My bruised arms ache as they wrap around the cold pole…SLASH!! I feel a burst of pain on my back as the whip hits me yet again. The trainer pulls the whip back and hits me across the face and my mouth fills with blood. My body gets tense, and I think, Why are they doing this to me? I’m only 7-years-old. Before the whip strikes me again, I faint. The spartans wiped wiped the young Spartan boys for cruelty and entertainment. The training methods in Sparta tested the boys limits and were on a daily life or death basis. To emphasize there were huge benefits of the training camps, the camps taught discipline and created strong warriors. In fact there were also downsides of the camps the young boys would would die daily in combat, and were rarely fed. The training camps paved a way for Spartan warlike success. The harsh and cruel Spartan training methods and camps were essential to the success of the spartan warlike nation in 6th-4th centuries B.C.E To explain, the training methods in Sparta tested the young boys limits and were on a daily life or death basis. According to Steven Pressfield “the spartan didn't do anything but train for the next twelve years”. The young boys were tied to poles and wiped, the Spartans believed this taught …show more content…
According to David George, P.H.D “the Spartans whole society was to strip you of individual identity” The spartans conquered the hardest obstacles with no regrets. The leaders of the training camps pushed the boys to their limits. The spartans prepped the men for war by teaching them war methods, battle tactics, and battle formations. Without the camps, the spartans would not have been a powerful war-like nation. Without the camps, the soldiers would not know what lay ahead in war. They would not know how to take pain and live in harsh climates. The Spartan training camps pave the way for generations to come in the noble city-state of