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LYCOPODIUM
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Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911) / britannica_1911
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lycopodium, the principal genus of the lycopodiaceae, a natural order of the fern-allies (see pteridophyta). they are flowerless herbs, with an erect, prostrate or creeping widely-branched stem, with small simple leaves which thickly cover the stem and branches. the "fertile" leaves are arranged in cones, and bear spore-cases (sporangia) in their axils, containing spores of one kind only. the prothallium developed from the spore is a subterranean mass of tissue of considerable size, and bears the male and female organs (_antheridia_ and _archegonia_). there are about a hundred species widely distributed in temperate and tropical climates; five occur in britain on heaths and moors, chiefly in mountainous districts, and are known as club-mosses the commonest species, _l. clavatum_, is also known as stag-horn moss. [illustration: from strasburger's _lehrbuch der botanik_, by permission of gustav fischer. fig. 1.--lycopodium clavatum. a, old prothallus. b, prothallus bearing a young sporophyte. g, polian of a mature plant, showing the creeping habit, the adventitious roots and the specialized erect branches bearing the strobile or cones. h, sporophyte bearing the single sporangium on its upper surface. j, spore.] gerard, in 1597, described two kinds of lycopodium (_herball_, p. 1373) under the names _muscus denticulatus_ and _muscus clavatus_ (_l. clavatum_) as "club mosse or woolfes clawe mosse," the names being in low dutch, "wolfs clauwen," from the resemblance of the club-like or claw-shaped shoots to the toes of a wolf, "whereupon we first named it _lycopodion_." gerard also speaks of its emetic and many other supposed virtues. _l. selago_ and _l. catharticum_ (a native of the andes) have been said to be, at least when fresh, cathartic; but, with the exception of the spores of _l. clavatum_ ("lycopodium powder"), lycopodium as a drug has fallen into disuse. the powder is used for rolling pills in, as a dusting powder for infants' sores, &c. a _tinctura lycopodii_, containing one part of the powder to ten of alcohol (90%), has been given, in doses of 15 to 60 minims, in cases of irritation and spasm of the bladder. the powder is highly inflammable, and is used in pyrotechny and for artificial lightning on the stage. if the hand be covered with the powder it cannot be wetted on being plunged into water. another use of lycopodium is for dyeing; woollen cloth boiled with species of lycopodium, as _l. clavatum_, becomes blue when dipped in a bath of brazil wood. lycosura (mod. _palaeokastro_ or _siderokastro_), a city of arcadia, reputed to be the most ancient city in greece, and to have been founded by lycaon the son of pelasgus. its fame in later times was chiefly associated with the temple of despoena, containing the colossal group made by damophon of messene, of despoena and demeter seated, with artemis and the titan anytus standing beside them. the temple and considerable remains of the group of sculpture were found in 1889. the date of both has been a matter of dispute, damophon being placed at dates varying from the 4th century b.c. to the age of hadrian. but it has now been shown that he lived in the 2nd century b.c. remains of a portico, altars and other structures have also been found. see [greek: praktika tes arch. hetairias] (1896); g. dickens, _annual of british school_ at athens, xii. and xiii. lycurgus (gr. [greek: lykourgos]), in greek history, the reputed founder of the spartan constitution. plutarch opens his biography of lycurgus with these words: "about lycurgus the lawgiver it is not possible to make a single statement that is not called in question. his genealogy, his travels, his death, above all, his legislative and constitutional activity have been variously recorded, and there is the greatest difference of opinion as to his date." nor has modern historical criticism arrived at any certain results. many scholars, indeed, suppose him to be in reality a god or hero, appealing to the existence of a temple and cult of lycurgus at sparta as early as the time of herodotus, (i. 66), and to the words of the delphic oracle (herod. i. 65)-- [greek: dixo e se theon manteusomai e anthropon. all' eti kai mallon theon elpomai, o lykoorge.] if this be so, he is probably to be connected with the cult of apollo lycius or with that of zeus lycaeus. but the majority of modern historians agree in accepting lycurgus as an historical person, however widely they may differ about his work. according to the spartan tradition preserved by herodotus, lycurgus was a member of the agiad house, son of agis i. and brother of echestratus. on the death of the latter he became regent and guardian of his nephew labotas (leobotes), who was still a minor. simonides, on the other hand, spoke of him as a eurypontid, son of prytanis and brother of eunomus, and later the tradition prevailed which made him the son of eunomus and dionassa, and half-brother of the king polydectes, on whose death he became guardian of the young king charillus. according to herodotus he introduced his reforms immediately on becoming regent, but the story which afterwards became generally accepted and is elaborated by plutarch represented him as occupying for some time the position of regent, then spending several years in travels, and on his return to sparta carrying through his legislation when charillus was king. this latter version helped to emphasize the disinterestedness of the lawgiver, and also supplied a motive for his travels--the jealousy of those who accused him of trying to supplant his nephew on the throne. he is said to have visited crete, egypt and ionia, and some versions even took him to spain, libya and india. various beliefs were held as to the source from which lycurgus derived his ideas of reform. herodotus found the tradition current among the spartans that they were suggested to lycurgus by the similar cretan institutions, but even in the 5th century there was a rival theory that he derived them from the delphic oracle. these two versions are united by ephorus, who argued that, though lycurgus had really derived his system from crete, yet to give it a religious sanction he had persuaded the delphic priestess to express his views in oracular form. _the reforms._--herodotus says that lycurgus changed "all the customs," that he created the military organization of [greek: enomotiai] (_enomoties_), [greek: triekades] (_triecades_) and [greek: syssitia] (_syssitia_), and that he instituted the ephorate and the council of elders. to him, further, are attributed the foundation of the apella (the citizen assembly), the prohibition of gold and silver currency, the partition of the land ([greek: ges anadasmos]) into equal lots, and, in general, the characteristic spartan training ([greek: agoge]). some of these statements are certainly false. the council of elders and the assembly are not in any sense peculiar to sparta, but are present in the heroic government of greece as depicted in the homeric poems. the ephors, again, are almost universally held to be either an immemorial heritage of the dorian stock or--and this seems more probable--an addition to the spartan constitution made at a later date than can be assigned to lycurgus. further, the tradition of the lycurgan partition of the land is open to grave objections. grote pointed out (_history of greece_, pt. ii. ch. 6) that even from the earliest historical times we find glaring inequalities of property at sparta, and that the tradition was apparently unknown to all the earlier greek historians and philosophers down to plato and aristotle: isocrates (xii. 259) expressly denied that a partition of land had ever taken place in the spartan state. again, the tradition presupposes the conquest by the spartans of the whole, or at least the greater part, of laconia, yet lycurgus must fall in the period when the spartans had not yet subjugated even the middle eurotas plain, in which their city lay. finally, we can point to an adequate explanation of the genesis of the tradition in the ideals of the reformers of the latter part of the 3rd century, led by the kings agis iv. and cleomenes iii. (q.v.). to them the cause of sparta's decline lay in the marked inequalities of wealth, and they looked upon a redistribution of the land as the reform most urgently needed. but it was characteristic of the greeks to represent the ideals of the present as the facts of the past, and so such a story as that of the lycurgan [greek: ges anadasmos] may well have arisen at this time. it is at least noteworthy that the plan of agis to give 4500 lots to spartans and 15,000 to perioeci suspiciously resembles that of lycurgus, in whose case the numbers are said to have been 9000 and 30,000 respectively. lastly, the prohibition of gold and silver money cannot be attributed to lycurgus, for at so early a period coinage was yet unknown in greece. lycurgus, then, did not create any of the main elements of the spartan constitution, though he may have regulated their powers and defined their position. but tradition represented him as finding sparta the prey of disunion, weakness and lawlessness, and leaving her united, strong and subject to the most stable government which the greek world had ever seen. probably grote comes near to the truth when he says that lycurgus "is the founder of a warlike brotherhood rather than the lawgiver of a political community." to him we may attribute the unification of the several component parts of the state, the strict military organization and training which soon made the spartan hoplite the best soldier in greece, and above all the elaborate and rigid system of education which rested upon, and in turn proved the strongest support of, that subordination of the individual to the state which perhaps has had no parallel in the history of the world. lycurgus's legislation is very variously dated, and it is not possible either to harmonize the traditions or to decide with confidence between them. b. niese (_hermes_, xlii. 440 sqq.) assigns him to the first half of the 7th century b.c. aristotle read lycurgus's name, together with that of iphitus, on the discus at olympia which bore the terms of the sacred truce, but even if the genuineness of the document and the identity of this lycurgus with the spartan reformer be granted, it is uncertain whether the discus belongs to the so-called first olympiad, 776 b.c., or to an earlier date. most traditions place lycurgus in the 9th century: thucydides, whom grote follows, dates his reforms shortly before 804, isocrates and ephorus go back to 869, and the chronographers are divided between 821, 828 and 834 b.c. finally, according to a tradition recorded by xenophon (_resp. laced_. x. 8), he was contemporary with the heraclidae, in which case he would belong to the 10th century b.c. authorities.--our chief ancient authorities, besides plutarch's biography, are:--herodotus i. 65; xenophon, _respublica lacedaemoniorum_; ephorus _ap_. strabo x. 481, 482; aristotle, _politics_, ii.; pausanias iii. and v. 4; and scattered passages in plato, isocrates, polybius, diodorus, polyaenus, &c. of modern works the most important are: e. meyer, "lykurgos von sparta," in _forschungen zur alten geschichte_ (halle, 1892), i. 211 sqq.; a. kopstadt, _de rerum laconicarum constitutionis lycurgeae origine et indole_ (greifswald, 1849); h. k. stein, _kritik der uberlieferung uber den spartanischen gesetzgeber lykurg_ (glatz, 1882); s. wide, "bemerkungen zur spartanischen lykurglegende," in _skand_. _archiv_. i. (1891), 90 sqq.; e. nusselt, _das lykurgproblem_ (erlangen, 1898); h. bazin, _de lycurgo_ (paris, 1885); c. reuss, _de lycurgea quae fertur agrorum divisione_ (pforzheim, 1878); a. busson, _lykurgos und die grosse rhetra_ (innsbruck, 1887); h. gelzer, "lykurg und die delphische priesterschaft" in _rhein_. _mus_. xxviii. 1 sqq.; f. winicker, _stand der lykurgischen frage_ (graudenz, 1884); g. attinger, _essai sur lycurgue et ses institutions_ (neuchatel, 1892); the general greek histories, and the works on the spartan constitution cited under sparta. (m. n. t.) lycurgus (c. 396-325 b.c.), one of the "ten" attic orators. through his father, lycophron, he belonged to the old attic priestly family of the eteobutadae. he is said to have been a pupil both of plato and of isocrates. his early career is unknown, but after the real character of the struggle with philip of macedon became manifest he was recognized, with demosthenes and hypereides, as one of the chiefs of the national party. he left the care of external relations to his colleagues, and devoted himself to internal organization and finance. he managed the finances of athens for twelve successive years (338-326), at first directly as treasurer of the revenues ([greek: ho hepi te dioikesei]) for four years, and in two succeeding terms, when the actual office was forbidden him by law, through his son and a nominal official chosen from his party. part of one of the deeds in which he rendered account of his term of office is still preserved in an inscription. during this time he raised the public income from 600 to 1200 talents yearly. he increased the navy, repaired the dockyards, and completed an arsenal, the [greek: skeuotheke] designed by the architect philo. he was also appointed to various other offices connected with the preservation and improvement of the city. he was very strict in his superintendence of the public morals, and passed a sumptuary law to restrain extravagance. he did much to beautify the city; he reconstructed the great dionysiac theatre and the gymnasium in the lyceum, and erected the panathenaic stadium on the ilissus. he is mentioned as the proposer of five laws, of which the most famous was that statues of the three great tragedians should be erected in the theatre, and that their works should be carefully edited and preserved among the state archives. for his services he was honoured with crowns, statues and a seat in the town hall; and after his death his friend stratocles drew up a decree (still extant in pseudo-plutarch, _vit. dec. orat._ p. 851; see also e. l. hicks, _greek historical inscriptions_, 1st ed., no. 145), ordering the erection of a statue of bronze to lycurgus, and granting the honours of the prytaneum to his eldest son. he was one of the orators whose surrender was demanded by alexander the great, but the people refused to give him up. he died while president of the theatre of dionysus, and was buried on the road leading to the academy at the expense of the state. lycurgus was a man of action; his orations, of which fifteen were published, are criticized by the ancients for their awkward arrangement, harshness of style, and the tendency to digressions about mythology and history, although their noble spirit and lofty morality are highly praised. the one extant example, _against leocrates_, fully bears out this criticism. after the battle of chaeroneia (338), in spite of the decree which forbade emigration under pain of death, leocrates had fled from athens. on his return (probably about 332) he was impeached by lycurgus, but acquitted, the votes of the judges being equally divided. the speech has been frequently edited. editio princeps (aldine, 1513); f. g. kiessling (1847) with m. h. e. meier's commentary on pseudo-plutarch's _life of lycurgus_ and the fragments of his speeches; c. rehdantz (1876); t. thalheim (1880); c. scheibe (1885); f. blass (ed. major, 1889), with bibliography of editions and articles (ed. minor, 1902); e. sofer (leipzig, 1905), with notes and introd. there is an index to andocides, lycurgus and dinarchus by l. l. forman (oxford, 1897). the exhaustive treatise of f. durrbach, _l'orateur lycurgue_ (1890), contains a list of the most important review articles on the financial and naval administration of lycurgus and on his public works; see also c. droege, _de lycurgo publicarum pecuniarum administratore_ (minden, 1880). several fragments of his various laws have been preserved in inscriptions (_corpus inscriptionum atticarum_, ii. 162, 163, 173, 176, 180). on the history of the period see authorities under demosthenes.