Answer:
Unlike such Greek city-states as Athens, a center for the arts, learning and philosophy, Sparta was centered on a warrior culture. Male Spartan citizens were allowed only one occupation: soldier. Indoctrination into this lifestyle began early. Spartan boys started their military training at age 7, when they left home and entered the Agoge. The boys lived communally under austere conditions. They were subjected to continual physical, competitions (which could involve violence), given meager rations and expected to become skilled at stealing food, among other survival skills.
In 371 B.C., Sparta suffered a catastrophic defeat at the hands of the Thebans at the Battle of Leuctra. In a further blow, late the following year, Theban general Epaminondas (c.418 B.C.-362B.C.) led an invasion into Spartan territory and oversaw the liberation of the Messenian Helots, who had been enslaved by the Spartans for several centuries. The Spartans would continue to exist, although as a second-rate power in a long period of decline. In 1834,Otto (1815-67), the king of Greece, ordered the founding of the modern-day town of Sparti on the site of ancient Sparta.
Answer:
The hunter-gather societies used the simplest form of technology to hunt and gather their food. Native Americans lived in hunter-gatherer communities composed of bands of people through kinship and marriage. The division of labor was equal between the men and women. Men would hunt for large animals and control the distribution of goods from the land, while the women would forage for fruits, nuts, tubular vegetables, and any other edible plant based food and hunt for small animals (Lenski, G., Nolan, P., & Lenski, J., 1995) and control the use of the land. Everything was shared with the whole tribe, so there was no power struggle
B. It maintains religious laws and has religious courts to interpret all aspects of law.
Europeans had huge egos back in the Old days, and were notorious for colonization. I'd say Europe