Constitution of Athens The Historical Constitution



Yüklə 460 b.
tarix26.11.2017
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Constitution of Athens

  • The Historical Constitution:

  • Cleisthenes to early Fifth century PHIL 2011


Solon’s and ancient China’s social classes compared

  • Solon: wealth basis (measures of harvested products)

  • Four groups

  • Military and political functions are implied, and still associated with merit (w/out examinations):

  • Wealthiest = elite, equestrian troops, serve as magistrates;

  • Poorest = foot soldiers, belong to assembly and juries.



Aristotle’s social classes compared with ancient China

  • Aristotle:

  • Citizen-magistrates

  • Farmers, wealthy or not;

  • Mechanics (Bk III), might even be excluded from polis;

  • Merchants (Bk I: household management)



So is there a big difference?

  • How do you account for the similarities in social structure?



Rise of Cleisthenes

  • 510 BCE: the Alcmaeonids (an aristocratic family), deposed Hippias, the son of Peisistratus, with the help of the Spartans;

  • 510- 508: Civil war between Alcmaeonids and the archon Isagoras (another aristocrat);

  • 508: Cleisthenes the Alcmaeonid, former chief archon, had support of the people, who trusted him because his family had opposed the tyrants;

  • Cleisthenes lacked authority, but initiated reforms on basis of popular support, thereby

  • Creating “the most democratic state the Greek world had ever seen” (Ober 1989, 69).



Cleisthenes’ Reforms

  • Defined citizen as legitimate son of an Athenian father;

  • Expansion of participation:

    • “…he first divided all the citizens into ten tribes instead of the earlier four, with the aim of mixing them together so that more might share control of the state” (CA, xxi);
  • This act severed the direct political link between ancestry and tribe, thereby reducing the potential for tribal loyalties disrupting political life:

    • Hence, “no investigation of tribes” (CA, xxi);
    • did not establish twelve tribes because that would have aligned with the trittyes (thirds) of the four traditional tribes.


Map of Cleisthenes’ trittyes



Cleisthenes’ Reforms, cont.

  • 30 trittyes, three for each tribe;

  • One each on coast, in city and country—Why?

  • 139 demes (district centers)—neighborhood of city or village (in country side);

  • Each citizen to use the name of the deme, not a family name;

  • Demes named after location or founder;

  • Citizens still free to join phratries (brotherhoods), belong to clan groups and hold priesthoods (these now private, not political).



Upshot:

  • Citizenship of a place replaces membership in a clan.



Cleisthenes’ Reforms, cont.

  • Boule (council) of 500 (to replace old Boule of 400);

  • 50 members from each tribe sent to the Boule;

  • Term limits: service on council limited to two annual terms (U.S. President: 2 4-year terms);

  • Broadening participation: notables may have initially dominated, but term limit expanded the number of citizens needed to serve;

  • Citizens from all of Athens now included, not just urban elite;

  • Mode of selection unknown—either election or selection by lot (sortition; this system used for jury selection in many countries today).



Cleisthenes’ Reforms, conclusion

  • Introduced Athens’ ostracism law:

  • 6,000 would agree to hold an ostracism assembly: citizens voted to banish fellow citizens for ten years (Plutarch’s story of Aristides);

  • Originally intended against tyrants; later used against political dissenters;

  • Cleisthenes’ mottos were isonomia (equality) and collective responsibility, but he did not support speaking out in public (isegoria, important later);

  • He did not remove property qualifications for holding office.



The Trireme: School of Democracy



The Trireme: Athens’ School of Democracy

  • Battleship of the Athenian navy;

  • Boule oversaw trireme construction and maintenance (CA, xlvi);

  • Navy increasingly important in early fifth century defense of Greece against Persia;

  • Previously, cavalry and hoplites (heavy-armed soldiers) were crucial; demes preserved names of the fallen;

  • Athenian navy played critical role in winning the great sea battle against Persia at Salamis in 480 BCE;

  • Paradigmatic community, own social imaginary, a kind of brotherhood (historian Barry Strauss in Dēmokratia).



Athenian liturgy

  • At Athens, “liturgy” refers to a public office or duty which the richer citizens discharged at their own expense.

  • 1836 LYTTON Athens (1837) II. 461 The State received the aid of..what were termed liturgies from individuals. 1847 GROTE Greece II. xi. III. 159 The Liturgies of the State, as they were called, unpaid functions such as the trierarchy, choregy, gymnasiarchy, which entailed expence and trouble upon the holder of them. 1880 Sat. Rev. 25 Dec. 790 It was a species of liturgy a voluntary contribution to a great public object.

  • Oxford English Dictionary online.



The Trireme: School of Democracy

  • Triremes manned by citizen oarsmen (Aristotle advised using non-citizen farmers, Pol. 1327b8-14);

  • Helped establish democratic self-confidence, basis for later isonomia (equality) of the poorest citizens;

  • Socrates mockingly describes how an oarsman or foot soldier would know he was as good as a man of means—by the rich man’s pallor (Rep. 556c-557d);

  • Discipline, order and obedience of the crews: rhythm of rowing—cooperative, collective effort;

  • Went into battle in silence (no cheering or shouting).



Athens’ Alliance system: its role in the growth of democracy

  • Aristides “was the man who assessed the first list of contributions to be paid by the cities two years after…Salamis”;

  • Ionians “to have the same enemies and friends” as Athens;

  • “Athens’ confidence increased and she built up a significant financial reserve”;

  • Aristides encouraged people to move into city to serve in public posts;

  • “The people agreed, took control, and treated their allies more tyrannically except for the peoples…they used…as guards for the empire” (CA, xxiv).



Quote for both questions

  • “… but when after the disaster in Sicily the Spartan side gained a considerable advantage because of their alliance with the king of Persia, the Athenians were forced to change their democracy into the regime of the Four Hundred. The decisive consideration in winning over the majority of the people was the belief that the king of Persia would be more likely to make a military alliance with them if their government was oligarchic” (emph. added; 232-3).



Question 1

  • I find the use of the word ‘forced’ quite interesting. I don’t think it’s a ‘forced’ decision imposed on the Athenians. We always think that we are ‘forced’ to make some choices; but usually, we don’t want to bear the consequences of not making those choices, i.e. we don’t want to pay the price. We then say we are ‘forced’, even when we are completely free to choose. The Athenians wanted to ally with Persia, and when they saw that democracy was in their way, they simply gave it up. I don’t see any element of ‘force’ here. In Hong Kong, there are many people, mainly the rich and the government, who are against democracy because they think it would turn HK into a ‘welfare state’ and hence hamper economic development. In other words, they are giving up democracy for money. What do you think? 1) Do you think that there is anything that is worth giving up democracy for? Or, if you’re not a believer of democracy, 2) what is more important in your view?



Question 1, cont.

  • The question is whether it is good or better to (1) change the whole political system for immediate response to some problems or factors, then overthrow the emergency system and restore the old one, or (2) to uphold and treasure the existing system, and try to reform it step-by-step though the change and response would be slower.

  • This also raises the question of whether it is better for the reform of the political system of certain countries (e.g. Iraq) to be step-by-step, even if we think a certain system (e.g. liberal-democratic) is the best.



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