The Gymnasium of Virtue is the first book devoted
exclusively to the study of education in ancient Sparta, covering
the period from the sixth century B.C. to the fourth century A.D.
Nigel Kennell refutes the popular notion that classical Spartan
education was a conservative amalgam of "primitive" customs not
found elsewhere in Greece. He argues instead that later political
and cultural movements made the system appear to be more
distinctive than it actually had been, as a means of asserting
Sparta's claim to be a unique society.
Using epigraphical, literary, and archaeological evidence, Kennell
describes the development of all aspects of Spartan education,
including the age-grade system and physical contests that were
integral to the system. He shows that Spartan education reached its
apogee in the early Roman Empire, when Spartans sought to
distinguish themselves from other Greeks. He attributes many of the
changes instituted later in the period to one person--the
philosopher Sphaerus the Borysthenite, who was an adviser to the
revolutionary king Cleomenes III in the third century B.C.