Sparta forged the most feared warriors of the ancient world.
Its armies became legend.
Its discipline shaped an empire of fear.
Its heroes achieved immortality at Thermopylae.
But behind the shields, the blood, and the glory stood the women who sustained Sparta.
In Daughters of Sparta: Between Honor, War, and Memory, Roberto Arnaiz reveals the hidden world of Spartan women - mothers, queens, priestesses, and daughters raised within a society where war governed every aspect of life.
Unlike any other women in Ancient Greece, they trained their bodies, controlled property, influenced society, and raised generations of warriors destined for battle.
Yet beneath that strength existed sacrifice, control, fear, and the relentless demands of the State.
Blending history, mythology, war, religion, and political power, this book explores the rise of Sparta through the lives of the women who stood behind one of the most brutal and fascinating civilizations in human history.
Because Sparta was not built by warriors alone.
It was built by women forged in the shadow of war.