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MDS1 ANG
Peisistratos to Perikles:
th
Athens in the 5 century BC Gillian Shepherd
The Reforms of Kleisthenes
•  Division of Attica into 139 demes (municipalities)
•  The demes were grouped into:
–  10 phylai (tribes)
–  and each tribe divided into 3 trittyes (thirds)
•  Citizenship, political and military organisation
were based on these new units
•  Boule (council) of 500 formed from 50
representatives of each of the 10 tribes
•  NB demos = people, kratos = power
Sources of Evidence for Athenian Democracy
•  Aristotle (?) Athenaion Politeia (Constitution of the
Athenians), late 4th cent. BC
•  Pseudo-Xenophon, Athenaion Politeia (Constitution of
the Athenians), or “Old Oligarch”, c. 420 BC
•  Political speeches (in assembly, law courts, other public
gatherings like state funerals), late 5th cent. – 4th cent.
•  Inscriptions (public decrees, inventories, accounts etc)
•  Herodotus, Thucydides
•  Drama (especially the comedies of Aristophanes)
Athenian Democracy •  Political rights restricted to adult male citizens (ie not women, slaves
or foreigners)
•  Full political rights acquired at the age of 30 (ie could be a candidate
for a magistracy, juror)
•  Ekklesia (assembly): all adult male citizens over 20 yrs belonged to
this; any could speak
•  Boule (Council of 500) met every day except on holidays;
considered business to be put before the assembly
•  By the later 5th century appointment to the boule was by lot for a
year; by the 4th century service was limited to 2 years for an
individual
•  Each group of 50 men (from the 10 tribes) also served as prytaneis
for a tenth of the year
•  Also law courts (dikasteria)
Image source page: h/p://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:AGMA_Kleroterion.jpg Kleroterion (allotment machine)
Image source page: h/p://www.utexas.edu/courses/introgreece/kleroterion.jpg Image source page: h/p://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/25/Pinakion_Archilochos.jpg Bronze pinakion of Archilochos of Phaleron (4th cent. BC)
Image source page: h/p://www.agathe.gr/id/agora/image/2002.01.0873 Restored plan of the Agora, end of the 5th cent. BC
Image source page: h/p://www.agathe.gr/id/agora/image/1997.04.0051 Plan of the Tholos and New Bouleuterion, Athenian Agora
Photo © Gillian Shepherd The Tholos (Athenian Agora)
5th cent. dining crockery
(ligature delta/epsilon ie
DE = demosion)
Image source page: h/p://www.agathe.gr/id/agora/image/2008.20.0022 Tholos reconstruction
Image source page: h/p://www.agathe.gr/id/agora/image/2000.02.0395 Reconstruction of the New Bouleuterion
plan (NB with alternative arrangement of
curved seating)
Image source page: h/p://www.agathe.gr/id/agora/image/1997.03.0395 Gateway to the New Bouleuterion
Photo © Gillian Shepherd Image source page: h/p://www.agathe.gr/id/agora/image/2009.01.0229 Photo © Gillian Shepherd The Pnyx
Image source page: h/p://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pnyx-­‐berg2.png Image source page: h/p://www.agathe.gr/id/agora/image/2008.19.0028 Ostraka (for voting for ostracism) cast against Themistokles, Kimon, Perikles etc
Image source page: h/p://www.agathe.gr/id/agora/image/2002.01.0873 Restored plan of the Agora, end of the 5th cent. BC
Image source page: h/p://www.agathe.gr/id/agora/image/2008.20.0086 The Stoa Poikile (Painted Stoa)
Image source page: h/p://www.agathe.gr/id/agora/image/1997.01.0213 [Kimon] was the first to beautify the city with the so-called “liberal” and elegant
resorts of which they were so excessively fond a little later; for the Agora he
planted with plane trees, and the Academy he converted from a waterless and arid
spot to a well-watered grove, equipped with clear running tracks and shady walks.
Plutarch Kimon 13.8
The Agora,
La Trobe University
here
Photo © Gillian Shepherd Theseus
•  Athenian hero
•  Accredited with the synoikismos (“dwelling together”)
of Attica (ie political unification, symbolised by his
labours)
•  Died when thrown off a cliff on Skyros by Lycomedes
(King of Skyros during the Trojan War, feared Theseus
would dethrone him)
•  Becomes symbol of Athenian democracy
And, understanding that the ancient Theseus, the son of Aegeus, when he fled from
Athens and took refuge in [Skyros], was here treacherously slain by King Lycomedes,
who feared him, Kimon endeavoured to find out where he was buried. For an oracle had
commanded the Athenians to bring home his ashes, and pay him all due honours as a
hero; but hitherto they had not been able to learn where he was interred, as the people of
Scyros dissembled the knowledge of it, and were not willing to allow a search. But now,
great inquiry being made, with some difficulty he found out the tomb and carried the
relics into his own galley, and with great pomp and show brought them to Athens, four
hundred years, or thereabouts, after his expulsion. Plutarch, Life of Kimon
The sacred enclosure of Theseus at Athens was founded after the Battle of Marathon,
when Kimon son of Miltiades devastated Skyros in revenge for the death of Theseus and
brought home the bones to Athens.
Pausanias I. 17-2-7
Image Source Page: h/p://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2010/10/bones-­‐of-­‐gigantomachy.html Human with mastodon skeleton (from A. Mayor, The
First Fossil Hunters. Paleontology in Greek and Roman
Times, Princeton, 2000)
… and rearranged
(from A. Mayor, The First
Fossil Hunters. Paleontology
in Greek and Roman Times,
Princeton, 2000)
Image Source Page: h/p://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2010/10/bones-­‐of-­‐gigantomachy.html Image Source Page: h/p://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Acropolis-­‐Athens34.jpg The Acropolis, Athens