A Day in Old Athens; a Picture of Athenian Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 262 pages of information about A Day in Old Athens; a Picture of Athenian Life.

A Day in Old Athens; a Picture of Athenian Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 262 pages of information about A Day in Old Athens; a Picture of Athenian Life.

[*]Of course women were entirely excluded from the Ecclesia, as from all other forms of public life.  The question of “woman’s rights” had been agitated just enough to produce comedies like Aristophanes’s “Parliament of Women,” and philosophical theories such as appear in Plato’s “Republic.”

Under these circumstances the whole number of voters is very much less than at a later day will appear in American communities of like population.  Before the Peloponneisan War, when the power of Athens was at its highest point, there were not less than 30,000 full citizens and possibly as many as 40,000.  But those days of imperial power are now ended.  At present Athens has about 21,000 citizens, or a few more.  It is impossible, however, to gather all these in any single meeting.  A great number are farmers living in the remote villages of Attica; many city dwellers also will be too busy to think the 3-obol (9-cent [1914 or $1.55 2000]) fee for attendance worth their while.[*] Six thousand seems to be a good number for ordinary occasions and no doubt much business can be dispatched with less, although this is the legal quorum set for most really vital matters.  Of course a great crisis, e.g. a declaration of war, will bring out nearly every voter whose farm is not too distant.

[*]Payment for attendance at the Pnyx seems to have been introduced about 390 B.C.  The original payment was probably only one obol, and then from time to time increased.  It was a sign of the relative decay of political interest in Athens when it became needful thus to reward the commonalty for attendance at the Assembly.

131.  Meeting Time of the Ecclesia.—­Four times in every prytany[*] the Ecclesia must be convened for ordinary business, and oftener if public occasion requires.  Five days’ notice has to be given of each regular meeting, and along with the notice a placard announcing the proposals which are to come up has to be posted in the Agora.  But if there is a sudden crisis, formalities can be thrown to the winds; a sudden bawling of the heralds in the streets, a great smoky column caused by burning the traders’ flimsy booths in the Agora,—­these are valid notices of an extraordinary meeting to confront an immediate danger.

[*]"A prytany” was one tenth of a year, say 35 or 36 days, during which time the 50 representatives of one of the ten Athenian tribes then serving as members of the Council of 500 (each tribe taking its turn) held the presidency of the Council and acted as a special executive committee of the government.  There were thus at least 40 meetings of the Ecclesia each year, as well as the extraordinary meetings.

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A Day in Old Athens; a Picture of Athenian Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.