SPARTA, THE PELANORS, WEALTH, AND WOMEN
	
	Sparta, of all the Greek States, is one that resisted most of all, in 
	ancient times, the encroachments of international money power, and the 
	circulation of precious metals, and all those demoralizing factors deriving 
	therefrom. 
	
	 
	
	However, from those laws promulgated by Lycurgus in Sparta, 
	reputedly during the ninth Century B.C., but, as according to the 
	archaeologists, the early sixth century B.C., (1) it would seem that all 
	those evils deriving from giving such international money power free rein, 
	had already been experienced, and had brought about that reaction amongst 
	the people generally that enabled Lycurgus to take those measures by which 
	he expunged forever the main causes of the sickness of greed and 
	self-interest which ate at the heart of the Doric overlord class of the 
	Peloponnese. 
	
	 
	
	To him (2) are ascribed those laws directed towards this 
	purpose such as are described by Plutarch:
	
		
		"Not contented with this (redistribution of land) he resolved to make a 
	division of their movables too, that there might be no odious distinction or 
	inequality left among them; but finding it would be very dangerous to go 
	about it openly, he took another course and defeated their avarice by the 
	following stratagem: he commanded that all gold and silver coin should be 
	called in, and that only a sort of money of iron should be current, a great 
	weight and quantity of which was very little worth. 
		 
		
		So that to lay up twenty 
	or thirty pounds, there was required a pretty large closet, and to remove 
	it, nothing less than a yoke of oxen. With the diffusion of this money, at 
	once a number of vices were banished from Lacedaemon for who would rob 
	another of such coin? Who would unjustly detain or take by force or accept 
	as a bribe, a thing which was not easy to hide or a credit to have, or 
	indeed of any use to cut in pieces. 
		 
		
		For when it was red-hot they quenched it 
	in vinegar, and by that means spoilt it and made it almost incapable of 
	being worked.
In the next place he declared an outlawry of all superfluous arts; but here 
	he might have spared his proclamation; for they of themselves would have 
	gone after the gold and silver, the money which remained being not so proper 
	payment for curious work, for being iron it was scarcely portable, neither 
	if they should take the means to export it, would it pass among the other 
	Greeks who ridiculed it. 
		 
		
		So now there was no means of purchasing foreign 
	goods and small wares, no itinerate fortune teller, no harlot monger, or 
	gold or silver smith, engraver or jeweller set foot in a country which had 
	no money; so that luxury deprived little by little of that which fed and 
	fomented it, wasted to nothing, and died away of itself. 
		 
		
		For the rich had no 
	advantage here over the poor as their wealth and abundance had no road to 
	come abroad by, but were shut up at home doing nothing." (3)
	
	
	Plutarch, of course, lived in a city and in an age when all wealth was 
	assessed in terms of precious metals by weight. 
	
	 
	
	Needless to say, in order to 
	have the cooperation of the real ruler, local money creative power, towards 
	the publication of his works, he wisely followed that trend which 
	undoubtedly had been instigated in Athens of making a mockery of Spartan 
	customs, a trend which is still followed to this day by many so called 
	scholars. 
	
	 
	
	Sparta, early in the Millennium had come to understand the real 
	significance of precious metal money, as being part of an international 
	confidence game. Sparta also realized the destructive forces inherent in the 
	activities of its controllers and the foreign luxury traders they encouraged 
	and financed in order to debilitate the people, and so make absolute their 
	own secret hegemony, such as destroyed all racial pride in that people on 
	whom they were battening, and thus destroying their will to resist through 
	creating obsession with pleasure. 
	
	 
	
	The evidence is in the findings of the 
	British School at Athens from their excavations at the site of the city of 
	Sparta:
	
		
		"The excavations of the British School at Athens at the site of the city of 
	Sparta reveal a flourishing state of the arts and manufactures in Laconia 
	carried on, if not wholly by Laconian workmen themselves, at least by 
	foreign artists who were welcome and encouraged to ply their crafts without 
	any of the dark suspicion of strangers that was so marked in latter times." 
		(4)
	
	
	The so-called Spartan way of life derived from the necessity of the Spartans 
	to always be prepared for total war from abroad, as their final rejection of 
	international money power made certain would come, and to be always prepared 
	for war from within; i.e., insurrection; an equal certainty deriving from 
	the same causes.
	
	The first Messenian War (736-716 B.C.) was entered into by King Theopompus 
	of Sparta for the usual reasons for any war in a state indicated by 
	archaeological findings as being under the thumb of international money 
	power: instigation by that money power in favor of its arms industry and 
	its other long range purposes. The long drawn out character of the war 
	indicated that the Messenians had equal access to international arms 
	industry with Sparta. 
	
	 
	
	Armies are not raised and maintained in long drawn out 
	wars without finances acceptable in international trade and ready access to 
	the best of weapons and equipment; and it is clear the Messenians were not 
	short of such... 
	
	 
	
	This war served that purpose most desirable to money power 
	of reducing the power of kings: 
	
		
		"The first and second Messenian wars were 
	both followed by constitutional crises. The first settlement was a victory 
	of the Spartan peers over the kings and a curbing of royal prerogatives and 
	powers." (5) 
	
	
	Such would have been typical of the progress of international 
	money power in its usual insidious takeover of any state or civilization. 
	
	
		
		"...The crisis after the second Messenian war was at least within the ranks 
	of the Spartans themselves, a democratic one, if that very dubious word can 
	be used." (6) 
	
	
	The long drawn out character of the second Messenian War 
	indicated the same underlying factor of the original war of conquest: 
	international money-power extending its favors to both sides, to the 
	insurgents and to Sparta. 
	
	 
	
	The final edicts of Lycurgus as a result of the 
	constitutional crisis that followed the second Messenian war, certainly 
	indicate he was aware of the loss of sovereignty that came to any state that 
	based its money system on the product of the international bullion brokers, 
	and which meant dependence on their good graces; the more especially if such 
	state had no mines of its own.
	
	The Second Messenian war which was doubtless to have established total 
	"Democracy", that is, total rule of the international banking fraternity, 
	failed so far as such purpose was concerned. Lycurgus's answer to a man who 
	insisted he create a democracy in the state was "First create a democracy in 
	your own house." 
	
	 
	
	Certainly an apt answer!
	
	The complaint of Theognis, admirer of Sparta, visitor from Megara, whos e 
	political aim was directed towards the prevention of the recurrence of a 
	Tyranny at Megara, should not be forgotten, and bore light on the conditions 
	at Sparta, as well, and that gave rise to Lycurgus:
	
		
		"Tradesmen reign supreme, the bad lord it over their betters, This is the 
	lesson that all must thoroughly master..." (7)
	
	
	Of the reforms of Lycurgus, their cause, and those forces they were directed 
	against, there is no doubt whatsoever, and verification through the 
	findings of archaeology such as the work of Dr. Blakeway in Laconia 
	reestablishes the time as being, as remarked above, after the second 
	Messenian war, namely between 600 B.C. and 550 B.C.
	
		
		"He has demonstrated from archaeological evidence that between 600 B.C. and 
	550 B.C., foreign imports into Sparta practically ceased. Corinthian pottery 
	which had been common in Sparta in the early or Proto-Corinthian period is 
	exceedingly rare after c.600 B.C. Ivory, amber, Egyptian scarabs, and 
	Phoenician goods likewise cease before 550 B.C. and the same is true of gold 
	and silver jewellery." (8)
	
	
	There is no doubt that early in the sixth century B.C., the Spartans totally 
	excluded the international money market, such as controlled the rest of 
	Greece through silver and gold money, and the banker's practices relating 
	thereto. 
	
	 
	
	They also excluded foreign trade as being equally destructive of 
	the order of life they wished to preserve.
	
	The notion created by Plutarch of that national currency of iron as being 
	something ridiculous and requiring also an ox-cart may be dismissed as part 
	of the steady stream of propaganda no doubt being created in Athens against 
	everything of ancient days, particularly the customs special to Sparta. 
	
	 
	
	If 
	it is true that the pelanors were of such weight as ruled out their being 
	readily passed from hand to hand, then it may reasonably be assumed that 
	they denoted wealth in much the same manner as the stone rings of Uap and 
	the ancient Indus Valley civilization; (9) more in the nature of a reserve, 
	the circulating money being the leather notes referred to by Suidas as 
	circulating in Lacedaemon, just as the circulating money of Uap was shell 
	strings, similar to Tekaroro of the Gilbert Islands. (10) 
	
	 
	
	It may equally 
	have been a system whose origins were lost in remote ages; perhaps bearing 
	relationship to that system existing in Europe during the 4th Millennium 
	B.C., (11) when it is clear that the spondylus shell had greater 
	significance than that ascribed to it as "Prestige Possession", and was part 
	of a world wide use of shells as money.
	
	Sparta was indeed fortunate to possess considerable reserves of iron ore, 
	the principal deposits being at the Malean Cape and the Taenarian 
	Promontory. (12) 
	
	 
	
	Thus, both for her money and for her arms, she was 
	therefore independent, and needed no assistance from abroad. The Laws of 
	Lycurgus excluding international money and trade, directly continued the 
	fomentation of that warlike spirit and racial and national pride bred in the 
	Spartans out of the trials of the long drawn out Messenian wars; and which 
	brought them in as saviours at Thermopylae, and, indeed, of Carthage at the 
	end of the first Punic War (255 B.C.) when the army of Regulus encamped 
	before the city was destroyed by Xantippus the Spartan.
	
	The very fact that the power of the kings had been undermined by the first 
	Messenian War, although their position as absolute leaders of the people in 
	war still existed, became a blessing in disguise. History has shown that the 
	point to which international money power immediately gravitates when 
	penetrating any people living in natural order, is the top, the king 
	himself, either directly, or through the priesthood. 
	
	 
	
	Given his sanction and 
	connivance in respect to their schemes, then peoples whose very souls have 
	leaned towards the king as to the Lord's anointed, are easily subdued, and 
	their minds filled with arithmetical calculations and obsession with their 
	animal needs, instead of that great glory of a oneness with the Deity, a 
	oneness with the harmony of the universe, and their being lords of their own 
	world with dominion over all other life...
	
	One of the first steps of such money power towards total assumption of rule 
	has been the eradication of kings and kingly power. Even though a king might 
	be lead into connivance with the banker's schemes, through lack of 
	understanding, he always could still awaken and discover his mistake, and 
	realizing the sword was still in his hand, take measures to regain his 
	prerogative. Therefore he had to be disposed of, or reduced to paid and 
	willing servant.
	
	In Sparta there seems to have been another obstacle to the promoters of that 
	"Phony" democracy advocated by international money power, namely the 
	Ephorate whose existence was undoubtedly linked to that national money power 
	of Sparta as instituted, or reinstituted under the protection of Lycurgus. 
	
	
	 
	
	Of the Ephors it may be said their main objectives were: 
	
		
		"first the 
	maintenance of home defense and limiting of Spartan dominion to Messenia and 
	Laconia (i.e. no imperial entanglements). (13) Second, the fostering of a 
	steady policy which lead to intervention in the struggle at Athens with the Peisistratids, and the expulsion of the family; third an unrelenting 
	hostility to the pretensions of royal power in the state..." 
		
		 
		
		..."The Ephorate was a profoundly democratic institution that feared and fought 
	against tyranny both within and without the borders of Lacedaemon." 
		(14)
	
	
	Accepting the tyrant as front man of those alien agents of international 
	money power, the trapezitae, in which category the Peisistratids certainly 
	fell, then the meaning of the policies of the Ephorate becomes clear; with 
	the limiting of Spartan dominion to Messenia and Laconia, was the 
	establishment of an area from which Spartans could derive total economic 
	freedom, sufficient to maintain themselves, and that which above all 
	maintained their way of life and its source, their national monetary system.
	
	The intervention at Athens and the total opposition to the Peisistratids was 
	obvious policy in view of the unrelenting pressure of Athenian money power 
	as a branch of International Money Power, against Sparta, city that had made 
	mockery of the power of the counting houses of the world financial centers, 
	and had set up example in the world which would become inspiration to 
	others. 
	
	 
	
	The hostility to kingly power by the Ephorate, would be guided by 
	what they doubtless saw was the need, if their national life was to be 
	maintained, of making sure that kings in no way had the power to surrender 
	themselves, and the people they represented, to the blandishments of 
	international money power, whose opportunity, alas! has always been a weak 
	and ill-instructed king. 
	
	 
	
	However the remark of Archidamos, King of Sparta at 
	the commencement of the "Great" Peloponnesian war reveals, even at that day, 
	428 B.C. how the corruptive forces outpouring from Babylonia, with its 
	immediate agents, had certainly reentered Sparta to some degree.
	
		
		"And war is not so much a matter of armaments as of the money that makes 
	armaments effective." (15)
	
	
	In his speech to his own people Archidamos also warns them of the 6000 
	talents war chest supposedly held by the Athenians in the Acropolis. Both of 
	these statements show no understanding of that in which a king should above 
	all be instructed, National Monetary Emission, and prove how right were the 
	Ephors in the controls with which they surrounded kingship... 
	
	 
	
	Archidamos 
	privately was close friend of Pericles, scion of the Alkmeonidae, whose 
	destiny, Greek history shows, to have always been closely linked to that of 
	international money power.
	
	During the period when the national currency of Sparta maintained its 
	integrity, it might be safe to say that the Spartan, in so far as it is 
	possible for true freedom to exist, was a free man. 
	
	 
	
	Indeed the helots were 
	more than likely more free by a long way than are the labouring classes of 
	this day; and certainly more free than those classes of the semi-mass 
	production lines of the other Greek Cities, whose monetary systems were 
	almost all, whether fiduciary and of state issue or not, at the mercy of the 
	bankers, and therefore the manipulators of the value of bullion and slaves, 
	wherever it was they maintained their centre; generally assumed to be 
	Babylonia and its outposts, Lydia, and Naucratis in the Nile Delta, and 
	Phoenicia, and Athens, and Cyzicus and Colchis and many other cities in key 
	positions to trade with the world beyond...
	
	A monetary system, simple, inviting neither peddlers of luxury, panders or 
	pornographers to make mockery of the lives of the people, issued and 
	regulated by a benevolent state, and undoubtedly with its units paid into 
	circulation with care and attention to the result on the national well-being 
	and strength, bred a sturdy independent people completely contemptuous of 
	the gold madness raging elsewhere. 
	
	 
	
	They were an example by which other great 
	peoples came to profit, outstandingly the Romans. They lived with a feeling 
	of great superiority to the Athenians, who, while having a plentiful 
	currency, except during the periods of exhaustion of the Laureion silver 
	mines, were exposed to all the evils of control over their political life by 
	alien money power through the trapezitae.
	
	History gives much information about the means whereby money was collected 
	and raised and spent, but nothing as to those shadowy figures who institute 
	its units in the first place, and, as in the case of the banker's 
	"democracies", inject them into the circulation.
	
	As to when international money power reentered Sparta, there is little 
	enough evidence. But the outlook of King Archidamos suggested it had made 
	quite some progress by the date of the commencement of the Peloponnesian 
	war, and it may be safely said that to win that war, out of which could come 
	nothing but gain to international money power, Sparta had to make almost 
	total concession. 
	
	 
	
	The final victory over Athens and her Empire, which ended 
	the war, achieved the purposes of the international bullion and slave 
	traders as surely as final defeat would so have done. As it will be 
	remembered, the relaxation and luxury that inundated Rome after the second 
	Punic war, as a result of the concessions that had been made to 
	international bullion and slave traders in order to be able to re-arm after 
	Cannae, and ultimately drive Hannibal out of Italy, and defeat him in his 
	own territory, within 25 years dragged the Romans down (16) to a debauched 
	money mad mob, though still mighty through the employment at arms of the 
	defeated peoples.
	
	Similarly, after the Peloponnesian War, like causes had done the same for 
	Sparta, and it was but 25 years later, in 371 B.C., the Spartan Phalanx, 
	softened to the core, crumbled into bloody ruin at Leuctra, to Epaminondas 
	the Theban and never again recovered the élan that had made it the victor of 
	a hundred battles, for the Spartans now, more than any, were consumed by the 
	corrupting diseases of money madness and its attendant liberalism.
	
	That by 360 B.C., the ancient money system that had been the factor behind 
	the morale of the Spartan of Thermopylae was little more than a memory, is 
	revealed by the following quotation taken from Alexander Del Mar:
	
		
		"The crime of Gylipus, B.C. 360 and the decree offered upon its exposure, 
	viz. 'That no coin of gold or silver be admitted into Sparta, but that they 
	should use the money that had formerly obtained,' shows that as this decay 
	of the state and weakening of credit went on, gold or silver coins, at or 
	near their bullion value, gradually crept into circulation as money. The 
	failure of the decree to pass is conclusive that the iron numerical system 
	was no longer practicable." (17)
	
	
	In other words, the damage to that which had been Sparta and its people done 
	by the ruler who first of all turned a blind eye to dealings in the precious 
	metals, the regrowth of international trade, and no doubt the holding of 
	deposits in Athenian Banks, and who failed to deal with ferocity with those 
	who interfered with the pelanors either by counterfeiting or speculation, 
	was irreparable. It seemed this time the clock could not be turned back...
	
	Thus while Sparta finally collapsed before the unremitting pressure of the 
	Athenian, or better put, the international money market, seeming to yield 
	its ancient strength and the sources of its independence, the Athens that 
	carried on, as well, partly for reasons as elsewhere given, was but a shadow 
	of itself with the approach of the exhaustion of the mines, and thence the 
	failure of the base of its money power and the "confidence" essential to its 
	maintenance... 
	
	 
	
	Moreover, still in the hands of the bankers as a centre of 
	trade for trade's sake, Athens was become but a name. 
	
	 
	
	As with Rome by the 
	time of the Civil Wars, its original people had disappeared into that mass 
	of freed slaves, and immigrants from elsewhere, the "sojourners", who were 
	now a large part of the Athenian population, and for whose leaders Xenophon 
	the journalist obviously fronted when he proposed that special taxes should 
	be lifted from foreigners who at the same time were not to be required to do 
	military service. (18) 
	
	 
	
	(Here it might be remarked that it is perhaps 
	unfortunate that should still survive the writings of a paid propagandist, 
	so similar to the writings of some of his brethren today, when so little 
	remains of Greek literature relative to the total output.)
	
	Of Spartan money as reinstituted under the patronage of Lycurgus, Ernest Babelon, famous French Numismatist of the 19th Century, wrote:
	
		
		"A long time after the use of money had been spread throughout the Hellenic 
	world, Sparta continued as through tradition, to make use of ingots of iron 
	as a means of exchange. These bars were known under the description of 
	(gâteau de pâtisserie). Each one weighed an Aeginetic Mina, and to carry 
	only six of them, that is to say about 536 Kg., a wagon drawn by two oxen 
	was required. 
		 
		
		This information supplied to us by Xenophon and Plutarch 
	agrees with that from central Italy where cumbersome bars of bronze were 
	carried in carts; 'Aes Grave plaustris quidam convehentes,' said Titus 
	Vivius. All kinds of stories circulated on the subject of the famous 
	Pelanors of Sparta that seem to have remained in use until the Persian Wars. 
		
		 
		
		It was said, for instance that the iron used in the manufacture of this 
	money was unsuitable for any other purpose and was rendered brittle by an 
	operation consisting of heating it until red-hot, then quenching it in 
	vinegar. In the conservative capital of Laconia it appears that these ingots 
	of iron were the sole money in use and all citizens were forbidden under 
	penalty of death to possess any other money... 
		 
		
		When Epaminondas died he was 
	so poor that nothing was found in his house in the way of wealth other than 
	an old iron . At Thebes the native land of Epaminondas where money was known 
	and struck at an early date, found in the residence of the hero could have 
	no more than a superstitious character.
This surprises us less especially as since the 7th century, Pheidon, King of 
	Argos, when he struck the first silver money of Aegina, and introduced a 
	standard system of weights and measures into the Peloponnese, withdrew the 
	former iron spits from circulation that had served as money until then, and 
	consecrated a certain number of samples, "in Ex-voto", in the sanctuary of 
	Hera at Argos. 
		 
		
		At the time of Aristotle they could still be seen in the 
	Temple." (19)
	
	
	Babelon, most learned scholar as he was, however reflects the complacent 
	attitude of the bankers of the end of the last century, which was founded on 
	the idea, such had been their luck during the previous century, that their 
	millennium had finally come. 
	
	 
	
	With him, money was precious metal, and 
	precious metal was money. Although of interest, his information, a 
	repetition of Xenophon the journalist and Plutarch, offers not much more 
	light. Though over two thousand years had gone by, precious metal money and 
	its promoters still ruled, despite a dozen great kingdoms and empires having 
	risen at its behest and having fallen at its behest.
	
	 
	
	Did Babelon see the 
	shadow which lurked behind the throne, he closed his eyes and turned his 
	head away..!
	
	Lycurgus was without doubt inspired to reestablish this national monetary 
	system by the clear understanding he must have come to have of the evil 
	effects of this gold and silver madness, and its disastrous effects as a 
	result of the operations of the trapezitae or bankers, relative to the 
	destruction of national morale and being. 
	
	 
	
	Precious metal coinage was 
	currency whose total circulation the state could in no way control because 
	of the desirability of its material internationally. In the common money 
	market of the silver bullion brokers it was material, which, whether minted 
	into money by state authority or otherwise, produced a money always of value 
	regardless of local convention. Its value was dictated by the arbitrary 
	decision of that international fraternity who controlled its mining, and the 
	slaves that mined it, and out of manipulation of that pyramid of abstract 
	money they created thereon, controlled the political affairs of states...
	
	The money that had been established in Sparta was of value to Spartans 
	alone... Although no record exists of such matter, it may be safely assumed 
	that the Pelanors and the leather multiples or divisibles of Suidas, entered 
	the circulation as against state indebtedness; thus reducing taxation, that 
	vicious destroyer of peoples, to relatively negligible amounts. 
	
	 
	
	Their pitted 
	and otherwise worthless appearance deriving from their being immersed in 
	vinegar when red hot, made them of no value for any other purpose than that 
	for which they were intended. 
	
	 
	
	The use of this national money was the force 
	that gave Sparta the leadership of Hellas until the end of the Peloponnesian 
	War, even if decline had commenced with the execution of the great General 
	Pausanias (20) by the Ephors in 479 B.C., and was that which necessarily 
	dictated the policy of the extirpation of the tyrannies; the tyrant always 
	being representative for the agent of international money creative power 
	through precious metal control... 
	
	 
	
	There might be temptation to assume the pelanors were a system of "Iron Greenbacks". But while they resembled the 
	"Greenbacks" in this that they were the total will to be of the Spartans, 
	(21) assuming the truth of their great weight, as pointed out above, they 
	may have been more in the character of that monetary system of very ancient 
	days of which the stone rings of Uap are a last remaining evincement.
	
	A healthy wholesome people who controlled totally their state and existence 
	would have little reason to accumulate money fortunes, and wealth as 
	distinct from the land which was their patrimony; and as such money fortunes 
	begin and end as little more than figures in the banker's ledger, nor could 
	they be guided into becoming mouthpieces for the policies of the bankers... 
	
	
	 
	
	Meals were eaten in common amongst men as in Carthage of earlier days, and a 
	genuine contempt for luxury existed. A simple life was not sought after, so 
	much as it came of its own accord as a natural outcome of such monetary 
	system created for their better and right living, and which preserved them 
	from the encroachments of that liberalizing, demoralizing, and debt creating 
	force of international trade, and its destructive effect on the esprit de 
	corps of any particular race or people who are foolish enough to permit its 
	proponents to have their way.
	
	Although it was said of the early days of the Laws of Lycurgus and his 
	monetary reforms that precious metals seized in War were deposited with the 
	Arcadians, of later days Augustus Boeckh wrote of gold and silver in Sparta:
	
		
		..."Sparta during a period of several generations, swallowed up large 
	quantities of the precious metals; as in Aesop's Fables, the footsteps of 
	the animals which went in were to be seen, but never of those which came 
	out. The principal cause of this stagnation was that the state kept the gold 
	and silver in store, and only reissued them for war and foreign enterprise; 
	although there were instances of individuals who amassed treasures according 
	to the law." (22)
	
	
	Xenophon stated that Lycurgus made the privilege of citizenship equally 
	available to all who observed what was enjoined by laws, without taking any 
	account of weakness of body, or scantiness of means; which would mean that 
	no Spartan suffered in respect to the mess or syssition to which he was 
	entitled to belong, on account of economic condition. Xenophon had lived in 
	Sparta and was writing before the loss of Messenia. 
	
	 
	
	Aristotle who declared 
	failure to pay dues entailed political disenfranchisement, wrote after the 
	loss of Messenia in 370 B.C., and the certain penetration by the bankers of 
	the Piraeus, and the assumption of control of Spartan fiscal affairs which 
	it may safely be said, they were already conceded by an already corrupted 
	Sparta, ready to accept any humiliation to save itself from total ruin. 
	
	 
	
	The 
	final military collapse at Leuctra rose from that weakened condition that 
	followed the apparent victory of the "Great" Peloponnesian War, and those 
	concessions that already would have been made to the international bankers, 
	now in the Persian court, as a result of the desperate need of the Spartans 
	for ships. 
	
	 
	
	The loan of 5000 talents towards the building of ships which was 
	granted to Sparta by Persia as a result of the Treaty of Miletus, 412 B.C., 
	would not have been granted without major concessions being exacted; most 
	likely abrogation of those Spartan edicts forbidding the sojourn of foreign 
	traders etc. on Spartan territory. 
	
	 
	
	It would not take long, once such traders 
	had been admitted, for them to undermine the morale of that which had been 
	Sparta, by spreading the money madness, and the promotion of luxury (23) and 
	the creation of unnatural concern with sex, and body needs. 
	
	 
	
	Of this 
	situation Polybius, as quoted by Humphrey Michell wrote the following:
	
		
		"As long as they aspired to rule over their neighbours or over the 
	Peloponnesians alone, they found the supplies and resources furnished by 
	Laconia itself, adequate as they had all they required ready to hand and 
	quickly returned home whether by land or by sea. But once they began to 
	undertake naval expeditions and to make military campaigns outside the 
	Peloponnese, it was evident that neither their iron currency nor the 
	exchange of their crops for commodities which they lacked, as permitted by 
	the laws of Lycurgus, would suffice for their needs. 
		 
		
		These enterprises 
	demanded a currency in universal circulation and supplies drawn from abroad, 
	and so they were compelled to beg from the Persians, to impose tribute on 
	the islanders, and exact taxes from all the Greeks. For they recognized that 
	under the legislation of Lycurgus, it was impossible to aspire, I will not 
	say to supremacy in Greece, but to any position of influence...." (24)
	
	
	The fact is however, Sparta, while following the Laws of Lycurgus had 
	dominated Greece in more or less degree. 
	
	 
	
	As soon as she lost sight of the 
	meaning and purpose of such laws, she became just another petty state; an 
	agency for the subterranean control by international banking through 
	manipulation of the silver and gold bullion basis of her currency; each man, 
	concerned with his own need and greed, aimlessly following the pretty bubble 
	which was the illusion of the banker's "wealth"... 
	
	 
	
	The old order, and that 
	which had given them strength and national morale, was soon destroyed 
	through the promotion of foreigners and the lower castes, and the helots, 
	who merely took the name but not the meaning; also by the stirring up of 
	women towards rejection of their subordinate place in life, and therefore 
	instituting insidious attack on the natural order of the home, out of which 
	is bred the natural order of life itself...
	
	The later age of Aristotle, with its hard and realistic facts as referred to 
	by some writers, was no more realistic than the earlier age of Xenophon. 
	Rather it was less so. 
	
	 
	
	It was the age of the triumph of those international 
	interests whose arming and instigation of the Messenian helots in an earlier 
	age had decided Spartans to accept that structure of law as advocated by 
	Lycurgus, which meant surrender of so much ease of living, rather than 
	become the same as most other Greek states, an alien money manipulators 
	paradise, with, as Theognis of Megara put it: 
	
		
		"Tradesmen reigning supreme 
	and the bad lording it over their betters."
	
	
	As the earliest finds of the clay facsimiles of precious metal coinage at 
	Athens, seem to date around the middle of the fifth century B.C., (25) it 
	may be assumed that one way or the other, either through Spartans permitted 
	to reside at Athens, or through those Spartan mercenaries who traveled the 
	world seeking employment for their skill at arms, the lust for having, one 
	man more than his neighbor, slowly became injected into them. 
	
	 
	
	Perhaps 
	Spartan mercenaries, who always required to be paid in those international 
	currencies of silver and gold, returning from abroad via Athens, had been 
	inveigled into depositing their pay in such gold or silver, with the bankers 
	of the Piraeus, with whom it might "grow" from interest; taking home the 
	baked clay coins as evidence of their account, and thus evading 
	contravention of the Spartan laws in respect to possession of gold and 
	silver...
	
	With the resumption of the rule of international money power in later 
	Spartan history, one of the most outstanding instances of that sickness 
	rotting the fibres of their racial morale, was the tale of those Homoioi who 
	seemed to have fallen in the social scale and were no longer able to take 
	their places in those great messes, the syssitiones, the breeding places of 
	that esprit de corps that was Sparta. 
	
	 
	
	Scholars give various reasons for 
	these "disenfranchised" Spartans apparently known as the hypomeiones. The 
	reason for their coming to be is however more than clear. They are the 
	direct result of the power to discriminate, which is the natural outcome in 
	favour of the banker, of that actual god-power he exercises once installed 
	as local money creator.
	
	More than likely after the Peloponnesian War, and certainly after the battle 
	of Leuctra in 371 B.C., the reestablished bankers, following usual policy, 
	would have taken care that certain families, who this caste of men 
	instinctively realized might yet create opposition to them, were 
	dispossessed by one means or another. With that banker created money as 
	being now the necessary qualification for membership to the syssitiones, it 
	was a small matter to make sure that such persons whose disenfranchisement 
	they planned, never had enough. (26) 
	
	 
	
	Clearly in such later day, the syssition or mess charges, being assessed in silver money whose issue the 
	bankers controlled, those to whom such alien bankers extended no favors, 
	and therefore ultimately dispossessed through mortgage and foreclosure, not 
	having any longer the wherewithal to pay, no longer belonged. 
	
	 
	
	Further, 
	seeing their former helots raised up to place of honor and riches by 
	bankers created wealth, and certainly by the reign of King Cleomenes III 
	(228-219 B.C.), (27) actually sitting in their place in the syssition, 
	little desire to retrieve such a distinctly lost cause remained.
	
	The Spartan, whether poor or whether rich (in land), in the days of the 
	national currency had been the social equal of any other Spartan; however, 
	as much as anything, the slow decay of the Spartan principle derived from a 
	most outstanding omission in the constitution which was total lack of 
	provision for the redistribution of wealth at certain definite intervals, 
	and the cancellation of debt as in the Hebrew custom of the 49th year. (28)
	
	Needless to say, even in the days of the national currency, there must have 
	been tendency towards economic inequality resulting from such omission; (29) 
	but the rapid increase of such economic inequality after the return of the 
	bankers, that certainly followed the "Great" Peloponnesian War, additional 
	to furthering the breakup of the caste system that previously had obtained 
	in Sparta in some degree, and wherein each man had known his place in the 
	order of society, also caused a further breakup in the natural order of life 
	of Spartan man as master of home and family...
	
	In that Spartan society wherein women had always known considerable freedom 
	relative, say, to their Athenian sisters, the control of wealth however 
	designated, passed substantially into the hands of women. (30) 
	
	 
	
	Concern for 
	the growth of "Money", no doubt, just as in this day, replaced care for 
	their men, and concern for themselves as mothers of the race, and concern 
	for the growth of their children.
	
		
		"Two fifths of the land and wealth had come into their hands, simply because 
	lack of men left them as heiresses, and this wealth they used extravagantly, 
	maintaining race horses which they exhibited at the Olympic games, costly 
	equipages and fine clothes. They meddled in the affairs of state and brought 
	undue influence upon the conduct of the government." (31)
	
	
	In such society, this stratum of wealthy women have no respect for men as 
	such, too often. While perhaps not classified as hetaerae, who all said and 
	done, had served some useful purpose to men, they clearly lived public lives 
	very much the same as the hetaerae.
	
	Such women, their heads full of figures and pride, would have served most 
	usefully those alien money powers who ever have sought to further their 
	purposes through corrupt and malleable persons... 
	
	 
	
	Women, rarely corrupt in 
	the sense that a man may be corrupt, because of their natural need to 
	shelter behind what seems to be strength, as arrogant Money Power would 
	appear to them, are malleable... 
	
	 
	
	Their own Spartan men, either dead, and if 
	not dead, completely confused with the new liberalization program of the 
	returned bankers, were virtually enslaved; therefore they turned for the 
	protection they needed to what seemed to be the new strength, pudgy and 
	gross though it may have been...
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	References
	
		
		1. Humphrey Michell, M A: Sparta, P. 27; (Cambridge University Press; 1952.)
		
2. Further than the findings of archaeology, the deductions of some of the 
	classical scholars also attribute the so-called reforms of Lycurgus to the 
	sixth century B.C., being therein the so-called Eunomia, c 610 B.C.; 
	clearly, therefore, either inspiring the events at Athens brought about by 
	Solon, or being inspired thereby. According to the writer on this subject in 
	the Encyclopedia of World History. (P. 50) ..." By the so-called Eunomia, 
	the Spartans, fearing further revolts (of the Messenians) completely 
	reorganized the State to make it more severely military. Youths from the age 
	of 7 were taken for continual military training. Men of military age lived 
	in barracks and ate at common messes (syssitia, phiditia). Five local tribes 
	replaced the three Dorian hereditary ones and the army was correspondingly 
	divided, creating the Dorian Phalanx. In the tribes were enrolled as 
	citizens many non-citizens. The gerousia, comprising 28 elders and the two 
	kings, had the initiative in legislation though the apella of all citizens 
	had the final decision. The chief magistrates, ephors were increased to 
	five, with wider powers especially after the ephorate of Cheilon (556 B.C.). 
	Later ages attributed the reforms (the financial sector of which is ignored 
	by this writer) to the hero Lycurgus in the ninth century, perhaps because 
	the new laws were put under his protection..."
3. Plutarch: Lycurgus (The Lives: Dryden Translation).
		
4. Humphrey Michell, M.A: Sparta; P. 12.
5. Ibid. P. 23.
		
6. Humphrey Michell, M.A.: Sparta, P. 23.
7. P.N. Ure, M.A.: The Origins of Tyranny, P. 8.
		
8. Humphrey Michell: Sparta, P. 27.
9. Paul Einzig: Primitive Money, pp. 36-40; also see E.J.C. McKay in Further 
	Excavations at Mohanjo-Daro, P. 582.
10. Kingston-Higgins: A Survey of Primitive Money, P. 140. London; 1949.
		
11. Colin Renfrew: The Emergence of Civilization; pp. 483-544; London; 1972.
		
12. Paul Einzig: Primitive Money, P. 224; London; 1949.
13. Bracketed comment by present author.
		
14. Humphrey Michell, M.A.: Sparta, P. 30.
15. Thucydides: The Peloponnesian War, Book I, Ch. 6.
		
16. Sallust who lived from 86 B.C. to 35 B.C. drew the following picture of 
	the state of society at that time: " When freed from the fear of Carthage, 
	the Romans had leisure to give themselves up to their dissensions, then 
	there sprang up on all sides troubles, seditions, and at last civil wars. A 
	small number of powerful men, whose favour most of the citizens sought by 
	base means, exercised a veritable despotism under the imposing name, 
	sometimes of the Senate, at other times of the ' People'. The title of good 
	or bad citizen was no longer the reward of what he did for or against his 
	country for all were equally corrupt; but the more anyone was rich, and in 
	condition to do evil with impunity, provided he supported the present order 
	of things, the more he passed for a man of worth. From this moment the 
	ancient manners no longer became corrupted gradually as before; but the 
	depravation spread with the rapidity of a torrent and youth was to such a 
	degree infected by the poison of luxury and avarice, that there came a 
	generation of people of which it was just to say, that they could neither 
	have patrimony nor suffer others to have it." Sallust: Fragm. I.10.
		
17. A. del Mar: A History of Money in Antiquity, P. 165.
18. Xenophon: A Discourse upon improving the Revenues of the State of 
	Athens, pp. 311-13; (Trans. Charles Davenant, London, 1771).
19. " Longtemps après que l'usage de la monnaie eut été partout répandu dans 
	le monde Hellénique, Sparte continuait par tradition, a se servir de lingots 
	de fer comme intermédiaires des échange. Ces lingots était connu sous le nom 
	de (gâteau de Pâtisserie). Ils pesaient chacun une mine éginétique et pour 
	en transporter six seulement, c'est a dire environs 4536 Kg il fallait un 
	chariot attelé de deux boeufs. Ce renseignement qui nous fournissent 
	Xenophon et Plutarch, est conforme a ce qui se passait dans l'Italie 
	centrale où les encombrantes lingots de bronze étaient transporté sur des 
	chariots: "aes grave plaustris quidam convehentes " dit Titus Vivius. Il 
	circulait toutes sortes de fables au sujet du fameux Pelanor de Sparte, qui 
	parait être rester en usage jusqu'a l'époque des guerres médiques: on disait 
	par exemple que le fer destiné a fabriquer cette monnaie était impropre à 
	tout autre usage et rendu cassant par une opération qui consistait à la 
	faire rougir au feu et a la tremper ensuite de fer était, parait-il 
	exclusif, et défense sous peine de morte, fur faite à tout citoyen de 
	posséder une autre monnaie.
....Quand Epaminondas mourut il était si pauvre qu'on ne trouva dans sa 
	maison, pour toute fortune, qu'un vieil en fer. A Thèbes, la patrie 
	d'Epaminondas ou la monnaie fut connu et frappée de bonne heure, trouve dans 
	la demeure du héros ne pouvait avoir qu'un caractère superstitieux. Ceci 
	nous surprendra d'autant moins que dès le septième siècle, Phidon, roi 
	d'Argos, lorsqu'il fit frappés un système régulier de poids et mesures, 
	retira de la circulation les vieilles broches de fer qui auraient servit de 
	monnaie jusqu'à là, et en consacra un certain nombres d'exemplaires en 
	"ex-voto" dans la sanctuaire de Héra à Argos En temps de Aristotle on voyait 
	encore dans le Temple..." (Ernest Babelon: Les Origines de la Monnaie. P. 
	79; Paris; 1897.)
20. Pausanias was the commander of the fleet of the Greek allies. After his 
	success against the Persians on land at Plataea, in the same year, 479 B.C., 
	he reduced both Cyprus and Byzantium. According to the record, he was 
	executed by the Ephors by being starved to death in the temple of Athena of 
	the Brazen House, having been found guilty of (kingly) domineering which was 
	supposed to have alienated Ionia. The real reason of his disgrace and 
	execution would have been buried amongst the secrets of National or 
	International money power. He had most likely entered into secret dealings 
	with the latter. (Thucydides: The Peloponnesian War; Book I; Ch. 10.)
		
21. According to A. del Mar, the iron currency of the pelanors was strictly 
	a numerical system; confined to Sparta, it was a national system having no 
	relationship to International Standards or ratios with other metals; thus 
	being identical in character to the "Greenback" paper money issued by 
	President Abraham Lincoln, during the American Civil War, and by which means 
	the schemes of the international bullion braking fraternity were temporarily 
	frustrated.
22. Augustus Boeckh: The Public Economy of Athens, P. 43, Vol. I.
		
23. Aristotle: The Politics, Book II, Ch. 9.
24. Polybius VI. 49. (Humphrey Michell: Sparta, P. 305.) François Lenormant: 
	La Monnaie dans L'Antiquité, P. 215-216; Book II, Tome I.
25. François Lenormant: La Monnaie dans L'Antiquité, P. 215-216; Book II, 
	Tome I.
26. By corollary, those prepared to promote the bankers' policies, however 
	subversive or destructive, would be amply provided for... Of this period 
	Professor A.H.M. Jones (Sparta, P. 39; Oxford; 1967) makes comment: "After 
	Aegospotami there was such an influx of gold and silver that the 
	conservatives tried to revive the Lycurgan ban, and it was decided that the 
	treasury might hold gold and silver but not individuals. Nevertheless part 
	of the Spartiate's mess contribution was in Aeginetan Obols" (Italics 
	present author's.)
27. Humphrey Michell, M.A.: Sparta, P. 78.
28. Leviticus; Ch. 25: (King James Version).
		
29. Aristotle: The Politics, Book II, Ch. 9.
30. Ibid.
		
31. Humphrey Michell: Sparta, P. 50.
	
	
	
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