Search
Your search for 'dc_creator:( Rhodes, AND Peter AND J. ) OR dc_contributor:( Rhodes, AND Peter AND J. )' returned 258 results. Modify search
Sort Results by Relevance | Newest titles first | Oldest titles first
Epidosis
(53 words)
[German version] (ἐπίδοσις;
epídosis). Voluntary tax requested by Greek sta…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Nesiotai
(273 words)
(νησιῶται/
nēsiôtai). [German version] [1] See Hecatonnesi See Hecatonnesi Rhodes, Peter J. (Durham) [German version] [2] Aegean league of islanders, with Delos as its centre, c. 315 BC League (
k
oinon ) of islanders in the Aegean with Delos as its centre, probably founded …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Epicheirotonia
(84 words)
[German version] (ἐπιχειροτονία;
epicheirotonía).
Epicheirotonia…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Isonomia
(250 words)
[German version] (ἰσονομία;
isonomía). The concept of
…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Tettarakonta
(191 words)
[German version] (οἱ τετταράκοντα/
hoi tettarákonta, 'the Forty'). In Athens, a college of forty judges appointed by lot, …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Epimachia
(105 words)
[German version] (ἐπιμαχία;
epimachía). Thucydides (1,44,1; 5,48,2) uses the term
epimachia for a purely defensive alliance, which obliges the participants to give assistance only in the case of an attack, as opposed to the
…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
States, confederation of
(621 words)
[German version] In Greece federal states were regional units composed of separate
poleis (Polis) and organised in such a way that at any rate foreign policy was in the hands of the federal organisation (Synhedrion), but the individual
poleis retained their own citizenship and a greater degree of autonomy than was enjoyed by each of the demes (Demos [2]) of Attica. 'Tribal states' in the less urbanised parts of Greece were similar, with a federal organisation and smaller local units which had a degree of autonomy: as
poleis were established these tended to develop into federal sta…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Delian League
(858 words)
[German version] (5th cent. BC). The Persian offensive on Greece was repelled in 480-79 BC, but nobody could know at the end of 479 that the Persians would never return. In 478 the Greeks continued the war under the leadership of Sparta, but the Spartan commander Pausanias soon made himself so unpopular that Athens, either of its own record (Aristot., Ath. Pol. 23,4) or at the urging of its allies, decided to take over leadership (Thuc. 1,94-5). At this point, Athens established a standing allian…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Katalogeis
(200 words)
[German version] (καταλογεῖς;
katalogeîs) are known as Athenian Commissioners of Enrolment. During the oligarchical overthrow of 411 BC, 100 men no younger than 40 years of age were chosen as
…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Dokimasia
(411 words)
[German version] (Δοκιμασία;
Dokimasía). In the Greek world it means the procedure of determining whether certain conditions have been met. In Athens the following
dokimasíai are attested: 1. The
dokimasía of young men who at the end of their eighteenth ye…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Ostrakismos
(836 words)
[German version] (ὀστρακισμός, 'trial by sherds' from
óstrakon , pl.
óstraka, 'pottery sherd'). A procedure in Athens that permitted expulsion of a man from the country for ten years without having been convicted of an offence, but without confiscating his property. According to the (Pseudo-) Aristotelian
Athēnaíōn Politeía (22,1; 22,3), ostracism was introduced by Cleisthenes [2] (508/7 BC), but not applied until 488/7. A fragment by Androtion (FGrH 324 F 6) reports that ostracism had been established immediately before its first application, but this statement was probably falsified when it was passed on; the original text of Androtion probably offered the same content as the …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Apodektai
(87 words)
[German version] (ἀποδέκται;
apodéktai, ‘receivers’). A ten-man board of officials in Athens, with members chosen by lot from each of the ten
phylai. They were charged by the
boule with receiving state funds and remitting them to the central treasury in the 5th cent. BC, and apportioning them to various spending authorities (
merizein) in the 4th, following routine procedures. They had their own powers of jurisdiction towards tax farmers in cases of up to 10 drachmae (Arist. Ath. Pol. 47,5-48,2; 52,3). Rhodes, Peter J. (Durham)
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Mastroi
(148 words)
[German version] (μαστροί/
mastroí, ‘searchers’, ‘trackers’) is the name given in some Greek towns to official accountants with functions similar to those of the
eúthynoi (
eúthynai ) or
logistaí (e.g. Delphi: Syll.3 672; Pallene: Aristot. fr. 657 Rose). The accounting process is called
mastráa/mastreía, e.g. in Elis (IvO…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Antidosis
(152 words)
[German version] (ἀντίδοσις;
antídosis, exchange). In Athens someone designated to discharge a
leitourgia ( Liturgy) could take measures to avoid it by naming somebody richer who was not exempt from it, but who had escaped it. He could ask him to assume the
leitourgia or, if the other man denied, insist on an exchange of their respective fortunes. Such an exchange was in practice fully possible [1; 3], although this is contested [2]. If the person so named wanted neither the
leitourgia nor an exchange, then the plaintiff was forced to assume the
leitourgia or seek a
diadikasia …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Zeugitai
(274 words)
[German version] (ζευγῖται, literally 'yoke-men', from ζεῦγος/
zeûgos = 'yoke', 'team'), the third of Solon's [1] four property-classes in Athens ([Ar…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Symmoria
(314 words)
[German version] (συμμορία/
symmoría, 'company'). In Athens in the fourth cent. BC, a group of men liable for payment of the property tax called eisphora or for the
leitourgía (Liturgy I) of the trierarchy (Trierarchia). In 378/7 all payers of
eisphorá were organised in 100 symmoriai for administrative convenience (Cleidemus FGrH 323 F 8): each member continued to be taxed on his own property, but later the liturgy of
proeisphorá was created, by which the three richest members of each symmoria had to advance the whole sum due from their symmoria. There were additional symmoriai for metics (Metoikos) (IG II2 244. 26). In 357/6 a law of Periander extended this system to the trierarchy: the 1200 richest citizens were grouped in 20 symmoriai (probably independent of the symmoriai for eisphora, but this is controversial), and although it was still possible for individuals to take on a trierarchy, much of the cost of the trierarchy was divided …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly