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At Sparta, Anaxandridas the son of Leo was no longer king: he had
died, and his son Cleomenes had mounted the throne, not however by
right of merit, but of birth. Anaxandridas took to wife his own
sister's daughter, and was tenderly attached to her; but no children
came from the marriage. Hereupon the Ephors called him before them,
and said - "If thou hast no care for thine own self, nevertheless we
cannot allow this, nor suffer the race of Eurysthenes to die out from
among us. Come then, as thy present wife bears thee no children, put
her away, and wed another. So wilt thou do what is well-pleasing to
the Spartans." Anaxandridas however refused to do as they required,
and said it was no good advice the Ephors gave, to bid him put away
his wife when she had done no wrong, and take to himself another. He
therefore declined to obey them.
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