|
Section § 62. The "Ephebi." |
 |
A Day in Old Athens, by William Stearns Davis (1910) Professor of Ancient History at the University of Minnesota |
Chapter IX. The Schoolboys of Athens.
62. The "Ephebi."--The Athenian education then is admirably adapted
to make the average lad a useful and worthy citizen, and to make
him modest, alert, robust, manly, and a just lover of the beautiful,
both in conduct and in art. It does not, however, develop his
individual bent very strongly; and it certainly gives him a mean
view of the dignity of labor. He will either become a leisurely
gentleman, whose only proper self-expression will come in warfare,
politics, or philosophy; or--if he be poor--he will at least envy
and try to imitate the leisure class.
By eighteen the young Athenian's days of study will usually come
to a close. At that age he will be given a simple festival by
his father and be formally enrolled in his paternal deme.[*] His
hair, which has hitherto grown down toward his shoulders, will be
clipped short. He will allow his beard to grow. At the temple
of Aglaurus he will (with the other youths of his age) take solemn
oath of loyalty to Athens and her laws. For the next year he will
serve as a military guard at the Peiræus, and receive a certain
training in soldiering. The next year the state will present
him with a new shield and spear, and he will have a taste of the
rougher garrison duty at one of the frontier forts towards Btia or
Megara.[+] Then he is mustered out. He is an ephebus no longer,
but a full-fledged citizen, and all the vicissitudes of Athenian
life are before him.
[*]One of the hundred or more petty townships or precincts into
which Attica was divided.
[+]These two years which the ephebi of Athens had to serve under
arms have been aptly likened to the military service now required
of young men in European countries.
Section 63
| Contents
This resource page is copyright © 2002 N.S. Gill.