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===Education=== {{main|Agoge}} [[File:Spartan swordman.jpg|thumb|upright=0.8|left|Bronze appliqué of Spartan manufacture, possibly depicting [[Orestes]], 550–525 BC ([[Getty Villa]])]] When male Spartans began military training at age seven, they would enter the ''[[agoge]]'' system. The ''agoge'' was designed to encourage discipline and physical toughness and to emphasize the importance of the Spartan state. Boys lived in communal [[mess]]es and, according to Xenophon, whose sons attended the ''agoge'', the boys were fed "just the right amount for them never to become sluggish through being too full, while also giving them a taste of what it is not to have enough."<ref name="Xenophon, Spartan Society, 2">Xenophon, Spartan Society, 2</ref> In addition, they were trained to survive in times of privation, even if it meant stealing.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Western Heritage|last1=Kagan|first1=Donald |last2=Ozment|first2=Steven|last3=Frank|first3=Turner|last4=Frank|first4=Alison|publisher=Pearson|year=2013 |pages=44, Spartan Society|chapter=The Rise of Greek Civilization}}</ref> Besides physical and weapons training, boys studied reading, writing, music and dancing. Special punishments were imposed if boys failed to answer questions sufficiently "[[Laconic phrase|laconically]]" (i.e. briefly and wittily).{{sfn|Cartledge|2001|p=85}} Spartan boys were expected to take an older male mentor, usually an unmarried young man. According to some sources, the older man was expected to function as a kind of substitute father and role model to his junior partner; however, others believe it was reasonably certain that they had sexual relations (the exact nature of [[Pederasty in ancient Greece#Sparta|Spartan pederasty]] is not entirely clear). Xenophon, an admirer of the Spartan educational system whose sons attended the ''agoge'', explicitly denies the sexual nature of the relationship.{{sfn|Cartledge|2001|pp=91–105}}<ref name="Xenophon, Spartan Society, 2"/> Some Spartan youth apparently became members of an irregular unit known as the ''[[Krypteia]]''. The immediate objective of this unit was to seek out and kill vulnerable helot Laconians as part of the larger program of terrorising and intimidating the helot population.{{sfn|Cartledge|2001|p=88}} Less information is available about the education of Spartan girls, but they seem to have gone through a fairly extensive formal educational cycle, broadly similar to that of the boys but with less emphasis on military training. Spartan girls received an education known as ''mousikē''. This included music, dancing, singing and poetry. Choral dancing was taught so Spartan girls could participate in ritual activities, including the cults of Helen and Artemis.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Millender|first=Ellen G.|title=A Companion to Sparta|publisher=Wiley-Blackwell|year=2018|editor-last=Powell|editor-first=Anton|pages=504}}</ref> In this respect, classical Sparta was unique in ancient Greece. In no other city-state did women receive any kind of formal education.{{sfn|Cartledge|2001|pp=83–84}}
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