Deze foto is genomen aan het UZA in Edegem, als men rond het UZA wandelt treft men deze aan naast een beekje vol met aangename planten. Ook de omgeving in het algemeen in de wijde omtrek van het UZA nodigt uit tot fietsen en wandelen.
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20-01-2015
WKRt6XzUG
"Not all inhabitants of the Spartan state were codsniered to be citizens. Only those who had undertaken the Spartan education process known as the agoge were eligible. However, usually the only people eligible to receive the agoge were Spartiates, or people who could trace their ancestry to the original inhabitants of the city.""There were two exceptions. Trophimoi or "foster sons" were foreign students invited to study. The Athenian general Xenophon, for example, sent his two sons to Sparta as trophimoi. The other exception was that the sons of a helot could be enrolled as a syntrophos if a Spartiate formally adopted him and paid his way. If a syntrophos did exceptionally well in training, he might be sponsored to become a Spartiate.[30]""Others in the state were the perioikoi, who were free inhabitants of Spartan territory but were non-citizens, and the helots,[31] the state-owned serfs. Descendants of non-Spartan citizens were not able to follow the agoge and Spartans who could not afford to pay the expenses of the agoge could lose their citizenship. These laws meant that Sparta could not readily replace citizens lost in battle or otherwise and eventually proved near fatal to the continuance of the state as the number of citizens became greatly outnumbered by the non-citizens and, even more dangerously, the helots."Source: wikipedia for Sparta