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Encyclopedia Britannica



TYRTAEUS

This article appears in Volume V27, Page 551 of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: TUM-VAN
TYRTAEUS , Greek elegiac poet, lived at
Sparta
  about the middle of the 7th century B.C. According to the older tradition he was a native of the Attic deme of Aphidnae, and was invited to
Sparta
  at the suggestion of the Delphic oracle to assistthe Spartans in the second Messenian war. According to a later version, he was a lame schoolmaster, sent by the Athenians as likely to be of the least assistance to the Spartans (
Justin
  iii. 5; Themistius, Orat. xv. 242; Diod. Sic. xv. 67). A fanciful explanation of his lameness is that it alludes to the elegiac couplet, one verse of which is shorter than the other. According to Plato (
Laws
 , p. 629 A), the citizenship of Sparta was conferred upon Tyrtaeus, although Herodotus (ix. 35) makes no mention of him among the foreigners so honoured. Basing his inference on the ground that Tyrtaeus speaks of himself as a citizen of Sparta (Fr. 2), Strabo (viii. 362) is inclined to reject the story of his Athenian origin. SuIdas speaks of him as " Laconian or Milesian "; possibly he visited Miletus in his youth, where he became
familiar
  with the Ionic elegy. Busolt, who suggests that Tyrtaeus was a native of Aphidnae in Laconia, conjectures that the entire legend may have been concocted in connexion with the expedition sent to the assistance of Sparta in her struggle with the revolted Helots at Ithome (464). However this may be, it is generally admitted that Tyrtaeus flourished during the second Messenian war (c. 65o B.C.) a period of remarkable musical and poetical activity at Sparta, when poets like
Terpander
  and Thaletas were welcomed that he not only wrote poetry but served in the field, and that he endeavoured to compose the internal dissensions of Sparta (
Aristotle
 , Politics, v. 6) by inspiring the citizens with a patriotic love for their fatherland. About twelve fragments (three of them complete poems) are preserved in Strabo, Lycurgus, Stobaeus and others. They are mainly elegiac and in the Ionic dialect, written partly in praise of the Spartan constitution and' King Theopompus (Ebvopla), partly to stimulate the Spartan soldiers to deeds of heroism in the field (`Tsro8ilsacthe title is, however, later than Tyrtaeus). The
interest
  of the fragments preserved from the Ebvoia is mainly historical, and connected with the first Messenian war. ' The `TsroOiKat, which are of considerable merit, contain exhortations to bravery and a warning against the disgrace of cowardice. The popularity of these elegies in the Spartan army was such that, according to Athenaeus (xiv. 63o F), it became the custom for the soldiers to sing them round the camp fires at night, the polemarch rewarding the best
singer
  with a piece of flesh. Of the marchingsongs ('E0arr7pca), written in the anapaestic measure and the Doric dialect, only scanty fragments remain (Lycurgus, In Leocratem, p. 211, 107; Pausanias iv. 14, 5. 15, 2; fragments in T. Bergk, Poetae lyrici graeci, ii.).
Verrall (Classical
Review
 , July 1896, May 1897) definitely places the lifetime of Tyrtaeus in the middle of the 5th century B.c., while Schwartz (Hermes, 1899, xxxiv.) disputes the existence of the poet altogether; see also Macan in Classical
Review
  (February 1897) ; H. Weil, Etudes sur l'antiquite grecque (1900), and C. Giarratani, Tirteo e i suoi carmi (1905). There are English verse translations by R. Polwhele (1792) and imitations by H. J. Pye, poet laureate (1795), and an Italian version by F. Cavallotti, with text, introduction and notes (1898). The fragment beginning TeOvapivac yap KaX6v has been translated by
Thomas
  Campbell, the poet. The edition by C. A. Klotz (1827) contains a dissertation on the war-songs of different countries.


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