The most important cause of the 1st Messenian War was the lack of cultivable allotments and the demand for land redistribution. The sharing out of the lands of Stenyclarus to landless Spartans does not seem to have solved the problem. After the end of the 1st Messenian War, so Plutarch tells us, the legendary lawgiver Lycurgus asked for advice from the Delphic Oracle, in order to go ahead with reforms that would solve the crisis. The divinely-inspired oracular text - rhetra - was Sparta's founding charter. It laid down the distribution of the population into tribes and obai (villages), and shared power between the Senate, a body of thirty which drafted the laws, and the Apella (the people's gathering), which voted them through. So as to free Sparta from wealth's excesses and crimes, Lycurgus redistributed the land in thirty thousand allotments for perioikoi and nine thousand allotments for Spartans. | ![]() |
Even though modern research questions the historicity of the person of Lycurgus, the reforms attributed to him outline with broad sweeps of the brush the beginnings of the Spartan state. The two kings from the Agiad and Eurypontid families had resricted powers. They took part in the Senate; led the army; possessed a temenos (farmstead) in the regions of the perioikoi; and had the right to a greater portion |
Those who counted as citizens (or homoioi) were all who had been born of a Spartan father; tilled an allotment of land; and were at least thirty years old. Perioikoi were free inhabitants of Laconia who did not have civic rights but did serve in the Spartan army. At the bottom of the social pyramid were helots, dependent villagers who were essentially state property. |
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