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  1. Lycurgus (c. 390-c. 324 BC) was a leading Athenian public official during the period after the Battle of Chaeronea (338 BC), in which Athens and its allies were defeated by Philip of Macedon. Lycurgus’ special achievement was his reorganization of Athenian finances, which doubled the amount of money raised annually.

  2. Nov 7, 2022 · Lycurgus the Lawgiver. Mary-Joseph Blondel (Public Domain) Lycurgus is considered the semi-mythical founder of classical Sparta and responsible for all of the city-state ’s laws as well as its military and political institutions. He became better known to generations of Spartans as the lawgiver. He transformed Sparta into one of the most ...

  3. exclaimed athenian statesman lycurgus in a speech he delivered more than 2,300 years ago At The Heart Of Public Service In ancient Athens, early military successes were more for cultural identity than political power, an identity verbalized and emotionalized through the Athenian Oath.

  4. Lycurgus also encouraged the rich to pay some of the costs of the offices they held; the separation between public office-holding and private wealth which had characterized the classical democracy in Athens (Humphreys 1983a, ch. 2) became blurred. 23 Contributions to restore Athens' military strength and rebuild her walls have already been ...

  5. Mar 8, 2017 · Athens had its Solon, and Sparta had its Lycurgus the lawgiver. Like the origins of Lycurgus' legal reforms, the man himself is wrapped in legend. Herodotus 1.65.4 says the Spartans thought the laws of Lycurgus came from Crete. Xenophon takes a contrary position, arguing Lycurgus made them up; while Plato says the Delphic Oracle provided the ...

  6. Lycurgus of Athens (c.390–324 bce) (c.390–c.325/4 bc),Athenian statesman, active after the battle of Chaeronea (338). He played the major part in the control of the city's finances for twelve years, raising the revenue to perhaps 1,200 talents a year, and financing projects by raising capital from individuals; scattered epigraphic evidence ...

  7. May 20, 2018 · About Lycurgus of Athens. Lycurgus (/laɪˈkɜrɡəs/; Greek: Λυκοῦργος, Lykourgos; 396–323 BC) was a logographer in Ancient Greece. He was one of the ten Attic orators included in the "Alexandrian Canon" compiled by Aristophanes of Byzantium and Aristarchus of Samothrace in the third century BCE. Lycurgus was born at Athens about ...

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