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fix the length of the contest at two–thirds, and for the boys at half of the entire
course, whether they contend as archers or as heavy armed. Touching the
women, let the girls who are not grown up compete naked in the stadium and
the double course, and the horse–course and the long course, and let them run
on the race–ground itself; those who are thirteen years of age and upwards
until their marriage shall continue to share in contests if they are not more
than twenty, and shall be compelled to run up to eighteen; and they shall
descend into the arena in suitable dresses. Let these be the regulations about
contests in running both for men and women.
Respecting contests of strength, instead of wrestling and similar contests of
the heavier sort, we will institute conflicts in armour of one against one, and
two against two, and so on up to ten against ten. As to what a man ought not
to suffer or do, and to what extent, in order to gain the victory—as in
wrestling, the masters of the art have laid down what is fair and what is not
fair, so in fighting in armour—we ought to call in skilful persons, who shall
judge for us and be our assessors in the work of legislation; they shall say
who deserves to be victor in combats of this sort, and what he is not to do or
have done to him, and in like manner what rule determines who is defeated;
and let these ordinances apply to women until they married as well as to men.
The pancration shall have a counterpart in a combat of the light armed; they
shall contend with bows and with light shields and with javelins and in the
throwing of stones by slings and by hand: and laws shall be made about it,
and rewards and prizes given to him who best fulfils the ordinances of the
law.
Next in order we shall have to legislate about the horse contests. Now we
do not need many horses, for they cannot be of much use in a country like
Crete, and hence we naturally do not take great pains about the rearing of
them or about horse races. There is no one who keeps a chariot among us, and
any rivalry in such matters would be altogether out of place; there would be
no sense nor any shadow of sense in instituting contests which are not after
the manner of our country. And therefore we give our prizes for single horses
—for colts who have not yet cast their teeth, and for those who are
intermediate, and for the full–grown horses themselves; and thus our
equestrian games will accord with the nature of the country. Let them have
conflict and rivalry in these matters in accordance with the law, and let the
colonels and generals of horse decide together about all courses and about the
armed competitors in them. But we have nothing to say to the unarmed either
in gymnastic exercises or in these contests. On the other hand, the Cretan
bowman or javelin–man who fights in armour on horseback is useful, and
therefore we may as well place a competition of this sort among amusements.
Women are not to be forced to compete by laws and ordinances; but if from
1498
zurĂĽck zum
Buch The Complete Plato"
The Complete Plato
- Titel
- The Complete Plato
- Autor
- Plato
- Datum
- ~347 B.C.
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 1612
- Schlagwörter
- Philosophy, Antique, Philosophie, Antike, Dialogues, Metaphysik, Metaphysics, Ideologie, Ideology, Englisch
- Kategorien
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International