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  2. Bronze Statuette of Athletic Spartan Girl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bronze_Statuette_of...

    The Bronze Statuettes of Athletic Spartan Girl are bronze figurines depicting a Spartan young woman wearing a short tunic in a presumably running pose. These statuettes are considered Spartan manufacture dating from the 6th century B.C., [1] and they were used as decorative attachments to ritual vessels as votive dedications, such as a cauldron, [2] suggested by the bronze rivet on their feet. [3]

  3. Young Spartans Exercising - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Young_Spartans_Exercising

    Young Spartans Exercising, also known as Young Spartans and as Young Spartan Girls Challenging Boys, [1] is an early oil on canvas painting by French impressionist artist Edgar Degas. The work depicts two groups of male and female Spartan youth exercising and challenging each other in some way.

  4. Women in ancient Sparta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_ancient_Sparta

    Spartan law codified under Lycurgus expressed the importance of child-bearing to Sparta. Bearing and raising children was considered the most important role for women in Spartan society; equal to male warriors in the Spartan army. [52] Spartan women were encouraged to produce many children, preferably male, to increase Sparta's military population.

  5. Category:Ancient Spartan women - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Ancient_Spartan_women

    Ancient Spartan queens consort (2 C, 11 P) P. Spartan princesses (9 P) W. Spartan women in ancient warfare (3 P) Pages in category "Ancient Spartan women"

  6. Gorgo, Queen of Sparta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gorgo,_Queen_of_Sparta

    A bust believed to depict King Leonidas I, Gorgo's husband. After Cleomenes's death in 489 BC, Gorgo was left as his sole heiress. By 490, she was apparently already married to her half-uncle Leonidas I. [11] Despite being the daughter and wife of Spartan kings, Gorgo herself could not be considered a queen, as royal women in Sparta did not typically hold a special role in society.

  7. Euryleonis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euryleonis

    Euryleonis (Ancient Greek: Ευρυλεωνίς) (Flourished c. 370 BC, Sparta, ancient Greece) was a celebrated woman, owner of a chariot-winner of Olympic games. Euryleonis was a horse breeder from Sparta whose horse chariot won the two horse chariot races of the Ancient Olympic Games in 368 BC. She is sometimes referred to as a princess and ...

  8. List of women warriors in folklore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_women_warriors_in...

    Artemisia I of Caria was a queen of the ancient Greek city-state of Halicarnassus and of the nearby islands of Kos, Nisyros and Kalymnos, within the Achaemenid satrapy of Caria, in about 480 BC. She was of Carian-Greek ethnicity by her father Lygdamis I, and half-Cretan by her mother. She was the first woman admiral.

  9. Statues of Cynisca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statues_of_Cynisca

    One of these female victors, Euryleonis who won in 368 B.C., was commemorated with a statue of her own on the Acropolis, a traditional monument site for male achievement. [6] Pausanias even notes that after the Greco-Persian War , in Lacedaemon, a region in Sparta where one of the statues stood, the people were “the keenest breeders of horses ...