215 1 11MB
English Pages 250 [233] Year 1981
PERICLES’ CITIZENSHIP LAW OF 451-50 B.C.
This is a volume in the Arno Press collection
MONOGRAPHS IN CLASSICAL STUDIES Advisory Editor W.R. Connor
Editorial Board E. Badian P.E. Easterling David Furley Michael H. Jameson W.R. Johnson Bernard M.W.
Knox
Jacqueline de Romilly
See last pages of this volume for a complete list of tities.
PERICLES’ CITIZENSHIP LAW OF 451-50 B.C.
Cynthia Patterson
THE AYER COMPANY Salem, New Hampshire
Editorial Supervision: Steve Bedney
First publication In book form 1981 by Arno Press Inc. Copyright © 1961 by Cynthia Patterson Reproduced by permission of Cynthia Patterson MONOGRAPHS IN CLASSICAL STUDIES ISBN for complete set: 0-405-14025-8 See last pages of this volume for titles. Manufactured
in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Patterson,
Cynthia.
Pericles'
Citizenship
Law of 451-50
B.C.
(Monographs in classical studies) Revision of thesis (Ph. D.)--University
Pennsylvania,
Bibliography: Includes
1. I.
p.
indexes.
Citizenship
Title.
of
1976.
II.
(Greek
law)
2.
Pericles,
499-29
Series.
Law ISBN 0-88143-022-6
312 38083 343.80283
80-2661 AACR2
B.C.
PERICLES’
CITIZENSHIP
OF 451/0
B.C.
LAW
For R.
and
N.
Table
Preface
,
LJ
e
e.
e
*
.
Chapter I. Introduction.
II. III. IV.
V.
Athenian The
Contents
.
.
.
.
Φ
.
e.
.
.
.
e.
.
.
.
.
.
.
2
2
2
«
2
«©
«
ew
02.
Citizenship
Population
of
Before
Athens;
451/0
480
.
B.C...
- 450
B.C..
Pericles, Politics in the Mid-Fifth Century and Citizenship Law . . . 2 2 2 2 . «© © 2 © 202% Conclusion.
Epilogue:
The
.
.
.
.
.
Citizenship
Appendix
1.
Citizenship
Appendix
2.
Some
2
Law
2
2
Athenian .
2
2
.
.
©
«©
©
General
.
.
.
.
.
2
2
2
2
2
Ancient
Sources
«©
450
Discussed
©
to
©
on
403
n
B.C..
in Athens.
Classes.
.
of
©
Terminology
.
Index
©
From
Bibliography.
Index
of
.
...... © © or
«©
©
©
©
©
© we we
Cited
111
©
n
ee .
.
.
.
Preface
This 1976
for
vania.
monograph
the
of
In revising
organization not
degree
and
attempted
is a revised
I have
take
to
Ph.D.
in Ancient tried
account
reform
or
holes.
The
many
but
which
of Athens that tions
will
whether are
one
find
very
the
much
Lateiner,
Sally
Jameson.
The
for
the
In
from
the
mistakes,
work
published as
therefore
still
those
re-reading answers
in August
of
Pennsyl-
arguments,
since
1976.
or
to
improve
I have
fill
all
a dissertation
(with
in
and
revising
proposed
University
a whole
interested and
submitted
clarify
manuscript
is
I hope
a dissertation
History
relevant
specific
worth
I am grateful
of
of
correct
result
useful.
or not
to
recast
bibliographical footnotes)
version
here
the
history
I have prove
become
too
society
convinced
correct,
the
ques-
raising. the
Humphreys,
criticism
Seth
responsibility
Schein,
for
the
and
suggestions
Brook
views
of Martin
Manville
expressed
and and
Ostwald,
especially
arguments
Donald
Michael
used
is
of
course my own. Finally, transliteration forms
for
tions
from
I have
not
attempted
of
Greek
proper
familiar
names
(Pericles,
Greek
for
less
to achieve
names,
familiar
but
have
Thucydides, ones
complete generally Piraeus)
(Kratinos,
New York, N.Y. October 1980
consistency used and
familiar
dircct
B.
the Latinized
translitera-
Boiotos).
C.
iv
in
P.
I.
The few.
ancient
Aristotle,
in
the
testimonia
Ath.
Pol.
archonship
number of citizens the proposal of that anyone not
for
Pericles'
26.4,
of
Introduction
says
citizenship
lawl
of
451/0
B.C.
that
Antidotos,
on
account
of
the
large
(dia to pl@thos tdn politÓn) and on
Pericles, born from
they both
[the Athenians] citizen parents
decided would
not have a share in the city (mà metechein tés t@s poleds hos an mf ex amphoin astoin ἃ gegonßs). and
Plutarch,
When and the
Pericles
the d@mos Pericles city and
37.2-5,
that
apologized
for
its
harshness
towards
straightway took up again the affairs was chosen general, he asked that the
on (bastards) (ton peri ton nothön
nomon),
him of law
the law he him-
self had introduced earlier, be relaxed so that his name and family would not be left completely bereft of a successor. This is how the law came about. When Pericles was at his height in power in the government many years before and when he had, as has been said, legitimate sons, he wrote a law that only those born from two Athenians vere
Athenians
(monous
Athénaious
einai
Y
tous ek duein Ath@naion
gegonotas). And when the king of „Egypt sent a gift of 40,000 medimnoi of grain to the d@mos, it was necessary to distribute it among the citizens (tous politas). Many law suits arose from this law against nothoi who had up to then escaped its notice and were overlooked, and many fell victin to the sycophants. In fact, those who were sold into slavery after being convicted vere only a little less than 5,000, and those vho remained in the politeia and vere judged Athenians were found to be 14,040. While it is strange that a law which prevailed against so many should be relaxed by the one who wrote it, the present personal (peri ton oikon) misfortune of Pericles (who seemed to be paying the price for
his arrogance
and disdain)
thinking that he had human sympathy, they
among These
are
the
the phraters two
most
moved
the Athenians
suffered retribution agreed to enroll his
giving
important
him Pericles’ sources
and
to pity.
And
and was in need of illegitimate son
name. perhaps
represent
independent
are
traditions. an
archon
connects
not
Apart date
the
from
and
in
law with
mentioned
differences
an
annalistic
events
in the Ath.
Then,
Aelian,
in
terminology
context
(the
‘return’
Historia
6.10
3,
while of
Aristotle
Plutarch
Pericles
and
cites
gives the
the
law
no date
and
Egyptian
with
graiü
gift)
Pol.
Varia
Pericles, when general of the said) if someone were not born
says
that
Athenians, wrote a law [that from both citizen parents he
should not have a share in the city (ean m$ tuchéitisex amphoin huparchón astön, toutGimé meteinai t@s politeias).
Retribution
and
the Suda,
came
s.v.
to
him
from
démopoiétos;
this
law.
that
Pericles son of Xanthippos, although he wrote a law that [said that]he who was not born from both [citizen parents?J should
not be a citizen
(ton m@ ex amphoin astupolitÉn mé einai),
when many years later he lost his legitimate sons, unwillingly and grieving, having relaxed his own law and having behaved in unseemly way, and being at the same time pitiable and hateful, he obtained the things he desired. Still only at length and with difficulty, by entreaty and bribery, did he make his
illegitimate
These
sources
phrasing
of
follow, the
law,
son by Aspasia of Miletus for
the
most
however,
part,
a d@mopoiétos.
the Plutarchian
is Aristotelian
an
(close
tradition.
to
Politics
Aelian's
1278a34-35
or
1275b31-32 as well as to Ath. Pol. 26.4) and the Suda's is unique." Despite for
the
the
character
relation
of
for
sceptics
some
"impossible" and with
the ite
Suda)
the
and
Greek
that as
paucity
to
of
career polis
corroborating
to
its
But
testimony
importance
democracy
membership.
Pericles
proposed
unreliable.”
the
of Athenian
separate
he ever
references
from
his
In
and
discovery
its
this
law
and
for
the
larger
the
19th
citizenship
such a law and the
of
definite
to dismiss in
1890
dating
of left
is
clear, issue
of
century
it
law,
consider
to
Plutarch the
was
the
possible it
(with Aelian
Ath@naiG6n
that
both
Politeia
position
untenable--and
and
effects
ileges
is
either
is
influencing
and
non-developmental;
Athenian
88
an
city
amendment
changed law
to
torical
society
ing
the
history
law
in
generally to
have
remedy
Chapter
the no
for
most
of
fifth
the
law
defining
Pericles
set
forth
as
their
self-image
sound,
has
rules
or
the
cause
on
the fifth
stereotyped,
described
are law
less
Athens,
been
place
an
assumed is
now
century
less tend
above.19
This
had
law
usual
in
is
static
still
fail of
to
view
monograph
is
approach considering
the
development viewed investigated.
piece to
for the
an
of
his-
mention,
Athenian
models
attempt-
in
than
a standard
studies
(marriage)
simply
rather
Athens
priv-
aristocrat
The
it
its
foreign
interest
the
Recent
? but
or
little
Usually,
new,
century
policies’
cast.
wants
aristocratic
what
which
since
which
population.
there
neglected.
argument
the
evidence
or
of
in
of
Peisistratus,
as
way
rules
Athenian the
membership for
"having
and
in which
Athenians,
for
study,
controlling
requirement
the
the
the
his
affected
or
Athenian
statutes
membership
revisionist
Cleisthenes
interpreting
démos
prevent
been
considers
tyranny
of
politics
understand-
citizenship attempt
to
situation.
determining
the
to
has
terms
that
a selfish
organization.
few writers
law
offered
II
civic
may
to
the
citizenship
which
polis
Solon,
it
citizenship
and
451/0
as
information
Pericles’
and
of
pre-existing
Paradoxical
task
ideological-political
decisions
static
of
begin
public
"debasement"
law
the
a strong
concerned
the
Pericles'
with
catering
or ἃ democrat
from
had
prevent
also
how
have
a demagogue
protectedÓ
to
historians
law.
interpretations
connections ing
Athenian
of Pericles'
Most Pericles
left
but
the
and
procedures
citizen chapter of
the
a share
civic
and
body. concludes
demes in
the
participated
until
mid-fifth
in
century
before
In what
is
that
there
phratries
city."
political
Athenians the
and
used
was
before laws
of
reorganization
of
their
The
perhaps
city
as
traditional
vell rules
and
identity
(both
was
an Athenian
dismissed
as
growing
to
(or
the
nature
least
growth
law
and
in Athens.
on
Peloponnesian citizen
time
of
on
general
in
births
demands
and
war
IV
the
up
the
the
finally,
institutions "most
her
self-sufficient
(Pericles, desire
tial
suit
as
new
criterion
distinctly
for
terms
determine
who
there
twenty
is
of
this
an
us
at
most
chapter
be
will
on
the
such
of
of
information from
increase
1.e.,
the
citizens
start
increase an
of
population
precise
a significant
"natural,"
Due
a pl$thos
later
that
in Athens."
views
indeed
our
‘the population
understanding
customary
years
and
entirely
such as
to
was
gives
this
an issue often
were now living
some
earlier
be
immediate and
‘having
political
democracy, between
Consideration to
an
part
analysis
of
position
as
an
of and
a larger
(autarkestat@)
in Thucydides,
to mark
years
relationship
451/0
is viewed
that
that
in 451/0,
relevant
with
Thucydides
empire
up
law
to
due
to
the
could an
not,
increase
deaths.
entailed.
The
sufficient
arguments
highly
first
principles,
of
the
odds
second,
developments
law.
at
which
changing
leads,
still
thirty
in
people
as their were
and
wars
in vague
evidence,
again,
these to
or
argued
takes
growth and
of
for
decrease
citizenship,
‘more
is
demographic
Chapter
rapidly’
as many
Persian
or
or put
also,
population;
the
were
the pl€thos of citizens
although
It
in 451/0—probably the
membership)
irrelevant,
lack)
conclusive,
citizenship
phratry
III considers
of Attica was the
and
citizen.
Chapter ignored,
deme
the
changing
attitudes
and
private
the
career
and
politics
interpretation
(Periclean)
‘imperial’ things
2.36.3).
In
particular,
the
boundaries
in the city’
Pericles’
public
all
a share
of
the
in
city's
context
and
effort
city, both the
of
to
make
in war law
clearly
make her
and
Pericles
Athens in
in
forth
of the Athenians.
of
which
citizenship
reflects set
towards realm
the
to
law--the
fact
peace"
the one
need
and
essen-
A Conclusion
takes
of
law,
tation
Pericles’
Pericles’
law
of
some
fifth
I will
Athenian be
one
to
Athenian
use
both
usage
Athenian
male as
obedience
of
or many
and
and
not
an
to he
and
class
female. Athenian
is
English
briefly)
of
considers
vote
Athenian
the
this the
members
An
Athenian
in
the
or
to
hold
ancient
usage.
life
the
citizenship
important
former
to
entitled
(contemporary)
modern
implications
terminology In
refer
can
(also
first,
society.
and
further
interprestatus
of
to 403 B.C.
discuss
to
and
some
Epilogue
451/0
‘citizens’
part
city—whether the
an
classes
politics
takes
owes
and
appendices
community,
who
Athenian the
two
century
whole,
briefly
in the period
Finally, second,
up
of
and
in
the
Athenian
citizen of
for
the
will
city,
This
historians!
an
monograph
be and
is
but
and
who
in
an
laws
of
accord
a
the
as
admittedly is
as
considered
of the
and
understanding
families
protection
office.
terminology
to
contrary with
Introduction:
1. For the Appendix 1.
2. as
Athenian
Throughout
Aristotle.
ship,
and
3. Again accounts.
see
Appendix
the
--LSJ)
rare
is not
astupoled
this
a
full
in LSJ. ("go
up
by
discussion
down
‘citizenship
to
Pol.
I do
of
not
the
a rare noun city,
Politeia
the Politics
think
author-
seem
a resolution
meaning in
see
Aristotle's
terminology
in
live
deny
and
than a
law’
of the Ath€nai6n
attempts
the Ath.
monograph
Rather and
standard
to the author
between
of
for
the
convinced
in view
1
by
I refer
I am not
But for purposes is necessary.
Astupolités
from
translated
monograph
general
the similarities
me striking. the question
4.
this In
terms
Footnotes
it,
used
in
‘citizen’ frequent
to
of
these
formed
the
streets"
it may be a corruption from mé ex amphoin astÓn politén mé einai of Politics
1278a34-35.
5.
See
the comments
of 0.
Muller,
Untersuchungen
Bürger-und Eherechts (Leipzig, 1899), pp. 813-814. that Plutarch's story was simply the result of the law-giver ‘hoist by his own petard'. 6. and
This of
is
Beloch,
the
view,
e.g.,
Griechische
Tod,
Walker
and
Geschichte
of
11.12,
Ὁ.
zur Geschichte
des
Attischen
Muller cites Duncher's argument favorite rhetorical theme of a
Adcock
in
CAHV,
pp.
5,
102,
167;
191.
7. E.g., Fritz Schachermeyr, Perikles (Stuttgart, 1969), pp. 50-51. 1. Gernet, "Les nobles dans la Grece antique," Anthropologie de la Gréce antique, p. 342, and S.C. Humphreys, "The Nothoi of Kynosarges," JHS 94 (1974) 93-94, also consider the law as aimed at noble, extra-city relationships, but do not claim that it is per se democratic. Gernet suggests that it reveals the homogeneity of the polis against the
internationalism
of
the
nobility.
For
Humphreys’
view
see
Chapter
IV,
p.
99.
8. The quotation is from Hignett, HAC, p. 346. The view is endorsed, for example, by Harrison, The Law of Athens I, p. 25 note 2; McGregor, "Athenian Policy at Home and Abroad," (Semple Lecture, 1966), p. 10; Burn, Pericles and Athens (New York, 1949), p. 92; Kagan, The Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War (Cornell, 1969), P. 104. See Chapter IV for a full consideration of these traditional views. New
Politicians
of
or such papers of S.C. Humphreys as "Economy Anthropology and the Greeks, pp. 136-158, or Classical Athens," CJ 73 (1977-78) 97-104.
9.
As,
for
example,
W.R.
Connor,
The
and Society "Public and
in Classical Athens," Private Interests in
Fifth
Century
Athens
10. For example, S.C. Humphreys ín her interesting and perceptive "Public and Private Interests in Classical Athens," (referred to in
artícle, note 9)
speaks
led
of "the dogmatic
Perikles'
citizenship
separation law"
and
adds
of public in
and
private
parentheses,
"to
life
which
prevent
families
to based
on international dynastic marriages from using their private relationships to manipulate foreign policy" (p. 99). She claims that "a decisive hardening of the public/private boundary" is confirmed by "Perikles' repudiation of his citizen wife in order to set up what was evidently a widely known and stable relationship with a foreign woman, just in the years when his own law had made marriage with foreign women impossible" (ibid.). It is not clear to me that Pericles’ law did make "impossible" a marriage to a foreign woman or that it had anything to do with his relationship with Aspasia. The public/private analysis has not been profitably applied to the citizenship law. And while J.K. Davies,"Athenian Citizenship, the Descent Group and its Alternatives," CJ 73 (1977-78) 105-121, offers an impressive formal analysis of alternative ways of defining a citizen body (although I doubt that what he terms alternatives were in Athens really so, see the Conclusion), he assumes the existence of a legal and procedural system in which Pericles' law simply 'closed the last remaining loophole' (p. 118). ll.
p.
See,
105.
for
example,
the
article
of
Davies
referred
to
in
the
previous
note,
II.
It
is
the
male
law
replaced
tion the
generally
parent
is
be
an
that
Athenian
this
examination gene,
and
Solon
through
will be
suggest
argued,
phratries
simply
the and
(2)
who
of
of
the
citizenship
the
on
507) law
This
conclusion
down
a standard
city)4
as The
but
nor
Athenian
specifically polis
itself deny
was
for
a local
will that
that
the
Athenian
that
were
necessarily
not the
and
the
of
Athens
from
these
groups,
451/0,
it will
Athenian
citizens.
the
citizenship? to
be
problem
restrictive
importance
citizenship
city's
the
define
lies
(having
met of
but
by the
or,
all cause
in
as much
a share
some
of
smaller
or sense,
in laying
in
the
communities
or
was. up
An
phratries,
of
the
was
a city
business
solve law
451/0
the
needed
law's
built
their
Before
‘why
451/0?
demes,
which
qualification
a community
before
of
in
of
there
the
"no. *
concern,
up
before
Was
development
is
members
condition
them.
assump-
accompanying
taken
exist
that
Pericles'
a discussion
responsibilities’
question
not
step
membership
regulated
political
whose
did
suggest
qualification
in what
last
demes,
it
they
that
be
did
society,
only
Jk further
will
rules
city
required 1.6.»
on
enforced
Attic
‘citizenship
necessary
does
it will
the
to the
in
of
point
what
who
law
democratic
embarking
regulating
of
itself
Athenians.
law,
or
and
same
second
before
in which
the
the
The
Athenian
final
consider
essentially
a minimum
‘democratic’;
a
them
effect
was
Pericles’
the
is
segments
way
the answer
(after
made
various
forth
of
ranks
the
defining
set
purpose
subject."
to
that
Furthermore,
the
first
we
Cleisthenes
and
on
need
of
and
law
that
tribes,
membership;
also,
clear
thesmos,
(1)
Athenian
be
important,
or
be
should
changed'
a nomos
to
it
was
B.C.
son
exclusive, of
451/0
451/0
democracy.?
the
law,
less
his
Before
before
'radical'
but
more
that
of
IV,
even
Citizenship
for
‘narrowing’
Chapter
and,
assumed
older,
development
law
Athenian
social
groups,
phratries
most
(hereditary
phratries).
Although
kinship
(phratries
and
Cleisthenic
the
tricts
into
as
voting
are,
in
the
and
more in
the
'old'
the
one
in
to and
tribe
polis
itself one
prytaneion,
other
simply
the
aggregate
tion istic
was
and
officials
8 but
between is
the
the
use
whole
possible
to
view
the
the démos,
against
increasing
than
between How
she)
was
that
an
should
parts
Athenian
and
Athenian properly?
was
been
the
one
who
recognized
Athenian
organs
smaller
not
and
its
lead or
in
always the
authority
parts
boundaries
tribe
and
Athenían
while
an
the
the
the
organizafederalrelation Rather
centuries
of
it
as
Athenians,
along with
and
rights
on
called
that
whole
member-
(one
be
fifth
second,
government
defined.
(d@moi or others), between
and
on
had
assume
the
purposes
character"’;
etc.)
which
clearly
of
dis-
citizen
of
perhaps
sixth
(demes
of his
his
a “double
to
for
by virtue
bodies
one
local
divisions; ® and
courts
could
or.
imagined
phratry
procedures
generals,
a society
Athens
and
or
divided
exercized of
of demes
real
deme,
and
districts),
administrative
be
the
something
static
influence
with
Athenian
the
of
any or all of
concern one
was
history
increasing
was
has
term
the
identified
which--as
that its
an
on
to
might
through
city
originally
geographical
not
other
Such
some
men
archons,
own.
and
based
First,
had
their
of
and
reflecting
ly
of
and
507,
up either
army.?
with
of
(made
country)
that
a whole,
after
comparable
extent
thus
agora,
is
(or
a large
"polis,' ' one it
sort
of
or,
tribes
tribes)
the
groups
The
was
Attic
population
phratry
responsibilities.
were
neither
it was
and
it
the
instance,
deme,
hand
hereditary
groups
registration
important,
(villages
some
tribes),
first
demes
and
a modern
or
the
'brotherhoods'),
and
which
such
ship
important,
a similar-
non-Athenian
rather
another.
identified The
answer
belonged from
before
to
to an
Aristotle
451/0 the
and
first
who
saw
to
it
question
is
quite
Athenian
(or
Attic)
on--was
the
primary
that
family, unit
he simply
an of
(and
oikos,
the
10
polis. 9 or
a
The
family
members (and
with
were
view
"local
nature
of
the
phratry
that
it
was
Andrewes of
the
in
evidence or
local
and
perhaps
by
classical
Greeks).
one
dominant
family,
ual
families,
13 the
bration the
line
and
the
phratry
the same
by the
the
to pardon ET
a closed
question,
formed
"at
the
close
the
family"
12 and
seems
(cf.
of
of
the murderer
dark
likely
that
originally
took
on
group
but
the
on
perhaps,
as
into
common
how
that
delegated
the
transitions--birth,
the
times
and
was
understood
all
its
archon
with (and
secured
cousin)
members
were who
exist.l?
its
not
entrance the
into
proper
In
Dracon's
homicide
law,
at
of
fifth
century,
phratry
members
their
duty
the
the
end
family "URS
n Eo
the
through
Pa" to ha
,
of a fellow
This
a phratry
cele-
4
fe
law
co-extensive--even
was
individeponymous
TRIER
phrater ue,n
ID
wur Rasagpee
to RT
prosecute
for whom no relatives pur
ATof "ve^
PEEL
LHEP
S
and
also
probably
member
was
shows in
clearly the
late
effectively
that fifth
RN capa-
nn
V.
RU A V
(up
oe
to the “παν
a
second
of
oikoi.
-
it
its
protected
the
adulthood and
phratry
festivals
of
to
early
cults
Apatouria
legitimized
the
through
and
protector
Through
to
a
character
word
protector
the
as
Whatever
a hereditary (e.g.,
age"
in classical
family.
I follow
individual
TEPER IUE
CALCOT” "Pp PF v9 wet Cre
of
its
question.
but
contributed
phratry
phratry
the
such
involving
large.
to
and
phratries
as
Iliad 2.362)
responsibility
Athenians
protectors
not
sort
on
it
is
matters
at
that
second
developed
city
was
Alcmeonidae)
answer
origin,
of
thing
the
the
provide
It
marriage--the
passing
social
phratry
EEUU
n
an
important
proper),
important
itself--depending
From
example,
the
a kinship
the
republished
anyone
name
of
noting
and
uns nat
attributes
the
and
as
the
for
succession
— city
domestic
for
organization,
polis.
organization in
Attic
then
great
56.6-7)
phratry
appear
the
origins,
male
larger who
local
of
in military
the
10 (as,
all; 11 the
and
development
Pol.
at
origin
the
(Ath.
a house
house’
tribes)
A.
artificial
"great
the
following
more
a
them
had a part is
barely
be
into
of
political
could
accepted
through The
the
oikos
Athenians
and
phratry
century,
!® or
that
atimos.!/
It
18
noteworthy
11
that
for
Homer,
Athens, tive
at
and
being have
least
were
demes)
and
was
legitimate
male
rule
was
oikos
that
than
that
woman
the
only
the
when
the
phrater's
and
only
marriage husband
her
the
same
of
to
18
citizen
body?
but
it
The
continuation
was
prime
importance
son
was
a member
through
9.63).
new
the
being
fifth
insured of
century,
the
after
There
may
have
been
clear
that
the
to of
the
the
right
to
a phratry. (and
of the
In
administra-
phratries
seems
for all. of
the
a member
the
(Iliad
deme
and
being
into
procedure!9
the
likely
a xenos, on
athemistos
made
very
acceptance
Athenian
as
and
depended
a legitimate
of
by
the
son's
father.
last
mother
There
may one
from
was
probably
the
least
which
Cleisthenes,
the
Athenian
(Herodotus
an
Athenian
father
wife
either
needed
celebration
to
could
be
but
only
her
side"
marriage.
have
phratry,
by
sons
would
the
ceremony,
father's the
his
Athenians
applied
his
polis
for
and
Cleisthenes
instead
succession
within
to Megacles
of
the
identity
of
from
although
her
into
anestios
phratry
into
variations essential
individual phratry
507
oikos through
and
the
basic
to which
his
belonged. 29 The
of
when
the
rules
phratries
requirement
also
prosecuted,
the
so
various
of
an astos
murderer
What
is
507/6
unit
an Athenian,
among
aphrétor
until
political
one's
the
the
The (or
daughter
marriage
sacrifice)
of
the
of
of
the
followed
be
The
announced
καπ8114.22
been
and
to
A
the
at
his
same
as
phratry. of
father some
or
point
daughter
those
have
only
no
to
to
the
husband's
If
the
marriage
offical
on
consummation
phratry were
one,
her
grandfather the
which
Still,
was
a woman
by
polis,
practices)
man, 4!
There
a
another
gave
could
interest
between
from
Athenian man
less
(customary
the
(enguésis) same
one
tyrant,
an
of
drawn
nomoi
probably
such.
entrusting
46.18), would
as
members
brother
phratry
Sicyonian
his
a simple
(Demosthenes
the
have
distinction
common.
were
and
or
no
another
recognized
heirs
"father
been
6.130)
gave
be
usually
ever
with
12
disputed
there
apparently ἃ wife
of
been
some
sort
as
of
only
sons
Pericles’
as a sort The
phratry
I.G.
main
phratry
first
.1237
of
two
official
for
(3)
is
(1)
within
is
at
Attic
also
for
the
at
least of
the decree,
and
the
fínes
supporters
are
set
members (debate,
against
an
phratry.?7 but
on
The
decrees
of
the
into
None
oc
fourth
the
of
these
unsuccessful
diadikasia
as
.1237)
into
a married
oath,
and
can
a whole.
a phratry century The
(2)
the
the
be
The
and
a good
are
is,
probably and
setting
procedure vote
of
forth has
the
Demotionidai, 18
itself
made
candidates
itself
from
2
II
members
son
steps
innovations
but
phratry.
discussion), to
a case,
(I.G.
new
phratry.
vote
a
owner
traditional
particular
adverse
procedural
imposed
forth.
three
part
as
Even
such
Decree"
phratries
does
heir.25
a traditional
most
one
beginning
new
(male)
of
of
presentation
property
a legitimate
of
this
In
not
there
identify
heir.
introduction
practice
diadikasia
appeal
the
origin
enacted. to
"Demotionidai
is
a set
of
the
were
daughters
that
a true
a true
this
actually
the
produce
that
in
from
as
the
of
able
a male
not
introducing
practice
the
possible
particular
steps
a part
introduction
& genos
this
is
could
I suggest
dating
steps:
and
apparently tion
2
'Dekeleis'^9
procedure
three
it
customary
II
is
birth
be
women
century
thought
to
without
called
father
and
fourth
at
be
necessary
witnesses
men,
the
not
although
she
reflecting the
of which of
the
gametes).
accurately
indication
called
eg
that
in
although
the law of 451/0 was
die
heiress,
as
23
should
father
commonly
acting
It
been
until
as were
presentation
after
have
her
an
decree
swear
registers
official
it would
Furthermore,
consequence,
in effect)
become
those
(gnésion as
of
should
phratry
phratry
little
'place-holder'
that
procedure
the
would
of
requires
law
witnesses.
3.71££.).24
(and
daughter,
daughter
taken
(Isaeus
necessary
legitimate
wife
the
been
well
the
in
have
have
the
to be
might
to
before
need
"enrolled"
seem
was
would
as
and
an
within
innovathe
their
Andrewes
notes
13
(JHS 81 1237
(1961)
3), taken “for granted" kata ton nomon
14-15).
not
the
Similarly
fact
assumption
of
the
vote
of
doing The
the
their
P
eyes.
is
in
these
phratry
play
nomos
their
membership
129),
the manner In
this
of
situation
iscussion,
-
voting
which
I think
the
important
the
keeping, 14,
people were
and
an
that
(lines
ority a vestige of still
————
their
final
21,
the
role
diadikasia
and
they
act
30-31).
"experts";
arbiters
‘aristocratic
of
rule'
in
the
admission
is
held,
as
a court
the
Clearly,
as
they
the
phratry
are
main
of
their
("Demotionidai,"
p.
131).
to which
the
practice'
have
that
meant
witnesses
to
do
an objection. how
have
diadikasia
is
father
introduced
the
same.
Then
carried
28
It
is
the
register
resort
for
those
of
("Demotionidai,"
the books'
Considering
for
this
auth-
"The Law of the Phratry
not,
m
it
resides
written
in
officials,
managed and
of
For
the
admission
relation
to
the
the
any
could
hardly
held
his
the
translation son,
phrater
the nomos Decree"
swore
who
fourth
have
of the
wished
in
than with what
then
procedure,
things
in
century
been
nomos
and
proper
could
an
the
arcane
that
oath
matter.
seems
and
probably
"Lay"
to
produced
have
voiced
influence of the genn@tai would then have had more to do
out
quirements
Their
|1f
However,
a better
the
"Demotionidai
own
was
probably
The special
they
The
may
unlikely
of
notes
'keepers
comments,
breasts;
copy
last
N
in
keeping"
its
an
procedure.
Wade-Gery
decisions.
Wade-Gery
resides (unwritten
'Customary
with
is,not
discussion,
EEE
according
with
it
under
112
vote and appeal--were the traditional
-—-—7
perhaps
is
(1.G.
things.
to
of members
p.
only
itself.
Demotionidai
according
denied
is
that Nee
way
it
ton Demotionidon
records
a slightly
procedure
18
procedure
phratries
reveals
the
and
different
likely
to
of
demes
will
the be
the nomos itself phratry
"board way,
have
but
been
there
considered
of
as
an
autonomous
experts." the
much
entailed.
Other
substance the
of
body phratries the
re-
same.
is
less
detailed
along
with
the
information. 29
reforms
of
14
Cleisthenes. political on
the
now
it
of
the
state
unit
pre-existing
such
‘official’
(the
‘big men’
there
two
For
was
said
in
507
it
when
probably
ranks.
be the same
essential
that
the nomosof
in its ow
might any
be
phratry--on
elite
ever
can
for
the
deme
modeled
a genos
its
difference
and
rules
perhaps,
Many demesmen
both),
was.instituted
were
in fact
and
also
the
criterion
constituted
the
four
for
a
procedures
although
it
fellow
it cannot
in
as
had
no
phraters
be shown
membership
that
of
the
groups. 2° From
Hopletes,
the
phratries
Argadeis
Cleisthenes
the
were
and Aigikoreis--Herodotus
ten
new
'Cleisthenic'
‘Attic’
5.66.2)
tribes.
and
And
the
tribes
from
(Geleontes,
the demes
tribes,
either
after
old
or
new,
constituted the Athenian demos. >! What control or influence did the dÉmosas a whole have on who was admitted to
the
phratries
the polis--as a
Single
"age
,
or
(after
distinct
from
phratry--dealing
there
would
probably
argued recently ———
that
507)
the
that
with be
eligibility
first
/
constitution and
of
————
persuasive.
Before
j
πὶ
i.e.,
——
mn
—
a new
ec.
any
or other
the
answers.
both
in
a law
of
relevant
to
pre-Solonian _It
has
Pe
the
sense
been
-..-.-
of
[nn
identity as Athenians.32 "This-ise
A
the distinctions
for
genos
For
negative
ἃ politeia M
evidence
admission? on
Athens
.
Solon
there
and
agreement
gave eae)
citizenship, --
Is
of the Demotionidai
general
Solon
demes?
__
“αν.
within
Attic
society,
between rich and
DE
poor, esthloi un
Dana νῶν,
e
T
T
.
Athenians, Yo
and
kakoi
“m
and ET
so n
tm
or mehbers "of Attic
Lo
eres
anm
forth,..may_ have overshadowed
any
"p eo
----
phratries
and
9ikoi, and
-.
distinction
foreigners.
Te
There "may
— “νοις
are
the
hekt@moroi
property. issue
in
"legally
and
While the
or
between
ya
others
there
is
pre-Solonían
illegally’
who
were
no
clear
troubles,
(Solon,
frag.
no
u
longer
masters
of
that
phratry
indication 99 certainly
36,
West)
wee
when
he was
Uwe
and
membership could
longer
ennt
mE"
themselves
a man
no
~
gee
be
their was
sold
a member
an abroad
of
his
"--
15
hereditary
phratry.
otherwise
'freeing'
Athenian.
And
It
18
in
He
the his
not
by
of
provided
bringing
'enslaved',
poems
evident,
responsibilities ship.
Le
he
shows
himself
that
phratries
a politeia
to
Attica
recognized
however,
the
back
for
which
those
a real
their
embraced
proud
legislation
and
through
and
abroad
and meaningful
distinctly
Solon's
sold
to
be
status
the
distinguished
the
city's
all
of
one.24
affected
them
and
basic member-
Athenians,
>>
but did he modify the rules which determined who was an Athenian? | The and
their
essential relation
in the Digest fragment
on
a
and
was
once
mistaken
and
are
first
ae
in Plutarch's
claimed
in
needless
any to
in this
had
no
but
the
say
life
to the effect
Zeus,
but
this
law
some
Solon's
supposed
of Solon
inheritance
Solonian
(24)
and
ten
Heracles nothing
(a mortal
laws
laws
found
in Philochoros
of
him when
(5651)
assumed
foreign
not To
said
relation
to
no
turn
concerned
out
not
with
to
the
be
at
all.
integrity
of
the
based 1,
been
a
which
a law of
the estate
sure,
it
is
law
of
because
that
to the
particular
facts
was
Peisthetairos
to cite
in relation
in Muller's tour de force analysis
law(s)
mother)
inherit be
was
to have
alive.
claim
law
Themistocles
in the realm of the gods)
is not
in
be
he was
spouses.
however,
Plutarch,
a
p.16 ) does
this
citizenship
idea,
cannot
to
is a xenos
lines
was
of
born
foreign
but
Solon
and
as a nothos will of
earlier
The
(i.e.,
below,
him a nothos,
citizenship Still,
(see
Pericles'
Solon.
Themistocles
applied
says
that
1660-66
not
have
36
of
Birds
sense
Thus the two key "facts" Athenian
of
law
post-451
that
is ek xenes
considers
Müller)
earlier
of the Birds
Solon
but
an
O.
foundation.
would
section
Heracles
of
(by
interpretation
otherwise
tairos
consideration
citizenship,
(42.22.4),
a reenactment
nothos
law
to
for
35a. It
simply
points
PeistheSolonian
at
all. 5}
of nothoi and the
individual
oikos
and
16
with
the
briefly
proper
to Solon's
quotes
two
father's the
laws
an
heiress
ed
to
Solonian
phanes'
to
(Solon,
20).
procedure
of
and
her
prevent
which
the
estate
insure As
we
Herakles:
insure
that
has
may
have of
an
been
true
find
the
following
(Ath.
suggested,
heirs
oikoi
could
essential
Solon.
through be
for
legitimate
true
of
claimed
a system
of
her
feature
relative
Such
lack
refers
and Plutarch
children
(paternal)
by
only
9.2),
bear
the
a male
Aristotle
Pol.
would 39
instituted
individual
seems,
integrity. 38
epikléros
by which
been
it
that
and heiresses
epidikasia
dissolution
view,
Birds,
would
law on inheritance
intended
oikos
classical
the
succession
attenpt-
heirs.
sons.
In
On
Aristo-
exchange:
Well, but suppose my father as bastard's heritage?
leaves
me
all
Peisthetairos: The law won't let him. Poseidon here, who now excites you on, will be the first to claim the money then, as lawful brother, and your father's heir. Why here, I'll read you Solon's law about ít. "A bastard
18
to
inheritance anchisteian)
children And
if
have
no
right
(nothöi de m8 if
there
(paidon there
be
be
lawful
ontön gnesion). no
lawful
children
(ean de paides me 881 gnésioi) goods kin."
are
to
fall
to
the
next
1660-1666
There to
is
the
lawful
no
same
certain effect
children"
combined,
the
any
part
in
the
are
combined,
omitted
first
gn@sioi, nothoi
interpretation
(the
might family
from
the
Solonian
in fact
of
this
with
one?)
whatsoever. 41
and
phrase
Possibly
two
that
the second
Whatever
trans.)
quotation.'
the
implying
the of
(Rogers
‘comic
possibly
first.40
inherit
of
einai
the
"or
Possibly if
there
different
in
case
(a later correct
are
rules
there
one)
two
not
are
were
no
denying
resolution,
laws
the
nothoi law
17
does
show
the
maintaining private
then in
or
its oikoi
On in
lawgiver
denied other
body
of
concerning
with what
prerogative.
the
the
its
population,
in effect
city.
membership
through
familial
Solon
the
‘state’
If
before
there
is
a genuine
the
law
Athenians.
puts
Overall,
un.
system
of
Attica;
MEM ee
forth. 42 slaves
Again,
by
or had fled
bringing from
re
-
no
interest
archonship
was
law
both
citizenship
or
the
to
Attica
(Solon,
nd
them
to
again
ship
(or
the
be
the
(paternal)
phratry.
by denying
the nothos
son,
the
be
aper ipt
e
concern
with
was
frag.
A son
whom
a share of
the
t?s
poleös
those
who
had
Athenians
36 = Ath.
phratry
in
other
responsibilities
traditional drawing
a distinct
of Athenian
of
Pol.
demes,
(42.22.4)
12.4)
Solon eo.
"db
set
sold
as
restored aD
in
we
te
phratries,
stand
this
belong
the. historical
dip
He enabled
phratry
will
is
father's
estate,
and
giving
by
were
the
been
were
position
in
a father to
even
an
wore
the Solon,
from
illegitimate
Certainly nothoi if
irregular;
family
reinforced of
And
Essentially,
children.
of
citizen-
membership
ta chr@mata
adoption,
for
issue.43
prohibited
not part
phratry
an
gnesios.
(gn@sioi)
(perhaps
the
seems)
have
admits
from
qualifications
(it
a law is attributed
grammata" to
are
been
to these men.
the
not
legitimacy
between
"dGmosia law
But
were
as nothoi they
line
the
or state.
by
legitimate
specific and
legis-
illegitimate
families.
In the Digest others)
but
ways
The
(among
of
se
of his
40.11)
members
per
the
see Demosthenes
lation
oikos.
if there were other legitimate
accommodated
for
© btet
an Athenian
evidence
and
o ——À
on to metechein
of being Athénaioi EN
Athénaios)
clearest
decision
at least
might
of
of
important,
ignoring
πη τὸ θα» Pe
part
status
status
family
criterion
—
a
involved,
in the
ae
effect
perhaps
independent
-
of
bu
back
debt
rules
no
Solon's
in the
Solonian
a place
forth
—— —
property holding
Solon's
the nothos (as nothos) hand,
itself
thiasoi,
in the way.
The
Solon?
and
to Solon which
first
sussitoi
their
problem which
Andrewes
comments,
own
guarantees rules
arises "This
unless
is, is
not
does an
to
18
antiquarian's as here one
of
presented
step
later
than
century
may
further
lew.44
the
In
restriction
at
mentioned
on
if there were
the
νόμος
Solon which
definitely not
or who
craft
(epi
techn81).
exclusive'
Athenians
Plutarch's
was
on to explain Athens
trustworthy
But
what
foreigners
permit
such
pretation law
in
will
is
in
law,
this
given
be
the of
on this
Although
Solon
have caused
really
former,
does
membership.
matter--which
(παρέχει
whole
modern approved the
not
puzzlement such
may
be
wholesale
negative
to drive
order
in
household
over
others
of
away,
but
an
imply only
issue.
a law of
law provided home-
their
a
practice
to how
a
ὁ τῶν
from
the
as
at
about
admission
phrasing
a fifth
result
καὶ
exile
in
were
were
authenticity
This
24).
(Solon
founder
the point
sources,
passed
known
would
ἀπορίαν
go
the
necessarily
is just
in his
as
not
the
That
6°
a law
argues
about
law
We could
him
Andrewes
decided
who
to
sussitoi are
itself
those
40).
the
the
'jealously
aliens, 46
of law.
He
rather
goes
to call
to
citizens.
was
this
exile
or
not
and
incentive
law
so that
accretion,
attributed
the
is
12 n. an
which
9-12),
its
to
their
by
simply
citizenship
díd not mean
permanent
be
may
puzzlement
except
with
could
law
whatever
control
foreigners--and the
pp.
to do with
has
(1961)
thiasoi,
to being puzzled
permanent
provide
economy.97
But
apparently
that
the
cit.
all.^?
to Athens
came
to
reference,
(JHS 18
whole
), or to finding
δημοποιήτων
land
the
a lawyer's
later--and
(art.
grammata
Plutarch admits
citizenship
much
phratry's
d@mosia
that
that
addition
creation
but
accretions”
suggest
institution
groups
the axones
contain
and
Athenian
Athenian
from
Solon--possibly
Athenian
of
quotation
to
the
law
proposing?
settled
any
in
Athens
others--to
motivation
foreign
trade
Is
is and
it
an
epi
become often needed
enfranchisement
technéi?
citizens? found
in
stimulus
Or
does
The "epi to
of
all
it
simply
usual
inter-
technéi'; Athenian
the
19
The as
second
Plutarch
aliens
in
would
noticed,
general
then
with
that
be
a
the
someone.48
interpretation
likely
that
the
Athenians
citizenship
any
and
so
A a
one-time
but
one
‘laws
used’
the
(cf.
that
among
the
exiles
problem
of
Pol.
might the
(1)
the
a reference
later
time,
Greek
world. Finally
and
often
we
admit
of
possibly
by
the
as
a
archaic to
to
an
axon,
to
the
Solon:
law
that
exiled
the (2)
be
by
with
well
have
anti-Athenian
law
does
not
did I
relative the
would
offer
unusual perhaps
exiles
were
(fragment
the
no
stop
openness
provide
seem
times]
only
or
Philochoros
before
they
of
not
this
more.
when
is
excluded.
unauthentic years
class
been
classical
given
by
to This
have
When
no
not
present
may
It
also
not
It
but
quoted
there
policy.
say
or
It
would
general
[of
but
other
craftsmen.
But
of
aliens.
met,
the
voted
laws).
war
to
Athenians
suggest,
restricted.
perhaps
reflects
post-Persian
the
of
whether
was
and
may
given
would
Athenians
Athens
on
would
acceptance
be
somewhat
is
of
fact
to
decision
exile.
city
such
aporia
sorts
pro-Athenians
the
the
Solonian
the
come
attributed
which
certain
to
groups
permanent
establishes
if
control
of
caused
of
simply
restricted
to
the
precondition
was
and
against
actual
(e.g.,
reasonable
was
attention
8.3 on the naucrary
simply
law
if
admission,
Solon
centralized lack
is
law
or
choice
in
addition
also
acceptance
particular were
their
the
the
not
who
apparently
Ath.
One here
or
extraordinary
Arginusai, of
exiles--and
all
that
further
of
credibility
involved--the
decisions)
the
making
freedom
in
of
is
requirement
phratries'
gains
"desirables'
for
'state'
Their
however,
thrust
than
aliens
been
the
rather
indéed
compatible admit
interpretation,
battle
to
the
be
ir?49
suggestion
lack
phrasing >
of and
belongs
to
a
abundant
in
the
35a,
of
longer
using
and
for
Jacoby)
20
τοὺς
δὲ
φράτορας
ἐπάναγκες
δέχεσϑαι
καὶ
The phraters must admit both the orgeönes homogalaktes, whom we call genn@tai. This to
is
most
commonly
'nobles')
that
all
idea
is
to membership
Athenians that
were
before
‘commoners’
from
a guarantee
in
the
members
Solon,
the
Athénaioi.
Andrewes,
however,
His
main
are:
the
points
from
the
kai
as well
epigraphic
orgeones
(4)
Philochoros
of
462
quoted
and by
the
will
be discussed
menos)
this
law
in
(Ath.
next
Pol.
redress on
(see
in
his
be
on
to
considered
This
view in
considered
establishing
behalf of the
by
and
it--and
take admit is
the most itself
book
suggest
(and of me
relation
to
the
the right
wronged we ee
and
prevent
citizens
this
power
view.
of
automatically; "the
reading;
(3)
(p. the
argue)
to 1)
and
finally
probable
citizenship
limits
the
but and
"th
anyone
that
most
"2
decision
construed
correct?
the
being
suggested
Solon's
);
ignoring
everyone
has
10
or
a digression
to
two of
all
phratry"
which
p.
to
natural
seems
that
from
opposed
shows
unjustly
then
have
the
part
above,
bending
so
(as
homicide
objections
to
in
on
did
either
homogalaktas
fourth
goes
time
would
by
‘commoners’
his
serious
is not
of
could
commoners
chapter
9)
were
right
forced
never
of
then
century.
the
tous
would
not
be
which
mentions
Andrewes
raised
understood
kai
body
should
in
the
law
imposing
would
main
innovations
to seek
so
they
orgeones
mid-fifth
Aristotle
law
orgeönas
by
καλοῦμεν.
Dracon's
genne@tai
has
the
Philochoros
into
"populist")
on
B.C.
well
not
as the gennétai"
formed
405
i.e.,
tous
evidence
that
genos,
(1)
phratry,
phrase
orgeönes
or
the
phratry--presumably
and
the
phratry
phratries
aristocratic
entering
of
and
phratries.?!
of
law
(2)
the
as
the
away
of
taken
τοὺς
γεννήτας
οὖς
ὁμογάλακτας,
touc
και
ὀργεῶνας
law
fits
the
very
fragment
law.
"popular"
(or
of any Athenian (ho boulothe
right
το.) ues Ὁ n mum PT E
πεν
of
appeal
ygei
to d
the
i BAR OO OO
law a
21
court the
(for
case
all
of
someone
ho boulomenos phratry
Athenians).
and
into
self-contained suggest
denied
prosecute so
that
and it
One
the
would
admission
to
to
know
who
(he
polis:
did
the graphe
not;
thought)
procedure
certainly
if
a phratry.
someone
self-determined
did
like
there
is
these
Or, was
the
no
on
the
other
improperly
xenias
of
principles
of
the
second
half
of
the
fifth
exist
at
this
time?
phratry
of
I.G.
11?
indication
century
hand
there
that
recorded
by
to
could
accepted
that phratry will be appealed to anyone but the Demotionidai.?^ psephisma
applied
into
a
The 1237
might
decisions
of
Further, a Krateros
provides
that
if someone born from two acts as a phratry member for
whoever
is
willing
foreigners (ex amphoin xenoin) (phratrizei), | it is possible (ho boulomenos)
(who have the right--hois dikai the case will be alloted on the to the nautodikai.
There law,
but
are
the
most
ho boulomenos pp.
108-111).
two
foreign
menos
to
a number natural
of
in such
Theoretically,
prosecute
is if
ways
interpretation
to prosecute
parents”
possible
new,
someone
to
of
to
one
to
prosecute
if
someone
were
born
the
right
to
prosecute
if
he were
born
of
that for been
does not the
law
hearing tried
find
sets cases
in
the
up
a suitable a special
against same
way
context
as
those
one
(with
aliens against
creates
be
it was
entered
someone
parent
parents.
- 430's
that
cases
one
this of
see Chapter
the
clause for
ho boulo-
logically
foreign
But includes
such
One might
had
IV,
"from
a phratry.
Further,
B.C.
of
right
as magistrates
such
with
the
possible
nautodikai
and
that
foreign
foreign
implications
discussion
parent
in the 450's
procedure
'pure-bred'
two
it
would
this
of
the
further
foreign
right
Athenians
that
possibility
the
shift
be
(For
previous
born
the
prosecute; and of the month
understand
would
a case.
another that
of
eisi) to last day
in
a
argue charge)
previously parent
who
22
entered
a phratry.
view.
Therefore,
secute
an
assumed
alien
ing
I would
the
may
have
is not
genuine,
then
citizen.2©
woman's)
mined
few
sum
and
kinsmen,
his
words
as
quoted
specific
be
ways
right
a citizen
of
tyrant
likely
some
citizens
for
far,
into
does
of
not
support
ho boulomenos
(phratry
bringing
to
If the
it
of
that
is
likely and
proceeded
according
to
to
or
fictious,
member)
that to
should
pro-
not
be
public
attention
‘law of Solon'
and
quoted
prosecut-
by Demosth-
or
carry
on
business
effect are
This and
on
supported
the next was
in
at
citizen their
to
expose
least body
the
through
was
individual
neighbors—not
order.
is
based
the
fraudulent
the
time
business
rules.
the
by those
that
the
both
of
Politics
"not
the
their
on
as
of
of
A man's
polis
on
pure
Athenian of
Solon's
individ(and
a whole--deter-
statement
"a sign of
membership?
of
says
the
that
of
(Ath.
many
is
Pol.
ia..."
tyrants
a 13.5)
Aristotle's Athenians being
prosékon--ibid.). Cleisthenes
often
me katharoi).
the
were
rules,
what
(tOigenei
this
"since
tes politeiasou
Aristotle
notion
in family"
explusion
citizenship
enfranchisement
a general
explicit
beginning
after
had
A policy
Aristotle's
(hös koinénountGn in
that
Cleisthenes
sentence
investigation
that
and
opportunity
him an astosor xenos. the
do?’
claim
improperly" 16
take
phratries
was
this
to work
the
from
sort
complication
so
Peisistratus.
Peisistratus
evidence
up
Peisistratus
to
is apparent
a xenos
might
considering
about
was
for
and judged
attributed
made
to
law
in the agora
real
status
Before
As
the
like an astos.
possible
entry
phratries
that
the
century.
other
acting
Athenians
To
legislation,
a
that
claiming
been
(ergazesthai)
ual
argue
of
57.31:
it
is
emphasis
mid-fifth
a xenos who was
enes
the
unjustly
before There
But
A further
enrolled
in
23
the
tribes
"foreigners
A common that
under
Then,
resident
slaves"
which
attempts
to
Peisistratus
after
Athenian
view
and
the
(and
expulsion
aristocrats”
Solon)
of
but
the
soon
tie
(1275b37). together
foreigners
Aristotelian
entered
Peisistratids, reinstated
the
they
although
the
ranks
were not
evidence
of
expelled
is
Athenians. by
completely
the
resurgent
‘cleared’
by
Cleisthenes. This of
real
the
is
evidence
Athenians that
this
have
been
an
is
after
the
tyrants’
Athens
by
such
in
Rather
than
through
value.
pressure
was
of
the
new
put
by
upon
If
a
the
wake
of
had
a
(if
It
Peisistratus
The the
suppose
Isagoras.
one
Aristotle
may
simply
brought
foreign
foreign-
wife.
It
as
Athenians,
that
were
it
is
so,
piece
tyranny
enrolled
then
likely
have
rid
be the
same
"xenoi and douloi"
of
Cleisthenes
no
sure
herself
as
would
diaps@phismos
is
so.
some
Athens
there
much
(see
which
in
below).
the
indication
of
fourth
that
the
510/9. any
‘open
Panathenaea,
brought
to have
too
to
himself
organization this
by
that
he
in
need
up
necessarily
assembly,
Greater a good
not
members.
not
civic
citizenship
is
and
tyrants,
terming
the
do
clear
managed
phratry
Athenian
The
Athenian
and
that
headed
is
artisans
Peisistratus
Aristotle's
be voted
affected
or
It
a little
is
We
action
action.
the
perhaps
membership.
These would in
but
in Herodotus)
aristocratic
was
participate, an
rid
included
would
procedure
that
friends.
despite
century
their
mercenaries
Sparta
supposedly Further,
an
contained
house-holders
that
of
as
possible
landowners,
sons
was
theory,
'antí-tyranny'
to Athens also
(not
examined
did)
ers
a economical
example the
of
admissions’
by
making
or
more
gene,
But
Peisistratus
distinctive,
in which
increased
Peisistratids.60
phratries
it
a festival the
policy,
all
awareness despite
Herodotus
more
Athenians
and
and
his
a thing could
importance
whatever
(1.59.1)
and
of
being
‘extra-legal'
Thucydides
(6.54.6)
24
agree
that
ditional
Peisistratus
rules
With of
Athens
tribes
for
the
did not
admission
a new
turn.
Athens with
ten new
phylarchs
accordingly
from
ten
tribes
(5.69)
and
the democracy more
to
and
the nomoi
citizen
undertaken
tribes
four
finally
for
the
Herodotus
of
somewhat
to
reorganization
takes
disturb
to
that
by
Cleisthenes
(5.66),
that
that
that
he
Cleisthenes
the Athenians"
the
tra-
body.
reports
ten,
of Athens--including
consititutional
Cleisthenes
he increased
distributed
was
(6.131).
the
the
one
the
the number
of
the "who
Aristotle
replaced
demes
among
established
in the Ath.
Pol.
history four
the the
has
say:
...he distributed the whole population into ten tribes instead of the previous four, with the aim of mixing up the population so that a greater number would be
citizens
This
is
(hopSs metaschdsi pleious
the
origin
of
investigation:
It was
wanted
on
to
check
the
t@s politeias).
proverbial
directed
family
saying:
against
backgrounds
No
tribe-
those who (ta
gen®).
Then
he established a Council of Five Hundred instead of the existing one of Four Hundred, taking fifty from each tribe,
whereas
previously
there
had
been
one
hundred
from each of the previous four tribes.... At the same time, he divided the whole country into thirty parts composed of demes, ten from the district around the
city
(t@s
(peri
to
_paralias),
astu),
ten
ten
from
from
the
the
shore
shore
district
district
(tés
mesogeiou ). These parts he called Trittyes and assigned three of them by lot to each tribe, in such away that each tribe would have one portion from all the main regions of the country. He made those who lived in each of the demes fellow-demesmen, so that they would not, by addressing one another by their father's names (patrothen), expose the newly enrolled citizens, but would call them by the name of their demes. This is the reason the Athenians speak of one another by the names of their demes.
Ath. A similar we
read
tradition that
(already
Cleisthenes
referred
"enrolled
in
Pol.
21
(after
to
earlier)
is
found
the
tribes
many
von in
Fritz-Kapp)
the
foreigners
Politics and
where
resident
tribes
25
slaves
(πολλοὺς
γὰρ
ἐφυλέτευσε
On Aristotle's the
number
and
although
of
system
If
but
citizens. an
organization
included
had
imputes
and
conclude structure, tribes.
The
ten
nev
the
generals
this
sense Did
rules?
everyone
result vas
of
were
can
have
could
the
ten
be
been
that
in
increasing
unbiased
of people
assume
that
on
this
the
result
left
out
of
was
his
main
of
foreigners,"
that
enrolled
the Athenian
citizens
be
be
from
each
the
that
in
system
directly
said
to
swear may
into
entail
issue
his
1
re-
the old
does
purpose.
not
mean
as the
Although
this
phratries
and
appears
same
have
says
five
year
of
to
result
of
the
Council
22 in
of
the
500
implementation years
told,
classical
so
that
Cleisthenes democracy.
democracy."
towards
explicitly
priesthoods
10
later
A11 of
into
years
several
him.9?
the
then
ten',
The
least
administrative
chapter
the
he
at
in
(22.1).62 required
can
a natural
says
features
attitude
and
'board
tríbes
today"
"established
he
trittyes
motives
we
Athenian
Aristotle
ten
the
account,
Athenian
attributed
a new
30
tribe,
organizational have
from
classical
fact,
from
still
provides
Herodotus'
the
In
and
essential
gené and
of
generals.
"they
so.
with
divided
elected
system
Aristotle
characteristic
(501/0)
also
thought
their
demes
fifty
first
the
Cleisthenes
Aristotle
to
- 1275b37).
and
author
administrative
with
he
μετοίκους
interested
have
number
together
170
does
the
which
the
500,
the oath which
Athens
likely may
"slaves
The demes
some
as
new
not
cannot
some
'facts'
Hermokreon
innovations
provided In
of
swore
of
being
Cleisthenes'
these
up
tribes,
that
first
the the
council
important
archonship
out
Cleisthenes
built
most
of
included
definitely
population
we
δούλους
then.
bringing
that
new),
them.
before
is
a significant
the
system
Separating
the
in
καὶ
was
Aristotle
citizen
(if there were
he 'enfranchised'
phratries
Cleisthenes
But
increased
Cleisthenes'
that
view,
ξένους
citizenship, that
or
new
Cleisthenes
let
kata ta patria,
he emphasizes
26
the
importance
name
plus
tion’
in
mission
Put
his of
own
new
Cleisthenes simply
phratries system They
deme
be
That
demesmen
ara
belonging
Pol.
this
demes
the
to
to
in
role.
Cleisthenic
new
citizens
in
old
phratries
this
was
the
neopolitai?95
why
Cleisthenes'
should
continued
the
use
Further,
tc
*hroughout
the
(with
restoration
(and for
the
be
classical
century testimony
membership
it
ar
Aristotle
in
was
join
but
the
not
in
in
bound
to
deny
since
the
ad-
Appeal
thought were
of
and
sons).
they
ranks
'constitu-
scrutiny
Aristotle
reorganization, to
motive of
is
but
the
not
is
from
in
the
‘new’
the
of
word
in
of the
Krateros'
having
phratry city
to
members
his the
his
old
day--
mind
the
unobtrusively.
demes,
so
Aristotle
(see,
for
[Demosthenes]
collection
(see
necessarily
other
of
sources
from
mention have
that
membership
citizenship
to
and
only
revealed
membership
in 409
the
in
polis
B.C.
says
enrolled 66
citizenship, birth
example,
and
membership
parentage)
Demosthenes
59, Against Neaira). above
To
phratry):
do with as
dubious ‚0%
name
criterion
A grant of
highly
father's
evident
important
period.
speeches
57, Against Euboulides; eluded
initial
18-year-old
that
personal
of the Athenian
the
(i.e.,
...that Thrasyboulos should be an Athenian in a tribe and phratry of his choice.
fourth
for
nomenclature,
thought.
problem,
In
the
citizenship--as
But
enable the
deme
of
of
account
suggests
curators
the
in his
their
account
phratries'
noticed
^ne
some
origin
responsible
the
devised
the
the
importance
have
a phratry
che
attributes
And
Ath.
made
and
to Cleisthenes.
citizens
with
any
was
to
day
ignored
would
seems
the
deme name,
together
and
of
vage
2]
reflects
39,
40,
in
a phratry
is vital
evidence
Against
Boiotos ;
And the ps€phisma the
fifth
century
in-
27
importance
of
belongs
the
to It
tion,
the
course
affected
by
head of
by
longer
itself.
fifth
growth
to
and
67
then,
the find
that appeal
Rathei, based
λι
of citizenship;
to
of
that
simply
to
has
in
fact
scrutiny,
on
emerged
have
phratry
popular
1t
testimony
procedure and
acquiesce
in
its the
ruli-pluwe during
but of
also
the
power
the phratry was
belonged of
registra-
developed
courcs
responsibility
itself
commentator
if
the fourth century,
the
One
deme
probably
the
though
Demosthenes
ot
ἃ dikastérior
would
phratry--even
(see
Philochorus,
systew
initially
jurisdiction
having
by
che
fifth and through
arbitrator recent
quoted
period.
possible
the
By the later
law
assume
century, of
the
century
Cleisthenes.
the
important--could public
Boule
the arbiter By
does
mid-fifth
the
the
as
juscifiable
of
of the Boule. no
phratry
same
not
review
from the
is
the
to
the démos
members decision
was
still
of a
40.11). wricten:
In the form of the new administrative δἥμοι- Structure the Attic State, now for the first time in its history, was Put on a firm, unshakable basis, ín contrast to the previous state of a loose conglomerace of overlapping blocks determined by such diverse factors as region, clan allegiance, communion of cult, kinship; a clearly defined procedure, regulated by the principle of due process of law and placing the responsibility with theónuórau was finally created fox the purpose of controlling and administering citizenship.
Certainly prised were
the
a new
legal
responsible
hereditary
kings’
for
held whose
their
the old Attic defined"
and
‘keepers
difference. 9?
as did
"clearly
now
entity
officials,
significant
ent
d@motai
Nor
a responsibiiity members the
of did
tribes.
procedure.
made
tribes
up
the
or of
I do not
(Procedures
not
new
berore.
tribes, The
the
Cleisthenic
But
nad
membership.
the bcoks' the
tney
deme
‘iaw,‘
tribes
have
They
and
as
did
not
and
this
there
aust
have
such
been
and
they
have
ie a
hereditary
tnink we know of a
cum
'new,
‘trive
difte:-
it would
28
be
helpful
Reform
to
know
Bill,”
more
CQ 27
about
(1977),
them.
pp.
See
the
241-245).
comments
of
Andrewes,
"Cleisthenes'
There were new attitudes
toward
(and
methode of dealing with) regional differences and loyalties ’° and towards the organization
of
the
cance
is
likely
and
from
the
it time
regulated
of
rules of
Athens
was
p.
Smith's 319)
anyone other ance
one's
by than
in
their
the
influence
thinking
mid-fifth
membership.
of
a deme
using
now
the
to
cities
kin
it of
was
began the
Through
ξενίας that
it
in
on
the
of
three
4; at
to
take
context
could
by
tell, the to
the
role
the
citizenship basis.
in
other in
setting law
hand, some
I, by
by
nothing
the
appear-
way
with
and Pericles’ perhaps
citizen-
under
the
criteria
for
of
should
451/0
was
Bonner
court
justified
35a;
citizenship
experience
to Aristotle,
"state,"
in
was
citizenship
tested
do
fragment
a direct
in which
Homer be
having
that
that
familial
always
On
time
and
from
so.
a deme
still kata ta patria.
century
be
common
introduction,
fifth
I can
decrees
an
signifi-
more
to
historical
as
to
was
the
far
Philochoros this
day,
Justice
name
28ff.)
a traditional
186,48 ought
1278
early
political
admission
a phratry,
his
had
deme
I submit,
(Politics
citizenship
fragment
Pericles, is
of
and
century
that
This
implies
to
a γραφὴ
law--suggests
of
admission
Administration
right
citizenship--Krateros, ship
as
concern
(The
of
way
in
initially,
different.
"a man's
means
But
neighbors
comment
that
practice
Aristotle
somewhat
by
the
membership
not kata ton nomon of any genos but
a persistent
determined and
same
although
were
that
the
and vote,
Thus,
body;
Cleisthenes.
in much
discussion
citizen
its be
considered. In Periclean prompt
the
demographic
both
Ath.
Pol.
citizenship entry
of
question
(26.4)
law with the
state
deserves
and
Politics
a large into
the
a chapter
(1278a28ff.)
population. business of
its
of own.
Did
Aristotle a pléthos
determining
of
connects
the
citizens
citizenship?
The
29
Chapter
1. for
For
example,
entitlement
both be citizens Greece,
p.
"In 451 Pericles
to
citizenship
by
II:
Footnotes
persuaded
a law which
for him to be a citizen"
100).
Hignett
implies
the assembly
to modify
decreed
a man's
(W.K.
something
that
Lacey,
similar
closing
the remaining
loophole"
(Athenian
must
The Familyin Classical
when he says,
Athenians could intermarry freely with members of other of such unions were legitimate and were citizens of the parent belonged" (HAC, p. 343) as does J.K. Davies with
law,
the rules
parents
"Until
451/0
states; the children born state to which the male "Pericles' citizenship
Citizenship:
the Descent
Group
and its Alternatives," The Classical Journal 73 (1977-78), p. 118). An exception is R. Sealey who says, "The law of 451/0 may mark growing pride in Athenian citizenship, but it is not easy to say how great a change it made, since the immediately preceding conditions are not known.... Conceivably even before 451/0 assemblies of demesmen may have insisted, commonly or increasingly, that both parents of a candidate must be citizens before they would accept him" (A History of the Greek City States, p. 299). A further exception is Brook Manville who in his recent dissertation (The Evolution of Athenían Citizenship, Yale University 1979) offers an historical analysis of the development of Athenian citizenships to the end of the 6th century B.C.
2.
Pierre
Leveque
'The
Final
ship
to men born
3.
It
(The Greek Adventure,
Consolidation
of
is often
English
of
Democracy',
"Finally,
fathers
and mothers
who were
assumed
that
Pericles'
law
trans.) a law
says
of
citizens"
included
under
451/0
(p.
the heading
limited
citizen-
255).
regulations
on marriage.
E.g., MacDowell refers to the "other provision of Perikles' law, invalidating marriage between a citizen and an alien" (The Law of Classical Athens, p. 67). Although the law as we know it it would ceratinly is not necessary to assume that marríage was here point see Chapter IV.
discourage at issue.
such marriages, it For more on this
4. For discussion of this phrase see Appendix I, pp. 153-160. In using metechein tés poleos Pericles emphasized that membership in the city as a whole-not in a particular deme or phratry--was his concern. This seems a sufficient
answer from
I,
p.
to Harrison's query, then
on
the
children
Paoli,
"Why did it [sc., Pericles' of mixed
marriages
were
to be
law] not simply say that nothoi"
(The
Law
of
Athens
65).
5.
Cf.
U.
Studi
di
Diritto
6.
For
this view of the demes
Attico,
see W.E.
pp.
Thompsen,
Reforms,"SO 46 (1971) 72-79; and D.M. Lewis, of Attica, in Gnomon 35 (1963), 723-725. 7.
Paoli,
Studi
8.
"Carattere
di
Diritto
Attico,
quasi-federale,"
p.
Paoli,
207-208.
222. ibid.
review
"The
Deme
of
Eliot,
in Kleisthenes' The
Coastal
Demes
30
9. See the recent account οὗ W.K. Lacey, The Family in Classical Greece, chapter I. After Aristotle (Politics I, 125la-b) the fundamental analysis is course that of Fustel de Coulagnes, La Cite Antique. 10.
See
Andrewes,
The
Greeks,
p.
of
81.
ll. I do not subscribe to the view that owning land (or a certain amount of land) was ever a requirement for being an Athenian. For holding office, yes, but metechein t@s archés is not equivalent to metechein tes poleos (see Appendix I, pp. 164-166. 12.
Andrewes,
Andrewes
argues
(1961) 129-240; portant studies
The
Greeks,
more
fully
pp.
80
and
81.
in two articles:
This
is
a summary
'"Phratries
and "Philochorus on Phratries," JHS 81 on the phratry to which reference will
M. Guarducci, "L'istituzione della Fratria nella antica e nelle Colonie Greche d'Italia," Memorie Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, Ser. VI, vol. VI hereafter referred to as "Guarducci." Wilamowitz, Wade-Gery, pp. 116ff. Nilsson,
Greece, 13.
Aristotles
und
Athen,
vol.
"Demotionidai,"
Essays
in
Cults,
Myths,
Appendix
II.
Guarducci,
p.
Oracles
and
II,
views
which
Hermes
(1961) 1-15. be made are:
89
Other
im-
Grecia della (1937),
chapter
Greek
of
in Homer,"
1.
History,
Politics
in
Ancient
19ff.
14. W.K. Lacey emphasizes the military role of the phratry and leaves affairs of the family to the genf. But in the fourth century at least the phratry was involved in disputes over inheritance, legitimacy (and names). One role need not exclude the other, and the genos should be understood as a group functioning within a phratry, not beside it. On the role of the genos within the phratry see below. 15. I.G. I? 115.11-29. See the text and commentary of F. Stroud, Drakon's on Homicide, University of California Publications: Classical Studies, Vol. (1968). 16. Membership in Thrasyboulos in 409
a phratry B.C. (M-L
that
Osborne,
time
(see M.J.
is also part of the citizenship grant 85.16) and 19 a usual feature of such
"Attic
Citizenship
For the effect of Cleisthenes' reorganization of tionship between phratry and city membership see
17.
Atimos
literally
is
‘without
honor
Decrees,"
BSA
69
(1972)
the Athenian state below pages 25-28.
or value.'
made to decrees on
On the development
Law 3
after
129-158). the
rela-
of this
important term and its meaning from 'outlaw' to 'disenfranchised' see most ly M.H. Hansen, Apagoge, Endeixis, and Ephegesis Against Kakourgoi, Atimoi
recentand
31
Pheugontes,A Study in the Athenian Administration of Justice in the Fourth Century B.C. (Odense, 1976), pp. 55-90, and B. Manville, The Evolutionof Athen-
ian Citizenship (dissertation, Yale University note 42 and Chapter V (Conclusion) pp. 135-136. 18.
For
this
contrast
(astos/xenos)
see
1979),
Appendix
Appendix.
See
also
below
I pp. 156-158.
19. For some variations evident in the fourth century see Paoli, Studi di Diritto Attico, p. 222 and also the comment of B. Manville, The Evolution of Athenian Citizenship, p. 23 note 26: "The inconsistent testimony of the sources may suggest that different phratries enrolled their members differently, at slight-
ly different stages of the child's life." notion of legitimacy may not have existed very
unlikely.
For
the
status
of
the
But Manville's further claim that "the much before Solon" (ibid.) seems to me
nothos
see
note
20.
20. I say this categorically (with the clear implication that illegitimate sons and daughters were not part of the Athenian 'citizen-body', despite the current debate on the issue. The evidence is quite one-sided, especially in that those who argue against 'nothoi as citizens‘ use the evidence of basic practice and principle while those who argue the opposite use particular problem cases. For example, see the particular objections of Mac Dowell ("Bastards as Athenian Citizens,"
CQ 26 CQ 28 into
no
(1976) (1978) the
longer
88-91) and the answers of P.J. Rhodes ("Bastards as Athenian Citizens," 89-92). And while it is true that we do hear of nothoi being accepted
phratries,
a nothos
they
when
are
not
in 429
accepted
as nothoi.
by the vote
Pericles
of the d@mos
son
he was
of
Pericles
accepted
was
as his
father's heir and registered in his father's phratry (Plutarch, Pericles 37.5); and when Callias introduced to the genos of the Kerukes a son whom he had previously considered illegitimate, he simply reversed his former stand and svore that the son was in fact legitimate (Andocides I.127. Cf. Demosthenes 40.11 and the comments of Wolff, "Marriage Law and Family, Organization in Ancient Athens," Traditio 2 (1944) 79-82) and Harrison, The Law of Athens I, 68-70).
forth
The status of by Wolff (op.
nothoi (illegitimate, cit. pp. 75-82). The
(1)
Illegitimate sons were were they eligible for
(2) (3)
Illegitimate sons were not Illegitimate sons were not Ath@naioi. For daughters,
not admitted adoption.
of anchisteia Wolff
55,
that
the
also
and politeia
suggested
situation
mate woman. (This case apparently illegitimate
may
(pp.
82-3), been
to
the
(WS 29-30
"untrennbar"
have
from unwed parents) points are: phratries
is
clearly
put
nor
their father's heirs. citizens of Athens, true see below.
The same position is held by Ledl rights
born main
(1907-8)) who considers
(vol.
30,
on a ‘straight’ somewhat
different
p.
230 and
reading in
of
the
is one emphasized by MacDowell, art. and unable to be an epikl@ros of her
Isaeus
case
the
passim). of
an
3.45-52, illegiti-
cit.) Phile was father's estate, but
was given in marriage to an Athenian and so supposedly could bear legitimate Athenian children. But the evidence of this speech should perhaps not be taken at face falue. There seems to have been something suspicious about the citizen-
32 ship
of
Phile's
escaped
maternal
by a margin
of
As long as Phile (or well enough was left
out
to be a xen$).
uncle,
Nicodemus--he
four votes
(37)--and
was
prosecuted
so also
about
for xenia
and
Phile's mother
only
and Phile.
her kurios) did not press the issue and claim the estate, alone (others besides Phile might suffer if her mother turned
But when
she claimed
the estate
of her
father
Pyrrhus
after
the death of his adopted son Endius, the truth (or at least partial truth) of her status was brought into the open. We can assume that if the prosecution in this case was successful, Phile's children were no longer consídered legitimate.
ably like deme
See also the comments of Rhodes (art. cít., above) who suggests quite reasonthat it might have been easier for a noth® born of two Athenian parents to act an asté than for a nothos since the latter had to go through the process of registration (p. 91).
If
A final argument, Pericles' law, which
also noticed by Rhodes denied to any not born
to
'share
could
in'
the city,
be popularly
Pericles 37), then the normal the city--or citizenship.
21.
Cf.
the comments
22.
Guarducci,
23.
Cf.
p.
of A.
assumption
Ledl,
WS 20
(p. 91, note 12), from tvo Athenian
termed
is
that
(1908)
can be mentioned. parents the right
a "law on bastards" bastards
did
not
(Plutarch,
have
a
share
in
203-4.
39.
Ledl,WS 20
(1908)
214-227.
24. Guarducci, p. 37. Hignett thinks (apparently) that women and children were registered with the phratry and not only introduced (HAC, pp. 56, 60 note 2), but he has failed to distinguish presentation and registration. 25.
For
further
discussion
of
the
position
of
women
in Athens
see
Appendix
I,
26. I follow here the interpretation of Wade-Gery ("Demotionidai"), contra Wilamowitz,on the name of the phratry of I.G. 112 1237, 1.e., that the Demotionidai are a smaller group within a phratry called Dekeleis or the Dekeleia "House." S.C. Humphreys has pointed out that it is not impossible for a whole phratry called Demotionidai to first vote on the admission of a new member as part of the ritual of the Apatouria and then if there were an appeal vote again as Derotionidai in a more legal setting with witnesses present and testimonies given ("Anthropology and the Classics," Anthropology and the Greeks, p. 26). But this possibility affects only one of Wade-Gery's arguments. I am aware that F. Bourriot in his
recent
dissertation
the genos
(Recherches
sur
la nature
du genos,
Lille,
1976)
also argues that the name of the phratry is Demotionidai. However, I know his view only in the summary given in the review of N. R. E. Fischer in JHS 99 (1979) 193-95. In what follows I continue to assume that the phratry is called the "Dekeleis" phratry and that the Demotionidai are a smaller group, probably a genos, within that phratry. However, if this is not correct I do not think it would affect substantially the larger argument of thís chapter.
27.
Again,
"Philochorus
see Wade-Gery,
"Demotioniídai"
on
JHS
Phratries,"
81
and
(1961)1ff.
also
the
comments
of Andrewes,
33
28.
It
admitted
is
possible
candidate
have been to uphold
not the
that
the
as well
an arbitrary law, as with
Demotionidai
as to admit
the
authority
one who had been
once
had
rejected.
to
reject
But
authority to reject candidates, but rather those whom the phratry had rejected.
29. Aristotle, Ath. Pol. 42.1-2 is the most accurately the practices of earlier periods. century the procedure was as follows:
complete account, but In the second half of
an
this would an
may the
authority
not reflect fourth
-. the right of citizenship belongs to those whose parents have been citizens. They are enregistered on the rolls of demes at the age of eighteen. When they come up for enrollment, their fellow demesmen decide by vote under oath the following: first, whether they appear to have reached the legal age--and if they do not appear of the right age, they return to the state of boys; secondly, whether the candidate is freeborn and of such parents as the law requires (ei...gegone kata tous nomous). If they decide that he is not free (eleutheros) he appeals to the law court and the demesmen choose five men from among themselves as his accusers; and if it appears that he has no right to be enrolled, the
city
sells
him
into
compelled to enroll have been enrolled, eighteen years, the
MacDowell
(art.
cit.
above
slavery,
but
if
he
wins,
the
demesmen
are
him. After this the Council examines those who and if someone appears to be younger than the Council fines the demesmen who enrolled hin. (von Fritz--Kapp trans.)
note
23) cites
Aristotle's
failure
to mention
legitimacy,
the need for married parents, as evidence for believing that nothoi were citizens. While it is true that gegone kata tous nomous does not necessarily refer to legitimate birth, it is also true that Aristotle is here concerned with the official and legal machinery of citizenship, not traditional practices. I consider legitimacy part of the latter and as much a requirement for belonging to the citizen body in the fourth century as in the fifth or sixth.
Also, as Rhodes (art. cit., above note 23), notes, the Ath. Pol. is an "insecure basis for argument" (p. 89) since it is a "text which abounds in omissions (p. 91)". And a further problem in this account is Aristotle's implication that if a deme rejects a candidate as "not free" (apparently "not entitled to citizenship" here, see von Fritz-Kapp, note 147) he necessarily appeals to the law court, and is sold into acquiesce in the
fourth by 422
30.
slavery if he looses deme's decision.
his
case.
But
surely
a man
could
simply
Finally, although Aristotle describes the system in the second half of the century, it can be noted that Wasps 577 indicates a role for the dikastéria in scrutinizing new candidates for membership into the demes.
The
main
difference
appears
at eighteen,
became
ἃ dememan
"L'üge
correspondant
au
to have
a phrater
sacrifice
at
been
age
(most
du xovUpaov
et
sixieme discours a'Isée," BAB 39 (1953) 358-394.
of
enrollment.
likely) les
sixteen,
données
An
Athenian
(see J.
historiques
Labarbe, du
Phratry membership was thus probably an important piece of evidence for gaining deme membership. There is no indication in the sources that while legitimacy was required for the first it was not for the second. (See note 29 for the omission of legitimacy as a requirement in Ath. Pol. 42.1.) 31. In both the old and the new tribes there vere smaller groups, three to each tribe, called trittues. These were intermediate between the deme and tribe and phratry and tribe. Although little is heard of trittues, they do have ἃ recognized place in both the pre-Cleisthenic and Cleisthenic systen. 32. B. Manville, 1979), p. 91.
The
33. For see below
objection
possible pp.
Evolution
34. See the comments Salamis, "Literature,"
on
of
Athenian
Citizenship
(dissertation,
the
basisof
Philochoros
fragment
35a
Yale,
(Jacoby)
of B.M.W. Knox in Athens Comes of Age, From Solon to (AIA Symposium, Princeton University, 1978), pp. 44-45.
35. Manville implies that Solon opened up the category ‘Athenian' to those who had before not belonged to it, that after Solon's reforms "men who had settled in Attika, recently or long before, could take part in political life, share any privilege of court, assembly, or law..." and that under the tyranny of Peisistratus, the démos included "freed hekt@moroi, foreign craftsmen, men of slave descent, landless immigrants, foreign mercenaries loyal to Peisistratos, itinerant traders, alien workers...." (The Evolution of Athenian Citizenship, p. 149). This seems
a little family)
extreme. would
organization
In order
stíll and
have
into
a
to
to be part be
accepted
of the into
demos the
ton Ath@naion
Athenian
social
a man and
(and his
political
phratry.
J.K. Davies argued that under Solon "the boundary between 'free residents' and 'citizens' became, or remained, permeable'"("Athenian Citizenship," The Classical Journal 73 (1977-78), p. 115). This seems quite true, but no so much because of Solon's law, as because of the traditional, local way in which the boundary was drawn. (See below for discussion of the law on 'becoming a citizen' attributed to Solon by Plutarch.)
36. 1899),
37.
zur Geschichte
Untersuchungen pp.
825-826
See A.
Ledl
and
(WS 29-30
critique of Muller's Birds passage). The (1)
Attischen
Bürger und
(1907-1908)
173-227;
1-46,
theory (WS 30 (1908) 199-200 on main points of the theory are:
Before Solon, nothoi (here as alvays in to be those born of an Athenian man and
citizens. 857) when (2)
des
Eherechts,
173-230) the
for a complete
misinterpretation
this argument thought a foreign woman) were
These were the days of the "Geschlechterstaat" (p. the 'nobility' did not intermarry with the ‘commons’
but when both Solon forbade citizenship.
(Leipzig,
passim.
groups could marry outside Attica. foreign marriage and deprived nothoi
of
their
of
the
35
(3)
Damasias, in the interest of his the civic rights of nothoi, but equal to that of gn@sioi. They but rather to the newly created nasium. Their position was not
enjoyed
(attempted) tyranny, restored did not give them a position were not admitted to the phratries synteleia at the Kynosarges gymaltered by Peisistratus who also
the support of these m? genei katharoi.
then, enrolled at Kynosarges as a youth. With the fall of the Peísistratids, Isagoras
(4)
of nothoi
and
abolished
the
«ynteleia
completely equal with the gn@ésioi. was (6)
Pericles,
the
For
place
the
was them
The synteleia at Kynosarges
interest
of
limiting
privileges
of
the
Athenian
number
of
those
citizenship,
enjoy-
reenacted
law.
to read
857-865).
on the the
rights
Cleisthenes
In 411 the special status of citizen nothoi and the Kynosarges svnteleia were reinstituted (due mainly to oliganthrÓpia). In 403 the "democratic"--Solonian and Periclean--rule was restored and the Kynosarges synteleia abolished once again.
(8)
logue
in
nev-found
Solon's (7)
best
the
abolished.
ing
(pp.
revoked
at Kynosarges.
was deprived of his citizenship. Cleisthenes restored the citizenship of nothoi (just how he able to do anything when not a citizen is unclear) and made
(5)
The
Themistocles was,
a general
Reference
fate
will
of Pericles’
Kynosarges
synteleia
outline
again
of
law after see
this
be made
theory
to
these
451/0.
Chapter
IV,
is in Miller's
Untersuchungen
They will
note ll5 page
"Uberblick" in
the
fare no better
Epi-
there.
128.
38. This integrity can be thought to have been under pressure from the claims of the wider kinship group or the genos of which it was a part (cf. Lacey, The Family in Ancient Greece, pp. 88-90) or simply from the possibility of dissolution if there were no heirs. The need for “enough hoplites to fill the ranks of the Athenian army may also have been a factor influencing Solon. 39.
See
Manville,
The
Evolution
of
Athenian
Citizenship,
pp.
97-99,
note
17.
40. This was suggested by A. Ledl (WS20 (1908) 176) who considers the law to be pre-Solonian. Humphreys also proposed that two laws were combined, one on nothoi and one on inheritance (JHS 94 (1974) 89 note 5). 4l.
2
Wolff,
(1944) 42.
that
"Marriage
pp.
Solon's
law
who
anyone
Law
and
Family
Organization
in Ancient
Athens,”
Traditio
88-89. on
stasis
did not take
(as
reported
by
in civic
part
Aristotle,
strife
Ath.
should
Pol.
8.5)
stipulated
and
be atimos
‘have
no
share' in the city( ὃς ἂν στασιαζούσης τῆς πόλεως μὴ ϑῆται τὰ ὅπλα μηδὲ wed’ ἐτέρων, ἄτιμον εἶναι γαὶ τῆς πόλεως uh μετέχειν). Even if this law is authentic
and
Ruschenbusch, that
Solon
properly
ZQAQNOE
understood
understood
NOMOJ atimia
by Aristotle
frag. as
not
38
and
having
(see
the
doubts
note), it should a
'share
'being an outlaw' (as suggested by B. Manville, ship, p. 90, and Appendix, p. 184). Ts poleds
in
the
expressed
not
city'
by
be taken as
opposed
E.
to mean to
The Evolution of Athenian Cítizenmé metechein may be a later para-
36
phrase should
or be
explanation. atimos.
See
the
Conclusion
43. This point is Stanford University 44.
For
Notice
this
for
that
some
Plutarch
further
made by Martin in 1974.
phenomenon
see,
20.1
comments
Ostwald
e.g.,
Solon
the
in
an
on
says
only
atimos
and
unpublished
comments
of
that
a man
atimia.
paper
Hignett,
such
HAC
read
p.
at
17ff.
45. On syssitoi see Busolt-Swoboda, 698ff., 746, 754ff. and G. Morrow, Plato's Cretan City, pp. 389-398. Sysstoi were a well-known Cretan and Spartan institution; Morrow considers the Athenian common meals for magistrates a survival of
this
practice
(op.
cit.,
p.
391 note
333).
46. See, for example, McGregor, "Athenian Policy at Home and Abroad," (Semple Lecture, 1966, Vol. 2), p. 14, who accuses Solon of "un-Athenian
activity." 47. E.g., Busolt-Swoboda, II, p. 835; Bury-Meiggs^ p. 123. However, see the more cautious and careful comments of D. Whitehead, The Ideology of the Athenian Metic (Cambridge Philological Society, Supplementary Volume number 4, 1977) pp.
48. For a phratry to admit a foreigner probably involved some form of adoption or perhaps the recognition of a new óikos (through marriage?). The obstacles were not insurmountable. 49. Busolt-Swoboda think very soon ("Das Gesetz verlor fruhzeitig seine Geltung" --p. 945). In support of this claim it is noted that in later times more was required of a recipient of Athenian cítizenship than residence. But on the second interpretation suggested above, residence does not automatically bring citizenship but simply permits it. More could have been required. More recent opinion favors a validity until the time of “Athenian concepts of citizenship were drastically realigned"
Citizenship,"
CJ
(1977-78)
p.
117).
According
momentarily 'equated' the inhabitants of segmental descent groups that mattered," For
50.
further
The
consideration
phrase
didonai
of
Davies'
genesthai
to Davies,
Attica with (p. 115 and
analysis,
politas
see
is not
Cleisthenes when (Davies, "Athenian
Cleisthenes
reforms'
"those who were in the 114) in this case the demes.
Chapter
V
a usual
(Conclusion).
formula
for
citizenship. The normal and earliest known formula is that found in the honoring the Samians (I.G. II^ 1.12--M-L 94.12), Samios Athenaios enai. Osborne, "Attic Citizenship Decrees," BSA 69 (1972) 129-158.
bestowing decree See M.
51. E.g., Guarducci, pp. 14-15; Nilsson, Cults, Myths, Oracles, and Politics, pp. 159-161; Hignett, HAC, pp. 61-2, 390-1. On Nilsson's account, the orgeones actually seem to be equated with the thetes to whom Solon gave "certain political rights" (p. 161). Are the genn@tai then equal to the three upper tele? That seems unlikely.
52. the
JHS 81 possible
(1961) new
1-2 on the difficulties
interpretation.
of the
usual
interpretation,
2-15
on
J.
37
53.
It might
be noted
that
Nilsson's
argument,
"that
this
reform
of
the phratries
was effectuated before the democratic reforms of Kleisthenes is confirmed by a passage in Aristotle in which he says that Kleisthenes let everyone keep the gene and phratries and the priesthoods in accordance with the custom of their fathers"
(op.
cit.,
p.
took
place
after
161),
carries
no weight
against
Andrewes'
claim
that
the
"reform"
Cleisthenes.
54. In the fourth century, of course, when this decree of the phratry was passed, the decision of the phratry could be overruled by the demos. I am simply suggesting that the traditional nomoi of the phratry imply that this had not always been the case. 55. Fragment 4 (Jacoby). See Jacoby's commentary (FGrH IIIb) for a discussion of the date and below, Chapter IV, pp. 109-111. The fragment comes. from book 4 of Krateros' collection of Athenian decrees, roughly the 450's to 430's. The phrase "hois dikai eisi" would appear to be an earlier version of hois exesti common in
fourth
century
Harrison, phrase. 56.
The
This
ship
laws, Law
See,
for
"those
Athens
suggestion
(dissertation
57.
meaning
of
II,
is made
Yale
example,
who have
pp.
by
82-85,
B.
Manville,
University, the
the right
who,
1979),
comments
of
to bring
however,
The
only
Evolution
cases."
See
mentions
of
the
Athenian
later
Citizen-
p. 89.
Hignett,
HAC,
p.
112.
58. Aristotle uses the term diaps€phismos, the term used for a scrutiny of the citizen registers in his day, but this is probably an anachronism. Later on, Aristotle asys that the saying "No tribe investigation (m8 phulokrinein)" originated
during tion
Cleisthenes'
of
the
reorganization
Athenian
state
and
to check on family backgrounds
of
that
the Athenian
this
was
state
directed
and
against
(ta gen8 )" (Ath. Pol.
21.2).
that
this
"those
was
who
reorganiza-
wanted
This may refer to
the investigations of 510 and may suggest that Cleisthenes and his followers adopted a looser attitude toward deme and phratry registration than did his opponents. But it should not be taken to mean that 'aristocrats' were trying to limit the citizen population
possible
On 59.
the
to
view
gennétai
by
term and This
gennétai
is
or
Lacey,
the
on
view
of
Family
institution
a common
insisting
members
The
gene
in
in
the
see Appendix
whether
it
genos membership
sense
Classical
is
of
Greece,
II. pp.
thought
(see note
85
(as
and
offered
note
5,
p.
as
a
273.)
186-193.
that
58)
'clan'
p.
these
or
aristocrats
less well
were
defined
'nobles'
who wished to deny civic membership to 'more humble' Athenians (see, e.g., Manville, Evolution of Athenian Citizenship pp. 147, 150, 179). The latter view founders on the problem of noble 'class' identification, for which see Appendix II, 60.
On
the
his sons) fountains
Greater
Panathenaia
(fostered
if
not instituted
see J.A. Davison, JHS 78 (1958) 23-42. (Thucydides 2.15.2), temples (for the
by
Peisistratus
and
Other ‘improved benefits' were ‘building program’ of the Pisistra-
tids see Joh S. Boersma, Athenian Building Policy from 561/0-4-5/7 B.C., Scripta Archaeologica Groningana 4, 1970), road markers (with inscribed moral messages--
[Plato],
Hipparchus),
note 53,
p.
121.
and perhaps
local judges
(Ath.
Pol.
16.5--see Chapter
IV
38
61.
In general
citizenship Chapter
see
II.
for Aristotle's Day
On
end
view of the relation
Chambers,
Arístotle's
view,
between
population
Aristotle's
History
of
Athenian
Cleisthenes
was
of
those
one
and
Democracy,
politicians
who
wanted to increase the citizen body, who would go to the length of admitting aliens (cf. 1278a27ff. where illegitimate children, children of a slave or of a citizen mother only are all considered xenoi) to achieve his end. The charge that Cleisthenes "made tribesmen of foreigners and resident slaves" (1275b37) could reflect conservative opposition to Cleisthenes new system from those who considered the demes to be acting or have acted without proper control, and as such is important for understanding later or contemporary perception of Cleisthenes' reorganization. But the motives and particular role of Cleisthenes in the events of 507 can not be understood snlelv along such lines. Population, either too much or too little, was and which he assumed an active statesman would Chapter III, note 68, pp. 77-78.
about below 62. oath
This as it
date.
ian
For
the
most
Boule,
pp.
190-100.
63.
Κ.
Ancient
Kinzl,
in
Historians
together
to
actually is somewhat in was sworn in the fourth
under
a
paper
díscussion
delivered
in May,
whatever
501/500
recert
error since century can
1975
of
the
at
the
at Ohio
innovative
legislation
"Kleisthenic
was
several clauses of the bouleutic only have been added after this
bouleutic
annual
State
the heading
a problem Aristotle worried worry about also. See also
oath,
meeting
University, enacted
Reforms"
of
Rhodes,
the
the
"that
return
delineate
The
Association
suggests
from
and
see
the
of
we
Athen-
of
lump
Kleisthenes
general
thrust
and spirit of reform in its immediate significance and in its far-reaching meaning. This will certainly do a greater service to the historical Kleisthenes than will a personality cult." (page 3). Kinzl further suggests (pages 5-7) that Herodotus' demokratia in 6.131 means (or meant originally in the source which he used) d$moikratia and refers to Cleisthenes' establishment of the deme as the basic political unit.
However,
as
kratia (and the able to suppose "reforms." 64.
See
Day
Kinzl
himself
notes,
Herodotus
in
all
related verb) in its ‘classical’ sense. that Herodotus himself applied the word
and
Chambers,
111-120;
Hignett,
other
And it in that
cases
uses
démo-
is entirely reasonsense to Cleisthenes'
138-142.
65. Wilamowitz' solution (Aristoteles und Athen II, 169ff.) that the had no recognized fathers, but only patrons, is a good attempt to make Aristotle but 18 not the most natural interpretation of the passage.
new citizens sense of
66. It is true that the decree giving citizenship to the Plataeans (inserted into [Demosthenes] 59.104) says only that the Plataeans are to be distributed among the demes and the tribes. In another case of wholesale enfranchisement (1.6. 112 1 = M-L 94) only the distribution into tribes is mentioned for sure (34). There is room for restoration and Meiggs-Lewis restore mention of the demes. Probably such enfranchisement of whole poleis, whose members would not be expected to move to Athens (?), would have called for somewhat different procedures than for individuals. J.K. Davies, in fact, argues that the Samians are given not citizenship but isopoliteia since they keep their own institutions and are not
expected
to move
to Athens
(CJ73
(1977-78) p. 107).
39
67.
Since
head,
The
naieve,
writing
this
I have
noticed
Ideologyof the Athenian
surely,
to
imagine
the
that
Metic
metoikia
this
image
(Cambridge springing
is
1977)
also
p.
used
145:
fully-formed
by
D.
white-
"It would
from
be
Cleisthenes'
head." 68. K. Kinzl, "The Origin of Anuonpathand the Early Development ot Athenian Democracy," (unpublished paper delivered at the Association of Ancient Historians, Ohio State University, May 1975) p. 2.
69.
W.K.
Lacey's
claim
that
"Cleistheaes
effectiveiy
eudeu
Cue
power
ot
tue
cau
aristocratic families to control admission to citizenship" (The Family in Classical Greece, p. 84) may be true,although ít implies that we know more about the early procedure and organization of the demes than we in fact do and that there would be no place in the 'democratic' demes for upper class influence. 70. See D.M. Lewis, "Cleisthenes and Attica," Historia 12 (1963) 22-40, for an account of how Cleisthenes may have distributed demes into tríttues so as to weaken the influence of local cult centers. Perhaps the most striking example is
that
Oinoe
of
and
the
Marathonian
Tricorynthos
and
tetrapoleis;
put
in
Probalinthos
a different
trittys.
was
severed
from
Marathon,
40
III.
A.W. Centuries and
Gomme's p.c.!
convenient
fifth
The
century
Population
Table
has
I in
become,
source
for
citizen
at
is
at
of
best,
the
discussions
of
Athenian
of
480
serve
as
the
fifth
century
an
(Gomme,
the
and
1,000
them 16,000
walls.
The
regular
question
to
insist
that
any
case,
the
for
examines
the
example
are of
which
Total
Athenian Population (2.13.6-9) that
their
hoplites, In
marks
and
possible,
when
all
eight
figures
should
no
questionable
sum
can
addition,
be
the
perhaps
9.28),
25,000
is more
but
in
fact
problematic
if
not
the
difficulties
population, p.
even
less
hoplites
reliable is
the
one be
of
than
as,
its
of 431 proceeds than
that
product
of
questionable.
involved
in any
when
ancient
the
thought
underlying
at
This
from
least
two
calculation
attempt
to
'quantify'
figures
are
"our
most
encouraged
the
Athenians
4).
reports city
the
total
which produces
2.13)
which
Thucydides
ing
figures
are:
18-59 thetes
(Herodotus
assumptions
and
His
population.
172,000
(In
Fourth
standard
43,000
the
and
the
18,000?
to note
Fifth
world,
25,000
can
forts
English-speaking
the
431
(Thucydides
telling
in
140,000
a figure
by
Athens
35,000?
guesses.
precise"
of
B.C.
20,000?
The calculation
major
- 450
15,000?
calculation,
15,000
Population in
population
parts.)
the
The
480
480
important
method
Athens;
least
Males hoplites
It
his
of
had
composed there
that
in
431
Pericles
13,000
hoplites
of
"youngest,"
the
were
1,200
not
cavalry
including "oldest" (including
those
and
in
metics,
the guard-
mounted
archers)
16,000
"reserve"
archers.
difficulty
lies
in determining
what
proportion
of
the
41
was Athenian,
Gomme's
20-49
year-olds
18-19
and
since
"3,000
431),
with
organized
unfit
two assumptions for
regular
50-59 year-olds; of
the as
them
took
citizen
the
and
army,
citizens
duty
(2)
part
that
they
(1)
sector in
assume
It 18
neither
of
161ff.)
who on his part
Democracy,
40 -60
Appendix
p.
that
implies tional 4,000
a force
of
some
14,000
men
of
the
ages
18-19
factor
and
argues
that
the
cleruchs.) Gomme's
acteristic
However,
25,000,
the
of
modern
graphic
experience
to
ancient
ture
Athens
on
the
(and
basis
modern)
societies,
shown,
the ancient
Empire
gives
not
averages.
as
were
census:
assumes
an
demographically
Rome) of
at
say
that
those
oldest,
the
in all,
that
operations not
so
least
5,500 by
(Megara,
thoroughly 2,000
or
in all"
Jones
(p.
evidence
in
Athens.
included
same
to
mortality
we as
that
of
levels
picture cannot
India
should more
likely
India
in 1900,
cavalry)
of an
addi-
very
apt
to
different be
overlooked.
to another
uneasiness. modern
that
the
demo-
age
struc-
can
be
in pre-industrialized
(or
pre-
(As Keith Hopkins
and age-structure when
considered that
because
of
Athens this
char-
This
thís
assume
just
not
important,
18 very
con-
approximately
points
cause
evidence.
expectancy
demographic
way
it
are
structure
and,
of ancient
for life
in method
which
data
is
and
account
included
23,000,
age
While
similar
Furthermore, the
result,
analyses
takes
hoplites
differences
on the basis
impossible ^ )
total
demographic
was
active
also
hoplites
5).
(Athenian
the "oldest"
(including
(He
India-based
Gomme's
general
not
his
year-olds 40-60.
13,000
of Burn's
application
of
both
and
fundamental
and
the
of
since
his
duced
active
assumptions is accepted
20-40
9,000
The use by Jones
is
there
and
5,500
probability,
hoplite
these
the
included
year-olds and, on the basis of the 1900-1 census figures for India,^
cludes
from
that
and old--of
youngest
were about
of
that
unfit
the "reserve"
the
all
2,500 more--organized, interesting
as
the metics
were
we may
that
as well
in a small
and
...
are
de-
has
in the Roman
individually would
and
have
reacted
similarity.
Jones
42
notes
(p.
those
of
ity."
177) Egypt
But
improved 20th
that and
in
modern
structure
in Athens
birth
about
The
the
(often
experiencing) century
beneath)
overall
has
Athenian
population
"natural
increase"
the
number
either Jones
of
and
of
others
within
negative. given
increase"
is "naturally"
ambiguity
of
meaning
to
was
came
as
rapidly
not
the
along
references
the
to
Athenian--
economic
only
with
abandon
instead model
today
factor
prosper-
involved;
prosperity
assume
in
for
in
the
classical
as
India in
fifth an
rate
gets
certain
is perhaps
over the
rapid. most
mortality
for
a
experi-
rate for
life
at
rates
3.3%
centuries
population
at
rates
and
age
a pre-in-
expectancy
in Mexico of
the
to
the
a given
6.12
at
impression, (such
as
term in
number
of
per
.17 in
every
the
births
however,
when
reading
following
in-
minus
and
the
38
term
time
takes
ca.
possible
of
then
year
in West
"natural
"prosperity")
some
Kuwait,
of
on
in
Before
population
comment
period
18
.32
from
Demographically
simply
blatant
beneath
discussions
A brief
The
(and
growth.
ranging
on modern
century.
conditions
and
of
grew
effect
is
35
two
a doubling
it
particular
appropriate
Table
illustration,
a population One
and
most
last
growing
is neutral;
positive
which
is
of
the
Athens. ©
the
high
a clear
the
for
population
resulting
in
take
in
to
estimates
table
can
model
it
2.9%
for
life
We
world's
serve
growth"
that
very
necessarily
abnormally
I think
will
or
pattern
cannot
experienced
1.8Z
growth
deaths
positive
to
had,
"natural
U.N.
an
the
Switzerland
This
we
a likely
while
rate
probably
as Athens. 5
has
with
or
the
world
and
crease"
turn
modern
Germany
years,’
such
and
as
well
an
to
simply
years
eighteenth
care
is
25
still
same
below p. 43).
countries
society
the
prosperity
something
approach
dustrial of
is
further
A better of
that
of
instance--respond
economic
or medical
and
(See
populations
for
cases
nutrition
Athens.
areas
India,
these
century,
ence
"modern
can
be Gomme,
"natural
on a certain comment
of
43
Rignett:
Apart from the exclusion of fraudulent claimants on the one hand and the natural growth of population on the other, the citizen-body had remained constant. (History of the Athenian Constitution,
It the
is
hard
word
theless
her
to
be
sure
'natural.' imply
Democracy,
we
to
ought
wealth
and
be as
locking possible E.A.
an
increase
age
at
result
in
of
leading
in greater
decreased
fifth
it
is,
is
in "real for
in
their
less
in varying
ways
only
growth
was
a complex
on
effect
in
result
(on
the
Or,
industrial
cities,"
leading,
then,
two main
faults
given)
which
and
however,
ancient
figure
an increase
goods"
and
1969,
an
of
during
fact,
increase And many
inter-
world, ὃ are 4.1).
however
will
The
well
indicated
For
in real
then
example, in
lead
income might
"proportion
increased
in
modern,
in a decrease
a greater to
none-
in
involved.
result
by
(Jones,
But, to
population
model
population,
income."
the
a pre-modern New York,
factor
but
increase"
startling.
the
in
usage
of Thucydides
be
not
specifically
"naturally
figures
react
seldom
History,
increased
to
somewhat
can
wealth
will
Athens
and
346)
mortality
of
the
and
a
population.
There of
were
and
to
"demand
towns
then
statement
careful
“startling”
vill
which
this
more
for
population
income"
to a decrease
in
it
increasing
"real
are
Populations
(Population
marriage,
population
modern
of
The become
earlier
most
Wrigley
further
161)
revolution,
effects
bv
p.
by
natural
century.
noted
factors,
Jones
only
startled.
post-industrial
is meant
and
it was
fifth
Athenian
what
Gomme
that
prosperous
just
p.
are,
century
Athenian
obscured
notions
of
with the
population,
problematic
"natural"
in Gomme's First,
the
assumptions
behavior
of
(and Jones') basic
and
ancient
calculations;
a population
are
calculations evidence, and
imported
Buch
as
second, into
discus-
44
sions
of ancient Perhaps
some,
already despairing
of any reliable
world,
would
now
up
ancient
insistence evidence remedy
that
these
faults
First,
the
of
figures.
figures.
adult
are
less
was
changing
background
cluding
during
evidence
those
of
unavoidable Second,
ancient for
evidence,
a life
structure
or
behavior
in
must
of
to water
large
can
needed, be
be ?
populations
stems
we
to
fifth
as
for
of
will the
law
know
we can of the I think,
possible, of
to
"total"
mostly
a
ancient or
be of
absolute,
with
the
purpose
concerned ascertaining
total
figures
how,
the
population
B.C.
Even
with
many
ancient
if,
century not
Gomme's
and
comparable,
and
some
this
limi-
figures,
in-
assumptions
figures.
made
to
interpret
should used
be
for
more in
and
any
the
light
The
of
p.
dramatic
of
U.N.
of
what
is
62). losses,
model
of
known
compares
limited
suggested
not
is,
the of
the
table
ageAthenian the
dem-
a pre-industrial
capacity
That
by
life
mortality,
the growth
Wrigley
a tap
History
changes
estimates
importantly
has
from
the
avoided,
populations.
which
(Population
calculation
the
convincingly.
credibility
accommodating;
considered
in a bathtub
the
But
really
more
directly
evidence,
need
the
are
but
pre-industrial
diameter
pre-industrial
is
speak
as
the
make what
for
But
it is possible,
citizenship
of
experience 25
the
these
attempt
of
sex-ratio
graphic
of
the
up
We
strength,
used
service.
be very
interpreting
expectancy
population
hole
not
modern
citizen
population
will
be
Pericles'
half
And
figures
altogether.
"we must
weakening
of
comparisons. first
that
evidence
giving
military
the
when
the
‘census’
enterprise
stands.
should
nature
of
military in
make
involve
for
than
still
and
the
fit
12)
calculations
Given
important
the
or
the
be ignored,
figures
often
citizens
demographic
(p.
ancient
giving
not
somewhat
will
the
are
subject
assumptions This
absolute
tation
the
suggest
at our disposal"
minimum
with
data.
and
dramatic
gains.
a plugchange
45
Such the
populations long
run
typically
remaining
In
some
Western
of
short-term
a period
the
and
provoke
result
periodicity Such
of
of
resources.
It
fluctuations
are
of
sharp
The over
an
Table will
die
average
will
age
have
relevant
necessary
in
surge
a society the
short-term,
that
rapid
population
which
will 10
adapts
p.
context
inter-
with
properly
Athenian is
usually
population
to
grow
a
69).)
to
its
that
increase
be
replace (One
History,
pattern
will
in numbers
Population and
if
a cyclical
generation.
a "wave-like
for
of
of
a pre-industrial
time
ca.
is
evident
25 years). This
bear
factors
one
note
thirty.
to
is
about
in
imperceptibly. been
year)
while
sharp
preceded
by
!?
expectancy
before
within
have drop
12% per
to
ability
period
(perhaps
fluctuations
almost
to
a severe
(Wrigley,
important
decrease.
limited
(life
only
normally
extended
35
Other
is
not
growing
appears
causing
crises
a generation"
short-term
or
there
crisis
cyclical
is
same
growth
another
such
sharp
the
a crisis
rapid
pattern
!!
a time
of
about
a cyclical
about
commmities
fluctuation;
by
esting
just
European
followed loss
experienced
five
Some
means,
just
the
mortality
levels
60% of the children
very
children
affecting
from
significantly
roughly, to
pre-industrial
that
replace
each
the
of Model
born each year
woman
existing
populations,
such
Life
on
the
population.
as
the
negative
effect of urban life, will be mentioned later, 19 We thinking propose from
the
cantly, of part
can
return
now
to
that
it vas
the
large
his era
of
The the
first
Persian
pre-Cleisthenic
indirect in
law?
the
evidence general
the
population number
specific Wars.
population
which Greek
can
of
of
citizens?
figures The is
for
beyond
of
the
Was
which
the
pre-Persian
be mentioned.
colonization
Athens 1^
Aristotle
prompted
Athenian or,
perhaps
recovery,
but
there
8th
and
Athens 7th
Pericles
population
war
First,
right
more
are
as a city
centuries.
a
in to
come signififew
bits
took
no
Some
Athen-
46
ians
may
individually
taken
part,
but
it
is
likely
that
Attica
was
not
over-
16 The
colonization’
'internal
for
room
had
actually
and
time
this
at
crowded
have
polis of Athens comprised about 1,000 square miles of territory!’ or 256,000 hectares.
Assuming
might
get
land
alone,
sistence 30,000
If
Megara
over
Megera
provided
wonder
how
fifth
mate is
of
only
century 6th
the
to
city
6th
the
less
perhaps
the
first
Herodotus
the years
this
in
the
with
however,
as
before
she
might
tempt
equal
the
was
been
her
less
less
to
this.
we
note
that
so
relative
small
of
might
any
of Megara.
esti-
It the
Athen-
and centralized
phratry
able
the
we
unified of
in
neighbor
to venture
that
some
Salamis,
reorganization
relationship
have
one
the sub-
that
When
at
at
than
with
was
to
Cleisthenes'
war but
figures also
are
come
not
from
Although
Gomme
on military
strength
(Population
access
and
that
to
"official
his
figures
only
the
possible.
480-479
which
not
about
ships
on
support
likely
years
we
to
take
tribe advantage
of
evidence
for
20
Persian
had
20
four
families
Attic
a city
If Athens if
of
could
seems
many
and
should
5th,
land
it
fewer for
subsisting
a family
income,
Plataea
trouble
was
cultivatable!®
population
cultivatable of
was
Plutarch, Solon 8ff.).
population
defined,
population
authorities" that
than
well
manpower,
Athenian
at
land
support
struggled
so military--system.
century
Thus,
had
Athenian
Attic
significantly
Athens
This,
that
of
sources
hoplites
have
this
will
in particular
3,000
to note
was
available
century
Athens.
century
tribal--and
in
were
of
potential
hectares
there
could
half
(10 acres)
other
(See
than
the
with
Salamis.
important
fan
6th
Athens
of
128,000
Even
the
more
hectares
centuries
During
to
four
families, 7th
not
estimate
level, !? tben
and
8th
a rough
that
first
period
classes
muster
our
p.
in which
Herodotus 3)
it
rolls"
in Books
specific
8 and
among
is
of
also
the
9 have
such the
figures
"incompetent
possible
Greek
are
to
forces
"a prima
think
during
facie
claim
47
to
acceptance," 21
about
Herodotus'
consistency would
some in
sort
part
ence
Persian
and
expect
show
them,
in
any
if
greater
with
hoplites
armed
the
at
specific is
probable
be
calculated
that
Greek
total
hoplite
does
(pace
not
Of reasonable involved
to
wae
would
have
land
battle
There would
excluding
the
mean
or
that
engagements
only
virtually the
reserved
at
that
been
8,000
ships
during
22)
does,
He
helots
was
all
Athenians
was
represents
some heavy-armed
as
one
consulted
little
evid-
and
at
other
9.90,
no
even
effort
of
another
age.
to
the
the
is reliable
(it
is
Artemision of
Plataea
force
Athentans
hoplites
as
possible
for
on board
could
Hellenic that
soldiers
It
Plataea
battle
probable
entire
at
Athenian
the light-
give
war.
that
this
involving
the
8,000 for
numbers
equal
peiloi
is
the
figures
note
if
it
almost
and
Thucydides
such
about
of military
100)
(8.43),
however,
just
time
at Artemision,
Peloponnesian
Athenian
the
ships
gives
which
But
a total
However,
experienced
internal
and
Salamis
the
from
Salamis
to Herodotus,
an
have
(Nor does
rosters
8,000
were
at
cities.
there
fleet
think
indirectly),
127
Herodotus
(9.29).
Mykale. ^
as many
the
fit
could
is very
supplied
Spartiates
Athenian
according
180
losses
elsewhere,
the
he
have
generally
information there
battle
or
excluding
15).
of
or
armies
we
rely,
individual
katalogoi
p.
fighting
have
of
last
whatever
cities
that
official
(8.1),
this
Greek
accepted
the
because
Greek
possible
Athenians
no
force
the
that
For
in Athens
the
to
Plataeans
were
for
on which
there
part
not
in part
of
seems
are
strengths
suppose)
and
it
for psiloi
Population,
only
ships
figures
the
figures
(or obtained
psiloi)
necessarily
(on the same day, 110
(the
force
these
because
(9.28).
light-armed
Gomme,
strengths
reports
of
either
total
it
help
opinion,
relative
credibility
Plataea
figures
latter his
sources
then,
contingents
the
figures,
part
these
Herodotus, manned
the
of official
because
of
I follow
the the
expected
hoplite
the Athenian
of
force,
ships
at
48
Mykale;
if
provided for
the
at
the
Sth
hoplites
century
the
get
of
Salamis.
of
the
that
ships
century
for
to move
at
at
serving
top
crew
own may
A tríreme
Athenians
would
9,000
all
to
Athenians
(rowers
200.28
(7.184) ship
and
with
two
not
have
known
could
move
with
no
doubt
have
is
for
were
180
normal
Herodotus
applies
notes
how
men,
many
every
but
together
with
in
have
force the
many
would
have
else whom to
non-Athenians been
the
resident
aliens
serving
foreigners
the Athenians
the Chalcidians,
were
could
employment
clearly
with
resident
recruit. of
suggests
the
figure at
Since
at it
with
in
full
the
son
for
it
is
they
and, were
in not
the
to of
at
their the
himself" in the it
>! and
of
Themistocles to man
is
Further,
Probably
slaves,
"was (8.17).
covered,
Salamis?
sufficient
able
Persian
Although
lending
fifth
and
triremes
oar
20
Alcibiades
all
the
Athenian
later
the
time
a safe
lent
strength
200 men. every
the
the
the
principle
in Athens, 30 perhaps
Plataeans that
Athenians
In any case,
of
battle
possible that they fought at Salamis with as few as 150 men per shíp.^? how
the
during
for
addition
manned
than
to
sources
that
beginning
Persians.
and
paying
actually
effort
the
figures
Cleinias
less
at
serving
this
and
men
considerably
made
were
a trireme
that
Late in
the
theoretical of
they
hoplites
thought.
ships
fighters)
as
9,000
military
the
by
able
whole
battle, ^^
Athenian
ravaged
the
boplites. ^.
that
sometimes
and
hundred
600
had
interpret
reported,
also
some
of
convincing,
fit
to
who
The
and
be
total
than
evacuated
to
supposition
the
try
proportion
Athenians
the
of
Herodotus
was
the
hoplites
size
been
same
necessarily
Chalcidians.
speed
his
Herodotus
480.
nearly
Artemision in
that
difficult
had
(the
amounted
supports
the
is more
the
the
it
of
provided,
to
have
is necessary
Athens
Athens
other
it
not
about
idea
ships
report
would
had
60
might
Plataea
This
assumption fleet.
at
any
battle
these
alone
wars
sent
Marathon
Athens
Persian
ships
of
This
To
But
Salamis)
battle
battle. ^) 8,000
Athenians
there
anyone
20 ships decree, the
ships
49
themselves.
In at racy,
p.
dans.
8)
But
produce
least
partial
subtracts his
6,000
the desired Some
recognition
6,000
metics
metics
seem
result
from to
have
32
of 30,000.
alternative
calculations
1.
On a moderate
assumption
per
ship
at
Salamis,
of
are
situation
Jones
36,000
(200
x 180)
been
chosen
for
For at
least
by
to
no
(Athenian
as
Democ-
get
30,000
Athen-
other
reason
than
the problem of this credible
of 150 Athenians
supplemented
there would have been per ship, there would
this
figure
as
to
see below.
Jones’,
on the average
as many
others
27,000 Athenians in 480; have been 22,500.
as
possible,
if there were
125
or
2. The Decree of Themistocles (Meiggs-Lewis 23.18ff.) calls for the mobilization of a total of 23,000 including metícs. Each of 200 ships is guaranteed 1 trierarch, 10 marines, 4 archers and 100 rowers--or 115 men, No doubt any extras would have been welcomed in the final "filling" (line 37) of the ships, but this was the number which the decree implies was known to be available.
If we
could
the correctness provisions"
would at
both
points,
possible the
hoplites This
is
the
become time
war
and the
of
the
of
>> the
alternative
Persian
sure
the
authenticity
of
this
part
of
the
of the crucial reading afvja Eexatovin line 32,
population these
be
to
evidence
the
the it
important
Persian
evidence
eivdence
a total
most
of
wars. the
figures
can
said
population which
is
some
other
of
that
insufficient
secure
However,
decree
higher be
evidence
enough
can
Gomme in
480
to man to
serve
for
the
since only and
be
180 as
size doubt
of
the
of
as
In any about for
the
basis
on
a
case,
9,000
triremes main
Athenian
is possible
considered
had
and
these "mobilization
Jones.
Athens
decree
from fit
battle. for
later
comparison. I turn
now
to
calculations
for
the
Athenian
population
at
the
50
beginning but
the
considered
berg, not
of
fifth
25,000
following
discuss
Labarbe, through 30,000
book
a number
on many
them
in detail
of
to
the
By
here.
not
devote
required
for
the
the
Navale
different
I will
only
manning
elaborate
calculation
that
the
will
mention
at
Since
serve
briefly
no
the
this
problem
ships. >”
25-30,000, is
1957)
population
199ff.). it
(Liege,
to
180
most
Themistocle
480
of
in
(p.
assumptions,
time
Athenians
de
in 480
much
of
arguments
38,000
problematic
did
number
far
La Loi
about
Beloch
a minimum set
issue,??
In his
based
as
Beloch,
the
in 499
century.
of
that
these
but of
Labarbe
Athens
Ehren-
Jules
proposed
grew
arguments
purpose
to
go
arguments
he
uses.
from
are
through
1. Herodotus’ report that Aristogoras misled 30,000 Athenians in 499 (5.97) is to be believed since it ought to have come from Hecataeus who as a Milesian ought to have known how many Athenians Aristogoras won to his (Milesian) side (p. 159).
2. Herodotus' account of the battles of suggest (to Labarbe) 35-36,000 Athenians
Plataea and Salamis (pp. 187-192).
3. The various stories involving the surplus from the silver mines can be reconciled (and explained) by supposing that in 483 there was a new surplus of 100 talents in addition to previously existing yearly surpluses of 100 talents. Although Themistocles prevented its occurring, the payment of this sum of 200 talents (1,200,000 drachmae) over a three year period at a rate of 10 dracmmae per head (Herodotus 7.144) to all males over 16 (Labarbe's explanation of Herodotus’ term orchidon) implies 40,000 such citizens (pp. 21-79).
4,
The arguments
that the the time
Pol. per
23.1)
head;
130ff.; The
30,000
adds
very
of
(3)
(plus
some
Athenian "treasury" would of the evacuation in 480.
to the conclusion
again
produces
some
36,000-38,000
eight drachmae
Athenfans
(p.
200).
Athenians little
lead
have contained 48-50 talents at It is reported (Aristotle Ath.
that at that time the Areopagus distributed
this
p.
others)
to
of our
499
will
knowledge
be of
considered the
size
further, of
the
but
the
Athenian
rest
citizen
of
did
this
body.
51
From what figures
cannot
Athens
at
genious) comes
has been
time;
arguments, with
of Hungary
this
awareness
"30,000 The
number
3.
206, is
4.
shown
(over
appears
in
1%
year)
the
Jones.
whose
Herodotus
which
passage
It seems to be easier to mislead many was not able to mislead Cleomenes but
is
(and
than
20 years.
military
extremely
cited
by
in-
Labarbe
citing
less
of
often
the
and as in fact
and
than one, succeeded
population
Labarbe,
considerable
value
Persian war
itself.
in less
political
Gomme
total
complex
not unusual
show
a figure
from
8,000
comments or
the
to the book
by
per
for
up
the reader
of Athenian
either is
built
considers
Such
by
are
that Herodotus’
number
increasing
"audacity" 211).
be clear
secure
I refer
growth
Athenians"
first
and
population
of
the
(pp. than
points
any
in the 1920-30's,
for
period
reveal
for which
rate
it should
to
a total
Thisis a rapid
"explanation"
earlier
be made
that
out
ample
said
ex-
a good
behavior
in
demographic
hard
to
judge.
Labarbe:
if he [Aristogaras] with 3 myriade of
Athenians.
(5.97)
Then
later
dust
coming
(8.65). and
the
speaks
he
repeats
from
Eleusis,
And
30,000
author
of
of
"citizens Socrates
Agathon's
victorious
mass
such
says
apparent
of Athenians--or
when
as
he
would
more
that
play at
that
than
an
be
of
"30,000"
Athenians
three
and
trial
and
that
raised
the the
was
by
Dikaios about
of the Athenians
Axiochos,
audience
(175e);
the
reports
to be used
pseudo-Platonic
being
in assembly"
immediately
number
continues
the
Symposium
myriads
the
In
myriads of
"more
author
a stock
foreigners.
three
than
of
the
The
cloud
of
myriadsof
Ecclesiazousae
30,000
figure
in
Hellenes"
for
ton Hellénon
an of
Plato
the
saw
mentions (369).
men"
a servant
(1131-2);
Axiochos
Arginusai
literary
"a
by Ariatophanes,
in number"
of
generals
the
saw
It
"three is
assembled the
Symposium
52
passage
would
suggests
be present. ?9
involved
is
theater
of
shown
large'
number
Empedocles, the
Agathon's
That
by
Dionysos
Further,
in
that
the did
this
not
frag.
Kníghts
at
when
hold
the
presented
passage.
"more
the
time
As
than
of
again
later
when
Demos
also
says
uses
to
the
again
in
the
you
as
for
and
Sausage
the
(Population,
number
p.
3)
the
n 37
figure
30,000
foreigners
to the actual
notes
(Works
when
an
Days in
'indeterminately
252;
this
see
sense;
also it
appears
Seller:
thief
complains:
And I despise you both, waiting (trismuriopalai) and ages, ages palai; palai) (1156-7).
Then
Dionysia
people.
a common
You will repent this, but I will seize of 3 myriads [of drachmas] (828-9);
and
the
Gomme
13,000
Hesiod
Aristophanes
Paphlagonian
at
could bear no relation
3 myriads--was
least
115). 38
was
figure
Symposium
30,000--or from
play
now and
for 30,000 ages ages (propalai,
Birds:
From
Libya
down
foundation
came
about
30,000
stones
cranes
who
had
swallowed
(1136-7)
and
But we sent (1178-9).
And
both
goras the
them
Herodotus'
could
number
be of
Gomme
as
comment
understood Athenian
(p.
3)
mounted
about in
thís
archers,
the
dust
sense
30,000
falcons
rising
from
rather
than
as
Eleusis
and
a specific
about
Arista-
reference
to
citizens.
considered
30,000
so
"completely
conventional"
(a
figure
for
53
the Athenian been
based
population)
originally
estimate
have
been
possible
that
30,000
erally
thought
polis
(cf.
common where
finally
total
could
we
accept
was the 6,000
These up
object is
6,000,
into
accurate
lot'?
It
seems
at
least
when
and
laws
of 30,000, on
cities)
was
the beginning
ostracism in
because
Athens
vas
gen-
a poluanthropotate
2.54).
provided
enrolled
quite
6,000
was
cannot
be
Meiggs'
ever
was
various
has
analogous thought
sure
that
of that
and
certain
"originally"?
of the
The
most
the fifth
century
just
only
argument
directed court
real
against
cases
the
an
he concluded the
deme
"Was
registers
failure
of
the
and
30,000
the real
at
time
the
for
individual
votes brought a fine and atimia,
"accurate
quarter the
a quorum,
smaller
of total
fifth
number
they
are
different
a minimum
as
a representative
quorum
was
30,000
estimate," the
two
to
it
could as
jurors
called
hoi
cast
^?
of
do
they
rather have
the
of
end
the
citizen
in one
way.
of
the
all
necessarily
'three
been
estimate
the
an
sixth. dikasteria,
body--even by
even
that if
classical
Athenaioi
a quorum
However,
as vell
for
the whole
things;
quorum
one-fifth.
I suggest
century of
of votes
citizens,
reforms"?
represented
courts
combined
grant
of Cleisthenes'
also
like
Meiggs
inference
an
second
that
not
to the "time
in
males
an
has
that
have
would
Greek
estimate,
at
may
why
to Athens
other
"it
But
Meiggs
votes,
is one-fifth adult
although
Athenians,
myriads'
6,000
'a
though
reforas?" ^!
voters
is,
that
for
Thucydides
accurate
Russell
Noting of
2.3.24;
to
even
estimate.”
attributed
relative
an
discussing,
figure
It belongs
1c, 7?
6,000
Athenian
One
made
put
accurate
were
was,
was
be worth
a stock
Hellenica
30,000
to
to get one-fifth of the jurors'
Cleisthenes'
belong
(and
there, ^
that
of
we
as
a minimum
as
citizens
is Labarbe's:
prosecutor
if
same
answer
it
not
a fairly
if
required
That
the
Xenophon,
Herodotus
total
on
Still,
putting
of
of
as
when
litigantes.
divided There
54
is,
I think,
classical actual
general
form
took
creation
& person
or
created
at
this
quorum
of
the
of
time
(late
and
including
devised
this
been
adopted
that
the
new
the
their of
that
numbers,
6,000
one-fifth
the
of
the
against
man.
It
one The
declaration demos
of war)
the
assembly
that
these
to
act
clauses
Boule
on
an
important
of
the
cannot
number 12
quorum
of
6,000
matter,
^?
P.J.
oath
at
a tíme
total
goes
the
the
when
have
the
have
be
claimed
460's.
applied
back
to
to
reforms,
that
boule's
(or
487).
actions
presence
argues
the
directed
507
to Athenaion
whose
of
been
a measure
Rhodes
the
rules
could
several
demo
the
(e.g.
plethuontos enables
convincingly "restrictive
powers
were
not
increased," "©
to me
likely
insuring
6,000
been
been
as
still
have
to
in
of
can to
aneu
incorporated
a quorum
might
a that
have
Also,
rules
it
either
effected
chosen
belong
take
Ephialtea’
for
classical
specifies
of
450's
was
votes,
6,000
114)
time
seems
the
to
extensive
determined.
logically
the
it
6,000
30,000
to
but considerably
so
ἔμελε
The
assigned
reforms
on ostracism--certainly
(I.G.
again
be
into
^?
It would
procedure,
belong
reduced
the
that
oath
probably
were
460's-early
the
law
of
these
would
cannot
Heliaia
figure
Heliaia
6,000
show
is
clauses
Thus,
not
bouletic
which
plethuon
of
Cleisthenic)
need
fragmentary
quorum
the
selection
specific rule
century,
217). ^^
one-fifth
objected
as
to
the
and
it vas
of
is
that
of
fifth
"Ephialtes'
(HAC p.
assembly
(1f
fifth
it
that
courte"
manner
the
Helfaia
old
Areopagos
450's)
dikasteria
the
existing
Cleisthenic
of
the
these
of
suggests
from
of
quarter
from
requirement
If
development
second
Hignett
early
the
from
Further,
idea
the
courts
the
time.
that
popular
460's,
procedure,
This
jury but
for
Athenians
at
in
jurisdiction
a need
of
place
to a date,
transference it
agreement
arose
population,
that
there
was
a representative at it
this can
time.
only
a concern
ekklésia If
suggest
6,000 that
in Athens
and is
to
there
coucts, be
in and
the that
considered
were
some
late the
one-
30,000
55
Athenians tus so
may
in
the
have
he may
projected
have
Gomme ment.
This
make
defends is
that
pages
total
Athenian
point
of
of
empire
and
how
of
at
only
two
needed
the
the
many
9,000
year.
of
the
hoplites were
life
fication
table),
and
Athen
Athens at
(and
this
year.
62.3)
It
since
the
meant
Cleistheníc
in
at 480
of
the
however,
limitation
to
this
is
equal
shows two
time
1s
surely
rule
(1f
at
the
terms
the
then
cites
odd
to
new
Athenian
It
bouleutai p.
help
very
much
structure
least
zeugités
at
the
same
500
would 2)
the tele, >
in estimating about
the
later
in
men
be
upper
and
(by means
that both
system
vere
statue
of Athens
it is unlikely effect
there
lead
allowing
not
of
a
the
needed
three
at
for
of
Cleisthenic
the
that
support
and his
but
from
probable
for
follow Gomme's
Boule,
that
Wilamo-
century,
came do
to
above. of
the census time.
fifth
the
quali-
A popula-
tion of 30,000 (adult males 20 and over)?!
would have slightly under 1,000 men
reaching
25,000
age
30
every
year,
*’
argu-
large
arguing
Cleisthenic)
250
οὗ
refer
there
Boule.
know
in
He
the
already
were
been
we may
it was
(The
cítizens
age
that
Herodo-
Cleisthenes,
sort
conatitution
to make
least
I suppose)
seems
probable
of
as
have
fifth
Still,
480
assumes
to
time
is
of the
24.3).
We
2).
Wilamowitz
constitution
ít
Just
a different
a little
in
time.
and
the
500 must
Cleisthenic
that
originally,
in
need
The
as Rhodes
roughly
Consideration
model
did
to
25 note
of
if,
population
these
(p.
207-8.
needs
earlier.
with
population
the
each
But
ὃ
in the middle
body
Pol.
officially
(fit)
century
crucial
(Ath.
Athenian
not
in 480
workable"
und
back
of 60,000
citizens
terms
needs
citizen
pp.
460's
years
in 499.
citizens
II,
fifty
the
Aristotle, Ath. Pol.
years
bouleutai then
is
30
each
total
(cf.
The
least
"the
Aristoteles
departure
"workable"?
35,000
Athen
of
Athenians
his
population
Athenian ask,
30,000
und
necessarily
is@goria
constitution
Aristoteles
these
not
the
assumed
Cleisthenes'
witz, to
460's--but
a population
of
about
750,
of
15,000
under
500,
and
of
10,000
to have
served
10,000 two
only
( or
all
On
could
the
other
realistic
not decisive
for
necessity
35,000
of
The population
which
undercut
the these
such (or
as
roughly
1.33/1 such in
later
sitting
to divide
total
the
on
Athenian
useful
are
accustomed the
middle then
of
are
the
the many
'have-not's'.
middle
to
can
The
matter
does
of
only
year
be is
not prove
the
classes
A prominent
of
(the
and
of
further
Figures
and
poor
and
some
the
and
and
of
the
of
the
with
the
few
this
thinking
due
1291b7-14)
in the
"proletariat" Greek
poor,
modern
the
tendency good
and
commentators
who
a basic
conflict
proletariat). 'have's' is
from
that
be
common
characteristic
rich
range
to
(Politics
and
non-hoplite
belief
seems
antithesis
in between
classed
I hope, 480.
society
a large
bourgeoisie
example
period
dictum
misled
class
in
generalized
The apparent
The the
will,
and
a preponderant
Athentan
society.
non-hoplite
non-hoplite/hoplite
classical
suggest
has
but
imply
the poor'--an
etc.,
a middle
class
of
the
theoretical
Athenians
body
classes,
the worthless,
hoplites
35,000
the
necessarily
opposing
lower
year.
estimating
Aristotle's
the many
two
in
(Labarbe),
nature
the
into
and
3/1
of
pyramid
of
assumed
a population
«ach
and certainly
figures
ratios
for
the
thinking
or
normal
of
and to
not
of
society.
and
that
be
a limitation
each
a somewhat
specific
or even
or
to
citizen
estimates
their
the rich
base
society
bad,
between
reasonable
century--does
the
now
for
(Jones)
with
councilors
difficulty
30,000
'few are
at
the
of
to 2/1
unlikely
can
480, ??
acceptance
class;
Athenians
30-year-oldas
of Athens,
common
the
new
new
any
comments
fifth
250
resort
a misunderstanding
Athenians'
the
in
remains
not
1,000
in
are
to
a council
population
I will
eligible
supported 750 or
citizens
all
it appears
result
(Gomme)
part
that
will
not
terms,
providing
problem
thetic)
ratios
hand,
total
of Athens.
argument
Since
have
for
the
basic
300.
their allowed
15,000)
terms.
considered
about
found
The
against in
the
often
57
repeated part But
comment
because at
the
that
of
the
time
not
eligible
they
be
considered
non-hoplite
absence
of
were
Ephialtes from
Ephíaltes' for
the
the
was
successful
Athens
reforms
archonship
supporters
of
4,000
or
therefor
Areopagite
"radical"
hoplites
non-hippeis nor
of
in his
reforms
(and
their
in
large
leader
Cimon.) 2»
non-pentakosiomedisnoi
for
the
Areopagus.
privileges
any
more
Why
hoplites should
than
the
thetes?
The
distinction
between
few
and
many,
rich
and
poor,
in Athenian
society
is not between hoplite and thete but rather between the really rich
(in Athenian
terms),
perhaps
the
even
these),
and
rest
have
been
the
small
landowners.
Knights
731),
point
ian
the
landowners,
20,000 of
out
the
both
population
innocent
of
and pentakosiomedimnoi
to
4
”
hippeis
some
Many and
1,000
preceding
argument
difficulties
also
in various
has
(but
of
the
perhaps thetes
not
and
pentakosiomedimnoi
knights
or so other Athenians
the
and
Athenians. the
In comparison
Much to
hippeis
wouldbe polloi been
involved
negative
in
in estimating
presuppositions
zeugitai
somewhat
(Thucydides,
all
2.13;
of
would
larger
Aristophanes,
enough. import the
underlying
and
size
of
Jones'
ís
intended
the
Athen-
apparently
calculation:
At
which
Salamis
required
(480)
the
36,000 men.
Athenians
manned
As Attica
had been
180
triremes,
evacuated
and no army was mustered this figure probably represents the whole able-bodied population including resident aliens,
so that
30,000. ?
We must
be
hoplites (fit) much
[ay emphasis]
satisfied
saying
(as
on
in 480 and not enough citizens
non-hoplites more
with
the citizens may be reckoned at about
numerous
is
not
than
ascertainable,
the
hoplites.
page
49)
that
Athens
had
to man 180 ships herself. but 12,000
we
need
not
non-hoplites
think fit
of for
about
9,000
fit
The number of them
as
being
military
58
service
may
for
Athenian
the
be
a reasonable
It would citizen
body
(e.g.,
the
to make
in
few
of
be
helpful
480.
for
small.
worked
there
was
involved not
society. was
correctly and
ao
5,000
ditions
these to
alter
Gonme
(p.
37ff.)
town"
noted
that
the male
living or
of
not
his
all
urban
of
assumption cítizens
within
of
walls.
life-style,
in
480
gradations
in
size
the
high
the
importance
More
method
to
living
the
is
demes
in
480
the
valls. ^
important
criteria
by
high
density
But are
main were
of
small of
true
and
Athenian
urban
situation
the
relative
satisfactory.
perí to astu) the
there
the
number
ascertaining
within
possible
were being
character
of
would
urban
based
were
He urban
Themístoclean
than one-seventh
Athenians
is
holding
the
entirely
(those
or "not more
characterized
of
not
of
in a
regard
was
comparatively
homogeneous
"town-demes"
within
been
population
this
land
but
Athenian
it
The mines
quality),
have
in
non-hoplites)
pp.177 -178), (of
the
evidence
that
the
living
of
likely
his
35,000
composition of
a maximum
480.
is
but
65-70
in
of
basically
population
number
the
would
the
unfit
considered
number
2,
recognized
populations,
bouleutai
On
the
and
be
the
that
activities
fit
can
deficiency
it
industry
proportion
adult
simply
a pottery
in
restricted
37).
and
the
walls whose (p.
First,
30,000
about
serious
(See Appendix
suffícient
and
more
determining
Second,
small.
"country
the
Athenians,
eyes)
probably
know
comments.
(to modern and
to
of
Perhaps
population,
Despite
brief
wealth
Athenians
male)
impossibility
a
source
(adult,
figure.
on
settlement
the whole" then
be
about
living
ís
not
living
and
con-
non-landed
income, That but
it
is
sort
of
possible
information on
the
square
kilometer
within
and
the
to note
on
other
one
the what
is
hand
city the
not
easily
to
calculate
walls
implied
extracted the by
archaeological
from
(citizen)
various record
the
ancient
population
population suggests
evidence, per
estimates
about
settle-
59
ment of the astu in 480. One-seventh women
and
2.15
sq.
of
children)?’ km? uhich
foreigners
realistic,
figure
Athenians
per
4,620 ers
per
and
about
sq.
slaves)
17,000
relatively an
area
we
assume
480,
the
people
14,000 with
and
within
of
of
that
some
raise km.
per
sq.
there
the
was
as
seems
private
Areopagus
"an industrial
aliens
is
less
belonging
of
the
tries
much
latter
at The
the
that
to
the
of ancient
and
results
later
deme
the of
Athens."
valley
Melite
62
too
one
reasonable
the
and
called
the
some
is
living even
18
walls
in
in
11,000
for
less
or
km.
century
seventh
of
urban-
480. 100,000)
dense
8,000
figure.
end
excavated
between
sq.
high
suggesting at
had
foreign-
And
fifth
London
36,000
about
in a somewhat
systematically is
walls.
or
than
1960
people
25,000, 9!
evidence
6,650
century
as
wichin
about
about
per
20,000
ia
still
(including
6,000
about
people
but
in
period
or
35,000
beginning
most
12th
Athene
only
9,300
in
slaves
for
is the more
the
astu
to
room
children
slaves
that
population
9,000
population
and
note
2,000
was
about
results
Themistoclean
and
including
A smaller,
to visualize
the
(now
walls
in
classical
either
indication
"urban"
in
in
)
Greater
total
archaeological
reasonable.
district
walls
leave
and
the
some
settlement
probably
not
women
I think
Further, wall
does
(including
km.
the
city
walls
can
while
aliens
urban
the
we
km.
within
a further
of
within
one
resident
Gomme'a
is
number
when
enclosed
That
kilometer.
A density
clear
1,000
perhaps
same
century, area
6126
square
sq.
the
the
population
estimated
ka, 99 is
Athenians
the
people
84.
within
comparison
per
population
Gomme's
per
of
citizen
area
14,300
within
as
sq.
or
Travlos
high,
would
per
ization
per
(for
people
possible
only
this
59
total
The
slaves)
By way
10,800
km.
then
100,000
km.
of
140,000
20,000.
and
of
sq.
a density
is
results
(excluding
had
Gomme's
that of
settlement the
5th
(and
published)
the
Pnyx
and
by
the
The name derives
the
excavator
from the many
60
workshops/houses one
of
these
found
workshops
Thus
to
spesk
tury
1e somewhat
quarter
of
of
the
the
fifth
the archaic
tery
occurred
in use
suggests
at
lifestyle it would
the
main
has
to be
only
sex
been were
and
the
of
the roads
fourth area
is made
the
Persian
the
the
Piraeus,
part
of
Attica,
transformed
of
classical
has
been
generally
vas
on
fewer
due
in
the
women
large
basis in
part
to
of
of
kind
represent
office-holders
females
and are
even often
a cross-section
one
when not of
families known.
all
of
the
names
of
of
of
a ceme-
fifth
century
in
conditions
four
is
later. 65
it
vithout
coastal
possible
was
vas
go
seems
comments, living
cf.
are built
the
unfortified
Athens
the second
existence
in the
cen-
so to speak
century
of
as Gomme
names
from
fourth
one
fourth
than 100 years
those
480
century.»
and
less
in
than
probably (and
to
the
'unplan-
tetrakÓmoi
into
Athens.
significantly
compete,"
the
from
since,
not
and
still
line of argument,
did
contrast
the
only
to Themistocles,
the
time
that
fifth
the houses
beginning
preceding
in
dangerous are
the
the
as
development’
walls 66
vas
as well
Further,
the
in
belonged
at that
the
which
such
along which
until
wars
within
these
century.
of
as
however,
are attested
"industrial
up
to note,
fifth
houses
type of settlement
of
ratio
this
in
one
vut
general
recently
argued,
that
and
early
Athenians
of
(perhape
important operating
Residential
whatever
urban
is
industrial
period, 64
And
harbor
as
22.2),
this
time
become.
and
there men
the
between
The It
shown
the
case,
thoroughly
ned')
can be
a more "rural"
that
most
in
within
In any say
It
century
back
have
area.
misleading.
Themistocles
to
the
area
Plutarch, into
in
or
subject
of
prosopographícal
citizen female
population
(p.
another, known
Further, but
the
81), from
to
some
that
of
than
Athens This
a field
have
are
is
a
"the vast majority
had
in which
daughters
prosopographical
rather
debate.
evidence,
infanticide.”
notes
are
Athenians
the
skewed
data
towards
of
women the do the
not
6]
wealthier,
socially
the “demographic average, 99
afford
In
less
especially
frequent
is
follows
and
p.
42).
sexes
but
the
such This
"in
age
of
slightly
an Athenian
30, 9?
an
different
family
could
born
reaching
average
keep alive.
It is poseible
Athenian
that
from the
probably
ill
the age of
family
Who knew what might
might
happen
in
not
not
have
that
social
assume from
ratio
can
as war
will
assess
thirty
years
after
changes
as
seem
to
The
next
fixed
wanted,
some and
But
to
the
by
clear
have
any
the
of
sex
the
in
women
may
such
cases
infanticide
of
is
have
been
children
not
an uneven
classical
likely
in
be ussumed
In
classical
life-table
to be
no.
time
(in
favor
antiquity." ^)
evidence, ^!
ratio
model
is
at any particular
to
the
This
discussion
Athens 35
of
was
not
population
is different
(see
for
close
to
1:1--unless
population
of
Athens
sig-
the two
other
2
discussion amount
of
establish
evidence
Salamis,
"perception" throughout
that
in,
small
important
chapter
men;
poor,
strata
that
a long
the
than
especially
her
generally
enter
been
often
been
The risk of dying
has
is
families
substantiated
I will
more
common,
all
considering it
was
572 of all children
it could
states
different
above
change
Atheniane.
Atheniana
average,
some
victims
some may
Pomeroy
ratio
nificantly
ially
the
the
child
the
or
females)
perception
factors
on
reaching
been
fertile
Sarah
which
and
every
have
(especially
sex
of wealthier
active)
This is not to deny that infanticide was at times practiced or that
may
been
(or legally
With only
half
have wanted
females
men)
general
than
the future?
have
behavior"
infanticide.
5 and
well
prominent
and
of
the
evidence,
a clear
for then
the
But
starting
Athenian
finally
in
any
point.
population
attempt
to
in
attempt The in
analyze
480,
espec-
to detect
rest
of
this
(particularly) such
occurred,
point
after
the
Persian
wars
in a consideration
of
the
the
62
Athenian
population
is usually
discussions
of Gomme
pléthos
politon
ton
way between throughout
these these
and Jones). we
need
to
years, ??
the
other
claims
would hand,
that
and
their
evidence
between
such
numbers
74
that
population of
generally
next are the
cluster
of
were
a way--to the
hoplites
the
draw
of
be
the
within figures
from
size
seen
the
first
useful
450's.
In what
follows
I have
otherwise
(δα
in the
dia to
population
a steady
half-
(even)
we would
just
rise take
that a pre-industrial
reat
by
of
in
the
the
contrary growth
Gomme.
to
may
Jones,
Athenians
second
half
both
these
have
in
on
and of
the
views,
fact
occurred
20-30 years.
for
and
and
that,
the
a graph
rapidly
population
of
proposed
the
war
Aristotle's
there was
extent
figures
75
to
increased
it will most
the
military
dates
of
that
again
accepted
to evaluate
idea
implies
if we
especially
However,
suggests
the Peloponnesian
But a priori it is doubtful
480 and 430 occurred The
events
in
so
of
in order
some
Gomme
distinguishes
Pentakontaetia. the
grow
But have
two points.
the mid-point on the curve. population
the outbreak
the
come
study
from
given
followed
of
fifth
Thucydides' a few
report
crucial
Thucydides'
In 460 or 459 two hundred ships of the Athenians their allies were diverted from operations in Cyprus in to come to the aid of the Libyans who had revolted from
century
Athenian
of
events
the
their
ordering. and order Persia. (1.104)
At to
apparently about che same time the Athenians sent a fleet Halieis where they were defeated by the Corinthians. (1,105.1)
After this war broke out between Aegina and Athens, There was a large sea battle involving allies on both sides, The Athenians captured 70 ships and began a siege, (1,105.2)
63 iad
Then, allies
aroused in
by the presence
the
Megarid,
from the oldest fought
owe
and
a successful
the
of the Corinthians
Athenians
the youngest battle
at
put
and
together
(hoplites
and
their
a force
psiloi)
and
Megara. (1.105. 3-6)
(At about the same time (kata tous chronous toutous) the Athenians began building the long walls to Phaleron and the Peiraeus,
(1.107.1)] a
In 457 (probably) the Athenians marched pandemei against the Peloponnesians at Tanagra. The force totaled 14,000 including 1,000 Argives and an indeterminate number of other allies. 6 The Peloponnesians were victorious in a battle involving great
loss
(phonos
polus)
on both
sides.
Sixty-two days later the Athenians marched back into Boeotia and
defeated
the
Boetians
at
Oenophyta. (1,108, 2-3)
(Meanwhile,
they
finished
the
long
walls .] (1.108.3)]
After this, (meta tauta) Aegina surrendered and agreed to tear down its walls, turn over its ships and pay tribute.
(1,108.4) Meanwhile, the Athenians and their allies still in Egypt met disaster, 77 Fifty additional Athenian and allied ships arrived too late to be of help and most of these (tas pollas) were also lost, (1.109)
Then
(1)78
the Athenians: sent
and Phocians to king, Orestes,
Pharsalus
to
a force
restore
including
the
exiled
Boeotians Thessalian (1,111.1)
And a little later (meta de tauta ou polldi) sailed with then sailed
1,000 Athenians
Pericles to Sicyon, defeated the Sicyonians, to Oeniadae, besieged the town but failed to
and take
it.
(1.111, 2-3)
Three by
years
the
later
Athenians
(451) and
a five years
the
truce was
agreed
upon
Peloponnesians.
(1,112.1) To 454 of
use
Labarbe's
definitely
show
citizens,
fronts
disaster
there
at
It ations the
is
and
and
what
course
Athenian
make
it
for
the
size
of
Athenian
follows
is
not
probability
of
fight
of
by
(Thucydides
after
the
of
coming
quantify
an
impression
of
an
reluctant
to
operate
at
least
and
Megara)
So
the Athenians
had
for
and to
how
between
on
79
and
many
the
and
459
and
abundance three
until
Athenian
the
citizens
of
and
the
that
the
there
in
all
were
in
these of
throughout
the
can
oper-
to
precise
still
of
each but
any
the
usual
rather
from
480 to
were
began
Egypt
to
following
surrender
of
six
the
450.
pay
rather and
Athenians. °!
before
left
What
for
accountof metics years
see
trireme,
preferring
Aegina
expedition
way:
on
population
end after the this
one
citizens,
(taking
siege
these
rowing alongside
assumptions
of men
allies
forces the
of
citizen
over
that
disastrous
evidence
in
that
However,
number
numbers
been
in
Thucydides record
conservative the
support
uncertainties—see notes
from
Athenian
clearly
have
population,
actual
of
allied
could other
extract
increase
remained
its
some
certain
one-third
Tanagra
xenoi)
Athenian
and
implies
might
the
1.99)
Thucydides
apparently
give
defeat.
to
450's
Then,
we
least
Aegina
by
(and
the
xenoi)
with
factors
argument
that
battle
Athenians
and
of
Aegina
other
impossible
other
battle
that (and
a significant
at
back
participation
an
not
Egypt,
implies—given
I assume than
true
These
record
set
the
energy
were in
metics
90
that
level
not
activities
time?
83)
evidence
and
(e.g.,
were
of
the
apperently
this
Athenains,
82
audacity
simultaneously
Egyptian were
They
terms,
and
before
ended
the
years,
Aegina.
Therefore,
65
1)
2)
If the 200 ships there would have
in Egypt each had a complement of 175 men 82 been 35,000 men involved and 11,700 Athenians.
If the Athenians
and
their
allies
captured
70 Aeginetan
ships,
they may have numbered about 100 themselves. Again giving each ship 175 men, this would result in c, 5,800 Athenians. There may have been a considerable number of Athenians of hoplite as well as non-hoplite status engaged in the siege, since Thucydides says that the Corinthians thought that Athens would be very weak without them and in fact Athens had to call out the youngest and oldest to resist the Corinthians in the Megarid. I assume
here
that
during
all
the
the Athenians
engaged
in the sea battle
remained
siege.
3) The pand@mei
army at Tanagra
is somewhat
difficult
to understand.
It cannot (it would seem) mean ‘with all their military since troops were still engaged elsewhere, It probably
‘with all available
forces'--or
perhaps
including the youngest and oldest. some 1,000 along with the Argives,
Athenians 4) Adding
(plus
In
addition
Tanagra
to
or
trates
at
figure
for
all
those home the
of 1,
involved
these
c.
2,
and
3, we have
in military
29,500
there
working
on
abroad.
In all,
some
Athenian
(adult,
male,
at least
operations
were
Athenians
or
the age
groups'
If we give the other allies this would result in 12,000
some psiloi?).
the results
Athenians
‘from all
force' means
the
the
at
possible
long
40,000
walls
or
same
time,
light-armed
or
Athenians
militarily
29,500
the
those is
troops
serving
perhaps
politically
at
as magis-
a minimum
active)
population
in the 4508. This
figure,
ascertainable. Athenian
years. would zation,
However,
military
Certainly have
29,500
had
force
the
it in
little
intended
is the
it should
only
important 450's
manning
a suggestion;
realize
implicit
be at least
difficulty
to
as
the
order
in Thucydides’
clear
that
200
ships
the
real
of
magnitude
account
the Athenians at
a time
of
total
of
16 of
440's
supports
of
the
the
various
idea
that
cleruchies the
city
and
was
colonies
overflowing
unthe
these
in the 450's complete
mobili-
9^
Consideration in
16
sent with
out
by Athens
citizens
in
66
the mid-fifth servative at
century.
With
estinate, 85
Tanagre),
the
and
substantial
additional
Athenians
still
losses
losses
were
in Egypt
elsewhere
able
(or
felt
on even
(e.g., the
the most
the phonos
need)
to
send
polus
out
haps 6-8,000 Athenians to colonies and cleruchies in the next decade. has
collected
the evidence
"several
thousands”
1,000
2,000
or
to Jones
were
of 3,000)
were
argument,
cleruchies.
Drawing
independent
Jones
then
registers been
a fantastic
permanent
cleruchs
waste of
Athens
of
this had
such
twenty
years
earlier.
uchs
did
out
of
and
live
the
Athenian
allies.
arose,
as were,
we
that
in
the
of
the
as
8,000
Sinope)
450's,
440's,
If we
to
sometimes now
move
would
to
a "term
on
of
their
assigned
lots,
probably
imagine,
the
could live
were
colonists
loss
of
perhaps
afford
to
send
in
foreign
lands,
(e.g.
Euboea).
from
450's
to
431,
if by
suppose
some at
for
it
427 in
10,000 least
the
the
would
quite
that
not
here
while
cler-
control need
is
simply wars
as many
(e.g.
the
sent
if
the
perhaps
distant
of
the for
in
a
necessarily
service
point
as
"they
garrisons
and
have
context
440's
Athenians 3,000
appears
military
citizens
the
military
new
citizens, °’
“It
it was
to
on
entirely
Thucydides’
as
But
sometimes
all,
In
that
serving
according
Athenian
176).
175)
also,
out
close by the
p.
liable
an
regular
at
to Brea,
theory
able-bodied
But
(p. to
the
2,700
true.
possible
on
as
of
that
it is crucial
on Jones!
kl@roi
Democracy,
art"
think
outpost
their
is
They
the
an
1,000 minimum
a colony
remained
surely
(a
I do not
sterilise
is
others
per-
Jones?Ó
calculated
to Sinope,
between
livedon
and has
necessary
simply
have
(Athenian
It
after
Athens
citizens
and
can
Although
as
manpower
become
(600
thousand
distinction
statement
(apepempsan)
colonies
are probably
have
Lesbos"
out"
go
several
a cleruchy
necessarily
garrison
post-plague
common
and
that
not
while
given kleroi.
the
and
off as coloniats
a few words
polis
argues and
sent
to Histiaia)
the present
and
on cleruchies
con-
Thrace,
losses
were
67
probably
replaced
population
as
and
a whole
Turning
once
again
431,
find
that
we
forts
and
there
replacing
the
his
claim
that
But
his
1,000 is
see
pp.
wealth of the
century
half,
and
above)
in more
(e.g.
so
with
still
lites
the
ian
hoplites
other Athenian youngest
and
The an
increase
lation
may
and
the
oldest
hoplite of have
decades.
at
any
increased
332
of
more
had
the
450's
Further,
hoplites
Plataea
afford
more
these
ana
12,000
83).
from
all
well
been
on
over
dramatically.
20 years. If we
(or
second
the
at
These
the
assume
the
hoplite
increasing
half in
some of
the first
were
ranks
of
hop-
18,000)
Tanagra,
Athenwhen
be the
groups.
order the c.
with
12,000 may
age
And
"oldest"
explains
than
perhaps
the
some
the
into
proof.
the
there
in
including
so
that
metics
of
and
hoplites
available
a little
in
In
although
177),
cleruchs)
up
23,000
(see note
have
hopla
p.
the
method
Athenian
Dem.
effect
moved
(plus the
probability
who
with
of
on
in
of
others
claim
in
walls.
susceptible
his
(Ath.
colonists
inherent
could in
to
the
in
not
suggests
the
Jones'
14,000
a doubling
able
have
out
others
population least
being
and
at
others
to Gomme ' a, 99
is not
but
450's.
of Athens
proportion
figures.
the
the
some
guarding The
ephebes
hoplites
as Jones
plus
preferable
method
of
strength
oldest)
year-olds
(see below) level
hoplites
archers,
is
least
comparable
contained
plus
at
would
with
not directly
forces
show
sending us
his
the
hoplite
in these
2,000
8,000
that,
Athenians
following are
with
factor
leaves
non-hoplite
if
Athenians
This
40-60
oldest,
hoplites
comparable
abundant in
(7,000
mounted
figure
include
the
and
‘unknown’
a specific
18,000
increase,
and
hoplites
beyond
13,000
youngest
cavalry
It is possible
resulted
this
by
for
time
metics,
is the main
hoplites
47-48
that
became
grown
figures
at
"oldest"
are
population.
were
1,200
the
or
8?
not
Thucydides’
unknown
cavalry)
fleet,
necessarily
reserve
23,000
followed
had
(including
were
in the hoplite
more Athenians
there
16,000
addition
to
perhaps
of
15,000
non-hoplite
40,000
in
457—popu-
Athenians
68
in the 450's, 25,000. not
the number
Finally,
possible?
20,000,
so
of
although
neither
resulting
in
would
not
then
non-hoplites.
more
nor
just
of
Jones
about
have
actual
the
same
been
Athenians
in
were
total
that
of
they
total
(c.
15,000
non-hoplites
numbered
40,000)
in
much
as was
in
but
431
in proportion
than
the
of
450's,
to 431
more
than
not
as
to
hoplites
but
is
suggested
in the population from the 450's
numbers
wealthier
from perhaps
number
suggests
The main change
have
increased
to
necessarily
numerous. The
may
have
480
to
may
even
ancient
grown
some
that
as
evidence, much
as
in
the
40,000
be
possible.
population
in
this
then,
50Z
in
early
period
are
few years
after
Attica?)
would
have
lean
and
fewer
this
might
have
ravaged) losses
and were
suffered
urbanization
during
have
replace
the
to come
and
hard
together
empire
the fifth
into (Ath.
to
Mykale, 31
century.
growing
even
more
proportion Aristotle
the astu "from 24.1).
Even
if
this
Athenian
might
expect
post-
how of
pervasive Attica
have
losses been
its to
that
and is
an
was
following
Athenians
the fields"
the
marriages
difficult
reports
50,000
scarce,
beyond
of
to
in
(and
military
would
25-30,000
25,000
we
Athens
of Athens
much
whatever
of
ravaging
immediately
these
before
increasing
Pol.
years
from
First,
judge
how
from
affecting
been
to
judge
with
(perhaps
1002
factors
have
is
and
Athens,
may
population
years,
of
the Persian
is difficult
"fat"
20
figures.
It
been
factor
increase
and
citizen
about
these
Food
Plataea to
of
the
negative
by
Salamis
it
have
Still,
negative
of
the Athenians state
would
vould
A second
as
An
two
ones.
that
course
450's.
born.
(just
Salamis,
population
their
had
replaced.
at
conditions
been
children
there
the
masked
first
poned
suggests
Furthermore,
the
the
would
calculation
Gomme
a minimum for the 450's. 431
thetes
effect
actually
in which Athens
losses
pre-var
which
level.
estimate) living
in
Aristeides
is
urban encouraged
take up the business regarded
as
the
of 92
unhistorical,
69
one
can
or,
in the second
would
hardly
have
either
led
than
in
tive
effect
areas
the
1800)
rapidly
but
make
Population
and
smaller
effect
cially,
which
doubt
suggest even
ians
crisis'
assume
unhealthy negative
that
the
gross
(see
the
then,
that
with
such
prosperity above,
in
an
means
p.
43)
the
years
very much a return
level requires
(or
have
of perhaps city
to
would
been
surplus
have
the
from
to
had
to
fifth
acute
nega-
rural was
900,000
8,000-10,000
continue
more
instance,
1700
in
a year...
grow”
(Wrigley,
a proportionately
significant.
during
unsanitary
a uniformly
for
in
astu,
The
Piraeus
century,
would
espe-
have
been
are
completely
the
citizen
unquantifiable,
population
18
but
they
likely
do
to have
been
suggests. increase
to be
increasing
in
the
460's,
decade)
normal something
As noted
We
450's,
and
earlier
The
but
The
standard
response
is unsatisfactory
grounds.
immediately
conditions, more.
explained?
population'
historical
richer. to
to
on
the
shortages
have
London,
550,000
in
trade
live.??
in
and
prosperity
(from
factor
rapidly
factors
increase
increase, ^4
This
to
cities
(walls
or private
crowding,
food
depend
works
residence
to
possible
They
the
up
Due
pre-modern)
allow
ought
place
and
in public
business
take
without.
immigration
and
grew
evidence
is
in Athenian
became
pected
can
to
century
150). but
Athenians
growth.
"a net
p.
public
disease,
to
employment
temples),
(or
or
surplus
on Atheng,
than
of
18th
required
two
‘increasing
believe
early
These
How,
crease
the
size
for
distance
population
burial
we
of
pre-industrial
History,
a very
larger
graphic
in
the
a short
constant
actually
good
or
number
spreading
natural
to maintain
growing
no
walls
country,
opportunities
of the century,
a rapid
on
new
increasing
the
and
that
half
an
within
conditions
to
doubt
can
imagine
440's,
following
but
growth
Athenian
of
502
evidence
it
is very
"boom" or
even
does
on
significant
Salamis
a recuperative
both
not
of demoin-
difficult many
to
Athen-
is to be ex25%
above
seem
to
'prefit
the
70
model
of
a population
crisis, would
then be
recovering
"ripe
Not
only
year
in
over
a period
for
does the
the
and
the
at
and
Arginusae
tribes
vere
In more
rejected
special
tion
in
of
the
the Then
seems to
skills of
or
grown
at
it
I think
that
one
population
that
should
of
demographic
a generation
Population
and
the
when
History,
rapid
rate
its
higher
retained
the
or
But
entry
creation
grounds we
of
that
should
necessarily
explanation
of
is
not
those
of
perhaps
give
the
restoration
battle
possible
those it
ranks special
vho is of
that
fought also
children 100
or
provide for
the
be
12 per
of
the
Salamis
the
later
fifth
dÉmos made
. 99
as
major
demes,
reasons
in defence
of
the
noticeably
Such
explanation abundant
rowed The
as
and of
Athens.
newcomers
common
marriage.
best
who
phratries
suppose
that
economic
prosperity
enabled
the
7°
the Plataeans
(403)
crises
or
century.
democracy
were
may
fifth
those
to
simply
into
un-Athenian
early
Athenians
for
is
to
Athenian with
the
This
that
citizenship
possible
Athenians,
wealth,
and
of
Athenians.
the
and
of
considered
suppose
the Athenian
ín
be
it would
century
population
possible
70).
level
or
military new for
Athenians-the
citizen
rapid
popula-
450's. it
it
p. of
non-Athenians
new
fifth
479
the
their
Athenían
vere
entirely
after
sort
in
but
the
subsequent
admit
have
admission
it.
citizens
and
to
25%
Salamis,
in
on
of
later
entered
some
the
some
helped
times
service,
growth
or
villing
aliens
perhaps
(405)
it
resident
and
Athenian
nothing
in the
Attica
settled
by
attitudes
(406)
and
the
perhaps
some
generation.
resulting
Samians
Arginusae,
one
during
(Wrigley,
seem
considerations,
in
say
check"
following
phratries,
even
of
by
increase
population
than
century
evacuation
to
1.e.,
sources
Furthermore,
losses
severe
decades
these
significant
increase, "?7
be
fourth
(429)
of
and
immediately that
two
increase
“non-natural demes
a further
longer
“startling”
rapidly
Athenian
first
In view
the
suffering
population
to
7]
remain
at
children
born
expanding the
this
have
was
been
in
economy
increase
century
high
will able
a "boom"
that
be to
the these
to
find
they
come
of
not
support
years
by
Athenian,
Aristotle
prosperity
there
And
a larger
number
is
more
Athens
of
If
in
and
an
chance the
citizens
the
that
mid-fifth
than
would
some
is
perhaps
depend
upon
but were
foreigners
acceptance
as
an
less
and
crucial
were
not
if
the
the responsibility would
alien
have but
entered
by
it
is
result
of the the
individ-
demes
fraudulently
of
and
pretending
102 seems
Athenians
Pericles’
age,
of
war.
earlier.
t6n AthénaiOn,
'official'
a wave
109]
not
And
Peloponnesian
cyclical,
did
not
and
enough
admissions
phratries
situation
the
sources
phratries.
of
οὗ
when and
and
time
the
and
a plethos
the
of
demes
was
them
silence
ual
Thus,
lucky
fifty
the démos
a native
are
employ
of
be
to
permanent
decisions
to
down
awaiting
conceivable
Finally, accepted
level
to in
have
451/0
citizenship
been B.C. law
correct The
will
at
least
possible be
taken
in
believing
relation up
ín
between
Chapter
IV.
that this
there
72
Chapter
1. P. "Gomme,
Footnotes
26. Hereafter, in this section, Population.” Gomme's discussion
in his A Historical
this book will be of the population
Commentaryon Thucydides
nificantly from his earlier will be discussed below. 2. under
III.
comments.
(II pp.
Other
33-39)
estimates
Jones here follows A.R. Burn's analysis of the Principate (Past and Present 4 (1953),
of
referred to as of Athens in 431
does the
not differ
Athenian
the population 2-31).
of
B.C.
sig-
population
Roman
Africa
3. D. Whitehead (The Ideology of the Athenian Metic, Cambridge, 1977) briefly considers Thucydides 2.13 for the purpose of estimating the metic population and comes to no conclusion other than "something has gone seriously wrong" (p. 98). I think, however, that he dismisses too quickly the usefulness of Thucydides’ data.
4, "The Probable (1966) 245-264. 5. See "Age and countries," United
6.
See Keith
Age
7.
The
Hopkins,
specific
Section
E,
art. For
2.
cit.,
what
figures p.
of
the Roman
Population,"
Population
Studies
20
Sex Patterns of Mortality, model life-tables for under-developed Nations Population Studies, no. 22, New York, 1955.
range as 20-30 years. growth see below,
1980,
Structure
are
For
p.
this
cited
the
264
and
suggests
in The
average
p.
250,
about
New
figure
York see
n.14,
possible
Times,
who
sets
Athenian
Sunday,
Population
the Roman population
August
Facts
at
31,
Hand,
(UNFPA, New York 1980). 8. For a concise account of the complex problem of the relationship between the industrial revolution and modern population growth see E.A. Wrigley, Population and History (New York, 1969), p. 146ff. D.E.C. Eversley, "Population, Économy
and
Society,"in Population
in
History,
is also
helpful
for
the non-specialist.
9. The model life tables are of course not infallible. They are built on the basis of actual census data which can contain errors, but overall they "tabulate high probabilities" (Hopkins, art. cit., p. 251). The life table represents a stable population, i.e. one with a constant age and sex pattern, This may not always have been the case in Athens, but distortions of the structure caused by such things as war or plague would have been temporary, barring significant permanent change in fertility. 10.
Wrigley,
Population
and
History,
p.
70,
1l. Such proper adaptation of population to natural, population growth 16, I suggest, the
tion 12.
policy.' Such
See also below note
rapid
increase
(or
more
and
in
general
Chapter
3,
p.
62ff.
resources, not the danger of rapid, basic concern of ancient 'popula-
68. properly,
replacement)
is
"one
of
the
most
73
widely and
documented
is most
scarcity
and want.
bers may p. 68).
also
13.
See
also
15.
due
of demographic
to
the
Decreased
play
the
the Greco-Roman 14. will take
phenomena
clearly
a role
of
CP 75
due to the
Eversley,
D.
history"
of marriages
mortality
(see
comments
World,"
"boom"
loc.
Engels,
(1980),
cit.;
“The
pp.
(Eversley, and
"weeding
of
after
out"
Wrigley,
Problem
art.
births
cit.,
of weaker
Population
Female
p.
a period
44) of
men-
and
History,
Infanticide
in
112-120.
In the following discussion "population of Athens," unless otherwise noted, refer to the adult, male citizen population of military age and ability. I age 60 to be the upper limit, age 18 the lover limit of military service.
It should be noted
the "rapid to think.
that διὰ τὸ πλῆϑος τῶν πολιτῶν
does not mean
'due to
growth of the population"' as Gomme (p. 12) and Hignett (p. 245) seem To translate the phrase that way would be to prejudge the issue at hand.
16. Cf. the comment of B. Manville, (The Evolution of Athenian Citizenship, dissertation, Yale University, 1979, p. 46): "We might suspect that at least some of the restless Megarians, Korinthians, Euboians were not so restless as to travel
to Manga Graecia 17.
Ehrenberg,
or Ionia The
but
Greek
resettled
State,
18. For what it 16 worth, we (excluding Greater Athens) was
Table 19.
p.
closer
to home,
in Attica."
27.
can note that in 1960 only cultivated. (Economic and
about one-third Social Atlas of
of Attica Greece,
301). See
Appendix
II,
p.
202,
note
19.
20. In this context it seems possible that one of the reasons Solon was concerned with the enslavement and sale abroad of Athenians was the effect that such Practices had on the Athenian military strength. 21. XIX,
Both quotations p. 363.
are
from
How
and
Wells,
A Commentary
on Herodotus,
Appendix
22. This should not be taken to imply, however, that lists of non-hoplite thetes were not kept in Athens. For some comments on the katalogoi and the lexiarchikon grammateion see M.H. Jameson, "Apollo Lykeios in Athens, Archaiognosis 2 (1981) note 25. 23.
I accept
tion of Munro
Herodotus'
have
had
than
in 480 when
24, By triremeg lites in
110
(JHS 24 (1903)
a significantly
smaller
they were
the time of the (epibatai) were 479.
ships
despite
146-7). fleet
fighting
the
objections
and
It is most reasonable in
479
when
they
were
clever
reconstruc-
that the Greeks would fighting
on
two
fronts
on one.
Peloponnesian War, the heavy armed usually thetes. But they may have
soldiers on Athenían been self-armed hop-
74
25. Nepos, Miltiades 5.1; the Suda διν. Ἵππιας. Justin (2.9) gives 10,000 Athenians plus 1,000 Plataeans instead of the 9,000 Atheniane plus 1,000 Plataeans of Nepos and the Suda. He appears to have added in the Plataeans twice. 26. I am following Gomme in drawing a distinction between fit Lowever, I think it possible that only those who were fit would logoi in the first place. 27.
It
1s not
clear,
however,
to what
extent
Attica
as
and unfit be put on
a whole
was
hoplites. the kata-
ravaged.
28, See, for example, Thucydides 6.8.1 and 31.1 on the preparations for the Sicilian expedition and also Plato, Critias 119a-b. In general on the crew of the trireme see Casson, Ships and Seamanship in the Ancient World (Princeton, 1971), p. 300ff. and Morrison and Williams, Greek Oared Ships 900-323 B.C. (Cambridge, 1968), pp. 254-279. 29. See Decree of
the comments of M.H. Jameson, "The Provisions for Mobilization Themistokles," Historia 12 (1963) 394 and notes 18 and 19.
30. Cf. M-L 23).
lines
30-31
of
the Themistocles'
Decree
(Hesperia
31
(1962)
in
the
310-315;
31. If there were empty places it 18 hard to imagine that slaves would not have been employed. fm Athenian use of slaves in warfare see R. Sargent, CP (1927) 209-11, 264ff. Cf. also Isocrates 8.48. 32. Jones elsewhere (Athenian Democracy, Appendix, p. 165) calculates were 7,000 metícs in 431. I think one would expect more of an increase figures imply.
that than
22
there his
33. In general I think the decree contains an authentic tradition of a decree Proposed by Themistocles. However, since 20,000 was a stock figure for the population of Athens in the fourth century (e.g., Plato, Critias 112b; Dem. 25.51) thís may be a part of the decree which was affected by fourth century transmission.
See also
the objections
of Meiggs
in Bury-Meiggs^,
p.
530.
The
reading
álvj]a ἑκατόν
was not in the first edition of the inscription (Hesperia 29 (1960) 198-223) thus has sometimes been missed (e.g. by Podlecki in his Life of Themistokles (Montreal, 1975), p. 148). It is accepted by Meiggs and Lewis. 34. Die Bevolkerung der Griechisch-Romischen Welt, p. the idea that the ships in 480 were smaller than in the 35.
The
36.
Despite
37. vote
Greek
State
(New
Athenaios'
York,
statement
1964),
pp.
(5.217a)
33
and
that
prefix tpı@-has (1952) 172-190,
a similar effect in the esp. 178 and note 28.
60; 99. This is based on latter part of the century.
248.
it
was
Also we might wonder if the total citizen body of 499 or the condemnation of the generals.
38. The Eranos 52
and
word
performed
took
part
τριπάτωρ
at
in
the
the
;
see
Lenaia.
assembly
B.
Hemberg,
75
39,
See
also
Jones,
Athenian
40.
CR 78 (1964), 2-3.
41,
Ibid., p. 3.
Democracy,
p.
161,
42. The question of the use of the quorum in Athens is an interesting one which has not been much studied. Bonner and Smith, for example, discuss extensively (The Administration of Justice from Homer to Aristotle II, chapter 7, passim) the role of the 6,000 without ever considering what fraction this was of the total. E.S. Stavely (Greek and Roman Voting and Elections) mentions a "quorum" of 6,000 for certain meetings of the Athenian assembly (p. 78) and notes that "the total citizen population at the time of Pericles has been estimated at between 50,000
and 60,000" (ibid.). He does not give.his source or clarify what is meant "the time of Pericles" or discuss when this 'quorum' was instituted. 43.
See
44.
Hignett,
Bonner
date
in the
for
example,
and
Smith
470's, A.
HAC,
pp. (The
216-221. Administration
but Hignett's
Andrewes,
The
opinion
Greeks,
p.
of
Justice
I,
pp.
now the generally
222-223)
accepted
Op.
cit.,
p.
206.
But
see
previous
The number is close at Salamis. 15,000
possible
increase
a
See,
223-225. Rhodes τὸ 'ABevatov
note.
47. G.T. Griffith, "Isegoria in the Assembly at Institutions: Studies Presented to V. Ehrenberg, 48. ships
prefer
one.
179.
45. See Bonner, "The Minimum Vote in Ostracism," CP 8 (1913) (The Athenian Boule, pp. 194-207), however, considers τὸ δέμο πλεϑύοντος as meaning simply ‘Athenians in assembly." 46.
by
Athens," 115-38.
Ancient
Society
and
to 36,000 (180 x 200) but is not based directly on 180 hoplites come from 8,000 at Plataea (7) and from “the
of citizen population between 480 and 430"
(p. 25 note 1);
20,000 is then added on the basis of the 180 ships and the Cleisthenic constitution. Needless to say, “the possible increase in citizen population” is just what I am trying to determine. 49. The one piece of direct Memorabilia 1.2.35, but it is Erythrai (M-L, 40.11).
evidence for this age also specified in the
50. See also Chapter IV, p. 92. census qualification he goes on to whole citizen population (Athenian
qualification is Xenophon, regulations drawn up for
Although Rhodes states a belief in this cite population figures (Gomme's) for the Boule, pp. 2-3).
51, The 18- and 19-year-olds are left out here simply in order to use the numbers 30,000 and 10,000. In the first population they would number about and proportionally less in the others.
52.
But,
it is a decisive
argument
against
there
being
a limitation
to two
round 2,400
terms
76
and an exclusion of thetes at the same time. Thus when we tion to two terms we should probably aseume that there was
know there was ἃ limitano exclusion of thetes.
The council set up for Erythrai had 120 members and no one could serve twice within a period of four years (Meiggs-Lewis 40.12). Assuming that each man served as often as possible and taking 20 years as the length of the average career (to account for mortality after age 30), then each Erythraian would serve four terms. This would require then 30 new men each year. A population of 3,000 would have 100 men reach 30 every year and does not seem too large for Erythrai which paid a maximum of seven talents tribute. 53.
See,
54.
Andrewes
speaking
for
of
example, (The
Hignett,
Greeks
the revolution
HAC,
(New
p.
York,
of 411:
196.
1971),
"But
p.
210)
says
the ordinary
something
hoplite
similar
remained
when
suspicious
of the intentions of the extremists and in the end sided with the people instead. The noticeable socíal gulf here was rather between the middle class and the really rich, roughly the division between hoplite and cavalry." I would only object that the hoplites ("middle class") and the "people" or demos are not really so distinct. As Jones (Athenian Democracy, p. 90) remarks, "I have depicted a society in which, except for a small group of relatively very rich men at the top and a larger group
of
casual
labourers
at
the
bottom,
wealth
was
evenly
graduation from the affluent to the needy very gentle." (1972) 123 and below Appendix II, pp. 177 - 178, In 480 social scale may have been even less pronounced.
55.
Athenian
Democracy,
p.
of course,
that
the number
original
Cleisthenic
distribution.
Hesperia Supplement and quotas.
15
a deme
chose was based
with a house in Melite who does not, I think,
The bouleutai quotas are known from fourth the usual (probably justified) assumption is
of Attica, utai lists
the
JHS the
92
Gomme in assuming that enough Athenians to justify considering the bouleutai quotas of various parts of Attica. (I am also
of bouleutai
population.) Themistocles Phearrios, stocles 22.2) is a prominent exception of this assumption.
but
and
8.
56. Here and in what follows I follow were still living in their demes in 480 as accurately reflecting the population
assuming,
distributed,
See also Rhodes, both extremes of
See John (1975)
for
(Plutarch, affect the
on its Themivalidity
century and later inscriptions, that the quotas go back to the
Traill,
The
a general
Political
discussion
Organization of
the
Finally, it might also be noted that although there were apparently sort of pre-Themistoclean walls in Athens (see Eugene Vanderpool in QOPOZ p. 156ff.), the walls serving as the boundaries of urban living for Gomme Themistoclean--and post-480.
boule-
some , are
57. This is calculated by multiplying 35,000 by 4. This is satisfactory for present purposes, but probably the factor should be closer to 4.5 for a population likely to have had a life expectancy at birth of 25 years. (Gomme argues on p. 7Sff. for an average Athenian family of 4--against those who thought the number
77
should
58. this 59. Atlas 60. 61. since
be
lower.)
J. Travlos, Poleodomik$ Exelixis tön Athenön, p. 71. area
was
taken
up
by private
Only about half of
settlement.
W. Petersen, Population (New York, 1975), p. 378 and Social of Greece, Table 202, for London and Athens respectively. Travlos, op. cit. I follow a larger
(above
Gomme (p. 25, proportion of
62. Rodney Young, (1951), 135ff.
note
44),
p.
Economic
72.
note 4) in multiplying the residents these were apt to be bachelors.
"An Industrial
and
District
of Ancient
Athens,"
aliens
by
Hesperia
20
3,
63. See Hesperia 20 (1951), 187-252. The exception is House F in which "a central floored area was surrounded, probably on all sides and certainly on three, by tanks or vats set beneath floor level" (p. 229). The earliest phase of this
building
was
64.
See
65.
Rodney
"around
the
the middle
discussion Young,
of
of
these
"Selputurae
the fifth century" roads
Intra
in Hesperia
Urbem,"
(p. 20
Hesperia
232).
(1951), 20
(1951),
66. Quite a few Athenians may have lived within the walls without. Probably one such was Themistocles Phrearrios and been more ag the fifth century progressed. But see note 56 67.
See
Gomme,
Note
C,
p.
75ff.,
for
references
to
this
Sarah Pomeroy has reopened the discussion in her Goddesses, Slaves, pp. Infanticide
68-70, in the
145-168. 69ff.
and have owned land there would have above.
discussion.
Whores,
227-230, and was answered by D. Engels, "The Greco-Roman World," CP 75 (1980) 112-120.
Recently
Wives and
Problem
of
Female
68. Wealthier Athenians may have tended to marry younger wives than the average Athenian, and a young wife would have more child-bearing years ahead of her than an older one, Also, a richer woman might have been better nourished and so less prone to miscarriage, stillbirth, and perhaps infertility. One other factor which could conceivably have led to a wealthy woman bearing more children is the practice of employing wet-nurses. A woman who did not nurse her child would become pregnant again sooner than one who did. (For this and the other factors
see Wrigley,
Population
If, then, richer more of a chance to be should also not assume control,
and History,
Arethusa
8 (1975)
100ff.).
families tended to have more children, they would have had selective and more of a motive for infanticide. But we that there was no knowledge in Athens of methods of birth
For methods of birth "Biomedical Techniques for
B.C.,"
p.
control known in the fourth century see A. Preuss, Influencing Human Reproduction in the Fourth Century
237-263.
Preuss,
however,
apparently
aseumes
(contrary
78
to the implications of the medical writers he cites) that restricting the natural growth of the population (1.e., the number of births) was a major concern in classical Greece. But concern with numbers of citizens--clearly a concern of both Aristotle and Plato--is not necessarily concern with numbers of citizen births. (On the "population policy" of Plato's Republic, see J.J. Mulhern, "Population and Plato's Republic," Arethusa 8 (1975) 265-281.) Preuss’ claim that "In classical Greece we see an agricultural economy becoming progressively more urban, and consequently the desirability of having many children giving way to the desirability of having few" (p. 240) is not obviously true.
69. ments 70.
Calculated from United Nations Model Life Table of Engels (above note 67) to the same end. Goddesses,
Whores,
Wives
and
Slaves,
p.
no.
35.
See
also
the
argu-
227.
71. The pelvic studies of Lawrence Angel, purporting to show 4.3 births per woman with 1.6 juvenile deaths resulting in 2.7 survivors per female which Pomeroy cites on this point, are not very helpful. It is surprising that she goes on to comment, "According to these calculations the Athenian population would have increased each generation, and indeed Aristotle stated that Pericles’ citizenship law was enacted because of the large number of citizens" (p. 68). Angel's "classical" skeletons are few and range over the 6th, 5th and 4th centuries. See E. Badian's review of Pomeroy in New York Review, Oct. 30, 1975 for further criticism. 72. after 73.
On the probability of an the Sicilian expedition, E.g.,
page
unequal see the
sex ratio Epilogue,
(in favor p. 142.
of
women)
in
Athens
48.
74. Athenian Democracy, p. 179. Jones thinks that both prosperity and inflation played a part in increasing the number of hoplites (p. 180). It does seem possible that--in the second half of the pentakontaetia--prosperity might have increased the proportion of Athenians able to supply their own hopla. For the effect of inflation, see Appendix II, note 24, p. 202. 75.
See
Russell
Meiggs,
The
Athenian
Empire,
(Oxford,
1972),
p.
92ff.
76. It is usually assumed that these 14,000 are hoplites (e.g., by Jones, Athenfan Democracy, p. 161) although Thucydides does not specifically say so; but since he does not seem to have known specific figures for psiloi in the rest of his History, this is probably a fair assumption. 77.
The
size
of
the
loss
involved
here
is
a matter
78. Thucydides gives no chronological indication. suggests that this and the following expedition may news of the Egyptian disaster reached Athens. 79, The Erechtheid casualty list (I.G. 1? 9295 Egypt, Phoenicia, Halieis, Aegina and Megara.
M-L
of
dispute.
See
Meiggs (Athenian have been decided
33)
lists
below
note
82.
Empire, p. 111) upon before
tribesmen
dying
in
79
80.
See
the discussion
(Cambridge Philological
οὗ Ὁ.
Society,
Whitehead,
The
Ideologyof the Athenian Metic
Supplementary Volume,
number 4, 1977),
pp.
86. His comment, "...we lack a typical, representative document to show ative proportions of citizens and metics (and others) in a trireme under circumstances" (p. 85) indicates the problem at hand.
84-
the relnormal
It is noteworthy that Thucydides does not mention metics in his account of any of these events, as he does for the Megara campaign thirty years later (2.31.2). The implication is that serving as a hoplite was not yet an official duty of the metic who could afford it in the 450's (as it was in the 430's) and further that metic service in the fleet was voluntary, unorganized and "not a service but a job of work" (Whitehead, p. 86). The calling up of "xenoi registered with the polemarch" to serve in the fleet in 480 ("Decree of Themistocles"--M-L, 23.30-31) was perhaps the result of extraordinary circumstances. 81. It Pericles
18 notable, sent out 60
politón"
(Pericles
82,
There
but hardly decisive for any argument that Plutarch ships every year for eight months, on which sailed
says that "polloi
11.4).
is admittedly
a tendency
to think
that
not
all of
the
200 ships
stayed
in Egypt. (See the account of this position and counter-arguments given by Meiggs, Athenian Empire, p. 104ff.). But nothing in Thucydides’ text suggests that he did not think that they all stayed. To assume that they would have been needed at home would be to assume something about the size of the population--and that is just what I am trying to ascertain, 83.
Jones
engaged 84. Cf. on p. 55.
(Athenian
in Egypt the
Democracy,
and Aegina,
estimate
of
p.
161)
thinks
but Thucydides'
Wilamowitz,
based
that
there
were
account
seems
to suggest
on Aristotle
24.3,
"not
many"
hoplites
otherwise.
referred
to
above
85. If 1t is assumed that there were only 40 ships involved at the end of the campaign and (for purposes of calculation) that.the whole crev of 175 on each Ship, 40 plus the relieving 50, was lost, then the losses would have been on the order of 5,750 men. 86. 87, clear
Athenian
Democracy,
p.
168ff.
As Jones notes (Athenian Democracy, p. 168) the distinction is in literary sources. Possibly it is not appropriate for fifth
88, See above,page 41. are very similar to those at birth of 25 years.
As of
not always century usage.
noted there, the age-group proportions used by Jones the model-life-table population with life expectancy
89. This would result in some 10,000 metics vis-a-vis the citizen hoplite population.
which
90. The calculations of Gomme (p. 12ff.) and Jones guesses.
might
be
considered
too
many
(Ath. Dem., p. 9) remain
80
91.
These
losses
are
probably
of
less
significance
for
overall
population
growth
than the effects of changed rates of marriages and births. As Bversley noted (art. cit. p. 52, see note 7 above) in relation to the plagues of medieval Eurpoe, in-
creased mortality already 92. istic
low
life
in the adult population has less effect expectancy
Day and Chambers (pp. democratic move vhich
93.
See
Wrigley,
94.
Since
societies,
rural
95. E.A. Wrigley's p. 99) is suggestive port" has a negative
and
population surplus
decrease
in
in a population with an
fertility.
35, 124-125) regard this ae eimply another Aristotle attributes to Aristeides.
Population
the urban the
than
need
History,
p.
is usually not
be
97ff.
a small
huge
character-
fraction
in order
to
"demographic contour map" (Population of what might have been the situation population growth of 20 per 1,000 per
of the whole
keep
a city
in such
alive.
and History, figure 3.7, in Attica. His "reayear.
96. It should be clear from what vas said earlier (pp. 42-43) that Jones' claim, "increase in wealth meant...that larger families survived" (Athenian Democracy, p. 180) is demographically simplistic and not necessarily true of Athenian population. 97. Again, other explanations such as a significant drop in infant mortality or a significant increase in the number of live births per less reasonable. (See also D. Engels, CP 75 (1980) 112-120). 98. For origin in
a few comments on Athenian the mid-fifth century, see
xenophobia or exclusivity the Conclusion.
and
the
and child woman seem
its
probable
See also A. Billheimer, Naturalization in Athenian Law and Practice (Princeton 1917), pp. 24-27 for a collection of testimonia suggesting that the Athenians and other Greeks were not entirely unavare that less exclusive practices had existed in Athens. The scholiast to Thucydides 1.2, for example, says, " οἱ Adevaloı τὸ
πάλαιον εὐϑὺς μεταδίδουσαν πολιτεῖας,
ὕστερον δὲ οὐετι.
Naturalization, however, should be distinguished from honorary bestowal of citizenship, which after 451/0 was the only legal way a foreigner could become an Athenian, The historicity of reported grants of citizenship before the latter fifth century is doubtful. See, for example, J.W. Cole, "Not Alexander but Perdikkas," GRBS 18 (1977) 25-29. 99. Although Thucydides implies that the Plataeans were Athenian politai (3.63) and had a share of the politeia (3.55) already at the end of the sixth century, | Demosthenes] 59.104 and Isocrates 12.94 imply.that 'Plataeans became Athenians’ only after their city was destroyed by the Spartans. See Gomme, HCT II, pp. 339340.
For the Samians, see I.C. I^ 1 (M-L, 94). Diodorus
However
this
(13.97)
is not
says
supported
that
those who fought
by Xenophon,
at
Hellenica
Arginusae
1.6.24
were
made
citizens.
or Aristophanes'
Frogs
81
190
and
693
slaves
and
for
some
service
modern
Citizenship," CJ 73
I.G.
historians
in the fleet (1977-78)
consider
as historical
p.
120 with
only
the
(e.g.,
note
freeing
J.K.
of
Davies,
“Athenian
91).
The bestowal of citizenship on democratic allies seems to be II^ 10, but there is much difficulty in restoration. See Tod
100.
A new
after
480 would
because
101.
of
group
of
citizens,
by the 450's
their
own
See Eversley,
if
settled,
have almost
married
a double
and
producing
effect
recorded 11.100.
children
in
soon
on the population
size
'baby-boom."'
art.
cit.
(note
8 ), p.
50ff.
This Athenian
prosperity
and
expansion, however, was in a sense artificial since it was based not on any permanent improvement in production or opportunity such as occurred in the Industrial Revolution, but on the opportunities and funds provided by the Empire. And the population seems to have dropped back to a lower level with the loss of the
Empire. 102.
(See Gomme, For
vironment
further
Population.)
comment
on
this
of the astu and Piraeus,
phenomenon
and
see Chapter
its
likelihood
IV, pp.
83-84.
in
the
urban
en-
82
IV.
Pericles,
Politics
and
It for
is
difficult
subsequent
in
Greek
their any
Athenian
history.
aftermath certainty
general will
As was
or
morale,
here
to
only
over-emphasize
has
been
certainly
This seen,
It
was
the
is
comments
Century
Law
importance
as
demographic is
easier
to
offer
and
social
relevant
of
decisive
but
well-being
a few
Mid-Fifth
the
significant
precision.
make
the
the Citizenship
history.
economic
in
to
Persian
a turning impact
hard
and
the
now
of to
wars
point the
as
wars
evaluate
and
with
judgments
on
political
institutions.
Pericles
the
and
the
and
then
any
effects
on I
citizenship
law. To 480
begin,
(and
fans
to
the
victories
a lesser
those
in
Plataea
Mykale
confidence
Themistocles
had
proposed
daring,
novel
them
won.
A new
generation
of
and
had
Themistocles,
ambitious
the
for
Xanthippus
themselves
'international'
It
was
it
seems
decline
as
in
archonship 22.5).
to
the
The
and
that
importance
new
in 487 brand
further
sharpening
opposed
to
a member
of
the of
their or
and
in
and
the
these
an office
and
Athenians
awareness
one
or
regional
to
of
deme
or
Athens
the
and
in
that
political
himself or
as
another.
as
well highly
concerned
with
rivalries.” and
office
to
elite
led of
(Ath.
image an
followed
Athenians,
by lot not vote ‘imperial’
Athen-
and
had
audacious,
local
in
the
Miltiades
more
prestige
a new
Athenían's
gave
looking,
led
chosen
created
one
with
men
Salamis
leaders--Aristeides
outward
than
479)
leaders.
as Miltiades--arose,!
attractiveness
region
their
Athenian
success
leaders
and
490
strategies;
Athens that
became of
well
Athens,
(generals)
say
which
themselves
as
position
strat@goi fair
in
of
at Marathon
in
as
a boost
extent
first
of
the
Pol. Athene,
Athenian
Indeed,
a
it
as is
not
83
going
too
heroic
far
to
heritage
a share
in
being
or
the
From
say
that
the
ideal
and
the
470's
on
Although
for
employment
cleruchy
for
the
were
most
"continuous" for
military
conclusion
that
on
Athenian
‘foreign
As the
state
Pol.
27;
while
shipboard
or
Plutarch
Pericles
indicates
a major
step
popular
(1.e.,
court the
in
city,
after
480;
executive
the
the
city
of
Athens
a common
"being an Athenian’
Cimon the
city's
in
mines the
assumed and body.
but
or
‘having
the
greater the
and
paid
paid
be
more
that
enabled
them.
used read
later
importance
for
his
imperial
the
to
finance.)
popular
of
the
fact
story
but the
450's.
i.e.,
the
a fleet,
Similarly,
d@mos of both
of
all
Athenians,
became
older--institutionally
and
probably
also
(Ath.
certainly
distribute
assembly,
of
to win support
in
representative
new
by
purposes,
the
and
was
ways,°
not
and
business,
so.’
treasury
representing
of
a justifiable
profits
own resources
and
still
plenty
in Athenian
well-known
in various
state
seems
an Athenian The
a
developing
increased
to do
Athenians
them
through
for
to and
developments,
It
time
the
them to
service,
responsibility
Boul$,
The
spent
the
dikasteria
jury
also
rowers.Ü
convincing
of
for
enrichment
and
public
to all Athenians
of
naval
Cimon
use
and
advantages
479 gave Athenians
the
to
size
after
revards,?
wages
can
concrete
or
of
direction
open form
in
and
which
that
and
projects
Athenians
actual
10)
office
campaigns
have
obvious
'second-generation'
assembly,
treasury
success the
later,
would
importance
(Themistocles' of
as
used
the
surpluses
the
to
more
public
skill--as
the
policy'
‘league’
for
part
more
in
also
in building
of
480
or
important
pay
employment
a consciousness after
were
military
skill--and
either
gave
a new meaning
there
opportunities
opportunity
wars
city.'
an Athenian.
the almost
Persian
the
is
the
Athens) meeting
in
decades the
city's
demographically--
council
of
seened
the
a vestige The
ilial
were
Areopagus,
local
distinct
from
former
distinction
and
public
of
between
realm
were
or
οὗ
ex-archons
with
life
tenure,
might
have
and
private,
times.” the
becomes
from private
leaders
local
composed
political
increasingly
(cf.
elites
about
politicians, who
realm
apperent
the story
increasingly
traditional
public,
might
and
Cimon
relevant.10
and Pericles
professionals
seem
the
to be
or
Public
noted
‘experts’
‘amateurs’
fan-
in
monies
above); distinct
comparison.
The state, hoi Athénaioi or ho démos ho Athénai@n,!? was more often the focus of attention ades
of
also,
and
the
for
state
When
fifth
funeral
for
those
can
assuming
powerful
demos,
they
and
The
latter
Athenian
who
say/
that
Thee,
outsider
the
new than in
group
a Tyrant
sharpens, however, attempted
by
the
the
Athenian
public
record
and
ἃ state
calls
upon
citizenship.
héliastoi,
to defend
familial
or
local
Salamis
in
importance
‘Delian some to
quote
and
League’
the
(see,
allies
e.g.,
the
420's
an
replacing
increasingly
Knights:
In
into
the
several
to Athens. regulations
the
one.l^
distinction
turned
the
phratores
"Proud,
and obey"--1111-1114,
qualification.
unite
the
became the
or
him against
traditional,
fear
but
for
by
All men
pay,
qualification
was
and King/
state
dec-
public
identity
to
courts
with
middle
the
3-obol"--255)
following
the
keeping,
"gerontes
(Again,
tended
By
Athenian
years
the
century.
dikastéria
people.
requires or
popular
of
3
of the
public,
mid-fifth
only
Knights
fade
as
the
system
in var, |
the
of
by not
phraters
differences
point,
(or misserved)
died
jurors,
privileged
empire
were
developed
Athenians’
Internal
ian
there
importance
‘the
and
trans.).
see
more
Thus,
distinct
in Aristophanes’
("veteran we
more
& more
'Paphlagon'
Knights,
as
century
example,
trlobolou”
or
emerged
Rogers
between
Athen-
‘Athenian respects They
for
0
Eapire. the
were
Chalcis,
served 1.6.
12 39 = ML 52 752; cf. Thucydides, 1.77.1), given Athenian institutions (e.g., the
council
set
up
in
the
decree
for
Erythrae,
1.6.
I”
2 10,
line
8ff.),
ordered
to
85
use
Athenian
festivals
(ML,
significant lan
coinage 69,
is the
as
course "set
The
or
from of
are
major
for
the
reports
Cholargos,
and
(Pericles
3.1).
Indeed,
the
Athenian
Xanthippos,
to
element
same
time
that
in
their
that
own
of
his
mother's
uncle
at
ancestors
were
distinguished
Appendix
also
about
2,
Xanthippos'
elsewhere
pp.189-91
ancestors
).
but
in
too,
could
an Alcmeonid,
a descendant
gave
Athens
her
first
yictory.
among
the
weaith This,
to
a very
together
families
lucrative
with
the
the mid-6th century family's But
wealth while
it
story
is
from
to
that
King
13.4),
but
more
is
on
and
has
politics. tribe
on
and
doubt
means
led
sore
simply
families
were
that
"party
was
were
his
more
Pericles" 37.2.
much
is
known
and
Alcmeon
who
wealthy--probably
attributed Lydia
deme
sides
these
prominent,
century
to
father
that
Not
been
6th
the
to
the
both his
e.g.,
true.
have
of
Athen-
16
33.1,
Croesus
more
of
only
Acamantis,
genos
no
some
been
biography,
Tradition
used
excluded
for
the
even
closely
were
the use of genos
Both
Megacles
here
Cleisthenes
well
18
Athens.
visit
(Ath. Pol.
came
of
the
seems
of
they
later
aim
to
Athenian
the allies
bound
Athenian
was
the
was
wealthiest
again
The
(cf.
Cleisthenes
Olympic
up
in
Athenians.
apparently
This,
they
the
there
Plutarch
were
nikos) and
Mykale;
remote
sense
of
into
(pr@tog
that
paradeigma,
15
family
general
allies
belonged
genos
See
important,
come
Pericles
Pericles
a prominent
larger
is
right.
By prÖton
the
compulsion
or
will
oikoi.!7
in
colonists
city
prßtoi
'family'
as
the
the
points
entry
also
participate
of
metropolis
a share’
in
to
it was never as Athenians
general
topics
Plutarch
and
tyrannos,
these
stage’
that
the
"having
Many
the
57-8).
At
hégemon
distinctly
45 )
fact
institutions.
Athens
(M-L,
the
Alcmeonid
(Herodotus of
the
3.128.5).
coast”
in
has been interpreted as evidence that the
commerce. 19
possible
that
the
family
grew
wealthy
with
the
new
trade
oppor-
86
tunities need
and
to
And
economic
suppose
Pericles
Pericles likely
that
in the family
of
to
comments
Athenian
of
which
to
change
the
locally
‘rule
of
more
for
that
was
his
father
prosecuted
the
matter
of
was
ostracized.
22.8;
cf.
served was
as
"The
the
born
and
Decree of
of the
considered
for
with
in
or
its
than
did
their
ca.
494
B.C. 24 on
the
expedition
not
were recalled
young
to
in
23 479
fight
in
on
to
might
also
were
more
one.
We
position
more nor
Pericles
been
about the
11
or
the battle 45-47)
(Herodotus the
than
amenable
Alcibiades.
and
of
units
but
have
any
goes
administration
lines,
home-
power
"deceiving
for
the
own
22 and
a similar
3.136)
a
"alternative
relative
of
(Herodotus
fleet
was
would
charge
prevented
old-established
Cleisthenes
younger He
the
and
of
cult. 21
family's]
seek
in
Plutarch,
a member
Attic
have
necessarily
Themistocles"--M-L.
too
to
families
Neither
been
Praxiergidai",
organization
masses.‘
Athenian
to
(cf.
such as the Eumolpidai
[the
hetairos'
families--but
have
might
open
merchants.
estate, ^U most
particular
its
no
still peri to asty.
to
connection
is
fact
farmer’
groups
any
Alcmeonids
other
Miltiades
Paros
used
power
as
political
the
known
the way
the
but
there
in
a sizable
is
Bouzygai
demos
The ostracized
general
apparently
the
entrenched
or
Pericles
the
the
in
led
Alcmeonids in
cult
vere
a ‘gentleman
Pericles
sense
effective
as
centuries,
the city walle
of
phratries
"taking
amenable
any
left
6th
Cleisthenes
Cleisthenes
lack
such
or
associated
situation
the
cared
and
this
that
democracy’
this
politics
suppose
more
been
exercising
cults
that
bases"
that
“from
through
suggest
nor
and
be called
deme north of
have
7th
Megacles
probably
Xanthippos
or
Alcmeonids land
the
genos in the restricted
Boutadai,
Davies
of
confidence
Xanthippos
Neither
or
Alcmeon,
can with
16).
particular
expansion
of
9.114), battles
‘pure have
^? six when
when
in Xanthippos
Salamis
and
to
may
people" 12
were
(Ath.
Pol.
Xanthippos but of
Pericles 480-479
2?
87
It is sometimes his
mother--1.e.,
politician hand, was
it no
that
pursuing
is
implied
said
he was
the
that
Alcemeonid.
of
attempt
classify
to
previous
the
The
in Athenian
his
ideological
family
sufficiently attacked >! lingers
on
basically after
in two
things
Salamis
crats.
as
First,
wrong
it
suggests
a recognizable
interest
and
son
Thucydides
maternal
great
as
hetairos.
their
existed it
did
tion. those
in or
aight
century
notion
viewwe might
is
themselves
political lay
a
claim
the
life
‘nobility’
to
consider
that Cimon,
find
‘party
that
(see
Cimon
this
term. along
Athenian
the
to
other Pericles
the
the
this
admitted
sort
of
membership’
or
the
citizenship politics
democrats
‘renegade’
time
was
But from
Furthermore, with
his
the
‘best
probably the from
father
upper
are
decades aristo-
‘aristocracy’ others
by
was Cimon
who
the démos
pp.187-193)
represented
There
or
2,
a very
influence
Pericles
a single
probably
the
among
nobles
its
conservative or
like
has been
law.
in
that
Appendix is
and
upper-class
clear
politics
Introduction,
‘democrats’
were
is not
of
represented
kaloikagathoi.
at
not
assumed
the
Athenian
spokesman
that
I do
Athenian
radical
and
it
its
the
and
the
Athens
was
‚3
from
family
democrats,
Despite
Pericles
Cleisthenes,
Cimon
A common
in Athenian and
that
that
However,
no
on
democratic29
in
between
group,
certainly
Or,
belonging
model
viewing
Melesias,
uncle,
fifth
calling
of
to
family 2/
father
politics
an Alcemeonid
in
indicated
of
with
a struggle
got his
convincing.
as
interpretations
his
politics
politics’
but
his
were
was
according
‘party
of
followed which
Pericles
democradó or
Alcemonids
he
Pericles
of
that
interests
faction,
family
behavior
the
Rather,
Themistocles-Aristeides
stated)
an Alcemonid
personal
while
28
importance
(or
took
monolithic and
to
'nobility' assume
misleading people,’ any
a different Miltiades,
perhaps
of
point as
that
simplifica-
Athenian
reaches
his
one
prominent society of of
the
more
radical
Athenian
of a maritime
(naval)
Second,
cratic
in
in
the
'game.'
in one
another
or
tyranny,
them
do
assume
that
is
limit every
of
may
issue
have
all
the
challenge
politicians
democrats.
"9 the
anonymous
a previous at
In
Athenian
and
as
that
dissidents
time
opportunity
so
this
far
time
played
particular
over
the
of
457
was
demo-
rules
and
function
return
of
far
the
1,107.4), >"
Athens
not
(in
so
as we
radicals
va.
conservatives
a
the
(Thucydides
would
were
as Athens
over
who
were
δὲ
politicians
generation
this
empire)
and
there
that
politics were
return
a struggle
were
no
was
simply
certainly to
earlier
and
with
wealth and inclination for
high
Pericles’
we
if
of
perhaps
to play an active and
stakes--in
Athenian
relationship
with
arouse
same
of
we
Athenian
families
the
to
know
do
strong
came
from
a family
(or
for
feeling
with
of
terms Some the in
to
suppose
i.e., power. and
Davies'
action.
comment
accustomed
'radical')
by
part--
politics. Themistocles
is
important
for
the
or
century
need
politics,
content
the
long
Areopagus
not
be
as
lines.
mid-fifth
struggling
innovating
for
desirability
that
oligarchy
could
the
role
view
behind
Pericles
the
the
the
meanings
down
(e.g.,
and
various
then that
Athenians
reject
which
‘class’
(e.g.,
families
issues
saying
we
or
issue
democracy
only
should
one
another
a matter
other
Pericles,
on
between but
divided
on
Thus,
ideas
of
ideological
radical
36
speak
have
conservative
was
that
to to
will
been
politics
often
the
ourselves
governments).
quoted
Athenian
disagreement,
legitimate
Athenian
To
up
there were disagreements
politicians
it
not
Athenians
There
take
) revolutionaries.>
we
naval
all
century,
for
Hippias
Athenian
to
were
bitter
except
like
Still, as
they
To be sure,
But
someone
sense
mid-fifth
institutions--sometimes Areopagos.
ready
empire.32
while
‘aristocrats’, democracy
leaders,
nature
of
89
the
part
known
he
came
public
to
action
Aeschylus'
Persians,
not
Athens
all
of
Pericles his
admired
strategy
Athenian ing of
the
long
in
may
not
have
Pericles
seems
fifth
century
young
man
"lofty
Ionian
on
to
have
Anaxagoras
thought"
of
philosophy.
of
of was
telling
Pericles
Thurii2?
Hippodamus century
49
may
of
for
in
it
Miletus
Certainly,
even
more.
His
day
spent
is
to
plan
both
philosophy
that whom
Thurii in
he
the
choice
(and
perhaps
of
the
century
an
was
not.
1.138)
thinking
much
time
"proud
as that
and
town
the
not
an
of as
mind"
of or
to "slander" on
(Plutarch,
in
idea
or
Protagoras
probable)
Piraeus
the
theoreticians
Protagoras
theoretician
expense
and
knowledge
tried
homicide
the
fifth
with
advis-
(Thucydides
his
some
in
of
'imperial'
spent
acquired
that
for
vision
the
theoretical
son reportedly
and
and
policy
genius
suppose,
only
fleet,
practical-minded
political
not
aristocrats
Pericles
when
believe
Piraeus
a large
more
a time
and
invincible
Athenians,
the
the
first
for
valls--at
in
and
involuntary
behind
the
both)
their
in discussion
possible
in
by
we may more
of
them
"natural"
from
the
been
bringing
all
reports
and,
a case
have
Similarly,
responsible
5.1)
a full
responsibility
walls
influenced
Perhaps
by
to
Clazomenae
(Pericles
further
foresight
a militarily were
at
go
interest
untrained
Plutarch
and
The
473/2
a Themistoclean
ships
earlier
strongly
been
to
intelligence,
of
to Themistocles'
Pericles
and
an
in
to Themistocles
admired
followed
features so
Pericles
36.5),
in
be documented. chorégos
possible
their
a vision
appealed
interested
of
his
to
had
is
Thucydides for
rely
as
favorable
Perícles
sophists
problem
(as
extent
service
It
also
philosophers.
natural
his
clearly
essential
also
with
was
perhaps
men
a certain
least
431
the
to
disposed.
but
ἀξ
Both
which
play
so
Salamis
In addition
and
3/5
greatness.
of
can
Pericles
countryside--and
Athens
and
Themistocles
at
walls38
which
of
was
Athenians
the
play
the
Pericles nomothetés Pericles
planner
mid-fifth armchair
a
90
profession
nor was
association ment,
at
least
ideal. 41 needed same
to
some
was
not
of
the
scenes
friends in
and
B.C.,
years
clearly
implies
credit.
No
that
to
451/0
it
is simply
which
By at property")
judicial
to
their
(or
in
offer
his
the
on
the
attribution
the
public
on Athenian
departed
space may
of
from
have
governthe
time,
no
doubt
thought
advice
and
proposals
Pericles
ideas
significant On
behind for
limelight;
and
as "uncrowned
42
the more
the
the
other than
suggestions
king"
the
the This
for
tendency
from
he
as
took
political
influences
likely
democrat
within
just
which
direct
activity
already
than
of
through
causes
The
Plutarch
more
city
development
Pericles’
of an ideological
preferred
of Athens
or
hand,
about
somewhat
to
activity.
that
of
he
7.7).
decision
account
perhaps
guise
way
affairs ^^
innovate
25.1)
Pericles
(Plutarch,
every
for
a short
and
political
was
Athens
Pericles'
made);
those
in
demogague
or
politician.
private
organization
(Ath. Pol.
enjoyed
his
views
that
Athens.
the age of 22 Pericles
43 and
his
who
story'"--but
family
least
of
in
to imagine
his
where
rapidly
planning,
claimed
follows
appears
'aristocratic'
willingness
is
a "likely
Pericles
of
Pericles
affected
recognizing
Pericles,
for
it is hard
have
unjustified.
certainty
up
not
associates
to make
responsible is
and
evaluating
and modern)
clearly
and
rational
a man
and
grown
Pericles
460-430
man,"
having
institutions
behind
manager
of
the
(ancient
own
extent
'radical',
difficulty
which
the
would
of
agency
these
men
Piraeus,
some
work
some
‘conservative’
such
to
The
of
the
with
it
are
during
to
was kurios
proving This
desire
characteristic
his
30's.
himself
of
Pericles
(Ath.
27.1)
and
the judicial probably
if
in
of
his
unorthodox
combined
activity
a "just
is
("master
efficient
efficiency
Pericles’
Ephialtes,
Pol.
a very
for
was the main force behind to
ton heautou
with
the
area
a of
incorruptible
reforms an
of 462/461,
example
of
just
9)
that
tendency
friend
and
story
noted
supporter
that
although
almost
certainly
most
to Aristotle
a
While
it
as
is
a
Pol.
what
that
it
was
(perhaps and
Plutarch
25.2;
of
natural
at
same
the
position Subject
The
Areopagus
had
or
to
the
10.8).
Might
to be
do, to
divide
and
leaving
the
the
Athenían
controversy
in
the
in
458,
before
its law.
The
idea
the
by
for
and
Ephialtes
was
the
taken
came
rich
by
but
it
of
all
away
of
was
the
their both
an
uncertainty seems
as
to
possible
Athenians
suits
corruption been
role
the
cases
true?
Pol. Perhaps
by more
cases
among
other
proposed--while
and
'hallowed'
continued least
against
(Ath.
played
hearing
duties
from
46
Aristotle
Ephialtes
at
according
aristocracy
Areopagus
have
Areopagus 462,
Ephialtes.
were
numerous
active
following
of
which,
time
Both
charges
years
Pol.
Pericles--
against
obscured
perhaps
what
(Ath.
chat
supporter
thie
it.
religious The
a
blow
462 48
and
apparently
10.7).
a
boul@ and dikastfria,
satisfaction
the
was
effort
through
at
is
responsibility
council
of
Eumenides
issue
increasingly
is
foundation
of
a
that
preceded
the
this
true
were
some
the
as depriving
before
not
given
and
came
mismanagement
Pericles
responsibilities
which
for
tíme
Aeschylus’
also
Areopagus
magistrates,
of
is
reforms
thing
as
it
number)
also
Areopagos
can be seen
the
would
or
the
that
Pericles
groups
in
support
democracy
of
fairly
in this
reforms,
judicial
overworked. the
of Ephialtes might
that
(Pericles
among the assembly,
members
managing
report the
Athenians,
of
not
increasing
members
the
jurisdiction
claims
Ephialtes'
certain
the reforms
probably
impossible
Themistocles--was
‘radical’
the
not
Plutarch
an ally
of
jurisdiction,
‘anomaly’ 47 and just
that
is
unlikely,
of
toward
telé and of
as
also
25),
it
and distributed
step
true
right
was
interpretation
(Ath.
two highest unique
Ephialtes
supporter
from the Areopagos them
But
chronologically
common
sees
of
Themistocles
25.3),
The
earlier. 45
to
be
a
up
to
the
production
assassinated
by
Aristodikos
92
of
Tanagra
(Ath.
understand
the
ation.49
details
Judicial
clearly
in
aroused
bitter
the
the
merits
of
and
cal'
democracy
thetes
were
assumes
are
p.
crats.
ment,
While of
the
city's
itself, and
were
and
fifth
interests
Pol.
new
24.3;
to
the
to
insure
a necessary
aroused or
and
most
simply
system
of
that
there enough
still
Athenians
Chapter
did
have
to
depended
have would
latter,
change on
If the been
need
upper
26.2)
but
P.J.
in
some
figure of
participate,
Rhodes
(The
and
55).
We
in
in
could as
with
than
traditional
6,000
does
a large Pericles
jurors
not
himself
govern-
scope
of
democracy
in
authority institutions. daily
in fact
number.).
the
Increasing
and
local
then
demo-
during
their
size
rather
Athenian
there
or development.
‘conservatives’
opposition
'radi-
two
democratic
growth
author-
the
Pol.
part
which
between
necessarily
taking
the the
not
one
most
considerable
Boule
p.
more
issue
of
been
from
661-2.
but
Athenians
consequence
the
III,
become
a subsidiary
dikasteria
would
from
seen
had
of
(Ath.
can
assassin-
judicial
is inconclusive
reformers
more
protest
Wasps
(See
still
(Although
excluded
as
between
members
eligible.
Athens
it may
a firm
Aristophanes
450's,
been
were
a restriction it.
with
and
and
issue
than
Areopagites
we
system
delegating
rather
that
Ephialtes'
process
the
to the achronship
radical
that
century,
government,
which
The
was
such
for
out
and
assume
classical
to view
judging
462,
officially
as
true
have
of
the
a drawn
and
to
reason
in
dikasteria,
officially
against
the
sense
of
Archons
for
Ephialtes seems
way
admitted
also
arguments
more
public
never
over-confident
apparently
reforms
were
this per se may
participation the
the
be
resulting
makes
and
evidence
it
it
aristocracy.
after
the
was
traditional
'modern'
thetes
Pericles
course
old,
and
demographic
view
eventually
But
apparently
2)
controversy--or
this
debate.
zeugitai
that
of
century,
responsibilities
In 457
It would
fourth
the new
tele.
25.4).
reform,
the
ity,
Boule,
Pol.
(Ach.
go back In
order
proposed
93
that
the jurors
The
principle
remain
of
Cimon
e.g.,
responsible
φιλαργύρους" It
is
for
that
obols
was
and
insufficient
the
were
provided
there
into
able
in
a few
rich
of
enough
into
and
(and
trap
"masses"
of
of
and
away
from
considered
καὶ
λάλους
greater
which
something
conclusion
thinking
that
if
willing
of may
5156).
amount
for
a fair and
καὶ
of
Pericles
day-wage
Athenians
this
a
average
courts
poor,
attributed
Plato
δειλοὺς
give
the
popular
would
"masses"
required)
I believe
qualified
the
the
dangerous--but
than
and
5156).
and money-loving-Gorgias
however,
less
a family. >!
be
fall
not,
new.
tradition
9.3),
και
Gorgias
nothing;
for is
a laborer simply
remuneration and
able
to
Athenian
society
as
not
such
unreason-
seem
an
belief. It
which
would
not
did
cf.
Later
to woo
" ἀργοὺς
considered
a system
>
Pericles
possible
significantly
in
democracy.
loquacious
made
27.3;
startlingly
and a desire
and
It
Pol.
was
Plutarch,
Plato
support
believed
divided
system
(Ath.
service
Athenians
essential.
to
do
the
which
probably
we
Athenian
27.3;
new
Pericles
If
the
and worthless
that
serve.
public
making
thought
two
service
for
Pol.
participation,
apparently
their
to demagoguery
Ath.
(lazy
clear
public
of
innovation
(see
for
payment
characteristic
Pericles'
it
be paid
may
seems
453/2
possible
both
of
traveled
be
the
among
to
credit
centralizing dikastai
the
demes
and
kata
Pericles
standardizing
d@mous,
giving
a group
preliminary
before the dikast@ria or final judgéments Pol.
26.5;
(one
from
demes
of
uniform
53.1). each his
The
tritttis?),
native
system
judges
of
trittus
settling
were
and
most
whether
the
with
result
disputes.
in
of
judicial
effect.
thirty
judgments
This
judges
in
cases
innovation is
who
the
creation>
apparently
which
might
in cases involving small claims likely
or
another
chosen
three
not
each
judge
would
have
been
Aristotle
does
was to
not
from
each
name
Athens an
(Ath.
tribe
responsible
give
come
for a more
author
for
the
94
this
institution
someone name
like
(in 453,2).
Archestratos
dropped
out
of
Aristotle its
former
important
just
what
Aristeides
But
Pericles its
the
had
its
We
if
a special
the
the
Piraeus
By 451/0, himself
an
adapting
with
needs.
In
his
tion had inherited (autarkeatate in
peace"
ability
of
)--or
the
who
be
Oration
their arché,
average
to
take
2.36.3).
Athenian
for
when
have
another
judicial
to judge
able
need
century
might
He
35.2)
whose
been
in
the
in
the Areopagos
would
the
above,
not
seem in
Themistocles
direction. in
as
the
specify
that
170)
of
as
that
Piraeus, p.
455d).
(27.1)
does
decisively
(see
Gorgias
jurisdiction
institutions
(Thucydides
spokesmen,
Pol.
power"
career.
interest
sectors
the
sea
dynamis--it
agoranomoi,
the
well
as
By
the
time
metronomoi
and
sitophulakes
some the
of
these
physical
instituted fifth
indication
of
was
about as
Periclean
in
the
Aristotle (Ath.
magistrates
plan
century
of
planning
was
laid
out.
this
time,
had
they
did
in
interest
in
systen.
from
politician--a
Funeral
Ath.
in shearing
Athenians
(cf.
that
could
the
then,
city's
private
mid-fifth
they
and
at
toward
‘popular’
the
yards
port
city
a special
assume
innovative
the
take
role
nautike
astınomoi,
the
the
early
turned
nautodikai,
concern
Ephialtes
supposed
promote
ship
own
by
fourth, 53 then
both
his
and
might
apparent
Finally,
to
religious
50-51).
already
of
already
and
with
“turning
probably
ships
Piraeus
Pol.
the
did
of
his
did
had
civic,
building
Pericles’
features
Pericles
and
of
with
(connected
have been one of Pericles’
tradition.
linked
powers
most
the
It could
the available radical
(and (of
if
physical
431/0)
one
evidence,Pericles likes
plan)
Pericles
to
that its
claimed
added to it and "rendered care
of
Pericles
to
rule
itself--in in
450
himself
all
probably
(cf.
had
shown
term--concerned
changing that
he
with
situation
and
his
and
genera-
it most self-sufficient things, had
both
more
Thucydides
in war
faith
2.41)
in
and the
95
than
did
Plato
in
the
to
demagoguery
city's
plexity as
an
(of
in
of
399, 54 and
institutions, or
the
Athenian
With
as this
‘democratic’
or as
sort
to
the
(Ath.
purpose) not
of
say.
Pol. this
It
simply
citizenship.
marriages
In
behind
fourth
but
450
marriage
since
Athenian
parent
law as being
about
as
(see
may
the
law
the
effect
in the
"about
failure
and
that
Finally,
of
not
legitimacy there
same
have the
the
or
(in
so
the absence simply
a gap
a definition was
probably the
i.e.,
it is argued
real
but
a man
or
in
fi
it
does
does
and
does
parents--for
not
declare
to that
below,
p.
with
58 Plutarch
could
preserved)
to
effect
133),
of private woman
(or
contract. only
one
refer
to the
37.2).
far
as
of
some
to
be
only
problem
emergence
Pericles
be laws
52 and
it
is
form of
gamos
filled. 39 a necessary
But
of
whether
it applied
if the scrutiny
or
to those
say
in the when
not
anything
law,
ve
condition
required kata ta patría,
whether that
put
com
proposals
citizen
it
a matter
the nothos
(Pericles
her
the
of the motive
what
There would
to
to
the
supposing)
just
and
everything
situation.
sources,
entirely
law vas
am
on
59.16
been
class with
law
(I
of
condition--two
in
[Demosthenes]
of
the
remains
to be "retroactive," the one hand
quoted
the nothoi"
a problem
provides
is
still
legitimacy per se,
considered
it
that
necessary
a necessary
(e.g.,
durability
Athenians
reduce
justice
century
a discussion
between xenoi and astoi.?7
century
However,
The
far
do
not
to
of
óc ἄν μὴ ἐξ ἀμφοῖν
beginning
are
does
with
τῆς πόλεως
a few words
But
and
him >
participation
courts.
mid-fifth
dealing
Before
establishes
so
illegal
in the in
law,
the
for
a career
26.4). 56
the
originality
451/0 proposed that μὴ μετέχειν γεγονώς
in
ideology
in
others)
of
large-scale
clearly
situation
city) well
promoted
most
radical
"imperial"
Pericles
he
has been
realize
of
that
citizenship
the
problem
disappears.
the
law
intended
born before
was
451/0.
of 445/4 was an enforcement
On of
the law,
as Plutarch
clearly
have
chised
are
been
simply
called
of
Cimon
and
last
(pace
that
died
afterwards.)
a scrutiny capacity supply
of
of
all
necessary to
his
father's
more,
there
of 445/4
is
his
no
see below
But phratry
an
(or
possibly
language
of
have
Athenian
two
the
by the grain xenoi
Athenian during
bred’
xenoi
suffered
parents.
would
parent,who the
last
six
have had
the
law.
of
that
deprived
be unfair the
individual 149),
the
probably also
need
was
scrutiny
in
entailing
beyond be
parentage?
the
able
to
In addition
witnesses
to
a citizen.
451/0.
the
Cimon
law
instance,
case
given
(Also,
perhaps
for
of
and ex post
p.
of
was
Athenian
she
not
the case.
50,
he would
of
is
is On
to
included
managed
to But
have become Finally,
law
entirely be
this
the
at
the
possible
a shareholder
both be
Further-
(For
the
events
citizens
to
one the
others
before
understanding
the
law
the
fits
best
the
who
does
not
city
of
him
this
rule;
rolls
the
fraudulently
(including
would as
occasioned
those with no
citizen
450/1)
into
scrutiny
and
like
entry
also
the
the
those with
and
and
of
an enforcement
admitted
Cimon
time
in
interpretation,
can be considered
years. 9?
who might
under
one
in 445/4
was
64.)
dene)?
No
would
grammateia
a wholesale
enforcement
the
law:
gift
involved
double
and note
Cimon
enforcement
prove
such
that
disenfran-
xenoi
Metic,
a man
of
the
Athenian
immediate
prove
that
the
Would
to
noted
Jacoby)
to prosecute
enrollment
the law would
can
system. to
then
decisive,nor
lexiarchike
enrollment
immediate
be
37.4), is
119,
enforcement
"willing" an
it
(frag.
the
father's
mention
other,
enrolled)
hardly
However, on
(Pericles
Ideologyof
witnesses
to witnesses mother's
can
someone
the Athenian
the
falsely
The
those
the
retroactive
Whitehead,
of finding
On
Philochoros
objection
necessity soon
by
thought
60
(foreigners
his citizenship, 61 The
to have
retroactive.
pareggegrammenoi
facto.
seems
not
'pure-
have justly
providing
an immedi-
97
ately
effective
law was
criterion
provoked
not
by
for
entry
foreign
into
marriages -
and
phraters What
The
general
and
so Athenians.
caused
Pericles
character
making
that
answer
I will
begin
with
that
the
law
most
clearly
was
of
what
provoked
stated
some
seems
by
to
by
but
by
again
suggests
foreigners
becoming
that
the
demesmen
wm
propose
answer
explicit,
τ
phratries
64
to
my
the
a
Hignett
this
should old
me
be
concern
who
new
the be
demos
to
accept
evident.
But
before
need
to
a complete
"red
herring, " the
"racial
that
the
be
it?
views
for
notes
or
already
and
to
law
purity."
considered.
65
"aliens"
The
in
the
notion
position
18
Piraeus
included
not merely of Greece,
Greeks from the Athenian Empire but non-Greek elements and even
and the rest Orientals.
To allow citizens to intermarry with such might entail a debasement of their racial purity that would be viewed with alarm by progressive statesmen who could take a long view.
66
(HAC
This
view
writes, itally
is
"He
endorsed
[Pericles]
superior
measures" Is
to
there
any
presume must
to
Hignett
be willing
Greeks
and
the
numerous
may
other
(Periclean
that the word genos, resemblance
by
even
Greeks
Athens,
have and
p.
foundation
other
that
it).
to
of
speak
Persians. 67
C.M.
that
thís
Bowra,
the
should
be
for
Athenians
example,
were
recognized
congen-
by
practícal
93). for.such
"race"
is using
346)
authors.
believed
often translated English
p.
in
views?
"race" its
of
birds,
There does not
it
is
important
(see LSJ s.v. genos)
biological
If we want races
First,
sense
to translate old
men
and
(the
genos women
seem to be a Greek
to
bears little
sense
as
note
in which
"race"
as well
equivalent
then we as
of
of
"race"
I
98
used
to refer
noticed and
physical
culture
instance, the
biological
differences
appear
to
have
considered
greatest
actually He was
to any
obstacle
may
have
concerned
distinction
the
sub-species
(cf. been
Xenophanes, the
more
foreigner's
had
with
other
"purity"
Dorian/Ionian
is
important
analogous.
Although
"races"
by modern writers,
the only real
Dorian
from
Ionian
and
and
Sparta
Dorian been
are
much
In
less
any
considered
minority
have
usually
of
suggests.)
case,
"orientals"
free
foreign
off
as)
Athenians.
that
would
be
Most
of
the
non-Athenians,
Athenians
is
have
if there was it
speaking
for
would
who
70
“racial
purity”
will
do.
another
matter,
and
not
will
be
groups
and
little
Thus,
to
in
in
explain
discussed
below.
stands.
the often
all
who
Ionian
or
(or
may than
might
the
conceivably
law courts,
but
themselves
"debase"
pass
the
a small would
pass
to
have
Athenians
barbarians
of
and
probability the
a
(Athens
There
language,
dislike
are
of
law would
Simple
(Plato
of
Corinth
xenoi
these
the
"race"
still
culture.68
overreaction by
for
for distinguishing
become
lest
an
differed
Athenian.
nature
assemblies
affected
average
The
in their
of
the
point
Certainly
to
his
the
Attica.
a concern
people
only were
attempted
something
probably
terms)
of
xenoi
(the
language
Plato,
not
atypical.
Miletus
but
(Laws 7414).
two
extent
very
say,
modern
population
not
proposed?
from
such
And
Pericles
a concern
on
and
representatives
probably
barbarians
to non-Greek-speaking
unlikely
culture
are
but
these
a certain
between,
or
"race"
to
differentia.
criterion
archetypal
both
dichotomy
seems
even
fact
the
difference
the
stock,
as
cultural
it
citizen
in
a non-Greek
objected
dialect
taken
cultures, 69 but
Ionian/Dorian
be
was
group
purity.")
termed
an
Diels-Kranz),
here,
“racial
the Greeks
16,
of Magnesia
in mind
not
Certainly
(or culture)
a citizen
Greeks
but
frag.
education
to his becoming
only
of mankind.
the
have
law
been
which Greek-
appearance law
by means
foreigners
the
or of
becoming
99
The argument practice
of
a practice rational
concern
of
already
Athenian assumed
perhaps
tice would
toward
was
necessarily
The
idea
that
but
perhaps
foreign
can
we
subjects
is
marriage
was
from
how
the
a widespread
more
to
it
century? do
we
is
again
What
really
marriages
know
central
(Lakedaimonios, xenoi an
that
of? to
The
the
Pericles
Arcadian) mother
of
Eleios)
29.2).
(ibid.).
In
his
Cimon,
know
the
the
own
gnésioi
that
in Athens
large--or
the
Pericles'
reviled
the
sons
however,
Plutarch
mid-fifth generation
his
these
the
at in
but
of
Megacles
not
that
policy."
and
marriage
explains
& prac-
practices
sort"
in name
extra(again
such
Neocles
of
main
is widespread?
the
"better
Athenians
his
Few
father's-of
othneioi
were
the
reveals
Cimon
and sons
of
that,
“eee”
according (16.1). be
to
Stesimbrotos,
Since
understood
both
it
of
been
probably
geographically
biographies
evidence
has
Lakedaimonios
a
probably
foreign
wife
but
stem for
correctly
sensu
from Cimon.
and
the
Eleios
were
ek
noted
that
this
obscoeno, n 74 and same Davies
source, accepts
we
gunaikos
since are
a good
phrase the
left
kleitorias not
to
statements
of
with
Athenian
"is
no
\
practices.
to "rational
about
reportedly
as not
Plutarch
we
and
Pericles
that
un-
the
aristocracy
an obstruction of
that
assumes
second,
widespread
Cimon--now
argument.
and
Athenian
two
admission
it
of Miltiades,
foreigners
case
of
states--
obstruct
on
implies
then,
among
particularly
between
Thettalos
(Plutarch,
was
it
to
rests
phratry
and
other
liable
First,
little
habit
and
the
"aristocratic in
rivals"!
a habit
examples
the
were
addition
group)
generally
considering
her
δὲ
families
which
deme
to Pericles
it was necessarily point,
not
defined
that
the
(In
characteristic
seemed
assume
and
mistaken.)
clearly
have
unjustified
And
this
leading
loyalties
arrtage-jond
and
with
assumptions.
a unique
a unified
and
Athens’
vith
was
law was directed
alliances
sympathies
I think
marriage be
marriage
unlikely)
law
noted,
to
Many. 73
both
the
the citizenship
created
policy (and
As
contracting which
proven
that
sure
wife,
100
Isodike,
as
the
ascribed
to
Pericles
@velouc)
disgraceful
would
not
have
an
might
a new
to
of
the
well
it
would
himself also
had
not
ship
did
prevented
not
was
prevent
others
from
Aristotle's "che
large
substance.
number For
not
at
most
one
of
the
the
only
Pericles’
of
least
it
way
to
can
was be
Pericles
wife'—he
they
should
Rather
lands
be
were
essential
proxenoi
were
officially
Athenians,
Sparta
the
of
(If
helped
much--
but
they
2.13.1).
friendships.
Aspasia;
did
Pericles
Miletus
(Thucydides
foreign
Cimon
Athens
either.) of
proxenos
individual
also.
Aspasia
with
than
private
policy
was
form
if
with
have
Athenian
of
Or,
it
he
those
useful not
relationship
would
The it
citizen-
have
similar?
(followed
citizens"
might
thought have)
‘wedded
friendship
been
citizenship
false.
foreign often
the
notorious kings
76
καὶ
or not.
individual
have
something
suggestion
were
of
hindered
the
doing
in
( ζένους
vell
that
demonstrably
through
could
have
friends;
Archidamos,
not
relationship
necessarily
marriage
and
position
the
citizenship.
power, 77 and while
friendships
Arcadia
Finally, law
or
his
foreign
included
city
he may
insinuation
friends
Ambassadors
to
from
but
relations.
come
have
more
policy,
(as
mother
Tendenz
If Pericles
born of his
the
"the
of Pericles’
cryptic.
not
a foreign
perhaps
foreign
a whole
Informal
a wife
is
as
Athenians.
and
that
resemblance
children
justify
had
démos
have
to
they
foreign
is somewhat
to Athenian
law
states
intention
illegitimate--not
assumption
a
then
a curious
the
name-giving
needed
foreign
connections
on
of being
to
^? but
bears
This
names
a lav
obstacle
Athenian
friends
305).
sons
second
sons,
and presumably
xenoi--whether
The
Cimon's
Stesimbrotos
such
proposed
considered
to
p.
give
Cimon's
forming
by
(APF,
to
have
accused
οὗ
to the effect,
law of 451/0"
would
mother
by
some
responsible said
with
modern for
some
the
commentators) 78 that
law
certainty
of
451/0
that
has
there
more were
a
101
large
number
however,
of
encounter First,
many?
For
been
the
the
Athenians
if
some
common
purposes
5,040
families
Plato
(Politics
of
century
opinion.
fear
lest
the
constitution 35,000 must
have
machinery the
been of
480
large
"too
many"
of
these
are
pléthos
may (cf.
His
have
too
ought
is
arguments
would
make
the
to
involved,
"the
Cleisthenes' not
Athens
her
empire
than
did
the
quite in
"the
and
chief
his
administration
of
was
make
in
can
alone
a
the
of 500
Surely
the
imagine
that
substantially
Athens
by
fifth
estimate
We
the
fourth
workable."80
required
for
envisaged
population
delicate.
have
thought
motive
eventually
citizen
450
he
reflecting
supported
so
many
state
too
would
too
but
of
as
constitution
was
and
saying,
total
they
anti-democratic
taken
also
were
sort
an
increasing
however,
claim,
of
were
better’
26-28)
the
be
lines,
continue
Gomme,
for
what
the
there
1326a,
that
not
for
more
thought
many
view
450,
‘the
Politics
government
citizens
were
or
the
The
in
more
480
(cf.
24.3).
Or
been
to
of
480.
in
expect,
Aristotelian
with
Athenian
participating
Pol.
along
in
with
citizens
would
were
probably
unworkable."79
administration
Ath.
Laws
population
citizens
one
14-19).
and
argued
many’
government’
1265a
comparison
Aristotle
Plato's
phílosopher
in
‘too
purposes,
‘good
century
Gomme
were
opinion.
of
450
difficulties.
there
military
in
there who
"too
wanted
probably
appropriate
ἔθη politÓn
to
valid remedy?
own
Athenians land
citizen
population?
the
law
not
applied
It
living
outside
considerations, This
theory--viz.,
the
was
many"
can
bringsme
how would at
least
retroactively
to
be
of but to
in the
the
city
city
and
would the
the
main
those
that (such
the
Piraeus,
Piraeus?
citizenship
affected
if, as
the
difficulty
the law have said
or
as
Cimon)
Both
law
of
the
the size
have dia
to
of
seems
most
likely,
who
were
already
102
enrolled effect
in
on
citizen for
the
and
the
also
the
grew
is
and
effect
on
of
is
chain
the
size
of
probably
When
it
was
most
and
phratries,
is
likely
eliminating
it
the
population
would
not
assume
that
cleruchies),
the
regard.
would
Nor
Foreigners Is
might the
it
been
of
population--unless
the
Athenian
which
led
the
large be
still
has
the
of
any
of course
law
the démos
immediately
live
recourse
any there
now
to
the
we
not
to
or
of
decided
have
an
ail.
of
by
is
second
is
480
effect
(or
in
the
continue motive)
non-
Now
on
the to
Colonies
efficient
(or
in
that
astu
or
Piraeus.
to
move
there.
which
450
of
its rule).
reasonable
true. 84
demes
excluding
law
of
and
the
is
more
(This
premise
and
been
de-
fathers
the
population.
had
if
of
it
of
Athen-
81
into
the
time
have
effect
still
explanation
had
growth
overcrowding
Athenians
the
to
type
that
between
to amend
the
at
foreigners have
the
law will
first not
this
between
a lobby
the
figures
population
suppose
population
would
large’
if
in
suppose
to
and
marry
that
since
up
the
the
further
drop
we
If
that
concluded,
negative
would
further and
was
further
Still,
on what
century
negative
military
population
451
admission
aim to reduce a ‘too
prevent
the
fifth
the
significant
solution,
or
suggest
of
the
"naturally." been
440's
stand--whether
the
that
immediate
in
However,
growth
to
evident
to
immediate
no
depends
choose
Gomme
cannot
part
the
would
law.) 82
that
traditional
only
men
of
an
Athenians.
then,
have
it
century
woman,
grow
it did not
fifth
before
(unless only
increase
common
possibility
would
the
had
that
effect
least
in
population
the
at
or
conclusion
will
increase
of
of
law's
have
added
half
realized
due
events
the
of
be
first
behind
false, 83 the
can
not
the
wives
was
of
habits
reasoning
women
the
cause)
in
it would
It
by
view
(and
legal
foreign
unmarried
natural
our
a foreign
prived
the
this
"naturally"
ian no
suggested
matrimonial
marriage
then
population.
nature
foreign man
registers,
citizen
Beyond
been
only
deme
numbers
431.
have
the
some
have
the
103
thought
obvious
of the démos
from
the
outset,
in its new-found
draw a distinction
between
Pericles
simply
people
is in
either
order
motives
of
notions
are
to
well
in
the motives
his
as
own
his own
accord
"Athens
privilege?
acting
enhance
the demos for
i.e.,
of
position
taking
"refined"
character
to
the
selfishness
like
to
of Pericles8°
the
will
advantage
86 purposes. of
the
view often
those
catering
or
or
this
the demos and
a demagogue
the
Athenians”
Proponents of
more
with
for
of
of
the
Although
Plutarchian
the baser
such
Pericles,
the
m
Olympian was
his
fit
so
was
just
intellectual task
well
the
historical
the average The
and
18
a serious
of
this
member
also
military
campaigns)
Athenian
and
I have the
suggested
of
of
urban
entirely
so
far
during
where
and
most
the in
in of
the
the
multitude
possible
for
whom
it
they may not
that
Pericles
the Athenian
increasing
citizenship context
jury
increase demes
in and
as
such
the
460's
and
the
xenoi
and
of
off
intercourse
demos
the
the
as
(legally,
law
opening may
of
comments
have
citizens.
(in
court,
451/0
led This,
festivals,
to be saure of who was an
problems, to
value
citizenship
themselves
it difficult
the
of
the
Athenian
social
in regard
of
between
pass
serious
foreigners
continued demes,
also
most
In
to
have made
created
that
is
Athenian
value
contact
but
Salamis.
patroxenoi) the
of
be viewed
increased
would
times
distribution,
enrollment
battle
in
at
of
in what was best
a connection
should
increased
It
interested
a few xenoito attempt with
superstitions
Pericles.
emotionally)
The
combined
grain
the
of that démos.
of
one | and
chapter.
than
and
possibility
financially
“from
" 87 or the demagogic Aristotelian Pericles,
guide
as parochial
as was
more
to
free
especially duty the
or
enrollment 450's would
other
citizen
phratries (of
when
there
public
the
xenoi,
it may
have
have
lived,
years
was
due
after
metroxenoi, occurred and
a
offices.
population in
was
have
to
the
or primarily been
104
least
conspicuous
and where
the
is
that
likely
where
citizen the
rosters
urban
tinctly
cosmopolitan
imagine
the
to
a suspiciously
for
find
either
"Athens
for
number
(HAC, of
citizen are
And
for
the rulers
its
politai
cities
or xenoi. for
crucial
to
may
citizenship
law
response
an
ment
of
a
shoring
mid-fifth
Athenian,
or
While
“racial
been
a slogan
prevented
a way
of
in
the
had
which
after
further
a
the
We
walk
in
line
of
place,
number it
in
of
of is
reduced
interests
might
long
as
increase
it
a dis-
out
large
have
rapid
on
ahead
certainly
not
found,
case,
a
be dismissed,
law would
protecting
any
taken
asteios
rallied
be
flavor.
agora
is
cannot
the
In
foreign)
purity”
explanation
have
also
century
perhaps
would
up 99
foreign-sounding
that
seem there was for
just
an of
be
astoi
had
allies. remained
who
was
possible
to
451/0
B.C.
can
problem
Athenian
state
in 451/0
by
the the
those
considered
an
for a standard Athenian.
to be identifiable, was
who
from
city
in its
territory
(1.6.
considered
which best
an
the
does
seem'of
be
threads
understood
and
at
the
same
and
of
Athenian
the
of
the
could be 12 10-11)
allied
fined
five
it was
Athenian.
together not
from
as
a territorial
inhabitants
an allied
quali-
Athenians,
distinct
a polis not
when
to weave
interpretation
be
distinct
level,
be
a need
Athens
of an Athenian
immediate
unified
could
(or arche),
'foreign' or
who
On a practical
now
into
to
is
it would
the murder know
arguments
the
most
grounds
would
which
still
state;
It
It
the
agroikos who arrived
have
on the
citizenship,
but
talents
by
“self-interest”
of an empire
‘related’
need
employment
citizens.
In general fication
would
duty. 89
could
Athenians.
already
non-agricultural
foreign-looking
346),
population
the
a rural
the
jury
the
p.
to
of
Athenians"
Athenians.
Hignett
or
of
population
(and
irritation
grain
most
time
as as
of
whole
the
preceding
cloth’.
a remedy one
step
citizenship,
the
The
proposed in
the
public,
in developlegal
105
status
of
“being
successful;
the
Peloponnesian the
code
of
polit6n
Athenian."
problem
war the
The
an
in
it
the
increase
probably and
a larger
young of
men
these
were
dramatic
to
for,
but
Athens
in
perhaps
the
the
expansion, owners
of
56,
century
68) can
a greater
the only
be
proportion
short-lived
land
the
also
clue,
the
guessed
citizen The
for
a period
to
became
to
have
been
during
a permanent
the
part
of
thetic but
might
the
fed on
(or it
the
citizen
body
empire
(c.
457-446)
may
in
have
the the
than
served
non-Athenians
in
daring
young
men
who
been the
that
either
a double
and
force
are
likely
of
445/4
and
room landless
preceding
the
sudden
fighting seems
population
in
the
Boeotia
have
been
of
rather
episode
in
have
Peloponnesian
been
"frontier"--or
possible
of
some
It
(The
interest
450
of
housed.
non-hoplite)
of
on
abundant
emphasized
seems
2.8
of
may
some
the bulk of
would
attribute
an
ton
in the 470's,
have
had no more
As
that
would
food.
perhaps
450's
opening
and
Athenians
were
pl@thos
there would
the
in
the
phratries
pl@thos
Athenian
plots.
and
born
we
to)
suggested
Further,
numbers
be
of
equal there
demes
at
short
but
not
that
advantages
was
number
at,
except
Thucydides
war
time Attica
supportive of
the
in,
needed
century
seems
generation
confidence--cf.
increasing
size
to
(Perhaps
age. 9]
years. 92
law
law
in 480 and
of
important
marginally
than
III
of
By this an
(but
Chapter
(post-crisis)
(adult)
mid-fifth
and
by
proportion
in
a force
revealing.)
the
the
90
in
inexperienced
these
most
ignored,
admission
youthful
ways
and,
the battle of Salamis.
come
jump
such
the
the
usual
and
in just
clear,
(pp.
than
years
Thus
to
a 'boom'
recently
eager
war.)
also
been
was
in the 450's
due
these
solved
revealed
I argued
following
have
is
of
was
democracy.
problem
450's.
was
in the years
perhaps
Athenian
15,000 more Athenians the
apparently
when
immediate
In both
in
the
that is
Egypt
is
for internal or
the
chapter fifth
thetes
comprised
480
430.
or
purpose:
not
The only
106
could also
the
'bread-basket'
supplement The
possibly I have
or
the
could
Urban
planning
might
have the
in
in
resembled
immediate
problem
might
uncontrolled.
means
of
controlling
up of individual any
who
wished
altered. who
an
Thus
in
suggests
both, an
the
that
Gomme
attempt
would two
city some
and
of
restore
San
of
what
was
right
was
could
citizen
body--and
by
to
some in
order
enforceable
the
was
disorder. the
citizen
body--
qualification,
state--
had no
democracy
made
the gates
and
of
teru
substantially
that the
the
it
of
origin
allow
just
relatively
necessary
the
"the
clarify
kept
language
ignoring
were
city
be
standard,
normal;
which
to open
that
that
funds
town
standard
Athenians
While
what
lav.
and
the
participatory
demanded of
a
451
ín
a
colonization.
lawlessness in
of
allied
to
as & whole--the
number
as
of
remedy,
increase
a
symptoms
citizenship
Pericles
meaning
to insist
regarded
exploitation
possible
were
the
by
was
the
the
Pericles’
bring
no
became
phratries
also
hoplites
class--are
further
an Athenian.
and
Boeotian
by
concern
identity the
in
Francisco
ít was not
parents
being
demes
least
Athens
that
but
traditional
the demos
size.
self
citizen
is probably to
own
and be
the
at
Athenians--unless
interest
Athenian
constant.
be
of
there
admission,
its
solved
admissions--and Since
poorer
addressed
were)
was
Attica
increase
the
century
shareholders; to
Self
sharing
over
in
could
which
further
control
a rapid
Greece
míd-19th
that
no central
(and
Piraeus
possibility occur
be
feed
force.
problem
maínland
the
by
increase
immediate
difficulties
help
hoplite
caused
disproportionate
aggrandizement
But
Athenian
difficulties
termed
These
the
of Boeotia
condition
Pericles of
one
for
proposal
parent
or
law of 451 was was
in accord
with
average
. —
sentiment."
93 Although
usually
a matter
married
other
of
the origin
inquiry
Athenians.
before
And
since
of a potential 451,
it
it was
seems
citizen's likely
approved
by
mother was _
that the
Athenians
Athenian
not usually
assembly,
the
107
law
could
or
very
average
‘urban’ know who
was
sentiment
who.
been
is
marry
a daughter
if
he
fought
of
individuals
or
his
a deme or
as
in
sentiment."
persuasion.
permanent
to
a daughter
admit
In
have
residence or
in
battle.
his
(M-L
but
Of
85.15-16)
henceforth
popular
increasingly
a man did not necessarily
may
him
But
the
been
son
or
course, or
an it
be
may
could
such
made
to
know
have
been
Athenian be
exceptions
groups
would
difficult
in Athens
in marriage--especially,
Athenians
possible,
of
parents--it
Thrasyboulos
still
average
the Piraeus--where
phratry
the
with
admits
neighbors’
or
give
such
were
it
craftsman
alongside
94.12)
accord
movable,
Α foreign
persuade
"in
of the astu and
neighbors
to
(M-L
have
atmosphere
his
able
well
on
as
to
added,
in behalf the
the
man
Samians
vote
of
the
démos. Once and
there
logical--that
that
the
law
Pericles
on
might
appeal
from
the
(or
duty) be
time)
of
were
suppose
deme's
is
no
direct
also
city
While
451/0
it
either
decision
to
may
to or
criterion
for
citizenship,
procedures
and
regulations
is
included
that
ho boulomenos (this
‘state’
not any
at
the
not
judicial
to
know
measures
right
dikasteria)
been
called
not
the
(the
have
or
after
démos
was
whether
seeing
proposed
or
who
for
likely--
his
time
someone
soon
is
in
that
prosecute may
possible
it
and
the
fraudulently
the graphe
of
right claiming
xenias
at
this
established. was
that
it
in
suppose
a citizen
As
stead,
day
or
were
enforced.
that
we
a city
there
was
decree,
to
was
both
argued
the
démos
logical ancient
as
legislation
is
often which
in
and,
Chapter
exercised by
the
testimony the
II,
case
suggest
there
these
this
in
ancient
changes
of
no
evidence
responsibilities
mid-440's,
for
is
confirmed
important history, a more
by
to
before some
constitutional we
general
have
suggest
two
nature.
or
451,
reason
but
evidence.
after
^
fragments
These
are
451
There
development. odd
to
the
is
Inof frag-
108
mentary
decrees 35 contained
ἐᾶν δὲ τις
διώκειν
in
Krateros
ἐξ ἀμφοῖν
ξένοιν
εἶναι
εἰσί.
frag.
4
(Jacoby):
γεγονὼς
φρατρέζη,
τῷ βουλομένῳ Ἀϑηναίων,
λαγχάνειν
δὲ τῇ Evn
καὶ
οἷς δίκαι
νέα πρὸς
τοὺς
ναυτοδίκας.
and if someone born from two foreigners acts as ἃ phratry member, it is possible for whoever is willing of the
Athenians
(who have
case will be nautodikai.
and
in
Philochoros \
\
τους
δε
ὀργεῶνες
the right)
alloted
frag.
on
35a
φράτορας
καὶ
the
to presecute;
last
of
and
the
the
month
to
the
(Jacoby):
ἐπάναγκες
τοὺς
day
δέχεσϑαι
ὁμογάλακτας,
καὶ
τοὺς
and
the
οὐς γεννήτας
καλοῦμεν.
The
phraters
must
homogalaktai, (It
should
chosen
be
by
the
accept
emphasized Byzantine
that
(orgeOnes,
ment
law
Athenian
making
complete
fragments books
from
roughly
the
fragment
c.
which late 462
Andrewes
The they 450's to
the
argued
creation
of
thiasoi
he
to
the
dated
or
legal
a date.
the
are
orgeones
sense
of
basic are
odd for
nautodikai)
justice.
We
for
For
the
the
latest,
end
of
the
Peloponnesian
the
which The
two
fragments
nothing
date
the
depends
in
importance
will
some lies
be
Krateros
430's,
which
97
were
illustrating
expect
the
usage
in the develop-
difficulty in
giving
limits
fragment and
the
for
the
these
of
thís
in
the will
be
Philochoros
war.) 9 (along
remains)
in
problem
limits
at
that
their
first
chronological
information,
value
therefore
The
extracted. ^?
of
their
not
can
them.)
bits
to,
from
430's.
these
lexicographers
of certain words of
both
whom we call gennetai.
with
belonged
large
part
on
a provision to
the
same
for law,
interpreting
the
the which
109
citizenship
law
as
affecting
...Complications
only
were
those
likely
born
to
after
arise
in
metroxenoi born before the passage of yet enrolled in the demes by 451/450, be specially came to deal 451/450.
the
the and
acute in the middle 430's with candidates allegedly
451:
case
of
law but not these would
when born
the demes just before
("Philochorus on Phratries," JHS 81 (1961), p. 13.)
But
this
situation
and
demes
to
Further, the
would
begin
of
grounds
451
that
rejection
was
not
the
conclusions
law,
also
with
the
is
phratries
may
even
While Krateros
frag.
fragment
and
the most
early
not
natural
a main have
clause
been so
the
optimistic
also the
but
interpretation
‘rider’ other
as
the
of rhe of
of
I think
law. 4 is
As that
un-
while
from
or
of
can to
it
the
to
do
these
whose
main
citizenship. attributing be
argued
decrees
suggested this
also
having
a law
belong
the
come
both
of
on
finally,
about
it
part
decrees
or
ATL
parents.
are
is
fragments
to
phratries
9-12)
451 ??
one
on
the
Athenian
pp.
And
phratries
fragment
frag.
III
more)
that
tacked
authors
citizenship
Krateros
or
than
law,
Philochoros
(or
two
in
both
to
fragments
accepted.
two
450-430,
citizenship
the
wake
a
these
by ATL
to have
were
order
of
business
are
14)
there
years
something
Pericles’
possibly in
in
that
II
an
born
fragment
Chapter
p.
was
that
phratries'
cit.
possible
I am not
440's,
art.
passed
4 to
of
law
those
possibility
citizenship
same
concern
the
Krateros
(Andrewes,
was
of
the
only
the
the
if
admitting
for
is "economical"
fragments
arisen
(proposed
necessary--if
it
have
immediately
Andrewes'
law
not
that passed
earlier,
fragmentary
law
that in the
110
established acting
as
the
a citizen
magistrates
of
and
presided
understood
in
Archidamian
two
καὶ
in Aristophanes"
ἐϑέλω
βάψας
alien
in
Andrewes' such
jurisdiction
that
a law
well
as
But
the
at
about
(or
thís
time
citizenship. as
required
two
countered. graph? Cases
any
πρὸς
It
xenias, of
is
old
comedy
from
to
the
the
xenos
for
nautodika1 10°
That
these
fraudulently roughly
there
passed
the
appeared
I
lead
three
as
citizens
beginning
the
of
is
the
lines:
shameless
to
the
still
the
most
too,the
possible
where
the
beasts.
illegal
might
"from
not
just
one.
103 Thís
have
come
that
of
only
idea
the
deme
p.
13).
as
membership
essential
law
giving
the
of
phratry
objection
before
on
[parents]"
4 deals
accused
a law
Phratries",
citizenship
fragment was
and
foreign
the
from
depends
perhaps
with
that
defendant could
both
and
be
an
membership
suggest
characteristic
.͵92
you]
cannot
nautodikai
to
.
prove
("Philochoros
alone
possible
Athenians
to
"refer
relationship
the
[to
cases
phrase
parents,
entirely
nautodikai,
phratry"
phratry
ἐξαίφνης.
fragment
would
the
ξένον
Krateros
citizenship
than)
'half-bred'
who
the
'pure-bred'
ναυτοδικῶν
sailing
in
that
aliens
ναυτοδέκας
that
citizen
of
nautodikai
belief
Then,
excluding
the
citizenship
was
to
ἃ
ἀναιδῆ. 101
instant.
reference
cases
Cheirones
παρὰ
an
rather
to prosecute
Daitaleis:
I am willing, an
of
κνώδαλ
before
such
cases
Kratinos’
μὲν
tola
first
assigned
over
In
πρῶτον
And
ho boulomenos
fragments
war.
ánáyo
and
right
has
sign
of
been
taken
of
451/0
also
can
be
with
one
type
being
wholly
another
set
which
of
foreign.!0^
of magistrates.
lil
Busolt-Swoboda
suggested
the thesmothetai who xenias
the
polemarch
in Aristotle's
dÖroxenias--or
retaining
came before
the dikastéria
(Ath.
to
explain
boulomenos
could
nautodiksi
prosecute
who
entered
the
thesmothetai. 10° The
boards
of
a phratry
little
xenoi
The
earliest
the
regulations
belongs were
dikai
with
the
created
were
existence
in
reference set
just
does
cases
it
time
not
been
is
1.6.
I2
involving
446
been
any
voted in
and
one
of
the
put
in
the and
that
perhaps
that
polemarch
or
that
cases
their X
their to
containing seem
to
be
institution
suppose a
also And
of
jurisdiction.
37),
would
nautodikai
year).
parentage
idea
they
probably
ho
obscure
evidence,
other
by Harpo-
more
under
that
graphai
the
(SEG
where
rather
that
quoted
the
was
of bribery)
stating
before
reasonable
first
case,
belong
allies
(7),
more
seeing
half-foreign)
41.4
suggested
are
4 was
itself
in
it
by means
one
supports
have
they
fragment
come
nautodikai,
seems
In
by (or
would
in
has
1074,
would
Athens,
Hestiaia
increasing.
Krateros
fragment
judicial
the
preceded
century
While
about
been
the
for
the clause
half-Athenian
about
nautodikai for
Thus
cases
as citizens
century,
probably
when
known
to
106
such
fifth
down
sixth
that
is
acting
officials. in
Krateros
that
magistrates
'pure-bred'
imperial
and
of
12).perhaps
citizenship
59.3).
have
someone
note
responsible
fraudulent
Pol.
may
1095,
time were
(and
cration
(page
time
that when
they nautikai
were
already
in
451/0—(if
they
foreigners.
were
in the
concerned
Thus
it
would
have been natural to turn over to these magistrates the newly established graphé xeníasin cases
of allies
A few words and
343.89,
the
or
foreigners
are probably
Parthenon
[odikai]
contributed
Athenian
Maritime
"at
Courts,
necessary
accounts least p.
who
for
9,148 172)
to
attempted
to act as Athenians.! 08
on thexoev
the
years
and
at
most
the
building
pó(xau
444/3
and
32,148 of
the
of 1.6. I?
443/2.
drachmai" Parthenon;
In
342.38
444/3
(Cohen, the
xen
Ancient sum
for
112
443/2
does
not
epigraphic
or
Cavaignac of
funds
came
xenia
Pericles
431;
see
may
104
in
(and
445/4
magistrates
and
the also
have the
of
442 on
and
were
replaced
production
coincidence for
who
the
of
of
these
best
to
a certain
class
of
graphe
soon
after
book
IV could
cases
property
evidence
That
striking),
the
It
4 belongs
such
seems for
the
In
there
in the 440's
have
begun
to
suspend as
to
xenodikai
than
451/450
by
437.
between
reason
numerous
that
their
Plutarch had
charge
111
(The
436
and
elaborate--especially
"xen"...in
two
fifth
to the Parthenon of
fraudulent
need
not
(E.g.,
Cohen, on
logic for
citizens
have they
been may
aliens
the
of
slaves--
Athenian
xenodikai. responsible having
supposing
the
have
as
Ancient
magistrates the
the
(cf.
convicted cf.
the
this
slavery
judgment
another
rather
before
of
of
and
tríal.
aliens;
addition is
they
selling
nautodikai
xenias. 451,
conviction
view
445/4,
somewhat
is
either
trying
Cheriones
contributed
the
18
is
in
for
that
theories
of
solid
fragment
this
again
In
nautodikai
Kratinos'
charge
more
Krateros
172).
the
in
into
claimed
by
with
years
bringing
the
and
of both
do
gift
of
109
century.
grain
of
heard
responsible
the xen...who
ín
took
of
All
to
not
defendants
but
something
magistrates
established
Psammetichos'
Although
responsible
then
were
further
There
graphe
magistrates
went
Courts,
for
fourth
the
then
Maritime is
until
the sole basis
had
p.
are
reference).
that
selling
officials
unsuccessful
the
inscriptions.
expenses
been
in
depends
when we remember century
sale
Korte
xenias
note
these
attended
the
35.119
date
sources
that
which
from
of graphai
These
literary
proposed
suits
latter
survive.
this that
the 430's: 18 no positive
argument for assigning F4 to that year, but it cannot be so very much later; the fact that book IX included a document from Sept. 411 prevents us from alloving a long span to book IV. (Andrewes, "Philochoros on Phratries," note 44, p. 13) 112
113
It
seems
not
an
unreasonable
hypothesis
that
Krateros
fragment
4 is
part
of
a
law establishing the graph@ xenias--or a law concerned with one class of this graphe, other
that
it is one judicial
important
correlate,
correlate
that
of Pericles’
rejected
candidates
teria, may also have been instituted about apparently
note
possible
64),
for
those
and by 422 and
enrollment
of new citizens
is a well
at
line
58).
It
is
more
difficult
‘citizenship’
interpretation that
phratry
sub-groups, grant
of
normal
members the
this
to
still
apply
ed
anyone
who
thought
thought
that
procedures
of
451/0
gene
some
their
as
are
after
groups--and
he was
a
not
Andrewes (at
accepted,
451/0.
81
(1961)
membership The
law to
that
most
1-2),
two is
own.
insisted
Further, on
it
Athenian
natural
smaller
apparently
undergo
the
fourth
or
it
would
it would
also
make
be simply
gennetes
phratry
could
member
had adequate
seems
just
parentage
on
a
the century
sense
still
possible both
that
sides
be
unlawfully.
admission
and
that
law
prosecutBut
for
Presumably enrollment
already
and
to
a procedural
The basic criterion of Pericles'
a supposed
orgeones
the
a chronological
the original phratry enrollment was automatic. the gene and
(see
gennétai./ 13
then
Then
dikas-
445/4
The
required
the
in
into
(JHS
shows
least)
the
overseeing
a guess.
their
are
The
of the dikasteria
35a
gennetai).
they
citizen
Wasps,
noted
into (=
and for
best
Andrewes
accept
groups;
at
to
distribution
fragment
is
law.
Appeal was already
responsibility
(and orge6nes).
those
gennftai and orgeßnes
to
arguments
as passed
to
is,
procedure,
to the gennétai
known
homogalaktes two
grain
appeal
of Aristophanes’
follows
a privilege
preceding
would
it was
and
these
such
35a
the
Philochoros
what
required
enrollment
regulation
concession
by
are
orgeones
supports the
and
put
Philochoros
privilege
If
view
of
phratry
evidence
context,
to
might
this time.
at
the production
(parodied
or
rejected
citizenship
before the
law
114
quoted
by
Plataíeon
a share
Philochoros
is
recorded
[Demosthenes]
in all
in which
archonship(s) their
in
and
children
Chapter
genos
189-191
in
any
will
106,
here
in
they the
) the
be
was
the
priests
and If
requiring
ward?)
eligible
are
have
born
than
were
made by
clear
the
of
so,
Athenian
recognition
59.104
for
these
cult)
once
the
office
they
the
(astes) sense
body
must
gene
as
a whole in
made
the
citizenship,
was
to have
and
that
the
state.
a concession
own
on
2,
pp.
more
this The
amphoterous.
might
its
the
aking
been
standard
they
for
explains
115
have
kat’
have
But
Appendix
may
fulfilled
had
author
(see
to
genous.
wife.”
be Athenians
of the genos this
are
peri
except
is ek
also--if,
Athenian
Athenians
again
psephisma
Plataeans
which
citizen
citizen
Athenian
The
kai hieron kai hosion,
the
cults
for
But
the
functions
privilege
phratry.
that
offices
that
Athenian
the
states
Eteoboutaidai
Athenian
parents
fact.
a wedded
suggests
then
this
religious
Kerykes,
the
of
share,
or
"from
(or
priestesses
two
recognized
priesthood
religious
this
a
the Athenians
qualification
exclusive
to
part
Eumolpidai,
rigorously due
in
rule (soon
after-
scrutiny
procedure
not
on
qualifications. Pericles’ city’
thus
Krateros the
have
frag.
(or
latter be
further
along taken
In century physical
of
were and
a standard
up
the
other in
for
the
Philochoros
the
this
of
of
the
implications
and
35a.
nothoi
and
‘having
procedural Further
at
status
for
xenos
consequences
related
in
_ >
and
perhaps
or
by
may the
‘metic.’
Perícles'
the
recorded
developments
metoikos of
share
innovations
Kynosarges!
of
a
be delinea-
The
citizenship
law
Conclusion.
chapter, intense
we
a time
of
in
institutional
the
qualification
judicial frag.
synteleia
delineation)
with
sum,
of
prompted
4 and
institution
tion
will
may
proposal
can
say
development sense.
that of
These
the
the
middle
Athenian
years
saw
decades polis, the
of
both
creation
the in and
fifth the
115
development
of
an
of
of
participation
the
base
and
with
part
to
the the Wars,
leaders
who
institution
but
seized
generation,
city.
Pericles
led
was
leaders,
The
public
status
law of
even the
being it
the to
perhaps
less
institutions, of
the
which
and were
law
important
of
and
for
and
being
the
archonship
was
of
and
his
needs
in
after
then,
these other
in
the
the
imperial second known
Athens
by
large
extraordinary
the emergence
controlled so.
in
the
of
broadening
due
a cohesive,
with
development,
determined
the
themselves
there
well
situation
of a larger
This
influential--of
fits
and
to
ability
formation
most
general
found
energy
the
zeugitai
service.
Athenians
the
citizenship the
civic
public
in
Athenian--now
is no
of
admittance
for
more
one piece an
the
Athenians
his
and
opportunities
and with
is only
procedures--but
with
position
the
and
center
payment
one--and
innovations
451/0.
and
of
perhaps
first
second
political
civic
extraordinary
Persian
generation
urban
city
in
of a rules
116
Chapter
IV.
Footnotes
l. Cf. the suggestion of Davies (in a review of W.R. Politicians of Fifth Century Athens) that the 480's saw cians’
moving
into
the
vacuum
left
by
the
Alkmeonidai"
P. 378), and also the comments of W.G. Forrest racy) who, however, sees the change as from an ' Eos -dog' to the démos taking "charge of its
certainly
that
Just politics
to
have
démos
why
the
a
topic
is
been
an
still
had
Alcmeonids for
(Hermes
47
New politi-
(1975)
(The Emergence of Greek Democ"Alkmeonid tail" wagging the tail for good" (p. 203). But
leaders. lost
another
important
Connor's The “young, ‘new
their
position
occasion;
their
ín
or
control
attitude
toward
of
Athenian
Persia
seems
factor.
2. I find R. Sealey's claim (A History of the Greek City States, p. 257; cf. 184-185) that Themistocles "was resented not because of any distinctive policy but because he came from the deme Phrearrioi, far outside the city" highly
3.
makes
improbable.
The
more
point
is
sense
not
new;
(pace
cf.
Hignett,
to the lot as following the archonship.
rather
Wilamowitz,
Aristotle
HAC p.
to view
than
175)
producing
and
the
Athens
II.88.
It
change
from election
in
prestige
a decline
the
of
4. Aeschylus’ Persians can be viewed in this light. But by the later fifth century the idea of the heroic 'Marathon-fighters' was perhaps somewhat hackneyed and could be mocked on the comic stage (see, Gomme, "Aristophanes and Politics," More Essays in Greek History and Literature, p. 85). 5. See S.C. Humphreys, "Homo politicus and and the Greeks, pp. 169-171. On page 171 she military activity" which followed the Persian
6. special
See Appendix point
of
2 for
Athenian
comment
homo economicus," Anthropology speaks of “continuous Athenian wars.
on the extent
to which
‘naval
skill'
was
a
pride.
7. M.H. Jameson has emphasized the importance of agricultural slavery for Athenian participatory democracy ("Agriculture and Slavery in Classical Athens," CJ 73 (1977-78), esp. pp. 122 and 140, and suggested (p. 141) that "the Persian Wars, with the expansion of mining and ship-building before them and the influx of unprecedented booty after, may have provided the initial impetus in all three areas of slavery (mines, professions and household)." 8.
S.C.
Humphreys
notes
that
quality but of range" ("Public CJ 73 (1977-78) p. 102). W.G. an
"open-handed
(Emergence
local
of Greek
dynast
Democracy,
the
story
implies
"a
difference
not
only
of
and Private Interests in Classical Athens," Forrest sees in it evidence that Cimon was at
heart"
p.
219).
while
Pericles
was
a "class
politician"
117
9.
See
10. Greek
below,
pp.
172-173
This distinction history (as, for
for
a discussion
of
the
‘reform’
of
the
Areopagus.
is currently popular in discussions of Athenian and example, in the papers, and comments and discussion,
at
the Princeton conference entitled "Kinship, Politica and Economy in Classical Greece," the papers for which were published in CJ 73 (1977-1978)). It is potentially a very clearly applied. 1l. ('The
appropriate
and
fruitful
Cf. Connor, The New Politicians Indispensible Expert').
12. See Appendix 1 for describe their community 13.
Cf.
Forrest,
The
of
distinction,
Fifth
a discussion of the terms or civic membership.
Emergence
of
Greek
funeral
the comments
to
14, The Wasps fusion--between
the
chorus
law
suits
the
(contra
Thucydides
of A.W.
is another the public
of Wasps in
460's.
Jacoby)
claim
their
own
not
pp.
Athenians
p.
it
HCT
219:
a patrios
II p.
108-127,
used
"The
general for 455-460.
E.g.
to have
houses"
matters
Schachermeyr,
20.
Evidence
2318.9-11), in
the
to pay
21.
430's
for
for
his
nomos
(2.34.1).
of
heard
that
Pericles'
(1.6.12
Davies, APF,
wealth
to contribute 54
= Hill,
the Parthenon
p. 369
See
"The Athenians
one day would
judge
(800-801).
Perikles,
Pericles'
offer
should
94.
empire
see
especially
family,
see
J.K.
Davies,
Sealey's
APF,
18. See Davies, APF, p. 371. 1 follow Wade-Gery and Davies (APF, considering the Alcmeonids to be a (very remarkable) family and not the restricted sense used of the Boutadai or Eumolpidai. 19.
to
state
The account which follows will be somewhat different from R. Entry of Pericles into History," in Essays in Greek Politics.
17. In 368-384;
always
play in which the relationship--and at times conand private realms is a major theme. For example,
15. On the development and character of the Athenian R. Meiggs, The Athenian Empire (Oxford, 1972). 16. "The
is
those who have died in its service." ín dating the introduction of the
terms
Gomme,
it
Athens,
the
Democracy,
take over from the family responsibility for Forrest follows Jacoby (JHS 64 (1944) 36-66) state
Century
but
p.
Cf.
includes
to
Sources
(Plutarch,
17.
Bury-Meiggs^, his
a project 69)
Pericles
and
chorégia
p.
the
story
that
p. 370) a genos
in in
126.
in 473/2
of uncertain
pp.
(1.6.11?
character Pericles
offered
24.1-2).
(on family of Cleisthenes);
p. 459
(a less explicit
statement on the family of Xanthippos, simply a denial of its belonging to the genos Bouzygai). Davies believes that the family of Alcmeon was of Eupatrid status on the grounds that its members held the archonship before 580. I do not think that this is conclusive; it depends completely on Wade-Gery's theory
118
of the pre-Solonian "caste" of Eupatridai. Pericles is not called a Eupatris; Alcibiades may have been a member of the group--but on his non-Alcmeonid side (see Appendix 2, p. 188 ).
22.
Ibid.,
23. that
Cf.
25.
for
370.
the comment
Cleisthenes
toward 24.
p.
the results See Davies, Ex silentio
a birth
date
of Forrest,
descendents
"are
of
their
APF,
p.
457
but,
as
Davies
c.
The
Emergence
not
distinguished
ancestor's for
of Greek for
Democracy, any
love
p.
they
work."
the evidence. notes
(see
preceding
note),
some
confirmation
494.
26. E.g., Kagan, The Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, p. 59: "The Cleisthenes founded the Athenian democracy and the Alcmaeonid Pericles its development." 27. PP:
28.
Sealey,
"The
200, show
Entry
of
Pericles
into
History,"
Essays
in
Greek
Alcmaeonid fostered
Politics,
64-65.
W.G.
Forrest,
"Themistocles
and
Argos,"
Classical
Quarterly
54/10
(1960)
233.
29.
Ibid.,
p.
235.
30. The assembly's election of Pericles as a prosecutor of siege of Thasos (Plutarch, Pericles 10.6; Cimon 14.5) may in due to the memory of Xanthíppos' prosecution of Miltiades. 31.
See
W.R.
Connor,
The
Nev
Políticians,
pp.
Cimon after the part have been
3-9.
32. On all accounts Cimon was also committed to a friendly relationship with Sparta (see Plutarch, Cimon 16.8; also Thucydides 1.102); another good indication is that he named his son Lacedaimonius). This combination of imperial and proSpartan policy provides a good example of the deficiency of a simple democrat/ aristocrat model for early fifth century politics. 33. The official ineligibility of the thetes to the archonship and perhaps the Boule in 450 (but see Chapter III, pp. 55-56 and above p. 92) is an "oligarchic element" counterbalancing the "democratic" lack of property qualifications for voting in the assembly (cf. de Ste. Croix, "The Character of the Athenian Empire," Historia 3 (1954/5), pp. 40-41). 34. they the
These dissidents are ever really existed. course
of
events
in
mysterious characters and we might even wonder if They cannot be seen to have had any real effect on
Athens
or
in
Greece
in
general.
that is was in "suspicion" of these activities that to Tanagra (108.1). Perhaps they were an invention the Spartan delay in Boeotia or of some Spartans to
Again,
Thucydides
says
the Athenians marched out of some Athenians to explain promote discord in Athens.
119
If they did exist they probably were oligarchs in the sense that they are said to have wanted to katapausein [ton] démon (107.4) and so probably wanted to put political power in the hands of a few (including themselves). They also wanted (according to rumor, it seems) to put an end to the building of the long walls (ibid.); this was an oligarchic idea at the end of the fifth century--was it already such when the walls were still being built?
35.
On this
into
History,"
36.
Not
point
see
Essays
everyone
also
the comments
in Greek
would
have
Politics, seen
the
of R. pp.
Sealey,
60-61,
logical
“The Entry
of Pericles
66-67.
connection
between
empire
and
‘radical’ democracy noticed by the ‘Old Oligarch' ([Xenophon), Constitution the Athenians) or considered the career of Cimon to have entailed a "fatal contradiction" 37.
See
Pericles
(Hignett,
note
20
by the
above.
lot
HAC,
p.
of
193).
I think
or any other
it
unlikely
"objective"
that
this
play
simply
fell
to
method.
38. The North and South walls need not have been due to Pericles, but the Middle wall was, according to Plato (Gorgias 4556), built on the urging of Pericles (cf. Plutarch, Pericles 13.7). It might be added that Cimon helped supply the funds for the foundations of the North and South walls (Plutarch, Cimon 13.6). On the Piraeus see page 94. Other possible "Themistoclean" aspects of Pericles' leadership are (1) an interest in the West (see V. Enrenberg, "The Foundation of Thurii," AJP 69 (1948) 155). I am, however, not so confident as Ehrenberg in the legitimacy of attributing to Pericles the responsibility for all Athenian policy in the 440's. And (2 ) an interest in a well stocked central treasury (Herodotus 7.144 on
Themistocles support
of
and the
the profits
appropriation
from of
the mines;
League
funds
Plutarch, for
Pericles
Athenian
12 on Pericles'
purposes).
The possible influence of Themistocles on Pericles has of course been recognized (e.g., by Jacoby, FGrH IIIb (Supplement), 123 and 387), but not always to great profit. Forrest, for example, uses this relationship to prove
that pp.
39.
Pericles
was
a Democrat
not
an Alcmeonid
(art.
cit.--above
note
28--
233-235).
Protagoras'
association
with
the
founding
of Thurii
is reported
by
Heracleides Ponticus (frag. 150 “ Diogenes Laertius 9.50). Diodorus does not mention Protagoras in hís account of the colony, but the story 18 generally accepted (see Ehrenberg, "The Foundation of Thurii," p. 168). Since Pericles is likely to have known Protagoras (if the sophist had visited Athens already by the mid-440's) it is a reasonable guess that Pericles was responsible for the choice of Protagoras as lawgiver for Thurii. But we cannot really be sure. The anecdote about the two men reported by Plutarch (above p. 9) is not dated and could as easily have taken place in the 430's as the 440᾽8. Pericles might have come to know Protagoras after the foundation of Thurii rather than before. 40. Aristotle, on the Piraeus;
Politics Diodorus
1267b37ff.; Harpocration, 12.10.7 on Thurii.
Photios
s.v. Innoódytc.a,
120
tion
For the date of of the substance
Miletus,"
in Studies
Hippodamos' laying of the Hippodamian
Presented
out of the Piraeus and for ἃ consideraplan see J.R. McCredie, "“Hippodamos of
to George
M.A.
Hanfmann
(Mainz,
1971),
pp.
95-100.
41. Again, the notion that Pericles was influenced by philosophers is not new (it goes back at least as far as Plutarch). What I am suggesting is that the influence may have been more practical--and less ideological--than is usually assumed; that, for example, Pericles may have absorbed from Protagoras (when he came to know him) less of a ‘theory of democracy' (cf. Ehrenberg, "The Foundation of Thurii," p. 16, n. 40) than an interest in the possibilities of legislation or rational planning.
42.
See de Ste.
76-7 root
(n. 31), 79. in Thucydides
43.
Davies,
Croix,
APF,
The Origins of the Peloponnesian War,
The term 2.65.
p.
"uncrowned
king"
is
his,
pp.
27-8,
but
of
course
harvest
in
mass
has
73, its
456.
44. Plutarch, Pericles 16. He sold supplies as needed from the market. 45. Aristotle's attribution of be due to his following a source
all
of
his
the reforms to Pericles with this anachronistic
and
then
alone in Chapter tendency.
bought
27
may
46. E.g., Hignett, HAC, pp. 193-213. Hignett claims (p. 195) that "It was not the unworthiness of the Areopagites to exercise their powers which was denounced by the radicals but the retention of such wide powers in a progressive state by a council whose members were appointed for life." I do not see how he can be sure that the issue was so limited. 47. Forrest considers the Areopagus an "anomaly" because it represented 'personal' as opposed to ‘constitutional’ authority. (Emergence of Greek Democracy, pp. 215-216). We might more easily suppose that it was an anomaly because a council of ex-archons (whether or not they vere members for life) would no larger represent the character and interests of Athenian leadership, which
now
rejects
tended
this
to
use
the
possibility
as
generalship
as
48. See P.J. Rhodes, The Athenian Boule, discussion of the Areopagus before 462. 49. It
On is
this
possible
point that,
cf. as
a
insuffícient--p.
Forrest, Forrest
The
of
power
(Forrest,
however,
216). pp.
Emergence
claims,
basis
179-207
of
Aeschylus
and
201-207,
for
a
Greek
Democracy,
pp.
212-215.
was
radical
the
issue
a
on
of
the Areopagus and in the Eumenides (indirectly) supported the limitation of its responsibility. Just what other advice he was giving the Athenians is not entirely clear. When he warns against '"muddying" the laws "with foul infusions" (lines 693-4, Lattimore trans.) it is possible that he is referring to something that we know nothing about or that never came to pass. On the political aspect of this play, see especially Podlecki, The Political Background of Aeschylus" Plays; Dover, JHS 77 (1957); Dodds, The Ancient Idea of Progress (Oxford,
1973),
PP.
45-63.
121
50. Although M.I. Finley (The Ancient Economy, p. 173) claimed that Athens was unique in this regard, G.E.M. de Ste. Croix (CQ25 (1975) 48-52) has shown that at least Rhodes in the 4th century and Iasus in the 3rd provided pay for some public service. The conclusion, however, that "quite a number of Greek democracies made use of political pay, in the fifth and fourth centuries and later" (p. 52) is somewhat overconfident; its main basis is the belief that Aristotle made use of a wide range of historical examples in his comments on state pay in the Politics.
Pay for public service at Rhodes may have been instituted in conscíous imitation of Athens at the time of the synoikiamos of the Rhodian cities (408/7). The Rhodians also adopted the deme system (see Ehrenberg, The Greek State, p. 30) and called in Hippodamos (who had already planned the Piraeus and Thurii) to lay out their new city (Strabo, 14.2.9). The degree to which Athens served as a model for other Greek cities ís an interesting topic for investigation, especially in the light of Thucydides 2.37.1. As noted earlier in this chapter, there was a certain amount of forced imitation of Athens by the allies. 51.
See
A.H.M.
Jones,
52. Aristotle actually (26.5) since he believes (16.5). On this see Day
Athenian
Democracy,
p.
135,
says that the deme judges that they were originally and Chambers, pp. 95-96.
note
1 and
pp.
17-18.
vere reinstated at this time established by Peisistratus
53. For the problem of the nautodikai and their function see E. Cohen, Ancient Athenian Maritime Courts (Princeton, 1973), pp. 162-183 and also pp. 110-111. 54. Pericles also an autarkestate and
had more faith than Plato in his own well governed city (see Gorgias 5156
ability ff.).
to
make
below
Athens
55. Notice the 'domestic' character of Pericles' early political activity. 'Foreign affairs' ceratinly affected Pericles' early political activity, but were not apparently his main concern. 56. I am assuming here that Aristotle's is the "documentary" version of the law and that Plutarch (Pericles 37.3) gives a paraphrase. This assumption rests primarily on the annalistic context of the reference and the use of astoin. The dual seems especially appropriate to the fifth century (cf. Jacoby, FGrH IIIb (Supplement) Notes, p. 379, n. 27, who uses the term "documentary" and Chapot ('"AZTOZ" Revue des Etudes Anciennes 31 (1929) 7). Astos, even in the singular or plural, was not a word Aristotle tended to use in his own discussion. For what it is worth, we can also note that in the funeral oration (Thucydides 2.35.46) Pericles twice uses metechein to describe the nature of Athenian civic participation (37.1, 40.2). However, it may be possible that Aristotle's formulation derives from the reenactment of the law in 403 (see the Epilogue, p. 145 ) and has no more real claim to be ‘documentary’ than Plutarch's version, which uses the epigraphic
phrasing "einai Athénaious".
122
57.
Hignett's
statement
(HAC,
p.
343),
"Presumably
it also
enacted
that
hence-
forth no Athenian man could contract a valid marriage with a woman who was not an Athenian citizen," is unjustified and unnecessary. But MacDowell (The Law in Classical Athens, p. 67) simply speaks of the "other provision” of Pericles’ law "invalidating marriage between citizen and an alien." 58.
See
Chapter
II
note
20,
pp.
31-2
(on
nothoi).
59. Hignett (HAC, p. 343) says simply, "There is nothing in this clause as we have it to exclude from the citizenship those whose parents were both Athenian citizens but had never married, and it is usually assumed that, as being of pure Athenian descent, they were not excluded from the citizenship either before or after 451/0." Bury-Meiggs', however, follow Busolt-Swoboda I, p. 222, and solve the problem by simply incorporating legitimacy into their "paraphrase" of the law: ...a
decree
name
of
not
no
was
introduced
child
Athenian
should
citizens
is
the
position
61.
Hignett,
HAC,
p.
62.
This
also
been
Humphreys, the ion then ship
has
'"The Nothoi
Pericles...that
admitted
whose
legitimately
"In the future" it can be noted question. See below, pp. 95-97. 60. This 167-8.
by
be
of
is
Tod,
also
wedded an
Walker,
in
the
future
the
father
and
mother
were
'
(page
addition
and
and
Adcock
217). begs
an
important
CAH
V,
pp.
5,
102-3,
reasons)
by
S.C.
in
345. suggested
(for
of Kynosarges,"
somewhat
JHS 94
different
(1974)
phratry 18 generally considered to have taken to the deme (see Humphreys, art. cit. n. 12), have to have been decisive. which was considered the key
92).
Since
admission
to
place two years before admissone of the admissions would
I suggest that it to citizenship.
was
still
phratry
member-
63. It is probably unnecessary to insist that the relation between the cítizenship law of 451 and the grain gift of 445/4 with its attendant scrutiny 18 an either/or question--that either the gift provoked an enforcement of the law (the
first enforcement 445/4 had nothing p. 345).
according to the CAH V authors--above note 61) or the events to do with the law of 451/0 (the position of Hignett, HAC,
of
There 18 actually no reason to think that the grain distribution occasioned a complete scrutiny of the deme registers (see Jacoby, FGrH IIIb (Supplement) p. 476). Neither Plutarch nor Philochoros speak of a diapsephismos, the fourth century term for a full-scale scrutiny by the demes of their membership, as having been carried out at his time. Plutarch's comment ...Ol δὲ μεέναντες έν
tfj πόλιτεία
καὶ
κριϑέντες
᾿Αϑηναῖοι
μόριοι
τεσσαράκοντα τὸ πλῆϑος ἐξητάσθϑησαν (Pericles mean (e.g., by Jacoby, op. cit. p. 463) that he not scale
scrutiny
had
been
carried
out
but
also
καὶ
τετρακισχίλιοι
καὶ
37.4) is usually takento only thought that a full-
believed
that
Athens
had
a total
of
123
14,040 citizens when it was all over. However, he need way. He could have meant that of those who applied and anined 14,040 were found to be Athenians.
Perhaps
the
course
of events
in 445/4 was
not be read in that whose status was ex-
something
like
this:
The grain arrived in the Piraeus and an announcement was made that all Athenians might come and collect a share. [Whether the amount that each man would receive was set beforehand or calculated after it was clear how many qualified claimante there would be is a problem. But the idea that the amount was set beforehand might find some support if we suppose that Psammetichos sent what he thought would be one medimnos per
Athenian;
on this see the comments of Jacoby
on Philochoros
frag.
119)
who
thinks
that
(op. cit.
n. 4
Philochoros’
30,000 medimnoi--Plutarch says 40,000--are evidence for 30,000 citizens. Jacoby is probably right in insisting that shares would not have been limited to thetes or city dwellers (op. cit. p. 467), although these may have been the majority of those in need.] At the distribution point the claimants were divided into tribes, and appropriate magístrates, demearchs and tribe officials were present to verify that each claimant was actually an Athenian. If a man were rejected by the deme or tribe offícial, he míght then appeal to a
dikasterion.
But
According to this fate.
if he lost,
Plutarch
he would
(Pericles
37)
be sold
nearly
into
5,000
slavery.
men
suffered
If this were the system, then the fraudulent claimants could have included (very brazen or hungry) xenoi with no connection to a deme at all as well as those
whose enrollment in the deme was questioned, and almost 5,000 rejected applicants is perhaps not so unlikely. In so far as the claim of someone demonstrably enrolled in a deme could be question it would have been on the basis of the law of 451/0 and the complaint would have been that the man was not born of two
Athenian parents yet had been admitted to a deme after 451/0. Thus the state distribution of 445/4 can be seen as the first major test of the state citizenship law of 451/0. 64. The of whether
Eumelos
ἀκξτάτοις
(FGrH
recognized 65.
The
reenactment of or not the law
in
77,
frag.
ἴσϑαι. fourth
concept
(or
the law in 403 is actually of 451/0 was retroactive.
2)
only
adds
of no help in the The law ag quoted
the qualification
τοὺς
6€
npo
question by
Εὐκλείδου
The possible ambiguity of this clause may have been
century "myth")
Athens of
Man's Most Dangerous Myth: The Montagu, writing in the 1940's,
as well
race
is
as
today,
a modern
Fallacyof Race, calls the modern
cf.
Demosthenes
invention.
See
57.30.
Ashley
Montagu,
esp. chapter I, pp. 1-26. conception of race “the tragic
myth of our tragic era" (p. 8). It is unfortunate that so widely in regard to Greek history. The issue is not
it has simply
been employed a semantic one,
124
a simple
matter
Dorians can the lonians
ancient ent
of
be as
how
one
chooses
to
translate
genos
or
ethnos
When
the
thought of as somehow innately slow, dull, conservative and innately quick, lively and innovative, we should realize that
historians
sub-species
have
of
66.
For
other
67.
See Appendix
adopted
more
than
just
the
modern
term
for
Introduction,
note
8.
the
differ-
man.
proponents
2,
pp.
of
this
view
189-191,
for
see
comment
on
the word
genos.
68. Kagan, for example, refers to Dorians and Ionians as "races" (The Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, p. 347) but rejects the idea that such "differences of race" determined the policy of any Greek city. Bury-Meiggs^, on the other hand, are duly cautious about terming Dorians and Ionians "races" (p. 212) but consider the Peloponnesian war as "the culmination of that antagonisu between Dorian and Ionian of which the Greeks of this period never lost sight" (p. 245). It
seems
likely,
however,
that
this
antagonism
Athenian tensions of the fifth century (see (and dangers) of using the term "races" for Doriens et Ioniens (Paris, 1956). 69.
This
may
have
its
roots
in
the
was
post-Persian
prise of
at the
(to tolmeron) the
same
ídea
and
time
that
revolutionary
considering
the
Spartans
character
them
and
product
war
Athenians and Spartans over the leadership of the comment that the Spartans sent the Athenians home and
a
next note). Dorians and
the
conflicts
on E.
the error Will,
between
(to neoteropoion)
are
Spartan-
the
Greek world. Cf. Thucydides' from Ithome "fearing the enter-
allophulous
Athenians
of
In general Ionians see
(1.102). tvo
And
dífferent
of
the Athenians
a developed
sorts
of
version
people
is
found again
in the first speech of the Corinthians in Sparta (Thucydides I.70--note the characterization of the Athenians neoteropoioi 70.2). Allophulos, how-
ever,
as
used
by
Aeschylus
(Eumenides
851)
and
Plato
(Laws
629d)
plication of 'racial'--biological or genetic--differences. simply foreign--xenikos as opposed to astikos. 70.
liked
Many
to
of
the
Greek
think were
xenoi
originally
in Attica
Athenian
would
have
They considered themselves closely related,and Apatouria (Herodotus 1.147) suggest that there 71.
S.C.
Humphreys,
"The
Nothoi
of
been
colonists
(cf.
carries
Rather
lonians,
it
who
Furipider. Ion
no
im-
means
the
Athenians
1570ff.).
similar institutions such as the was a certain truth in the claim.
Kynosarges,"
JHS
94
(1974)
93.
72. E.g. Humphreys, ibid., Gomme, Essays in Greek History and Literature, p. 87; McGregor, "Athenian Policy at Home and Abroad," p. 10; Connor, The New Politicians, p. 171. 73. Also the idea that foreign marriages were foreign women may be likely but has no basis in See below note 83. 74.
Davies,
APF,
75.
Lakedaimonios,
p.
304, in
any
A.E. case,
Raubitschek, RE was
considered
confined to Athenian men the evidence (such as it
18, an
2
(1942),
Athenian
marrying is).
2000. citizen
since
he
125
served other
76.
as stratégos evidence
It
can
children. and
on
be
in 433
noted
that
Peisistratus
Themistocles
Themistocles
(Thucydides
Lakedaimonios
32).
Cimon
also
called
and
was
had
three
1.42.2).
the
other
not
alone
a son named
of
his
In a casualty
from
in
giving
Thettalos
daughters
list
See Davies APF,
p.
306,
for
sons.
Asia,
(7)
such
(Ath. Italis
the 440's
names
Pol.
to
his
17.3,
and
18.2)
Sybaris
(M-L 48.79)
(Plutarch,
there
appears
a Naxiades and in one from 412/22 (1.G. 12 950.14) an Eretrieus. (The last could possibly be an ethnic, but if so it would be the only ethnic of the list.) [Chal]kideus is a secretary of the Hellenotamiai in 442/1 (1.6. 12 203.2); Helliespon]tios is a treasurer of Athena in 438 (1.6. 12 359.12; and Salaminokles (a different sort of foreign-root name which could be connected with the battle of Salamis) is epistat@s of the Parthenon accounts in 446,5 (1.G. I2 340.37). 77.
and
On
this,
Private
see
the
comments
Interests
78.
E.g.,
A.
79.
Essays
W.
of
in Classical
Gomme.
in Greek
See
note
History
S.C.
Humphreys
Athens,"
(in
CJ 73
another
(1977-78)
The Population
and Literature,
81.
HAC,
82.
Essays
83.
See
84.
Actually
p.
of Athens,
p.
"Public
79.
p.
87.
This
really compatible with his other remark on this issue, same essay, note 1. Also, although Comme may not have cation, it suggests that the main growth in population had occurred by 450.
80.
article),
100-101.
26,
n.
statement
is not
on the same page of the been aware of the impli in the pentakontaetia
3.
346. in
above
Greek
History
Chapter
III,
one might
and Literature,
p.
87,
n.
1.
pp.
normally
assume
that
in 450
(before most
of
the
cleruchies were sent out) that Athenian women married did Athenian men. There were probably more unmarried women.
foreigners more often foreign men in Athens
85. E.g., A.R. Burn, Pericles and Athens, (1974) 93, also makes this distinction.
S.C.
86.
The word
body
(Pericles
is Burn's, and
87. This phrase (Bury-Meiggs^) of
88. urban
89.
See above
and
Athens,
the purpose
p.
pp.
92-3;
is again
II,
"purity"
of
JHS
94
the citizen
92).
belongs to J.B. Bury and appears his Historyof Greece, p. 215.
Chapter
the
Humphreys,
than than
pp.
68-69 for
in
the negative
the
recent
demographic
fourth
edition
effects
of
living.
Plutarch
(Pericles
37)
says
that
some were
accused
unjustly
in the spurt
126
of citizenship
suits
in 445/4.
Perhaps
there were
some
as those who had spent considerable time abroad or who (to some) were indistinguishable from xenoi.
in
genuine
the
Athenians
company
of
such
foreigners
90. It is commonly thought (and said) that Pericles’ law was repealed during the Peloponnesian War, but there is no actual evidence for this other than its ‘reenactment’ in 403. For further discussion see the Epilogue.
91.
This would
ence
to
92. young 93.
have been
Wrigley,
a "bulge"
Population
and
generation.
History
cited
If we suppose some 30,000 Athenians Athenians came of age in the 450's. Essays
in Greek
History
and
94. For the grain distribution See also the discussion below p.
See p.
45
above
and
the refer-
there.
in
c.
462,
Literature
p.
86.
then
perhaps
and scrutiny of 445/4 see above 108ff. of Krateros, fragment 4.
about
note
10,000
64,
pp.
122-3.
95. Andrewes noted ("Philochoros on Phratries," p. 2) that the δέ of Philochoros frag. 35a, "shows that it was not the sole or the main clause." The same might be said of the δε in Krateros frag. 4. (Actually, since Andrewes thinks the fragments are from the same law (p. 14) he necessarily thinks both are fragmentary laws.)
96. For Krateros of psephismata was Philochoros, digressions,
97. p.
who the
this is sufficient since it seems clear that arranged in chronological order (see ATL III
was writing an historical narrative situation is more complicated. See
For the upper 10.
Their
limit
with the possibility of the argument below p. 113
see Jacoby FGrH IIIb on Krateros
disagreement
over
the
exact
terminus
his collection p. 10); for
post
frag.
quem
18
4 and ATL III not
crucial
at
this point. It involves in part the citizenship lav, and the relation of that law to this fragment will be discussed below. The lower limit is very uncertain, but since Book IX contained material from 410/9, Book IV ought to have ended by at least the 430's. (In fact, I think it likely that it did not go further than
the 440's,
see below
p.
198.)
On the Book
IX fragments
see Jacoby
and ATL loc.
cit.
98.
Jacoby,
99.
"Philochoros
100.
FGrH
IIIb on
(Supplement),
Phratries,"
I accept Harpocration's
pp.
p.
251-2.
13.
(s.v.vauto6(xaui)
classification of the nautodikai
as magistrates, similar to the thesmothetai. They might have judicial authority than the thesmothetai at this time because foreign or allied cases.
101. The
Edmonds, date
is
in
fragment the
later
233,
cited
430's;
see
by
the
scholiast
Edmonds,
had more real they dealt with
to Aristophanes'
Fragments
of
Attic
Birds
Comedy
I,
766. p.
105.
127
102.
Fragment
the ancient
225,
cited
testimonia,
by
Harpocration,
Edmonds,
op.
cit.
s.v.
p.
nautodikai;
the
date
is
427,
see
629.
103. E.g., Harrison, The Law of Athens II p. 24. Harrison thinks that Krateros frag. 4 "is the less strict rule that prevailed before 451/0." It is, however, not clear whether he thinks the law from which the fragment came was actually passed before 451. If he follows Jacoby in thinking that Krateros' fourth book has an upper limit of 446 (see note 98 above for reference), then one wonders what he thought the purpose of the law was. But, as will be seen, the
Krateros 104.
fragment
This
not
possibility
ATL (III p. Phratries", dealing covered
does
is
necessarily also
recognized
10), Busolt-Swoboda (p. p. 13). Since Andrewes
with phratries but by the fragment of
in an earlier
clause)
not the
were
imply by,
"the
less
for
strict
instance,
rule." the
authors
of
1095 note 1) and Andrewes ("Philochoros and believed that the fragment came from a law
cítizenship, he suggested that the cases not ps@phisma quoted by Harpocration (but dealt with
under
the jurisdiction
of the phratry
alone.
105. Harrison (The Law of Athens II, p. 24 n. 2) finds a dividing up of jurisdiction in citizenship cases "hard to believe." But a difference in status of the defendant I think) have
106.
See E.
(1.e., whether he had one or no Athenian parent) could led to a difference in procedure and jurisdiction.
Cohen,
Ancient
Athenian
Maritime
Courts,
pp.
162-184,
(reasonably,
for
the most
recent and complete discussion of the nautodikai. Cohen suggests (pp. 163, 176) that the nautodikai of the fifth century may be a wholly different board from the commercial magistrates of that name in the fourth century. I will be concerned only with the fifth century nautodikai, who on the most natural interpretation would originally have had something to do with things nautika but who may very early on have been concerned also with imperial matters.
107. G.F. Greece, p.
Schoman, Die Verfassungsgeschichte 42ff.; Schwahn RE s.v. nautodikai.
Athens These
(op.
pp.
brief
108.
cit.,
162-3,
note
12).
If we could be sure that
See
also
his
the nautodikai
nach Grote's History of references are from Cohen comments
in
the
same
note.
in the fifth century also had
charge of commercial cases involving foreigners in the emporion as they did in the fourth century, then we might assume that many of these fraudulent citizens were sailors and merchants in the Piraeus. However, there is no clear evidence for nautodikai as commercial magistrates in the fifth century even though it seems likely (see note 110). Jacoby's claim that graphai xenias were assigned
to the nautodikai not because the "seasonal on
Kraterus
all
graphai
nautodikai
109. seem
frag. were
They appear to
Athenian
be
4,
xenias in
p.
191)
sounds
came
before
fact
commercial
strange--and
the nautodikai magistrates
in the very fragmentary
concerned
Maritime
because of their connection with commerce per se, but character" of commerce gave them free time (FGrH IIIb
with
Courts,
symbolaia
p.
173
for
among
I.C.
is
at in
based
this the
fifth
discussion.
See
on
the
idea
and a belief
that
that
century.
112 46 and 144,
foreigners.
further
both
time
both of which
Cohen,
Ancient
128
,
110. E. Cavaignac, "Etudes (Paris, 1908), p. 1xvii.
111.
A.
Korte,
sur
l'histoire
"Die Attischen
᾿
financiere
Xenodikai,"
Hermes
d'Athenes
68
(1933)
au
noted frag.
113.
were
"Philochoros
114.
I assume
were
and
a similar
astoi
that
not
Phratries,"
privilege when
xenoi,
pp.
could
Plataeans
and
so
a
3-9.
I assume
be shown became
Plataean
for
earlier the 4 is part of
there
enough
the orgeOnes,
Athenians,
would
that
siecle
240ff.
112. Reference is to the argument of ATL III p. 9-12. As authors think ít "virtually certain" (p. 10) that Krateros the citizenship law. But that is hardly necessary.
evidence
V*
not
they--both
have
to
have
male
and
married
female--
an
Athen-
ian woman in order to pass on his citizenship to his children or for his children to be able to serve as archon. However, as the restrictions cited by [Demosthenes] indicate, these new Athenians were not yet full members of the community. For a discussion of the term astos see Appendix I. 115. The argument for a post-451 date for the synteleia at Kynosarges depends on the suggestion ín Plutarch (Themistocles 1) and in Demosthenes (23.213) that its members were nothoi by virtue of having a foreign parent. This is why Themistocles,
with
the
existed
who
group in
his
and
in
his
why
day
was
probably
Demosthenes
day--ibid.)
with
considered
compares
one
in
Oreus
this
gnésios,
synteleia
which
was
(which
enrolled
associated
no
longer
Charidemos,
the
son of a foreign mother. It is reasonable that such an institution would have been thought desirable in the 440's (7) and also that it would have disappeared by the mid-fourth century. For a full discussion of this institution see A. Ledl, WS 30 (1908) 43-46, 188-193, and S.C. Humphreys, JHS
94
(1974)
88-95.
mother (or seemed an sons of a have been the upper
Both
especially
so.
Thus
probable
a
it
special
is
authors
argue
for
a post-451
date.
The
sons
of a foreign
father) who had not been admitted to a phratry by 451/0 would have obvious anomaly. Théy were to be considered nothoi and xenoi yet were married Athenian and possibly siblings of Athenians. They may not numerous, nor (pace Humphreys, p. 93) were they all necessarily from class, but they would have been conspicuous and the upper class ones These
young
that
synteleia was
men
either set
up
were
perhaps
formally in
or
connection
not
content
informally with
the
with
(so cult
a
metoikos
Humphreys, of
Heracles
status.
p.
92)
(who
was
thought of as being in a similar situation, cf. Birds, 1661). In the 420's perhaps there was still a public interest in the synteleia (see Humphreys discussion on pp. 85-89 of the decree proposed by Alcibiades--Poleman frag. 78, Preller), but by the time of Demosthenes the synteleia had ceased to exist.
129
V.
“Classical terms
of
'defined' of
a
Athens
defined
the
(J.K.
Davies,
"Athenian
descent"
Alternatives,"
CJ 73
since
law
at
(1977-78)
no
of Athens the
thought
as members
important
A non-Athenian descent
(the
could
group--into
(Chapter
II,
the
At
character.
was and
those
the
public
was
realm,
essentially
Solon
subject
example, cial
the
that
marriage
groups
oikos)
the
children realm
public
a matter
of
private
in
certain
a heiress called
instances find
of
the
atimia--a
form
of
punishment
imposed
heiress
upon
of
and
and
reserved a citizen
were
first
had no were
As
thought
as odds
also,
as
at
produce
or
and
(Plutarch, for off
emphasized
group')
was
a public
least
unit
different
unit
although
of
the
time
The
need
to
insure,
laws
Solon
in
woman
of for judithe
Similarly,
crimes’--was
foreign
the
regulating 20).
from
marriage
from
resulted
of
that
least
in
that
in familial
and
basic
public a
been
into
relationship
of
at
children
46.22)
group. '
a self-contained
Thus
it was
married
foremost
has
‘descent
the
rules.
correctly
entering
'familial'
both a private
especially
and
and
tribe.”
its
evidence
statement
accepted
regulations.
husband
who
this
there
being
at
and
is
and
in
the word
‘descent
life,
and
(Demosthenes her
periods
with
Athenian
and
often
state
quarrel
the Athenian
private
contract, to
Group
Descent
the
thus
concern
a husband
epidikasia
deme,
had
state,
of
life
century
the
of
by
(and
interests
object
'private'
fourth
or
or
in reality
which
The
is..., "1
or the genos)
epitome with
and
society
body...rigorously
classical
citizens
an Athenian
which
citizen
one might
citizen
families
the phratry
(the
or
Athenian
phratry
its
Citizenship:
archaic
that
oikos,
both
wife
public
point
of
Although
Athenian
of Athenian
husband, of
"an
become
family
It
the
only
tribe,
the base
individual
in
Athenians
even
membership
105).
of
the
p. 10)
Cleisthenic
terms.
point
stating
emphasizes of
Conclusion
as
in
the
though
130
she were Athenian 87),
and
and
a
"similar
Aeschines
tially still
(|Demosthenes}
1.183).
course
producing
to
have
the
Suda:
would not
clear
are
only
taken
simply
as
admitted
to
It
is
profitable
group;
of
the
suggested,
does
not
say
that
property,
public,
‘state,’
or
are
only
but
that
the born
only
to view
this
criterion
two
between
its
on
law
the
two
a public
was
parents.
as
decision
the
parents
a share
are
lav
itself
the
while
foreigners, The
now
no
two
shift
law it
is
one
Athenians. to
a closed as
or
law makes
buttress
group
a significant
Athenian
‘have
of
were
the
451/0
And
from
a legal
Athenians
[Demosthenes]
after
context:
born
rules.?
Aelian
time.
century
of
Plutarch,
and
this
from
that
were
marriage
changed
Arístotle,
substan-
matter
strict
about
assume
is not
law
indicates
they will
public
who
The
to
to
known
probably
at
mid-fifth
Pericles’
those
was
‘public’
a law
Athenians
happening
group.
of
by
Athenian
phratries
only
that
for
‘state’
in
reason
quoted
fact
to view
criterion we
in
descent
those
one
with
and
possible
however,
inherit
How
was
evident
as
(Ibid.
relationships
subject as
(Ibid.,
adultery
solidarity
clearly
were
such
ín
Private
now
procedures
marriages
demes
Athenian
‘adoption’
have
the
marriage
the
law.
and
an adulteress
taken
group
considered
is
was
by
Athenians
and
quoted,
be
106)
rules
those
discouraged
descent
usually
no
to divorce
a woman
important
on
than
that
still
18
there
extent
solidarity
a public
related
other
p.
citizens,
law
to what
sense,
should
provision
severely
the
restrictions
107-115),
Athenians
have
good
IV
any
and
on
century,
cit.,
in
citizenship
But although
included
art.
or refused
imposed
fourth
but
heirs
included
Chapter
the
(Davies,
legitimate
59.16-17. (see
By
possible,
Pericles' and
punishment" ^ was
"buttressed" of
59.52)
the 'familial'
a whole. in
focus.
legitimate®
in the city.’
I
or
It
It can
is a
status. insistence
necessary
in
on 451/0,
a descent was
the
group
criterion?
Periclean
rule
If the
131
only
possibility?
Descent
Group
bilities
for
(1)
and
all
behalf
those
be
citizen:
who
this
But
Athenian
Athenian
of
treasurer
of
though
Cleisthenes
did
not
contrary.
tribes)
may some
thereby order
is
any
terms"
"The
three
possi-
who
be
that
roles
says
an
and
1). office
is
to
definition
office’
(see
accordingly
holding
reason that
Aristotelian
judicial
He
level.
class
his
Athens
use
"cares
away
towards
defining
it in terms
of criterion
alternative
to being
for
choosing
be entitled
before
were
not
the
not
poorer
to attend
Athenian
alternative
citizens
would
a somewhat
broadened
any
office-holders
non-Athenian than
defining
be
able
(see
xenoi
for and
(3)
to
run
II,
of an body
office wealth
al-
(in
the
p.
25)
citizenship.
On
metoikoi
a
"wealth
for
And
word
of
the
(with
even
about
terms
within
include
Chapter
the
a member
the assembly.
criterion
(presumed)
from
to
above But
of
in
non-Athenian
citizenship
included
it
the
discus-
mainly
strongly
a real
from
the
in Athens.
question
Solonian
of
concerned
moves
would
have
groups
essential
with
serious
Davies
more
introduce to
the
wealth was not
of the thes)
In
defining
A wealthy
Athena
citizenship
"in Athenian
resources above a certain (art. cit., p. 114)
deliberative
there
and
other
operating
a criterion
families.
level
he
of
and
in Appendix
example,
(1)
but
at the
and
of
office-holders,
family,
of
demes
ways
certainly
on Athenian
and
is
a share
of criterion
(ibid.).
Davies
definition
For
defining...the
State:
economic
restriction,
‘alternatives.’
version
have
has
alternative
granting
article
citizenship:
the
that
Aristotle's
with
of
who
noted
‘he
of
his
and postulated
those who perform military
(3)
sion
subtitled
its Alternatives”
determining
on
should
Davies
those who were in the segmental descent mattered (gene, phratries, and demes):
(2)
It
J.K.
douloi
the
132
(Aristotle, that
Politics
mattered,”
the
last
the
years
criterion
program
of
for
the
and
these
foreigners
proposal
was
tal ed
again
within
the
Thus,
it
group
membership
manned"
was
of
noticed
istic
or
side
the
not)
of
of
body.
What
by
and
descent
idea
that
group
Such
a law
discussed
in
speaking
this
Chapter had
was
to
more
most
clear
"segmental Finally,
that
based
on
than
5,000
able
to
in
anyone
the
was
descent.
turmoil
the
take
with
groups
proposing
If
should
contribute
descent
of a
oligarchic
part
in public
their
moneys
and
there is no reason to think that this The
natural
participation
family
in
membership
uncontroversial" controversial members,
cit.,
were
no
under
or
And p.
interpretation
public
affairs
membership p.
105)
is
that
this
to
a certain
the
Athenian
basis
the
degree
just
how
to
insure
that
"sense
of
seige,
of
derives
from
Athenians--a
were
in
was
110)
It but
for
to which
the
fear
a special
barbarians.? pressure,
or
(Davies,
the
longer
Athenians
with
and
the
civic 'segmen-
descent
barricades
Athenian which
fear
developed
distinct
was
not
the
rather
the
solidarity
group
of
descent-group or
remainbeing (realalongpeople, criter-
identity
itself.
buttress is
that
that
citizenship
a substantial
on
the
of Athenians.?
(art.
'unmixed'
one
Athenians.
was
Athenians
not
to
citizenship.
Davies
'obsessive'
is
‘not
into
phratries.’
p. 118),
‘adopt’
Athenian
Pericles'
vided
body
to
it
those
"largely
free
citizenship
that
be
as
to me
the
that
autochthonous ion
seems
were
basis
to
that
a restriction
larger
the
alternative
well
in Athens.
groups' the
as
brought
and
century
alia
were
be
(Davies, art. cit.,
included
descent
fifth
inter
must
tribes
citizenship
their bodies"
group
demes,
"specified
affairs,'
1275b37)
only IV
law
to the
passed
the
do with
was
when
reasons the
a response
to
‘familial’ it for
is
development
pressure!9
solidarity
needed
which
this
this of
or law
Athens
and
indeed
of the Athenian
thought seemed after
to
the
citizen
be needed.
necessary. Persian
pro-
I Generally
wars
into
133
an
urban
number
and
of
imperial
related
drew a tight
center.
issues.
line
ans,
59.104
II,
pp.
339-340).
natural
and
probably
law
was.
ing
consciousness
the
belief
With
It
the
"inflow
those
on marriage
art. The
on
p.
111;
suggestion
parent
vas
in
community
the
the
on
the
'family'
groups,
ἃ cosmopolitan 451/0 ignored
ignore
itself by
it,
by
of
the
but
that
most
rather
of
center starkly
Athenians
or
drew
producing
commentary
of
A.W.
Gomme,
from
art.
result
to be
century
(except
121).
It
supported
for
was
(e.g.,
by
"obsession"
the
further
(Davies,
entrenched.
or
worst
all,
a foreign
or,
to
impugn
someone's
again,
I
way
But,
should the
of
be
or
sacrificed
in
(although
and
of
right
this
no
with
doubt
the
to membership not
families
and
their
of
traditional
growth
of
Athens
second,
of
the
could
not
continued
for
a foreign
result
that
and
which
insecurity'!?
the
Athenian
empire,
a way
many
of
perception
ἃ maritime
boundary
'anxiety'
consider
members
Athenian
lost
ruler the
accent
of
status.
regulations
the
increas-
development
outsiders p.
of a city the
valuable
further
59.16-17)!?
of
further
cit.,
require
the making
the of
it was
was well
common
foreigners
Platae-
both
themselves
group"
it a "neurosis"--ibid.)
being
and
‘descent
revolutionary--rather
was
fifth
Athenians
the
distinctly
first,
was
their
the
a
of
and
of the
451/0
on
as
a distinct
Athenians
which
thereby
name
the
not
briefly
(e.g.,
cause
Athenians.
Athenians
urban
terms
and
law
eventually
end
with
in
closed
the
isolated
would
They
and
[Demosthenes]
foreign
idea
as
which
By the
easiest
pressure
self-identity
a
was
proposal
sentiment"! !—pbue
a trickle"—Davies,
he also
of
was
this
identity
commenting
‘adoption’
3.55
itself
that
Athenians
quoted
public
with common
probable
remained
or ideology.
cit.,
criterion
Athenian
a course
of
by
Pericles’
Thucydides
an Athenian
the
that
step
rationale
of
law
first
and
to me
being
Pericles'
occasion
The
to
here
civic membership.
"in accord
seems
that
the
conclude
agreeing
their
on
Demosthenes}
ECT
By
around
to outsiderg--except
I will
easily
law
be
to
try
to
themselves
and
their
into of
134
families). Pericles’
(between
the astos
tant
further
some
were
Athens
that
division.
Some xenoi
were
The well
citizen metic
for
but
it
not
Cleisthenes' of
the
14
with
rights
and
became was
of
Athenian
the track
of
necessary
to
the
the
concept. '!'
contribution)
alien the
most
"Decree
important of
a τῶι
[πολε] u [oex] e (.] --M-L 23. 30-31) to man
lans
before
this
aliens
decree
18
permanent
yet
been
I.c.
12
not
188.52-3)
may
share
in
indicate such
significant foreigner,
uses an
such
as
the
common the
result
seems
then
in
calls
the
ships
official
in
city It
the
requirement
status
seems
main
( reat} of
of
that
460's
which
of
possible, that
development the
foreigners
the
evidence
the the
one
that the
registration
480
deme
τὸς μετοίκίος
plausible
features
that
admittedly
term
metoikos
at
Athen-
also
term
is
the
and
the
now
with
registered
the
the
along
suggests--although
By
the
ἔμ τῶν ἀπογεγραμμένων
in
them.
as
defined--nor
upon
a recognition
to
the
Cleisthenic
entirely
was
assigned
the made
fully
watershead
held
of
was
there
be
in
for
emerged
view
secure--that
distributions.
development
have
This
to
‘metic’
responsibilities
and
Salamis.
enough
'officially'
which
of
(τοὺς) 6€ εἰέν] oc
or
and
law)
only
Themistocles"
and Attica
status
the
was
an impor-
distinct
arrangement
status
foreigner
there was
metoikos
residents
rr
battle
or
the
of Athens
a
most
some
with
the
of
The
That
of
could
registered
of
the polemarch
xenos
innovation
that
the
The
the
and
(out)side
formulation
registering
Athenian
residents
protection
state. 16
was
of
distinct.!?
suppose
reorganization
'polités
but
the
latter,
permanent
a Cleisthenic
and
the
status
(to
likewise
on
between
the
financial
status
keeping
is
of
documented,
service
reorganization time
evolution
foreigner,
the
boundary
but
not
of
a clear
the xenos),
military
status
drew
and
not.
is
resident (for
law
was
mid-fifth
a deme,
had
of not
Scambonidai
λαχ],) Ev
classical with
a class
metoikoi of
feature
the
of
status the
-51-3)
having
a
century of
saw
resident
guarantee
of
135
legal
rights
Periclean in
any
or
institution
legislation,
case
it makes
citizenship
main
century
tés
Pericles
did
parents
could
of
later
not
own
be
of
a
the
Athenians
law
stands
u
the
Samians
re-enacted This atimos of
in
the
by
atimos
centuries)
may
perhaps
have
an
in which
been
part
anticipation
we
have
atimia changed
to
and
the
—
-1—
Athenian
if
or
of
of
viewed
the
it,
but
Pericles'
might
"deprived
(or
could
(and
duties)
it
stood
for.
the
right
to
beginning
it
from or not
land
seems
of
the
development
Further,
the
older
and
two
‘to
Athenian a public
be
part
a
in
but
was
belonging,
not
decades make
that
him
a
Pericles’
a abstract
simpler
of
451/0
three
possible of
and
hold
simple
Although own
37),
city’
citizenship as
two
citizenship.
born
she)
rights
1? 83),
the
a juror
that
is I.c.
in
be
then
alien
community
was
not
lost;
" σΣαμίος ᾿Αϑηναίος the
has
in Athenian from
or
not
the
mid-
and
attitude
toward
τ΄
in
valid,
he
was
in
the
Pericles
toward
suppose of
an
office
that
everything
that
law
hold
a share
about
used
Plutarch
attitude who
suggests
phrases
26.4;
have
someone
simply
citizenship. —
Pericles'
vote
We
('to
law
The
Pol.
'wholistic'
that
example
at
Ath.
say
but
Pericles'
citizen.'1?
Athénaious
offer
decreeing
conclusion, and
or
city
known
of
the
a collection
could
first
notion
membership
or
on what
to me a
Athenians.
in
(the
einai
polites,
a share
divisible
it,
This
context
(Aristotle,
land
much
citizenship
same
of
(apparently)
so
citizen
of
comment
suggest
not
the
law
and
both
not
community
having
the
‘concept
the
poleos
priesthood--or
considered
metoikton. 18
result
in
brief
Athenian
be Athenians’),
the
the
sense
a very
quotations
metechein
the
law.
Finally, fifth
or
of
same
terms
"outlaw"
in
of rights"
It the
for
is
in the
our
late
it
Athenians
94.12)20
was
originally of
recognized
that
(7th
and
and
fourth
at
honored
and
understanding
period
fifth
the
(M-L
generally
archaic
405
ἕναι
in which
implications usage.
in
in
403
they
proposed.2! the
terms
the
least
meaning
early
centuries.22
sixth
And
136
by
the
later
certain
period
it
was
such
as
holding
to
view
this
rights
tendency
now
is
it
probably
should
The
crucial
years
the
related
development
According was
passed
about
that,
attribute Cimon" as
"with and the
were
as
may
indeed
have
one
late
an
absolute might
lack
of
But over
actually
very
little
trusted?
Was
there
no
question,
but
would
suggest
and to
those
on
to
traditional his
rules
Olympian
of Athenians polis have
society been
of
of
this
that
on
or
chat
the
and
in the
of
not mid
and
trouble."2?
It
of
the
hear
Parthenon al 1.26
or
perhaps
fifth
of
only the
Cleisthenes,
complete
change.
century
citizenship is
which
saw
confident
there
had
been to
of
necessary
their
own
best
interest.
for
sure
goes
on
of
the
have
attention
able
to
it
their seems
come poets
who
wanted the
speaking
convince
be
either
changing
Pericles,
maintaining that,
to
and
of
members)
opposed
such
sources
it may
ordinary
and
12)
opposition the
to
objections,
to
was
greater."
be
Pericles
however,
And
to
answer
conservatives
proposal,
451/0
an
(or
Perhaps,
of
Pericles
or
silence
receive
officials
both
between
debate
the
not
likely
who
(Plutarch,
Can
law
difficult
source,
no
I am
the
Although
late
the
was
argument
assembly.*3
necessarily
of
own
loss
Solon
report
we
from
atimia'--the
citizenship.
rule
lesser
with
that
state.
his
the
bargain
deme or
in
a “political
at
if
Athenian
behalf
of
least
phratry
and
again
the
law
Athenians
the
occurring
reliability
to
prerogatives,
voice
‘making
the
‘partial
speaking
of
opposition?
namely, their
minimum
building
of
century!)
striking
about
‘anonymous’
historians, hang
the
as
been
(20th
doubt
is
or
concept
opposition it
speak
a gradual
the
to
raised
from
change
viewed
in
to
office
be
we
(ibid.).
possible
the
in
majority
traditional to me,
would
not
137
Chapter
1.
As was noted
tion’ 2. tial
of
in Chapter
citizenship
but
I argued that after part of citizenship,
3.
See
IV
only
Hansen,
Apagoge,
(Odense
University
4.
Ibid.,
by men
p.
on
this
56.
(p.
95)
Pericles’
law did not
necessary
provide
a
'defini-
condition.
Cleisthenes membership in a phratry was still an but that is not crucial to the point made here.
M.H.
comment
Footnotes
a minimum
and Pheugontes further
V.
term,
Hansen
Endeixis see
and
Classical pp.
believes
Ephegesis
Studies
against
Kakourgoi,
8,
pp.
Vol.
1976)
essen-
Atimoi
72-74.
For
135-136.
that
"atimia
was,
of course,
a penalty
incurred
only."
5. It is clear, however, that the rules were not always followed, and the proliferation of rules about who can marry whom perhaps reflect a certain laxness in
obeying
and
enforcing
Pericles'
law of 451/0.
6. I would argue that Plutarch's referring to Pericles' law as the "law about nothoi" (Pericles 37) is due to the popular perception that this law put children of a foreign parent in the same position as nothoi. For the nothoi of Kynosarges see Chapter IV, note 115, p. 128, 7.
See
note
2,
above.
8. See the Epilogue for a brief discussion of the various proposals about who should manage the affairs of Athens which were put forth in the last years of the fifth century. 9. See the comments of D. Whitehead, The Ideology of the Athenian Metic (Cambridge Philological Society, supplementary volume no. 4, 1977) pp. 113-114 and especially Plato's Menexenus 245c-d. However, it should be noted that a hatred of
t@s allotrias as
Whitehead
10. 19th
war
phuse@s (245d) translates
does not necessarily mean a hatred
"of other races"
it.
Compare the development of American ideas on citizenship in the 18th and centuries under the pressure of first the conflict with England and then the
between
1608-1870,
the
states.
University
ll. A.W. Gomme, "The Literature, p. 86.
(See J. of
Nortb
Law
of
Kettner,
Carolina Citizenship
The Press,
Development
of Athenian
Citizenship,
1978).
in Athens,"
Essays
in
Greek
History
and
12. If foreigners could live with Athenians as though they were married it may have been difficult to keep the boundaries clear and to enforce Pericles' law. I do not know of any argument dating the marriage laws quoted by [Demosthenes] 59. 451/0 is a terminus post quem, but the rules may not have been thought necessary until the fourth century.
138
13. According to Davies, obsessions, anxieties, and 14. "A ‘history’ of the sparse that vast expanses
classical 15.
period"
"For
it
is one--but amounts
is
(D. the
Athenian of metic
Whitehead, the
and
same
argument.
16. E.g., Davies, Metic, p. 145, with
art. note
cit. 24.
the
17. This seems 140 and 147). 18.
pp.
Whitehead, however, does participation of the metic
On
these
to
and
be
rigid
maintenance
foundations
116-117;
of
of
Whitehead,
view
features
of
the
(The
Ideology
metic
status
ology of the Athenian Metic, pp. 75-97, who also ments. It seems possible that the metoikion was 19. See Appendix 1 for it implies about the way
descent
rules...generated
Metic,
the
p.
polites
The
Ideology
of
the
see
140). which
" (ibid.)
of
the
Athenian
now
so the
concept
the metoikia
not believe thatthe entire set of rules were instituted by Cleisthenes (ibid.).
Whitehead's
other
"rigid
Ideologyof the Athenian
ideological
the
the
metic can never be written: the data are history are totally undocumented, even in
The
appearance
only one--of
to much
art. cit., p. 111, insecurities.”
Athenian
regulating
Metic,
Whitehead,
pp.
The
Ide-
views them as post-451/0 developa product of Peloponnesian War.
a discussion of Athenian citizenship terminology Athenians viewed their civic membership.
20. See M.J. Osborne, "Attic Citizenship Decrees,” a discussion of the terminology of such decrees.
BSA
69
(1972)
and
129-158,
what
for
J.K. Davies regards this decree as actually bestowing isopoliteia on the Samians (art. cit., p. 107), but although that may have been de facto the result of the decree it is not what the words say. 21. See Chapter IV, Aristotle's quotation 22.
See
M.H.
23.
Ibid., p. 6lff.
24.
For
note 57 for of Pericles’
Hansen,
Apagoge...,
this
view
see
(dissertation,
Yale
University,
were
expanded
Association 25.
A.R.
ín
in Burn,
a
B.
paper
Boston,
a discussion of the ‘documentary character law and the Epilogue for its reenactment.
26. It is possible that already in the air in 458
reference
in note
The
Evolution
of
Manville,
1979)
read
at
December
Pericles
(full
and
the
Appendix. annual
The
meetings
4),
Athenian
arguments of
the
p.
of
/5ff.
Citizenship
presented
American
there
Philological
1979.
Athens
(New
York,
1949),
p.
93.
the issue of ‘who can be (or become) an Athenian?’ was when Aeschylus' Eumenides was produced. It might be
139
argued that Aeschylus was taking argue that the son bears no real
more
likely
that
he
δὴ anti-Periclean position when he relation to his mother (657-660).
is simply--for
purposes
of Orestes'
has But
defence--making
Apollo it seems
use of the
common idea that the woman provides the receptacle, the man the seed (cf. Sophocles, Antigone 569). Plato (e.g., Timaeus 50d) and Aristotle (e.g., On the Generation of Animals 729b1-20) adapted the idea to philosophical purposes. Furthermore, attention should as well as to the biological theory court but win a position of honor in nal as well as the paternal side of
the
Eumenides
as the protectors
the Eumenides become Apollo has spoken so
of
be paid to the values defended by the Eumenides of Apollo. The Eumenides lose their case in Athens; and they very clearly value the materthe family (e.g., 545-549). Athena establishes
fertility
the guardians of the fervently (213-220).
and marriage
'bond
between
in Athens
husband
and
(834-836). vife'
of
Thus which
140
Epilogue The
Citizenship 450
The evidence half In
of
account
for the
the
given
the
own
and
short
are
and
of
shrift.
the
scope
citizenship
law,
by
the
assembly;
it
to
the
demes
phratries.
and
seen
to
have
pp.
66
- 68)
population total
home and boon
we
only and
years.
as
as
revenue
for
The ment
of
more
specifically
his
two
first
of
out
from
occasion parents
after the
went
was
of
war
deserve
the
of
during
the
and of
the second
reenacted. plague
411
full
of
and
on
the
404
treatment
will
of
their
Pericles’
loss
of
his
it was
admissions
population (see
is
for
voted
cannot
be
Chapter The
likely
III,
citizen
that
the
increased
during
these
those
stayed
at
who
Athenian
also
were
public an
works
economic
dwellers.
annulment
after
future
body
Athens
city
429,
and
It
used
in
in
all
benefitted
funds
an
day
effective.
citizen
the
the
450-430
years.
business
law
to
citizen
years
the
for
effect
generally
these
perhaps
citizenship
sketch
essentially
applied
the
Allied
suggested
law
revolutions
cleruchies
allied
is
as
in
law
of
was
into
but
far
in
left.!
espectally
citizen
discussion
the
a brief
monograph.
retroactive so
as
effect
however,
this
well-being
who
gained
Athenians,
the
topics,
In
sending
those
of
it
constitutional
‘naturally’
general
The
well
the
grew
when
both
of
assume
only
citizenship
403
significantly
can
B.C.
Pericles’
I argued,
not
increased
wealth
twenty
was
403
From
intended
until
These
the
is by
complexities
beyond
The
enjoyed
century--or
population
be
follows
status
fifth
particular,
citizen
which
TO
Law
the
of
losses
legitimate
Egyptian
grain
the from
citizenship the
sons. ^ gift
Plague
requireor
Plutarch
with
the
ends
comment,
141
While
it
is
strange
that
a law
which
had
prevailed
against so many should be relaxed (luth@nai) again by the same man who proposed it, Pericles’ personal misfortune...moved the Athenians to pity and... they allowed hie bastard son (nothos) to be enrolled in the phratry, taking his (Pericles') name. (Pericles 37.5)
The
usual
revoked
interpretation
but
only
of
"relaxed"
this
passage
is
best;
in the
sense
that
the
law was
its provisions
not
were
officially
not
to be
applied to its author.
The demos, with its jurisdiction over citizenship,
voted
should
that
should
be
an
exception
considered
father.
The
Athenian
parents,
legitimate,
passage
was no longer
does
would
that
tries
Heracles
to
share"
cites
Birds
as
be
that
such
that
Heracles lose
a xenes
that
but
1646-1670
thereby
is "of
suggests (1656)
prove
henceforth
dissuade
vould
since Heracles Heracles
not
and
and
Pericles'
enrolled
nothoi,
in
either
citizens.
illegitimate the of
phratry
one
Pericles
son
or of
son >
of
of
his
two
Pericles
a nothos.
Aristophanes' Poseidon
be made
Zeus
supports from
his
Peisthetairos
ceding
give
(1651) him
replies
conclusion.*
to
the
Peisthetairos
estate
the
law
"as
not
the
allow
When
arguing out
and not
anyway does
birds, poínts
he 18 ἃ nothos
the
that
preceding
Olympos
patrimony,
gynaikos"
might
the
that
heir. bastard's
that
and
a "law of Solon': A nothos will not be heir when there are legitimate children; if there are no legitimate ehildren the goods shall go to the nearest in kin. (1660-1666)
Heracles
is
stunned,
to the phratry wondering
about
and
(1669). that
Peisthetairos
"No, for
some
asks
he did not!" time"
(1670).
him
answers
if
Zeus
has
ever
introduced
Heracles,
"and
I have
been
comic
intent
this
Even with
its
him
142
passage shows clearly
that in 414 when the play was produced
1) nothoi could
neither be heirs nor phratry members and 2) the child of a xen@ was in the popular
mind
second
a nothos.
Pericles’ The
found
by
Diogenes
that
some
modern
on
the
of the shortage
children
(paidopoiesthai)
The
decree
is
the
Sicilian
not
and
kai
Athenian been
nothoi
concern Pomeroy, bigamy
not
the
in all
in
the
below
for
the
"situation
wives
an
Sicily
productive
discussing
see
eign
conversely
the
this
were
Athens
women..."(ibid.).
law
from
The
really
When
(cf.
the
of 451
evidence
seems
and
of
of
of
notes
ín
(Goddesses, the was
word
belongs
the
as
"three
but
not
support
the
were
mian...
women
there
of
must
591-3),
known
Wives
men
latter
on
have
the Sarah
cases
and
goes
restored....Athenian
does
asten
be vasted."
Whores,
'bigamy'),
rules
shortage
Lysistrata women
civic
foreign wives
foreign
women,
after
7
wording
a severe
who
2.26).
now given
that
have one
soon
plausible.
The
Athenian
that
it
told
says,
was
Philosophers
the oikos and
was
he
Socrates
pre-Cleisthenic
suggests
Athenian
a story
one aste and
were
say?
there
is
disaster
Athenians,
that
that
Aristophanes;
years
The
Famous
and
another)
Athenian,"
before
of
part
abundance
point,
inappropriateness of
this
argument
that nothoi
were
the Sicilian
further
pre-Periclean
consideration.
defeat
lest
does
aste...and
under
and
was
what
kata ta patria and
(gamein)
suggestion
law as evidence
that
(one
and
accepted
on his view But
"to marry
(Lives
Muller's
generally
this
the
of
of Aristotle.
law
the
men
after
the
but
basis
another,"
that
ex heteras are
from
after
voted
argues
allowed. ὃ
(xenai)
authority
obeyed)
is
rule
annulled
The
of men,"
dated,
takes
Wolff
reinstated, were
(or
disaster
Muller rights
of
law was
proponents.°
Laertius
advantage
is the Athenian
law.
Pericles’
"because
took
first
citizenship
ides
has
The
of
Slaves, τό
could
p.
67,
conclude marry
conclusion.
that for-
1
0
143
The
law
does
not
make
bigamy
legal
nor
man can marry one asté and paidopoieisthai considered
paragraph
a key
122);
feature
the
of
idea
that
clear.
Thus
the
effect
status,
which
was
neither
Athenian they a
women
could
of
not
married.!
special
law
in
order
by
the
law
nor
to
is
the
author
be
able
by
of
to
of
concubinage,
citizens.
legitimate was
future
to
an
59
create
which
is
a special
more
even
Athenian
(illegitimate)
is
(see
children
citizens,
that
A
Paidopoieisthai
through
conceivable father
nothoi
[Demosthenes]
Diogenes
children,
hardly
make
from another.
quoted
legitimate It
it
it is the producing
marriage
bear
were
marriage
does
though
ever
children
of
needed a
prostitute. It tions
is more
of
common
411
idea
is
citizenship those
(in be
set
the
and
disturbed
rights,
that,
one
sense
by
in which vas
were
it was
an
issue
to rule,
Thucydides
was
to
8.92.11);
The
is
‘turn
33.1-2). this
qualifications
not
It
in
of
over The
perhaps
for being
1s
the oligarchic
Pericles’
deprive
many
additional
not
not
clear,
law
conditions
to Pericles
the
oligarchic
ta
pragmata
5,000 the
are
to
there
5,000'
of
as
thing
as
prassontes
same
have
of that assembly and also of the dikasteria.
been
or
‘who
issue
tes
to
This
which
seems
most
represented
poleos
by
8.97.1-2; Thucydides,
holding
office?
(kai hosion
it seems,
substantially
is to was
(archein, or
in the assembly were not, would
added
8.65.3,
"ruling"
for metechein
were
as
(e.g.,
spoken
an Athenaios,
can
the
program
The
their
the
when
way.
citizenship
in 451/0) Rather,
revolu-
of
that
controlta pragmata.
411
any
Athenians
however,
revolution.
in
and
However,
that
say,
of
or
power
and for participating imagine
did
either
kai hieron) we
whether
status
of concern
to hold
revolution
Pol.
could
Pericles.!?
the
Ath.
the
revolutions
in
cf.
determine
these
an Athenian'
evident
404/3
to
that
forth
Athenians
difficult
fewer
changed. 13 meetings
144
The take
an
reign
of
the
interest
in
the Athenian
the laws 35.2)
of Ephialtes
and
intended A.
tried
down"
and
participation
account
for
of
the
as
fall
of
(36.1)
and
the
penalty
"outside that was
not
still
then
36.1,
was tés
katalogos
of
death
at
was
not
who
and
is
was of
the
was
put
to
3,000
1ξ
were
the other
citizenship by
the
a member that
citizenship
the
but
use
supposed
of
the
Athenians
rather
to
become
Thirty.
the
It
as be
could
Phyle
value
of
to
the
that
who
this
the
the
would
Mounychia
(as
regard.
the
411,
ton
for
existing being
decreed
politon the
who
politeia
(supposedly) which
Athenaioi
in
the
fought
citizenship.
land
ta pragmate
when
be
in
government
considered
that
also
to the
had
outside
possession
who
in
in
any
controlling
argued
and
of
of
Theramenes,
Thirty
to
of
Aristotle's
400
a share
refer
still
but
the
death
have
Thirty
ownership
Then
Pol.
even
the
unclear.
those
form
those
be
to
down"
the qualification
confusing
the
Are
a paltry
the
is
have
put
were
community at
for
may
not
did
(Ath.
over ta pragmata
by
politeia
Athenians
had
to
“took
discussion
changing
37.1).
death
they
or
opposing
"to
(ibid.).
(as well
who
of
politeias
3,000
of
"given
autokratores) the
(thus
cults)
right
the
whether
also
convicted
oligarchs
They
(see
terminologically
had not
that
(ibid.).
But
but
these
the Areopagítes"
code
city's
circle
will was
the
to
But
to
in
seems
force)
their
assembly
Aristotle
inner
laws
Athenian
but
notes
"concerning
parouses
(ibid.)
the
politai,
community,
loss
(as
in
Aristotle
law of 451/0
the
after
empowered
38.2).
their
soon
terror,
333-335).
the Thirty
(koinonein
politai?
governing was
that
were
in
the
Pericles’
the politeia”
they
of
in
of
testamentary
Theramenes
beltistoi"
constitution"
laws.
an Athenian
objected
crime
a reign
(1971)
participation
Theramenes
which
40
(or altered)
only
the
revamping
Hesperia
not
was
and Archestratos
clarify
ἃ complete
Fingarette,
"took
to
Thirty
they
(cf.
and
could
be
411)
the
issue
rulers
of
to
put
that
restore
not
145
In
403,
under
μηδένα
τῶν
restored
democracy,
μετ "Εὐκλείδην
dv μὴ ἄμφω πρὸ
the
τοὺς
Βὐκλείδου
γονέας
it
ἄρχοντα
dotrods
aveEetdotouc
was
voted
μετέχειν
that
τῆς «πόλεως,
ἐπιδείξηται, τοὺς
δὲ
ἀφείσϑαι.
no one of those [coming of age!“ ] after the archonship of Eukleides, who can not show that both his parents are astoi should have a share in the city; but those before Eukleides should be left unexamined. (Eumelos frag. 2, from Scholiast to Aeschines 1.39)
What
was
this
question
as
to
the reason
those
of
democracy
the
law
be
would
begun
in
we
up
which
The
the
should
look
not
to
first
months were
The
law
agreed
for
it was not
does
not
mean
that
that
it was
been
ignored
policy were
of
(cf.
to
by
of
and
in
of
to
‘those
the
turmoil and
been
to
of
by
the
Thirty
restoring
just
of
of
what
Dracon
their
Athenian
and
Solon'
. . law'
law. the
This
of in
the
before
the
403.
accordance admitted
It
to
the
(43.51),
of
451/0.
before
403'
suggests
decade
with
situation
law
enro11ed!*
preceding
Demosthenes
is
citizenship
of age and
illegally
law quoted
After
‘laws
unwritten
prevailed
that
reign
clarify
the
To answer
(1.85,87),
Athenian
had
had
The
of
an
law
those
who
use
the
democracy.
need
reinscribing
8.88),
of
μὴ χρῆσϑαι.
principle
to apply
that
the
law of 451/0?
events
restored
Andocides
not
Isocrates
remain.
the
the
codification
should
a different
recognized
amnesty
allowed
the
a restating
that
much
τὰς ἀρχὰς
upon
fact
of
quoted
δὲ νόμῳ
so
convinced
continue
magistrates
now
called
of Pericles’
to
᾿Αγράφῳ
sums
reenactment
Athenians
15
‘chat
this
the
and
410.
for
the
the
rather
law
general
citizen
body
had
146
νόϑῳ δὲ μηδὲ νόϑῃ μὴ εἶναι ἀγχιστείαν ἱερῶν
und’
that
the
ὁσίων,
nothoi
inheritance
ἀπ’
and
the
Εὐκλείδου nothe
(or no place
should
among
who are entitled to inherit), cult" nor "material goods.
is
of
the
same
character.
Further, the to
air
in
have
‘to
that
the
been
months
after
those who
a "share
of
the
was
passed
and
the
court
Orators
835).
previous that
first
Soon
whom?' 19
all
question
the
upheld The
approval
after
the
(1.G. was
A more
first
the
again
set
out
as
reiterate requirement;
citizenship phratries
was,
which
ignored
and
but all
of
of
“family
for
once it
was
exceptions
the
the and
Pericles'
were
such
Ten
lack
of
the
to
think
of
is
two
not
their
unreason-
agreed citizen
idea
upon parents,
phratries.
as
were but
of
the
again
eventually
necessity
it
lav
a definition
qualification
made,
of
(the
a precedent
was
decree
but
began
cítizenship
not
phratríes
cit.)
be given
(paranomos)
Lives
point
Athenians
setting
demes
intended
and
a procedural
so
proposed
The
the laws"
loc.
if
should
3.195).
in
seems
and
Thrasyboulos
together"
was
issue
tended?'
[Plutarch]
enfranchisement
a minimum
demes
of
be
"against
[Plutarch],
principle,
again,
to
The
Aeschines
plus
on
an Athenian
Thirty.
Piraeus’
cf.
(ibid.
see
the
become)
the
the
it vas
fell
of
(or
of
40.1,
that
dangers
general
as
right
relatives
from the Piraeus
enthusiasm
decree
lav
from
Pol.
Boule,
the
moderate and
back
reportedly
of
no
citizenship
‘return
(Ath.
rush
10)
negative
been
and
in
be
fall
of
objection
the
could
the
objected
law
II?
To
the
the
by
after
"come
but Archinos
neither
of who
privilege
politeís"
self-interest able.
had
have
the closest
ἢ
the
‘ought
μήϑ᾽
ἄρχοντος,
for
to
of
admission
observe.
cannot
essentially
be
what to
As
such,
shown
to
set
a
Athenian the it have
demes may
and have
been
147
revoked
or
reenactment
modified in
403
during B.C.
the
period
between
its
enactment
in
451/0
B.C.
and
148
Epilogue.
1.
Cf.
Jones,
2.
See
Beloch,
Athenian
Footnotes
Democracy,
Griechische
p.
169.
Geschichte
III.1,
p.
14,
note
l.
3. This son is usually assumed to be the child of Aspasia, and usually thought to be a nothos in the traditional sense of the word as well as the new. But it seems just possible that Pericles married Aspasia. 4.
Again,
5. See passage.
Contra
above
Beloch,
Chapter
II.
Gr.
G.III.1,
pp.
16
p.
-17
14,
and
note
notes
for
l. a discussion
of
this
.6. In addition to 0. Müller, Untersuchungen zur Geschichte des Attischen Burgerund Eherechts (Leipzig, 1899) pp. 786-811, these include H.J. Wolff, Traditio II (1944) 85-86, and S. Pomeroy, Goddesses, Whores, Wives and Slaves, pp. 66-67; Jacoby, F. Gr. H. IIIb (Supplement), n. 35 on Philochoros frag. 119, thinks it "more likely" than an annulment in 429. 7. Untersuchungen p. 797. Wolff tially oligarchic (op. cit. p. 86).
likes 411 because he sees A 413-412 date is simply
by,
p.
for
example,
Greece,
p.
8.
Müller,
op.
cit.,
66
and
Lacey,
The
Family
in
Classical
113.
Untersuchungen,
9. Perhaps epigamia with
was
Pomeroy,
the lav as essentaken for granted
this is (or to)
done when Athens
pp.
797-798;
Wolff,
op. cit.,
p. 86).
also the correct context in which to put the the Euboeans (Lysias 34.3). Lysias however,
had her
"walls,
ships,
money
and allies"
grant of says this
(ibid.).
Muller
(Untersuchungen p. 812) thought the grant must have been made before the Sicilian expedition. The difficulty in giving this measure a date and placing it in relation to the Euboean revolt, in ascertaining just what it implied and in deciding who these Euboeans are (can they possibly be former Athenians now living in Euboea as colonists?) makes me wary of any definite conclusions.
10.
A.
Muller's Greece, ll.
Ledl,WS 30 viev. p.
Lacey
See
(1908) also
38-46
the
followed
comments
of
By Hignett,
W.K.
Lacey,
HAC, The
p.
345,
Family
also
rejects
in Classical
113. (The
Family
in
Classical
Greece,
ment "accords fully with the Athenian view maintaining the oikoi, and (in the case of supply of citizen soldiers." 12. E.G. Hignett, pp. 273, question in too Aristotelian
p.
113)
remarks
that
this
arrange-
of marriage--as an arrangement the city) for replenishing the
274. I think that we a manner, considering
for
often tend to approach this only the political rights of
149
the citizen. But were rights of inheritance, or of participation in public cult to be taken away from all but the 5,000 in 411, or all but the 3,000 in 403? See the Conclusion, p. 132 for J.K. Davies discussion of ‘alternative' criteria for citizenship in the oligarchic program of the lgst years of the fifth century.
13. See de. Ste. Croix, Historia 5 (1956) 1-23, for an analysis of the revolution of 411 along these lines, and contra Rhodes, JHS 92 (1972) 115-127. 14.
See
note
16.
15. On the codification of the laws see especially the articles of S. Dow, Hesperia 30 (1961) 60-68; Historia 9 (1960), 270-293; and Massachusetts Historical Society, Proceedings 71 (1953-7), 1-36. Also, Andocides 1 and Lysias 30. 16. As with the law of 451/0, I think the law would have been effective for all future admissions to the demes and phratries. I agree with Humphreys, JHS 94 (1974), 91-92, that Demosthenes 57.30 is not decisive evidence against this idea.
17.
So
18.
Harrison
Similarly
fathers
who
had
Law
of
Athens
Theozotides
in
his
died
(The
in
battle
I.,
decree
(Lysias,
p.
130)
on
the
frag.
vi,
translates public Bude;
"hieron
support cf.
R.
for
kai
hosion”
orphans
Stroud,
of
Hesperia
40 (1971) 280-301, for what seems to be a fragment of the decree proposed by Theozotides and opposed by Lysias' client) was careful to exclude nothoi. We need not assume (as does Stroud, p. 299) that before 403 such orphan nothoi had legally received state support. Theozotides also excluded (according to a move which has caused some puzzlement (e.g., Perhaps the adopted son was thought to have a turn for support. Or perhaps the poíétoi are had fallen in battle but the natural sons (of adopted. 19. However, if Lysias has (Lysias 34) there were also narrower the qualifications Dionysios of Halicarnassos, proposed that the exiles be
over
not
to all
but
Lysias) poi&toi (adopted sons), Humphreys, JHS 94 (1974), n. 14). natural father to whom he could not the adopted sons of men who those men) who had since been
not distorted the nature of Phormisios' proposal some Athenians (or one Athenian) willing to make for citizenship. According to the hypothesis of after the 'return' from the Piraeus Phormisios accepted back and "that the politeia be turned
to those who
owned
land."
Dionysios
adds,
"The
Laceduemonians
also were in favor of this being done." The number of Athenians excluded from ta koina by this measure--again according to Dionygios, but the figure may come from part of Lysias' speech which has not survived--was 5,000. (It might be noted that this is the same number--5,000--which was said by Plutarch to be
disenfranchised
in 446.
See above
p.123,
n.
63.
here.
150
Lysias
certainly
makes
the landless 5,000 Athenians include hoplitas pollous kai
it
sound
as if Phormisios'
into xenoi; hippeas kai
he also toxotas
proposal
would
turn
claims that these would (34.3). The whole thing
seems
somewhat odd. The proposal does not really fit into what is known of late fifth century oligarchic ideology; it sounds suspiciously Spartan. Was Phormisios acting as the spokesman of the Spartans, who perhaps did not understand the nature of Athenian society? It should be noted that Lysias himself was personally involved in the debates about citizenship in these months. He is said to have been one who enjoyed a brief moment of citizenship under the decree of Thrasyboulos ([Plutarch] Lives of the Ten Orators, 835). As a metic he probably owned no land.
151
Appendix1,
"Pericles' designation
quotes full in
and
citizenship the
rule
Plutarch
texts.)
this
ing
for
There
are
‘citizenship’
the
language
reveal
about
their
with
Athenian,
but
political
theory
the
and
is he
most
and
old
that
and
later
office
Aristotle
actively
a
the
are
Does of
the
common
Aristotle
simply
Introduction
and
for
terminology
not.
What
this
implicit
are
we
call-
of
its
law
in
any
citizenship
or
citizen
membership
the
nature
discussion
extremely
a state is
(1275a33)
and
of
such
what
does
this
membership
modified (exousia
"he
relieved
has
"simply" in
of
meaning
the
state
of
citizens of
for
the
archés or
made
the are
or
their
business dutiesl),
to
and and
Aristotle (1274b34)
up
of
term?’
by
quick(politai) The
what is
they
he
part
in
of
do
who
of assemblyman
qualification"
likewise
and
(1275al-2).
or
deliberative
@ kritikés)"
decisions
of
opens
citizens
(polites)
take
a non-(native)-
development
identified
bouleutikes
"without
the
a state?’
a citizen
power
of
Athens.
(ἀῤριστος ἀρχή -1275432)
koinonein
a citizen
is
by
a composite
definition
who
terminology
influential
"what
is
one;
office
of
influenced
the
functional
participating
(those
is
what
‘indeterminate’
as
men
is
suitable"
in the
is
notion
a citizen offers
who
and
question
the
‘who
terminology
the
via
who
of
with
on
for
understanding
himself
ly moves
Thus,
often
community
was
Politics
judicial
to
but
is
which
language
terminology
also
the
or
technical
B.C.
(See
citizens?
who
of
or
raised,
refer
a non-Athenian
III
juryman
about
Athens
citizenship?
I begin
shares
questions
in
monograph,
bastards."
or
Athenian
"the
"law about
calling
the
and
451/0
we
did
definition
in
are
How
ask
Pericles
whom
status?
to
this
be
legal
Book
of
to
reflect
Terminology
title
need
formulations
of
the
by
important
which
and
law,"
proposed
terms
designation
‘concept’
Citizenship
(1275b18-19).
(ἁπλῶς
his
resident
city.
)
is
one
Children
foreigners,
152
are
only
mention
"qualified"
the
parents
does How
of
not do
tion
a clear,
-1275b21-22),
number
are
citizens
really
wins
-1275al6).
he
(by
holds
some
whether
A related
problem
do we
regard
There
is
no
need
or
kind
not
arises
new
we when
is
defined
someone or
any
city??
For
of
ot
rule
doubt
"in practice"
even
to
as
(πρὸς τὴν
one
of
€E ἀμκροτάχυν τολιτῶν). This
definition a
But
citizen
τὸν
this of
a
πολίτην
how
members
who
a citizen,
...
First,
the
definition.
Aristotle,
(
qualify
regard out;
concise
continues
problems.
we
called
(οὐχ ἁπλῶς
women.
So we have χρῆσιν
citizens
his
rules
acts
other
like
office
to
a city
the
18
a
that
both
raises
a
a citizen
concerned
Aristotle,
claim
of
who
whom
with
parentage)?
functional
cítizen
name
but
and
defini-
must
be
(1276a5).
change:
There are many constitutions (politeiai) where the law goes to the length of admitting aliens to citizenship. There are, for example, some democracies where ἃ man who has only a citizenmother (politis) 18 admitted; and there are many states where the same privilege is given to persons of illegitimate birth. But the policy of extending citizenship so widely is due to a dearth of genuine citizens (gn@ésioi politai); and it is only a decrease of numbers which produces such legislation. When the population increases again first sons of a slave-father or slavemother
are
disqualified;
mother
but
an alien
citizenship
on both
is
sides
then
father
confined
those
who
are
| born
(tousaapo gunaikon);
to
those who
(tous ex amphoin
are
of
Aristotle
states, have
but better
argues the
by
the
politically
there
citizen
citizens
A problem part
that
which
terminology
is
are
still
than
Aristotle of
participating
different
the male
kinds
functionally
others
a
citizen
citizen-
finally parentage
aston). -1278a27ff.
So
of
and (Barker
of
trans.)
citizen
defined.
Some
in
different
states
will
simply
(1278a40-bl). seems
rules but
he
what
not
to
appreciate,
quotes. about
however,
A polites the
astoi
may
(male
be or
is
raised
the
active
female)?
in
153
Metechein tes
archés
poleös??
is
In
chein
t@s poleös
quoted
in
the
experience
of
political,
was
it
is
not
an
as
Aristotelian
although
Aristotle
does
are
the terms
appearing
in Pericles’
Pol.,
while
Aristotle's
democratic
polites
does
definition
Athens
a noticeable
of
where
privilege
of
definition
understanding
the way
in which
Athenians
membership.“
For
last
is
when
we must
to metechein
indicated
“Athenians that
this
are
both
only
turn
not
in
to Athenian
the
those
‘citizenship’
fact
born
was
that
from
terms
given
by
Athens,
of
mete-
that
reflect
judicial
of
the
law. the
and
community,
authoritative for
and defined
their
(civic)
term astoias well
The importance of the Pericles’
parents"
the
clearly
to the
quoted
Athenian
to
and
law as
version
necessarily
usage,
Plutarch
both
any
member
tes poleés” and hoi Athénaioi.
by
astoi
decisions,
male
group
metechein
‘citizenship’
to make
it
about
them,
appears
is
used
what
discuss
adult
nor
but
appear
right the
adequate
not
polités
the
entirely
as politai,
citizenship,
fact,
Ath.
Although
clear
law
simply
(Pericles
recipient
was
37.4),
simply
"to
as and
be
an
Athenian" (e.g., I.G. II? 1.12 * M-L 94.12). Aristotle or
indirectly
just
as
they
quoting were
and polis
for
community
along
difference to
those
of
Attica
eminent
has
and
the
two?
the
town
astoi and
polis
been
claimed,
astoi
author up
onto
What or
Attica
he
use
of
term astoí
astu
for
century imply?
Attica.
as
a
and
is
either
its
The
Athenians,
of
politai.! term
in
directly
settlement
the members
Neither
throughout Athens
he
for
term
itself;
was)
does
institutions.
Athens
it
however,
old
each of
when
Athenian
fourth
does
living
or
the
citadel
are
and
the
standard
whatever of
term
give
held
more
the
and
(whenever
astu
It
in
to
also
with
the
Athenian
reluctant
between
politai
uses
an
citadel,
living
Athenian
rarely
acropolis
there
referred
the
town
their
Is
historical
After
or
only
times
synoikismos
were
the
pre-
refer
to
whole.
that
in Athens
astoi
and
politai
a
154
distinct
groups
of
people.
Bekker,
Anecdota,
257
s.v.
Eupatridai
ἐκαλοῦντο οἱ αὐτὸ τὸ ἄστυ οἰκοῦντες καὶ μετέχοντες βασιλικοῦ γένους καὶ
they
are
have
a share
called
religious
has
been
taken
that
in
earliest
astu.
This
gene
did have
that
"in
is not
born
warns
that
Athens
mind
and
that
the
will
of
putting
the
city
danger.
Solon
the
fragments
démos and
and the
-frag.
uses
her of
the
and
men--frag. other
the
perish
town
itself
and,
with
such
to of
with
of
in
does
contrast
not
with
specifically
poems
the
division
(frag.
6),
the démos
9)
the
nobles
may
also
and
the
own city
kakoi
oppositions.
and
that
When
is
mean
that
theoi;
it
it
is
within
the
it
solon
immortal
gods,
persuaded
and
the the
Solon
says
own
city
(the (at
is
that
andres vile the
and time
by
unjust who
equal
h@gemones.
the megaloi
esthloi
("the
h@gemones
Athens'
a
3).
49
the astoi is
be
poems
35 note
"being
the
the
Athenian
his
In fragment
Zeus
in
claimed
in
p.
mean
simply
many
who
" (HAC,
to
lived
and
Hignett
1)
of δήμου 6° ἡγεμόνων ἄδικος νόος
this
and
C.
the
their
who
families
poetry. of
people")--suggesting But
note
anecdotum
the πενιχροῦ
will
38
Eupatridai
But
of Solon's the
p.
this
town."
residence
by
Athens,
Athenian
risk destroying
troubles
Solon's
the
fragments
astoi
its hégemones
great 34)
in
is
of
part
prominent
on to speak
leaders
causing
the
a concern
referred
first
contrasted
themselves
goes
astoi
many
never
the
are
in
Population
"around
by the
of
who
live
and have
The
ἄστυ
as such
the astoi
hégemones.
Gomme,
centers
out
then
A.
in Athens
fact
time
This
He
by
their
the Ócto(
money."
who
family'
unjustified.
the
Solon's
that
'royal
times
are
but
[Eupatridai)
of
(e.g.,
of
ἱερῶν ἐπιμέλειαν ποιούμενοι.
cults.
seems
recognition
τὴν τῶν
are
the
citizens
Throughout between
the
(the people the
worthy-
of
Peisis-
155
tratus’
designs
on a tyranny),
δείξει δὴ μανίην μὲν ἐμὴν βαιὸς χρόνος ἀστοῖς, δείξει,
ἀληϑείης ἐς μέσον ἐρχομένης . .
A little time will comes out into the
show my open.
madness
to
.
the
(frag. there
is
no
Diogenes this
reason
Laertius
does
not
passages
(in
it
astoi
be
usage
will
to
essentially haps
from
Troy
be
Troy
taken
as
to
help
friends
will
a clear we
and
the
of
Solon's
is
any
local
more
common
of
claim
Solon that
sum
total
of
it
not
is than
population.
also
Athenians.
to
meaning
Greek
and
the
astoi
adduced,
the
early
all
accused
the
evidence
stratum
to
that
) comprise
truth
10)
talking
Boule
terms
astoi
the
members
for points
the
the
astoi,
Odyssey
‘communal’
of
politai But
recognize
might
10
this
the
warriors.
in
perhaps,
far
the
when
usage.
of
being
mad,
Boule.
These
Solon's
use
did
Further,
two
to
politai
asto1.
that
a distinction
consideration
a background
is
the
the
community
killed
(Iliad
15.557-8);
Iphidamos Trojan
astoi
left
with
mist Put
are
politai
battle
for
of
that
interpreting
as
so
"one's coming
own" to
they
seem
to be
citizens,
but
seen
per-
with
and
is
neither with in
draw
the
Achaians
politai
his
a whole
that
together
Homer !?
there
Thrace
community
in or
urges
(13.192).
sense;
consider
of
appear
Hector
covered
him"
politai
view.
when the
and
young in
wife
and
the
civic
water
from
are wife
view.
"wife
nor
13
realm.
lest the to
come
So
astoi
philoi,
King
Ὁ
suppose
Nor
such
to
but
of
necessary
A brief
provide
According
usage.
different
Odysseus
has
support
not
meaning
4 and
from
synonyms
as
the
in Athens
Athenian
is
it was
a particular
both
so
he
convincing
retained
In
to
more
a deviation
classical
citizens
(1.49)
fragments
referred
would
think
restrict
Unless that
to
astoi
nor
astoi So,
Alcinous'
156
well as
(Odyssey
viewed
ruled.
an
a more
or
usage
Grant
one
him
is
of
the
the
another
frequently
one's
own
pleasure
and strangers,
fountain
perspective:
reveals
astos
insider,
from
public
Post-Homeric
Athenian is
in
7.131)
water
paired
was
and
the
aspect
is
in
asty
provided
contrasted
a xenos
veneration
his friends
of
'connotative'
while
of
outside
an
the
of
by of
Ithaca
the
ruler
astos
with
(17.206) to
the
significant
xenos.
!?
An
13
for
astos
outsider.
sight
of
citizens
(ποτ΄ ἀστῶν καὶ ποτὶ ξείνων).
or Thrice Olympionician the house citizens (ἀστοῖς ), ministrant
A xenos
can
enemy,
the
but
be
never
meaning
legal.
a guest-friend
of
part
both
Sophocles’
usage
a xeinos
xenas
as
xenoi
(e.g.,
206)
Athenian
chorus
Oedipus
can
see
their
the
terms
is
also
epi
of
as
is vell
the
they and
position
his in
do
at
him
(e.g.,
way.
At
... μανϑάνειν γὰρ ἤνιομεν ξένοι πρὸς ἀστῶν, ἂν 6° ἀκούσωαιεν
...forwe we hear.
a sentiment
which
must
learn/xenoi
Antigone
echoes
from
at
another The
a good
184);
he
xenoi the
From
among
opening
situation
usage,
is
214).
13.1-3
contrast
in Athenian
Colonus
are
in
astos. 18
strangers,
daughter this
an
or
evidenced
before
also
lines
or
Oedipus
(stranger as
these
community
and in
in
I praise, gentle to fellow to foreigners (ξένοισι ). Pindar, Olym. 7.89-90 and (Lattimore trans.)
is
fundamental
literary
example.
addresses the
and
of
play
and
Oedipus the
chorus
viewpoint
astoi, the
a hostile
the
of two
Oedipus
the Thebans says
τελεῖν.
astoi,
171.
and
Theseus
do
what
too,
when
berating
Creon
for
to
157
his
conduct,
says
ξένον
πορ΄ ἀστοῖς ὡς διαιτάσθαι,
...but
He would xenos
I
would
never
convey
[ Demosthenes
act
the
know
in
a
same
how
foreign
contrast
pen.
a xenos
must conduct (927-928);
land
Creon
in
as
the
fourth
has
century
yore
In Thucydides
the
always
together
astoi
people
xenoi
astoi
6.16.3;
summed would
appear
and
in the city, 1.24.4;
up
expect;
marriage
and
The
in Attica!”
marriage
term
is
relationship
referred
to
above
set
prominent
or
to
in
one
or
the
means
law
Astos
quoted
and
by
procession
to
be
the
laws
dealing
Plato's Laws 849a-d,
form. !?
(2.34.1)
community
against
See,
Astos
for
everyone
the
example
(See
large,
As one
categories the
866c,
laws
872a,
also
easily
xenoi.
various
845d-e,
example,
(6.30). at
outsiders, with
For
and xenos
or almost
expedition
the
another.
whatever...
explicit.
plural
the Sicilian
appear
and
way
always
in
funeral
saw off
astoi
form,
is almost usually
in the
and xenoi,
plural
the
their
opposition
joined
27.4).
in the
and
astoi.
τὲτέχνῃ ἢ umen ἡτινιοῦν ....
If a xenos cohabits with an ast@ by any and if a xené cohabits with as as astos. T
both
acted
among
| 59.16: 18
"Bay δὲ ξένος d
nearly
himself
of
on
882a,
938c. Accordingly, the first
the
lav of Pericles
would
be
implication
'born
of
the
from astoi,
phrase
not
"born
xenoi.’
from
Under
both
astoi
astoi"
in the
in
158
lexicon
of
LSJ
we
find,
however,
townsman,
citizen,
πολίτης,
ἀστός being
πολίτης,
a
stronger
Il.11.242,
conclusion:
0d.13.192
etc:
one who has civil
one who has political
we
have
seen,
restrictive
Periclean there
at
laws
rule)
on who
politai,
LSJ
is
which
rights „20
makes
and
those
from
(p.
Politis,
not
to me
of
their
between women
only
as
rule
with
the
did
but
quoting
who
as
possible
"civil
the
is born
feminine
from a politis"
by Aristotle
distinction
Is
rights?
have
uses
(1275b22)
the
two astoi."
not
even
Aristotle
The
progressively
political
astoi
elsewhere
politai."
from
a woman
earlier
of
(apparently
and
he is a citizen
are
speaking
(born)
civil in
But
is phrased
politai
those
included
lines
is
concludes
only
sense.
seven
Aristotle and
those
democracies
198). he
just
but
Diritto
from
language.)
politis(ides)
in Athens,
two
di
astoi
politai.
meaning.
of
And
(Studi
office
graphic’
a citizen
1278a34;
of
LSJ
as
appears
?!
distinguished
clear
here
the Periclean
Paoli
hold
be
Politics
they make politai
"In some
born
the
(Aristotelian)
in Athens?
{11-founded.
or
made
in to
thinking
form of polités: (1278a28)
is
"finally
a distinction
Apparently
"only
1278a34
Pol.
from
only,
rights also. Arist.
As
dist.
rights
politai Thus
claims, what
not
as
have
and
is
undeniable
nowhere
is
it
ever
as
astai.
The
said
due
underaged
“official
that (or
woman's
argued
along
to
or
age
males
language are
‘official,’ women
did
implied) exclusion
as
not
that from
carry
arms
astai
and
astoi,
not
opposed
this
was
these
However below
common
carry
and
not
(See
more
lines
do
(ibid.),
is.
much
similar
sex
are
language”
polites(at)
obvious
it
3)
who
‘official’
Although
status
and
is not
an
chapter
those
women
Paoli's
Astos(oi) do
Attico,
to
for
it
is
'epi-
than common
arms
or
hold
due
to
or
activities
usage, office
a sign was
due
to
159
the
simple
insider,
fact
an aste.
traditional
her
she
no
referred
for
the
asté"--Demosthenes
was
enrollment return
palin
a deme
eis as
8.31,
And
offers
to
was
the so
no
describe
example
introduced
she
was
accepted
it--other
usually
of
his
outsider,
commonly
a woman was
than
an
and that
of
a gune.2?
their
specifically
son to the phratry
being
he might
as
I can
the contrast with xenos and xene is
see,
until
to within
his
community
Athenian
did
not
(Ath.
paides epi
the
needed
but certainly far
an
paidas
teen-year-olds
10.12).
as
referred
into
place
in Greece
Paoli
against
("knowing him to be an astos born to him from a wedded
57.54),
Otherwise,
her
was
When a father
to him as an astos
an Athenian
term
underaged,
Viewed
society
as elsewhere
to as astoi.
implicit.
a woman.
her
specific
In Athens
As
was
Within
that
sex.
refer
that
Pol.
42.1).
by
reached
to
be
Similarly,
the
Isaeus
(children
Isaeus
the
as a pais.
appear
dietes t@besan
law quoted
he
two
age
If at proper
of
the
time
of
age,
he
would
of
the
eigh-
speaks
years
eighteen
past
puberty--
10.10:
ὃ γὰρ νόμος διαρρήδην γκυλόει παιδὶ μὴ ἐξεῖναι συμβάλλειν μηδὲ γυναικὰ πέρα μεδίμνου κριϑῶν.
The
law
expressly
or a woman of
shows
but
the
hardly
that
stages
main
‘child’
of
legal
an
unusual
On
the
political
it
being
possible
to make a contract
worth
for
a child
(pais)
over one medimnos
barley.
clearly
Different
prevents
(guné)
childhood and
social
'woman' might
be
were
sufficient
recognized
distinction
was
(as
between
indication of
the
child
of
legal
meirakion and
status.
or
adult.
ephebos)
It
is
situation.
other
rights
and
hand,
astos
and military
is
frequently
service.
used
in Attic
In Aristophanes’
in
reference
to
Birds
Euelpides
claims
160
that
he
and
Peisthetairos
Gouy....(honored ing
of
a second
in
are
tribe
class
φυλῇ
and
τιμᾶάμενοι
astoi
Again,
among
when
in
4
ἄστοὶ
μετ᾽
astoi--33-34);
the
he
Ecclesiazousae
is
not
boast-
Blepyros
asks,
ἐστι προστεταγμένα
ἃ τοῖσιν ἀστοῖς. ἔμελεν has everything concern of the
γένει
family,
position.
Grexvtadτ’ αὐταῖς
μαὶ
;
been assigned astoi?
to
them
(the
women)
which
was
the
assembly
and
jury
(459) he
specifically
Thucydides fifth
means
speaks
century
such
of the
things
as
lightarmed
inscription
seems
when
most
no
law
unlikely
makes
If astoi terms
in
of
the
that Athenian
usage
suggests
communal
one,
26
in
were
usage
was
democracy.
then
politai
women;
in
fifth
we
be
came
carry
cross
the
century usage
usage
the
cult
of
be
in
legal
used
by
the the
legal view
while
that
in
polites, Homer's
bridge
built when
politai
flaunts
‘official’
and a
Apollo
Lykaios
does
the
their politai
not
political
(as opposed
in
it
broad
Athens
excluded took
queen vote
an
water
is
the
active
judge
include
Greek
term The
part
in his
Herodotus'
(1.186), they or
still
a domestic,
women.
or
to
development
century
draw
usually
terms
polites
existed
25
suggests
who
politai
it.
astos
which one
by the
that
In sum,
describes
enactments),
and
fifth
connotations
When
Athens
directly
Paoli
or
context
clear
which
‘legal’
accept
Aristotle's
Judging.?’
in Athenian
also
it will
became
and
not
public
to
to
distinction
affected
If
a political,
Babylonian
Thus
common
their
in Athens
men.
and
might
polites
but
it
legal
which
increasingly
by voting
of
relation
(4.94.1)
duty.??
... (archers both astoi and xenoi) .24
the
use
polites
city
that
and politai
common
apparent
use
troops aston kai xenon
mentions,
τοχσότος τός τε dot [oc wa. χσένος it
office-holding,
will
they
women.
28
were
be men and only
161
There (as
far
it was term
as
remains I know)
coined
is
1227),
Aristotle rights.
The
either
that
all
basic to
education
of
the
(Plato)??
called
astai
notable 459,
1335),
half
increasingly Whether
it carries term
female
it
fifth
is
(e.g.,
used
is not
at
all
(Sophocles
politai
and
woman
of
an
Perhaps
polites.
Plato
insider
8144)
or
or political
Euripides) will
The
(Electra
(Laws
common)--seems
and
appears
Sophocles
of legal
politides, 18
by
57.43),
first
century.
connotation
no implication
chorus
community,
the
male
Demosthenes
the
of
It
to
or
be
to
that
an Athenian
from
any
women,
when
not
referred
to as gunaikes,
were
politides
and
could
included
collective
rhetori-
emphasize
undergo
or
than
cases
quoted
asté,
when
fact
not,
see Thucydides
Again,
this
is due not
‘official’
that
the
key
community
was
her
status
she
would
not
normally
for
the
use
opposed
political the
to or
as
be
was
(wife
for
the the
class
insider
Athenian
to
not
city most
to Athenian
and daughter)
and part
an
we
military point
owing passive
‘official’
it
of
of
say,
to
yet
the
and
produce
Athenian more
"invisible"
which
and
called
citizens not
state,
solely
entitled
30 put their fathers
Athenian
link.
from
the
a xene,
broader,
service,
Eccles.,
in
certainly
or
(For
it stems
not
be
of astos,
contexts
community
indirect.
in order
the vital
were in
allegiance or
Rather
an aste
to
astoi.
meaning
‘political’
the
likely
or membership
outsider,
‘citizens’
more
or Aristophanes,
of women.
might
of members
husbands
was
to any
in active,
women,
the
citizenship
understanding sense
ín
2.34.4
position
a woman's
referred
Aristotelian, of
of
an
non-citizens,
daughters
The woman
second
feature
politai.
protection
citizenship their
of
be
they are
above.)
or to the
the
to
status.
he politis.
(Demosthenes). Athenian
as
second
to
use--(and a
the
the
1278a28)
address
members
in
('unofficial')
of
as
(Electra
(Politics
cal,
view
because
ambiguous
Euripides
feminine
in Athens
just
never
the
After
married sons.
451/0
162
an Athenian
would
prove
his
citizenship
father and of his mother's 1237, ing
lines her
119-120.)
A woman
citizenship,
father,
father.
but
would
have
indirectly
it
or sons. 31
There
aste as between
a xenos and
an astos.
not
as
and
in modern
In addition
to his
rigorous
terminology”
to adult
male
aion or ial"
for
themselves
children)
did
making
the
forty-odd
to
Aristophanes
("The
not
of
refer of
40-1
only
these
1229,
where
always
are
Archarnians
630
and
764
the
phrase
language
Bdelykleon
632,
among
ton
swears,
the
but
It
is
(in
various
for
Athenians
ox
that
cases)
listed
ἄδουσι their
tachybouloi
and
is
used,
τὸν ᾿Αϑηναίων
had
πάντα
"to
94)
(and
no
to
498,
or
part all
in of
index
formal, 645,
Knights
the Athenians,”
τὸν βίον
whole
life
metabouloi. and
]eM-L
in Todd's
typically
"among"
records)
virtually
Acharnians
law cases
Athenaion
TOE
is
to
that women
striking
"in
to an "offic-
referred
they
terms.
ho Athen-
(1.G. 112
true
an
restricted
administrative
Samians
example,
that
came
they
Clearly
is to speaking
about
ton
in which
reference
exclusive
argued was
her
and wives were
(or ho demos
16 also
also
Further, See
Paoli
prov-
a xen® and
mutually
Athenaioi
to the
1.6. 112
between
are
his
involving
as the Athenians way
of
directly
daughters
treaties,
ἀεὶ "ἐπὶ τῶν bud
demon
hoi
Athenaioi.
it
Athenaioi
singing the
the
is given
reference
6°
is
(12).
to men.
alien
for
cases
hoi Athenaioi
(decrees,
Ath@naioi.
᾿Αϑηναῖοι
Athenians
832
of
and
deme
Decree,"
in
mothers,
as close
ἕναι
decrees,
appearances
Lysistrata
and
or
and
occasion
issue
198)
that
citizenship
fall
name
and polités,
p.
This
documents
normally
treaties
activity
or Birds
When
astos
is about
that σαμέίος Admaloc
the
811,
official
on stone.
is said
public
the
an
citizen
seem
body.
little
Athenian
Diritto,
It does
citizen
the
as much of a contrast
about
di
ho demcs)
their
in
inscribed it
Athenians.
abbreviated
term
(Studi
had
became
was
English
claim
citing
(See the "Demotionidai
husband
aliens,
by
in
long
"), or
At
Knights
parody
κολοσιυρτόν
of
"official"
32
163
("To
the
The
women
in
‘rabble’ of
their
of Athens
the
I'll
ever
Thesmophoriazousae
opening
prayer
to
be true" --Wasps seem
Demeter
and
to
666,
separate
Rogers’
themselves
trans.).
from
hoi
Athenaioi
Kore:
Θοιλησίαν τήνδε καὶ EdvoSov τὴν vOv μάλλιστα
eee
κἄριστα ποιῆσαι,
δὲ ἡμῖν
wee
6° ἡμῖν αὐταῖς
se
Epiicay καὶ τὴν ἀγορεύουσαν δὴν δρῶσαν καὶ τὴν ἀγορεύοιχκαν
alie
μαὶ τὸν τῶν γυναικῶν τούτην
νικᾶν.
that this assembly and gathering now achieve the best and noblest things, most beneficial to the city of the Athenians, and favorable to us, too. and that she, who does and counsels the best things for the demos of the Athenians, and also for that of the women, be victorious. (302-309)
Thus,
it
could
Athenian the
restriction
women
that
i.e.,
of
the
not
appear often
made
city's
cults
and
Athenaiai)°>:
the
the
Athénaioi
adult
to
courts
male
males
or
is
in
this of
Athena
states
that
This
may
not
an
be said
to be
be
an Athenian
exact
‘incorrect’
must
quotation
or
of
too
was
be born Chapter
‘unrigorous.'
be
or
IV
usage
Athenaioi
and
as
all
traditional
the
participate
"from
fifth
actively
Athenaioi
the
of Pericles’
p.
usage
the
(or
citizen-
(Pericles
but
in
Athenians"
two Athenians" 56)
Again,
definition; in
recorded
active
community.
official
version
"from
collective,
Athenian
did
chosen
Plutarch's
(see
hoi
women
the
common
legal
might
to
the of
where But
Nike
of
result
not
they
(" ἐχς ‘Adevalov hona [οὖν "| M-L 44.4). law
the
heard.
realm
usually
members
assemblies
themselves
priestess
ship
refers
responsibilities,
in
most
hoi
term
of male/female
did
century
said
citizenry,
division
their
be
37.4).
cannot
164
An
to
Athenian,
express
his
however,
belonging
have
a share
in
the
city’
says
to Oedipus
"I,
too,
(Oedipus century
Tyrannos, orators
did
in
the
the
phrase
appears
ín
the
Ath.
use
either
or
with
Pol. 's
polités
could
moi
is
καὶ μετὸν
or
simply
tes
Athénaios
say
poleOs).
It is not yours
variation,
δεῖξαι,
or 39.31,
He
metesti
in the city.
57.1,
astos,
citizenship.
poleos
phrase,
57.2,τὸ προσήκειν μοι τῆς πόλεις The
tes
Demosthenes
to
his
a share
and
(e.g.,
need
city,
(metecho
have
630),
not
common
‘I Creon
alone" ín
τῆς πόλεως
the
fourth
ἡμῖν
or
εἰ τῆς μὲν πάλεχως ... μετέστι σοι). „34
"documentary
version
of
Pericles'
law
(n€ metechein tés poleós) and is perhaps more helpful than astos or polités alone in
understanding
in which
women
The
citizen in
verb
a piece
of
these
phor.
polis
of
did
its
land.
most
important (Laws
There was
as
ways
768b)
or
the
citizenship
illustrates
in a cult is
meant
close
of
a god
of
its
picked
a citizen
and
in Athens
(or in
and
also
the
the
shared
or
idea and
exousia
in his
involvement
a "share
hero)
citizens
out
immediate
He had
a concreteness
community
in which
the
its pragmata.
Aristotle
also
or
the
in"
in his which
its to
city
the
family
is more
wealth judge
city or than
belonged and
(Politics
of
rule
the
just
ín
to as
Certainly Plato's
someone that is
these
day,
but
were they
οὐ μέτοχος εἶναι.
is without completely
important do
not
a share without
aspects exhaust
of the
in the capacity to judge, a share in the city.
(male) meaning
citizenship of metechein
he
in Aristotle tes
the
1275a22-23)
ὃ yap ἀκοινώνητος Gv ἐξουσίας τοῦ συνδινέζειν ἡγεῖται τὸ
For if thinks
all
meta-
comments:
παράπαν τῆς πόλεις
way
citizenship.
and with
land
polis
them
this
metechein
together.
The
'belonging'
possessed
with his
as
Plato
what
poleos
and (as
and
165
Plato's
‘he thinks'
material,
judicial
participation proper
and
in
and
his
relationships
“sharing
in" Athens.
from
civic
all
and
formed
theus
the
the context political
city's with
of his
"shares,"
cults--and
the
gods--as
Conversely,
cults
as
well
as
basis
of
community
comment
loss from
also
an Athenian
in
the
benefits
an
essential
assembly
membership.
In
have
which
resulted
considered
his
from
citizenship
meant
or
exclusion
membership
speech
to
was
against
analogous
Boíotos
Manti-
says,
Having
τῶν
ἔχεις τὸ μέρος μετὰ τὴν τοῦ πατρὸς τελευτήν.
ἱερῶν,
μετέχεις.
a share
in
hiera
part of Boiotos'
city
his
atimia,
You have some share of the paternal estate after our father, you have a share in the cults of the of the city. (Dem. 39.35).
is
of
Family
his
In addition
would
part
of citizenship,
the
suggest).
membership
had
kai
hosia,
patrimony. been
the
The
father]
you then,
cults
of
the
closeness
in
conception
emphasized
is it not strange if while a share of the city and of
the death of gods and business
somewhat
gods
and
business
between
of
the
family
city,
and
earlier:
on account of this name you have the property left by him (our
casting off this
name, expect
to take on
another?
(39.31) How did an Athenian not
legally
did
an
her
husband's
take
own
heiress
it back
her own
house.
to her
dowry her
women (i.e.,
‘share she
inheritance. If
he
father's
died
or
house.
in'
could On
her not
her
divorced
family
or her
dispose
marriage, her
of the
without
If she had children,
it
city? as
wife
she
A wife
did
wished)
nor
brought
children
she
they would
a dowry would
inherit
to
then
the
166
dowry and
apart
may
helped
It
belonged
a passive
would
with
analogy
restricted
but
actively
her
most
ensure
as
carrier
equally
were
paternal
to
luck--and
The
not
their
have
wished. was
from
she
of
with and
her
did
her
some
inheritance. welfare,
to
city
conspicuous
it
the
dowry
was
estate
was
contribution
(or
her on
to
something
to
or
to
the
as
the
heiress
(epikleros)
welfare
of
which
ἃ true
These the
active
on
to
she
she heir.
citizenship
passed
jury-courts.
woman
do with
woman's be
the
dowry)
a son,
The
with
to
mother's
clear.
assembly
hers
Similarly,
pass is
traveled
never
tanily./
membership
in
but
support--
potential;
exercized
her
father's
legal
The
vas
children
(male)
children
city:
τοὐράνου γάρ μοι μέτεστι war γὰρ ἄνδρας εἰσρέρυω.
I have a share in public for I contribute men.
service; (Lysistrata
But
certainly
woman the
herself
gods
women
(see
were
disgrace
the
value
was
most
the
preceding
‘active’
and
of
which
had married
of
will
women"
αὐταῖς
be
angry
and
also
attending
in
the
Neaira
realized.
and
her
to
Again,the
conducting
Lysistrata
referred
and
the archon if
was
in
were
Neaira
ταύτην wmamEvotte
μαὶ τῶν ἱερῶν.
you the
chorus
citizens
sacrilege
daughters
conspicious
(the daughter the
the
63)
as
daughter
civic
640ff.). such. have
In
is
μετέχειν
acquitted
upon
that
because,
τῶν τῆς mew
deemed her worthy, equally with them affairs of the city and the cults of
to have a share the gods.
| Demosthenes]
59.111
of
context
detailing
brought
basileus), [Demosthenes] says
cults
that
After
Athenian
in
the
the
the city
"wisest
167
In ology less
conclusion,
for
belonging
inclusive
political
a share
in
the
ship
or
an
inferior
able
of
including
women.
does,
able
a "qualified" not
service
on
can
the
say
cíty,'
none
way
the
to
of
of
which
(otx &mXX)
service
financial
may
reflect
ship,
but
a not
so much,
loosening
a loosening
citizenship.
An astos
from
the
late
fifth
ship,
to
give
one
piece
(e.g.,
considerable
of some
"belonging' comments
the
piece right
of to
development
for which on
this
most
boys
and
old
Athenian
tightly
boundary
but
men
each
or
resident
was
imply
‘having citizen-
which
function,
and
to
class'
of
is capthe
of
Athen-
what
one
foreigners
drew a sharp
origin.
a metic
seem
prominently
of
and
group
does
termin-
more
Athénaios
terminology
on
pay an
to
Despite
in
line
his
a xenos and despite
taxes
like
abstract
see
to
own
Athenian)
idea
the experience
inherent
possible
right an
Aristotle's and
in Athenian
of
of the
Chapter
to
land) to
III.
century
of
citizen-
ideas
of
Beginning
divide
up
to
xenos,
one
another.
citizenship
fifth
definition
duties
an xenosan outsider.
increasingly the
that
privileges
distinction
(e.g.,
development
add
connected
an insider,
it was it
of
citizen,
varied
both
‘second
but
criterion
is necessary
is still
century
a
his
is
which
astos,
denotes
contributions
once of
use
and
an Athenian woman was as aste.
it
of
which
polites
with
rendered
a rich
community
non-active
citizenship.
or
to
way
the
had
a citizen
could
any
to
young
her lack of such contribution, said
in
Aristotle both
being
Athenians
belonging
while
or
or
Athenians
In addition
politically
include
in the army
the
community
participation,
function
Having
that
Aristotle's.
However,
was
based
to
than
active,
ian
we
citizen-
This
another reflects
from
a simple
notion
was
crucial.
For
168
Appendix
1.
"Tous
"relieved
gerontas
of
a man of the not entirely
2.
tous
military
See Chapter
duty
II,
Footnotes
apheimenous'"--1275a15.
service’
right and clear.
1:
pp.
to
25-6
since
attend
in
Presumably
Athens,
the
at
assembly
for a discussion
Aristotle
least,
old
or
court.
law
age
of Cleisthenes'
means
did
not
The
argument
relieve
is
neopolitai.
3. Similar questions can be asked of J.K. Davies very Aristotelian discussion of citizenship, "Athenian Citizenship: the Descent Group and the Alternatives," The Classical Journal 77 (1977-78) 105-121. Like Aristotle, Davies rigorously defines citizenship in terms which exclude women (p. 105) but occasionally slips, as when he says that Neaira's daughter was given to Stephanos ‘as if she were a citizen’ (p. 112) or that the case against Neaira was first that "she was not a
citizen"
(p.
112).
Similarly
refers to a law saying that are trivial objections, but
4.
It
O.E.D.
is also
gives
l.
An
as
Aristotle,
a narrow and a first
restricted
definition
inhabitant
possessing freeman of
in the passage
quoted
a citizen is one who is born from the questioning of the functional
of a city
civic rights a city.
of
or and
meaning
of
the
on page
2 (1275b20)
two citizens. definition is
English
'citizen'.
These not.
The
citizen:
(often) of a town; privileges,
esp.
one
a burgess
or
and
The
lb.
used also as have thee go French hood.
second
definition
2.
A member
of
feminine. Lond. Prodigal III.1.243, I'11 like a citizen, in a guarded gown and a
is
the
more
a state,
an
‘political’ enfranchised
country,as opposed to an alien
one: inhabitant
[my emphasis};
of
a
in U.S.,
a person, native or naturalized, who has the privilege of voting for public office and is entitled to full protection in the exercize of political rights. The
American
usage
referred
to
is more
broadly
indicated
in
the
American
Heritage
Dictionary:
1.
A person owing naturalization
loyalty to and entitled by birth or to the protection of a given state.
This last seems to me the best general, over-all, definition of a citizen. (See note 3 for the situation in which it was developed by the American courts.) The English
169
word of course has a history of its but, as will be seen, the different above are reflected in the Athenian
5.
own, not related to the Greek polites or astos; aspects or meanings in the definitions quoted terms astos, polites or metechein tes poleos.
The degree to which metechein
the equivalent of--metechein entirely clear. Thucydides,
government’
or
'the
tas for
government’
tes politeias was equivalent
poleés in Athens in the example, generally uses
(1.18.1,
2.37.1
on the
Spartan
'constitutions' or 8.73.2, 76.5, 97.2 on ‘the government’ or Athens in 411.) But at 3.55.3, in relation to the Plataeans politeias metalambanein. By
ably.
the
end
Lysias
metechein
of
the
(34.3)
fifth
seems
t@s poleds
century
the
two
phrases
seem
to use metechein t@s politeias
(see Epilogue, p. 149).
to--or used as
fifth century is not politeai for ‘form of
to
and Athenian
‘those in power’ in he uses the phrase
be
used
interchange-
as the equivalent
And that usage
of
(with the variant
koinönein tes politeias) is standard in fourth century and later writers. It occurs in Plato (e.g., Laws 753a), Aristotle (e.g., Ath. Pol. 21.2, Politics 126818, 1275b32,34), as well as jn Aelian's version of the citizenship law. Politeia is also find
restored in I.G. II^ 10.7 (the enfranchisement the restoration dubious; see the discussion of
of democratic Tod (11.100).
allies),
but
I
The history of the many senses of politeia deserves further study but cannot be undertaken here. In general, we might suppose that Athenian usage in 450 was simpler and more concrete than in 403 and that Athenian epigraphic usage was sinpler and more concrete than literary usage. The Samians are simply "to be Athen-
fans" (M-L 94.12). "Attic Citizenship
For further comment on epigraphic usage see M.J. Osborne, Decrees: Α Note," BSA 69 (1972) esp. pp. 150-155.
6. In addition to Politics 1278a34 (quoted above p. 2), Aristotle uses astos at Politics 1300b32, when speaking of the court system and in particular of a court which hears cases xenois pros astous, and at Rhetoric 1394a34, when quoting Euripides' Medea 297. I think it is fair to say that in the first two instances he has in mind respectively the Athenian citizenship law and the Athenian court system. (1300b29-30 in the Politics contains a reference to the Athenian court at Phreatto.) Actually the manuscripts have auton for aston at 1278a34, the latter being the emendation of Bekker. It is interesting that Stahr (failing to see the 'quotation' of Athenian law) rejected this on the ground that astos is a very rare word in Aristotle (see the edition of Congreve, 1874, p. 121). 7. On this point see V. Chapot, ἌΣΙΤΟΣ," Revue des Etudes Anciennes 31 (1929) 7-12; and, more fully developed, D. Cole, 'Asty' and 'polis': "City" in Early Greek, (dissertation, Stanford University, 1976) pp. 255ff. Thucydides and Plato reveal ἃ tendency to limit the use of astos; see the examples cited below in the text.
8. (for
G. an
Alfoldy article
(Revue about
Belgede Philologie
the
Athenian
in which the
'-idai families’
See
II
Appendix
for
d'Histoire
synoikismos)
an
47
(1969)
interesting
and other recognized gene clustered
a discussion
of
the
Eupatridai
and
gene.
37)
map
has
produced
showing
the
peri to astu.
way
170
9. All fragment (Oxford, 1971). 10.
It
taken
is
numbers
interesting
to refer
to the
refer
that
in
to the edition another
‘commoners’.
of M.L.
context
So L.
and
Jeffery
West,
another
reads
Iambi poet
Pindar,
et
Elegi,
astoi
has
Pythian
been
3.70-71
ὃς Συροακόσσαισι, νέμει, βασιλεύς πατήρ.
νοις 6€ διαμαστὸς There last.
are
11.
three
D.
Whitehead
an
archaic,
Thucydides be
in
terms
6.54
never
(The
and
the
Ideology
real
of
contrast
locative
sense."
has
such
('Asty' home."
a
sense
in
is
between
the
Athenian
But
Aristogeiton's
but the deme of Aphidna
12. Astos appears polites three times (7.131, 17.206). 13. Cole family and
here,
("Aristogeiton anér ton aston,
astu of Athens, astoi)
ξεί-
ἀγαϑοῖς,
οὐ φϑονέωυν
ἀστοῖς,
προῦς
the
Metic,
of
family
Thucydides"
15.
See
247.
Athenian 16. astoi 9.35) did
D.
D.
Cole, p.
and
'Polis',
p.
'Asty'
and
terms
138)
'Polis',
the
become
an
the
that
in
"astos might was
not
from
Moreover,
History.
See
indeed the
astos p.
(or
157.
comments
that
astos
(dissertation,
contrast
"a mere
has
politai.
Stanford
cliche,"
"connotations
(The
Neither
University,
Ideology
of
men
1976)
of the
60).
It is noteworthy that we (e.g., Thucydides 1.2.6, which fits well with the
not
and
once in the Iliad (11.242) and once in the Odyssey (13.192), in the Iliad (2.806, 15.558, 22.429) and twice in the Odyssey
Whitehead
Metic,
first
suggests
Mor. 628e).
14. Note that in these instances women will be among the or women of Phaeacia will be politai in Aristotle's sense.
p.
60)
mesos polites")
(Plutarch,
rest
p.
the
astos
by a
hear of foreigners being made politai but never 3.63.2, 5.4.2; or Herodotus 5.57, 7. 156, 8.75, political, public connotation of polités. One
legal
or
official
act;
but
did
one become
an
astos
at all? Apollodorus claims that Neaera was neither left an aste by her ancestors nor been made a politis by the demos (|Demosthenes] 59.107). If we think in terms of the contrast astos/xenos then certainly the new citizen ought to have been included with the astoi, insiders as they now were; but there are indications that their position was in certain respects peculiar. Just as the adopted son could not dispose of his adopted father's property by will but had to produce a direct heir to carry on the family (see W.K. Lacey, The Family in Classical Greece, p. 146), so the new (adopted) citizen was subject to various restrictions which did not apply to his ‘native born' children (e.g., he could not hold the office of archon or an hereditary priesthood-- Demosthenes 59.104; cf. Herodotus 5.57). Even though the law quoted in „this speech refers formulaically to children born “ex astes gunaikos kai egguetes" (106) we might still conclude that while the parent(s) had been made a polites (ai) only the children were haplÓs astoi or citizens. See
next
note
for
Oedipus'
"astos
eis
astous
tel@"
(0.T
222).
171
17. The position deserves a further
"ἀστός εἰς ἀστοὺς
of Oedipus--and Sophocles ' usage--in the Oedipus Tyrannos comment. Wilamowitz argued that since Jedipus himself says
t€10-222"
the metic in Athens was Whitehead, The Ideology unnecessary
and Teiresias
calls
him a , Ἑένος, ..ETOUXÓc -452,"
considered as astos(Hermes 22 (1887) 334-5; see of the Athenian Metic, p. 60). But surely that
conclusion--and
not
supported
by
any
other
examples
D. is
an
(Thucydides
90.0
and
94.1 do not provide such support). The riddle of Oedipus' identity is a major theme of the play and Sophocles seems to be playing on this in these passages. In fact, Oedipus is an astos 'by birth’ in Thebes, not a xenos at all. (See also the comments of Whitehead, ibid.) 18. See Chapter V (Conclusion) for discussion of their importance.
19.
"The
phrase
aston kai xenon
has
(Cole, 'Asty' and 'Polis,' p. 356). e.g., Aristophanes, Acharnians 508, Suppliants 355, 843. 20.
"Civil"
belonged
to
Classical
21. p.
rights
ought
to
include
women
in
a
Greece,
22.
"This Note
for
being
138-139,
the comment eccentric example,
aston kai xendn" hai pros@kousai. their
pp.
become
of
almost
rights
of
ownership
way
if
151-153,
and
170-171).
of D.
these
laws
a formula
limited
statement that
substance
and
a brief
in Thucydides,"
It is also common in his contemporaries, Birds 32; Euripides, Heracleidai 411,
Athenian
See also 60:
the
Whitehead, is
not
Thucydides
The
borne (2.34.4)
at
all
and
(see
Ideology out
by
The
which Family
of the Athenian
any
first
contract
Lacey,
of
says
the that
in
Metic,
instances "whoever
only
cited." wishes
joins in the state procession and then adds, kai gunaikes pareisin Their position as female relatives here is more important than
'insiders'.
23. Although Aeschylus' usage is a special other Athenian writers by current usage (see 279 and 365-366), still if astoi implied any would probably have managed not to have used
the Areopagus
"astón tön emÓn ta beltata"
case in that he is less affected than Cole, 'Asty' and 'Polis', pp. 275doubt of full political rights he it when Athena chose the members of
(Eumenides
437).
24. I.G. 12 79. (For the identification of the cult see the forthcoming 1.G. 1? 138 and M.H. Jameson, "Apollo Lykeios in Athens," Archaiognosis (198 ).) This is the only epigraphical occurrence of astos listed in the index to I.G. 12. 25. Although A.H.W. between the two words
Harrison (The Law
D.M. MacDowell speaks possible distinction. 7-12) objected to the Glenn Morrow (Plato's debated.
of the "citizen (polites or astos)" and does not discuss any V. Chapot (AZIOB , Revue des Etudes Anciennes 31 (1929) distinction drawn by LSJ and other lexicographers as did Cretan City, 112 note 51). The issue has not been extensively
refers
26.
to "...the
See
above
simply refers his reader of Athens I, p. 188 note
fully qualified
p.
6.
Cf.
Cole,
citizen,
'Asty'
and
the πολίτης
'Polis',
pp.
to Paoli for the 2), on that same
or ἀστός ."
137-138,
difference page he
Likewise
238-239,
245-247,
172
358-359.
I do
polités
not
(e.g.,
follow
that
astos
Cole
in
all
usually
his
suggested
suggests
connotations
good-will
and
οὗ
harmony,
will and rivalry--pp. 238-239), but the basic distinction between ‘familial’ astoi and public, political politai seems sound.
27. For a good example, of the politícal the phrase agathos polites (e.g., 3.42.5;
sense of polites 5.9.2, 14).
see
astos
polites the
and
ill-
communal,
Thucydides
use
of
28. Apart from Athena in the Eumenides being prophronos toward the politai, I know of no use of polítai which can be definitely understood to include women. Aristophanes’ Ecclesiazousae would be a natural place to expect to find such usage, but the women in that play do not refer to themselves as politai or politides. The closest they come is to ask Praxogora to disclose the "myriad benefits" she will bring to the "politen dÉmon" (574-75). Here the adjective polités is equivalent to "of the polis" (see LSJ s.v. polites II.) and does not exclude the female ‚half of the polis. But in the phrase "Ootic πολιτῶν πλεῖον f τρισμυρίων ὄντων τὸ πλῆϑος"-1131 ("who out of more than 30,000 politai") it is clear that only adult males are included (On '3 myriads' of Athenians, see Chapter III pp. 51-55. Two
occurrences
of
politai
in
the
Lysistrata,
both
plicitly exclude--or contrast with--women, will further 3241. the female chorus pray to Athena that instead of they will see Hellas and the politai saved from war and the
business
and
responsibility
of
the
men,
the
of
which
seem
to
im-
illustrate the point. At seeing the women burned madness. War is clearly
politai.
Then, at 1041-43, the chorus addresses the male audience (ὥνδρες ) and says that they have not come to ‘scold’ any "of the politai," but rather to say and do "good things." In both cases, I think politai is best understood as including only adult males. 29. Something should Republic V (45le ff.).
ness
of the city
guardians,
are
Plato of
this
be saíd here about the female guardians of that these select women do pursue the same
(epitedeuma...pros does
simply gunaikes
argument
probably Granted not
and
dioikesin
poleds--455b,
establish
this
by
so distinct
from
the politai.
section
are
worth
calling
--And
politides.
The
concluding
busi-
as the male Rather
lines
they
of
the
not
the
best
of
indeed. what
women --Yes,
455d)
noting:
--What then? Are these (the guardians) the other citizens (politon)? --Yes,
them
cf.
then?
Will
these
women
not
be
the
best
of
the
(gunaikön)? this
too,
he
said.
(456e)
the
Plato uses politis only once, text. Certainly nothing can be
in the passage on military education noted in deduced from this occurrence about the position
173
of women
in Plato's
Laws.
Their
position
there
is ambiguous--largely,
it would
seem because of the way Plato has mixed Athenian traditions, philosophical innovation and philosophical modification of Spartan traditions. Much is left up in the air. "Plato's provision that women also should serve in the duties of the state, even in military service against the enemy (785b, 805a,c), would mean that they attend the assembly as well; but there is not a hint that Plato has this
point
in mind
Plato's
in any of the references
Cretan
City,
pp.
that
follow
in this
section"
(Morrow,
157-8).
30. See above note 4. In 1822 Judge offered this definition of citizenship:
Mills
of
the
Kentucky
Court
of
A citizen...is one who oves to the government allegiance, service, and money by way of taxation, and to whom the government in turn, grants and guarantees liberty of person and of conscience, the right of acquiring and possessing property, or marriage and the social relations, of suit and defence, and security in person, estate and reputation. (quoted in J.H. Kettner, The
of American This
opinion
was
in dissent
from
place of a man's birth, but the make a man a citizen (ibid., p. The constitutional and are of course very different good examples of alternative culties raised by each. The by reasoning that these
the majority rights 321).
and
which
Citizenship, held
privileges
be
Development
p.
the view
he may
Appeals
322.)
that
"not
entitled
to
the enjoy"
political issues of pre-Civil War America from fifth century Athens, but these opinions are ways of looking at citizenship, and of the diffimajority had tried to account for women and children
are generally dependent upon adult males, through whom they enjoy the benefits of those rights and privileges; and it is a rule of common law, as well as of common sense, that
females
and
infants
should,
in
thís
respect,
partake
of the quality of those adult males who belong to the same class and condition in society, and of course they will be or will not be citizens, as the adult males of the same
class
are or are not
so
(ibid.,
p.
321).
Mills pointed out that this excluded “widows "the unprotected orphan" (ibid., p. 322). It the
is noteworthy
majority
"that
and
citizenship
enjoyed"
(Kettner,
the citizenship 31. VIII,
the
In 9)
of
that
the
minority
could
in
'functional' the
be determined
op. cit.,
p.
332).
Dred
and maids definition
Scott
case
by examining
free black Americans
of mature
age"
eventually
(1857)
rejected
the rights
and
lost
out;
the
a person
p.
both
idea
actually
Justice Taney found other reasons (ibid.,
also
to deny
326-328).
their commentary on Varro's story (quoted by Augustine, The City of how the Athenían women in 'pre-historic' times lost the vote,
of God matri-
174
linear
filiation,
and
the
name
Atlíénaiai,
Austin
and
Vidal-Naquet
claim
that
the
story "can hardly have originated before the citizenship law of Pericles in 451 or 450" and that the loss of the name means that "they are not citizen women, but only daughters of citizens" (Economic and Social Historyof Ancient Greece, pp.
186-187).
women
I do
changed
not
after
follow
451/0
their
it ought
reasoning.
to have
If
been
the
position
in the direction
of
Athenian
of more
recog-
nition as citizens; their status was now essential to that'of their chíldren. The best way of proving a woman's citizenship was demonstrating that her father (and maternal grandfather, if we want to keep the seríes going) was a recognized citizen. But this is simply due to the fact that citizenship was public and
active of
while
Athena
a woman's
Nike
of husbands Athénaioi.
was
and
was,
chosen
fathers.
for "from
the most all
See below
the
part,
private.
Athenians"
pages 162-163
Presumably
(M-L
44.4)
for more
the priestess
by means
comments
of
lists
on the
tern
32. The metic, it should be remembered, was a xenos metoikos. See the Conclusion for a few comments on the origin of this classification. And see above note 17 for the (mistaken) view that an metic could be considered an astos. 33. I do not regard the story of XVIII, 9) as authoritative on this 34. above
Jacoby, Chapter
FGrH IIIb IV p. 121
Varro (quoted by Augustine, point. See note 31.
(Supplement) note 56.
35. Notice that thís usage tragedy, oratory and law.
16 not
Notes
exclusively
36. On atimia see Harrison, The Law of in Classícal Athens, pp. 73-75; and most and
Ephegesis
tion
of
against
Athenian
Kakougoi,
Citizenship,
Atimoi
discussion of 45-60, Wolff,
in
109-110.
Greece,
379,
times
each month.
If he was Family
in
term.
27
uses
legal
or
official
Pheugontes
but
of
God
See
is
found
in
169ff.; MacDowell, The Law Hansen Apagoge, Endeixis and
B.
Manville,
The
Evolu-
the Athenian dowry system see Harrison, The Traditio 2 (1944) 53-65 and Lacey, The Family
38. Not only did the city require that an heiress’ next Side either marry her or find her a husband, but a lav of husband of an heiress to have sexual intercourse with her kin (Lacey, The Solon 20.4).
this
n.
Athens II, p. recently M.H.
and
City
Appendix.
37. For a detailed Law of Athens I, pp. Classical
p.
The
unable
Classical
to do so then Greece,
pp.
of kin on her father's Solon also required the not less than three
she should
139-145
and
turn p.
89,
to his next citing
of
Plutarch,
175
Appendix
The
family
was
the
he*
participated
and
through
which
But
outside
his
which
participants
how
or
of
consider
fifth
or
be
primarily
of
an
the
portant
status,
and
order
of
Athenian
but
of
or
is
and
a variety his
of
In
terminology
important
or
classes!
toward
this
to
fellow legally
an
under-
appendix
what
it
distinctions.
implies
This
appropriate,
I will
will
comments
emphasize
here
the
divisions
remember
that
the
most
to
society
city.
whether
and
where
I will
the
groups
classes,
politics.
belonged
of
importance
political
Athenian
life
attitudes
Such
incorporating,
it
an Athenian
obvious
class
although
of
to
affected
are
economic
body,
to which
community.
usage
Classes
institutions
and
the
Finally,
citizen
group
belonged
and
essay
Athenian
the
statuses?,
social,
nature. 9
Athenian
in
Athenian
of
in
participated,
a descriptive
class,
important
citizenship
views
Some
Athenian
unofficial
century
analytical
within
the
he
Athenian
Athenian
most
"shareholders"
orders
standing
about
family
determined
defined
2.
was
the
Athenians
in-
them-
selves.” For vided
into
purposes
of
distributing
what
be
called
zeugitai
and
based
a type
to
on
and
the
of
(Ath.
by
500 medimnoi 200
thétes.
Aristotle
determined
can
These property Pol.
quantity
(dry) thés
* I am using the mostly on active,
orders rating,
7.3) of
four
than
were
(liquid) This
archai)
the
called
whose
agricultural
200.
(or
orders:?
membership
or metr@tai less
offices
in
the
per year, leaves
(or
nature
a telos
yield;
Athenians
pentakosiomedimnoi,
telé
exact
the
many
(in
timémata) is the
of
questions
300,
were
According Solon)
pentakosiomedimnos
the hippeus
di-
hippeis,
and
unclear. time
were
was
produced
the
unanswered,
generic 'he' here, although in fact what I will say political and military, functions of citizenship.
zeugités most
will
bear
176
prominently:
barley,
What
is
the
metretai
of wine
non-agricultural
income?
Aristotle
thought.
Plutarch
attributed
with
"palaia
the
Aristotle
and
tions
added
the
and
horse
might
land
or
because
that
income.
In
they
were
basis
of
of
what
of
the
This
property seems
tel@
to
Solon
supposing
did
not
account of
early
fifth
It
century
is
value
definitely
although
annual
(Laws 698b),
does mean
estate
(see
Demosthenes’
there
Croix,
"Demosthenes' T{wpa
Classica et Mediaevalia
14
and
[1953]
set
wine
wealth
system
(as
been
century
But
and
so
we
qualificaorders,
neither
did
might
both
of
formed
that
changed
evidence
reconcile
‘common
reported
not
the
at
currency’;
the
natural
least
by
by Aristotle)
to
one
based
on
property). for
it.?
The
of the citizen
the
value
total
guardians
again,
(27-29)
in
owm
suppose
divisions
Athenian E(Opopá
30ff.).
were
non-landed
direct
his
by
them
non-agricultural
however,
‘ancestral’
against the
and
of
families).
and
of
to
they
account
and
links
owned
their
take
wine,
assumed,
fourth
who
and
7.3),
traditional
because
support
could
had
those
Pol.
minimal
three
a summary,
oil
their
no
before
either
to
possible
definite
oxen 8 and
including is
in the
speeches
it
and
yield
word timéma, which Plato uses for the body
Perhaps
land
Solonian
by
possible
simply
grain,
membership (now
Plato
laborers
usually
the
while is
of wheat
And what
18.1),
system
counted
in value?
(Ath.
of
oil
medimoi
Solon
certainly
the
century
Athenians
system.
most
barley,
sixth
equal
6 to what were
as
Are
before
Solon
enough
Solon
and
that
out
is
existed
ἃ team
own
names?
considered
689b).
of
the
(Solon
(Laws
themselves
time
most
the
owners
of wheat
Solon's
determining
total
the
the
that
by
the
they
value
all
500-bushel-men
hire
from
different
middle
the
Aristotle's
even
and oil,
politeia"
owmers,’
who
Further,
them
Plutarch
(and
significanceof
the
of an
and
Fourth
de
Ste.
Century,"
it is possible
that
the
177
agricultural sorts
of
yield
property
example,
might
his
were
pots
When new
was
scale
or
income.
as
10
the
common
denominator
The telosof
have been determined
the
owner
by calculating
for
of
comparing
a pottery
how many
different
workshop,
bushels
for
(or measures)
worth. (and
of
retained
if)
the
values?
tele
A.H.M.
were
determined
by
has
that
Jones
argued
total
property,
what
200 medimnoi
were
was
the
valued
at
200 drachmae and then multiplied by 10 to get a value for the total zeugit®s
cen-
sus
of
it
was
produced)
2,000
drachmae is
the evidence
from
Diod.
If
And that
brought
rent
we
that
Whether
of
are
below
or not
figures
possible, for
observations it
can
we
need
be
on
noted
not
bushel
Second,
price
200
the
for
Jones’
due of
the
equation
argument
lack
of
evidence
in
classical
the
scale
of
land-holding
that
the
range
that
range. 16 medimnoi
The of
the
between
majority
system grain
is
on
200
property
and
up
a hoplite
fran-
on a somewhat 20 minae. 13
might
need
support
to ask:
of land?" yield
I will
offer
by
Solonian
the
bushels at
of
Jones"
the
is
No precise and
here
not
lower
"How rich ans-
reliable only
a few
system. 1? extreme,
of
thetes
were
was--to
modern
eyes--one
of
small
amount.
At
a maximum
a considerable
noted
hoplites.)
agricultural
500
be
"is an inference
value
this
and
in terms
implied
should
rent which
we still
Athens. 14
by which
says that each kl@ros on
zeugitai
a th@s
land
assume
of
it
set
zeugit®s,
is valid,
how poor was
to
annual
be
method
of 20 minae
Antipater
a total
to
the but
(3.50.2)
two minae
expected
not
correct,
that
indicate
(if
figure
Thucydides
would was
be
The
assumption
cleruch
10%
ἃ pentakosiomedimnos,
wers
000
on
value
may
it is minimal.
a cleruch
(See
This and
is about all.
percentage
assume
accepted
the Athenian
calculation.
was
behind
XVIII.18.4-5,
chise."12
high
20 minae, 11
generally
that
Lesbos
or
end
of
First, and
the
199-
gradations. yield
of
178
20-25
medimnoi
a minimum On
this
same
hectares
or
counted two
plot
(those
had
stands
as
other
that
ín
These they even
great
of
at
planted
at
by
of
classical
many
and
by j.18
of
wholly
are
30
each
their
three
system
minimum-yield
We
ought,
penet@s
at
between
did
not
to be
value
all
vary
30
of prob-
but
still
the
all
fact very
large 1?
comprehensive,
is
nor
not
poorest
address
about
Aristophanes
(This
the
since
and
destitute
21
20 is
or
I.123c
at
necessarily
requirements
therefore, face
not
fallow
considered
or
fallow.
about
plethra
and
mean
of magnitude
300
was
for
need no
land,
hectares
existed--as
The
vould
Alcibiades to
would
allowance
order
satisfactory
was
this
Plato.Alcibiades
addition
a farm
fact
but
plousioi
in
of
a pentakosiomedimnos.
wealth,
of
know
than in
no
to be the right
19.19
not
plethron,
year--again
poorer
pentakoisiomedimnos.)
holding.
we
(each
a thes
richest
property
grain
that
in wealth
set
with
suggest
tímes
extremes
Lysias
are
80 plethra
reported
income
calculations
per
seems
as
Athens
2 medimnoi
pentakosiomedimnos
with
estates
Alcibiades
sources
of the
least
Athenian
reported
least
about
reckoning
This
of
or
8 hectares
plethra
largest
Aristophanes
or
about
method 200
the
hectares
but
of
hectare!
in here).
of
ably
per
itself
landless,
to
thes to
^)
deny
and
that
the
extremes
of
suggesting
moderate
sized
accepting
Athenian
talk
of
and
especially
of
equating
firm
conclusions
about
large
part
context
at
the
penetés
with any one or two of the tel®. The of
the
which
members the
graphic
or
who
of
tele
sources
obsolete e.g.,
difficulty the
four
tele
to
any
is
in
mentioned
(in
of
classical
Athens. ??
in determining be
coming
are
throughout
would
in
this who
called
up
period was for
any
for
eligible service
This
they for on
do
the the
‘real’
due
to
the
infrequency
all)
in
the
literary
does seem
the
not to
have
colony fleet
mean
at in
that
been Brea
427
the
wealth with
and orders
epiwere
used
officially,
(1.6.
1245.40-42)
(Thucydides
3.16).
179
Although
in Aristotle's
day
requirements
that
certain
of certain tel& were "on the books" but ignored assume
that
above
this
show,
was
membership
totle also notes death")
shows
that
the
tion,
Ath.
Pol. is
Athenian
during
the
higher
tele
the
course 7^
up
of If
Probably set
one
of
the
four
26.2)
this
of
the
a statue
on
were
tele
Avrı
at
that
to
time
by Glotz, that
century
true
would
be It
political
(telé),
18
at
possible
discussion
based
participated 'cut
interesting
the
on in
to
the
the
his
ἱππόδ᾽
(social
or
also
Ancient
examples record;
given and
which
Aris-
certainly
the Anthemion
dedica-
Greece
would
and
a mass
at
Work,
general
have
169;
prosperity
movement
perhaps
p.
upwards
been
to
into
lessen
this
Anthemion
jumped
two
exchanged
his
orders
inscription:
25
ἀμειψώμιενος.
- Ath. Pol. 7.4
if
there
the
lack
of
a
in
century
with
know
reveals
city's
of
zeugitai,
inflation
effect
fifth
acropolis
that
property,
a matter
(cf.
resulted
Anthemion son of Diphilos dedicated 'thetic' telos for the 'hippic'.
It
two
systen.
during
τέλους
was
the
we cannot
the
opened
Διφίλου Avdeulunv τήνδ΄ ἀνέϑηκε ϑεοῖς, ϑητικοῦ
As
7.4, 47.1),
members
was
166-167)
Solonian
the
century.
by
("in the sixth year after
(e.g.
pp. fifth
sometime
Pol.
held
below).
assumed
the
(Ath.
be
that in 458/7
important
Democracy,
significance
and
fifth
quoted
sometimes
Jones,
the
archonship
were
7.4,
in
Pol.
the
telé
case
in
(Ath.
Ephialtes'
It
the
offices
this,
were
volitical)
may
joints"
he
others of
the
situation:
determined
government
many
prominence
paradoxical
which
after
the not, in
manner in
the
the
like telé
the
hin. in
official
in which fifth
Athenian
social
an
orders
Athenian
century,
citizen
and
have
bodv.
180
Political
issues
not
directly
saw
other
battle,
and
the
This
Athenian
(s.v.
10
these
as
more
based
on
type
objection
to
the
orders),
military
lines;
social
The Athenians
classifications)
(or
the
hippeis
could
of
then,
equation
16
classes
were
not
epibatai Dracon (5.1)
of
was of
the given
the
those
who
that could
However, invention
ments
go
Further,
back all
fact
and
their been
vere
own
of to
161ff.
status
in the
is
ships...." over
as
1,500
not
and
of
classical
suggestion with
according supply
when the the
to
we
who
references
the
their
fifth
same
from
could
the
to
A reference
a Solonian
(e.g.,
by Jones,
Hoplite
Assessment,
support.
effect
that
on
the
Harpocration
thetes
manning
all
5,100
katalogos,
700
thetes
4.2)
arms.
says Since
zeugitai
Aristotle
that he
speaks of
thetes
followed
vere of
hoplites, (as)
of
later the
(7.3,
the
those
the
the politeia
as members
to the
pre-
Solonian
"...in
by Solon
tradition own
this:
Pol.
and
to
ancient
6.43,
the
the zeugitai as
granted
the
the
bear
given
council
9),
rhates
we
were
hopla.
that
century,
period--the
have
(Ath.
hippeis
recognize
late
for
Athenians
those
to
of
cavalry.
"Solon's
some
Thucydides
support
the new privileges
not
Antiphon
the
for
periods
participation.in
a reference
taken
without
Aristotle
to
in
was
significant.
equated
and French,
armor.
taken
be
generally
p.
pentakosiomedimnoi,
of 400 and notes assume
in
essentially
Aristophanes
has
there
would
S12ff.)
supply
fleet,
pentakosiomedimnoi)
Appendix,
(1961)
these
(and
class,
Θῆτες ) quotes
Sicilian
an
(or
A possible
that
on
membership.
classes
is
Democracy,
Historia
can
classes
drawn
the thétes serving as light-armed soldiers or as rowers,
telos.
and
directly
significant.
a military
who
of
paragraph
hoplites to
not
to telos
military
were
ceding
tele,
linked
sorts
The
were
the
"constitution
7° it last
do with
is
striking
decades
thetes
as
of
the
of
Dracon"
that
all
fifth
non-hoplites;
is
these
probably state-
century. the
other
telé
181
are not mentioned. the
time
of
the
Thucydides
Mytilenean
pentakosiomedimnoi were
still
tel@
were
the
fifth
and
so
above.
revolt)
and
hippeis.
'operative'
official
officially century
the
3.16
the
cavalry
Nothing
equated
and
more
As
noted
the
and
this
their
orders;
the
hoplites
than
that
with
with
thétes
says
manned
a fleet
own
except
for
citizens,
earlier it
does
cavalry.
this
usually
show
It
appears were
those
legitimately
shows
not
non-hoplites
were can
the Athenians
be
the
telt
the
two
upper
that that
the
at the
zeugités
concluded
the
that
usually
of
(at
the
end
same
people--
census
from
the
of
and
evidence
available. If
we
more
unlikely
type
of
would
to
that
military
this
wealth
try
imagine
membership
service.
always of
course,
experienced
as
a hoplite
property
rich yet
and
pentakosiomedimnos come
into
would
acquire
have
objected?
his
seems
possible
was were had
in
the
failed
drafting.
to
instance
enroll
In
this
as
Or
context
of
and
of
it
But
if
register,
in view
of
the
the
as
zeal
Would
the
to
(Ath.
with
who
katalogeis
evidence
he
lost
son
of
had
not
philotimia,
the Athenians called
Pol.
not was would
presented
was
he
and
upon
to
49.2) 28
liturgies
were
a man
be
who
the
full
rolls
that
though that
but Although
zeugités
even
of
a certain
property?
a
even
hopla,
because
eligible
that
having
likely
or cavalry
proof)
appears
soldier
thés,
men
a katalogeus
proper
was
it
implied
total
imagine
light-armed
8.24.2) no
of
a hoplite
Or,
a
on
in the katalogos.
lists
is
as
perhaps
voluntary.
the
a
depended
could
serve
himself
6.43,
attention in
2
were
there
we
practice,
necessarily
or value
a thes.
serve
(Thucydides
to
to
in
telos
a hoplite
factor,
officially
enroll
worked
produce
continuing
katalogoi
the
as
annual
would
system
a Solonian
limiting
(although
first
brought
and
The
as hoplites
in
inheritance?
hopla
serve
on
a
became
the
Service
depend
was,
his
how
It
enrollment
filled able
or to
if
it
serve
have
done
above,
it
some
is
182
likely from
that the
level
thetic
duty
would
higher there the
cavalry
the
rowers
have
been
They
varied in
also
and
Aristophanes'
the
221a;
also
see
who
were
as
Athens
as
Athenian
virtues
the
growth one
speak
of
cavalry.
power."
proudly
108). of
a man higher
Perhaps not.
century, above,
But
that
Thus, between
and
even
between
this
may
not
and
and
horsemen
the
came
public
empire
and
navy
In the themselves
same as
were
chorus
chorus
their
have
of
and
Athenians
showier,
their
also
could
vas
may
have
increased
the
on
a recognition
rowers.
proud
Athenian
of
in which
'Marathonomachoi'
their
the
not
ancestral
But,
Symposium
it was
them
service. 3l
knights
a particularly
paid
brought
were
not
represent
orders--the
Athenians
of
may
at Potidaea--Plato,
they
to
and
and
was
respect
courage
military
proud
(in-
on vealth.?)
prestige
The
wealthiest
Rather,
they
and
light-armed
based
state.
cavalry the
the
their
Alcibiades
the
sea
1.142)
and
orders
Athenian
and
While
toward
lower
perhaps
hoplites,
although
the
(e.g.,
city
the
(Birds
army,
the
Athenian
some
cavalry.
status.
the
long-haired
of
grew,
beneath
fifth
status
considered
the
But
as hoplites
steadfastness,
in
rich,
Athenian
power
the
be
fortunes
backbone
of
can
the
16.3).
later
thetic
cavalry,
groups,
Lysias
the
excused
29 the
are
the
zeugitai of
in
equivalent),
in
prestige
the
ranks"
of
legally
falling
service
the
or
the
(Thucydides
triremes" Wasps
of
sea
group
skilled
in
‘turned
of
least
rowers,
Knights
service
serve "in
of
status
time
part
at
rule.
the
from
those
war)
Similarly,
(or
those
classes,
and
Peloponnesian
farm
and
fast
military
prominent
the
and
archers)
fathers'
and
light-armed
a hard
with
Athenian
300-bushel
hoplites
the
a hoplite.
correspondence,
and
were
as
a richer
a
and
The cluding
was
some
(during
serving
excuse
level was
of
status
the
of
the
hoplites
diminished in
stature
'heroic' other
the
rowers
hand,
virtues vere
"beautiful
‘Wasps’
of Aristophanes
(1075-90—the
word
Marathon
183
fighters
is
emphasize
not
used
their
but
the
ability
to
reference
to
the
Persian
in
by
spear
and oar
it
still
may
given
the
to
similar
final
lines
that
a hoplite to
that
of
that
(...xdnnv
be
of
chorus
in
a trireme
knight.
the
they
μήτε λόγχην
rowing
or
is
clear),
they
also
row:
‘Twas not then our manhood's test, Who can make a fine oration? Who 1s shrewd in litigation? It was, who can row the best? -(1094-1098,
And
Wars
The
equate
the
trans.)
value
of blisters
μήτε φλόκταιναν did
rower's
Rogers
not
command
position
in
-1119).
the
social
this
produced
However, respect
respect
was
perhaps
artist:
No youth of proper character longs to be Phidias or Polyclitus. For it does not of necessity follow that if the work delights you with its grace, the one who wrought it is worthy of your egteem.
It orders
18
important
should
be
taken
relationship
to
the
can not
hoplites
interests
the
distinct
and
hippeis
the
fifth
But
when
Greece,
economic of
from
the
century
be
landless
that
the
middle it
production.
owners
"party
is
ΑΒ
the
of
all
three
p.
126)
lower-middle-classes"
all
coo
transfer
or that the
(Lacey, modern
III
(pp.
by
the
end
social
or
of
of trade?»
the
middle
democracy
customs
The
56-57)
hoplítes
bulk
"the
by
and political
industry
...the
military
determined
Thetes,
through
with
the
economic
might
included
conformity
to
Chapter
with
living
nor
sense
aristocracy.
and
easy
in
class"
Coast
of Greece
Solonían
Marxist
noted
or
their
the
the
likewise
earn of
measure
in
a "middle
and
and
A History
a considerable
156),
classes
"proletariat"
land
hear
that'neither
be considered
be
dominant p.
as
means
classes" (Bury-Meiggs,
ically
emphasize
could
we
...imposed
to
of
the
numer-
Familyin Classical and
economic
class
184
relationships Greek
term
indicate
the
are
either
have
likely
divided
but
then
without
the
trans.)
with
In of
to be
into
all the
such
trace
as
modern
existence
squeezed
out
by
the commons, is clear
economic indeed
the
the
"with
rich,
the
rich
of
the
heavy-armed
of
the
mesoi.
the
to
citizens
the
class which
forms
the mean
principle,
that
help
extremes
on
or the rich and
says
the city
that
and
the
possessing and
(mesoitout6n).
will
terminology;
(Politica has
more
Now
middle
the
poor
to
"is
class being
1289532,
states there may be distinguished three parts, citizen-body--the very rich; the very poor and
a general
the
the many,
poor,
he
of
categories.
in Greek
few and
on,
meaning
(terminological)
soldier"
Later
of
applied
in Aristotle who
classes--the
continues,
equipment no
of
consideration
moderate)
a precarious
The situation
be
A brief
middling,
the protoi and
the poor. 29
(mesoi)"
(middle,
mesoi
very
to
Athens.
inappropriateness
side,
bound
ancient
μέσος
The they
to
Barker
say:
or classes, the middle
it is admitted,
moderation and the mean are always -1295b1-4, Barker trans.
as best.
and
..a state which is based on the middle class is bound to be the best constituted in respect of the elements of which on our view, a state is naturally composed. -1295b25-27, Barker trans.
For mesoi the
very rich;
Aristotle
the
pressure
often
the
victim
whichever
(1296a16). their
The
moderate
record neither
are
one
very
poor
nor
the
the
upper
mesoi
is
political
not
only
struggle
terminological; between
establishes
are
the
non-extremists
who
wealth
but
who
unfortunately
have
a government
and
very
in Aristotle
position
in maintaining
of
the
hand
mesoi
gets
on
and
very
rich,
but
easily
otherwise
have
drop no
its
out
own
of
special
the
the
poor
and
constitution
are
content
a very
with
poor
sight. economic
track
They
are
or
class
185
characteristics. “middle
class" Two
They or
very
mesoi
to the Ath.
will
Pol.,
one of the mesoi"
of
legislators
view,
few Solon
linked);
by
is
not
is
also
he
the
seeing
an
(Plutarch,
problems.
best
a mesos
he way
"a
would to
says
that
seem
certainly
comfortable
dé@mos. 29
He
Athenian
and
clear
or
in
or
to
2,25).
the
Marxist
notion
belong the
of
should
the
political merchant
this This
will the
the
and
is
he
was
was
a
of
the
again
friend
mesos
is
distinctly
come
as
no
distance
can
trading-sight-
and
view,
translated
in a middle
and
presents
(5.53)
elíte.
the from
but
was
not
tyrant meaning
still
an
but
modern
ancient
and
Perhaps
a moderate the
con-
some.
Gephyraioi
that
are
suggested
variously
neither
to most,
two
on Thucydides
with
see
modern
(the
Aristogeiton
different
surprise
between
of
is one
Aristotelian
on his
Athenian
that
Solon
easily
"a citizen
satisfied
we
is
been
of genos
tern.
and business
the
as
time
has
leisured
Thus,
the
terms
class"-Jowett)
a member
phrase
bourgeoíg.
Aristotelian
example
or
On
and an emphasis
middle
of
(ousia)
(1296818).
54.2).
to
nature
in the Politics,
Again,
he was
property
This
mesos
middle-class
'politics';
hardly
"in his wealth
economic
(6,
the
rank of life"-Crawley; of
in wealth
very
modern
Similarly
been
polites
citizen
extremist
'middle-class.'
have
Solon
understand
was
the
illustrate
'middle-class'
in the middle
Herodotus
otherwise
(5.3).
not a rising
travels
dition'"-Hobbes;
further
extremist
translation
("a citizen
the
who
common
Aristogeitonwas
from
Solon was
(pragmata) the
far
bourgeousie.
Athenian
According
are
nor of
the the
English
provides
'class'
a
term-
inology. Nor They
but
determined
not
the
necessarily
official
nature
his
of
vote.
orders a man's
The
be
considered
political
Periclean
and
political military
building
program,
interest
groups.
participation
for
example,
186
might
have
order
or
been
deme
political
not
A common
this
furthermore
apt
there
never was
Athens
(Staat
and
spheres and
by
of
office Apart
from
Athens—or
ever
no
better
those
seems
or
to
the
any of
with
pin
down.
will
Who
were
description.
despite
vague
the
came.
Hyperbolus
a sufficient But
than
begins
generally
Cleon
is hard
from
A discussion
necessarily
‘nobility’.
of
did exist that
its
attractive-
'upper-class',
nobility in
accepting
Still,
there
Stand
and
would
special
rights
and
took
up
the
challenge
of
fragments
of
the
Ath.
(plus
attempted privilege
in the
is not some to
(and
a class
to
an
in
the
until
areas
of
appropriate in
operated
Aristotle's) people
that
seeing
inferences called
about
Eupatridai
claim
or
the
creation
religion
and
of Eupatridai.
for
in historical
a hered-
Plutarch,
law,
how
be
no
Wilamowitz'
580
term
that
in
in various
form of the "caste"
difficulty
Solon)
of
show
duties
Pol.
that
der Adligen"
nobility
"caste"
was
Jeclared
A true
in Athens
his
Essentially
in Athens.
with
(Theseus
abgesonderter
sense,
saying
2.14)
is
in a loose
he was
with
the
there
Adel
74).
Wade-Gery
a nobility,
fact
p.
group
life.
using
irgendwie
existed
defined
describes, >’
pre-historic
cavalry
term
fact
rechtlich
Thucydides
such
the
in
nor
by
initiative
‘upper-class’
commonly
reading
and
holding,
Wade-Gery
events.
had
Athenian
the tel&
is
Athens
or
ideal.
‘lower-class’?
the
Gesellschaft,
legally
25
to
orders
Periclean
political
the
Athenian
while
und
a careful
Theseus
whence
from
is
the
all
to be misleading.
"ein
nobles
of
the
term
Wilamowitz,
itary
know
οὗ
fifth-century
itself
recourse
to many,
of
in
voters to
Pentakosiomedimnoi
modern
order
urban
responsive
we
But
Neither
by
groups
do
qualify. ?9)
ness
were
‘upper-class’
Athenians
they?
18
who
interest
Athenian (What
supported
a class
his
such
essentially (post-Solon)
pre-historic in historical
as
187
Athens,
and
one
must
try
to
determine
what
sort
of
a class
they
may
have
been
then. The
most
from Eretria,
on
the
ἐξ Εὐπατριδὺῦν
seems
to be
Acropolis
c.
Alchimachos c.
525.
is
of
are of
help
four
involving
was
in
for
the
us
have
the
late
fifth
man
(DAA,
p.
the
was
in
have
the for
Theseus
regard.
No
the
been
special
can
The be
have
held
these
the
tribe-kings
of
wealthy their
Pol. laid
are
Alcmeonidae
them:
to
them
calling
archonship were
of
the on
before
chosen
an
so
580
a dedication
be
down
in
the
phvlobasileis the
is
that
until
have
Eupatridai.
Laws,
part 40,
no
record. the
There
is
little
validity
in
of
this
Eupatridai,
called
of
of
45-46,
B.C.
problem
members
873e)
580
historical
that
cases
10.38-39, we
not
'kings'
surviving
which
are
entry
Plato,
of
the
acropolis
homicide
cf.
13.2.
himself
on the
The
judged
57.4,
is
made
Pollux'
would
interesting
they
Pol.
calling
28
Supplement,
view
depends
it
they They
(LSCG,
modern
son,
prominence.
responsibilities and
inscription
Ath.
a statue
family.
but
regulations
Athena,
whose
erected
(Ath.
responsibility
for
6)
tribes.
calendar
century
Aristotle of
and
figures,
attributed
to
If
and
animals
cult
330)
no.
Attic
(essentially
25.).
genos
and
Aristotelian
this
10,
nature
other
argument
known
the
Athenian
real
are
p.
sixth
extent)
treasurer
no.
well-known
only
the
364,
the
(1.6. XIII 9.296), Pollux 8.111
as
prominent,
objects
century
Plutarch
and
are
a lesser
who,
(pre-Cleisthenic)
standard
evidence
(DAA,
least,
a part
may
archonship sure
550
inanimate
There
evidence
(to
same
a proud,
at
old
also
Again,
the
understanding
and
53).
of
and
600A5 πατρός
This
not,
pieces
Χαιρίον Adevaloc Εὐπατριδδν
φυλουασιλεῖς Chairion
important
the
39
family
B.C.
exclusively
from
the
group
of
families
188
known in
as
the
Eupatridai,
historical
matter. it
An
should
13.2)
Athens as
that
from
the
Eupatridai,
might
be
sufficient
a
legal
Finley
a recognized
reports
order
of
can
^O Calling
order,
be
we
from
Athenian
farmers
and
artisans
Hippeis
(or
Pentakosiomedimnoi)
Ath.
or
But
Pol.
13.2
is
and
Another
Davies "tend
(APF,
200,"
but
p.
11)
and
is
when
that
it
an
similar
help
by and
the
is
a
that
B.C.
late
Andocides
sixth
to Ath.
puzzle.
of
are
their
ῥάδιον γνῶναι,
Demiouroi) was
but
not
welathy
non-noble
really
archon
list
fragment
such
orders
to
This
course
they
were
not?
tradition
3742
of
farmers
“3 to
the
sources" ...through
development.
Eupatridai
as
in Hellenistic
and
that
the
they
Roman
Eupatridón"
are
a genos.
times "described
period...till
Plutarch
(Lives
is
speaking
A.D. anach-
of the Ten Orators,
Alcibiades
πρὸς μὲν ἀνδρῶν ἦν Εὐπατριδῶν ὧν τὴν εὐγένειαν ἐξ αὐτῆς ἐπυλυμίας
of
Pol.
Eupatridai
"genous
and
(Ath.
five
Demiousgoi.
century!)
if
piece
chosen,
Wade-Gery
despite
reference
in the Delphic
this
the
Further,
Aristotle
Agroikoi
"These
elite
another
orders.
were the
trusted.
references
the Athenian
180
from
agroikoi
authentic
solve
c.
be
however,
a whole.
(and
Solon
in nature
from
two
religious
other
ten archons
and
of
18,
to
as
qualification,
historical
says
relation
can
quarter
official
a nobility
population
it
démiourgoi
that
he terms
Isocrates
the
an
Eupatridai
understanding
as a genos
believes
when
to
or
Agroikoi
admitted
is
no
notes
consistently
ronistically 834),
Athens
problem
to behave
a genos
are
group
in
the
the
first
them
of theory
in
the
with
the
call
there
craftsmen
story
puzzling;
is it a piece
Unfortunately,
as
why
of
state--if
to believe
(in
order
stands
considering
the
that
'Damasias stasis'
willing
estate.
an
notes,
the
three
the
them
division
after
for
consider
πρὸς γυναιμῶν
6° ᾿Αλκμεχυυνιδῶν.
(Isocrates
16.29
Pol.
189
was on his
father's
side
‘of
the Eupatridai'
whose
nobility ['good birth'] is easily recognized by the name, and on his mother's side ‘of the Alkmeonidai,'
he
is
referring
we
need
as
'family'
though what
limit
to
the
sort
sense
particularly
in
that
they
(see were
privileges that
class
made
an
before
Solon
It
also
of
up
is
Athenian
the
that
by
Davies)
cult,
in
the as
257,
four
well
urban, But
frequently
said
(or
genos
could
108 note
genos
"means
1)
refer
both
in
for
assumed)
of
with
to
a
'Caste'
of
the most
(e.g.,
Hdt.
just the
as
in the
Further,
rites p.
and
154
)
retaining that
we
their
respon-
suggests those
need
old
assume
office.
the
gene
This
‘Body
is hardly
think
political
individual
45
elite
al-
responsibilities,
'kingly'
that
problem,
that
tribes.
I,
that simply
understanding
possible
Appendix
not
taken
(now understood
Attic
Athenian
nobility.
that
as
in
seems
18
little
traditional
old
I do
eligible
Athenian
it
convinced
genos
presents
with
quoted
era, ^^
members
If
a genosof gené
were
gennetai,
I am not
helpful
However,
used
Athens
12).
Eupatridon
alone
while
p.
was.
particularly
pre-Solonian
"Eupatridai," saying
of
p.
particularly
considered
classical
they
not
(APF,
possibilities.
genous
Anecdota
early,
the
two
this
to
town
Bekker,
into
First,
of
the
is
'clans'
relation
with
sibilities
it
been
of
a genos
these
group
have
specialized
not
below),
hand
'family'
could
association
to
further
other
of
Eupatridai
"caste"
ourselves (see
on
a
Eupatridai or
view
were
'clans,'
too
Gennetai'
and
presents
the as
such
difficulties.
(Wade-Gery,
common meaning.
Instead
2.164)
of
and
‘Body
Gennetai'
190
(ibia.)", ^6 we should (as
opposed
genos.)
to
The
artificial)
most
basic
(e.g., Aristophanes’ notion
of
of
phanes, or
natural
"blood"
were
a genos
Medes
or
these
there
the
(Birds
5,473c,
Birds
were
700,
birds
to show
the
parables
in
Eupatridai
or
origin,
as could
Dorians be
Herodotus
1.6,
Birds
gene
10,
620a;
699,
960).
Aristophanes,
flexibility
of the word genos and
the
can
implied.
comment
be
and
on
‘family’
is
even
a genos
The of
the
1239)
as
were
All
other
137)
if
men
of
Alcmeonidai
is
ene
(Wasps
is simply
"natural" incom-
and
an
(e.g.,
possible
comparing
neither
(Plato,
citation
notion
within
within
gods
old
this
necessarily the
the
Lydians,
And
are ἃ genos
some
4.61)
Persians,
divisions
on
(Aristo-
barbarians
125
a whole
both
ideas
(Thucydides
gene
of the Greek
(16.25);
groups
be called
Lysistrata
not
strict
7.27).
(Frogs 240).
Isocrates
Andocides
considered
the
frogs
offspring
But the Greek
by
1.24).
Finally,
1227)
it
as
or
under
Thucydides
1.101,
Birds
312,
limited
into
833,
LSJ
family
the Chalcidians
(anthröpoi)
Aristophanes,
(See
2.80.1).
could
divided
(Herodotus
men
not
(Thucydides
also
for a natural
sort.
descent,
was
could
Then,
Rep.
of gennetai."
families
but
further
189d;
which
any
as a whole
1696)
Thesmophoriazousai
Certainly of
of
almost
(Birds 699,
relationship
"body
1700)
be
(Plato,
of
relationship
1.56)
Persians).
702,
that
The Athenians
(e.g.,
Symp.
women
223),
‘familial’
(Herodotus
and
kind
is
Birds 1867,
Thracians
Medes
Rep.
and
could
or
meaning
or heredity.
Ionians
group
Greek word
Frogs 946, Birds 1451 or Thucydides
Wasps 1077,
the
say that genos is the natural
the
official
47 word
claiming
genos
a common
intendence
of
a common
Eumolpidai
who
claimed
cult.
could
refer
(mythical) 48
descent
One from
of
to
such
ancestor the
Eumolpus
more and
a
"body
and
sharing
famous who
of
gennetai,"
a group
in
the
super-
examples
was
the
provided
the
Eleusinian
191
cult
with
its
Eumolpidai noble
and
others
with
or
order?
The
class
mistaken
interpretation
ChaptersII within
hierophantes.
but
recognized
cults,
and
while
many
(e.g.,
the
cults
of
evidence
to
The
in
is,
nobility. serve
I
Nor
any
in
think, does
purpose and
force
Wade-Gery's
the
gene)
is
offices
for
obsolete.
The
who
back
looked
they of
can
the
modern
no more ‘original’
American
Using kaloikagathoi
despite
the
and
said
members
as
of
be
of
which be
of
Massachusetts
in
proud,
Bay
local
as
with
a whole
there
but
the
is
ít
city
genn@tai
Eupatridai)
after
Athenian
groups
a unified
451/0
was
order. did
the
Athenian
‘nobility’
B.C.)
Athenian
The
whole
those
was
nobility Company
elitists
unquestioned,
than can
about
politically
family-conscious
rule
not
a whole.
extent
580
no
as
a
a genos.
a lesser
their
see
a
city
especially
when
a classical
the
the
privilege,
to
which
a
constituted
goddesses)
(or
(and
might
time
local
for
on thembership
a nobility
they
considered
gennétai
Eupatridai
imagined
that
considering
(and
for
I consider
a
seem to be an elite group
institutions for
then
Euptaridai
or to
the
historical
depend
were
the
constituted
on what
(Jacoby)
mean
particular
Athenian
on
35a
that
themselves
hereditary
a whole
in
suppose
extent
Eleusinian
condition
the
in
important
the
or
existence
a real
be
and
genos
not
were
were
brought
argument
gennetai
to
gene
cults
discussing did
the
The
a minimum
to
The gennftai
genos
calling
in
fragment
necessarily
gennétai
there
a large
not
Polias
another
politics of
these
that
to
113-114.
elite.
is
responsibilities
depends
does
ἃ particular
privilege last
this
of
reason
Philochorus
Athena
suggest
Membership bring
idea
of
city
what
similar
p. 20 and IV pps.
a phratry,
legally
But
be
the
but
descendants
called
a
one.
‘nobility’ (and
"false
to denote
chrestoi,
and
modern
a status ^? (not
plousioi,
flavor
etc.)
in
that
the
an order), "nobles"
antithesis"
as
Ehrenberg against
(The
People
termed the
of
the
"commons'
Aristo-
192
phanes,
p.
75).
It
is
class
self-description,
speak
of
the
nobles
recognizable
of
But
part
On
the
kaloikagathoi Use
of
the
not
to
affect
not
possible.
out'
pp.
term
Despite
opinion
was
not
Thucydides
by
different never
not
whether
nobility
and
did
not
from
speak
rich
that
of
the
bad
A
spend were
and
a good
his
a
or
the
noble
Cleon
perizösamenos
in
conspicuous.
kaloskagathos
A kaloskagathos
time
the
a bad
life-style
People
wealthy.
kaloskagathos;
the
a
be
(Ehrenberg, to
to
to
articulation.
kaloikagathoi
is
itself;
Thucydides.
loud,
least
also
desire)
to
one
If we are
at
clear
only
and
the
of
his
important
Athenian
But
but
(and
‘flavor’
worthy,
ought
a
The
Aristophanes
right
nobility
Alcibiades
by
Alcibiades’
title
to
the
it
is
of
the
the
and
In
sum,
were
as
economic
Athenian
probably
called
(or
that
(Ath.
ought
however
was
in
is
‘voted
their Pol.
kaloskagathos
the
those
Ehrenberg goals
to
29.3;
Athenian
MOAOL
of
them
attempts
upper-class
the to was
at
νάγαϑοὶ
and
the
not
probably
a status
habits,
and
would
himself
claims
and
call
behind
Athenian
same
Alcibiades
while
misleading
the
by
upper-class
misconception idea
be
Athenians
name.
8.48.6)?
basic is
all
to
career)--although
political
segment
class, the
of
granted
social,
Perhaps
‘politics’. moral
strong.
upper-
3. 36.6.) ^?
stages
upper
means
presumably
self-conscious
active
the
characteristic
of "life-style"
and
(Thucydides
an
having
view
such
wealth
ὀνομαζόμενοι
were
a matter
the
the
nobles
of
was
was
is quite
the
provide
in
and
then
not
a strong
in
his
unanimously
doubted
or
flavor”
point
approval.
violent,
Similarly,
been
of
good
kaloikagathoi
their
does
is
membership
class
have
the
implied
the
commons
from
107),
there
were
of
cf.
the
horses
term
the "false
only
99,
hand,
the
kaloskagathos
training
other
but
kalokagathia
Aristophanes in
that
versus
of being
gymnasia,
50
class--not
non-noble.
large
true
group
with
certainly
politically
Athenian speak
of
nobility. an
a monolithic
193
class, the
order
very
O.
and
use
of
Reverdin
turn
out
and
Greek
the
said
in
thus
status word
effect
falsify
to
powerful
as
just
where we should
in
active.
Rather,
politics the
an
class of
active
Athenian
upper
class
the
Athenian
upper With
the
basic
class, the
talents,
that
presítge
Davies Although
won
class"
Davies'
life
Athenian
the
his
the
political
(xxiv),
would
class
as
catalogue
of
than
liturgical
by
i.e.,
politically aspects
of
Athenian
or
when
an
depend
upper
on the
sort
base." ?9
Davies
of
legal
argues
(p.
covers
that
xx).
privilege
An estate
an Athenian
class."
the Athenian
liturgies” any
families
that
the “liturgical
leverage. put
elites
kaloskagathos
J.K.
clear
"liturgical
of
"power
or
even
or member
would
of his
definitely
not
which
state, >> but
of public
special
is
= the
of
for defining membership
rather
wealthier
different
stuff
then,
standard
Athenian
or
Families
services,
enjoyed
it
and
‘politics’
upper
the
equivalent,
of
Athenian
is the performance
such
the
values)
Propertied
exist
all
as
employ
(For Davies’
classes)
or on the nature
does
this by
of
and
from
inappropriate,
the
or pentakosiomedimnos (or
power;
use
simply
= cavalry,
(or
result
who
To
the various
represent
style
running
are
those
is
two.
that
segments
of
powerful
tht
may
a strange
reality." 34
necessarily
on the Athenian
his
suggests
are
probably
he was
criterion
and
"liturgical
to
suppose
idea
which
mind
less
between
a ‘politician’
a comment
introduction
a "usable
the
did become
Finally, In
in
or
every gennétés the
has
upper-class
poorer
pages
most
adopt
part
Athenian
different
Not
would
the
= pentakosiomedimnoi
upper-class
were made.
cavalry
take
these
in
historical
not
this
"These words,
thing
the line
preceding
= kaloikagathoi
of
extent
Terminology
'party,'
the
We should
the
Athenian
to
draw
gennétai
the
the
opposed
see below.)
a certain
that
vision
analysis,
more
considered
to
create
their
To
'nobility.'
in regard
dualistic
class"
group.
in three
of four this
class.?/
centuries
194
(600-300
B.C.)
the
(see
table
on
the
clase
is best especially
much
to
fifth
was
as
in
as
Davies
a product
Oligarch,"
xxvii),
the
admitted
century
system
p.
documented.
ury,
the
overwhelming
of
3.4)
and
The
first
scarcity
is
class
of
with
describes
it
and
this
of
them
where
as such
three-quarters
compared
the
majority
fourth,
through
Peloponnesian Paphlagon
much
war,
can
of
the
as
to
of
the
and
period
400-300
leverage
in the This
prominent
Athenians
absence
is
the
century.
clearly
Sausage
of
of
his
fifth
century?
fifth
is
the
the
evident
the
it
in
wealth
about
when
threaten
the
is less
information
the
belong
due
centnot
in
so
the
liturgical
The
a liturgy
eisphora ("Old
Seller:
ἐγὼ σε ποιήσυ tpunp apxeiv, ἀναλίοκοντα τῶν σαυτοῦ, παλαιὰν ναῦν ἔχοντ΄. (Knights
I will make you serve as trierarch, spending your money, and having an old
But
the
not
seem
decree,
mention to
refer
this century.
war.
The
not
trierarchs to
should
fifth
does
of
Perhaps
chorégia,
justify
the
of
Athenians
such
13.8)
13.7)
or
(in
produce--to and
his
sons
an
his
in
it,
like
course,
apparently
in
not
the
(Ath. to
through
gift)
Pol.
help
the back
a product
the
Many
liturgies
of the
on
liturgy was
class."
longer-term
views
the
eisphora,
formal
Themistocles"
one's
back
financing
offered
of
pushing
goes
fellow demesmen
apparently
"decree
"liturgical
were
or his
the
Whatever
caution
term
fifth-century
as Cimon
own ship.
a liturgy. urge
912-14)
fifth
but
27.3;
finance
too
the
far
of
the
century,
of the up
Plutarch, a public
does
of
voluntary,
opening
23.18,27)
authenticity
of the public
foundations his
(M-L
of
into
Peloponnesian but
gifts,
long walls
of
itself
of rich
one-time,
(ibid.
estate--and
Cimon 10.2).
project
by
services
his
the
its
Pericles
unknown
character
195
in Athens
offered
in
the
to pay Davies
equation the
in
people
again
in
for
would
have
Therefore,
despite
importance
of
defining
crossing were of
country
Athenians
in
guishable
social
the
has
the and
general
dressed
a zeugites
sound) from
quite
fourth
class
and
a 20-year-old.
to be a rough
performed
which that
will
of
liturgies
and
examples
is
of the
fifth
his
their
they
of
wealth
formed
official
Athens
solve
to have
classes been
spent
a class
liturgies.
and
the
admitted
politics,
the
in
I do
problem
passing
but
was
of
it was
not
purple
wore
hair
long
but
1.6;
assembly
might
a shepherd a potter
"Old
the
the
there Two
town
and
all-pervasive
robes (Knights
the
have
580,
Ceramicus,
1121),
1.10).
been
would
most
(Plutarch,
Oligarch,"
not
"criss-
a whole
always
from Phyle
from
of
groups.
an
wore
their
as
are
Alcibiades
the
from
composed
interest
Wealth
(Thucydides, in
been
population and
made
old.
life,
knights
different
came
in Athenian
citizen
the
Although
speaking
Pericles
upper-class.
already
simply
that
rich Athenians
century
involuntary,
political
young
many
performance
Athenian
young
factor. the
to
told
earliest
clear
can be considered
from a pentakosiomedimnos,
(and
60-year-old
and
less
distinguished
reference
and
is
who
popularity
a liturgical
in
vertically
16.1)
it
or
Athenian
visible
situation
appear
voluntary
century
in Athenian
the
"there
The
that
was
24.1-2).
people
xx).
regular
fifth
dwellers
or
the
of
applicability
as the upper-class
Alcibiades
this
them;
of
to which
prominent
advantage
38 so
the
(p.
story
century
is clear
concept
significant
factor
It
the
categories,"
these
the
its
between
the
Pericles
fifth
εὔποροι
by
and
(Plutarch, later
1.13.
bring
liturgies,
the
Just
or
characterized
that
54.13-16),
language
taken
could
or
think
by the
Oligarch"
causes
2
I^
πλούσιοι
recognized
not
that
contemporary
"Old
public
(I.G.
the Parthenon
shows
called
the
century
430's
distin-
very as
In
likely
would
a
196
The the
rest
opposition--potential
of
sometimes
Attica
no
Government
doubt
in
have
"carried
over
the
emphasized
had
a close
its
and
Greek
military
and
had
as,
(Humphreys,
when
to
Greek
other
contrast
poleis
was
little
sign
to the
division
course
no
The
how true
of
true much
or
to
seems
between
rich
distinguished of
why
solidarity
solidarity
"urban/rustic
p.
part
rights
134).
Thus,
groups
contrast"
and
at
Larsen,
that
the
the
he
on
the
in
in comparison
Attica and
later
beginning
is
sued that
other
remarkably viewed
of
the
fifth
boundary
did
not
hand,
assembly,
ín Ancient
or medieval
were
must
countryman
its
with
and
other
festivals,
Country
Alexandria
war
and
of the war
obligations--including and
Athens
tovnsmen
outbreak
voted
religious
of
Representative
"The Athenian
("Town
the
in of
Greece,"
city/town
Europe homogeneous. in
relation
century,
the
significant. urban/rural
poor" the
and
in Athens
of
while
of at
is
‘urbane’
solidarity
(ibid.
a vertical
all--apart
coincide
town
(agroikos),
a conscious
a solidarity
in Aristophanes
the
'bumpkin'
and manners"
division
demands
that
country
interests,
this
ite
and
itself
activity
one
in
century
and
Peloponnesian
at
(astu)
Humphreys,
city;
mid-fifth
"the
the
says
state:
population"
from
of economic is
took
more
that
a grouping
who
the
in Hellenistic
the
states
and
with
133-134), Athens
of
cíty/country
(asteios)
urban
example,
Athens
3,
town
by J.A.O
people) 29 S.C.
political
the
p.
of the Athenian
the Greeks,
Humphreys
just
same
example,
of
the
the countryside”
country
markets,
pp.
for
History,
in
for
the opposition
(as,
relationship
the
discussions
to abandon
the
its
actual--between
in
direct
ibid.,
However,
Roman
of
service--as
relations,
noted
the cohesion
Anthropology and
of
and
the decree
sold
courts,
often
exaggerated
reluctance
has
bought
is
or
p.
one;
the
group.
from
is certainly
133).
the
dweller
"there
is
corresponding
The
second
Perhaps Athenians
largely
with
first is depends
there
on
were
themselves.
"cultural"
197
rather
than
picture
of
last
"political" the
moment
farmers
in
"Ic The the
(Humphreys,
the
smelling
ibid.
of
245
note
garlic,
arriving
290ff.).
But
Ecclesiazousae,
is necessary to poor agree; but farmers do not.
p.
12),
for
for
the
example
assembly
Praxagora's
the
at
the
comment
launch the ships' the rich and
(197-198) although
again
town/country
fourth
is
only
relevant
must
have
become
It
when
Athens
grew
(cf.
Humphreys'
other zation which
of
besides
town
and
economic
the
town
‘political’
nothing 106).
of
change:
keeping) at
the
environment
p.
the
to
tíme
the
the men
might
during
the
Piraeus)
more
and
paper,
141-14
such
as of
differ. course than
of the
the
the
during
Piraeus
).
and
opposition war
the
into
a major
Society
of
a centralized The
changes
the
fifth
in Classical
temples
and
or
organi-
system,
intellectual,
century
would
resulted
port
there were
judicial
in
and
Pentakontaetia
Furthermore,
building
country
The
Peloponnesian
"Economy
pp.
development
the
noticeable
center
ships,
revealing.
of
increasingly
the Greeks, and
still
on
social
have
also
in
to
cope
affected different
attitudes. 9?
"When
and
or
country
the
18
in another
war
climate
(and
comic,
a cosmopolitan
comments
sacrifices
and
an
into
Anthropology and
issues
and
not
afterward.
Athens,"
century
rate
of which
the
Fifth
old
all
beginning.
man
century
art, were
of
drama, very In
change
is
very
his
grandfather
can
say
Athens,
seems as
education, different the
420's
great and
already
warfare,
(and
no
relevant"
has
at
the
the
end
perhaps
grandson
experience (Dover, been
has at
Greek
said,
a comparable Popular
underwent
public
decision-making
of
century
the
earlier)
from
Marathon
with
and
Morality,
such (and
what
age,
a period record-
they
Salamis
were were
198
already
events
uation
in which
opposition the
Alcibiades,
in °!
strongly by
into
the
(from
the
the It
If
it
of
the
became
terms
Individual wealthy
had
a potentially
But
the
the
city
economic, in
social
a distinctly
which
was
to
may
and
part
that
that
similar of
pressures and
responsible
of
political
untypical for
The
not
was and
a
Aristotle,
vacuum moving
discussion
society
was
of
also
Syracuse
participation
"popular"
of
inland
the
astu
status,
urban
and
opened
by
had
its
its
class
(and
a large for
one
port/harbor(s).
and
service
harbor)
and
a maritiue
of
gamoroi
Megara
separate
(and
and
‘typical’.
and
privilege
center
classes
council
demos,
polis.
uniqueness
not
6.100),
had a
Greek the
5.77,
classical
for
different
typical
Hdt.
possibilities
the
politicians’
Chalcis
a expanding
of
is suggests
into
cities;
for
importance
there
other
criteria
generation
essentially
not
preceding
of
is
century]. "9?
Plato
Chios
Euripides,
opposition
its
moving ‘new
and
the
in
‘unfossilized' the
evidence
sit-
Clouds 6.13.1;
to
of
the
the
The
relation
were
Athenian
arrangement
various
in
young
Athens for
1.155). the
the
of the
paralleled
reflecting
1229-1235.)
is
Indeed, the
1.80.1,
possibility
Ephialtes,
remains. °°
Hdt.
the
this
in
Thucydides
politicians’
("horse-feeders,
land,"
(e.g.,
Colonus
with
(ibid.) important.
'new
democracy
be
be
"What
remember of
to
discussed
450's
later
I think,
combination the
the
notes
father.
young
Kimon
still
population)
and
or
by
suggests,
in the
or his
with
‘model’
hippobotai
(“sharers
discount
in the
elements
at
not
important the
Oedipus
118;
should
left
achievement
class
slave
is
frag.
most
480's
situation
likely
and
Allmeonidai
vacuum
is
sources
we
the
As Dover
in Aristophanes
Eupolis,
of Pericles
that
left
the
gap"
prominent
Sophocles,
but
generation
is
also,
232-7;
evident
past.
a "generation
(See
Suppliants
the
“heroic”
old/young
Wasps).
most
in the
empire
social
structure
and
society,
Athenian
cultural
and
political
within
the resulted the
society
achievement.
199
Appendix
1.
2:
Footnotes
I use
‘class’
having
common
2. order
I follow as
here
in the neutral
characteristics the
usage
ἃ juridically
or
of M.I.
defined
sense
status’
of
‘a group
(adapted
Finley
(The
group within
from
Ancient
ranked
Economy)
a population,
together
Webster,
fifth who
as
edition).
defíncs
an
possessing
formalized privileges and disabilities in one or more fields of activity, governmental, military, legal, economic, religious, marital and standing in a hierarchical relation to other orders (p.
45),
and a status
|
(less
succinctly)
group
sharing
common
These
meanings
will
as an unofficial
economic, be
social
assumed
or
through
(non-juridically
political
the
rest
position
of
this
defined)
pp.
46-50).
appendix.
3. In both narrative accounts and structural analyses of the Athenian state there seems to be a tendency to take the accumulated traditional view of Athenian society as a starting point for analysis. Eupatridai are a nobility; zeugitai are hoplites; thetes are poor, etc. In this appendix I am suggesting that we need to examine carefully the evidence for the social and 'class' structure of Athens before we go to more sophisicated analysis. An argument is only as good as its underlying premises. 4. Cf. Finley, The Ancient Economy, pp. 47-48. It can be noted here that in Plato's Laws the groups or orders receiving different treatment under the law are the astoi (citizens), Xenoi (foreigners) and douloi (slaves). See, e.g., the laws on homicide, 865-873. Athenian law recognized a similar division (cf. D.M. MacDowell, The Law in Classical Athens p. 67ff.; Austin and VidalNaquet, Economic and Social History of Ancient Greece p. 95ff.).
It can still ians
did
op.cit.
not
p.
be quite
constitute
103).
Lysias
of an urban upper-class were excluded. 5.
See
the
6.
Bushel
definition is
not
an
true
a single
that
"from
social
a social
class"
and his brothers,
Athenían
social
circle
from
which
given
above,
note
2.
exact
translation
422 larger than a bushel, c. 50 of oil or vine was c.40 liters.
of
point
(Austin
metics,
poorer
medimnos;
as opposed to c. 35 See M. Lang, Agora
and
of view might
Athenians
be a part citizens
a medimnos
liters. 10, pp.
the Athen-
Vidal-Naquet,
was
c.
A metrétes 46 and 58.
(measure)
The apparent artificiality of the name '"500-bushel-men"” other tel@ led me to the idea that this telos was added
as compared with the by Solon (cf. L.H.
Jeffery,
a "rich
Archaic
Greece,
p.
93).
However,
the
grave
of
Athenian
lady"
200 from
the
9th century
(published
116) produced a chest Smithson suggests, p.
by E.
L.
Smithson
with five model grannaries 96) that the woman was the
in Hesperia
37
(1968)
pp.
77-
on top, perhaps indicating (as wife (or daughter) of a penta-
kosiomedimnos.
7. Horses were a luxury pleasure. A man who owned
and were used for racing, hunting, a horse probably also owned oxen.
warfare
or
just
8. It is possible that the zeugitai were so called because of the figurative "yoke" binding together the hoplite phalanx (as argued by Adcock, The Greek and Macedonian Art of War (Berkeley, 1957), p. 5) and that the hippeis were simply the cavalry. But it is not probable.
The
tele
Ath. Pol. generally class,
had
their
main purpose
in determining
7.4, Plato, Laws 698b, Isaeus thought of in the latter part
and
híppeis
is
the
word
used
7.39). of the
for
eligibility
for offices
(cf.
As will be seen, the theten were fifth century as the non-hoplite
'cavalry.'
But
no
complete
equation
of
tele with military classes seems to have been made. Zeugites and thes are not military terms, and it is not clear whether or not all those who qualified for the telos of hippeus also were eligible for service in the cavalry. Unfortunately, Aristotle (Ath. Pol. 49) does not say specifically what size ousia qualified a man for the cavalry. The Knights of Aristophanes’ Knights are clearly members of the cavalry (see, e.g., 595ff) but are they also members of the telos of hippeis? The
and
the
communis
opinio
references
given
is
also
against
Adcock's
view.
9. Different dates have been proposed for a change yield to one of total property value. Busolt-Swoboda time of Cleisthenes, Beloch (Gr.G. 112 p. 89) for the
Hignett
(HAC p.
143)
for
See
Hignett,
HAC
p.
101
there.
the mid-fifth
century--and
from a criterion of annual (II, p. 837) voted for the era of the Persian wars and
Pericles.
B. Manville
(The
Evolution of Athenian Citizenship, diseertation, Yale University, 1979, pp. 111112, note 39) has suggested that there was a monetary equivalent from the start: "I believe the change came with Solon himself; the new system required the machinery for assessing any Athenian, and thus the development of equivalents." If it is necessary to assume that there was ever an official monetary equivalent, Manville's view seems to me very plausible, remembering, as he does, that for sacrificial equivalents, "a sheep and a drachma were reckoned as a medimnos" (Plutarch, Solon 23.3). 10.
Cf.
Jeffery,
Archaic
Greece,
p.
92.
11. Athenian Democracy, p. 142, note 50. Presumably the value of the property of hippeis and pentakosiomedimnoi would be calculated in the same manner. Since Jones believes in fifth century inflation (e.g., p. 166) it is a little odd that he thínks the "Solonian scale of values" (p. 142 n. 50) was used in figuring the total property values. 12. Athenian Democracy, of hoplites and zeugitai.
13.
For
the possibility
p.
142,
that
note
this was
50.
about
See
below,
the value
pp.
of
180-183,
on
the average
the
equation
'family
farn'
201
see
below
14.
note
19.
I follow
Jones,
Jarde
tutions,
(his
de
Ste.
and
P.
114).
'timema'
Croix
others
in
(see
Using
his
"The
one
scepticism
Estate
fourth
for a zeugités)
century
would
buy
on
the
value
of Phanenippus," price,
"perhaps
Jones
of
land
Ancient
prices
calculates
a holding
used
Society that
of 5 acres
and 20
by
Insti-
minae
with
house
and stock" (Athenian Democracy, p. 79). But that seems too small (see note 19). Is it not likely that the price given by Lysias (19.29, 42) is 'rhetorically' inflated?y. N. Andreyev (Eirene 13 (1974) 5-46) suggested, on the basis of fourth
century Athenian sales of public drachmas
per plethron.
100 drachmas.) and
general
This
price
(One
seems
land,
hectare
a basic price half that of Jones’ = c.
2.5
acres
= c.
10 plethra.
more reasonable but cannot. be decisiye
levels.
See
note
19
below
for
Andreyey's
for
60 plethra
or 50
1 mina
=
earlier 'zeugités
farm.'
15. Any attempt to calculate exact equivalencies in land for the Solonian tele is riddled with problems. Apart from ignorance about such crucial matters as fallowing customs or ratio of seed to yield, or whether the seed was included in the Solonian assessment, the apparent equating in value of dry and liquid measures
(Ath.
Pol.
7.3)
suggests
that
not
size
but what
was
planted
could
have determined
the status of an estate. Olive trees need more land to produce ἃ measure of oil than wheat needs to produce a bushed of grain, while vines need less. The most usual sítuation may have been a mixture of agricultural products. 16. In 403 there were apparently some 5,000 landless hypothesis to Lysias 34). As has been noted (e.g., by p.
80),
Lysias
these
says
5,000
they
are
not
included
necessarily
"many"
co-terminous
hoplites
and
Athenians (Dionysius, Jones, Athenian Democracy
with
knights
the
thetes.
In
fact,
(34.4).
17. This figure is given by French (Historia 10 (1961) 511). De Sanctis (Atthis, p. 299) gave a figure of c. 23 medimnoi per hectare or just under 10 medimnoi per acre. Similarly, Beloch (Griechische Geschichte I? p. 303 n. 2) put the Attic
yield,
"in einem
12-14
hecto-liters
18.
value
Despite
unfruchtbaren
the
per
hectare
specific
of Phaenippus'
estate
Lande...beí or
statements
remains
Phaenippus," Ancient Society and [Demosthenes] 42 claims that the metretai of wine, but Phaenippus
meros"
of
those
figures
(29,
again
5).
on
primitiven
about
Wirtschaftsmethoden,"
23 medimnoi
circumference
obscure
(see
de Ste.
per
and
at
hectare.
yield,
Croix,
the
"The
size
and
Estate
of
Institutions, p. 109ff.). The speaker of estate produces 1,000 medimnoi of wheat and 800 has sworn that the yield was not "to dekaton
And while
the
speaker
says
that
the estate
measures forty stades in circumference, the actual area would depend on the contour (as de Ste. Croix points out, the speaker 18 trying to make the estate seem as large as possible). De. Ste. Croix sets 100 acres as the minimum size of a piece of land enclosed by 40 stades; this is still "the largest single Athenian estate of which we have any details" (art. cit. p. 112), but it all need not have been suitable for agriculture. No doubt Phaenippus was one of the wealthier
Athenians—he
served
in the
cavalry
(24)
and might
of income such as his wood-carrying donkeys his estate by [Demosthenes] 42 is of little yield per acre.
have
had additional
sources
(30)--but the information given about help in estimating average Attíc
202
19. Other discussions of the scale conclusions. See most recently A.B. (1977-78)
168-172
and
M.H.
Jameson,
of land Cooper,
holding in Athens have come to similar "The Family Farm in Greece," CJ 73
"Agriculture
and
Slavery
in
Classical
Athens,"
ibid., p. 120 and note 13. V.N. Andreyev ("Some Aspects of Agrarian Conditions in Athens in the Fifth to Third Centuries B.C.," Eirene 12 (1974) 5-46) argued that the average farm was approximately 60 plethra in size and worth 2,000-3,000 dr. This may be true, but it is not necessary to assume that the average farm was the 'zeugite farm." The calculation in the text suggested a larger figure. 60 plethra (or about 6 hectares) strikes me as perhaps low, since it has been estimated by K. Hopkins that 4 hectares would support a family of four at subsistence level,
with no allowance is
a
correction
for from
fallowing the
(see
printed
Further, as Cooper notes tares) as a minimum plot
Jameson,
five
known
art.
cit.,
me
through
to
p.
131;
a family
personal
of
four
communication.)
(ibid.) Hamish Forbes considers 80-90 plethra (c. B hecnecessary for a modern Greek to make an adequate living.
20. It is clear, of course, that a family did not live on grain alone and that these rudimentary calculations have not taken account of necessitíes such as oil for cooking, lighting and soap or fodder for animals. (My thanks to S. Humphreys for this point.) More exact calculations would be desirable but are not necessary, I think, for the point being made here. 21.
It
thetes,
seems a
term
odd,
then,
carrying
the lowest ranking remains a puzzle. 22. See plousios. come less
that the
members
all
those
implication
of
a
class
the comments of M.I. Finley (“A plousios was a man who
(as we should phrase or even, in the full
it), a sense,
penes poor:
beneath of
the
hired
giving
200
labor.
a name
medimnoi Perhaps
to
the
whole.
23.
For all
in
example,
pentakosiomedimnos
Herodotus,
the
I.G.
I“ index,
in the I.G. I2 index (45.41-2) but phanes. Thes is also rarely used,
were is
But
called
a
case
the
term
of
(The Ancient Economy, p. 41) on penes and was rich enough to live properly on his inwas he
not. could
The own
latter a farm
need not be propertyor slaves, and he
could have a few hundred drachmas accumulated in a strong-box, to devote himself to gaining a livelihood" (ibid.).)
at
level this
appears or
once
in
Thucydides
Aristophanes.
not at all in while hippeus
but
he
vas
(3.16)
Zeugites
compelled
but
appears
not once
Herodotus, Thucydides or Aristoappears frequently--as a cavalry
member.
24. The idea that inflation caused this "upward mobility" involves some confused thinking. First, the Solonian value of one drachma per medimnos is assumed to be the standard on which the figures in produce were translated into drachmae. Then, since the prices at the end of the fifth century appear higher, inflation is assumed. And many more Athenians would have been able to qualify as zeugitai. But when did the supposed change-over to monetary values occur? If it was sometime in the fifth century it would have been odd to use a Solonian price as standard--if there had been inflation.
Further,
as
suggested
earlier,
there
is
perhaps
no
reason
to
think
that
the agricultural basis for the assessment was ever eliminated. Adjustment could have been made for non-agricultural income while keeping the agricultural yield as the standard.
203
Second, Jones and Glotz claim that inflation will help explain the increase in the number of hoplites from 480 to 431. Granted that there was such an increase, can this have been due to inflation? An equation is made between hoplites and zeugitai, and since membership in the telos of zeugités was 'cheaper' in 431 than in 480 there were more hoplites in 431 than 480. But service as a hoplite
was
a thés'
50 medimnoi
him
to
own
based
his
on
own
wealth,
armor
inflated
on
the
ability
200 drachmae,
any
in
480?
more
than
Chapter
For the question of the increase in III and for the equation hoplites
Raubitschek
(DAA,
for
the way
“attractive
set
(Presumably
the
of
hopla.
that cost
If
enable
of
armor
p.
206)
noted
hoplites between 480 and 431 see = zeugitai, see below pp. 180-183.
that
if Aristotle
saw
this
dedication
it
suggested that this was Anthemion, father of Anytos politician. Plato (Meno 90a) praises that Anthemion
he made
his
certain."
Hignett,
a
how would
also.)
but
not
provide
at
have
should be post-480 and the late fifth century
to
in 430 valued
would
25.
been
real
were
fortune
HAC,
p.
through
5 with
sophia.
26.
See
27.
The problem of the son who was not yet
Davies
(APF,
p.
40)
says
references.
'kurios ton heautou' is a problem
in any case. To what telos did he belong? French (Historia 10 (1961) 512) also imagines this situation. His explanation is, "Solon's assessment was minimal, 1.e., each Zeugites farm was expected to supply at least one hoplite. W.K. Lacey suggests that "when a man underwent his dokimasia and was approved, he was enrolled in his deme as a citizen in the oikos of so-and-so, and this gave him his status as a citizen, and the financial standing enjoyed by his oíkos at the same time" (The Family in Classical Greece, pp. 128-129). 28.
of
These
all
lists
Athenians
are
for
distinct
general
from
the
purposes
lexiarchika
of
civic
grammateia
which
were
lists
participation.
29. It also can be noted that the property requirement for a scrategos cited by Deinarchos (in Demosthenem 71) is not that of any Solonian telos but simply Yin &vvoc ὅρων xExrfio9avs cf. the 'Decree of Themístocles' (M-L, 23) 20-22. 30.
See
the
definition
given
above,
note
2.
31. When the Athenians try to restore the ‘ancestral constitution’ they think in terms of turning things over to the hoplites. On the ideal of the "Marathonfighter" in Aristophanes see Ehrenberg, The People of Aristophanes (London, 1943), p. 299£f, but like many features of Athenian society this glorification of the past
could More
be mocked. Essays
in
32.
Plutarch,
33.
See
above,
See Greek
the comments History
Pericles note
16.
and
2.1-2
of A.W.
Gomme,
Literature,
p.
(Finley's
"Aristophanes
and
Politics,”
85.
translation,
The
Ancient
Economy,
p.
54).
204
34. See Chapter III, pp. 56 - 57 divide the citizen into two parts.
35.
Or,
say that as to go
36.
if we regard Aristogeiton into exile.
Cf.
37. ments
W.R.
the was
Connor,
tyrant
for
further
comment
as a ‘friend
neither
a supporter
The New Politicians
of of
of
on
the
the demos’ the
Fifth
then
populist
Century
Greek
tendency
perhaps
regime
Athens,
nor
pp.
to
we could so opposed
158-159.
See M.I. Finley, The Ancient Economy, chapter 2, note 20 (p. 185), who comthat castes (on the most accepted definition according to which the essential
features would be "separation in matters of marriage and contact...division of labour...and finally hierarchy") "did not exist in the ancient world...when ancient historians write caste, they 'order.'" Wade-Gery's Eupatridai are correctly called an order, or an estate, as he sometimes terms them (e.g., "Eupatridai," p. 92). I do not know what he intends by the "Eupatrid race" (p. 104).
38.
See
eligible
39.
Davies, for
the
APF,
pp.
office
12-15
of
The Leipsydrion scholion
kai eupatridas.
Since
as
on this
treasurer
(Ath.
the Ath.
of
family. Athena
Pol. Pol.
19.3) says
Only pentakosiomedimnoi (Ath.
Pol.
refers
were
47.1).
to the andras...agathous te
a few lines
earlier
the Alcmeonida
were the leaders of the exiles, there were probably some Leipsydrion. But, as is commonly recognized, eupatridai
members is used
of the family of here in a poetic,
non-technical sense. These were men ‘of good family' who "then showed what of parentage they were from" (tor’ ἔδειξαν οἵων πατέρυν ἔσαν -ibid.) Cf.
Sophocles,
40.
It
γένους
1s
as
(Bekker,
Antigone
162,
'tribe-kings
Anecdota
257,
4l.
"Eupatridai,"
p.
42.
This
describes
fragment
859, ,
then,
c.v.
Pol.
13.2
only
the
1081. that
Eupatridai
are
said
to
be
βασιλικοῦ
Eupatridai).
102.
the Athenian
phratries and 4 tribes. Only the based on the model of the days of
Ath.
sort
Eupatridaí
state as being composed of 30 gent,
four tribes are historical; the month and months of the
are known
the other numbers year. Similarly,
12 are in
to be historical.
Although Ath. Pol. frag. 3 has been taken as historical (most recently by F. Bourriot in his dissertation Recherches sur la nature du genos, Lille, 1976, known to me only through the review of N.R.E. Fischer in JHS 99 (1979) 193-195), I find that
view
unlikely.
43. Aristotle's agroikoi, Plutarch's geomoroi (Theseus 25.2) and various mentions of georgoi (e.g., Schol. Plat. Axioch., p. 465 Bk., see Wade-Gery, "Eupatridai,” p. 88) are all usually taken to refer to the same group of people. It is not clear, however, that this assumption is justified (see R. Sealey, A History of the Greek City States, p. 118). The later references are of no help in resolving the puzzle of this "order."
205
F.R.
Wüst
historical
political The
(Historia 8 (1959)
Athens
by
rights,
déniourgoi
suggesting
1-11)
that
the Eupatridai
(or
craftsmen)
attempts
before
(the Adel)
were
and
without
to give
Solon
there
the
these orders
a place
only
two
geomoroi
(the
freie
rights
as were
political
were
Stande
Bauern).
the
hekt@moro1.
When the hektemoroi were 'freed,' they, along with the craftsmen, were admitted the tribes, given certain political rights and became the third "Stand." But orders.
in the accounts of Solon's reforms there Were craftsmen so numerous in 6th century
is no mention of these Athens as to give their
name to the third order? The fact that the tele probably as traditional classes (orders?) also makes Wust's theory have
a much
greater
Manville
dubious
ground
claim
also
accepts
that
"the
that early Athenians pP.
31 note
for
60).
the
knew more,
There
existed before Solon unlikely; the telé
historicity.
classes
lower
two
existed
not less,
is too much
classes
on what
for Arístotle,
about
theoretical
seems
to me,
and we should
them than he did" discussion
the
assume
(op. cit.
of political
forms
and development in the time of Aristotle to assume that he necessarily reflects an accurate and popular tradition. Nor am I convinced that the problem is solved by assuming that “Eupatrids, agroikoi, dÉmiourgoi were social classes" (ibid.) not orders. 44. This is approximately the City States, pp. 116-119), also p. 4l.
suggestion of R. Sealey (A History of found in "Eupatridai; Essays in Greek
the Greek History,"
45. M. Nilsson, Cults, Myths, Oracles and Politics (Lund, 1951), Appendix II, considers the genetai as 'nobles' as does Hignett, HAC, esp. pp. 61-67. Hignett follows E. Meyer (G.A. 1112 p. 278.) in identifying (contra Wade-Gery) gennétai and Eupatridat. Gernet, also, identified the two groups(''Les nobles dans la Grece antique," Anthropologie de la Gréce Antique, p. 334). 46.
as
Herodotus
"caste")
2.164
speaks
(the
passage
of the seven
Wade-Gery
relies
on
gené of Egypt--which
for
the
turn out
meaning
of
genos
to be seven
occu-
pational groups such as priests, warriors or interpreters. The fact that these Egyptian groups might be similar to true castes does not mean that genos had Such a meaning for Greeks in general or for Herodotus (as his use of the word
in other
contexts
shows).
47. See Davies, Athenian Propertied Families p. the family of Cleisthenes was not associated with
cult.
Davies
grounds
that
believes they
that
held
the
the Alcmeonidai archonship
of Wade-Gery's pre-Solonian nobility use of the names (above p. 17) might Alcmeonidai
48.
were
also
See Wade-Gery,
not
before
were 580.
369 any
for the suggestion that particular genos or Attic
among
the Eupatridai
However,
if
the
on the
existence
is admitted to be unproved, then more naturally be taken to imply
Isocrates' that the
Eupatridai.
"Eupatridai,"
49. The "original" Roman nobility Ancient Economy pp. 46-47).
pp.
86-87.
was a status
not
an order
(cf.
in
with
Finley,
The
to
206
50. For a good, brief Ste. Croix, The Origins Greek Popular Morality,
discussion of this term, with of the Peloponnesian War, pp. pp. 41-45.
51. While there were consular senators of not have questioned their status as nobles. 52.
Connor
136).
More
considers
Cleon's
values of the kalotkagathoi important,
improper
whom
style
Cicero
only
to
Connor,
were
did
part
and of “old politics"
according
references, see G.E. Μ. de 371-376. Also K.J. Dover,
not
of
approve,
his
rejection
(The Néw Politicians
his
he would
rejection
of
pp.
of
the
87-
traditional
philia relationships and espousal of démo-philia. However, J.K: Davies (Hermes 47 (1975) pp. 374-378) has pointed out that the ‘old versus new politics’ model can be something of a simplification. The changes in fifth century Athenian politics were not so simple, not so complete, and Cleon's politics were not entirely
new.
53. It ie not entirely clear how successful these men were in getting other Athentans to recognize their special title to this name. In the fourth century Cleon's relatives would probably not have thought of him as anything but kaloskagathos. Mantitheos (Demosthenes 40.25) says that Cleon Ev τῇ πάχει oo. By the end of the fifth century many of these same men had voluntarily retired from politics. The most famous case is that of Plato but there were certainly others. See the comments of W.R. Connor, The New Politicians of Fifth Century Athens, p. 175ff.
2
54. "Remarques sur la vie politique d'Athenes au V (1945) 201-202, quoted (in the Englísh given above)
Politicians,
p.
'race'.
above
55. and
See Cf.
note
Connor, 70
(with
7.
Something
Chapter The
New
similar,
IV
pp.
Politicians
references)
on
the
I
think,
has
siecle," Museum Helveticum by Connor, The Nev happened
with
the
word
97 - 98. of
Fifth-Century
apragmónes
in
Athens,
Athens
in
pp. the
179-180 later
fifth
century. 56. Davies, in his review of Connor's New Politicians (Hermes 47 (1975) 374378), speaks of late fifth century politics as "an uneasy competitive symbiosis of various power-bases, some (cult-linked ἰϑαγένεια: athletic prowess) antique and crumbling, some (wealth: overseas clientela: military competence) vellestablished and taken for granted, others (display oratory) strident and ostentatious precisely because novel, tentative, and unincorporated" (p. 378). I think that similar competition of "power-bases" probably existed earlier in the century. Davies also notes (p. 376) the possibility that the role of the gené was essentially passive. It should be recognized that some gennetai may have been more concerned with local than state business. 57.
This
century xxiv).
is
for
may well
the
have
fourth
been
century.
rather
"The
higher,
corresponding
but
one
cannot
figures
say
for
the
by how much"
fifth
(p.
207
58.
ΜΟΙ.
Finley,
The
Ancient
Economy,
p.
51.
59. I doubt that the actual town-dwellers were numerous enough not all the citizens outside Athens came in to vote. Thucydides
"tous pollous" (2.14.2). 60.
Perhaps
(most) the
key
of the Athenians
were
to
the
understanding
at that charges
time of
still
foreign
to do that even does say that
living birth
if
in the country
made
against
many of the "new politicians" in the later fifth century lies not in their being "non-nobles" or "nouveaux riches" (which some at least were not), but in their living and doing business in the city where tions to paternal estates perhaps weakened. of the town/country contrast see Chapter IV 61.
See,
Studies
62.
for
example,
W.G.
24
(1975),
37-52.
J.K.
Davies,
Hermes
47
Forrest,
(1975),
"An
foreigners were plentiful and connecFor further comments on the importance , pp. 103 - 104.
Athenian
Generation
Gap,"
Yale
Classical
378.
63. Resemblances between other democracies and Athens of the 'model' (see Chapter IV, note 50, p. 121).
may
very
often
be
imitations
208
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219
General
agroikoi and asteioi 84, 196 order of 188, 204-5 note Alcmeon 85 Alcmeonidae 86-87, 190, 204
to
democrats in 403 70, 80 note 99 to Thrasyboulos 26, 107 concept of 135-36, Appendix 1
43 n.
47
and Pericles Apatouria 10 Archestratos 94 Archidamos and Pericles
86 of
91-92,
hoi Athenaioi represented
120
note
47
53
Boule
οὗ
500 in Athens 25 implications for size of population 55-56 of Erythiai 46 note 52 of Chios 198 | Cimon 57, 83, 96, 119 note 36 marriage of 99-100 and Sparta 118 note 32 citizens
astoi 153-160 politai 158-160 politis 161 female 161-162,
of i^
classes
in Cleisthenes' 163,
165-166,
29
under
Athenian society 56-57, Appendix 2, passim "middle class" 76 note 54; 184-85 Cleisthenes and citizenship 24-28 and xenoi kai metoikoi 23, 25 and organization of population "renegade noble" 87 and metoikia 134 Cleon 192, 206 notes 52 and 53 cleruchies see colonization colonization in 8th and 7th centuries 45 of Athens in mid-fifth century 65-66 deme 9 . admission procedure 14, 26-28
"reforms"
46
27-28
demiourgoi
‘definition’ 5 ‘alternative’ definitions in Athens 131-132 Aristotle's definition 152-53 granting of aliens
1 151-74
chapter
of
citizens
162-163 in dikast@ria
28,
Appendix
testimonia 1-2 traditional interpretations 3, 97-104 re-enactment in 403 145-47
atimos and atimia 10, 30 note 17, 35 note 42, 129, 135-36, 165 birth control in antiquity 77-78, note 68
172 note citizenship
of
citizenship law of 451/0 IV, passin
89
100
Aristeodes 82 astos, astoi see
to
passim
terminology
Anaxagoras
Areopagus reform
Index
law
of
Solom
18-19, 34 note 35 to Plataeans 38 note 66, 70, 80 note 99 to Samians 38 note 66, 70, 80 note 99, 107, 138 note 20 to rowers at Arginusoi 70, 80 note 99
order in Athens 188, demos plethuön 54 Demotionidai 12-13, 14, 33 note 28 diadikasia 12-13, 53
204-5 32
note
note
63
26,
diaps€phismos of
510:
of
445/4:
23,
37
95-96,
note
58
122-23
note
63
dikastai kata demous 37 note 60, 93 dikasteria 83, 91-92 and citizenship 26, 27, 33 note 29 Dorians/Ionians 98, 124 notes 68 and 69 Dracon
law on enguésis
homicide 10 11 (see also marriage)
220
"nobility '
Ephialtes 54, 57, 91 and Pericles 90 and Areopagus 91-92 epidikasia 129 epigamia 148 note 9 Eupatridai 186-88, 204 note 39 and archonship 117 note 21
‘family
oikos
farm'
price of size of
few/many
56-57
as a 'nobility' katalogoi
and Athenian society 9-10, 129 Solon's concern with 15-17, 35 note 37 oligarchic revolution and citizenship 143-44 orgeönes 20, 108, 113
201 note 14 202 note 19
gamelia 11 generation gap, 197-98 genos and gennetai 20, 113-14, 189-91 and phratry 30 note of Demotionidai 12, graph& xenias 21, 28, Hippodamos of Miletus homogalaktes 20, 108, infanticide 60-61, 77 inheritance Solon's laws of 15 kaloi kagathoi 57 47,
73
25,
‘party
168,
for public note 50 paidopoiesthai
14 32 note 26 107, 110-113 89, 120 note 40 113 note 68
class'
96
19 182-83,
nomoi of 11 and citizenship law 29 note 3, 95, 99-100 to foreigners 11, 99-100 metechein tes poleös 17, 29 note 4, 30 note 11, 35 note 42, 164-66 mesoi 184-85
creation
of
72 note 3 military forces status
79
note
134-135
military classes 180-83 Miltiades 82, 86 “naturalization” 98 note 80 nautodikai 21, 108-111, 127
note
108
21
plousios/penés 178, 202 note polit@s (see also citizens) Aristotle's as citizen population
metoikoi
431 41, Athenian
35
of Dekeleis 12, 32 note 26 Phulobasileis 187 Piraeus 60 effect on population 69, 80 note 95 Pericles interest in 84 pléthos ton politÓn (see also population) 1, 4, 28, 100, 105
marriage
in in
121
143
"phraterize"
193-95
Lysias and citizenship 150 note marathonomachoi 116 note 4, 203 note 31
93,
and citizenship 22-24 Pericles family of 85-87 early career 90 and Themistocles 88-89, 119 note 39 and philosophers 89-90 citizenship law of 95-107 (and passim) Phormisios 149 note 19 phratry 9 importance of 26-27, 34 note age of enrollment 33 note 30 prosecution of foreigners who
22
synteleia of 114, 128 note 115 legitimacy (see also notho1) and citizenship 31 note 20, 33 note 29, 95 lexiarchikon grammateion 73 note 22,
87-88 service
Peisistratus
Kynosarges
"liturgical
politics'
pay
191-92 note
|
in Athens 186-95 nothoi 910, 31 note 20, 33 note 29 and inheritance 15-17 and citizenship 31 note 20 theory of E. Muller 34-35 note 37
80
definition 153-60
22
152-53
growth
in premodern societies 41-45 "natural increase" 42-43 in Athens 43-44 and prosperity 43, 68-69, 71, 81 note 102 urban 58-60, 80 note 95 population of Athens Chapter III before Persian wars 45-46
passim
221 at
time
of
Persian
in mid-fifth
wars
century
46-61
61-66
in as
431 40-41, 66-68 factor in passing of citizenship law 100-102, 105-6 Protagoras and Pericles 89 and Thurii 119, note 39 proxenoi 100
public/private 4, ‘quorum’ of 6,000 ‘race’ and ‘racial
6-7 note 10 53-54, 75 note purity'
42
and citizenship law 97-98 slaves use in military forces 48, 74 note 31 and democracy 116 note 7 Solon and citizenship 14-22 inheritance laws 15 sussitoi 18, 35 note 45 [618 of Athens 175-82 and military classes 180-82 200 note 8 Theramenes 144 Themistocles 82, 83, 87, 110 note 2 decree of 48, 49, 74 note 33, 134 and Pericles 87, 88-89, 91, 119 note 39 Theozotides 149 note 18 thíasoi 18 "30,000 Athenians" 51-55 Thucydides son of Melesias 87 Thurii 89, 119 note 39
timÓmata see tele towi/country 195-97 tribe 9 Old Attic 14 Cleisthenic 14 trittues 34 note 31, 39 note 70, 93 women in phratry 12 citizenship of 129notes 28 and 29, 160-62, 163, 165-66 Xanthippos 82, 86 xenodikai 111-112
young/old
197-98
222
Index
of
Ancient
Historia
6.10,2
Aeschines
1.183 3.195:196 Aeschylus Eumenides 120 note 49 124 note 69 138 note 26 657-600 545-549 834-856 437:171 note 23 Persians 89, 116 note
Discussed
26.4
^ frag. 3:188, 7.3:175 7.4:179, 200
1
and
passim
204
note
note
8
42
.5:35 note 42
4
:2
1.85,87:195 Aristophanes Acharnians 498:162 645:162 Birds 33-34:160 40-1:162 699:190
16.5:37 note 60 21:24, 37 note 58 22.5:82 23.1:50 26.1:68 24.3:55,92 25.1:90,91 29.4:92 26.2:92 26.5:93 27 :83 27.1:90,94 27 .3:93,194 29.3:192 35.2:144 37.1:144 40.1:146 42.1-2:26, 33 note 49:200 note 8 40-51:94 $3.1:93 56.6-7:10
700:190
833:190 1239:190 1451:190 1200:190 1867:190 Da italeis 110 frag. 225 (Edmonds) Ecclesiazousae 459:160,161 574-75:172 note 28 197-198:197 1131-2:51,172 note 28 Knights 255:84 580:195 811:162 828-9:52 912-14:194 1111-1114:84 1121:195 1156-7:52 Lysistrata 63:166 note
28
591-3:142 229:162 1041-43:172
Cited
Aristotle Ath. Pol.
Andocides
341ff.:172
or
Thesmophoriazonsae 302-309:163 Wasps 577:33 nore 29 661-2:92 666:163 800-801:117 1075-90:182 1094-98: 183
Aelian
Varia
Sources
note
28
On
the
Generation
of
29,
159
Animals
729b1-20:139 Politics 1265a 14-19:101 1274b 30-1278b- 1:151-152 1275a 15:168 note 1 1275b 31-32:2 1275b 37:23,25,37 note 61,152
40:26 note
53
|Demosthenes) 42:201 note 18 59:26,95,130,133 59.16:157 59.104:114,170 note 59.111:166
16
42.22.4,15,17-18
Diodorus 18.18.4-5:177 Diogenes Laertius 2.26:142 9.50:119 note 39
Dionysius
> oD
- μὰ Μ μὴ με μὰ
ΦΦ
.
:47
ON
.65:51 .28:40,47 .29:47 ~ 90:47 .100:47 9.114:86 Hesiod Works and
Homer Iliad
40.11:17 40.25:206 46.18:11 46.22:129 57:26 57.1:164 57.31:22
Digest
30:50,51 31:24 44:50 84:48
Ὁ
1278a 28ff.:28,37 note 61 1278a 34-35:2 1289b 32:184 1291b 7-14:56 1295b 1:184 1295b 25:184 1362a 26-28:101 Rhetoric 1394a 34:169 note 6 Deinarchos 71:203 note 29 Demosthenes 23.213:128 note 115 25.51:74 note 33 39:26 39.31:165 39.35:169
A I~ WA 0OwOw0OwoOWWO@~
223
of Halicarnassus
hypothesis to Lysias 34:149 note 19 201 note 16 Empedoctes frag. 115:52 Eumelos frag. 2 (Jacoby):123 note 64 145 Eupolis frag. 118:198 Euripides Electra 1335:161 Ion 1570f£:124 Medea 297 :169 Suppliants 232-7 Harpocration s.v. nautodikai 126 note 100 8.ν. Metes 180 Berodotus 1.59.1:23 1.155:198 3.128.5:85 3.136:86 5.57:170 5.66:14,24 5.69:24 5.77:198 5.97:50,51
Days
252:52
2.362:10
9.63:11 15.557-8:155 Odyssey 7.131:156 13.192:155 17.206:156 Isaeus 3.71:12 3.42-52:31 note 20
7.39:200 note 8
10.10:159 Isocrates 8.88:145 16.25:188-189,190 Justin 2.9:74 note 25
Krateros
frag.
Kratinos 110 Cheirones Lysias frag.
4
(Jacoby):21,108
frag. 233 vi (Bude)
Theozotides):149
note
(Against
18
16.3:182 19.19:178 19.29:201 note 14 19.42:201 note 14 34.3:148 note 9 150 note 19 169 note 5 Nepos Miltiades 5.1:74 note 25 Philochoros frag. 35a (Jacoby):15,20, 27,108,191 frag. 119 (Jacoby):96,113-114, 122-3 note 63 Pindar Olym. 7.89-90:156 13.1-3:156 Pyth. 3.70-71:170 note 10 Plato Critias 112b:74 note 33 119a-b:74 note 28 Gorgias 455d:94 455e:119 note 38 515e:93
224
37:1
and
passim
Themistocles
1:15
834:188
835:146,50 note Polemon frag.88:128 Pollux 8.111:187
Solon
frag.
19 note
4 (West):159
frag. 6:154 frag. 9:154 10:155 34:154 36:14,17
8
T
UD & VA
N i
Φ
D
C
e
NO
=
2P ON
.97.1-2:143 Xenophanes frag. 16 (Diels, Kranz) Xenophon Hellenicon 2.3.24:52 Memorabilia 1.2.35:75 note 49
22.2:60,76 note 56 Theseus 25:186,204 note 43 [ Plutarch] Lives of the Ten Orators
(Ten Orators)
s.v. demopoi$tása.2
e.v. Hippias:74 note 25 Thucydides 1.24:196; 1.6:195 1.80.1:198 1.99:64 1.102:124 note 69 1.104-112: 62-64 1.107.9:88,119 note 34 1.138:89
ω
37.5:31 note 20 Solon 2:185 18.1:176 20:35 note 42,129 24:15,18-19 Bff:46 25:185
17
^
The Suda
QS
123c:178
Axiochos 369:51 Hipparchus:37 note 60 Plutarch Alcibiades 16.1:195 Cimon 10:83 14.5:118 16.2:99 Pericles 2.1:183 3.1:85 7.7:90 9.3:93 10:83 10.6:118 10.7:91 10.8:91 12:119 note 38 13.7:119 note 38 24.1-2:117 29.2:99 36.5:89
Strabo
μ
Alcibiades
29
ON μ© ..
Plato)
Sophocles Antigone 569:139 note 26 Electra 1227:161 Oedipus at Colonnus 12-13:156 184:156 927-928:157 Oedipus Tyrannos 222:171 note
δι Ne
Laws 629d:124 note 69 698b:200 note 8 741a:98 753a:169 768b:164 849a-d:157 873e:187 Republic 451cff.:172 note Symposium 175e:51 221a:182 Timaeus 50d:139 note 26
115
[Xenophon]
p.
Constitution of the
Athenians, "Old Oligarch" 1.13:795 1.10 Bekker Anecdota 257 s.v. Eupatridai: 154,189,204 note 40 DAA 330:187 6:187 I.G 10:146 39:84 41:111 45:178,202
note
23
98
225 54:117 79:160,171 note 83:135 114:54 115:30 note 15 203:125 note 76 339:125 note 76 340:125 note 76 342:111 343:111 929:78 note 79 950:125 note 76
24
112
1:38 note 66,153,162 10:81 note 99,146,169 46:127 note 109 144:127 note 109 1237:12-13,21,162 XIII 9,296:187
note
M-L 23:86,134,194,203 note 29 33:78 note 79 40:75 note 49,86 44:163,174 note 31 48:125 note 76 52:84 69:85 85:26,30 note 16,107 99:38 note 66,107 ,135,153,162 S.E.G. x 37:111
5