Education in ancient Greece
{{Short description|Overview of education in ancient Greece}}
Education for Greek people was vastly "democratized" in the 5th century B.C., influenced by the Sophists, Plato, and Isocrates. Later, in the Hellenistic period of Ancient Greece, education in a gymn school was considered essential for participation in Greek culture. The value of physical education to the ancient Greeks and Romans has been historically unique. There were two forms of education in ancient Greece: formal and informal. Formal education was attained through attendance to a public school or was provided by a hired tutor. Informal education was provided by an unpaid teacher and occurred in a non-public setting. Education was an essential component of a person's identity.
Formal Greek education was primarily for males and non-slaves.Downey, "Ancient Education," The classical Journal52, no.8 (May 1957): 339. In some poleis, laws were passed to prohibit the education of slaves.{{Cite web|url=http://www2.stetson.edu/~efriedma/periodictable/html/Y.html|title=Pythagoras|website=www2.stetson.edu|access-date=2017-11-07|archive-date=2018-10-15|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181015033212/https://www2.stetson.edu/~efriedma/periodictable/html/Y.html|url-status=dead}}Ed. Sienkewicz, "Daily Life and Customs," Ancient Greece (New Jersey: Salem Press, I) The Spartans also taught music and dance, but with the purpose of enhancing their maneuverability as soldiers.
Athenian systems
= [[Classical Athens]] (508–322 BCE) =
Elementary Education
File:Douris' Cup (School Scene).jpg
Elementary education had a long history in Athens as Aristophanes called it the arkhaia paideia (literally ancient education).Aristophanes, Clouds, 961. But it was only fully developed in the early fifth century BC and attained its recognisable form.Mark Joyal, J. Iain MacDougall, and John C. Yardley, Greek and Roman Education: A Sourcebook, Routledge Sourcebooks for the Ancient World (London: Routledge, 2009), 31. In its developed form, the old education consists of three divisions, gymnastikē or physical education, mousikē or music, and grammata or letters.Joyal, MacDougall, and Yardley, 31. The boys would attend the classes concurrently and there were separate teachers for each of the disciplines. Although it is similar to modern day elementary level study, this traditional education of the Athenian boys was neither mandatory nor free. The education came at a price and it was up to the fathers’ decision of what and how long the education would be.David M. Pritchard, “Athens,” in A Companion to Ancient Education, 1st ed., ed. W. Martin Bloomer (Chichester, West Sussex, UK; Malden, MA: John Wiley & Sons, 2015), 113.Frederick A. G. Beck, Greek Education, 450–350 B.C. (London: Methuen, 1964), 81. While the elementary education normally ended when the boys reached their adolescence at around 14 to 15 years old,Joyal, MacDougall, and Yardley, Greek and Roman Education, 59. children from wealthier families would start earlier and end later.Plato, Protagoras, 326c.
Physical education
Among the three divisions, the physical education held the prestigious place.Henri-Irénée Marrou, A History of Education in Antiquity, trans. George Lamb (New York: Sheed and Ward, 1964), 69. It was not because Athens needed her citizens to become competent warriors through physical training. Another institution, the ephebeia would deal with military training.Marrou, A History of Education in Antiquity, 64. There were two purposes of the sports education. One was to prepare the young boys for local and Panhellenic sports games.Pritchard, “Athens,” 113; Beck, Greek Education, 450–350 B.C., 129.Marrou, A History of Education in Antiquity, 69. The other purpose was to cultivate a strong and beautiful body which was essential to Greek culture.Plato, Gorgias, 452b.
File:Scenes in a Palaestra.png
The teacher of the physical education was called a paidotribēs. The paidotribēs was often a professional athlete himself.Beck, Greek Education, 450–350 B.C., 129–130. A main part of the training was the fighting arts, wrestling, boxing and pankration.Pritchard, “Athens,” 112. Another important component of the training was the athletic sports, racing, discus and javelin throwing and long jump.Pritchard, “Athens,” 113. The paidotribēs supervised and instructed the training in a privately owned palaistra.Beck, Greek Education, 450–350 B.C., 131.John Patrick Lynch, Aristotles School: A Study of a Greek Education Institution (Berkeley; Los Angeles; London: University of California Press, 1972), 35. The famous Athenian public sports centre gymnasium was for the adult citizens. Little was known about how much the paidotribēs would actually charge. It could be very high as Athenaeus mentioned that a course could cost a mina.Athenaeus, The Deipnosophists, 584c; cf. Kenneth J. Freeman, Schools of Hellas: An Essay on the Practice and Theory of Ancient Greek Education (London; New York: MacMillan, 1907), 134. And a mina could afford the living of a four-people family in Athens for up to three months.Paul Cartledge, Ancient Greece: A Very Short Introduction, Very Short Introductions 286 (Oxford ; New York: Oxford University Press, 2011), xix.
Students would write using a stylus, with which they would etch onto a wax tablet. When children were ready to begin reading whole works, they would often be given poetry to memorize and recite. Mythologies such as those of Hesiod and Homer were also highly regarded by Athenians, and their works were often incorporated into lesson plans. Old Education lacked heavy structure and only featured schooling up to the elementary level. Once a child reached adolescence his formal education ended.{{Cite book|title=Aristotle's School|last=Lynch|pages=38}} Therefore, a large part of this education was informal and relied on simple human experience.{{Cite book|title=Plato's Theory of Education|last=Lodge|first=R.C.|publisher=Russell & Russell|year=1970|location=New York|pages=11}}
Music education
A kitharistēs (literally a player of the kithara, a stringed instrument like a lyre) was responsible for the music education. He would teach the students to play the kithara, to sing and compose lyric songs and to dance.Beck, Greek Education, 450–350 B.C., 126–128.Plato, Protagoras, 326a-b.
The education of music was an essential part of the old education. Plato asserted its parity with the sports. He stated that “gymnastics for the body and music for the soul.”Plato, Republic, II 376e. By this, Plato meant the moral function of music and poetry. Aristophanes also emphasised the importance of musical education, stating that the boys would go to the music class “even if the snow is falling as thick as flour.”Clouds, 964; cf. Marrou, A History of Education in Antiquity, 69. Given this importance, if one cannot play the lyre and sing in a choir, he was indeed uneducated at all.Plato, Laws, II, 654b; Aristophanes, Wasps, 957-959. Accordingly, since the education was heavily charged, ignorance in music was also a symbol of lower socio-economical status.Beck, Greek Education, 450–350 B.C., 129.
Letter education
In order to take part in trade and politics, the demand of skills in reading and writing arose to become the third discipline of the old education.Beck, 80; Pritchard, “Athens,” 118.Marrou, A History of Education in Antiquity, 71–72. Hence, through the practical perspective, education in literacy was the most important among the three disciplines. If the father is not wealthy enough to send his son to attend all three classes, he will send him to a grammatistēs, a letter teacher.Beck, Greek Education, 450–350 B.C., 128.
The Athenian boys would study the following subjects at a grammatistēs, reading and writing, literature, and arithmetic.Beck, Greek Education, 450–350 B.C., 114-126. The boys would firstly engage in memorising the Greek letters. In the initial stages, they were required to recognize letters in short syllables.Plato, Statesman, 277e. While they were familiarising with the alphabets, they started to write as well.Beck, Greek Education, 450–350 B.C., 115. Under the assistance of the grammatistēs, students would write with a stylus on a wax tablet as shown in the paintings on the Douris’ Cup. There is also a detailed written description of the process in Plato’s Protagoras:
...just as writing-masters first draw letters in faint outline with the pen for their less ad- vanced pupils, and then give them the copy-book and make them write according to the guidance of their lines,...Plato, Potagoras, 326d.After the boys got some progress in the letters, they would proceed to the reading of the poets. Reciting poetry was very important to the adulthood life of the Athenians, especially those of Homer’s. Familiarity of Homer’s epic was the permit to the banquets for an educated Athenian man.Marrou, A History of Education in Antiquity, 70. Furthermore, this component of the syllabus served as another motivation for a poverished father sending his son to the grammatistēs.Pritchard, “Athens,” 121. To learn the stories of the legendary heros by heart was critical to the Athenian identity.Marrou, A History of Education in Antiquity, 71.
== Higher education ==
File:Parc_de_Versailles,_Rond-Point_des_Philosophes,_Isocrate,_Pierre_Granier_MR1870_03.jpgThe emergence of higher education in ancient Athens was the result of the so-called Sophists Reform happened in the latter half of the Fifth Century BC.Marrou, A History of Education in Antiquity, 78–81. It was a higher form of education compared to the old education. Although Freeman and Marrou proposed a classification within this Higher Education, secondary education and tertiary education,Freeman, Schools of Hellas: An Essay on the Practice and Theory of Ancient Greek Education, 157, 210.Marrou, A History of Education in Antiquity, 148. Beck refused the proposal.Beck, Greek Education, 450–350 B.C., 141. Nevertheless, there was a huge expansion in the subjects student could learn, astronomy, philosophy, mathematics, rhetoric, history and grammar.Beck, Greek Education, 450–350 B.C., 142–143.
The sophists were professional teachers and most of them were foreigners, i.e. non-Athenians. They emerged because of the continuously growing need of higher knowledge than basic literacy and numeracy in the democratised Athens. The study normally took three to four years and the tuition fee was reasonable. For example, Protagoras charged a thousand drachma, which would be 10 mina.Marrou, A History of Education in Antiquity, 80. Despite of all the branches of studies mentioned above, rhetoric, or sometimes referred to as the “art of persuasion” was considered the most critical and fundamental parts of curriculum. This was primarily because mature skills of rhetoric bought the student a ticket to the politics.Marrou, A History of Education in Antiquity, 81–82.
== Classical Athenian educators ==
=== Isocrates (436–338 BC) ===
Isocrates was an influential classical Athenian orator.{{Cite book|title=Greek Education|last=Beck|pages=253}} Growing up in Athens exposed Isocrates to educators such as Socrates and Gorgias at a young age and helped him develop exceptional rhetoric.{{Cite book|title=Readings from Classical Rhetoric|last1=Matsen|first1=Patricia|last2=Rollinson|first2=Philip|last3=Sousa|first3=Marion|publisher=Southern Illinois University Press|year=1990|location=Edwardsville|pages=43}} As he grew older and his understanding of education developed, Isocrates disregarded the importance of the arts and sciences, believing rhetoric was the key to virtue.{{Cite book|title=Greek Education|last=Beck|pages=255}} Education's purpose was to produce civic efficiency and political leadership and therefore, the ability to speak well and persuade became the cornerstone of his educational theory.{{Cite book|title=Greek Education|last=Beck|pages=257}} However, at the time there was no definite curriculum for Higher Education, with only the existence of the sophists who were constantly traveling. In response, Isocrates founded his school of Rhetoric around 393 BCE. The school was in contrast to Plato's Academy (c. 387 BCE) which was largely based on science, philosophy, and dialectic.{{Cite book|title=Greek Education|last=Beck|pages=293}}
===Plato (428–348 BC) ===
Plato was a philosopher in classical Athens who studied under Socrates, ultimately becoming one of his most famed students. Following Socrates' execution, Plato left Athens in anger, rejecting politics as a career and traveling to Italy and Sicily.{{Cite book|title=Greek Education|last=Beck|pages=227}} He returned ten years later to establish his school, the Academy (c. 387 BCE) – named after the Greek hero Akademos. Plato perceived education as a method to produce citizens who could operate as members of the civic community in Athens.{{Cite book |last=Beck |first=Frederick A.G. |title=Greek Education, 450–350 B.C. |publisher=Methuen & CO LTD |year=1964 |location=London |pages=201–202}} In one sense, Plato believed Athenians could obtain education through the experiences of being a community member, but he also understood the importance of deliberate training, or Higher Education, in the development of civic virtue.{{Cite book|title=Greek Education|last=Beck|pages=200}} Thus, his reasoning behind founding the academy – what is often credited as the first University.{{Cite book|title=Greek Education|last=Beck|pages=240}}
It is at this school where Plato discussed much of his educational program, which he outlined in his best-known work – the Republic. In his writing, Plato describes the rigorous process one must go through in order to attain true virtue and understand reality for what it actually is.{{Cite journal|title=Plato's Theory of Education|last=Lodge|journal=Nature |year=1948 |volume=161 |issue=4089 |pages=303|doi=10.1038/161376a0 |bibcode=1948Natur.161Q.376. |s2cid=4048356 |doi-access=free }} The education required of such achievement, according to Plato, included an elementary education in music, poetry, and physical training, two to three years of mandatory military training, ten years of mathematical science, five years of dialectic training, and fifteen years of practical political training.{{Cite book|title=Republic|last=Plato|publisher=Harvard University Press|year=2013|location=Cambridge|pages=186}} The few individuals equipped to reach such a level would become philosopher-kings, the leaders of Plato's ideal city.{{Cite book|title=Republic|last=Plato|pages=188}}
=== Aristotle (384–322 BC) ===
File:Aristotle_Bust_White_Background_Transparent.png
Aristotle was a classical Greek philosopher. While born in Stagira, Chalkidice, Aristotle joined Plato's Academy in Athens during his late teenage years and remained there until the age of thirty-seven, withdrawing following Plato's death.{{Cite book|title=A Companion to Aristotle|publisher=Wiley-Blackwell|year=2013|editor-last=Anagnostopoulos|editor-first=Georgios|pages=5|chapter=First Athenian Period}} His departure from the academy also signalled his departure from Athens. Aristotle left to join Hermeias, a former student at the academy, who had become the ruler of Atarneus and Assos in the north-western coast of Anatolia (present-day Turkey). He remained in Anatolia until, in 342 BCE, he received an invitation from King Philip of Macedon to become the educator of his thirteen-year-old son Alexander. Aristotle accepted the invitation and moved to Pella to begin his work with the boy who would soon become known as Alexander the Great.{{Cite book|title=Companion to Aristotle|editor-last=Anagnostopoulos|pages=8}} When Aristotle moved back to Athens in 352 BCE, Alexander helped finance Aristotle's school – the Lyceum.{{Cite book|title=Companion to Aristotle|editor-last=Anagnostopoulos|pages=9}} A significant part of the Lyceum was research. The school had a systematic approach to the collection of information. Aristotle believed dialectical relationships among students performing research could impede the pursuit of truth. Thus, much of the school's focus was on research done empirically.{{Cite book|title=Aristotle's School|last=Lynch|pages=87}}
Spartan system
Unlike Athens, the Spartan education is largely state-organised.Mark Griffith, “Public and Private in Early Greek Institutions of Education,” in Education in Greek and Roman Antiquity, ed. Yun Lee Too (Leiden: Brill, 2001), 23. The Spartan society desired that all male citizens become successful soldiers with the stamina and skills to defend their polis as members of a Spartan phalanx. It was a rumored by Plutarch, a Greek historian, that Sparta killed weak children.Ed. Sienkewicz, "Education and Training," Ancient Greece (New Jersey: Salem Press, Inc. 2007), 344. After examination, the council would either rule that the child was fit to live, or would reject the child, condemning him to death by abandonment and exposure.
=Agoge=
Military dominance was of extreme importance to the Spartans of Ancient Greece. In response, the Spartans structured their educational system as an extreme form of military boot camp, which they referred to as agoge.Adkins and Adkins, Handbook to Life in Ancient Greece (New York: Facts On File, Inc., 2005), 104. The pursuit of intellectual knowledge was seen as trivial, and thus academic learning, such as reading and writing, was kept to a minimum. A Spartan boy's life was devoted almost entirely to his school, and that school had but one purpose: to produce an almost indestructible Spartan phalanx. Formal education for a Spartan male began at about the age of seven when the state removed the boy from the custody of his parents and sent him to live in a barracks with many other boys his age. For all intents and purposes, the barracks was his new home, and the other males living in the barracks his family. For the next five years, until about the age of twelve, the boys would eat, sleep and train within their barracks unit and receive instruction from an adult male citizen who had completed all of his military training and experienced battle.
The instructor stressed discipline and exercise and saw to it that his students received little food and minimal clothing in an effort to force the boys to learn how to forage, steal and endure extreme hunger, all of which would be necessary skills in the course of a war.Adkins and Adkins, Handbook, 104-5 Those boys who survived the first stage of training entered into a secondary stage in which punishments became harsher and physical training and participation in sports almost non-stop in order to build up strength and endurance.Adkins and Adkins, Handbook, 104, 275 During this stage, which lasted until the males were about eighteen years old, fighting within the unit was encouraged, mock battles were performed, acts of courage praised, and signs of cowardice and disobedience severely punished.Adkins and Adkins, Handbook, 105
During the mock battles, the young men were formed into phalanxes to learn to maneuver as if they were one entity and not a group of individuals. To be more efficient and effective during maneuvers, students were also trained in dancing and music, because this would enhance their ability to move gracefully as a unit.Adkins and Adkins, Handbook, 275 Toward the end of this phase of the agoge, the trainees were expected to hunt down and kill a Helot, a Spartan slave. If caught, the student would be convicted and disciplined-not for committing murder, but for his inability to complete the murder without being discovered.
=Ephebe=
The students would graduate from the agoge at the age of eighteen and receive the title of ephebes. Upon becoming an ephebe, the male would pledge strict and complete allegiance to Sparta and would join a private organization to continue training in which he would compete in gymnastics, hunting and performance with planned battles using real weapons. After two years, at the age of twenty, this training was finished and the now-grown men were officially regarded as Spartan soldiers.
=Education of Spartan women=
Spartan women, unlike their Athenian counterparts, received a formal education that was supervised and controlled by the state.Pomeroy, Sarah B. Spartan Women. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002), 27-29. Much of the public schooling received by the Spartan women revolved around physical education. Until about the age of eighteen women were taught to run, wrestle, throw a discus, and also to throw javelins.Pomeroy, Spartan Women, 13-14. The skills of the young women were tested regularly in competitions such as the annual footrace at the Heraea of Elis,Pomeroy, Spartan Women, 24. In addition to physical education, the young girls also were taught to sing, dance, and play instruments often by traveling poets such as Alcman or by the elderly women in the polis.Pomeroy, Spartan Women, 5-12. The Spartan educational system for females was very strict because its purpose was to train future mothers of soldiers in order to maintain the strength of Sparta's phalanxes, which were essential to Spartan defense and culture.Pomeroy, Spartan Women, 4.
Other Greek educators
= Pythagoras (570–490 BCE) =
File:Pythagoras in the Roman Forum, Colosseum.jpg]]
Pythagoras was one of many Greek philosophers. He lived his life on the island Samos and is known for his contributions to mathematics. Pythagoras taught philosophy of life, religion, and mathematics in his own school in Kroton, which was a Greek colony. Pythagoras' school is linked to the Pythagorean theorem, which states that the square of the hypotenuse (the side opposite the right angle) is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides. The students of Pythagoras were known as Pythagoreans.
==Pythagoreans==
Pythagoreans followed a very specific way of life. They were famous for friendship, unselfishness, and honesty. The Pythagoreans also believed in a life after the current which drove them to be people who have no attachment to personal possessions everything was communal; they were also vegetarians. The people in a Pythagorean society were known as mathematikoi (μαθηματικοί, Greek for "learners").{{Cite web|url=https://www.mathopenref.com/pythagoras.html|title=Biography of Pythagoras - math word definition - Math Open Reference|website=www.mathopenref.com|access-date=2017-11-07}}
==Teachings==
There are two forms that Pythagoras taught, Exoteric and Esoteric. Exoteric was the teaching of generally accepted ideas. These courses lasted three years for mathematikoi. Esoteric was teachings of deeper meaning. These teachings did not have a time limit. They were subject to when Pythagoras thought the student was ready. In Esoteric, students would learn the philosophy of inner meanings. The focus of Pythagoras in his Exoteric teachings were ethical teachings. Here, he taught the idea of the dependence of opposites in the world; the dynamics behind the balance of opposites.
Along with the more famous achievements, Pythagoreans were taught various mathematical ideas. They were taught the following: Pythagorean theorem, irrational numbers, five specific regular polygons, and that the earth was a sphere in the centre of the universe. Many people believed that the mathematical ideas that Pythagoras brought to the table allowed reality to be understood. Whether reality was seen as ordered or if it just had a geometrical structure. Even though Pythagoras has many contributions to mathematics, his most known theory is that things themselves are numbers. Pythagoras has a unique teaching style. He never appeared face to face to his students in the Exoteric courses. Pythagoras would set a current and face the other direction to address them. The students upon passing their education become initiated to be disciples. Pythagoras was much more intimate with the initiated and would speak to them in person. The specialty taught by Pythagoras was his theoretical teachings. In the society of Crotona, Pythagoras was known as the master of all science and brotherhood.
==Rules of the school==
Unlike other education systems of the time, men and women were allowed to be Pythagorean. The Pythagorean students had rules to follow such as: abstaining from beans, not picking up items that have fallen, not touching white chickens, could not stir the fire with iron, and not looking in a mirror that was beside a light.{{Cite web|url=http://www.math.tamu.edu/~dallen/history/pythag/pythag.html|title=Pythagoras and the Pythagoreans|website=www.math.tamu.edu|access-date=2017-11-08|archive-date=2020-03-01|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200301110522/https://www.math.tamu.edu/~dallen/history/pythag/pythag.html|url-status=dead}}
==Mathematics and music==
Some of Pythagoras's applications of mathematics can be seen in his musical relationship to mathematics. The idea of proportions and ratios. Pythagoreans are known for formulating numerical concords and harmony. They put together sounds by the plucking of a string. The fact that the musician meant to pluck it at a mathematically expressible point. However, if the mathematical proportion between the points on the string were to be broken, the sound would become unsettled.
==School's dictum==
The Pythagorean school had a dictum that said All is number. This means that everything in the world had a number that described them.{{Cite book |last=Gower |first=Timothy |title=Princeton Companion to Mathematics |publisher=Princeton University Press |year=2008 |isbn=978-1-4008-3039-8 |location=Princeton University |pages=200–208}} For instance, number 6 is the number that relates to creation, number 5 is the number that relates to marriage, number 4 is the number that relates to justice, number 3 is the number that relates to harmony, number 2 is the number that relates to opinion, and number 1 is the number that relates to reason.
Pythagorean Society was very secretive, the education society was based around the idea of living in peace and harmony, but secretly. Due to the education and society being so secretive, not much is known about the Pythagorean people.
See also
Notes
{{reflist}}
References
{{refbegin|30em}}
- Lynch, John P. (1972). Aristotle's School: A Study of a Greek Educational Institution. Los Angeles: University of California Press. p. 33.
- Lynch. Aristotle's School. p. 36.
- Sienkewicz, Joseph, ed. (2007). "Education and Training". Ancient Greece. New Jersey: Salem Press, Inc. p. 344.
- Plutarch (1927). "The Training of Children". Moralia. Loeb Classical Library. p. 7.
- Lynch. Aristotle's School. p. 37.
- Beck, Frederick A.G. (1964). Greek Education, 450–350 B.C. London: Methuen & CO LTD. pp. 201–202.
- Lynch. Aristotle's School. p. 38.
- Lodge, R.C. (1970). Plato's Theory of Education. New York: Russell & Russell. p. 11.
- Aristophanes, Lysistrata and Other Plays (London: Penguin Classics, 2002), 65.
- Lynch. Aristotle's School. p. 38.
- Plutarch The Training of Children, c. 110 CE (Ancient History Sourcebook), 5–6.
- Downey, "Ancient Education," The Classical Journal 52, no.8 (May 1980): 340.
- Lodge. Plato's Theory of Education. p. 304.
- Lynch. Aristotle's School. p. 33.
- Lynch. Aristotle's School. p. 39.
- Lynch. Aristotle's School. p. 38.
- O’pry, Kay (2012). "Social and Political Roles of Women in Athens and Sparta". Saber and Scroll. 1: 9.
- Plutarch (1960). The Rise and Fall of Athens: Nine Greek Lives. London: Penguin Classics. pp. 168–9.
- Beck. Greek Education. p. 253.
- Matsen, Patricia; Rollinson, Philip; Sousa, Marion (1990). Readings from Classical Rhetoric. Edwardsville: Southern Illinois University Press. p. 43.
- Beck. Greek Education. p. 255.
- Beck. Greek Education. p. 257.
- Beck. Greek Education. p. 293.
- Beck. Greek Education. p. 227.
- Beck. Greek Education. p. 200.
- Beck. Greek Education. p. 240.
- Lodge. Plato's Theory of Education. p. 303.
- Plato (2013). Republic. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. p. 186.
- Plato. Republic. p. 188.
- Anagnostopoulos, Georgios, ed. (2013). "First Athenian Period". A Companion to Aristotle. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 5.
- Anagnostopoulos (ed.). Companion to Aristotle. p. 8.
- Anagnostopoulos (ed.). Companion to Aristotle. p. 9.
- Lynch. Aristotle's School. p. 87.
{{refend}}
=Primary sources (ancient Greek)=
{{refbegin}}
- {{cite wikisource |title=Athenian Constitution |author=Aristotle |authorlink=Aristotle}} See original text in [https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0045 Perseus Project].
- Lycurgus, Contra Leocratem.
- {{cite book | last=Aristophanes | title=Lysistrata and Other Plays | publisher=New York: Penguin Classics| year=2002}}
- {{cite book | last=Plutarch | title=The Training of Children, c. 110 CE}}. See original text in [http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/plutarch-education.html].
- {{cite book | last=Plutarch | title=The Rise and Fall of Athens: Nine Greek Lives | publisher=New York: Penguin Classics | year=1960}}
- {{cite book | last=Xenophon | title=Xenophon on the Spartans | publisher=Ancient History Sourcebook | date=28 January 2010}}. See original text in [http://www.csun.edu/~hcfll004/sparta-a.html].
{{refend}}
=Secondary sources=
{{refbegin}}
- {{cite book | last=Marrou | first=Henri-Irénée | title=A History of Education in Antiquity | publisher=University of Wisconsin Press | year=1956 }}
- {{cite book | last=Adkins | first=Lesley |last2=Adkins |first2=Roy A. | title= Handbook to Life in Ancient Greece | publisher=New York: Facts On File, Inc | year=2005}}
- {{cite journal | last=Downey | first=Glanville | title=Ancient Education | journal=The Classical Journal | volume=52 | issue=8 | date=May 1957 | pages=337–345}}
- {{cite book | last=Ed. Sienkewicz | first=Thomas J | title=Ancient Greece: Daily Life and Customs | volume=1 | publisher=Hackensack, NJ: Salem Press, Inc | year=2007}}
- {{cite book | last=Ed. Sienkewicz | first=Thomas J | title=Ancient Greece: Education and Training | volume=2 | publisher=Hackensack, NJ: Salem Press, Inc | year=2007}}
- {{cite journal | last=Mavrogenes | first=Nancy A | title=Reading in Ancient Greece | journal=Journal of Reading | volume=23 | issue=8 | date=May 1980 | pages=691–697}}
- {{cite book | last=Pomeroy | first=Sarah B. | author-link=Sarah B. Pomeroy | title=Spartan Women | publisher=Oxford: Oxford University Press | year=2002}}
- {{cite book | editor-last1=Too |editor-first1=Yun Lee | title=Education in Greek and Roman Antiquity | location=Leiden | publisher=Brill | date=2001}}
- {{cite book | last=Beck | first=Frederick A. G. | title=Greek Education, 450–350 B.C. | location=London | publisher=Methuen | date=1964}}
- {{cite book | last=Cartledge| first=Paul | title=Ancient Greece: A Very Short Introduction | series=Very Short Introductions 286 | location=Oxford; New York | publisher=Oxford University Press| date=2011 | isbn=978-0-19-960134-9}}
- {{cite book | last=Freeman | first=Kenneth J | title=Schools of Hellas: An Essay on the Practice and Theory of Ancient Greek Education | location=London; New York| publisher=MACMILLAN | date=1907}}
- {{cite book | last1=Joyal | first1=Mark | first2=Iain | last2=MacDougall | first3=John C. | last3=Yardley | title=Greek and Roman Education: A Sourcebook|
series=Routledge Sourcebooks for the Ancient World | location=London | publisher=Routledge | date=2009}}
- {{cite book | last=Lynch | first=John P.| title=Aristotles School: A Study of a Greek Education Institution | location=Berkeley; Los Angeles; London | publisher=University of California Press | date=1972}}
{{refend}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Education In Ancient Greece}}