Analysis of the Battle of Leuctra

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The Battle of Leuctra, one of the most influential and significant battles in ancient Greek history, occurred during the summer of 371 BC. This battle not only influenced Greece for many years to come but also eastern European history in the fourth century BC. Prior to Leuctra, the city-state of Sparta was the most dominant and powerful force in the Peloponnese and the rest of Greece. However, as a result of the conflict, the course of history would change forever. Sparta’s defeat at the Battle of Leuctra ended its power in Greece because as a result of the loss, its military, political, and social dominance was shattered forever and was never recovered for the rest of its history leading to its new position as a second-rate power among the Greek city-states.
Sparta’s military dominance was shattered after the Battle of Leuctra as a result of it losing many Spartiatai in the battle, significantly weakening its military strength. One of the reasons that this was important triumph for the Thebans was that Sparta’s force of Spartiatai, its full citizen soldiers, was declining at an alarming rate. The city was only able to send seven hundred full citizen troops to the conflict; in the aftermath of the battle, less than half returned, bringing the total manpower below one thousand (Strassler, 362). Another important reason is that the shattering of Sparta’s aura of military invincibility caused the oppressed revolt against Spartan rule and help end its dominance in the region (Strassler, 258).As a result of all this, the city was invaded for the first time in 370 BC when the Thebans and her allies decided to invade Laconia as a result of the apparent vulnerability of Sparta.
The fighting tactics of Sparta were being successfully cou...

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...ttle led Sparta to being reduced to just a local power that would never play an important role in Greek affairs. This moment in time in history is of great importance and needs to be understood and appreciated in order understand the history that followed the battle.

Works Cited
Campbell, J.B., and Tritle, Lawrence A. THE OXFORD HANDBOOK OF WARFARE IN THE CLASSICAL WORLD. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, 2013. Print
Cawkwell, G.L. “The Decline of Sparta.” The Classical Quarterly 33 (1983): 385-400. jstor.org. Web. 15 May 2014.
Devine, A.M. “A Study in Tactical Terminology.” Phoenix 37 (1983): 201-217. jstor.org. Web 15 May 2014.
Hornblower, S. “When Was Megalopolis Founded?” The Annual of the British School at Athens 85 (1990): 71-77. jstor.org. Web. 15 May 2014.
Strassler, Robert B. THE LANDMARK XENOPHON’S HELLENIKA. New York: Anchor Books, 2009. Print

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