Surveying Sikyon from the State to the Land - YANNIS A. LOLOS, with contributions by Aristoteles Koskinas, Lina Kormazopoulou, Ioanna Zygouri, Vassilis Papathanassiou, and Angelos Matthaiou, LAND OF SIKYON: ARCHAEOLOGY AND HISTORY OF A GREEK CITY-STATE (Hesperia Supplement 39; American School of Classical Studies at Athens, Princeton, NJ 2011; distributed by the former David Brown Book Co.). Pp. xxviii + 636, figs. 413, 6 maps in end pocket, 12 tables. ISBN 978-0-87661-539-3. $75.

2016 ◽  
Vol 29 ◽  
pp. 864-874
Author(s):  
Joseph L. Rife
2016 ◽  
Vol 71 (03) ◽  
pp. 395-418
Author(s):  
John Ma

This article explores the famously diverse and expressive political cultures of the “Archaic” Greek communities (650 – 450 BCE) in the light of recent work on public goods and publicness, to which the present essay partly responds. This contribution may also be considered as a fragment of the long history of the Greekpolis. The distinction between “elitist” or “aristocratic” styles and “middling” or “popular” styles, upon closer examination, turns out to be a set of political play-acting gestures, predicated on different political institutions and notably on access to public goods. The “middling” styles paradoxically reflect restricted political access, while “aristocratic” competition in fact responds to the stress and uncertainties of broad enfranchisement. The whole nexus of issues and gestures surrounding distinction is hence not socially autonomous, but immediately linked to political requirements and institutional pressures. This article thus argues not just for the centrality of public goods topolisformation in early Greece, but also for the centrality of formal access and entitlements to the “public thing”—in other words, for the centrality of the state and its potential development. Putting the “state” back in the early history of the Greek city-state: the exercise has its own risks (notably that of teleology), but it attempts to avoid problems arising in recent histories of thepolis, where the state is downplayed or indeed dismissed altogether, and thepolisitself reduced to a pure phenomenon of elite capture or elite constitution.


Phoenix ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 68 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 385-387
Author(s):  
Konstantin Boshnakov
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Michael A. Gomez

This prologue provides an overview of the history of early and medieval West Africa. During this period, the rise of Islam, the relationship of women to political power, the growth and influence of the domestically enslaved, and the invention and evolution of empire were all unfolding. In contrast to notions of an early Africa timeless and unchanging in its social and cultural categories and conventions, here was a western Savannah and Sahel that from the third/ninth through the tenth/sixteenth centuries witnessed political innovation as well as the evolution of such mutually constitutive categories as race, slavery, ethnicity, caste, and gendered notions of power. By the period's end, these categories assume significations not unlike their more contemporary connotations. All of these transformations were engaged with the apparatus of the state and its progression from the city-state to the empire. The transition consistently featured minimalist notions of governance replicated by successive dynasties, providing a continuity of structure as a mechanism of legitimization. Replication had its limits, however, and would ultimately prove inadequate in addressing unforeseen challenges.


Classics ◽  
2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey M. Hurwit ◽  
Ioannis Mitsios

The ancient city-state (or polis) of Athens was contiguous with the region known as Attica, a large, triangular peninsula extending southeastward from the Greek mainland into the Aegean Sea. In the western angle of Attica, on a coastal plain surrounded by four mountains (Hymettos, Pentelikon, Parnes, and Aigaleos), lay the city itself. Although the modern city has thickly spread up the slopes of the mountains as well as to the sea, the study of Athenian topography concentrates on the monuments, buildings, and spaces of the ancient urban core, an area roughly 3 square kilometers surrounding the Acropolis and defended in the Classical period by a wall some 6.5 kilometers in length. Athens is the ancient Greek city that we know best, and it is unquestionably the Greek city whose art, architecture, literature, philosophy, and political history have had the greatest impact on the Western tradition and imagination. As a result, “Athenian” is sometimes considered synonymous with “Greek.” It is not. In many respects, Athens was exceptional among Greek city-states, not typical: it was a very different place from, say, Thebes or Sparta. Still, the study of Athens, its monuments, and its culture needs no defense, and the charge of “Athenocentrism” is a hollow indictment when one stands before the Parthenon or holds a copy of Sophocles’ Antigone. This article will refer to the following periods in the history of Athens and Greece (the dates are conventional): late Bronze, or Mycenaean, Age (1550–1100 bce); Dark Age (1100–760 bce); Archaic (760–480 bce); Classical (480–323 bce); Hellenistic (323 –31 bce); and Roman (31 BCE–c. 475 ce).


scholarly journals Building the past in the Aegean - Pascal Darcque, Michael Fotiadis & Olga Polychronopoulou (ed.). Mythos: La préhistoire égéenne du XIXè au XXIè siècle après J.-C. Actes de la table ronde internationale d'Athènes, 21-23 novembre 2002 (Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, Supplément 46). iv+400 pages, 56 illustrations. 2006. Athènes/Paris: Ecole Française d'Athènes/De Boccard; 2-86958-195-5 paperback €80. - Y. Hamilakis & N. Momigliano (ed.) Archaeology and European Modernity: Producing and Consuming the ‘Minoans’ (Creta Antica 7). 296 pages, 62 illustrations, 1 table. 2006. Padova: Aldo Ausilio/Bottega d'Erasmo; 978-88-6125-007-9 paperback. - Lyvia Morgan (ed.). Aegean Wall Painting: A Tribute to Mark Cameron (British School at Athens Study 13). 250 pages, 24 colour plates, 186 b&w illustrations, 7 tables. 2005. London: British School at Athens; 0-904887-49-9 hardback £79. - Clairy Palyvou. Akrotiri, Thera: An Architecture of Affluence 3,500 Years Old (Prehistory Monograph 15 of the Institute of Aegean Prehistory). xxviii+210 pages, 257 illustrations, 10 colour plates, 4 tables. 2005. Philadelphia (PA): Institute of Aegean Prehistory Academic Press; 1-931534-14-4 hardback £40. - Martin M. Winkler (ed.). Troy: From Homer's Iliad to Hollywood Epic. xi+236 pages, 20 plates. 2007. Oxford, Malden (MA) & Victoria: Blackwell; 1-4051-3182-9 hardback £55 & $74.95 & AUS$165; 1-4051-3183-7 paperback £19.99 & $29.95 & AUS$48.95. - Stephen L. Dyson. In Pursuit of Ancient Pasts: A History of Classical Archaeology in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. xvi+316 pages, 40 illustrations. 2006. New Haven & London: Yale University Press; 978-0-300-11097-5 hardback £30. - Craig A. Mauzy with John McK. CampII . Agora Excavations 1931-2006: A Pictorial History. 128 pages, 267 b&w & colour illustrations. 2006. Princeton (NJ): American School of Classical Studies at Athens; 0-87661-910-3 paperback $15, £9 & €15. - Susan I. Rotroff & Robert D. Lamberton. Women in the Athenian Agora. 56 pages, 71 b&w & colour illustrations. 2006. Princeton (NJ): American School of Classical Studies at Athens; 0-87661-644-9 paperback $4.95, £3.50 & €4.95. - Carol L. Lawton. Marbleworkers in the Athenian Agora. 52 pages, 58 b&w & colour illustrations. 2006. Princeton (NJ): American School of Classical Studies at Athens; 0-87661-645-7 paperback $4.95, £3.50 & €4.95.

Antiquity ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 81 (311) ◽  
pp. 241-244
Author(s):  
Madeleine Hummler

Phoenix ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 372
Author(s):  
Stanley M. Burstein ◽  
Ronald P. Legon ◽  
Nancy H. Demand ◽  
Thomas J. Figueira

Author(s):  
Edward M. Harris

The rule of law was very important for the expansion of markets and economic growth in Classical and Hellenistic Greece. The Greek city-state enforced regulations about weights and measures, ensured peace and order, built infrastructure (agoras, roads and ports), granted foreigners access to courts, gave honours, privileges and protection from seizure (asylia), and concluded treaties with other communities. The state also protected the property rights of individuals and created records to ensure title and to resolve disputes about ownership. Finally, the state created third-party enforcement of contracts, such as lease, sale, lending and borrowing and the accessory contracts of personal security and real security. This allowed economic transactions to expand beyond the narrow confines of family, friends, and neighbours and to expand markets.


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