Men: If they weren't busy with military training and politics, men would often go to the theatre for entertainment to watch plays that they could relate to like comedies, dramas, romance, etc.
Women: Women were mostly busy with domestic duties such as cleaning and weaving. Women were not involved in politics or public life. They were mostly bound to the house except for one public duty of acting as a priestess at a temple. As a wife, women in ancient Greece had no status other than being the property of her husband. A woman was hardly given any education and she was considered inferior to men. A woman’s primary use was that of giving birth and it ended there. Women of Sparta were different from the other women in ancient Greece. Here the women were just as equal with men. They were educated, could own land and even have multiple husbands. A woman who had children could remarry after her husband’s death. She was not allowed to take any possessions previously owned by her and her husband unless there was a pre-signed contract. In a case where a man divorced his wife, the woman was allowed to keep all the belongings she had brought into the marriage along with half of the possessions gained during the marriage. However, she could be stripped of everything if the husband swore that he did not deserve the blame for the divorce.
Children: Children used most of their time playing with toys and games.