for a short time one of the
kings of Sparta.</p>
<p>The queen-mother was an ambitious woman, and she
wished still to sit on the throne as she had done while her
husband was alive. So she said to Lycurgus that she would
kill her tiny baby boy who would one day be king, if he
would marry her. But the lawgiver was angry, and rebuked
the queen-mother for wishing to do such a wicked deed.</p>
<p>One night as he sat at supper with the chief men of Sparta,
Lycurgus ordered his little nephew to be brought to him.</p>
<p>When the child was carried into the room he took him in
his arms and holding him up for all to see, he cried, ‘Men of
Sparta, here is a king born unto us.’ Before them all he
placed the babe on the throne, and as the child had not yet
been named, he called him Charilaus, the joy of the people.</p>
<p>From that time Lycurgus became the guardian of his
little nephew and the regent of the kingdom. So upright
were his ways, so honest his words, that he was reverenced
by the people as greatly as when he was king.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the queen-mother had not forgiven Lycurgus
for thwarting her ambition, and she determined to punish
him. So she spread a report among the people that Lycurgus
meant to put his nephew to death that he might again
become king.</p>
<p>Before long the rumour spread by the queen-mother
reached the ears of Lycurgus, and he at once made up his
mind to leave Sparta until Charilaus was old enough to
reign. As he journeyed from place to place Lycurgus
studied the laws and manners of the different countries, so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
that when he returned to Sparta he might be able to improve
the laws of his own land.</p>
<p>At Ionia he is said not only to have read the works of
Homer, but to have met the poet himself. So wise were
many of the customs described in the poet’s books that he
set to work to reframe those that he thought would be of
most use in his own country.</p>
<p>Some stories tell that Lycurgus made a copy of part of the
poet’s works, for it is thought that the Greeks at this time
(about 800 or 900 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>) already knew how to write. It was
thus Lycurgus who made the works of Homer well known to
his countrymen.</p>
<p>But in all his travels what interested Lycurgus most was
the way the soldiers were trained in Egypt. In other
countries he had seen men who ploughed their fields or plied
their trade, leave their work to fight when war broke out, but
the Egyptian soldiers were soldiers and nothing else all the
year round.</p>
<p>Lycurgus determined that he would train the youths
of Sparta as strictly as the soldiers in Egypt were trained.
They should be neither ploughmen nor merchants, but the
best soldiers the world had ever seen.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span></p>
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