Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
The Origin & Development of Democracy in Ancient Greece Objectives I. II. III. IV. V. What is Democracy? What are the main types of democracy? What pushed Greeks towards democracy? Who was Solon and what were his reforms? Who was Cleisthenes and what were his reforms? VI. Who was Pericles and what were his reforms? VII. What did Aristotle say about tyranny and democracy? Definition of Democracy • Democracy: – Word has Greek language origin • Demos: people • Kratos: rule • Rule by/of the people Plato • Greek philosopher Plato distinguished democracy from: – Aristocracy or Oligarchy: rule by a small elite or wealthy class – Monarchy: rule by one individual, i.e. king or emperor Main Types of Democracy 1. Direct Democracy: – System of government where the power rests with the citizens – Citizens themselves are the power (without representatives) – Power is exercised through voting – each citizen represents one vote Main Types of Democracy . Representative Democracy: – – – Citizens are elected as representatives Those elected officials are to act in the interest of the citizens Normally they serve only for allotted period of time Origin and Causes of Democracy • Began in Athens, Greece • Approximately 508 B.C. • Due to geography, isolated “city-states” began to emerge – City-states were given the name “polis” • A polis (or city-state) is an area with its own political system – A polis was independent from other polis’ (poleis) Evolution of Democracy • Initially, a polis was styled after monarchies (circa 700 B.C.) • Over time, this evolved into an aristocratic style of rule • Over time, there became an imbalance of power – Wealthy: more power; the rest of the citizenry: less power • This pushed Athens towards becoming a democracy Three Democratic Reformers • SOLON • Gap between wealthy & non-wealthy considered a crisis • Solon, a respected leader, elected to reform Athens • Reforms of Solon: – Slavery outlawed – The debts of farmers were abolished – Established four classes of citizenship • Based on wealth, not heredity • Citizens of three highest classes could hold office – All adult male citizens were granted citizenship • This dramatically increased citizen participation in government Three Democratic Reformers • CLEISTHENES • Reforms of Cleisthenes: – Formed the Council of 500 • Members were chosen randomly from the citizenry • Council was made a “legislature” (law-making body) Three Democratic Reformers • PERICLES • An instrumental figure in Athenian democracy • Reforms of Pericles: – All citizens of Athens encouraged to take part in government – Council of 500 increased dramatically—at times, it was made up of 6,000 members – Number of paid government officials increased – Lower-class citizens were now permitted to hold office – Citizens who served as jurors were now paid • Overall, the reforms increased participation among all the social classes of Athens. Read the two excerpts from Aristotle’s Politics below. Dissect and shrink each excerpt to two sentences. On the Nature of Tyranny: “The Tyrant must ‘cut down to size’ those who raise their heads too high, destroy men of Spirit, not allow common meals, political clubs or education . . . and he must guard against all things that might inspire courage and confidence among the people. . . A tyrant must make every effort to know what each of his subjects says and does . . . he must employ spies . . . The tyrant must also encourage quarrels among the people, pitting friend against friend, the common people against the gentry and the wealthy against one another. . . . The Tyrant must also be a warmonger so that the people will be kept busy and will constantly feel the need for a leader.” On the Nature of Democracy: “. . . rulers should be chosen by all citizens and from all citizens . . . each citizen should be ruled by all citizens and all citizens by each one of them; . . . the tenure of all offices . . . should be short; . . . the jury courts should be chosen from all citizens; . . . The assembly should be sovereign over all things and no official is supreme over anything accept quite unimportant matters; . . . no official should serve for life.Equality does not imply that the poor should rule instead of the rich or that they alone should hold power, but that all people should share power equally , according to their numerical strength.