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GREEK HISTORICAL INSCRIPTIONS 404-323 BC

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GREEK HISTORICAL INSCRIPTIONS 404-323 BG

Edited with introduction, translations, and commentaries by P. J. R H O D E S

and ROBIN OSBORN E

OXTORD UNIVERSITY PRES S

OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRES S

Great Clarendo n Street , Oxford 0x2 6DP Oxford University Press is a department o f the Universit y of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship , and educatio n by publishing worldwide in Oxford Ne w York Auckland Bangko k Bueno s Aires Gap e Town Ghenna i Dar e s Salaam Delh i Hon g Kong Istanbu l Karach i Kolkat a Kuala Lumpu r Madri d Melbourn e Mexic o City Mumba i Nairob i Sao Paulo Shangha i Taipe i Toky o Toront o Oxford is a registered trade mark of Oxford University Press in the UK an d i n certain other countries Published in the United State s by Oxford University Press Inc., New York © P. J. Rhode s an d Robin Osborn e 200 3 The mora l rights of the authors have been asserted Database righ t Oxford University Press (maker) First published 2003 First published in paperback 200 7 All rights reserved. No par t of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, i n any form o r by any means , without the prior permission in writing of Oxford University Press, or as expressly permitted by law, or under term s agreed with the appropriat e reprographics right s organization. Enquiries concerning reproductio n outside the scope of the above should be sent to the Rights Department , Oxford University Press, at the address abov e You must not circulat e this book in any other binding o r cover and you must impose this same condition o n any acquirer British Library Cataloguing i n Publication Data Data available Library o f Congress Catalogin g i n Publication Data Greek historical inscriptions: 404—323 Bc / edite d with introduction , translations, and commentaries by P. J. Rhode s an d Robin Osborne . 1. Inscriptions , Gree k 2 . Greece—History—Sparta n an d Theban supremacies, 404-362 BC—Sources. 3 . Greece—History — Macedonian Expansion , 359—32 3 BC—Sources. I. Rhodes , P.J . (PeterJohn ) II . Osborne , Robin , 1957 CN365.074 2003 9 38'.06—dc2i 200204255 2 ISBN 978-0-19-815313-9 (Hbk.) 978-0-19-921649-9 (Pbk.) 1 3 5 7 9 1 0 8 6 42 Typeset b y Regent Typesetting , Londo n Printed in Great Britai n on acid-free pape r b y Biddies Ltd., Guildfor d & King's Lynn

PREFACE The firs t volum e of M. N . Tod's Selection of Greek Historical Inscriptions (followin g earlier selections by E. L. Hicks and G . F. Hill: published in 1933, second edition 1946) was superseded b y th e volum e compile d b y Russel l Meiggs an d Davi d Lewi s in 196 9 (revised 1988). David Lewis had hoped to produce a volume to supersede Tod's second volume (publishe d 1948) : h e firs t considere d in 197 7 what migh t b e included , an d again in 1991-2 he consulted a number of colleagues includingboth o f us; but afte r he had finishe d editin g Inscriptiones Graecae, 13, he saw work on the tablets from Persepolis as his highest priority. After his death in 1994 Rhodes, as his literary executor, invited Osborne t o join hi m i n perseverin g with th e project ; an d thi s volume, whic h w e dedicate to the memory of David Lewis, is the result. Our collectio n stands in the traditio n o f Tod an d o f Meiggs an d Lewi s in bein g aimed primarily a t historians, and w e have retained Greek Historical Inscriptions a s ou r title. There is , of course, a sens e i n which al l inscriptions are historica l documents, but some make a greater contribution in their own right than others to the questions which historians are interested in asking, and it is on inscriptions of that kind that we, like ourpredecessors, have concentrated. We took as our starting-point Lewis' 1991—2 list o f candidates fo r inclusio n an d th e response s to i t o f ourselves and th e other s whom he consulted, and we continued the process of consultation before settling on the collectio n of texts assembled here. Significan t new texts have been foun d since Tod's collection was published, an d there have been significant new fragments and new interpretations of some which he included; beyond that , while adhering t o the aim o f presenting texts which are important no t just as typical of their genre but i n their own right, we have aimed to broaden the thematic range and to include a greater selection ofmaterial from outsid e Athens. We hope that our collection will offer a way in t o al l aspects of fourth-century history: political, institutional , social , economic, and religious. We have therefore endeavoured to make our commentaries accessible to those unfamiliar with the areas in question, and have translated all our texts. Since inscribed stone s and bronze s are physical objects , whose nature an d appearanc e i s important fo r their impact, we have included a number o f photographs. All that Lewis found time to do towards this volume after his consultation of 1991-2 was to type into his computer a few texts and translations: we have studied these, but for th e sak e of stylistic uniformity we have made ou r ow n translations of the texts in question. More importantly, over many years he had compiled and circulated among students and teachers of fourth-century Greek history in Oxford notes on significant work concerning Tod's inscriptions subsequent to the publication o f his volume, and texts of some additional fourth-century inscriptions; and these were invaluable t o us when we embarked on our work. One o f us accepted the primary responsibility for each of the texts included here: attentive readers may detect different style s of thinking, and of writing, but eac h ofu s has read and commented on all that the other has written, each ofus ha s responded

VI P R E F A C

E

constructively to the comments of the other, and we accept joint responsibility for this book in its final form. Lik e Meiggs an d Lewis , 'we . . . compliment on e another , for we have found a surprising measure of agreement and our few differences o f opinion have never escalated'. Beyond that, we have many thank s to express . At the institutiona l level, Rhodes thanks the Universit y of Durham for research leave in 1998, when we were starting work, and in 2001, when we were finishing our text; All Souls College, Oxford, for a visiting fellowship in 1998; and Corpus Christi College, Oxford (which awarded him a visiting fellowship in 1993), for continuing hospitality. Osborne thanks Corpus Christi College, Oxford, where he was Tutorial Fellow in Ancient History when this work was done ; an d th e Britis h Academy, for a Research Readershi p i n 1999—2001 . W e both thank the staff " of the Bodleian Library and the Ashmolean —* Sackler Library in Oxford for providing almost all the publications which we needed to consult. Though neither of us is now based in Oxford, almost all of this book was written there. We shoul d like to thank a great many individuals , but the y are not to be blame d for what we have done in response to their advice. Our lis t must begin with Dr S. D. Lambert, who has been exceptionally generous with his time and expertise , and his colleagues Dr A. P. Matthaiou an d Dr G. J. Oliver, who are re-editing fourth-century Athenian decree s for th e first phase o f a thir d editio n o f Inscriptiones Graecae, II, and who generously checked readings, scrutinized our drafts, and showe d us their drafts . Others wh o have helpe d us include M r D. J. Blackman ; Dr H. Bowden ; Professo r J. Buckler ; Professor J. McK . Camp ; Professor A . Chaniotis; Mr G . T. co*ckburn ; Dr C . V. Crowther , o f the Centr e for the Stud y of Ancient Document s in Oxford ; Dr B . Currie; Professo r P . D. A . Garnsey; Professo r P . Gauthier ; D r K . Hallof , of Inscriptiones Graecae in Berlin; Dr M. H. Hansen; Professo r P. Hellstrom; Dr H. King; Mrs E . Matthews, of the Lexicon o f Greek Personal Names; Professo r A. Morpurgo Davies; Mr N. Papazarkadas; Professo r R . C. T. Parker; Miss J. M. Reynolds; Dr I. Ruffell ; DrM. Sayar ; Professor A. C. Scafuro; Professor S . Scullion; DrJ. Shear ; Professor R . S. Stroud; Professor D. Whitehead; Dr G. M. Williamson; and Dr P. J. Wilson. We ar e indebte d t o thos e wh o hav e supplie d an d allowe d u s t o reproduc e photographs an d a line drawing , wh o ar e indicate d i n th e lis t o f illustrations. We thank M r J. W . Robert s an d th e LACTO R Committe e fo r permission t o reuse material fro m Rhodes' s LACTO R volume , Greek Historical Inscriptions, 359-323 BC. And we are grateful to the Oxford University Press for publishing this successor to its distinguished predecessors, and t o the staff " of the Press and th e printers for the car e which they have devoted to our book. Durham P.J.R Cambridge R.G.O December 2001

. .

Changes in the 2007 paperback editio n are limited to the correction of errors. We are again particularly gratefu l to Dr S. D. Lambert. P.J.R. R.G.O.

CONTENTS (Numbers in parentheses are those of Tod's edition) Illustrations References Introduction Map 1 Th e Gree k world xxvii 1 Map 2 Greec e and the Aegean xxi Map 3 Attic a xx w of the phratry o f the Labyadai a t Delphi, fifth/fourt h century 2 2 (97 ) Athen s honours loyal Samians, 403/2 1 3(99) Spart a liberates Delos, 403 or shortly after 1 4 (1 oo) Reward s for men wh o ha d fough t for democracy a t Athens, 401/0 2 5 Athenia n phratry decree s from Decelea , 396/5 and afte r 2 6 (101 ) Allianc e between Boeotia and Athens, 395 3 7(104/5) Athenia n casualtie s in the Corinthian War , 39 4 4 8 (106 ) Erythra e honour s Gonon, 394 4 9(107) Rebuildin g o f Piraeus walls, 394-391 4 10 (108 ) Athen s honours Dionysius of Syracuse, 394/3 4 11 (109 ) Athen s honours Evagoras o f Salamis, 394/3 5 12 (in ) Allianc e between Amyntas III of Macedon an d th e Ghalcidians, 3905—3805 5 13DedicatonsfhLyian dynast Arbinas,c.390—£.38058 14 Helisso n becomes a kome of Mantinea, earl y fourth century 6 15 Grant s o f citizenship by the Triphylians,c.400—£.37066 16(113) Arbitratio n betwee n Miletus and Myus, 391-388 7 17 Athenia n decre e for Erythrae, shortl y before 386 7 18 (114 ) Athen s honours Glazomenae, 387/6 7 19 (116 ) Athen s honours Phanocritus o f Parium, 38 6 8 20 (118 ) Allianc e between Athens and Chios , 384/3 8 21 (139 ) Athen s honours Strato o f Sidon, c.378—£.376 (?) 8 22(123) Prospectu s of the Second Athenian League , 378/7 9 23 (122 ) Methymnajoin s th e Second Athenian League , 378/7 10 24 (126 ) Gorcyra , Acarnania, an d Gephalleniajoin th e Secon d Athenian League , 375/4 10 25 Athenia n law on approvers o f silver coinage ,375/4 11 26 Athenia n law taxing Lemnos, Imbros, and Scyros , 374/3 11

xi xii xiii

i x x

1 La

2 8 0 6 8 0 4 6 8 0 4 58 2 66 0 4 6 0 2 6 2 6

8 2 8

viii C O N T E N T

S

27 Cul t of Amphiaraus, Oropus , 386-374 12 8 28 (125 ) Account s of the Athenian Amphictyons of Delos, 377—373 13 4 29 Paro s and the Second Athenian League, 372 14 6 30 (130 ) A Theban monument afte r Leuctra, 371 15 0 31 (131 ) Athenia n decrees for Mytilene, 369/8 and 368/7 15 2 32 (132 ) Th e Arcadia n federation honours an Athenian, 369—367 15 6 33 (133 ) Athen s begins negotiations with Dionysius of Syracuse, 369/8 16 0 34 (136 ) Allianc e between Athens and Dionysius of Syracuse, 368/7 16 4 35 ( :37) A n Athenian protest to the Aetolian League, 367/6 16 8 36 Sale s of public property at Athens, 367/6 17 2 37 Decre e of the Athenian genos of the Salaminioi , 363/2 18 2 38 (143 ) Athen s honours Menelaus the Pelagonian, 363/2 19 2 39 (142 ) Athenia n arrangements for lulis, 363/2 19 6 40(162) Athenia n regulation of Gean ruddle export, mid fourth century 20 4 41 (144 ) Allianc e between Athens, Arcadia, Achaea, Elis, and Phlius, 362/1 21 0 42(145) Gree k response to the Satraps' Revolt, 362/1 21 4 216 43 Th e Boeotians honour a Carthaginian,360S-350S216 44(147) Allianc e between Athens and the Thessalian Aomon , 361/0 21 8 45 (140 ) Contribution s to the rebuilding of the temple at Delphi, 361/0 22 4 46 Athenia n derne decree from Halai Aixonides,c.360230 230 47(151) Treat y between Athens and Thracian kings, 357 23 4 48(153) Allianc e between Athens and Carystus, 357/6 23 8 49 (150 ) Opponent s o f Philip II of Macedon expelle d from Amphipolis, 357/6 24 2 50(158) Allianc e between Philip II and the Chalcidians, 357/6 24 4 51 (152 ) Arcesin e honours Androtion, 357/6 (?) 24 8 52 (156 ) Athenia n precautions for Andros, 357/15 25 2 53 ( :57) Allianc e between Athens and Thracian, Paeonian, and Illyrian kings, 356/5 25 4 54 (138) Plot s against Mausolus of Caria, 367/6—355/4 25 8 55 Mausolu s and Artemisia award proxeny to Cnossus, mid 350S (?) 26 2 56 ( I55) Erythra e honours Mausolus, mid 350S (?) 26 4 57 (160 ) Contribution s to the Boeotians for the Third Sacred War , C-354-C-352

268

58 Athens , Delphi, and the Sacre d Orgas, 352/1 272 59 Leas e of sacred land from Arcesine, Amorgus, mid fourth century 28 60 Publi c buildings at Tegea, fourt h century 28 61 Introductio n of members to a phratry (?) , Tenos, fourth century 29 62 Religiou s calendar, Cos, mid fourth century 29 63 Athenia n deme decree from (? ) Hagnous, third quarter of fourth century 31 64 (167 ) Athen s honours Spartocus and his brothers, of the Cimmeria n Bosporus, 347/6 31

2 6 6 8 2 8

CONTENTS

IX

65(171) Dedication s in the Cimmerian Bosporus, C.344/3-C.311i/o 32 4 66 (169 ) Account s of the Delphian Naopoioi, 345/4—343/2 32 8 67(172) Payment s of Phocian reparations to Delphi, 343/2—341/0 33 6 68 (165 ) Allianc e between Erythrae and Hermias of Atarneus, c.350—c.34 2 34 2 69 (154 ) Athenia n penalties for attacks on Eretria, 343 (?) 34 6 7° (173 ) Athen s grants asylum to Arybbas the Molossian, 343/2 34 8 71 (174 ) Athen s honours Elaeus, 341/0 35 4 72 (175 ) Athen s honours Tenedos, 340/39 35 8 362 73 Regulation s for the Artemisia, Eretria,c.340362 74 Commemoratio n at Corinth of victory in Sicily, £.340 36 8 75 (164 ) Oropu s honours Macedonians, 338—335 37 0 76 (177 ) Commo n Peace and League of Corinth, 338/7 37 2 77 (178 ) Athen s honours loyal Acarnanians, 338/7 38 0 78 Trilingua l inscription of Pixodarus from Xanthus, 337 38 4 79 Athenia n law threatening the Areopagus in the event of a plot against the democracy, 337/6 38 8 80 (187 ) The Delphi c Amphictyony honours Aristotle and Callisthenes, 337-327

81 Athenia n law and decree on Little Panathenaea,c.335396 82 (179 ) Argo s arbitrates bewteen Melos and Cimolus , after 336 (?) 40 83(191) Th e kings of Macedon and tyrants at Eresus, 336 and afte r 40 84 (192 ) Alexande r the Grea t and Chios , 334 41 85(201) Reconciliatio n in Mytilene, 334 and afte r 42 86(184/5) Alexande r the Great and Priene, 334 and after 43 87 Regulation s of the Klytidai, Chios,330S434 88 (204 ) Th e Athenian ephebic oath and the 'oath of Plataea', mid fourth century 44 89 Honour s for Athenian ephebes, 332 44 90 (190 ) lasu s and Samo s honour Gorgus and Minnion, 334—321 45 91 (189 ) Athen s allows Citian merchants to acquire land for a sanctuary, 333/2 92 Honour s at Delphi for Archon of Pella, 333/2 and afte r 46 93 ( I95) Relation s between Olbia and Miletus , C.330 (?) 47 94(198) Athen s honours Eudemus of Plataea, 330/29 47 95 Athen s honours Heraclides of Salamis, 330/29 and 325/4 47 96 (196 ) Cor n from Gyrene , £.330—£.326 48 97 Sacre d law from Gyrene , late fourth century 49 98 (199 ) Athen s honours Memnon of Rhodes, 327/6 50 99 Assembl y pay at lasus, afterC.330508 100 (200 ) Athenia n naval list with decree for a colony in the Adriatic, 325/4 51 101 (202 ) Restoratio n of exiles at Tegea, 324/3 52 102 Act s of healing, Asclepieum, Epidaurus,C.320532

392 396

2 6 8 4 0 434

0 8 6 462 6 0 4 8 6 4 6 508

2 6 532

X CONTENT

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Athenian archons, 403/2-323/2 54 Concordance of standard editions 54 Bibliography 54

3 4 7

Index I Persons Index I I Subjects Index II I Significant

1 0

and places 56 58 Greek words

594 594

ILLUSTRATIONS PLATES

1. 2 B y courtesy of the Acropolis Museum, Athens 2. 1 o B y courtesy of the Epigraphical Museum, Athens 3. 2 2 B y courtesy of the Epigraphical Museum, Athens 4. 5 4 Photograp h by M. Ghuzeville: by courtesy of the Musee du Louvre, Pari s 5. 7 0 a uppe r part by courtesy of the National Archaeological Museum , Athens; b lowe r part by courtesy of the Epigraphical Museum, Athens 6. 7 8 B y courtesy of Katherine Eltringha m 7. 7 9 B y courtesy of the American Schoo l of Classical Studies at Athens: Agora Excavations 8. 8 8 B y courtesy of the Ecole Francaise d'Athene s 9 (or-b) 96/ 7 (same stone) B y courtesy of Catherine Dobias-Lalo u

FIGURES

1. 6 6 C

. Delpkes, ii 34 = No. 6 6 in its physical contex t (based on Corpus de s Inscriptions d e Delphes, ii, p. 6 4 fig. A,

by courtesy of the Ecole Francaise d'Athenes ) 33 2. 9 6 Communitie s an d individuals receiving grain from Gyren e 49

5 1

REFERENCES A N C I E N T TEXT S

Most abbreviations shoul d cause no difficulty; but the following should be noticed: Ar. Aristophane Arist. Aristotl Ath. Pol. [Aristotle]

e

s , Athenaion Politeia

Where there is a choice between numbering systems , we use the following: Aristotle, Politics book s in manuscript orde r (as in Oxford Text); then, not chapter s and sections, but Berlin pages Pausanias section s within chapter s a s in M . H . Rocha-Pereira' s Teubne r text Plutarch, Lives section s within chapters as in Teubner and Bude texts Strabo Gasaubon' s page s followe d b y book , chapter , an d sectio n numbers

MODERN WORK S

Numerals in bold type refer to the numbered item s in this book. Articles in periodicals ar e cite d in sufficien t detai l for identification in the cours e of the book. In general we use the abbreviations ofL'Anneepkilologique, wit h the usual English divergence s (AJP fo r AJPh, etc.; also BSA fo r ABSA); bu t th e publication s o f continental academie s ar e abbreviate d a s Abh. Berlin, Sb . Leipzig, etc . (cf. Ann.Pisa o the Scuol a Normal e Superiore) , th e Mitteilungen de s Deutschen Archaologischen Institute, Athenische Abteilung, a s AM, an d th e title s o f Greek-languag e periodical s ar e give n (abbreviated or in full) in the Greek alphabet . Collections of inscriptions which we cite are listed in section i of the Bibliography , and othe r book s whic h w e cit e ar e liste d i n sectio n 2 , an d excep t wher e w e us e shortened titles of a kind which will cause no difficulty we indicate in the Bibliograph y the abbreviations whic h we use.

INTRODUCTION I Nowadays inscriptions on ston e or metal are used in two main contexts : on public buildings (t o announce th e identit y o f the building , o r t o recor d th e layin g o f the foundation ston e or th e forma l openin g o f the building) , an d o n tombstones , war memorials, lists of officials o r benefactors and the like. In the ancien t world, with no printing or duplicating, o r other modern mean s of communication, inscriptio n was used not only for these purposes but fo r many others as well. Public announcements could not be made in the newspapers or delivered to individual members of the public: either a proclamation ha d to be made at a meeting attended by large numbers of the citizens, or a text would be set up i n the centre of the cit y in the hope that members of the publi c woul d com e an d rea d it . Temporary notices—lists of candidates for office, proposals for new legislation and so on—were written on whitewashed boards, and hav e no t survive d for us t o read ; fo r permanent publicatio n bronz e o r wood was sometime s used, but th e norma l mediu m wa s stone . For example , text s of a city's religious calendars, of its laws and decrees , and o f its alliances with other cities; schedules ofwork on apublicbuildingproject, an d accounts ofpublic expenditure on the project; inventories of precious objects in the templ e treasuries or of ships in the dockyards; epigrams commemorating a famous victory; honours voted to a native or foreign benefactor; lists of office-holders an d benefactors—all these and comparabl e documents might be inscribed on stone for members of the public to see. However, by far th e largest number o f inscriptions are texts set up by private individuals—mostly dedications an d funerar y monuments—and thes e no les s tha n publi c inscription s provide informatio n o f importanc e fo r historian s (fo r private inscription s i n ou r collection see 7, 30, 65 , 92). We hav e deliberatel y use d th e ver b 'see ' rather tha n 'read' . Thoug h i n theory the purpos e o f a published tex t is that i t should be availabl e t o be read , som e texts were published in such a way that they were not eas y to read, an d the purpose o f a lengthy inventory of items received by one board of treasurers from it s predecessors and transmitted to its successors may have been to serve as a symbolic demonstration that th e board had don e it s duty as much a s to furnis h materia l fo r an investigator who wante d t o chec k that non e o f the item s had disappeared . Nevertheless , some other text s were laid ou t i n ways designed t o ai d intelligibilit y (e.g . 45, wher e th e lines containin g th e tota l fo r th e yea r projec t beyond th e left-han d margin o f the column); and we think it would be a mistake to make too much of the symbolic aspect of inscription and too little of the notion that texts were published so that they could be read. 1 Expressions such as 'Write up .. . s o that al l other men als o may know . . .' 1 On the symboli c aspect s of publication see , e.g., J. K. Davie s and D. Harri s in Ritual, Finance, Politics . . . D. Lewis, 201—12 and 213—25 ; on thi s and o n other aspects of publication se e Rhodes, G&R 2 xlviii 2001, 33—44,

I36-53-

xiv I N T R O D U C T I O

N

(OTTOJS (i v ovv Ka l ot aAAo t aTravre s elSa>ai . . . dvaypai/icu: e.g. IGif223 = SIG3227, A. 13—16 ) are strictly compatible wit h either function . Very large blocks of stone were sometimes used for extensive documents or series of documents (in this collection, 2 2 measures about 1.9 3 x 0.4 5 x o.14in . = 6' 4" x 1' 6" x ^Vi", 64 measures about 2.1 7 x 0.5 5 x 0.1 6 m. = 7'1" x 1' 10" x G'/i") , but Greek inscriptions were not necessaril y 'monumental'. Ver y ofte n th e stele would be a slab of stone no larger than a modern tombston e (71 measures 0.5 x 0.3 x o.c>5 m = 1' 8" x 1' x 2", 77 0.54 x 0.43 x o.o8m. = 1' 9" x 1 5" x 3'1/4"), and both on these and on the large r stelm the tex t was usually inscribed i n letters 0.005—0.01 m. = 0.2—0.4 " high.2 Document s emanatin g fro m th e publi c authoritie s were normally publishe d at public expense ; but sometime s a man who had been honoured woul d himself pay for th e publicatio n o f his honours, an d se e on 3 5 fo r th e suggestio n that tha t tex t of ephemeral significanc e was published b y the Eleusinian officials . Publicatio n wa s not cheap. I n Athens in the fourth century it became commo n t o specify in advanc e how muc h th e stat e would spen d o n th e stele: 22 , a large ston e (cf. above), cost 60 drachmas; 3 0 drachmas wer e allowed for the eve n larger 6 4 (cf . above) and fo r th e elaborate 7 0 (but see commentary), and als o for the small 77 (cf. above); surprisingly, only 20 drachmas were allowed for two copies of 79, though the stone containing ou r surviving copy measures about 1.5 7 x 0.4 2 x o.i i m = 5' 2" x1' 5 " x 41/4" and ha s the top a sculptured relief. The stele would be set up in a public place, commonly th e acropolis (the rocky citadel) or the agora (the main square) of the city. Sometimes texts would be inscribed not on a separate stelebut, e.g., on a building: 86 comprises the first two of a series of texts inscribed on a temple at Priene, in Asia Minor . Although ther e ha d bee n earlie r attempt s o n a smal l scale , th e vie w tha t fo r Athens, with it s unusually larg e bod y o f texts, i t shoul d b e possibl e t o identif y th e work of particular stone-cutter s from their particular idiosyncrasie s was first seriously advanced b y S . Dow, and ha s been followe d up mos t thoroughl y b y S . V. Tracy . In Athenian Democracy i n Transition h e seek s t o identif y cutter s whose activit y fall s a t least partly withi n th e perio d 340—290 , an d o f the text s in our collectio n h e assigns 31, 34 , 4 1 (on e cutter), 72, 8 1 (on e cutter), 91, an d 10 0 to cutters . Identifications cannot alway s be certain , an d Trac y himsel f remarks tha t i n thi s period 'man y o f these cutter s inscribed letter s which ar e ver y much alike ' (p . 2). He claim s t o hav e been conservative in his assignments (ibid.); some might stil l be challenged;3 but he has pursued investigations of this kind more thoroughly an d systematically than anybod y else, and only a scholar who had been equall y thorough an d systemati c could rejec t his assignments with confidence. Sometimesmore than one copy ofatextwouldbepublished—an alliance , naturally, would be published i n each o f the citie s participating; 6 9 was published i n two (or, 2 Exceptionally, 7 . B, a grav e stone , ha s letter s 0.04 m. — 11/2"high; 86 . A. o n a templ e wall , ha s letter s 0.052-0.057 m. = 2—aV'a " high. Some epigraphists use the Gree k stek as the technical term for a comparativel y thin slab and cipps (the Lati n term for a marker, particularly of a grave or a boundary) as the technical term for a block which is more nearl y square i n cross-section, but th e words were not used in antiquity in accordanc e with that distinction. 3 Gf . th e revie w of Athenian Democracy in Transition^ M . B . Walbank, Phoen. li 1997, 79—81.

INTRODUCTION X

V

as restored by some editors, three) places within Athens, and 7 9 in two places within Athens; the dossier ^o was published in Athens, and the decrees of the in dividual Gean cities were published in the city in question—and where more than one copy of a text has been found it has become apparen t that the Greek s lacked our notion o f wordfor-word accuracy : instea d they seem to hav e ha d th e potentially dangerou s belief that, as long as the sense was correctly recorded, small differences i n wording did not matter. In spite of that, however, it was the inscribed text rather than the original text in the archive s which was in some sense the officia l tex t of a public document : thus the Thirty in Athens in 404 'took down from the Areopagus' the laws of Ephialtes and Archestratus (Ath. Pol. 35. ii), an d i n the prospectu s of the Secon d Athenian Leagu e Athens undertakes that if for cities which join 'ther e happen to be unfavourable stelai at Athens, the council currently in office shall have power to demolish them' (22.31—5 ; cf- 39- 3:-3)-4 Some stelai hav e survive d intact—unbroke n an d completel y legible . Fa r mor e often, however , only part o f the origina l stele survives, some letters even on the part that does survive are hard or impossible to read, and modern scholar s have had to do their best to reconstruct the text . Where onl y a few letters on the edge s of a stele are missing, restoration is easy, often inevitable; where large parts of the text are illegible and/or missing, reconstruction is far more difficult. If the historical context to which a document belongs can be identified, this may provide clues as to what the lost parts of the text should have contained. If a piece of standardized documentary language ca n be recognized, this can be reconstructedby comparison with other documents (though the Greeks could not retrieve a standard clause from a data-base, and variations tend to be found even within 'standard' formulai c expressions: compare, fo r instance, the different form s o f the Athenia n probouleumati c formul a in 24 , 31, 33 , 38 , 9 5 §§iv , v). If two or three lines can be reliably restored, the approximate lengt h of the lines is fixed, and this limits the possibilities of restoration in the rest of the document. In this period most Athenian decrees , and som e decrees of other states , were inscribed in a style known as stowhedon (a genuine Greek word, though not used of inscriptions in any ancient text) , with the letters regularly space d o n a grid, precisely the sam e numbe r of letters in each line, and little or no punctuation: this, though it made the stelai more attractive a s monuments, canno t hav e mad e fo r easy reading, bu t fo r us it has th e advantage tha t very often a formulaic expression can be found which allows enough reconstruction at one point to reveal the exact number o f letters to be restored in each line. With a few exceptions, where a text is fragmentary but o f sufficient importanc e to deserve inclusion, we have limited ourselves in this collection to inscriptions where a substantial stretch of continuous text survives or can be reconstructed. Beyond that, we have tried to choose texts which are both important i n themselves and give an indication of the range available; and readers whose interests are thematic can use our texts and commentarie s to study not onl y the main narrative threa d o f fourth-century histor y but suc h matters a s political institution s and administrativ e organization; religiou s cult s an d religiou s financing ; coinage , buildin g fund s an d 4

Gf . Rhodes with Lewis, 3— 4 with n. 4.

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regulations, trade agreements, and other economic matters. Geographically, w e have material from Athens and other states of the Greekmainland, from the Aegean islands, from Macedon , Thrace , an d th e Cimmeria n Bosporus , from wester n Asia Minor, and from Gyren e (and among the Athenian texts we have one concerned with Sidon, in Phoenicia)—but not from the Greek states of Italy and Sicily, which produced very few inscription s a t an y date , though w e include som e texts from mainlan d Greec e concerned wit h Sicily . Man y o f our document s ar e inter-stat e treaties, or law s o r decrees o f single state s (especiall y Athens, which i n th e fift h an d fourt h centuries inscribed public documents on a much larger scale than other states). However, our material include s texts from bodie s within a state (denies, 46, 63; gentilicial groups , 1, 5, 37, 61, 87; a contingent of ephebes, 89, cf. Athens' ephebic oath, 88) as well as from th e stat e itself; from Athens we have documents issued by the poletm (36) and b y the epistatm o f the dockyard s (100); from Athen s and fro m elsewher e we have suc h items as commemorations of men who died in war (7 , 30; cf. a celebration of victory, 74); religious regulations of various kinds (1, 62, 73, 81 , 97 ; cf. 37, 63 , 87); accounts of sacred treasurers (28), financial records of different kind s (28, 45 , 60 , 66 , 67 ; cf. 1 oo); a lease of sacred land (59); a record of donations of grain (96); accounts of people cured of diseases at Epidaurus' sanctuar y of Asclepius (102).

II

Since many of our texts are public documents of the Athenian state , and sinc e other Greek states had constitutions which, whether democratic or oligarchic, were similar in thei r genera l patter n thoug h differen t i n thei r detai l an d thei r balance , som e information o n the mechanics of the fourth-century Athenian constitutio n will help to make the texts intelligible. Since the reforms of Gleisthenes (508/7) the citizens of Athens had been organized in tenpkylai ('tribes') . In what for some purposes was an official order , these were: I Erechthei s V II Aegei s VI III Pandioni s VII IV Leonti s I V Acamanti s X

I Oenei s I Gecropi s I Hippothonti s X Aianti s Antiochi s

Each tribe consisted of three tnttyes ('thirds'), in different parts of Attica; and the tnttyes consisted of one ormore demoi ('denies': local units), of which there were 139 altogether. To be a citizen of Athens a man had to belong to a deme and to the tnttys and the tribe of which that deme formed a part (membership of these units was hereditary, and by the fourth century not all Athenians lived in the deme in which they were registered). Denies and tribes, though perhaps not tnttyes, acted as independent decision-makin g bodies, and sometime s published their decrees (bodies outside this structure, such as phratries, made and published their decisions in the same way: 5, 37, 46, 63). Beyond that, a good deal of Athens' governmental machinery was based on this structure.

I N T R O D U C T I O N Xvi

i

The bod y wit h th e ultimat e righ t o f decisio n i n mos t matter s wa s th e ekklesia ('assembly'), open to all full (i.e. adult male) citizens, which had fort y regular meetings a year and could probably have extraordinary meetings in addition (see on 64 and, for the ekklesia kjina, 98) : for certain categories of business, affecting a named individual, a quorum o f 6,000 was required. Since there are limits to what can be done by a large body meeting infrequently, day-to-day affairs were in the hands of the boule ('council') of five hundred. This body comprised fifty members from eac h tribe; within the tribe seats were allocated t o denie s approximately i n proportion t o thei r size , s o that i n the fourth century several small denies had on e member eac h but the largest deme, Acharnae, ha d twenty-two . Appointment wa s made by lot from thos e who stoo d as candidates; service was for one year at a time, and no man coul d serve for more than two years in his life. Withi n th e council , the fifty members fro m eac h trib e i n tur n served a s the prytaneis ('prytany' : standing committee) for a tenth o f the year , i n a n order fixed by lot; all business went to them in the first instance; each day one of their members was chosen , again by lot, to be epistates ('chairman') , and fo r twenty-four hours he and som e of his colleagues were permanently o n duty. In th e fifth century one of the duties of the prytany and its chairman had been to preside at meetings of the council and assembly. By the beginning of the 3705 they had been relieved of this duty, and meetings were instead presided over by a board ofproedroi—nine member s of the council, one from eac h tribe except the current prytany, and one of them designated epistates, picked by lot for one day (for the change se e on 22). In the fourt h century most decisions of the Athenian stat e (but not all: see below) were embodie d i n zpsephisma ('decree' ) of the assembly . Every matter o n which th e assembly was to make up it s mind was first discussed by the council, which drew up the assembly' s agenda (i f a new matter was first raised in the assembly , it would be referred to the council, with instructions to bring the matter back to a later assembly: e.g. 69) . O n eac h matte r whic h i t sen t forward to th e assembl y the counci l issued its probouleuma ('preliminar y deliberation') . Sometime s th e probouleuma containe d a positive recommendation, which the assembly might if it chose accept as it stood (e.g. 24, which contains a version of the 'probouleumati c formula' : 'bring them forward to the people, an d contribut e th e opinio n o f the counci l tha t th e counci l resolves') ; on othe r occasions the counci l put a question to the assembl y without making an y recommendation of its own (as in 91, where we have first the probouleuma—'contribute the opinio n o f the counci l t o th e peopl e tha t th e counci l resolve s that th e peopl e shall listen . . . and deliberat e a s they think best'—and the n the resultan t decree of the assembly) ; sometimes the counci l made it s own recommendation u p t o a point but lef t certai n detail s open (e.g. 2. 49-50, 60-1. The probouleuma was read ou t at the beginning o f the debat e in the assembly ; then—whether it had containe d a positive recommendation o r not—member s wer e fre e t o propos e alternativ e motions , t o propose amendment s t o a motio n alread y befor e the assembl y (if an amendmen t was carried , i t wa s publishe d afte r th e origina l motio n whic h i t modified , an d sometimes but no t always the text of the origina l motion was modified in the light of the amendment (see , e.g., on 2), or to amend a motion by taking it over and rewriting it (usually this can be reliably detected only in the rare cases where the original motion

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has been published with the final version, e.g. 95, but se e also on 41, 64). When th e assembly approved a recommendation o f the council, in a 'probouleumatic decree' , from the beginning o f the 370 5 the council's probouleumatic formula was often left in the published version of the text (the earliest example in our collection is 24); and th e Athenians also continuedusingthe fifth-century enactment formula which mentioned the council. In 'non-probouleumati c decrees' , when the assembly did not approve a recommendation o f the council (either because the council made a recommendation which i t rejected or because the counci l made n o recommendation ) the Athenians in the fourt h century took to using enactment an d motio n formula e which di d not mention the council (cf. below, pp. xix—xx , and Rhodes , Boule, 66—78). The alternativ e to a decree of the assembl y in fourth-century Athens was a nomos ('law'). At the end of the fifth century the accumulation o f nearly two hundred years' decrees since the codification of the law by Solon (594/3) had produced a great deal of confusion, an d an attempt was then made to assemble all currently valid enactments in an organized code oflaws. Thereafter, in principle, matters which were permanent and o f general applicatio n wer e to be deal t with by laws while matters which were ephemeral and/o r o f particular applicatio n were , a s before , t o b e deal t wit h b y decrees, and decrees were to rank below laws in importance an d validity. There are uncertainties about the application o f the principle an d the working of the new lawmakingprocedure (nomothesia]. A revised code oflaws was completed in 400/399.5 Any subsequent enactment which would change o r add to that cod e oflaws should itself have taken the form of a law; the procedure for enacting new laws was set in motion by the assembly but the final decision lay not with the assembly but with a special board ofnomotheku ('law-enacters') ; references in speeches of the fourth century suggest that the procedure shoul d have resembled that o f a law-court, with the nomothetm sitting in judgment o n th e riva l merit s o f the curren t la w and th e ne w proposal; bu t th e surviving texts oflaws (in our collection 25,26,79,81.^!) have introductory material which matches that o f decrees as closely as possible (the proedroi and thei r chairma n in 79 are proedroi of the board ofnomothetat). 6 I n practice, although this new procedure seems except in occasional crises to have been used on those occasions when it ought to have been used—with the proviso that, because there were no such matters in the new code oflaws, all decisions in the area of foreign policy, even on treaties intended to last for all time, were embodied in decrees—the record of surviving texts suggests that it was not used very often (on e matter for which it was used was modification of the annua l budget , on which se e below). It presumably conferre d extra importanc e and solemnit y on a n enactment ; but i t was more cumbersom e tha n th e procedur e for makin g decrees, and th e Athenians continued to take most of their decisions by decree.7 5 Se e Rhodes, JHSc'ix 1991 , 87—100, and othe r works cited there . 6 O n nmwthetai, juries, and assemblie s se e Rhodes, C( P liii 2003, 124—9. 7 O n th e distinctio n betwee n law s an d decree s se e M . H . Hansen , GRBS xix 1978 , 315—30 , x x 197 9 27 53 = Eccksia {/), 161—76(—7) , 179—2O5(—6) , believin g tha t th e Athenian s adhered to th e principle ; Rhodes , i n L' educazione giuidica, V. ii. 5—26 at 14—15 , suggesting that a law was needed to change the cod e oflaws . For a list of inscribed laws see Stroud, Th e Athenian Grain-Tax Law, 15—16, to which S. D. Lambert, ZPEcxxxv 2001, 51—62

I N T R O D U C T I O N XI

X

By the fourth century the layout of an Athenian decree or law had become more or less standardized. Not ever y text contains every possible element, but i n a complete text we should find the following:8 (i) Th e stele is ofte n surmounte d b y a pedimen t o r a horizonta l moulding , an d sometimes has a sculptured relief, often set in an architectural frame, above and / or below the text (70 has a relief above the text and another relief below; 79 has a pediment and a relief above). The styl e and detail of the sculpture can sometimes help to indicate the date of the inscription (cf . 88). (ii) Invocation : 'Gods'—perhaps reflectin g the prayer wit h which proceedings i n the assembly began (e.g. 31,35).9 The fou r letters 0 e o t are regularly spread across the ful l widt h o f the stele, and ma y (fo r instance) be inscribe d o n the mouldin g above the main inscribed surface. Some othe r state s also mention (good ) fortune in this position (e.g . Helisson and Mantinea, 14 ; Arcadian federation , 32). When the Athenians mention good fortune they do so in the main text of the decree (e.g. 22. 7-9).10 (iii) Heading , in larger letters (for eas y identification of text):11 archon and/o r secretary of the year (e.g. 11; 18; cf. 10, with the beginning o f the prescript presented in the styl e of a heading); subject of decree (e.g. 6; 11). (iv) Prescrip t (formal details taken from th e secretary's records): archon o f the yea r (sinc e we know the name s o f all the archon s fro m 481/ 0 t o 292/1, this provides us with the most reliable means of dating a decree: for a list of archons from 403/2 to 323/2 see p. 543); prytany: th e nam e o f th e trib e an d it s numbe r i n th e year' s sequenc e o f prytanies; secretary; date: eventuall y specifi c t o th e day , bot h withi n th e prytan y an d withi n th e month; chairman, wh o 'put to the vote'; enactment formula: for a decree of the assembly, either 'resolved by the people ' or 'resolve d by th e counci l an d th e people ' (fo r the significanc e o f the tw o formulae cf . above, an d see , for instance , 22 , 41 , wit h commentary) ; fo r a decree of the council, 'resolved by the council' (fo r decrees of the early fourth century which mention onl y the counci l but ma y be decree s of the assembly see on 10) ; for a law, 'resolved by the nomotheku'; proposer, with the verb eipen (literally 'spoke'). (77 and 94 are among those which contain al l these elements.) at 52—60 , adds IG 11 417; on th e procedur e se e Rhodes, Boule, 28, 50—2, and th e alternativ e reconstruction s o f D. M . MacDowell, JHSxcv 1975 , 62—74; Hansen, C&Mxxxii 1980 , 87—104 , GRBSxxvi 1985 , 345—71 ; Rhodes, C(P xxx v 1985, 55—60. !!

Gf . Rhodes, Boule, 64—5; Rhodes with Lewis, 4—5. 9 Gf . R . L. Pounder, Studies . .. S . Dow, 243—50 . 10 Gf . S. V. Tracy , Hesp. Ixii i 1994, 241—4. " Fo r a study of varations in headings and prescripts see Henry, Prescripts.

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(v) Mai n text: often beginning with an invocation of good fortune (cf. above); motivation clause , in it s fully develope d form in tw o parts, th e firs t beginnin g 'since . . . ' and the second beginning 's o that. . . ' (no example o f that in our collection; but the first part e.g. 11,23, the second part e.g. 4, 22); motion formula : eithe r 'b e i t resolved/decree d b y th e people ' i n a nonprobouleumatic decre e or the probouleumatic formul a in a probouleumati c decree (cf. above and see , for instance, 22, 41, 95 , with commentary); 12 'be it resolved/decreed by the nomothetaf i n a law; and the n th e positiv e proposals, commonly endin g wit h a n invitatio n t o th e prytaneion (tow n hall) for envoys or the recipients of honours; orders for the publication o f the text. (vi) Amendments : were published after the original motion. They normally begin with: proposer of amendment (omitted in 70); either 'in other respects in accordance with the council', when what is amended is a motion contained in the probouluma, or 'in other respects in accordance with [name of proposer]', when it is not (se e in particular o n 64). (A decree could also be amended by rewriting it [cf. above]; when the clauses of decree are presented in an illogical order, that has led some scholars to suppose that the misplaced clauses are the result of'concealed amendments', for which see on 20, 44, 64.) Athenian administration was based on the principle that any good citizen could and should play a modest part in the running of the state: large numbers of annual boards were set up (mostl y often men, one picked by lot from th e candidates in each tribe), and were given strictly limited jobs to do ; all worked under th e general supervision of the council, which also had judicial powers in matters concerned with the runnin g of the state. In the course of the fourth century there was a move away from th e fifthcentury democracy' s principl e o f equa l participation , toward s entrustin g greate r powers to men of proved ability, but in matters illustrated by the texts in this collection there was little change. The collectio n o f taxes was no t mad e b y stat e officials , bu t wa s farme d ou t t o contractors. The contract (like other state contracts, e.g. for rentals orpublic works) was auctioned to the highest bidder or syndicate of bidders, in the presence of the council, by the poletai ('sellers': Ath. Pol. 47. ii-iv; for a document published by the poletai see36) the record of the contract was kept by the council; and in due course the contractors had to pay the sum agreed (irrespective of the amount they had actuall y collected) to the apodektai ('receivers'), again in the presenc e of the counci l (Ath. Pol. 47. v-4-8. ii); i they defaulted they would be pursued by a board ofpraktores ('exacters': e.g. law ap 12 22, 39, and 4 4 have th e enactment formul a which mentions the council but th e motion formul a which does not; cf . 4, with th e non-standard motion formul a 'be i t decreed b y the Athenians'. I t too k time fo r the distinction between th e tw o kinds of formula to become established ; th e enactmen t formul a mentioning th e council had previousl y been standard; and we prefer t o rely on the motion formul a and clas s these decrees as non-probouleumatic (cf . Rhodes, Bonk, 75—7).

I N T R O D U C T I O N Xx

i

And. 1. Myst. 77-9 ; for an instance of default o n a tax-collecting contract see Agora xix P 26. 462—98). In the fifth centur y all revenue was paid into a central treasury, and all state payments were made fro m tha t treasury—b y yet another board, the kolakretai ('ham-collectors').13 In th e fourt h century the apodektm mad e a mensmos ('allocation') to various spending authorities (first attested in 19 , of 386): amongst these authorities were the assembly, which had an expense account, 'the people's fund for expenditure on decrees' (first directl y attested in 367/6: e.g. 35, but it s treasurer, the 'treasure r o the people', is first datably attested in 29, of 372, and th e fun d wa s probably created c.376), and the council, which had a similar expense account. Two other funds, ove r which there was some controversy between the 3505 and the 330S, were the stratiotic (military) fund and the theoric fund: the latter was established to make grants to cover the cost of citizens' theatre tickets at festivals, but it s activities were extended beyond that. The year's allocations to the spending authorities were fixed by a law and could only be altered by a law: in 64 the cost of crowns for the Bosporan princes is accepted for th e futur e a s a charge o n the assembly' s expense account (whic h will have to be given an increase d allocation fo r the purpose), but fo r the curren t year the apodektai are to provide the money 'from (wha t they would otherwise allocate to) the stratiotic fund'. One are a in which the fourth century saw an increase in professionalism was the office o f secretary. Until the 360s the principal state secretary, who kept the records of the counci l an d assembly , and wa s responsible for publishing document s when required, was a member o f the council, from a tribe other than the current prytany , serving for one prytany (i.e . one tent h of the year) only. Between 368/7 and 363/ 2 there was a change: th e offic e wa s detache d fro m membershi p o f the council , an d service wa s no w fo r a whol e year . Curiously , i t i s almos t certai n tha t afte r thi s change tw o different titles , the ol d 'secretary to the council ' an d th e new (but more appropriate to the ol d system) 'secretary by the prytany' wer e used indiscriminately to denote the same official. 14 Each Gree k state had it s own calendar. Year s were not counte d from an y real or imagined fixed point (the Olympic records, counting from a supposed first festival in 776, could be used to correlate the systems of different states; but their four-yearly basis was inconvenient, and the system did not pass into everyday use), but were identified by reference to an eponymous official, usuall y an annua l officia l wh o gave his name to th e yea r i n which h e served . In Athen s the eponymou s officia l wa s the archo n (though it did not become standard practice to date decrees by the archon until c.420), and the year began with the first new moon afte r th e summer solstice: thus the year which we call 378/7 (c. July 378-June 377: the year in which 22 and 2 3 were enacted) was to the Athenians the year of Nausinicus' archonship. In Athens, as in most states, the year was not a solar year ofc.365 days , but wa s based on lunar months, of 29 or 30 days. In an 'ordinary' year of 12 months there were c.354 days; in an 'intercalary ' year a thirteenth month wa s added an d ther e were c.384 days (and because o f this " Rhodes , Bouk, 102 with n. 5. Gf . Rhodes, Boule, 134—8 . Kara Trpvravciav seem s t o hav e mean t 'prytan y afte r prytany' , no t 'fo r one prytany': Ferguson, Th e Athenian Secretaries, 36; A. S . Henry, Hesp. Ixx i 2002, 91—118. 14

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discrepancy interest was commonly reckoned by the month rather than by the year). Decisions as to how long particular month s were to be, and how many months there were t o be i n a particular year , see m to hav e bee n take n o n a n a d hoc basis, not i n accordance wit h a fixed rule ; an d wha t wa s decide d on e way i n Athens might b e decided differentl y elsewhere . Because of these irregularities i t i s rarely possibl e t o give the exact equivalents in our calendar of dates in a Greek calendar. The names of the months at Athens were: i Hecatombaeo n v ii Metageitnio n v iii Boedromio n vi iv Pyanopsio n vii

Maemacterio n i i Posideo n x i Gamelio n x i Anthesterio n xi

x Elaphebolio n Munychio n i Thargelio n i Scirophorio n

Hecatombaeon corresponde d roughly to our July, and so on. In an intercalary yea r the extr a mont h wa s usually a secon d Posideon , adde d afte r th e first. Within th e month the days were counted in three decades: after 'new moon' (vovfj/rjvta) cam e the 'second of the risin g (month)' (BevTfpa lara^vov) an d s o on; in the middl e decad e 'eleventh' and 'twelfth ' were followed by 'thir d o n top often ' (rpirrj eirl Se/ca ) and so on; and in the last decade there was a backward coun t from th e 'tenth of the wanin g (month)' (SeKctTi ? OivovTos) unti l th e las t day, which was designate d 'ol d an d new ' (evr) Ka l vea). 15 The counci l worke d to a calendar o f its own, in which th e yea r was divided int o ten prytanies, in each o f which on e o f the triba l contingent s in the counci l acte d as standing committee; and there were four regular assemblies , with their own items of business, prescribed fo r each prytany (cf . above, an d fo r the regula r assemblie s and their business see Ath. Pol. 43. iv-vi). Until the late fifth century the council's year was a sola r year independen t o f the archonti c calendar , bu t thereafte r the counci l used the archonti c year as its year of office.115 As prescripts of decrees became increasingly detailed in the course of the fourth century, dates tended to be given both by prytany and by month (cf . on 29, 77). The sam e names were used in differen t state s for units of money, but th e values of the differen t currencie s varied i n accordance wit h the weight s of precious meta l (usually silver) to which the names were applied in each state. The scale used in Athens was: 6 obols = i drachma 100 drachmas = i mina 60 minas = i talent ls

O n th e count of days in the last decade see Meritt, 77^ Athenian Tear, 38—51 . 16 On the Athenian calendar see Samuel, Greek and Raman Chronology, 57—64 . There hasbeen much controversy over th e regularit y of 'intercalary ' year s (wit h a thirteent h month) and o f 'hollow' ag-da y and 'full ' 3O-da y months in the archontic calendar an d o f the lengths of prytanies (an 'ordinary' 12-mont h year of 354 days will have required four prytanie s of 36 days and si x of 35: according to Ath. Pol. 43 . ii the firs t fou r prytanie s were the long ones). For summaries with references see Rhodes, Boule, 224-9; Comm.Ath. Pol. 518—20 : we believe with B. D. Meritt against W. K. Pritchett that in an area where there must have been irregularities of various kinds it is unwise to insist on scrupulou s adherence t o the patter n stated in Ath. Pol. (though we do not rul e ou t th e possibility that what Ath. Pol. states is what the laws stated).

I N T R O D U C T I O N Xxii

i

Sums o f money were ofte n expresse d in talents, drachmas, an d obols , without th e use o f a mina as an intermediate unit. The wor d 'stater ' is often use d to denote the standard coi n of a state, irrespective of its value on a scale like the above : in Athens (which did not use the word of its own coins) the stater was a 4-drachma coin, weighing c.17.2 grammes (c.o.6 oz.) . For exchang e rates used to convert sum s in one currenc y to another, see 45, 57; for measures of capacity, again different i n different states , see 45 In the second half of the fourth century, payments for attending meetings of public bodies in Athens (juries, the council, the assembly, etc.) varied between 1/2 drachma (for juries: not increase d since the 420s ) an d 11/2 drachmas a da y (Ath. Pol. 62. ii). A t this tim e a n unskille d labourer coul d ear n 11/2 drachmas a day , a skille d 2 or 21/2 drachmas.17 A man wa s regarded a s rich enough to be liable for such burdens as the trierarchy or a festival liturgy if his total property was worth 3—4 talents or more, while liability for the property tax known as eisphora perhaps extended a little further dow n the scal e (cf. commentary o n 21 , 100) , and h e would have been on e o f the richest Athenian citizens if his property was worth as much as 15 talents. In 341 Demosthene claimed that in the past few years the annua l revenu e of Athens had increase d fro m 130 talents to 400 talents (Dem. x. Phil. iv. 37-8), whereas in 431, at the beginnin g of the Peloponnesia n War, her annua l revenu e was about 1,00 0 talents (X. Anab. VII. i. 27: Thuc. I I 13 . iii claims 600 talents tribute from th e Delian League, but th e tribute lists suggest not more than 400 talents).

Ill

The us e o f inscription s a s evidenc e b y historian s goe s bac k t o Herodotu s (e.g. inscriptions at Thermopylae, vI I 228 ; inscriptions commemorating th e conquest s of the Egyptian king Sesostris, some of which Herodotus had seen , II. 102-6; the story of Nitocris' inscription s i n Babylon , 1. 187). Thucydides use d inscriptions more i n the modern academi c manner (e.g . Pausanias' arrogan t inscriptio n o n the Serpen t Column a t Delphi, subsequently deleted and replaced by a list of Greek states which resisted the Persian invasion, 1.132. ii—iii; an inscription whose letteringhe described as faint, and an inscription cited to show that Hippias was the eldest son of Pisistratus, vI. 54. vii—55. i). In the fourth century Theopompus argue d that the inscription recording the alleged Peace of Gallias between Athens and Persia was a forgery, because it used not Athens' local alphabet but the Ionic alphabet which Athens adopted at the end of the fifth century (FGrH11 5 F 153—5: he also rejected the authenticit y of our 8 8 §ii). In the third centur y Graterus (FGrH 342 ) made a collection of Athenian decrees ; in the second Polemon of Ilium collected epigraphic texts and was called a 'glutton for stelai' (stelokopas: Ath . vi. 2340). On th e use of inscriptions by Pausanias, the traveller of th second century A.D., cf. on 102. l8 17 Se e M. M . Markle, III, Crux . . . G. E. M. d e Ste Croix, 293—7 ; an dcf- the detaile d collection and analysi s of data in Loornis, Wages, Welfare Costs and Inflation. 18 And se e Habicht, Pausanias' Guide to Ancient Greece, 64—94 ch- ii i

Xxiv I N T R O D U C T I O

N

In the modern world, inscriptions have long been found and recorded by explorers and archaeologists. The firs t work planned explicitly as a corpus of Greek inscriptions was A . Boeckh' s Corpus Inscriphonum Graecarum, published betwee n 182 8 an d 1877 Towards th e en d o f the nineteent h century , responsibilit y fo r a corpu s o f Greek inscriptions fro m Europ e wa s accepte d b y th e Berli n Academy , whic h undertoo k and is still continuing publication of the work which came eventually to be known as Inscriptiones Graecae, the first part of which appeared in 1873 (some parts have reached a second or third edition, others have yet to appear in a first edition, and in some cases planned volumes have been rendered unnecessary by volumes published under other auspices). Responsibility for Asia Minor was accepted by the Vienna Academy, which issued the first volume of the series TituhAsiaeMinons'm 1901 . Other series devoted to Asia Minor are MonumentaAsiaeMinonsAntiquae, begun in 1928; and Inschriftengnechischer Stadte von Kleinasien, begun in 1972 and proceeding very rapidly. Many inscriptions ar first published in classical and archaeological periodicals; and, when a large numbe r of inscriptions are foun d o n on e site , ofte n on e o r more volume s of the excavatio n report for the site are devoted to a corpus of the site's inscriptions. Every yea r see s th e discover y o f new inscriptions , an d th e publicatio n o f new inscriptions, new fragments o f inscriptions already known, and new contributions to the reading and interpretation of familiar texts. Keeping up to date with the stream of publications is rendered easier by chronicle s of new work. Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum was founded by J. J. E . Hondius i n 1923 with a survey of work published in 1922, continued by A. G. Woodhead, an d afte r a n interruption resume d by a team of editors who hav e produced annua l survey s of work published sinc e 1976-7: this commonly reprints new and revised texts if they have been published otherwise than in a major corpus. For each text in our collection, the references in our introductor y rubric includ e publicatio n i n a majo r corpu s and/o r i n SEG, which wil l enabl e treatments i n SE G to b e trace d throug h it s indexes. 19 The Revue de s Etudes Grecques regularly includes a Bulletin epigraphique: betwee n volumes li 1938 an d xcvi i 198 this was the work of J. & L. Robert, who were renowned for their vast knowledge and ability to make connections, and for their trenchant opinions; from vol. c 1987 this too has been continued by a team, with different member s focusing on different themes or geographical areas. 20 An epigraphical bulleti n on Greek religion is published in the periodical Kernos by A. Ghaniotis. More genera l chronicle s of classical work, which include Greek epigraphy, ar e L' Annee Pfulologique, begu n in France with a volume for 1924—621 and again now produced by an international team; and the Bibliographische Beilage published in the periodical Gnomon (from vol . i 1925). The periodica l Lustrum is devoted to bibliographical survey s of work on particular classica l topics (from vol. 11956). Information o n individua l Greek s ma y b e foun d i n th e Lexicon o f Greek Personal 19 Each volume o f SEG has concordance s covering th e majo r collections ; a n inde x volume i s now being produced fo r each decade. 20 Plans for the continuation o f the Bulletin were announced by P. Gauthier i n REGy.c\y. 1986, 117—18 . 21 Only the firs t part, Auteurs et textes, was published of a backward projection into DixAnmes de bibliographic classique (1914—1924).

I N T R O D U C T I O N XX

V

Names (regional volumes: names with collections of references). For Athens what was known a century ago is presented, with source references and Latin text, in Kirchner' s Prosopographia Attica; mor e recent , an d wit h mor e discussion , but limite d t o thos e attested as rich an d paying mor e attentio n to their wealth and their families than t o their careers , i s Davies's Athenian Propertied Families; 22 Traill' s Persons o f Ancient Athens is an exhaustiv e collectio n o f testimonia organize d unde r shor t rubrics. 23 For Spart a Poralla's Prosopographie de r Lakedaimomer, of 1913, was reissued in 1985 with an appendi x by A. S. Bradford. The bes t genera l introductio n t o Gree k inscription s i s Woodhead, Th e Study o f Greek Inscriptions, Cook , Greek Inscriptions, i s a shor t book writte n a t a more popula r level; on what can be learned from differen t kind s of inscription se e Bodel, Epigraphic Evidence: Ancient History from Inscriptions (which makes more use of Roman than of Greek examples).

IV The text s in this collection are arranged i n approximate chronologica l order , but we have taken advantage o f the fac t tha t not al l texts can be precisely dated to do some thematic grouping . We have not full y re-edite d the Gree k texts; but ou r texts are ou r own, in that we have reconsidered the texts of our predecessors and have made changes wherever we have thought it necessary: we have tried to verify readings where we thought it would be profitable to do so, but no t otherwise. In the introductory rubri c fo r each text we mark with an asterisk the edition whose text has served as the basis for ours: our critical apparatus i s selective, and we have not fel t bound t o provide a full history of the text and attribute every reading or restoration to its originator, but the apparatus include s a note on any point at which our text differs fro m that of the asterisked edition (except that w e hav e restore d origina l spelling s without commen t wher e To d substitute d standard spellings) . Where th e sign = is used, the references before and afte r the sign are to editions of the same inscription, but not necessarily to editions printing exactl y the same text. Where the sign ~ is used, the edition cited before the sign gives a Greek text, the edition cited after gives an English translation. We numbe r ever y fifth line i n th e Gree k texts , the lin e correspondin g wit h th e beginning o f each of our paragraphs i n the translations. Practice is different i n some older editions , but like most more recen t editions ours uses dots and brackets in the Greek texts in accordance wit h the 'Leiden system': a/3 letter [a/3] letter

s whic h surviv e i n part , bu t no t sufficientl y t o exclud e alternative reading s s not no w preserve d whic h th e editor s believe t o hav e bee n inscribed

22 This too is now somewhat dated: a new edition i s in preparation. 23 For an account o f the project and of the computer-searches whic h it allows see J. S . Traill & P. M. Wallace Matheson, hoposvii 1989 , 53—76 .

INTRODUCTION

XXVI

letters inscribed in error by the cutter and deleted by the editors letters supplied by the editors either because the cutter omitted them or because the cutter inscribed other letters in error letters supplie d b y th e editor s t o fil l ou t a n abbreviatio n i n th e inscribed text a passage which has been erased and can [or cannot] no w be read lost letter s which canno t b e restored , o f the numbe r indicated a lacuna or space of indeterminate size aspirate, whe n thi s i s indicated b y a n inscribed characte r i n th e original text one letter-space uninscribed meat (remainde r of) line uninscribed Features peculia r t o a singl e inscriptio n ar e explained i n th e rubri c t o tha t inscription Numerals. The Athenia n system of numerals was acrophonic, th e symbol being taken from th e firs t letter of the word represented (e.g. P = trevre = 5, H = eKaro v = 100). Some intermediate symbols were constructed by combining tw o others (F = 50, F = 500). Complex numerals were produced by aggregation, th e largest always appearing first. The basi c scheme is therefore: =i =2

=3 =4 =5 =6 = 10 = 26 = 50 = 66 = 100 = 500 =

1,000

= 5,000 = 10,000 = 50,000

The basi c numerica l syste m is regularly use d t o indicat e sum s o f between 5 an d 5,999 drachmas. Sum s in talents are indicated by the symbo l T and it s compounds (T, ^ , F , H) . For sum s of 1-4 drachma s th e sig n h (or at Tegea, see 60, < ) is used; I is used to indicate i obol . Halves and quarters and eighth s of an obol are indicated by the sign s C (a t Tegea E), T, and X . Outside Athens it is in some places the practic e t o use drachma s onl y up t o 99 dr. and t o indicate larger sum s in minas (M, see 60).

I N T R O D U C T I O N XXvi

i

Since readers can see in the Greek texts how much is preserved, in the translations we have not distinguished between what is preserved and what is not, except to attach question marks to restorations about whic h we are seriously uncertain. Whil e i n the translations we have not strayed unnecessarily from th e word order of the Greek, we have not felt bound to keep to it when to do so would produce unnatura l o r obscure results. We have not thought it necessary invariably t o use the same English word for the same Greek word and a different English word for a different Gree k word, but we have done that except when there was good reason to do otherwise. The renderin g o f Greek word s an d name s i n th e roma n alphabe t ha s bee n a matter o f controversy for a long time : rigid adherenc e eithe r to latinized form s o r to direct transliteration tend s to produce som e results which ar e widely regarded a s unacceptable, an d most scholars take refuge i n an awkward compromise . W e hav e tended, though no t with complete consistency , to use English o r Latinate form s fo r names o f persons an d place s an d familia r word s whic h w e print i n roma n letters (Athens, Corinth, Olynthus; Gallistratus, Lycurgus; drachmas, talents), transliteration for som e names, including epithet s of deities, and fo r words which we print i n italic letters (Zeus Eleutherios; eisangelia,proedroi,prftaneiori).

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INTRODUCTION

Map i . Th e Greek world

xxix

xxx

INTRODUCTION

Map 2. Greec e and the Aegean

INTRODUCTION

XXXI

xxxii

Map 3. Attic a

INTRODUCTION

THE INSCRIPTION S

1 Law o f the phratry (?) of the Labyadai, Delphi, fifth/fourth century Block inscribed on all four faces, broken at top, found in a late-antique wall in front of the Portico of the Athenians at Delphi. Now i n the Museu m at Delphi. Phot. BCHxix 1895 , pis. xxi—xxiv; C . Delphes, i, pis. v—viii. Script includes F and H (eta ) and aspirate s indicate d by B ; ov sometimes represented a s o with a dot in the middle. Stoickedm 20 (A and C) , 1 8 (B), 19 (D). hom*olle, BCHxix 1895 , 5—69; Buc k 52; C . Delphes., i 9*; Koerner 46 . Se e als o V. Sebillotte , Cahiers du Centre Gustaoe-Glotzvm 1997 , 39—49.

A

A. 1 7 KaKwv Bousquet , BCHxc 1966 , 83—4 ; [Fe]KOiv Bourguet , REGxxvi 1913 , 106—7 . II o n stone.

A. 54 i5t h letter

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W O F TH E P I I R A T R Y t ? ) O F TH E LABYADA I A T D E L P H I

3

A

let th e oat h be : ' I will serve as office r justly, according to the laws of the city and those of the Labyadai, as regards offerings o f sacrificial victim s an d o f cakes. I will exact money and will publish account s justly fo r th e Labyada i and I will not steal nor do any harm by any means or device to the property of the Labyadai. I will make the tagoi for next year swear the oath according as it is written.' 13 Oath : ' I promis e b y Zeu s Patroios . If I kee p m y oat h ma y goo d thing s happen t o me ; i f I brea k m y oath , may evi l result fro m evi l rather than good.' 19 Resolve d b y th e Labyadai . O n th e tenth o f the month Boukatios , in th e archonship o f Kampos, at the Assembly, b y 18 2 votes . Th e tagoi ar e t o receive no cake offerings o n the occa sion of marriages o r for children, an d no sacrificia l victim s unles s th e collectivity o f the patna fro m whic h th e person makin g th e offerin g come s endorses th e offering . I f the y orde r

31

44

anything that break s th e la w le t th e risk be on those who gave the order . Sacrificial victim s ar e t o b e brough t at th e Apella i an d thos e wh o brin g them ar e not to bring them, an d the tagoi ar e no t t o receiv e them , o n an y other day . If they do receive them o n a day other tha n the Apellai, eac h of them i s to pay a fine of 10 drachmas . Whoever wishe s to accuse thos e who have receive d th e sacrificia l victim s should bring his accusation unde r the succeeding tagoi, at the assembl y afte r Boukatia, if the tagoi who receive d th e victim disput e the accusation . The sacrificia l victim s ar e t o b e brought an d th e cake s offere d i n th e same year ; anyon e wh o doe s no t bring th e sacrificia l victim s o r offe r the cake s is to deposit a stater in eac h case. I n th e followin g yea r h e i s t o bring the sacrificia l victims an d offe r the cakes . I f h e doe s no t bring , n o deposit i s to be accepted : eithe r h e is to bring the victims o r he is to pay 20 drachmas, o r he is to be listed and pay

4

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W O F TH E P I I R A T R Y ( ? ) O F TH E LABYADA I A T D E L P H I

B

c

B. 5—6 Aa,fiva&a\_L EVK\£LOL\\S hom*olle .

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W O F TH E P I I R A T R Y t ? ) O F TH E LABYADA I A T D E L P H I

interest. And h e i s to offe r th e cake s in the following year or else pay a fine of...

B

4 member s of the patna. All the Labya dai are to decide a t . .. about the cake offerings an d a t the Apellai about th e sacrificial victims , provided tha t no t less tha n 10 1 ar e present . The y ar e to vot e afte r the y hav e promise d b y Apollo an d Poseido n Phratrio s an d Dionysos Patroios that the y will vote justly according to the laws of Delphi. Everyone i s to pra y that , i f he votes justly, th e god s wil l giv e hi m man y good things, and, if he votes unjustly, evil. The tagoi are t o accomplis h this, and i f anyone ask s the m the y ar e t o gather the Labyadai together. If they do not act according to what has been written or do not make the tagoi swear the oath, each of them is to pay a fine of 10 drachmas for each offence . 30 Anyon e who doe s not swear may no t be a tagos. If someone serves as a tagos without swearing he is to pay a fine of 50 drachmas. 35 I f th e tagoi receiv e th e marriag e o r childbirth offerings contrary to what is written, let each of those who received the offering s pa y 5 0 drachmas . I f he

5

does no t pa y h e i s to los e his right s among the Labyadai, both in this case and in the case of other penalties, until he pay s th e fine . Th e perso n whose cake offering o r sacrificial victim they receive contrar y t o what i s written is not t o be a member o f the Labyadai nor shar e the common fund s o r institutions. 51 I f any o f the tagoi makes an accusatio n of doing anything contrary to what is written, an d h e denie s it, th e tagoi i n the ... C

3 makingjus t judgements, let him pray that the gods give many goo d things, and i f he breaks his oath, evil. If he is elected but doe s not pass judgement, let him pay a fine of 5 drachmas, an d let the m elec t another an d complet e the case. 10 Whoeve r i s responsibl e fo r th e conviction o f anyon e doin g somethin g contrary t o th e la w i s t o hav e hal f (the fine) . Th e tagoi ar e t o brin g this to pas s fo r th e perso n wh o brough t the accusation . If they do not eac h of them i s to b e fine d double . Anyon e who owes a penalty is to lose his rights until he pays. 19 Thi s is the law about things to do with

6I

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W O F TH E P I I R A T R Y t ? ) O F TH E LABYADA I A T D E L P H I

C. 43 I7t h lette r E o n stone. £ 4 7 EPAIAMHA o n stone. .0.312 $a[y]oTo s afte r Panopeu s text Camp ; Ka[a]|oro s Rougernent, Hammage Roux, 225-9, after Kritzas , BCH e x 1986 , 611—17 ; /^4[.]|07 102' C. Delphes. D . 45 initial letter T on stone .

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burials. No more than 35 drachmas to be spent , either on articles bought o r on thing s fro m th e house . The thic k shroud i s to b e brown . Anyon e wh o breaks an y o f these rules is to pa y a fine of 50 drachmas, unless he denies on oat h a t th e tom b tha t h e spen t more. 29 On e mattres s is to be put underneat h and on e pillo w place d a t th e head . The corps e i s to b e carrie d covere d up, i n silence , an d i s not t o b e pu t down anywhere , eve n at the corner s of the road, and there is to be no wailing outside the house before they have come to the tomb, and there let there be ... unti l the . .. are brought. 39 A t the tombs there is to be no lamenting o r wailin g ove r thos e wh o die d earlier, bu t everyon e i s t o g o awa y homewards excep t member s o f th e immediate household , paterna l uncles, fathers - an d brothers-in-law , descendants, and sons-in-law. 46 Ther e is to be no groaning or wailing at th e second-da y commemoration , the tenth-day commemoration o r the annual commemoration . I f anyon e transgresses any of these written rules ...

D 2 Thes e ar e th e customar y feasts : Apellai an d Boukatia , Heraia , Daidaphoria, Poitropia , thos e o n the sevent h and th e nint h o f Busios,

7

Eukleia, Artamitia , Laphria , Theo xenia, Telchinia , Dioskoureia , Magalartia, and Herakleia, and if anyone sacrifices a victim himself, and i f he is present at childbirth, and if foreigners with him sacrific e victims and i f he is serving in the five-da y office . 17 I f any o f these written rules is broken, the damiorgoi an d al l the othe r Labya dai are to exact a fine and the Fiftee n are t o enforc e it . I f anyon e dispute s the fine, he is to swear the customary oath and be released. 25 If , whe n the y hol d a n assembly , a magistrate is absent, let him pay a fine of on e obol , an d i f he disrupt s i t le t him pay a fine of one obol. 29 Th e followin g regulations have bee n written also at Panopeus o n the rock inside. Phanotos gave this as dowry to his daughte r Boupyga : a half-sheep and a goat from th e sacrifice of twelve victims and the skins in the sanctuary of Pronaia an d th e skin s fo r (Apollo ) Lykeios, and the beautiful calf. 38 Th e man who offers preliminary sacrifice and consult s the oracle , whether in publi c o r privat e capacity , i s t o provide the items recorded in writing to the Labyadai . 43 Thes e ar e th e sacrifice s o f the Labya dai: i n th e mont h Apellaio s t o Dionysos, a t th e feas t o f the Boukati a t o Zeus Patroos and first fruits to Apollo; and the Labyadai drink together. The other feasts to be held in their season.

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The surviving , lower, part of this block gives us part o f the regulations of a Delphi c gentilicial group. The group never identifies itself as of a particular type, and modern identification of it as a phratry depends upon Hesychius s.v. Laphryadm ( A 436) identifying that group as a phratry at Delphi. As Sebillotte has pointed out, there were many different name s for gentilicial groups i n differen t Gree k cities , and us e of the nam e phratry fo r the Labyadai ma y be unduly Athenocentric, but the functions tha t they perform ar e broadly simila r to those of phratries a t Athens, and they include Poseidon Phratrios among the gods by whom they swear oaths (see 5, 61; on the variety of gods termed 'Patroos'/'Phratrios ' se e Plato, Euthydemus 302 B-D, Lambert, Phratries, 205 ff.). Gentilicial groups ofte n trace d themselve s back t o a single eponymous figure, i n this case Labys, said by the scholias t on Plato, Philebus 48 c, to have been a eunuc h temple-servant a t Delph i wh o invente d th e prover b 'Kno w yourself (Ghilo n an d Thales were also credited with that proverb). An inscription carved into a rock above the road from Arachov a t o Delphi also mentioned the Labyadai (RA 1969 , i. 47-56), and tw o furthe r version s of at leas t part o f the regulation s inscribed her e survive , one (recordin g what i s here line s D. 10—23 ) fr° mDelphi (C . Delphes 9 b is) and on e (recording what i s here line s D. 31—8) , recentl y discovered and t o b e publishe d b y John Gamp, from Panopeus . The othe r Delphi version is in late sixth- or early fifthcentury lettering and was presumably the text which this block replaced; the Pano peus version is presumably that mentioned in D. 30. What survive s of the late archaic inscription seem s to be wor d fo r word th e sam e a s this inscription, but w e canno t know whether the earlie r law was simply reinscribed o n this block o r whether this block incorporated th e earlie r law into more extensiv e regulations. The tex t on the block seem s to have been a t least partly up-dated i n its language an d orthography , and this up-dating, together with the letter forms, suggests a late fifth-century or early fourth-century date. The inscriptio n provides a striking example of the common difficulty of deciding what is new in a surviving inscription and what is taken over fro m earlier texts. This tex t gives us a rare glimps e of a gentilicial grou p a t work outside Attica. It offers instructiv e parallels to and contrast s with not onl y the Attic inscription o f the Demotionidai (5), and inscriptions from Teno s and Chio s (61, 87), but th e sacrificial calendars o f Athenian gene and denie s (compare here 37 an d 63) , and th e late fifthcentury funeral regulations from Geos(/Gxn. V593=67G31218). The Labyadai clearly constituted a n important par t o f the Delphian citize n body: th e 18 2 votes recorded here (A. 22-3) are to be compared with the 454 and 353 votes recorded in two fourthcentury records of decisions by th e Delphia n citize n body (F . Delphes, in . i 194; RPh xvii 1943, 62-86), and this law raises important issue s about the relationship between Labyadai an d state.

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9

Sides A and B concern the rol e of the tagoi, who appea r to be th e main officer s o f the Labyadai, i n particular wit h regard to the sacrifices and offerings which were the mark o f admission to the group . Sid e C opens with regulations about th e settlin g of disputes an d proceed s with regulations abou t burial . Sid e D is concerned with th e calendar o f festivals, although much on this side is obscure. The Labyada i see m to have quite a complicated administrativ e structure. We do not kno w how man y tagoi ther e were in offic e a t once , but the y ar e th e executiv e officers an d hav e a very wide remit. (Althoug h the name tagos has been taken to be a sig n of Thessalian influence, the word seem s to have been widely used for magistrates over the whole of central Greece: see Helly, L'Etat tkessalien, 27-9.) Decisions are taken by the Labyada i a s a whole at a n assembl y (ccAi'cc; the Delphians refe r to their assembly in this period as an agora (teleios)), which holds at least some stated meetings and whic h ca n b e summone d by a singl e phratry membe r (A . 42—3, B. 23—4) . Th e Labyadai recor d th e numbe r o f votes by which a motion was passed (A. 22-3) and have a quorum (B . 9-10 cf. 99). They also apparently form a court before which cases involving group business are heard, and which has the power to remove membership rights and t o impose fines. In addition , the inscription mentions damiorgoi, a term of disputed meaning (se e Rhodes with Lewis, p. 13 7 and n . 17 ) which perhaps covers all group official s (D . 19— 20), pentamantai ('five-day officials ' D . 16 ) who appea r to hav e sacrificial responsibilities, and 'th e Fifteen' (D . 22) who are here made responsible for collecting fines. Whether thes e are all officials of the Labyada i is not entirel y clear: part o f the oat h o f new members, which they swear by Apollo the go d of Delphi as well as by Poseidon Phratrios, is to vote according to the laws of Delphi (B. 10—17); this implies a close relationship between entry to the phratry an d entry to political life at Delphi, an d i t may be tha t on e o r more o f the magistracies mentioned is Delphian rather than Labyad . Like many earl y laws, these regulations lay great stres s on controllin g the officer s —so much s o that the admission s procedure i s not itsel f clearly laid out. Indications in the tex t and parallel s from phratrie s elsewher e (Lambert, Pkratries, ch. iv) suggest that ther e are thre e points o f admission to the Labyadai . Offering s o f cakes (called here daratai) ar e mad e t o mar k som e sort o f recognition b y th e grou p o f childre n and wives—recognition probably o f boys only at birth o r in their early years, and of wives at marriage. Then at maturity boys (probably) become full members by offerin g a sacrificia l victim (calle d here apellaia). I n al l case s permission for th e offering s t o be made ha s to be given a t a quorate meeting (B. 5-8), and the n confirme d by the particular patria (sub-group of the Labyadai) to which the ne w member wil l belong (A. 23-8) . The offering s ar e to be made within a year of the decision, and the offerin g of apellaia ha s t o happen a t the festiva l o f the Apella i (the Delphic equivalen t o f the Ionian festiva l o f the Apaturia: compare 5) . The offering s ca n be postponed for one

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year on payment o f a stater deposit (the word a^oviov occurs only here), but for one year only (A. 46-58). Side C opens with the end o f regulations about th e bringing and hearin g o f cornplaints which begin a t the en d o f B. Too muc h i s lost for it to be a t all clear what is at issue here. Cthen continues with regulations about burial (on such regulations see Engels, Funerum sepukrorumqm magnificentia, an d R . Garland , BlCSxxxvi 1989 , 1—15) . Here th e poin t i s extremely clear : funera l expens e an d funerar y displa y ar e bein g strictly limited. Thi s la w i s closely comparable bot h t o law s mentioned i n literar y sources (e.g . regulations o f burial attribute d t o Solo n a t Athens, Plutarch, Solon 21 . v—vii, [Dem. ] XLIII . Macartatus 62 , and th e regulation s collected by Cicero , De Leg. n . 62—6) an d t o othe r epigraphi c laws, especially those from lat e fifth-century luli s o n Geos and from third-century Gambreion (LSAM16 = SIG?11219): all are concerned to limit the possibility of turning a funeral int o a display of wealth and power (compare the interesting remarks of Seaford, Reciprocity an d Ritual, ch. iii). At lulis no more tha n three funerary vestment s were allowed, and they had t o be white and cos t less tha n 300 dr. At Gambreion the clothes of the mourners are regulated: brown for women, and brown o r white for men. Here thre e vestments are mentioned, and although th e specification o f the thic k shroud perhaps implie s that ther e might b e a thin shrou d also, the spiri t of the legislation appears t o be that the only item visible would be the brown shroud. The monetary limit is very low, by comparison not just to Geos but to the regulation s in Plato's Laws (xn. 959 D), which allo w 10 0 dr. fo r a member o f the fourth class, 500 for a member of the highest class. This raises the question of whether the sum s here, as perhaps elsewher e in the inscription , where the level of fines is also very low, were not brough t u p t o dat e whe n th e ol d regulations were reinscribed . These regulations share the Gean insistence on processing in silence, but by compari son with loulis, which is interested in consumption of wine and food at the tomb an d with purification of the house of the dead, and Gambreion , whic h is interested in the length ofmourning, the Labyadai are notable for their interest in limiting lamentation and i n controlling exactl y who can remain a t the tomb. In this the closes t parallel is with Solon's legislation (see also Plato, Lawsxu. 960 A). The variou s visits to the tom b subsequent to the burial are not forbidden here, as the thirtieth-day commemoratio n is at lulis, but lamentation is banned. Side D is the most difficult t o understand. The matte r ought to be straightforward: we have here a list of festivals giving rise to group feasts. (O n sacred calendars generally se e on 62. ) But int o this list ar e inserte d two almos t incomprehensible clauses . The openin g lis t gives (civic) festival s i n chronologica l orde r (th e Delphic year , like the Athenian , bega n i n midsummer). Many o f them bea r th e nam e o f the mont h that the y fall in , an d thi s enables us to se e that th e distributio n i s not even . Five fal l in the first half o f the year (on e in eac h month excep t th e thir d month , Boathoos); no festival occur s in the seventh month, Amalios, and none in the last month, Ilaios, but te n i n th e intervenin g fou r month s (roughl y February t o May) . O f th e fifteen festivals mentioned , eleve n ar e no t otherwis e known a t Delphi , an d man y canno t even be attribute d t o a particular deity , but the y certainly includ e a wide range o f deities (Hera, Artemis, the Dioscuri, Heracles, Demeter, almost certainly Dionysus)

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and several of them have titles paralleled by festivals elsewhere. With the exception of the Apellai, the festivals see m to be festivals celebrate d generally at Delphi, to which a feast o f the Labyadai is attached. But the Labyadai do not feas t o n the occasion of all the city festivals: they celebrate the festival of the birth of Apollo on jih Bysios, traditionally held to have been originally the only day of the year on which the Delphi c oracle coul d b e consulte d (Plutarch, QG 29 2 E—F), bu t d o no t themselve s mark th e Pythia, which fell in the month Boukatios (August). (For an attempt to show that the Labyadai celebrat e a coheren t annua l cycl e of festivals se e E. Suare z d e la Torre , Kernosx 1997,153—76 at 164—7 an(i :75 At the en d o f the mai n list of civic festivals which are occasion s for feasts (D. 2—11 ) is a list o f other occasion s when Labyada i sacrific e (D . 12—17) . What i s the poin t o f this list? Tw o interpretation s are possible . On one , thi s is an additio n t o the lis t o festivals: tha t is , the grou p also feasts wheneve r a member sacrifices , i s present a t a birth, entertains foreigners, and so on. On the other, this is a list of invalid excuses for not takin g part in the grou p feasts: givin g a strong sense to /ec u KCC , on e is to join th e Labyadai feasts a t the festiva l even if one i s otherwise sacrificing oneself, present at a birth, entertaining foreigners, and so on. The first interpretation renders the potential number o f group feasts very large indeed (cf. Ath. iv. I73E on Delphi in general), and the potential number o f people turning u p t o a private sacrific e equall y large (not e the 18 2 voting members a t A. 22-3); the latter presupposes that th e group feasts ar e occasions t o which member s ar e oblige d t o go . O n th e forme r interpretation th e fines for contraventio n o f the regulation s would presumably b e levie d on someone who failed to make the group members welcome at a sacrifice which they were holding; o n the latter interpretation th e fines would be levied on a person who faile d t o attend group feasts. The latter interpretation has the advantage of explaining why the regulations immediately move to clauses about non-attendanc e (an d misbehaviour) at the assembly, regulations which seem to have nothing to do with religious festivals. But despite the difficulties, we favour the view that this law obliges group members to admit other members who wish to attend to feasts on the occasion of private sacrifices , rather tha n the view that all Labyadai were obliged to attend every feast; penalizin g non-attendance at a feast would be surprising given that an officer's non-attendanc e at an assembly bring s only a one obo l fine (D. 26—8). There follow provisions for enforcement (D. 17—29). In th e middle o f these, reference is made to what is inscribed inside a rock at Panopeus and we are told about the sacrificial animals and perquisites which Phanotos gave to his daughter Boupyga (D. 29—38). We are then told that the stated items are to be given to the Labyadai by any individual or representative of a city who sacrifices in advance of consulting the oracle (D. 38—43) . Th e inscriptio n end s with a curiously brief list o f Labyad sacrifice s an d feasts (D. 43-51). Of the various problems that thi s sequence of items raises, one has recently been solved: i t is now know n what wa s inscribed a t Panopeus , sinc e the inscriptio n ha s been found. That text, as John Gamp has kindly informed us, resolves one question of reading: the character who gave the sacrificial animal and perquisites to his daughter is now revealed as Phanotos, presumably the eponymou s hero of Panopeus/Phano-

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teos. These gifts see m to form the basis and precedent for the offering s demande d of oracular consultants . Scholars have doubted whether every party consulting the Delphic oracle can have been expected to provide animal s and perquisites on this scale to a Delphic phratry, an d the identity of the giver as Phanotos offers som e support to restriction to consultant s from Panopeus , suggeste d by Vatin (C . Delphes, pp . 80—i) . The fina l list makes it clear that the Labyadai sacrific e on the occasion of the first two feasts mentioned at D. 2—11 and specifies the deities honoured, but what the statement that 'feast s are held in their season' adds to that earlier list is quite unclear. The puzzle s posed by D turn o n precisely the are a abou t whic h th e inscriptio n is i n othe r way s most revealing: th e relationshi p betwee n thi s group an d th e city . Civic sub-groups , a s many othe r inscription s i n thi s volume wil l show , frequently have institutiona l structure s and concern s closel y parallel t o thos e o f the cit y as a whole. But here at a number ofpoints we find ourselves not at all clear as to the limits of Labyad authority . Is admission to the Labyadai a t maturity also admission to civic life a t Delphi? Does the grou p hav e judicial rights over its members, o r do Delphi c officials hav e a role in group regulation? Why are the Labyadai regulating funerals at Delphi when parallel legislation elsewhere is issued by the whole civic body? (or is this

2 Athens honours loyal Samians, 403/2 Three contiguous fragments of the lower part of a stele, of which th e upper part contains M& L 94 ~ Fornara 166; at the top of the stele are a relief showing Athena and Samian Hera clasping hands, and a heading relating to the whole dossier. These fragments found between the theatre o f Dionysus and the odeum o f Herodes Atticus in Athens; now in the Acropolis Museum. Phot . Kern, Inscriptiones Graecae^ Taf. 19; Schede, Th e Acropolis oj"Athens., pi. 10 1 (cf. pp. 114—16) ; Kirchner , Imagims' 2., Taf. 19 Nr. 43 ; Meyer, Diegriechischen Urkundenreliefs., Taf . 10 A 26 ;

M. J. Osborn e differs fro m earlier edd. at a few points on how many letters can be read.

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the Delphian law , adopted an d reiterated by the Labyadai?) Do the Labyadai hav e a privilege d interes t in Delphi c civi c festival s an d th e sacrificia l activities that surround the Delphic oracle? In the past gentilicial groups have sometimes been thought of as pre-pohs institutions, or at least as institutions which became increasingl y sidelined by the growth of civic institutions. The reinscription , and perhaps revision and expansion, of the regulations of the Labyadai, alon g with the parallel activitie s of the Demotionidai in Attica at about the same time (5), remind us that institutions which traced their history into the distant past, and which in some of their rituals continued to repeat actions which had alread y been going on for centuries, continued to assert their place in the life of the Greek city in the fourth century. The inscriptio n contain s various dialectal features whic h mark i t out fro m Attic , some of which are general features of (North-)West Greek dialect and som e of which are particular t o Delphi. These include Aevre for ecm (B. 44), -OVTI fo r -ovai, infinitive in -ev rather tha n -et v (A. 31 etc.), use o f KO. rather than dv, use o f rot and ra t for th e plural of the article , use o f both TTOT (C . 31) and troi(A. 14 , C. 30) for Trpos, th e apocop e ofirapd(A. 2 8 etc.), the assimilation of final v and final s (A. 3,10,57 etc.), crasis of and to (B. 17, D. 7 etc.), a for at in aa)Tos (C. 24) and o for a in evro^ijicov .

Lawton, Reliefs, pi . 38 no. 7 1 (last three to p o f stele, with relief); ou r PI . i. Attic-Ionic, mostl y retaining the ol d E for EL and o for ou ; stoichzdm 57—62, often ending a line with th e en d o f a word or syllable. IG 11 ^ i ; SIG* 117 ; To d 97* ; Pouilloux , Choix, 24 ; M . J . Osborne , Naturalization, D 5 . Trans . Hardin g 5 (11. 41—55 only). See als o Shipley , History ofSamos, 131—5 . ii

41 Resolve d by th e counci l an d th e people . Pandioni s wa s th e prytany ; Agyrrhius o f Gollytus was secretary; Euclides was archon [403/2] ; Gallias of Oa wa s chairman . Gephisophon proposed: 43 Prais e th e Samian s because they are goo d me n wit h regard to th e Athenians ; an d everything shall be valid which the people of Athens decreed previously for the people of Samos. The Samian s shal l send to Sparta , a s they themselves demand, whoever they themselves wish; and, since in addition they ask the Athenians to join in negotiating, choose envoys in addition, an d these shall join with the Samian s in negotiatin g whatever benefit they can, and shall deliberate in common with them. The Athenians praise the Ephesians and the Notians because they received enthusiastically those of the Samian s who were outside. Bring the Samia n embassy before the people t o do

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Samos loyally supported Athens, and served as Athens' principal base in the Aegean, from 412 to the end of the Peloponnesian War in 404; it continued to hold out against Sparta afte r th e capitulatio n o f Athens; but eventuall y i t submitte d t o Lysander , who expelle d the pro-Athenia n democrat s (o r at an y rat e som e of them), restored the anti-Athenia n oligarchi c exile s (cf. Thuc. vin. 21, referring to 412), and installed a governor an d a decarchy, a ruling clique often men (X . H. n. iii. 6-7, D.S. xiv. 3 iv-v). In 405/4, before eithe r city had surrendere d to the Spartans, in the first decree recorded o n thi s stele (M& L 94 ~ Fornar a 166 ) th e Athenian s awarde d citizenshi p to the Samians, promised them independence an d the freedom t o choose their own form o f government, and undertook to join them in negotiation with Sparta. If that

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business if they ask for anything. And also invite the Samian embassy to dinner in the prytaneion tomorrow. 51 Gephisopho n proposed : I n othe r respect s in accordanc e wit h th e council ; bu t th e Athenian peopl e shal l decre e tha t ther e shal l b e vali d wha t th e peopl e o f Athens decreed previously for the people o f Samos, as the counci l in its probouleuma brough t before th e people . An d invit e th e Samia n embass y t o dinne r i n th e prytaneion tomorrow. §iii 56 Resolve d by the counci l an d th e people. Erechthei s was the prytany; Gephisopho n of Paeania wa s secretary; Euclides was archon; Pytho n fro m Kedo i wa s chairman . Eu— proposed: 58 Prais e Poses of Samos because he is a good man with regard to the Athenians; and, in return for the benefits which he has conferred on the people, the people shall give him a grant of five hundred drachma s fo r the making of a crown: the treasurers shall give the money. Bring him before the people, and he shall find from th e people whatever benefit he can. The boo k of the decree the secretary of the council shall hand over to him immediately. And invite the Samians who have come to hospitality in the prytaneion tomorrow. 64 proposed : In other respects in accordance wit h the council; but prais e Poses of Samos and his sons because they are good men with regard to the people o f Athens. And what the people o f Athens decreed previously for the people o f Samos shall be valid; an d th e secretary shall write up th e decre e on a stone stele, and th e treasurers shall provide the money for the stele. The people shall give Poses a grant of a thousand drachmas fo r his goodness towards the Athenians, and from th e thousand drachma s shall make a crown, and shall inscribe on this that the people crown him for his goodman-ship [andmgathia] an d fo r his goodness with regard to the Athenians. Praise th e Samians als o because they are good men wit h regard t o the Athenians. And if they want anythin g fro m th e people, the prytaneis shall bring them forwar d to the peopl e always first after th e sacre d business. The prytaneis shal l als o bring forward the son s of Poses before the people a t its first session. Invite also to hospitality in the prytaneion Poses and his sons and those of the Samians who are present. decree was inscribed in Athens at the time, the stele was probably demolished by the oligarchy o f the Thirty. 1 This stele has a heading namin g Gephisophon a s the secretary—which he was when the last of these decrees was enacted (§iii: 11.56—7): the three decrees were inscribed together afte r th e enactmen t o f the last; the relief stresses the continuing friendshi p between Athens and Samos. How many Samian s too k up the offer o f Athenian citizenshi p and migrated t o Athens, we do not know; Shipley see s 1

Fo r demolition by the Thirty and republication afterwards cf, e.g., Tod 98; the same was to happen at the end of our period, when a decree for Euphron of Sicyon enacted in 323/2 was demolished by the subsequent oligarchy and republished with a further decre e in 318/17 (IG n ^ 448).

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Sparta's impositio n of a decarchy as a sign that the bulk of the population staye d in Samos and needed to be controlled in the Spartan interest. In th e secon d decree (i.e. §11, the first printed here ) the secretary , Agyrrhius, was one o f the leading politicians in Athens in the late fifth and earl y fourth centuries, inter aha being the man wh o introduced payment for attending the assembl y (Ath. Pol. 41. iii), and was the uncle of another leading politician, Gallistratus (for Agyrrhius cf. on 26; for Gallistratus cf. on 31); Gephisophon, the proposer, is presumably the ma n who was secretary when the last decree was enacted, and according to X. H. n. iv. 36 was one of the envoy s sent to Sparta 'from th e private citizen s in the city ' before the restoration of the democracy in 403 (see APF, 148) . The provision s of the first decree are reaffirmed (cf . below). The Samian s whose demand is granted here will be the proAthenian exiles ; joint negotiation with Sparta had been promised in the first decree (11. 24—5) ; th e negotiatio n no w envisage d presumably concern s th e retur n o f these exiles to Samos, and Athenian involvement may help because of the links established with Pausanias and others when the democracy was restored at Athens. Ephesus and Notium, on the Asiatic mainland north-eas t of Samos, will have been natural places of refuge fo r men drive n ou t of Samos (A. Andrewes suggested that a t the time they were in the hands not o f Lysander but o f the Persia n Tissaphernes: Phoen. xxv 1971 , 214). The counci l had responded to the Samians' requests with theproboukuma which it sen t to th e assembly ; the claus e about acces s to th e assembly , which ha s several parallels, is in effec t a n ope n claus e in th e proboukuma, in which th e counci l invites the assembly to add t o the benefits which it is itself recommending (cf . Rhodes, Boule, 281-3). Th e hospitalit y offere d t o honorand s i s regularly calle d xenia ('hospitality' ) when offered t o foreigners but deipnon ('dinner' ) when offere d t o Athenians, who ar e not xenoi (cf. Rhodes, £PElvii 1984, 193-9; and in our collection notice particularl y 31, 70)—an d a s a result of the first decree the Samian s ar e now Athenians. Invitations for 'tomorrow' are almost invariable; but two fifth-century decrees invite for 'the customary time' (IGf 1 , 165), and one of 369/8 invites for 'the third day' i.e. the day after tomorrow , presumably becaus e som e special observance made th e usua l da y impossible (SIG*158 = /.Delos 88). The proboukuma is supplemented by an amendment, proposed in the assembl y by the sam e man, Gephisophon, with th e formul a which indicate s that th e proposa l being amended was contained in the proboukuma. It was common Athenian practic e both to correct the original proposal in the light of the amendment and to publish the amendment afte r the corrected proposal (M&L go ~ Fornara 160 provides a particularly clea r example) ; but i n the las t of these decrees, below, the origina l proposa l is not corrected . Here the proboukuma has been corrected: it is possible that both o f the items mentioned in the amendment had been omitted from th e proboukuma (the first because reaffirmation o f the first decree was thought unnecessary—and the Samian s may have taken advantage o f the open clause to ask for it; the second out of inadvertence); another possibility is that th e inadvertenc e correcte d in the secon d item was not omission of the invitation but failur e to remember tha t the Samians ough t to be invited to deipnon rather than xenia (cf. Rhodes 1984—but see also below). In the final decree (§iii) Gephisophon appears a s secretary; Python, the chairman , n

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is the earlies t known member o f a family attested over seven generations (APF, 485 — 6); a possible proposer, both o f the origina l motio n an d o f the amendmen t (thoug h this is far from certain , an d indee d the sam e man nee d not hav e proposed both), is Eurip(p)ides, a major figure o f the 390 5 (APF, 202—4) . Characteristically, we ar e no t told what Poses' particular benefit s to Athens were; we know nothing else about him. Giving him ' a grant . . . fo r the making of a crown' is an unparalleled formulation : commonly honorands ar e awarde d a crown o f a specified value (e.g . 33), an d fro m the mid fourth century the decree sometimes specifies who is to have the crown made (e.g. 64) : see Henry, Honours and Privileges, 22—8, 34—6. Acrownofi,ooo drachmas wa s awarded i n M&L 85 ~ Fornar a 155. There is no exac t parallel fo r an amendment' s increasing the value of the crown, but i n IG n2 223. A the council awards a crown of 500 drachmas o n its own account an d i n a probouleuma invites the assembl y to awar d a crow n o f 1,00 0 drachmas . 'Th e treasurers' , who mak e th e payment s prescribe d here an d i n othe r decree s of the earl y fourth century, are th e treasurer s of Athena and the Other Gods, from 406 to 385 a single board (cf. Rhodes, Boule, 103 n. 7). 'The book (biblion) o f the decree' will be a text written on papyrus (byblos). O n thi s occasion, apparently in the original proposal and certainly in the amendment, the Samians are invited to xenia (to explain this , some have suggested that onl y Samians who were in Athens by a certain date received citizenship; but perhaps here we have an oversight which was not rectified) . The amendmen t extends the honours to Poses' sons, and increases the value of the crown. What i s reaffirmed i s probably what was voted to the Samians in the first and second decrees, and this clause is to be read with the publication clause which follows: this is an oblique way of ordering the publication no t only of the decree for Poses but of the whole dossier. The Samian s are now granted priority access to the assembly on subsequent occasions if they have any request ('first afte r the sacred business', which had absolut e priority: cf. Rhodes with Lewis, 14 with n. 19,543 with n. 40). Elsewhere hedra ('session') is used of meetings of the counci l rather than the assembl y (e.g. M&L 85, 100, though B. D. Meritt restored hedra of the assembly in an adventurous reconstruction ofSEGx 87 = IGf' 90): linguistic usage was fluid in the fifth century, and i t would be procedurally more appropriate i f here Poses' sons were to be brought befor e the assembly , as in the origina l decre e Poses himself was to be brough t befor e the assembly. We d o no t kno w what resulte d from th e negotiation s with Sparta ; bu t ther e is evidence of enthusiasm for Lysander among thos e who remained i n Samos, Samos remained unde r a pro-Spartan regim e a t least until 398/ 7 an d probabl y unti l th e battle of Gnidus in 394, and i t was recovered by Sparta fo r a time £.391 (see Shipley, !34-5)-

3

Sparta liberates Delos, 403 or shortly after Two fragments of a stek found on Delos; now in the Epigraphical Museu m in Athens. Phot, a+b BCH Ixxi—Ixxi i 1947—8, 417 fig. 30 ; REAciii 2001 , 253 fig. i , 254 fig. 2 ; bLSAG, pi. 38 . aand£. i— 6 are in Laconian Doric, in a script old-fashioned for the date (LSAG, 198) ; b. 7—16 are in Attic-Ionic, in a smaller Ionian script. Both sections stoichedim. IGv. i 1564; ChoixDelos 8; SIG* iiga ; Tod 99 ; LSAG 407 no. 6 2 (all these b only); I. Delos 87*; the promise d ful l publication of a never occurred; F. Frost, REAciii 2001 , 241—60 at 253—60 .

The tw o fragments do not join: it is not certain ho w far apart on the stele they were. b . 1— 3 J . Treheux , op. G . Vial, Delos independante, 9 2 n . 12 . b . 7—8 adde d later Frost . b . 1 6 Treheux , RA* xxxi—xxxii 1949, 1023 n. 11 : Lewis read [JlJA^f—-—]0£, bu t accordin g t o /. Delos the doubtful letter is A or A but no t A .

Delos and its sanctuary of Apollo ('the god') were under Athenian influence through out the duratio n o f the Delian League: in particular, th e Athenians 'purified' Delos in 426/5; expelle d the Delians in 422; allowed them back in 421 (Thuc. in. 104 with S. Hornblower's commentary arf foe.;v. i cf. vm. 108. iv;v. 32. i). This inscription must be later than 404/3 (since none of the ephors appears in the list of eponymous ephors in X. H. n. iii. 10), but earlie r than £.400, when king Agis died: the Spartans after defeat ing Athens have sent dues (tele: offering s t o which they have committed themselves in the agreement ) to Delian Apoll o and presumabl y have acknowledge d the Delians ' right t o control their precincts, sacrifices, temples , and sacre d monies. The inscrip tion begins with a Spartan tex t in Laconian Dori c (e.g. Oios for Oeos', the character s include F and B = K). AiccA e is the aoris t passive of iccAAeiv: the sam e form i s found o n

3. SPARTA

LIBERATES DELOS, 403 OR

SHORTLY AFTER IQ

ab God. . . . o f the precincts an d the 2 Th e due s o f th e Spartan s sacrifice s and th e temples and were sen t to Delos in accord- th e monies of the god. ance wit h th e agreemen t 7 Th e king s were Agis , Pausa as i n accordanc e wit h th e nias . Th e ephor s wer e other mutua l pact s [symbola\. Thyionidas , Aristogenidas , Archistas, Sologas , Phedilas . In Delo s th e archo n wa s Androdicus.

a fifth-century lead table t fro m Himera , i n Sicily , where i t has been interprete d a s aorist passive or aorist active (Dubois, Inscriptionsgrecquesdialectaks de Sidle, 13-14 no. i; contr. R. Arena, %PE ciii 1994,157-8). The note of the Spartan king s and ephors and of the Delian archo n (b . 7-18) has presumably bee n added b y the Delians, since it is Attic-Ionic (nothing is known about the men other than the Spartan kings : the normal spelling of the last ephor would be Pheidilas). The Delia n records include dedications by the Spartans Lysander and Pharax(/Gxi 161.5.59, 92; 87). For the further history of Delos see 28. The meanin g of symbola in 1. a. lois discussed by Gauthier, Symbola,v>8o—i. Sparta is not otherwis e known to have entered into judicial convention s (cf. his pp. 85—9) , an d here the reference must be to agreements concerning the sacred treasures.

4 Rewards for men who had fought for democracy at Athens, 401/0 Five fragments of a stele inscribed on both faces: (a ) found o n the Athenian Acropolis, now in the Epigraphical Museum; (b + c] found on Aegina, now in the Epigraphical Museum; (d] once in the Piraeus Museum, now lost; (e) foun d in the Agora . Phot. BSAxlvii 1952 , pi. 27 (b + c) ; Hesp. Ixii i 1994, pi. 38 (e). Facs. BSA 1952 , 103 fig. i (a) , 105 fig. 2 (b + c], 10 6 fig. 3 (d, fro m a squeeze). Attic-Ionic, the decree normally retaining the old e for EL and o for ou . In the decree, 11. 1— 2 are i n larger letters 11. 3 sqq. stoichedon 87 (in the reconstructio n here followed); below the decre e there were four columns of names, and on the back seven (in this reconstruction), with tribe-names in larger letters than men's names . IG11^ 10 ; SIG* 120 ; Tod 10 0 (all these a only); IG n^ 240 3 ((/only); D . Hereward , BS A xlvi i 1952 , 102—1 7 (ful l

FRONT: top

On th e reconstruction of the decree, and o f the three categories of beneficiary in the list, see commentary.

4. R E W A R D

S FO R S U P P O R T E R S O F D E M O C R A C Y A T A T H E N S 2

1

text o f b + c^ discussio n of a—d}; P . Krentz , Phoen. xxxiv 1980 , 289—30 6 (ful l tex t o f decree, discussio n of a—d: heterodox); M.J. Oshorne, Naturalisation, D 6 * (a—d}] M . B . Walbank, Hesp. Ixii i 1994, 169—7 1 no. 2 (cf. .SEGxliv 34) (e). Trans. Austin &Vidal-Naquet 70 (the decree, and so me names and descriptions) ; Harding 3 (a only). See also D. Whitehead, LCMix 1984 , 8-10. We number the columns continuously, so that the first column on the back is v. For convenience we follo w M.J. Osborne's numberin g of lines within columns, with the warning that the placing of the fragments is only approximate: i n cols, iii and i v 1. i is the first line of which any tex t survives (iv. i being probably lower than iii. i), but i n v—viii 1. i is the first line of each column, whether preserved or not .

FRONT: top Lysiades was secretary; Xenaenetus was archon [401/0]. 3 Resolve d by the council and the people. Hippothontis was the prytany; Lysiades was secretary; Demophilus was chairman. Thrasybulu s proposed : 4 S o that worthy gratitude may be obtained by the foreigners who joined in returnin g from Phyl e o r who joined with those who had returne d i n coming back t o Piraeus: concerning these , be i t decreed by the Athenians that ther e shal l be citizenshi p for them and their descendants; and distribute them immediately into the tribes tenfold; and th e official s shal l use th e sam e laws concerning the m a s concerning th e othe r Athenians. 7 Thos e who came later, joined in fighting the battle at Munichia an d made the Piraeus safe, wh o remaine d wit h the Peopl e i n Piraeus when th e reconciliatio n too k place, and were doing what they were instructed: for these there shall be isoteleia if they live in Athens, in accordance with the pledge given (?), as for the Athenians. The

FRONT: below In accordance with th e decree there should have battl e at Munichia . been three lists, each organised in tribal sections. The following fragments will have belonged to The first list, beginning at the top of col. i, should the second list: have been headed: col. iii (perhaps Pandionis (III)) Thefollowingjoinedinreturningfrom Phyle. The second list, beginning i n the course of col. ii, tanne r should have been headed: retaile r The followin g joined i n fightin g th e 5 nut-selle r

22

4- R E W A R D S F O R S U P P O R T E R S O F D E M O C R A C Y A T A T H E N S

vi. 8 Th e ston e has eAatoy .

4. REWARD

—onus —on . . rmo . n 10 Socrate s Sosibius Hermon Gerys Blepon 15 Apollonide s —

S FO R S U P P O R T E R S O F D E M O C R A C Y A T ATHEN S

barley-groat-seller sailmaker leather-worker sackcloth-maker/ -seller table-maker shoe-seller retailer vegetable-seller table

col. iv

farm-worker LEONTIS (IV) (?) onion-seller —us cartwrigh t

Apollodorus fulle

10

on '5

—les —ion —chus —ippus 20 —istratu s —rias —ias —as -ippus

farm-worker bronze-smith fisher wool-seller gold grain fuller incense-dealer spear

25

—nus

r (?)

retailer

barley-groat ass-herd saw barley-groat

BACK col. v includes (Oeneis (VI))

40 farm-worke

col. vi includes (Aiantis (IX))

r

and, lower down

45 GEGROPI S (VII ) (?) trader 50 retaile

r tiler (?) —des heral d —s leather-worke r —ar 55 hire d laboure r

Ghaeredemus farm-worke Leptines butcher/coo Demetrius carpente r Euphorion muletee r 5 Gephisodoru s builde r Hegesias gardene r Epaminon ass-her d —opus olive-selle r Glaucias farm-worke 10 — n nu t Dionysius farm-worke and, lower down (Antwchis (X))

Aristo— Dexius s Charon ki Heraclides

— —

r k

r r

23

24 4

. REWARD

S FO R S U P P O R T E R S O F D E M O C R A C Y A T A T H E N S

During the oligarchic regime of the Thirty in Athens, in 404—403, Thrasybulus with about seventy supporters set out from Thebe s and occupie d Phyle, in the north-west of Attica (X. H. n. iv. 2); he attracted more supporters, while attempts to dislodge him failed; whe n hi s numbers ha d reache d abou t a thousand h e moved to the Piraeus, occupied the hil l of Munichia and defeate d th e oligarch s i n a battle (§§10—22) ; afte r that he remained at the Piraeus, attracting further supporters (§§24—7); and eventually a reconciliation was arranged. References to rewards for those who had supporte d Thrasybulus ar e plentiful bu t hard to fit together. For further detai l on the items listed see Rhodes, Comm. Ath. Pol., 474-7. (a) Afte r th e battl e o f Munichia th e democrat s promised isotekw t o an y xenoi wh o would join them in the struggle (X. H. n. iv. 25). (b) Thrasybulu s proposed, and Archinus attacked in zgrapkeparanomon, a measure to give Athenian citizenshi p to all who 'joined in the return from th e Piraeus' (Ath. Pol. 40. ii). (c) Thrasybulu s propose d t o giv e citizenshi p t o th e orato r Lysias , an d thi s wa s approved b y th e assembl y but successfull y attacke d i n a grapke paranomon b y Archinus ([Plut] XOr. 83^-8364 (d) Tw o othe r texts allude to Archinus' attacking Thrasybulus i n a. grapke paranomon (P. Oxy. xv 1800 , frs. 6—7 ; Aesch. m. Ctes. 195). («) B y a decree of Archinus the 'me n of Phyle' were awarded a n olive crown and a

4. REWARD

S FO R S U P P O R T E R S O F D E M O C R A C Y A T ATHEN S

40 Epigene s k — Glaucias s — Antidotus s — Dicaeus sta — Andreas porte r 45 Sosibiu s si — Phanus porte r Glaucias x — Astyages hire d laboure r Dexandrides 50 Sotaeride s Sota[[-]] Pamphilus a — Crithon sk — G orinthiade s 55 Gnip s farm-worke r Then follow the heading and the beginning of the third list: 56-7 Th e followin g remained with the People in Piraeus.

25

58/9 EREGHTHEI S (I) 60 Abde s brea d Anstoteles Idyes retaile r and later there survives: 74 Ghaeri s fig-seller col. vn includes (still Erechtheis (I)) Bendiphanes sk — Emporion farm-worke r Paedicus brea d Sosias fulle r 5 Psammi s farm-worke r Egersis vacat Eucolion hire Gallias sculpto 10 AEGEIS(II ) Athenogiton

d laboure r r

sum o f money (Aesch. m. Ctes. 187—90; Hesp. x 1941, 284—95 no- 7^)(f) B y a decree of Theozotides th e legitimate son s o f citizens who die d fighting for the democracy became, like war-orphans, the responsibility of the state and were given a grant of i obol a day (P. Hib. i 14, frs. a-b = Lys. fr. vi Gernet & Bizos; Hesp. xl 1971, 280—301 no.7). (g) Non-citizen s who die d fightin g fo r th e democrat s a t th e Piraeu s wer e give n a public funeral an d 'th e same honours' a s the citizens (Lys. n. Epit. 66) (h) Th e decre e in our collection , probably not enacte d until 401/0, probably gives rewards falling short of citizenship to some if not al l of the beneficiaries. (b), (c) and (d) ma y al l be interpreted as references to the same, general proposal (Lysias was far more distinguished than most of the potential beneficiaries, so a general pro posal could easily have been remembered a s a proposal for Lysias). (e), (f), an d (g ) are three independen t bu t compatibl e measures ; and ou r text , (K), i s best not identified with (bed) o r with (e) but regarde d a s a fourth measure together with (e), (f), an d (g). We now know that there were at any rate three categories of honorand in this document: 'thos e who joined i n the return fro m Phyle ' and 'thos e who joined in fighting the battle at Munichia', preserved in the text of the decree, and 'those who remaine d with the People in Piraeus', preserved as the heading of the list which begins in col. vi. M. J. Osborne ha s reconstructed the inscription so as to include all three categories in the decree and to have three tribally-organized lists corresponding to those categories, with £.70—90 names in the first list, £.290 in the second and £.560-58 0 in the third. H e

26 4

. REWARD

S FO R S U P P O R T E R S O F D E M O C R A C Y A T A T H E N S

supposes that those in the first category were given citizenship (nothing at all survives of the first list); and the second and third categories were both given isoteleia, 'equality of obligations' wit h th e citizen s in terms of taxation an d militar y servic e (regarded as higher tha n standar d metic status, for which se e on 21) , in accordanc e wit h th e promise after the battle of Munichia mentioned in X. H. n. iv. 25. (Engyesis in 1. 9 of th decree has usually been interpreted to refer to rights of inter-marriage with citizens (engye is the regular term for 'betrothal'), but Osborne follows those who refer it to that 'pledge' or promise.) However, Krentz argued tha t al l the honorands received ateleia ('freedom fro m obligations') , and Whitehead argued that all received citizenship. Osborne restore s as the proposer of the decre e Thrasybulus, who wanted generous honours for his supporters; since the nam e o f the archo n ende d -o s (an alternative reconstruction by Krent z i s highly improbable), the onl y likely archon availabl e is that of 401/0. Men grante d citizenshi p would have t o be assigne d to a dem e an d t o th e tnttys and trib e o f which tha t dem e forme d a part. I n th e secon d and thir d lists , a t an y rate, th e me n ar e liste d by trib e bu t no t b y trittys o r deme , and (typicall y for noncitizens) they are identifie d no t by patronymic but b y occupation . Sinc e the Athenian army was organized by tribes, isoteleis who were to serve with the citizens in the army will probably hav e needed a tribe affiliation thoug h not a deme affiliation (but

5

Athenian phratry decrees from Decelea, 396/5 and afte r A marble stele., inscribed o n both faces, found at Decelea. No w on the estat e of ex-King Gonstantin e a t Tatoi. Phot. Hedrick , Th e Decrees of the Demotionidai, ill. i—6;Jones, Th e Associations of Classical Athens, 209 fig . 7.1 . Attic-Ionic but retainin g the ol d o for ov regularly, and e for EL irregularly, in lines i—113. Stoichedon 25 (11. 2—12) ; 30 (11 . 13—113 ) (in both cases occasionally violated afte r erasures, se e apparatus); non-stoichedonll. 113—26 . IG ii2 1237 ; SIG* 921 ; Hedrick , Th e Decrees oftheDemotionidai*] Lambert , Phratries, 285—9 3 T3 wit h 95—141 ; P. J. Rhode s CQ? xlvii 1997 , 109—20 . Trans. H. T . Wade-Gery , CQ^xx v 1931 , 131— 4 ( = his Essays i n Greek History, 119—22) (lines 1—113 only); Hedrick, 14—17 , Lambert, 288—91 , Rhodes, 112—13 . Se e als o S . D. Lamber t CQj xli x 1999, 484-9, Le Guen-Pollet, 2.

Face A

2 Fo r the tw o consecutive erasures after icpevs see commentary below .

4. R E W A R D

S FO R S U P P O R T E R S O F D E M O C R A C Y A T A T H E N S 2

7

Whitehead disputes this); and two bearers of rare names can be identified with men who ar e described as isoteleis in their epitaphs: Dexandrides (vi. 49 cf. IGn2 7864 with SEGxvai 112 ) and Gery s (m. 13 cf. /Gn2 7863). It was important o n such an occasio n to have a public list , both t o publicize th e honours and to avoid any dispute about who received what (cf. 14). In th e survivin g parts o f these lists, the occupation s o f the honorand s ar e consistently humble (wherea s the metics of whom we hear in law-court speeches are ofte n of higher status); many of the names are unremarkable Gree k names, but some , such as Gnips (vi. 55 ) and Egersi s (vii. 6), are unparalleled ; an d others , such as Abdes (v 60: Semitic) , Gerys (iii . 13: Thracian) , Idye s (vi . 62: Garian? ) and Psammi s (vii . 5: Egyptian), are non-Greek, and thei r bearers ar e likely to have been slave s or freed men before they were made isotekis. Gf. the remark ofAth. Pol. 40. ii that some of those who returned from th e Piraeus were 'palpably slaves', and the remark of X. H. n. iv. 12 that Thrasybulus' forc e in the battle of Munichia included many light-armed men from there . For comparabl e list s o f non-citizens and thei r occupation s se e the list s ofpkialai exeleutkerikai, silver bowls dedicated by manumitted slave s in the late fourth century, IGnz 1553—78, withD. M. Lewis, Hesp. xxviii 1959, 208—38, xxxvii 1968,368— 80 (re-editing and adding new fragments to 1554-9: cf. SEGxviii 36-50, xxv 178-80).

Face A

§i

Of Zeus Phratrios. 2 Th e priest , Theodorus so n of Euphantides, inscribed and set up the stele. 4 Th e followin g ar e t o b e give n a s priestl y due s to the priest: from th e meion a thigh, a rib, an ear , 3 obols of money; from the koureion a thigh, a rib, an ear,

28 5

. ATHENIA

N PIIRATR Y DECREE S FRO M DEGELE A

8 I Hedrick, i n error . 1 9 an d 2 2 have extr a letter s squeezed int o them . 4 seems simply to follow an initial error by the cutter.

2 Th e erasur e her e

j . A T H E N I A N PIIRATR Y D E G R E E S F R O M D E G E L E A 2Q

a cake weighing on e choinix, half a chous of wine; i drachma o f silver.

9 Th e followin g wa s resolve d b y th e phrateres whe n Phormio was archon amon g th e Athenians [396/5] , and when Pantacles of Oion was phratriarch. 13 Hierocle s proposed: Thos e wh o hav e not ye t under gone adjudicatio n in accordance wit h the law of the Demotionidai, th e phrateres ar e t o adjudicat e abou t them immediately, afte r swearin g by Zeus Phratrios, taking their ballot fro m th e altar . Whoeve r i s judged to have been introduced, not being uphmter, the priest and th e phratriarc h shal l delet e his name fro m th e register in the keeping of the Demotionidai an d fro m the copy. The man who introduced th e rejected person shall owe 100 drachmas sacre d to Zeus Phratrios: this sum of money shal l be exacte d by the priest an d the phratriarch, o r they themselves shall owe it. 26 Th e adjudicatio n is to take place in future i n the year after tha t i n whic h th e kourewn i s sacrificed , on th e Koureotis day of the Apaturia. The y shall take their ballot fro m th e altar . I f any o f those who ar e voted out wishes to appea l t o the Demotionidai , tha t shal l be permitted t o him : th e oikos of the Decelean s shall elect a s advocates in their case s five men ove r thirt y years old , an d th e phratriarc h an d th e pries t shal l administer th e oat h t o the m t o perform thei r advo cacy most justly and not to allow anybody who is not a phrater to be a member o f the phratry . Whomeve r the Demotionidai vote out after he has appealed shal l owe 1,00 0 drachma s sacre d t o Zeu s Phratrios : thi s sum of money shall be exacted by the priest of the oikos of the Deceleans, or he himself shall owe it; it shall also be permitted to any other of \hephrateres who wishes to exact it for the common treasury . 44 Thi s shall apply from the archonship of Phormio. Th e phratriarch i s to take the vote each year on those who have to undergo adjudication : if he does not take the

30

5. ATHENIA N PIIRATR Y DECREE S FRO M DEGELE A

69—73 Thi s major erasur e mark s the replacement o f what was initially inscribed by a longer tex t resultin g in sfoichedon irregularities ; further stoichedon irregularities occur in lines 100 and 106 .

5. A T H E N I A

N PIIRATR Y D E G R E E S F R O M D E G E L E A 3

vote he shall owe 500 drachmas sacre d to Zeus Phratrios; the priest and an y other who wishes shall exact this sum of money for the common treasury . 52 I n futur e th e meia an d th e koureia shal l b e take n t o Decelea t o th e altar . I f he [sc. th e phratriarch ] doe s not sacrific e a t th e altar , h e shal l ow e 50 drachma s sacred t o Zeu s Phratrios : thi s su m o f mone y shal l be exacte d b y th e priest , o r h e himsel f shal l ow e it. (lacuna)

Face B 59 .. . bu t i f any o f these thing s prevent s it , whereve r the pries t give s notice, th e meia an d th e koureia shal l be take n there . Th e pries t shal l giv e notic e o n th e fifth da y before the Dorpia o n a whitewashed board of not less than a span, a t whatever place th e Deceleans frequent in the city. 64 Thi s decre e an d th e priestl y due s shal l b e inscribed by th e pries t o n a ston e stele i n fron t o f the alta r a t Decelea at his own expense.

§iii 68 Nicodemu s proposed: In other respects in accordanc e with the previous decree s which exis t concerning th e introduction o f the boys and the adjudication. But the three witnesses, who it is specified ar e to be provide d for th e anaknsis, shall be provided fro m th e member s of his own thiasos to giv e evidenc e i n response to th e questions an d t o swea r by Zeu s Phratrios . Th e wit nesses shall give evidence and swear while holding o n to the altar. If there are not that number i n this thiasos, they shall be provided fro m the other phrateres. 78 Whe n th e adjudicatio n take s place, th e phratriarc h shall no t administe r th e vot e abou t th e boy s t o th e whole phratry until th e members o f the introducer' s own thiasos hav e vote d secretly , takin g thei r ballo t from the altar. The phratriarch shall count the ballots

1

32

5. ATHENIA

112 v omitted by cutter. 11

N PIIRATR Y D E G R E E S F R O M D E G E L E A

3 Th e erasur e here seems simply to follow an initial error by the cutter.

5. ATHENIA

N PIIRATR Y D E G R E E S F R O M D E G E L E A

of the introducer's ihiasos in the presence of the whole phratry present a t th e meeting , an d shal l announc e which way they vote. If the members of the thiasos vote that th e candidat e shoul d b e a phrater o f theirs, bu t the othe r phrateres vote him out , th e member s o f th thiasos shall owe 100 drachmas sacre d to Zeus Phratrios, apart from an y members of the thiasos who accuse him or are obviously opposed to him in the adjudica tion. If the members of the thiasosvote him out, but the introducer appeal s to everyone and everyone decides that he is a phratry member, h e shall be inscribed o n the common registers . But if everyone votes him out , he shall owe 100 drachmas sacre d to Zeus Phratrios . If the members of the thiasosvote him out and he does not appeal to everyone, the unfavourable vot e of the ihiasos shall stand. The member s of the thiasos shall not case a ballot with the other phrateres in connection with boys from thei r own thiasos. 106 Th e pries t is to inscribe this decree in addition o n th e stone stele. 108 Th e oat h o f the witnesse s a t th e introductio n o f th e boys: 'I witness that this candidate who m he is introducing i s his ow n legitimat e so n by a wedded wife . This is true, by Zeus Phratrios: if I keep my oath, may there be man y benefit s fo r me, bu t i f I break it , th e opposite.

§iv 114 Menexenu s proposed: Tha t it should be resolve d by the phrateres concernin g th e introductio n o f the boy s in othe r respect s i n accordanc e wit h th e previou s decrees. But, so that the phrateres may know those who are goin g t o b e introduced , the y shal l b e recorde d with the phratriarch in the first year afte r whic h th e koureion is brought, by name, father's name an d deme, and by mother and her father's name and deme; and, when they have been recorded, the phratriarch shall display th e recor d a t whateve r plac e th e Decelean s frequent, an d the priest shall inscribe the record on a

33

34 5

- ATHENIA N PIIRATR Y D E G R E E S FRO M DEGELE A

Classical Athens had stric t criteria fo r citizenship: from 451/ 0 onwards , only those born of an Athenian mother and an Athenian father were citizens. But there was no central register of births, and th e effectiv e responsibilit y for policing membership of the citizen body fell upon the denies and the phratries. Every Athenian citizen had to be recognized by his deme as fulfilling th e birth and age criteria for active citizenship (Ath. Pol. 42). Although no text explicitly states that recognition by a phratry was also required of citizens, phratry membership is regularly included in Athenian citizenship grants to individuals (but not to groups: Lambert, Phratries, 51-4), would-be archon s were asked about their ancestral shrines of Apollo Patroos, which was probably tantamount t o askin g about thei r phratry membership (Ath. Pol. 55 iii with Rhodes ad loc.), an d Athenian s repeatedl y used membership o f a phratry t o bolste r claim s t o citizenship when challenged in the court s (e.g. Dem. LVII . Euboulides 54.), or dispute phratry membership to undermine statu s (e.g. And. i. Mysteries 125—6) . Phratries were themselves legally required to accept as members those who had been recognised by phratry sub-groups (Philochorus, FGrH^2& F 35a), which further implies that phratry membership wa s somethin g that ha d consequence s for the cit y as a whole. Phratries explicitly demanded that the father and mother were properly married (se e lines 109—111 here), though tha t di d not mean tha t fals e infiltratio n into phratries was not suspected (Isoc. vin. Peace 88). (On whether legitimacy was demanded for citizens see Rhodes C(P xxvii i 1978, 89-92, Ogden, Bastardy, ch . iv.) Much evidence for phratries outsid e Athens concentrates on their cultic activities (cf. i , 87). Athenians enjoyed an active religious life as members of denies (46, 63), o gene (37), and of other religious associations; members of Athenian phratries appeare d as witnesses fo r on e anothe r i n court , borrowe d mone y fro m th e phratr y (36. 16— 35), hel d phratry meetings, and honoured eac h other , but ou r evidence for phratry religious life centres on the phratry festival of the Apaturia an d the ceremonies introducing childre n t o the phratry at that festiva l (se e generally Lambert, Phratries; note also Jones, Associations, ch. vii). This inscription, which i s by far th e longes t an d mos t informative Attic phratry inscription (th e only othe r substantia l documen t i s a lease of land b y th e phratr y Dyaleis, IG n2 1241) , is further testimon y to the importanc e o f phratry membership. After a brief lis t o f the perquisite s due t o th e priest , it record s a decre e passed in 396/5 and two further decrees which declare themselves to be amendments to earlier decrees, and which have no separate enactment formula. The first amendment was perhaps passed not long after 395, for it is inscribed by the same hand although o n a very slightly different stoichedon grid; the secon d amendment was passed rather later, and inscribed by a different han d in larger letters not in a stoichedon arrangement; o n

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white tablet and display it in the sanctuary of Leto. 125 Th e pries t i s t o inscrib e th e phratr y decre e o n th e stone stele ...

linguistic grounds (us e of of rathe r than o as the genitiv e ending), and o n the basis of letter forms, a date after 360 has been suggested. All three decrees are concerned with the introduction o f new members to the phratry, explicitl y new child members in the second and third decrees. The firs t decree (13-67) introduces immediate adjudication by (all) the members of the phratry of those who have not previously been adjudicated 'according to the law of the Demotionidai' . I f the majority vote against th e candidate' s bein g a membe r then his name is to be expunged from the register kept by the Demotionidai and fro m the copy; whoever was responsible for introducing him is to be fined and the fine collected by priest and phratriarch. The decre e then lays down the future regula r procedure according t o which adjudication will take place i n the year afte r th e koureion. The koureion was the ceremon y a t which boys, on reaching physica l maturity, were initiated into the phratry during the festival of the Apaturia, an d the adjudication too is to take place durin g th e Apaturia, bu t a year afte r th e koureion. In th e cas e of this regular adjudication , appeal b y a rejected candidate i s allowed. The appea l i s made to the Demotionidai , an d th e oikos ('house') of the Decelean s is to choos e advocates (synegoroi) t o put the phratry case against admission. The fine, in the event of an unsuccessful appeal, is 1000 dr., to be exacted by the priest of the oikos of the Deceleans. The phratriarch is made responsibl e for holding th e adjudication , an d fo r seeing to th e sacrifice. Th e pries t is to fine the phratriarch if he fail s i n either of these duties, and it seems to be the priest's responsibility, the detail s of which are lost in the lacuna a t 58, to decide on an alternativ e sit e for the meia and koureia if it is not possibl e to hol d them at Decelea (presumably the phratry remembers being excluded from its phratry sanctuary during the Decelean war, 413—404, and s o makes provision for any similar problems in future). The secon d decree enlarges on the process of adjudication itself. It refer s back t o regulations, not contained in the first decree but perhaps containe d in the 'law of the Demotionidai', for the preliminary judgement (ana/crisis), a procedure which parallels the anakrisisbefore trial s in the dikasterion, and specifies that the three witnesses shall be from th e introducer's ow n phratry sub-group (thiasos). I t goes on to specify a preliminary vote by the introducer's sub-grou p followe d by a vote by the rest of the phratr y members (fo r secret voting se e on 63), and the n deals with the variou s possibilities for disagreemen t between sub-group an d phratry t o which this procedure ma y give rise. In the case of rejection by the sub-group th e candidate may appeal to the whole phratry. Whethe r ther e is further appea l possible to the Demotionidai, a s in the first decree, is not stated , but i n the absence of contrary indication shoul d be assumed . It is only after th e positive vote of the whole phratry tha t the new member is inscribed:

36 5

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this strongly implies that it was only after th e koureion, and no t afte r th e earlie r mewn sacrifice, which perhaps normally happened i n the first three or four years of a boy's life, that names were inscribed on the phratry register. The thir d decre e adds the provision that the names of those who ar e going to be introduced be written up in advance and displayed, both by the phratriarch an d by the priest. The decree s reveal a good deal about the organization of these phrateres. They have one phratriarch (th e Dyaleis had two) , an d since he is treated as a chronological reference point (11.11—12) he presumably served for a year. The phratriarch i s solely responsible for conducting the scrutiny of candidates, overseeing the voting, and conducting the sacrifices. They also have a priest who, remarkably, has to bear the cost of inscribing not only the list of his perquisites, but also at least the first two, and most probably all three, decrees. The nam e of Theodorus son of Euphantides which appears in line 2 of the inscription is the third priest's name to be inscribed in that line, implying that every time a decree was added to the stone, the name of the priest was updated, but that doe s not necessaril y mean tha t the priesthoo d was an annua l office . A s well as responsibility for the inscriptio n o f the decrees , the pries t is charged wit h decidin g the location of the sacrifices (line s 59—60) and with collecting fines. Together with the phratriarch, h e is responsible for expunging names from th e phratry register, collectingfines from those who introduced any who are expelled, and administering the oath of the synegoroi appointed to make the phratry case. At the point at which the priest is charged with collecting fines from those who have appealed to the Demotionidai and had thei r appeal rejected (11. 41-2), he is named priest of the oikos of the Deceleans. The relationshi p between the oikos o f the Decelean s and th e Demotionida i ha s excited much scholarly controversy. The decree s are decrees of t\K phrateres, but they do not make it clear whether 'the phrateres' ar e 'th e Demotionidai' or 'the oikos of the Deceleans'. The oikos of the Decelean s not onl y provides the pries t but i s the bod y which elect s advocates (synegoroi) t o argu e the cas e against admissio n to th e phratr y when a rejected candidate appeals. The Demotionidai, on the other hand, are responsible for the law under which the adjudication is carried out, keep the principal cop y of the register of phratry members, and vote on appeals. If the Demotionidai are the phratry, what is the oikos of the Deceleans and why does it and its priest have a special role? If the oikos of the Deceleans is the phratry, why is it the law of the Demotionida i that it operates under? The phratry has sub-groups known as thiasoi (mentioned many times in the secon d decree); if either the Demotionida i or the oikos of the Deceleans are themselves a phratry sub-group, how do they relate to these thiasoi? Are we dealing with a long-term arrangement , o r are we seeing a phratry i n the process of change, with on e grou p of phrateres beginnin g t o differentiat e themselve s from th e res t a s a prelude to splitting from the rest of the phratry altogether (so Lambert, Phratries; cf. 37 for fission in agenos). The questio n of the identit y of phrateres an d th e relationshi p between the Demo tionidai and th e oikos of the Deceleans is important because of its implications for the structure of both archaic and classical Athenian society. If the Demotionidai are the phratry an d th e oikos of the Decelean s are a sub-group o f the phratr y (s o Hedrick,

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following Wilamowitz) , the n a particula r phratr y sub-grou p coul d evidentl y pla y a dominatin g rol e within a phratry. Thi s woul d impl y som e hierarchy withi n th e phratry. W e would the n have , within democrati c Athens, the existenc e of phratry sub-groups with privileged roles—roles presumably inherited from a n earlier period but crucia l in determining a question that might affec t a man's citizenship . (For the nature and role of the genos see 37.) The for m o f the two names does not solve the question. The -idm patronymic ending is found in other phratries, but s o is the -as ending (as with the Dyaleis). Oikos is not a term used technically elsewhere at Athens (cf. MacDowell, CQ, 2 xxxix 1989,10—21) , but i t is used of phratries elsewhere in the Gree k world (Geos, /Gxn. v 1061. 1 6 etc.). One possibilit y is that the term oikos is used here in order to distinguish this group of Deceleans from th e members of the deme Decelea (and from member s of a phratry who belonged to the deme Decelea but no t to this phratry). (It is very likely that th e priest Theodorus so n of Euphantides was of the dem e Decelea, but evidentl y some in the phratry were not: the phratriarch i s from Oion (Dekeleikon), the neighbourin g deme.) In the end the issue rests on whether it is more plausible that the phratriarch an d the priest, who do so much together, belong to different groups or to one group, whether it is more plausible that the same body hears the appeal a s initially voted against the candidate or that appeal be entrusted to some group within the phratry, and whether it is more plausible that championing th e phratry's initial vote be entrusted to elected members of the whole phratry o r to men electe d by some group within the phratry . We regard it as more plausible that phratriarch an d priest come from the same group, that th e body hearin g th e appea l i s not th e whole phratry, an d tha t advocate s are elected by the phratry as a whole; in other words, that the oikos of the Deceleans is the phratry (s o Wade-Gery). Th e statemen t of Philochorus cite d abov e attest s to lega l interference t o reinforce the opinio n o n a candidate's membershi p credential s of a group that was not the phratry itself , in a way exactly comparable t o the role which, on this interpretation, is played by the Demotionidai. The Demotionida i surely must have cut across the thiasoi rather than being one of them, and it is perhaps most plausible to identify the m a s a genos, that is , a descent group independen t o f the phratr y structure and probably distinguishe d by a priestly function (cf . 37). We take them to be a group know n for the rigour o f their own membership criteria , whose practices the phratry a s a whole chose to adopt, perhaps in the face of concern at some laxness in the past, and to whom the phratry then entrusted the ultimate policing of their own rules. Why was this phratry so much concerned with membership procedures in the early fourth century ? Pericles' citizenship law had been re-enacted with the restoration of democracy i n 403 after a period durin g which the law seems to have been allowed to sleep. A numbe r o f reference s ar e mad e i n fourth-centur y author s t o denie s failing t o observ e th e rule s strictl y (Dem . xov. Leochares 35-9, LVII . Eubulides 49 , 55, 59 ; Anaxandrides fr . 4 , Harpocratio n (TT 86 ) Potamos (Menander) ; Whitehead, Demes, 292-3) . Th e demis e o f Athens' empir e ha d reduce d th e opportunitie s fo r profiting from servic e as an Athenian magistrate, but the introduction of payment for

38

5 A T H E N I A N PIIRATR Y D E G R E E S F R O M

attending the Assembly created a new source of income restricted to citizens alone. Was ther e a particular issu e a t Decelea ? According t o Lysias ' speech against him, Pancleon claimed to be a citizen by virtue of being a Plataean, and when challenge d to state his deme identified it as Decelea. He turn s out, so the speake r alleges, to be unknown to the Deceleans who meet at the barber's sho p near the Stoa of the Herms. We do not know why Pancleon chose to claim Decelea as his deme, but the likelihood that th e meeting-plac e o f the Decelean s mentioned by Lysia s (xxin. Pancleon 2—3 ) is

6

Alliance between Boeotia and Athens, 395 Two fragment s of a stele: (a) found on the Athenian Acropolis , now in the Epigraphical Museum; (£ ) found in the Agora, now i n the Agora Museum. Phot . (b) Hesp. viii 1939, 2. Attic-Ionic, sometimes retainin g th e ol d e for e t and o for ou ; 11. 2— 3 in larger letters ; 11. 4 sqq. stoichedon 30. IG11^ 14 ; SIG* 12 2 (thes e a only); E. Schweigert , Hesp. vii i 1939 , 1— 3 no. i ; To d 101 ; Svt. 223 ; Agora, xvi 34*. Trans. Harding 14. A.

i. U . Koehler, /Gn 1 6: [#e]ot'Koehler, Hermes v 1987, i; but A. G. Woodhead (Agora., xvi) stresses that that word is normally centre d o n or displayed acros s th e ful l width, s o that this is more probabl y th e las t line of another text: see commentary .

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the same as is mentioned in this decree (63-4) raises the possibility that he was trying to take advantage o f the ambiguit y betwee n being a member o f the dem e Decele a and a member o f the oikos of the Deceleans . Decelean residenc e patterns ar e likely to have been particularly disrupte d durin g the latter part of the Peloponnesian Wa r when the Spartans established their garrison there, and that, along with the increased attractions o f citizenship in the 3905 , may accoun t fo r the particular timin g o f these decrees.

2 Allianc e o f th e Boeotian s an d Athenian s fo r al l time. 4 I f any one goes against the Athenians for war eithe r by lan d o r b y sea , th e Boeotian s shal l g o i n support with all their strength as the Athenians cal l on them, as far as possible; and i f any on e goes against the Boeotian s for war eithe r by land o r by sea, the Athenians shall go in support with all their strength as the Boeotians call on them, as far as possible. 11 An d if it is decided to add o r subtract anything by the Athenians an d Boeotian s in commo n deliberatio n

40 6

. ALLIANC

E B E T W E E N B O E O T I A AN D A T H E N S, 39 5

In 39 5 the Corinthia n War develope d ou t o f a disput e in which Spart a supporte d Phocis and Boeotia supported Locris; Boeotia was joined by other Greek states hostile to Sparta , includin g Athens , Corinth, and Argo s (X. H. in . v. 1—17 , Hell. Oxy. 18 Bartoletti/McKechnie & Kern = 2 1 Chambers , D.S . xiv . 81 . i—iii) . Boeoti a was at this time a federal state, centred on Thebes (see especially Hell. Oxy. 16. iii—iv = 19 . iii—iv). This is the cop y of the allianc e publishe d in Athens: the tex t that survive s gives simply a subject-heading and the treaty, without the decree by which the Athenians approved it , but i f our interpretatio n i s correct i t i s probable tha t th e decre e was inscribed abov e th e treat y (cf. below); for this pattern cf . Tod 12 4 ~ Hardin g 38, of 377; for the more usual practice, by which the heading precedes the decree, cf. Tod 103 ~ Harding 2, of 394. The subject-headin g includes the provision 'fo r al l time', which is not included in the surviving text of the treaty which follows: alliance s made for all time rather tha n for a specified period are known from the sixth century (cf. M&L 10 ~ Fornara 29) , and at Athens from the fifth century (cf. M&L 63, 64 ~ Fornara 124,125) . The allianc e is a standard defensive alliance , in which each party undertakes to respond to the call of the other if attacked (but it is called a symmachia: the Greek s do not alway s distinguish a defensive allianc e a s an epimackia, as in Thuc. i. 44. i). Provision for amendment b y

7

Athenian casualties in the Corinthian War, 394 A. Th e uppe r part of a stele found in the Outer Ceramicus; no w in the National Museum (No . 754). Under an ornate anthemwn is an epistyle, on the left-hand half of which the text is inscribed; belo w it there will have bee n a relief, now lost. Facs. AMxiv 1889 , 407; phot. Mobius, Die Omamenk desgriechischen Grabstelen, Taf. 9. d (righthand half); Bugh , Th e Horsem*n of Athens., fig. i la (text not legible). Attic-Ionic, but twic e (for different kind s of ending) using the form -er/s, fo r which see Threatte, Th e Grammar of Attic Inscriptions., ii . 183 , 188 ; 239—42 . Th e fina l colum n appear s to be a subsequent additio n t o th e origina l text. SIG* 131 ; IGii2 5222*; Tod 104 . Trans. Harding 19. B.

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1

agreement of both parties, conjecturally restored in 11.11 sqq., is a common feature of inter-state documents (cf. Rhodes with Lewis, 517). There als o survives, in a simila r scrip t an d wit h simila r formulation , an allianc e between the Athenians and th e Locrians (Tod 10 2 ~ Harding 16). In that cas e there was definitely a text, very probably th e Athenian decree , before the subject-heading and th e treaty. Unfortunately, the treaty is simply with the 'Locrians' , and doe s not enable us to resolve the disagreement between X. H. in. v. 3 (the eastern, Opuntia n Locrians) an d Hell. Oxy. 18 . i i = 21 . ii , Paus. m . 9 . i x (th e western, Ozolian Locri ans): bot h were to fight on the anti-Spartan sid e in the war; but th e eastern Locrians adjoined the Boeotians, and the Boeotians would be more likely to support them in a dispute with the Phocians (cf. J. Buckler, in Tuplin (ed.), Xenophon and His World, forth coming, suggesting a valley in the north-east of Phocis as the disputed territory). The Corinthia n War wa s ended by the Peace of Antalcidas (the King's Peace ) in 386, on e consequenc e of which was the dissolutio n of the Boeotia n federation with which Athens had made this alliance. It is possible that immediately after that dissolution Thebes stil l considered itself to be an ally of Athens, but renounce d the allianc e after the Athenian Thrasybulus o f Gollytus was involved in an unsuccessful plot (Lys. xxvi. Evand. 23, Aristid. Panath. 173 Dindorf = 294 Behr, with schol. [iii. 280 Dindorf], discussed by E. Schweigert in Hesp. viii 1939).

B. A gabled stele found in the Geramicus outside the Dipylon Gate ; now in the Ceramicu s Museum ( P 1130). The text is inscribed below a relief showing a cavalryman striking a fallen enemy with a spear. Phot. , e.g., Bury & Meiggs 4, 34 0 ill . 12 . i ; Sealey , History o f the Greek City-States, 391 ; Bugh, fig . 12 ; Spence , Th e Cavalry o f Classical Greece, pi. ii; Osborne, Archaic and Classical Greek Art, 14 pi. 3. Attic-Ionic, retaining th e ol d o for ou; inscribed i n letters 0.04 m. ( = i '/2 in.) high. SIG* 130 ; IGii2 6217*; Tod 105 . Trans. Harding 19. G. See i n genera l Brueckner , Die Frudhofam Eridarws, 57—6 4 (B}] E.Pfuhl , AA 1932 , 1— 7 (B}] Glairmont , Patrios Nomos, 212—1 4 no. 68 b (^4) , id., Classical Attic Tombstones, ii, no. 2.20 9 (B); S . Ensoli, AfALxxix1987, 155 —329 (B); G. Nemeth , ^PEciv 1994 , 95—102; Osborne, Archaic and Classical Greek Art, 13—16.

A The followin g cavalryme n died at Corinth: Melesias , Onetondes the phylarch Antiphanes, Theangelus

, Lysitheus , Pandius , Nicomachus , A t Goronea:

, Phanes , Democles

B

, Dexileos , Endelus , Neochdes

Dexileos so n of Lysanias of Thoricus. Bor n i n the archonshi p o f Tisandrus [414/13] ; die d in that ofEubulides [394/3] , at Corinth as one of the five cavalrymen.

.

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The appearanc e o f Dexileos in A as well as B allows us to date both monuments to the same year, and we can associate with them a third monument o f which a fragment survives, a list in tribal columns of those who died 'in Corinth and Boeotia', including at least two generals (IGif 522 1 ~ Harding 19. A, cf. Glairmont, PatnosNomos, 209—12 no. 68a, noting that the texts of this and A are the work of the same mason), inscribed below a relief (see below : phot. Bugh, fig. nb; Spence, pi. 13, Osborne, 1 3 pi. 2). Paus. i. 29. xi mentions the tomb of those who died 'around Corinth'. In th e secon d year o f the Corinthia n War , 394 , the Spartan regen t Aristodemus was victorious at the River Nemea , near Corinth , in the earl y summer (X. H. iv. ii. 9—23, D.S. xiv. 83. i—ii), and the n king Agesilaus, recalled from Asia, was victorious at Coronea, in Boeotia, in late August (X. H. iv. iii. 13—23 , Ages. ii. 6—16, D.S. xiv. 84. i—ii, Plut. Ages. 18. i—19. iv). It is likely that the battle of the Nemea was fought at the en d of 395/4, that IGu 2 5221 and A refer to the whole campaigning seaso n of 394, and that Dexileos' death 'at Corinth' in 394/3 was not in the major battle (e.g. Beloch, GG2, ra. ii. 217—18, arguing from X. H. iv. iii. i , on Agesilaus' return, Aristid. Four 286 Dindorf = 578 Behr, probably meaning to date the battle to 395/4), but many believe that the major battle was fought at the beginning o f 394/3 and tha t Dexileo s did die in that battle (argued fully by E. Aucello, Helikon iv 1964, 31-6). There remain uncertainties about the scope of A, with eleven cavalrymen including Dexileos killed 'at Corinth' and one at Coronea, and about the body of five cavalrymen t o which Dexileos belonged. According t o Diodorus, about 2,80 0 on the anti Spartan sid e were killed at the Nemea and ove r 600 at Coronea; accordin g to X. H . iv. ii. 17 there were 600 Athenian cavalr y at the Nemea, but Nemet h casts doubt o n Xenophon's figure s fo r thi s battle. I f in th e majo r battles most o f the fighting was done an d mos t of the casualtie s were suffered b y the infantry , it is conceivable tha t very few of the Athenian cavalr y were killed in 394 and tha t A lists al l the Athenia n cavalry kille d i n tha t campaignin g season . Dexileos, of Thoricus, belonge d t o th e tribe Acamantis; it is possible though far from certai n that the Mantitheus of Lys. xvi . Mant. belonged to the sam e tribe (cf. Davies, APF, 364—5), and hi s tribe suffere d par ticularly heavy losses at the Nemea, but he appears to have been fighting as a hoplite (§§15—16 cf. 13). Certainly , A contain s no indicatio n tha t i t is limited to members o f one tribe, and probably i t lists all the cavalryme n killed that year (cf. Pritchett , Studies . . . Topography, ii . 83; Nemeth). There have been various guesses about th e body of five me n to which Dexileos belonged: men who cooperated in some particular exploi (Dittenberger, SIG)', a n elite group, of the kind recommended in X. Hipparch. viii. 23—5 (Pfuhl, 4—7) ; or, less probably, a group o f officers (BruecknerjJB/l/ x 1895 , 204—7),

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3

those of the cavalrymen killed at the Nemea who belonged to Acamantis (Bugh, dating that battle to 394/3; Nemeth). The phylarch s were the commander s o f the triba l cavalr y regiments (Ath. Pol. 61. v). Nothing i s known about th e men liste d in A other than Dexileos; Endelus is the only bearer of that name attested in Athens (LGPN, ii) . Dexileos belonged to a family which has left us a number of funerary monuments, placed with .Bin a single enclosure (see PA 3229 or IGu2 6217 for a stemma, and cf . Brueckner, DieFnedhqfam Endanos; S. Humphreys, JHS c 1980, 119 ; R. Garland , BSA Ixxvii 1982 , 135—6 . A i) ; his brother Lysistratus is mentioned in Dem. XL. Boe. Dowry 52 (a speech concerned with a family to which the Mantitheus mentioned above possibly belonged) as lending money, and Lysistratus' son Lysanias is listed as his tribe's member o f a board often me n (IG n 2 2825). After thei r involvemen t in the oligarch y o f the Thirt y 404—403 the cavalr y were under suspicion (cf. Lys. xvi. Mant., and Ath. Pol. 38. ii with Rhodesad loc.), and i t has been suggested that the y took advantage o f this campaign to demonstrate that they too had fought and died for Athens (Bugh, Spence). B, uniquely, gives both Dexileos' year of birth and his year of death, and that may have been done in order to stress that he was too young to have been involved in the misdeeds of the oligarchy (lectur e by G. N. Edmondson, cited by Bugh). It may be a further indication of the politics of this memorial that one of the five pots buried with Dexileos' monument bears images of the tyrannicide s (E. Vermeule^ZW/lxxxv 1970, 94—111). On th e relief s se e Pfuhl , 1-4 ; Robertson , History o f Greek Art, i. 369; Glairmont; Osborne. Image s o f a mounted cavalryma n rearin g over a fallen nake d enemy soldier, such as are found both on Dexileos' relief and on IGu2 5221, and closely related scenes, appear als o on other reliefs, both fro m publi c an d fro m privat e memorials, in the late fifth and early fourth centuries (Glairmont, GRBSxiii 1970,49-5 8 with plates; Spence, app. 2 nos. 12, 14 , 25, 26, 27 , cf. 10, 13 , 23 , 29). The peculiarit y o f Dexileos' monument appears particularly clearly from comparison with a monument for —ylus of Phlya executed ten o r twenty years earlier (IG if7716;Classical Attic Tombst ones, ii. 130; Spence, app. 2 no. 14) : although the iconography is very similar and the stelaiwere originally of much the same width, the Dexileos composition has been elongated, and, whereas the earlier monument has two elegiac couplets neatly written in small letters above the relief, Dexileos' monument has its much more starkly informative inscription in unusually large letters below the relief. The skilful way in which Dexileos' monument has been constructed to suit its, very prominent, site is explored by Ensoli. See also P. Low, POPS'2 xlviii 2002,102-22.

8 Erythrae honours Gonon, 394 The uppe r right part of a stek, found in the church of the Theotokos nea r Erythrae; no w lost. Phot. IKErythmi und Klazamerwi, Taf. ii i (squeeze). Ionic, with iota adscript omitte d i n 1 . i and a t leas t one instanc e eac h o f the ol d e for e t and o for o v (cf. on 1. 16); sometimes TJ i s used where Attic uses long a, but i n 6 the Athenian spellin g is taken over with the Athenia n technical ter m are'Aet a (J. Wackernagel, AMxvii 1892 , 143) . Stowhzdon 17—20 , ending eac h lin e with the en d o f a word or syllable. SIG* 126 ; Tod 106 ; IKErythmiuwtKlazom£nm&*. Trans . Harding 12. D.

16 Dittenberger , SIG' 2 65 : OTTOV a v Bogy 'als o possible ' Tod ; OTTOV a v oogrji IK , cf . Bechtel , Du Inschrifkn des wnischznDuikkts, no. 199 , but that is one letter too long.

Gonon of Athens escaped after the battle of Aegospotami in 405, went first to Evagoras of Salamis i n Cyprus , an d the n entere d the servic e of Pharnabazus, th e satra p o f Hellespontine Phrygia. Erythrae, on the mainland o f Asia Minor opposite Chios, had been a member of the Delian League, but was one of the first to revolt against Athens in 413/12 (Thuc. vin. 5. iv — 6,14. ii); an Erythraean is probably t o be restored in th e description of Lysander's 'navarchs monument' at Delphi (Paus. x. 9. ix with RochaPereira's apparatus), and it remained allie d to Sparta afte r th e Peloponnesian War. But when in 394, after their naval victory at Cnidus, Pharnabazus and Conon toured the Aegean, detaching states from Spart a an d promising them autonomy, Erythrae is one o f the state s mentioned by Diodorus a s having responded (X. H. iv . viii. 1—2 , D.S. xiv. 84. iii-iv).

8. E R Y T I I R A E H O N O U R S G O N O N , 39 4 4

5

Resolved by the council and the people. 2 Writ e u p Gono n a s a benefactor and proxenos of the Erythraeans; and h e shall have a front sea t at Erythrae and immunit y [ateleia] for al l commodities, both for import an d for export,both in war andinpeace; andhe shall be an Erythraean i f he wishes. This shall be both for him and for his descendants. 13 Mak e a bronze, gilded likeness of him, an d set it up wherever Gonon resolves. an d

Erythrae her e use s a standar d enactmen t formul a but doe s not identif y me n i n office o r the proposer o f the decree. The honour s are typical of those awarded by a Greek state to distinguished foreigners: the rank of benefactor sndproxenos (th e latter technically a representative in his own state of the interests of the othe r state, but i n this case, as often whe n combined with the former, an honorific rather tha n a func tional appointment (cf . F. Gschnitzer, RE Supp . xiii. 651—2) : for a striking extension of the ide a cf . 55); a fron t sea t in th e theatr e a t festivals ; immunit y fro m taxatio n (ateleia); citizenship ; the extensio n of the honour s to his descendants. Gonon is given not immunity from taxation in general but immunity from a particular tax which was particularly likely to impinge on him as a non-resident. Some drafters of decrees were more skilfu l than other s in the phrasin g o f their texts: here 11. 7— 9 offe r a remarkabl

46 8

. E R Y T I I R A E H O N O U R S G O N O N , 39 4

string of genitives used in different senses . The erectio n of statues of leading figures seem s to be a phenomenon which spread after the Peloponnesian War, an d there was perhaps competition between friends of Sparta who honoured Lysander and friend s o f Athens who honoured Gonon. Paus. vi. 3. xvi mentions statues of Gonon at Ephesus and Samos ; and Gono n was the firs t Athenian to be honoured publicly and in his lifetime with statues in Athens (Dem. xx.

9

Rebuilding of Piraeus walls, 394—391 Two block s of masonry buil t into th e Hellenisti c wall a t Eetionea (Piraeus) ; A no w lost; B now in the Piraeu s Museum. Facs. BCHxi 1887 , 130—1 ; phot. Maier, GrwchischzMamrbauinschnftm, Taf . 5 Nr. 1 1 (B). Attic-Ionic, retaining the ol d o for ov. SIG:' 124-5 ; ^GnJ 1656-7 ; Tod 107 ; Maier 1-2*. See in general P . Funke, ^PEliii 1983 , 148-89.

A. 2 Th e stone has TOS Kipoov peraXXov SIKTJ), perhap s relating to a much late r period, mentions a standard charg e o f i/24th o f the yield. If the sum s here ar e payments per prytan y the n in a full yea r the cit y stood to gai n 6 talents 900 dr. a year in rent; if payments are once a year then only 3,690 dr. (Note also the discussion in Shipton, %PE cxx 1998,57-63.) The poletai records regularly locate the mines and often , althoug h no t invariably , indicate whose land the mine is on. Later inscriptions referred to that land a s edaphe. The cit y claimed the right to lease out the sub-surface, but the surface was in private hands. Some landowners are also lessees, but others never feature as lessees. Although the public records never reveal it, it seems likely that lessees also had to negotiate with landowners who would expect some monetary return for allowing access to the subsurface, an d individual s known from literar y sources to have made thei r fortunes in mining all appear as landowners as well as lessees (see Osborne, Demos, 115—18). On e mine (11 . 67—71 ) here is located on the land 'o f the wif e of Gharmylus' and land neighbouring it belongs to 'the wife o f Alypetus'. Women might carr y property with them at Athens, but they were not free themselve s to dispose of that property an d it would normally be listed under th e name o f a husband. I t appears tha t we have two cases here of women widowed recently enough not yet to have passed into the control of a man (se e further L. Foxhall,CQ?xxxix 1989, 22—44). The mine s o n thi s inscription ar e simpl y liste d as they ar e leased . Later poletai records lay out the procedure more fully: the would-be lessee first registers the mine, its position is then described , and th e amoun t tha t th e mine i s leased for recorded. It was presumably possible for someone else to outbid the registrant, but i f this happened it is not recorded in surviving inscriptions. It is clear that mining was not happening on a very large scale in 367/6. That only five mines have their lease renewed and tha t onl y one stele is referred to (by contrast to later records) suggests that mining may only just have begun again after the decline

l82

36. SALES OF PUBLIC PROPERTY AT ATHENS, 367 6

occasioned by the Peloponnesia n War . Thi s woul d confor m to th e implication s of Xenophon's discussio n of the mines in Poroi, which was written a decade later tha n this record. The mines operatingin 367/6 also seem to have been largely concentrated in one area : locations are recorde d for fifteen mines , of which eight ar e in Sunium , with six of the eigh t located at Nape an d on e at Thrasymos; one is at Maroneia, sit e of the mines that gave famous profits earl y in the fifth century (Ath. Pol. 22. vii), three at Laurium, tw o at Besa, and on e at Thoricus. Nap e hardl y feature s i n later leases, but Thrasymos is frequently mentioned, and two sites which do not appear at all here appear later, Aulon and Bambideion. Poletm lists show that by the 3405 many more mining concessions were being leased (Agora, xix P 26 has traces of at least 45 leases in 342/1, and must originally have ha d well in exces s o f that number) , although, curiously , surviving figures for rents tend to be low (20 and 15 0 dr.). A number o f notorious court case s from th e later fourth century, some of which seem to have been politically motivated, indicate both tha t individuals were making enormous profits out of the mines and that they were known to be doing so (see especially Hyp. m Against Euxenippos ^-6, [Plut] X Or . 8430). Ou r records are rich enough for us to be able to say something about th e social and geographical origin s of those who profited from silve r mining an d abou t what activities led to the greatest profit (see Osborne, Demos, ch. 6). Four o f the nine differen t individual s who lease mines and eleve n of the nineteen different owner s of land o r plant i n the mining distric t named in this inscription ar e men otherwis e known to be wealthy because they or their family performed liturgies (see APF, pp. xx—xxiv). This high frequency of men fro m known wealthy families contrasts with the circle s revealed in the first half of the inscription. Although two of the poletai and their secretary are from known wealthy families, not one of those named in connection with the confiscation of Theosebes' property comes from suc h a family.

37 Decree o f the Athenian genos of the Salaminioi , 363 2 A marble stek found S W of Hephaesteum. Now in Agora Museum, Agora Inv. I 3244. Phot. Hesp. vii 1938, 2. Attic-Ionic, retaining old o occasionally for ou ; stoichedon 38 (line s 2—68) , quasi-stoiclwdon 39—4 1 (lines 69—79), non-stowhedon 79—10 2 (lines 80—97) W. S . Ferguson, Hesp. vi i 1938 , i—68 ; SEG xxi 527 ; Agora, xix L 4a; S . D. Lambert , ^PE cxi x 1997, 85—106* . Trans. Ferguson, 5—8; Roebuck, Greek Arbitration, 288 (part). See also S. G. Humphreys, x^Elxxxiii 1990, 243—8; R. Osborne in Alco*ck and Osborn e (edd.), Placing the Gods, 143-60; Pstrker, Athenian Religion, 308—16; Scafuro, The Forensic Stage, Appendix 2(F), p. 399 ; Taylor , Salamis and the Salaminioi, 47—63; Lambert, ^PEcxxv 1999 , 93—130; H. Lohmann , ^PEcxxxiii 2000 , 91—102 ; Roebuck, Greek Arbitration, 287—91.

36. SALE

S O F P U B L I C P R O P E R T Y A T A T H E N S ,367,8 6l 3

The followin g individuals ar e particularl y notabl e fo r the othe r activitie s which we know them o r their families t o have engage d in . Nicias (II) of Gydantidae (APF, p. 406) (landowner, 11. 41—2,58, 64—5) is a grandson of the fifth-centur y genera l Nicia son of Niceratus who is recorded by Xenophon (Pom iv. 14) to have had 1,00 0 slaves whom he hired out to work in the mines at i obol a day (yielding 10 talents a year from a capital of around 15—2 0 talents: 1,000 slaves at 100 dr. a slave = 1 6 % talents capital tied u p i n slaves) . Leuciu s o f Suniu m (APF 9057 ) (landowner , 11. 46 , 80 ) gave lan for a new agora for his deme in around 33 0 because the ol d one had becom e over crowded (IGu 2 1180) . (For the locatio n o f the agor a see Goette, AM ex 1995 , 171—4) . Thrasylochus of Anagyrous (APF, pp . 385—6 ) (lessee of two mines, 11. 49 and 51—2 ) wa the (older) brother of Demosthenes' antagonist Meidias (Dem. xxi) and himself challenged Demosthenes to an antidosis in 363 over a syntrierarchy (Dem. xxvn. 17) . H e appears a s owner of a workshop in the mines in the 350 5 and agai n as a trierarch at an eve n later date. Diophanes o f Sunium (APF, pp . 167—8 ) (landowner, 11. 59—60) wa the brother of the archon of the Salaminioi (37. 69) of 363/2. Gallias of Alopece (APF, p. 269 ) (landowner, 1. 64) belongs to the notoriousl y wealthy and politicall y involved family one of whose fifth-century members, Gallias (II), was said to have been worth 200 talent s and t o hav e ha d 60 0 slave s working in th e silve r mines (X. Poroi iv. 15 , cf. Nepos, Cimon, i. iii). Both literary and epigraphic sources show that Gallias vaunted his pedigree both in his political and in his equestrian activities (X. H. vi. iii. 4,SEGxln 466). H e appears later purchasing confiscated property from thepoletaiin 342/1 (Agora, xix P 26. 455) and was active on Delos. Epicrates of Pallene (APF4909) (landowner, 1. 70), is either identical o r relate d to th e Epicrate s alleged , when prosecuted in th e 3205, t o hav e made a profit o f 300 talents from th e mine s in three years (Hyp. rv Euxenippos 35) , and the Epicrates who proposed the ephebic law (see on 88).

184 3 7

' D E C R E E O F TH E A T H E N I A N GENOS O F TH E S A L A M I N I O I

The mason , th e sam e throughout , inscribe d long strokes first and frequentl y faile d t o return t o inscribe th e short strokes; these omissions are no t generall y recorded here , but ca n e.g. obliterate th e differenc e betwee n the sign for a drachma and that for an obol, and on five occasions lead to a space being left for a letter that doe s not involv e long strokes but tha t lette r never being inscribed (11 . 2 , 72, 88, 89 , 91) . 10—1 1 *Hpa,K)(eo\v Ferguson, y/pa^AeolsWalbank; Lambert report s insufficient trace s to allow confirmation of reading.

37- D E G R E E O F TH E A T H E N I A N GENOS O F TH E S A L A M I N I O I 18

Gods. In the archonship o f Charielides at Athens [363/2], the arbitrators Stephanus of Myrrhinous, Gleagorus of Acharnae, Aristogeiton o f Myrrhinous, E u thy crates o f Lamptrae, an d Gephisodotus o f Aithalidae settle d the dispute s between the Salaminioi o f th e Seve n Tribe s an d th e Salaminio i fro m Suniurn o n th e followin g terms, both partie s bein g agree d with one another that the proposal was good: 8 Th e priesthoods shall be common to both for all time, namely those of Athena Sciras, of Heracles at Porthmus, of Eurysaces, and o f Aglaurus an d Pandrosu s an d o f Kourotrophos. A n allotment i s to be made jointly fro m bot h groups when on e of the priestesse s o r priest s dies, and thos e who obtai n th e office by lot shall serve as priests on the same conditions as the earlier priests served. 16 Th e lan d at the Heraclium a t Porthmus an d the saltpa n an d agora at Koile shall be divided into two equal parts for each party, and each party shall set up boundary markers of its own land. 19 Al l (th e sacrificial victims) that th e cit y provide s a t publi c expense, o r that th e Salaminio i happe n t o receiv e from th e oschophoroi o r fro m th e deipnopkoroi, thes e both partie s ar e t o sacrifice i n common an d divid e the ra w meat, half for each party; but al l (the sacrificial victims) that the Salaminio i hav e been wont to sacrifice from th e income from rent s they are to sacrifice fro m thei r ow n resource s in the ancestra l manner , each party contributing half for all the sacrifices . 27 Th e perquisite s prescribed here are to be given to the priests and priestesses . To th e priest of Heracles, as dues, 30 drach mas; for pelanos, 3 drachmas; eac h party is to contribute hal f of these sums. Of the victims which he sacrifices for the whole group he i s to tak e the ski n an d th e le g of a victim tha t ha s been flayed, th e leg of a victim that ha s been singed ; but i n the cas e of a co w he i s to tak e nine piece s of flesh and th e skin. To the priest of Eurysaces, as due, 6 drachmas; for pelanos for both cult s 7 drachmas; i n place o f the le g and ski n in the Eurysacium 1 3 drachmas; each party is to contribute half these sums. Of the victims sacrificed to the hero at the saltpan he is to take the ski n and th e leg. A portion fro m eac h part y is to be distributed to the priests and priestesses in the shrines where each are priests. They are to distribute the loaves from Sciras in the following way, once they have taken out from th e total number thos e which it is ancestral custom to exempt: a loaf for the herald, a loaf for the priestess of Athena, a loaf for the priest of Heracles, a loaf to the priestess of Pandrosus and

5

l86 37

. D E G R E E O F TH E A T H E N I A N GENOS O F TH E S A L A M I N I O I

37- D E G R E E O F TH E A T H E N I A N GENOS O F TH E S A L A M I N I O I 18

Aglaurus, to the basket-bearer ofKourotropkos als o a loaf, to the oarsmen a loaf; of the rest each party is to have a half share. 47 The y shall allo t an archo n in tur n fro m eac h grou p to join with the priestess and the herald in appointing th e oschophoroi and deipnophoroi i n the ancestra l manner. Bot h groups ar e t o write thes e things up o n a common stele an d se t it up i n th e temple of Athena Sciras. The sam e man i s to serve as priest for Eurysaces and for the hero at the saltpan. If there is any need to d o building wor k in the shrines , they are t o d o it jointly, each group contributing half the costs. 56 I n the archonshi p o f Ghariclides, the Salaminioi of the Seven Tribes provide d th e archon . Al l the writte n record s ar e t o be commo n t o both . Th e lesse e i s to wor k th e lan d unti l the time for which he leased the land expires, paying half the rent t o eac h group . Eac h grou p i s to undertake in tur n th e preliminary sacrific e befor e th e contest . Each i s to take half the meat and the skins. The due s of the herald ar e to belong to Thrasycles according to ancestral custom. All other claims, whether against individuals or groups, up to the month of Boedromion in the archonship of Ghariclides are to be dropped . 69 Whe n Diphilo s so n o f Diopeithes o f Sunium wa s archo n o f the Salaminioi, the following of the Salaminioi fro m Suniu m swore the oath: Diopeithes son of Phasyrcides, Philoneos son of Ameinonicus, Ghalcideus son of Andromenes, Ghariades son o f Gharicles, Theophanes so n o f Zophanes, Hegias son of Hegesias, Ameinias son of Philinos. When Antisthenes son of Antigenes of Acharnae wa s archon o f the Salaminioi , th e following too k the oat h fro m th e Seve n Tribes : Thrasycle s son o f Thrason o f Boutadae, Stratopho n so n o f Straton o f Agryle, Melittius son of Execestides of Boutadae, Aristarchus son o f Democles o f Acharnae, Arceo n so n o f Eumelides of Acharnae, Ghaerestratu s so n o f Panclide s o f Epicephisia , Demon son of Demaretus of Agryle. 80 Archeneo s proposed: in order that the Salaminioi may always make the holy sacrifices to the gods and heroes in the ancestral manner an d tha t what is done may confor m to the terms on which th e arbitrator s reconcile d bot h partie s an d t o whic h those elected swore oaths, be it decreedby the Salaminioi that Aristarchus the archon shal l inscribe all the sacrifices and th e prices o f the victims on the stele on which ar e th e settlement terms, in order that those who are archons at any time in the future fro m bot h group s may kno w what money it is necessary for each to contribute for all the sacrifice s fro m th e ren t

7

l88 37

. D E G R E E O F TH E A T H E N I A N GENOS O F TH E S A L A M I N I O I

This is the longest of all extant documents from a n Athenian genos, and a s such vital evidence i n the dispute d questions of the origins , nature, an d function s o f the genos (see Parker , Athenian Religion, 56-66, S. D. Lambert, C(P xli x 1999 , 484-9 a t 484-7). We know of more than fifty Athenian gene, and some twenty-five can more or less certainly provide priests for city cults. It is not improbable that al l gene in fact ha d culti c

37- D E G R E E O F TH E A T H E N I A N GENOS O F TH E S A L A M I N I O I l8

g

of the lan d a t th e Heraclium , an d t o se t up th e stele in th e Eurysacium. 85 I n Mounychion: a t Porthmus, to Kourotrophos a goat, 10 dr.; to lolaus a sheep burnt whole, 15 dr.; to Alcmene a sheep, 12 dr.; to Maia a sheep, 12 dr.; to Heracles an ox, 70 dr.; to the hero at the saltpan a sheep, 15 dr.; to the hero at Antisara a piglet, 3'/a dr.; to the hero Epipyrgidius a piglet, 3'/a dr.; to Ion to sacrifice a shee p every other year. Wood fo r the sacrifice s includin g those for which the cit y gives money according to the kyrbeis, 10 dr. On th e eighteenth to Eurysaces a sow, 40 dr. Wood for the sacrifices and for other purposes, 3 dr. 88 I n Hecatombaion : a t the Panathenaea , t o Athena a sow, 40 dr. Wood for the sacrifices and other purposes, 3 dr. 89 I n Metageitnion: on the seventh to Apollo Patroios a sow, 40 dr.; to Let o a piglet, 3'A dr. ; to Artemis a piglet, 3'A dr. ; to Athena Agelaas a piglet, 3'A dr. Woo d fo r the sacrifice s an d for other purposes, 3'A dr. 90 I n Boedromion: to Poseidon Hippodromios a sow, 40 dr.; to the hero Phaiax a piglet, 3'A dr.; to the hero Teucer a piglet, 3'A dr. ; to the her o Nausiru s a piglet, 3'A dr . Woo d fo r the sacrifices and for other purposes, 3'A dr. 92 I n Pyanopsion: on the sixth to Theseus a sow, 40 dr; for other things, 3 dr.; at the Apaturia to Zeus Phratrios a sow, 40 dr. Wood for the sacrifices and for other purposes, 3 dr. 93 I n Maimakterion : for Athena Scira s a pregnant ewe , 12 dr.; for Sciru s a sheep, 15 dr.; wood for the altar, 3 dr. 94 Tota l that it is necessary that both spen d on all the sacrifices , 530 dr. 3 obols. They are to sacrifice thes e in common fro m the rents of the land a t the Heraclium a t Sunium, each party contributing money for all the sacrifices . 95 I f anyone makes, or if any archon puts to the vote, a proposal to rescind any of these or diverts the money elsewhere, he is to be liable t o scrutin y by the whole genos and th e priests on the same basis, and privately also to prosecution by any of the Salaminioi who wishes.

responsibilities (and that al l archaic public priests were provided b y gene). Gene were certainly descent groups; most had name s of the patronymic form, ending in -idai (as with the Eumolpidai who were jointly responsible for cult at Eleusis with the Kerykes). Some name s related to functio n (s o the Kerykes, 'heralds'), a link which suggest s a group forme d initially to perform a particular duty . Aristotle treats gene primarily a s

190 37

. D E G R E E O F TH E A T H E N I A N GENOS O F TH E S A L A M I N I O I

communities (Pol. 1.1252 B 17—18 with Philochorus FGrH^zQ F 35), and th e Salaminioi share with just two other firmly attested gene, the Goliei s and th e Gephisieis, a name with geographical reference . It may well be that not all gene had the same origin. The Goliei s probably were responsible for a cult connected to the locality to which their name referred, the cult of Aphrodite Golias, but the Salaminioi ar e responsible for four cults, located not on Salamis but in central Athens (the sanctuary of Eurysaces on the hill just west of the Agora where the inscription was erected, 1. 85, seems to be their main meeting place), at or near Phaleron, and perhaps a t Sunium. There is no certain evidenc e that any of their cult activities took place on the islan d of Salamis, although Eurysaces, as son of Aias, was associated with that island and the name Scira was apparently anothe r name for Salamis: Herodotus vin. 94 notes a cult of Athena Sciras on Salamis , but th e sacrifice s t o Athena Scira s mentioned her e were held at her shrin e at Phaleron a s is shown by their close association with the Oschophoria (11 . 41-52). In literary texts 'Salaminios' is used to denote a person from th e island rather than a member o f the genos, and th e existenc e of two different bodie s of people with the sam e name i s unexpected (but compare th e Deceleieis , 5), but th e evidenc e for any links between members of the genos and the island remains tantalisingly slight (see Lambert i n %PE cxxv). The lin k with festivals more or less certainly of great antiquity argues for an origi n that i s at least pre-Gleisthenic, but th e genos'& conception o f itself had change d subsequently: the Salaminioi her e have two branches, Salaminio i wh o belonged t o the deme Sunium, and Salaminioi who were scattered overmuch of the rest of Attica and belonged to seven tribes, that is, presumably, seve n out of the ten Gleistheni c tribes. Each branch has its own archon (69-70 , 74), and thi s inscription records the formal division by arbitrators of rights, duties, and property between the two branches. LI. 1—6 7 recor d th e identit y o f the arbitrators , an d the n thei r proposal . I t mus t have been inscribed in consequence of a. genos decision, but i n this case the decisio n to inscribe is not itsel f recorded (contras t 11. 80—2) . Five arbitrators ar e named , the number a measure of the importance of the judgement: private arbitrations recorded in the orators use one, two, three, or four arbitrators (Scafuro , 130) . The arbitrators who come from fou r differen t denies , are unlikely to be themselves Salaminioi since none is from Sunium , but one is from Acharnae, a deme from which some Salaminioi 'of the Seve n Tribes' came. The arbitrator s decid e that genos priesthoods, which ar e evidently held fo r life , shoul d continu e t o b e allotte d fro m bot h branche s an d o n the existin g conditions, which are subsequentl y set out in detail, but the y order genos property t o be divided equally between the two branches. Eac h branch is to contribute equally to sacrifices fo r which the genos pays, but both branches ar e to enjoy in common th e sacrifice s pai d fo r by th e city . Genos admission procedures (fo r which see [Dem.] LIX. Neoera 59, And. i. Myst. 127) , are evidently not subjec t to dispute. Th e names of the seven members of each branch who took oaths to abide by the decisions of the arbitrator s ar e recorded, and the n the proposal o f one Archeneos to inscribe the calenda r o f the traditiona l sacrifice s (alread y partly assume d in the arbitrators ' listing of priestly perquisites), and that calendar. (O n sacred calendars generally, see on 62.) The inscriptio n conclude s with an 'entrenchmen t clause' (see above, p. 102)

37- D E G R E E O F TH E A T H E N I A N GENOS O F TH E S A L A M I N I O I IQ

I

threatening scrutiny of and cour t action against anyone who proposes or puts to the vote breaking the agreement or diverting money to other purposes. The descriptio n o f the dutie s of the genos reveals the complexit y of ritual respon sibility. Ther e are som e religious events which are interna l t o the genos, others that the genos performs for the city and a t city expense. Among the former are the sacrific e of a pig on the occasio n of the Panathenae a (88—9) , a sacrific e on the occasio n of the phratry festival of the Apaturia, an d sacrifice s to Poseidon Hippodromius, Her o Phaiax, Hero Teucer, and Hero Nausirus, perhaps on the occasion of the Gybernesia at Phalero n (se e Parker, 314—15) . We shoul d perhaps envisag e the sacrifice s b y this genos at the Panathenaea bein g held at the Eurysaceum in Athens. Athenians needed to be together with their fellow demesme n at the occasio n of the main Panathenai c sacrifice if they were to receive their festival payment or their share of the meat (Dem. XLIV. Leochares 37, 81. 24), and members of this genos clearly came from many differen t denies. In the case of the Apaturia, this was celebrated at different locations by differ ent phratries, and to make a common sacrific e practical thi s genos must have been a sub-group of a single phratry descent group; this implies either that it was historically later in formation than the phratry descent group or that it or/and the phratry was a fictive creation not originally formed from commo n descent. The sacrifice s which the g«B0.y performs at public expense must be deduced from th e differences between the list of priesthoods and the list of ancestral sacrifices. The genos selects and provides 'oschopkoroi and deipnophoroi' (47-50) , and indee d receives money through thei r agency (21) . The Oschophori a celebrate d the retur n o f Theseus afte r slaying the Minotaur, and we know quite a lot about its rituals (see Jacoby, FGrHm. b. Supplement i. 286-9, f°r tne evidence, Vidal-Naquet, Black Hunter, for its interpretation): it began with a procession from Athens to the shrine of Athena Sciras made u p of boys and led by two boys disguised as girls and carrying the branches (the oschophoroi referred t o in 49); it also included a race i n which two youths from eac h tribe com peted and for which the victor was rewarded with a drink made o f oil, wine, honey, cheese, and flour. The festiva l ended with a revel back to Athens. Yet the only sign of the festiva l in the sacrifical calenda r here is a 'pre-sacrifice' (61 ) either that of a pig to Theseus at what has been regarded as the most probable date for the festival in Pyanopsion (92), or that of a pregnant shee p to Athena Sciras at a conceivable alternative date i n Maimacterion (se e Parker, 315—16); all else must have been finance d b y th e city. Similarly, in the case of'the priestess ofPandrosus and Aglaurus' and 'the basketbearer of Kourotrophos', we hear ofloaves being given (45—6) but of nothingmore in the way o f sacrifices tha n a goat to Kourotrophos: th e substantia l sacrifices t o these deities were evidentl y funded entirel y by the city . Curiously our later evidence for city cult differentiates between the three deities and makes no mention of any Salaminian connection (see Parker, 311; Lambert, ^PEcxxv). The Salaminioi meet and sacrifice on at least seven or eight occasions in six different months of the year (there may have been further meetings for city-funded sacrifices). It was presumably o n such an occasion that they agreed to this arbitration an d conducted th e busines s of renting propertie s (cf . 58-60), allottin g priesthoods (12-16), electing archons, and admittin g and honouring members (as in IG n2 123 2 from th e

IQ2 37

- D E G R E E O F TH E A T H E N I A N GENOS O F TH E S A L A M I N I O I

mid fourt h century). The bigges t gmos-oikfoccasion is in Mounychion (April ) when they hold multiple sacrifices, including the sacrifice at Porthmus of an ox to Heracles, the only occasion when the priest of Heracles sacrifices for the genos itself. The locatio n of Porthmus is disputed. It has traditionally been located near Sunium (AA xxxi i 1977, Mel. 206—7 ; xxxiv 1979 , Mel. 161—73 ) but Lohman n ha s recentl y argued fo r a location near Piraeus, a location which would mean that the genos never certainly met in Sunium. On the :8th of the same month the genos assembles again, this time in the city centre, to sacrifice to Eurysaces, again the only annual duty of the priest of Eurysaces for the genos. Two months later the genos sacrifices to Athena at the Panathenaea, an d in eac h o f the followin g two months (Augus t and September ) sacrifice s a so w an d piglets. The tw o months afte r tha t se e two further pi g sacrifices an d th e sacrific e o f two sheep . Two o f the sacrifice s i n this four-month period tak e place a t Phaleron , but the location of the other three is not known. The genos did not meet or sacrifice at all, a t least not at its own expense, in December t o March inclusive. The Salaminio i calculate thei r annua l expenditur e a t 530 dr. 3 obols (o r perhaps 53 3 dr.) (94), and reckon to pay for this from th e rent s of land (24-5 , 94) . Some 59 dr. of this is the cost of the priestl y perquisites, the res t the cos t of the 2 2 (23 every other year) sacrificial animals. The assumptio n here, as in some other sacrificial calendars, of a fixed price for livestock is to be noted, as is the comparison with the number of animals sacrificed by denies: Erchia sacrificed 56 animals in a year, Thoricus somethin g over 42. (On sacrificial animals see further o n 81.) The tendenc y fo r private dispute s in Athens to ru n o n an d o n ha s been muc h commented o n by scholar s recently (Scafuro, 129-31) . This disput e is no exception . A century after this inscription was erected the Salaminioi put up anothe r stele in the sanctuary of Eurysaces recording another agreement between what had now become not branches o f a single genos but separat e gene. It is clear that during the classical and

38 Athens honours Menelaus the Pelagonian, 363

2

The uppe r part of a stek with a relief a t th e top , foun d o n the Athenian Acropolis; no w in the Epigraphica l Museum. Phot. Kern, Inscriptions Graecae, Taf. 23 ; Kirchner, Imagines' 2, Taf . 2 5 Nr. 54 ; Meyer, Die griechischen Urkundenreliefs, Taf . 1 7 A 56; Lawton, Reliefs, pi . 1 2 no. 2 3 (the last two, relie f and 11 . i— 8 only). Attic-Ionic, retaining the ol d o for o u once in 1 . 22; 11. 1— 3 in larger letters. IG n^ 110 ; SIG* 174 ; Tod 143* ; M. J. Osborne , Naturalisation, T 56.

37- D E G R E E O F TH E A T H E N I A N GENOS O F TH E S A L A M I N I O I 19

3

early hellenistic period th e two groups o f the Salaminio i were growing increasingl y apart: but how did the two groups form in the first place? Scholars have offere d variou s speculations about th e early history of the Salamin ioi. Tw o aspect s of the genos cause particular surprise : that a genos linked to marginal Salamis should be central in the cult life o f the city, and that it should have a large an d distinct part of its members linked to Sunium. Som e scholars reject al l links between the Salaminioi an d Salamis (so Taylor, as earlier Ferguson and Robertson). Scholars who accep t tha t ther e is a link diffe r a s to whether they think it more plausible tha t the genos was made u p o f men wh o originate d i n Salamis , ha d moved , perhaps a s early a s the Dar k Ages , to Attica (s o e.g. Humphreys, Osborne) , an d ha d becom e settled by the end of the sixth century in various denies, or of men who originated in various parts o f Attica but move d to Salamis (s o Lambert). The forme r view makes it possible to believe that the genos was truly a kin group, descende d from a relatively small number of'original ' members. The latter view would give a striking case of the creation of a genos in the sixth century, and would involve families that settled on Salamis taking pre-existing cult responsibilities with them, transferring them t o the new group of which they became part, but never ceasing to think of themselves as groups connected to their place of origin. Our inabilit y conclusively to resolve this argument is a measure of our ignorance abou t both gene and Salamis . Of th e 1 8 certain o r probable members o f the genos (Lambert, %PE cxxv. 109-14 ) Hegias so n of Hegesias o f Sunium, brothe r o f two rich an d famou s fourth-century politicians Hegesandrus and Hegesippus (see APF&vfti), i s the only one from a known wealthy family. Ther e has been som e speculation that Alcibiades was a member o f this genos, since Plato has him sa y that his family traces its descent to Eurysaces, bu t no other member o f the deme Scambonidae is known to have been a member o f this genos.

Menelaus the Pelagonian, benefactor. 2 I n th e archonshi p o f Ghariclides [363/2] ; in the sixt h prytany, ofOeneis. 4 Resolve d by the counci l an d th e people ; Oenei s wa s the pry tany; Nicostratu s wa s secretary ; Gharicle s o f Leuconoe wa s

194 3^

' A T H E N S H O N O U R S M E N E L A U S TH E P E L A G O N I A N , 363 2

In 368 Athens began a war in the north, to recover Amphipolis (colonized in 437/6 after earlier attempts but lost in 424/3) and the Chersonese (in which Athens had ha d an interest since the mid sixt h century, but wher e Athens was encountering rivalr y from th e Thracian king Gotys). The Athenian s were to claim that the Persian King and all the Greeks had recognized their claim to Amphipolis and the Chersonese (e.g. Dem. xix. Embassy 137 , ix. Phil. Hi. 16) : it is hard to find an occasion or occasions when that might have happened, bu t i t is possible that on e or more of the common peace treaties state d that th e participant s wer e 't o possess what belonge d t o them ' (e^ei v rd eavrojv: cf . e.g. Isoc . vm.Peace 16) and tha t what we read in Athenian speeche s is a tendentiou s interpretation o f that. A much-reduced for m o f the Ghalcidia n state based on Olynthus hadjoined the Athenian League in 375 (22.101-2): it perhaps fel t threatened by Athens' revived interest in Amphipolis and withdrew from th e League £.367 (Gargill , The Second Athenian League, 168) . Timotheus , the son of Gonon , who was general frequently from 378/ 7 until he was condemned afte r refusin g to fight at Embata in 355, succeeded Iphicrates in the western sector of the war in 365/4. He did not captur e Amphipolis (whic h Philip o f Macedon wa s to take for himself in 357) or Olynthus, but h e did take several cities of Ghalcidice, in particular Olynthus ' near neighbour Potidae a (D.S. xv. 81 . vi, cf. Dem. xxm. Arist. 149-51, Isoc. xv. Antid. 108, 113: for Athens' cleruchy at Potidaea see Tod 14 6 ~ Harding 58). This decree belongs to the winter of 363/2, and presumably results from the campaigning seaso n of 363. Pelagonia was part of Upper Macedonia, north-west of the Thermaic Gulf. Menelaus was probably relate d to P— king of the Pelagonians, whom the Athenians hon-

38. ATHEN

S H O N O U R S M E N E L A U S TH E P E L A G O N I A N , 3 6 3

2_

:

95

chairman. Satyru s proposed: 6 Sinc e Timotheus the genera l demonstrate s that Menelaus the Pelagonian i s both joining i n th e wa r himsel f and providin g money for the war against the Ghalcidians and against Amphipolis, be i t decree d by th e council : Brin g him forwar d to th e people a t the firs t assembly , and contribut e the opinio n o f the council to the people, that the council resolves: 12 Prais e him because he is a good man an d does what good he can to the people of Athens. Also the generals who are in the region of Macedonia shall take care of him, so that if he needs anything he may obtain it; and it shall be possible for him to find from the people of Athens any other benefit if he can. 18 Als o invite Menelaus to hospitality in the prytanewn tomorrow. 20 Satyru s proposed: 20 I n other respects in accordance with the council; but, since the forebears o f Menelaus als o were benefactors of the peopl e o f Athens, Menelaus also shall be a benefactor

oured apparently 01371/0 (IGif 190 : date D. M. Lewis, ,B&4xlrx 1954,38—9; P[atraus] suggested by Papazoglou, Les VillesdeMacedoineal'epoqmrommne, 276—9) . Soon after th e enactment of this decree he probably fled to Athens and received Athenian citizenship, and i s the 'Menelau s son of Arrhabaeus of Athens' honoured by Ilium i n To d 149, and the Menelaus mentioned as a commander o f cavalry against Philip in Dem. iv. Phil. i. 27.' For the period i n which the Macedonians cooperate d with Athens in their northern war cf . Dem. n. 01. ii. 14, Polyaen. in. 10. xiv. Satyrus' proboukuma provided fo r Menelaus to receive 'any other benefit' fro m th e people (11 . 17-18), and Satyru s himself added the title of benefactor in an amendmen t (cf. Rhodes , Boule, 278-9: this decree should have been mentioned with SEGx 27 6 on p. 279). This decree is interesting from a secretarial point of view. Until at earliest 368/7 the principal secretar y of the Athenian state was a member of the council, serving for one prytany, and appointed from a tribe other than the current prytany in such a way that each tribe provided on e secretary during the year (cf. on 34); from a t latest the year of this decree, 363/2, the secretary was not a member o f the council and served for a whole year (this decree and 39 were enacted in different prytanie s but have the same secretary); the chang e i n the method o f appointment fro m electio n to sortition (Ath. 1 Beloc h identified as his father th e Arrhabaeus of Arist. Pol. v. 131 1 B 1 2 an d a s his grandfather th e Arrha baeus of Thuc.iv. 79. ii etc. (GG' 2, ill. ii. 76—7); but Thucydides' Arrhabaeus, at any rate, was king of Lyncestis, to the south of Pelagonia, Arrhabaeus is a common name in the region, and Hammond was right to protest against this further identification (Hammond [ & Griffith], ii . 19—20, cf. Osborne, Naturalisation, iii—iv. 61 n. 174) .

196 3 8

. ATHEN

S H O N O U R S M E N E L A U S TH E P E L A G O N I A N , 3 6 3 2

Pol. 54. iii) presumably took place at the same time; ironically the title 'secretary by the prytany' (ypa^^arevg Kara Trpvraveiav), use d inAth. Pol., is attested as an alternative to 'secretary of the council' only after the change (e.g. 48). The chang e to a longer term of office an d to appointment from al l citizens is presumably to be see n as a small step in the direction of greater efficiency. Se e Rhodes, Boule, 134—8. The secretar y responsible for the publication o f this decree, Nicostratus, belonged to a family with a tradition of public service (seestemma PA, ii. p. 390; but IG n2 1700.

39 Athenian arrangements for lulls, 363

2

The uppe r par t o f a stele., foun d o n th e sout h slop e o f th e Athenia n Acropolis ; no w i n th e Epigraphica l Museum. Attic-Ionic, sometimes retaining the old e for et and o for ov (but TroAe at the end of 1. 7 is 'probably a careless omission or abbreviator y shortening': Threatte, Grammar., i. 301); 11. 2—5 6 stoichedon 43, 57 sqq. stoichedon 45. IGii2 in; SIG* 173 ; Tod 142* ; Svt. 289. Trans. Harding55. See also D. M . Lewis, BSAlvii 1962 , 1—4 ; Gargill , The Second Athenian League, 134—40; E. Ruschenbusch, ^PExlvii i 1982, 177—83 ; P. Brun, ^PElxxvi 1989, 121—38 .

38. ATHEN

S H O N O U R S M E N E L A U S TH E P E L A G O N I A N , 3 6 3

2_

197

195—7 = Agora, xv 43. 209—11 , show s that th e younge r Philostratu s wa s th e so n of Nicostratus, no t o f his brother Philotades) . Nicostratus, one o f the first secretaries of the ne w kind, seems to have ha d a distinctive style in the formulatio n o f decrees: K. J. Dover has pointed out that 11.16-17, deferring the finite verb of a clause until afte r an inserted sub-clause, are paralleled i n another decre e of the sam e year, 39. 17-1 9 (TPS1981, 1-1 4 at 8-ii = his Greek and the Greeks, 31-41 at 35-9, cf. SEGxxxii 60) ; see further o n 39.

Gods. 2 I n the archonship of Ghariclides [363/2]; Aiantis was the prytany; Nicostratus o f Pallene wa s secretary ; Philittiu s o f Butadae wa s chairman. Resolve d by the council an d the people. Aristophon proposed: 5 Sinc e the lulietans whom th e Athenians reinstated demonstrate that the city of lulis owes to the city of Athens three talents from the money calculated in accordance with the decree of the people of Athens proposed by Menexenus, be it resolved by the people: 9 Th e lulietan s shal l give back this money to the Athenians in the month Scrirophorion i n the archonship o f Ghariclides. If they do not give it back in the time stated, it shall be exacted from the m by the men electe d by the people to exact from th e islanders the money that they owe, in whatever way they know, and there shall also join with them in the exaction the generals of lulis Echetimus and Nicoleos and Satyrus and Glaucon an d Heraclides . 17 S o tha t th e oath s an d th e agreemen t ma y hav e forc e whic h Ghabrias th e general agree d an d swor e to the Gean s on behal f of the Athenian s an d thos e of the Gean s whom th e Athenian s reinstated, they shall be written up, by the generals of lulis who were state d in the decre e t o join i n exactin g th e money , o n a stone stele and placed in the sanctuar y of Pythian Apollo, as they have been written up in Garthaea. They shall be written up also

ig8

39. ATHENIA N ARRANGEMENT S FO R IULIS , 36 3 2

39 {a.}ALaLcava Hille r vo n Gaertringe n ap. IG ii 2, approve d ZGPJV , i : Jl[y]atata)i< a Hille r op. SIG ?I. 49 [/3o]AetM . Feyel, RPhbati = Hxix 1945, 152—7 , taking his CK^T/TOS /3oAi J to be not the Athenian counci l but a joint court of Athenians and allies ; but ei < Keaii should be balanced by Athens as a whole, and /3oAi J would not be used as he supposed.

39. A T H E N I A N A R R A N G E M E N T S FOR I U L I S , 33 , 2

by th e secretar y of the counci l o n a stele in th e sam e way an d placed o n the Acropolis, and for the writing-up th e treasurer of the people shall give 20 drachmas from th e fund for expenditure on decrees. 27 Sinc e those of the lulietans who broke the oath s and th e agree ment and made war against the people of Athens and the Geans and the other allies, and when they had been condemned to death returned to Geo s and overturne d the stelm on which were written the agreement with Athens and the names of those who had contravened the oath s and the agreement; and o f the friend s o f the Athenians whom the people had reinstated they killed some and condemne d other s to death an d confiscate d their propert y contrary to the oaths and th e agreemen t (th e latter being Saty rides and Timoxenu s an d Miltiades) , because they had spoke n against Antipate r whe n th e Athenia n counci l ha d condemne d him to death for killing the Athenian proxenos Aeson contrary to the decrees of the Athenian people, and contravenin g the oaths and the agreement: 41 The y shall be exile d from Geo s an d Athen s and thei r propert y shall be public propert y o f the people o f lulis; and thei r names shall be declare d forthwith in the presence of the people t o th e secretary by the generals of lulis who are visiting Athens. 45 I f any of those declared assert in dispute that they are not among those men, it shall be permitted to them to establish guarantors with the generals of lulis that they will submit to trial within thirty days in accordanc e wit h the oath s and th e agreement , in Geo s and in Athens the city of appeal. 49 Satyride s and Timoxenu s an d Miltiade s shall return to Geo s to their own property. 51 Prais e those of the lulietan s who hav e come , Demetrius, Heraelides, Echetimus , Galliphantus ; prais e als o Satyride s an d Timoxenus an d Miltiades ; praise als o the cit y of Garthaea an d Aglocritus; and invite them to hospitality in the prytanewn tomorrow. 57 Th e followin g was agreed an d swor n by the Athenia n general s with the cities in Geos and by the allies: 58 I shal l not harbou r grudges fo r what i s past agains t an y o f th e Geans, no r shal l I kill or make a n exil e any o f the Gean s who abide b y the oath s an d thi s agreement, but I shal l bring them into the allianc e like the othe r allies. But if any one commits an act o f revolution i n Geo s contrar y t o th e oath s and th e agree ment, I shall not allo w him by any craft o r contrivance a s far as possible. 64 I f an y on e doe s not wis h to liv e i n Geos , I shal l allo w hi m t o

99:

200

39. ATHENIA N ARRANGEMENT S FO R IULIS , 36 3 2

83—4 Krech , De Cmteri^riaiatiaruiv avvayuiyri, 106 : unrestored edd.

On Geos , the first substantial island to the south-east of Attica, there were four cities: Garthaea, Goresia , lulis, and Poeessa . Fifth-century texts regularly refer t o Geo s as a whole; but i t could be argued tha t the principle o f the Peace of Antalcidas that all islands and cities should be independent ought to be applied to the individual cities of Geos. In the list of m embers of the Secon d Athenian League, Poeessa appears o n its own on the front o f the stele while the other three appear on the side under the rubric 'of Geos' (22. i. 82 insert, 119—22); but 'th e Geans' incompletely repaid a Delphic loan in the 370 5 (28. 12 , 11 3 = / . Delos 98. A. 12 , B. 3), and perhap s £.364 , in the perio d o rebellion against Athens which precedes our text, 'the Geans' established rights of isopohteia with Histiaea and Eretria, and had a federal council and officials (Tod 141 = Svt. 287; SEGxiv^o = Svt. 232). A list of names in 7G xii. v 609 is interpreted by Ruschenbusch as representing a short-lived amalgamation o f coastal Goresia and inland luli s £.360, by Brun as representing the federation of all the cities £.364. In a decree whose content suggests a date about the time of Athens' Social War, 356—35 5 (but see on 29) Athens was to insist that 'the Geans shall be governed by cities' (woXiTeveadai K[eiov]s Kara woXeis: IG n2 404. 13 = SE G xxxix 73. 14 (suggesting a date o f 363/2)); and i n dealing with Geos on a commercial matter, probably in the 3505, Athens treated the

39. ATHENIA N ARRANGEMENT S FOR IULIS , 363 , 2

201

live whereve r h e wishe s in th e allie d citie s and enjo y hi s ow n property. 66 T o thi s I shal l be steadfas t i n my oath , by Zeus, by Athena, b y Poseidon, by Demeter: to him who keeps the oath there shall be much good, but to him who breaks the oath ill. 69 Oath s an d agreemen t o f the citie s in Geo s with th e Athenian s and th e allie s an d thos e o f th e Gean s who m th e Athenian s reinstated: 71 I shall be a n all y of the Athenians an d th e allies , and I shall not defect fro m th e Athenians and the allie s myself nor shal l I allow another a s far as possible. 73 Al l private an d publi c lawsuits against Athenian s I shal l mak e subject to appeal in accordance wit h the agreement, as many as are for more than a hundred drachmas . 75 I f any one dares to wrong those of the Geans who have returned, or the Athenians or any of the allies, contrary to the oaths and the agreement, I shall not allow him by any craft o r contrivance, bu t shall go in support with all my strength as far as possible. 79 T o thi s I shal l be steadfas t i n my oath , by Zeus, by Athena, b y Poseidon, by Demeter: to him who keeps the oath there shall be much good, but to him who breaks the oath ill. 82 Thi s wa s swor n b y thos e o f th e Gean s who m th e Athenian s reinstated: 82 I shall not harbour grudges for anything tha t i s past, nor shal l I kill any of the Geans cities separately, with no mention o f Poeessa (40). It appear s tha t afte r th e Peac e of Antalcidas Athens preferred to deal with the cities separately but som e of the Geans preferred to think of themselves as belonging to a single community; the usage of our text is conditioned by the fac t that the first round o f trouble coul d be represented as involving Geos as a whole but the second was limited to lulis. The backgroun d t o this decree is probably to be sought in the Theban naval pro gramme mentione d unde r 364/ 3 by D.S . xv . 78 . iv—79. i (cf. Isoc. v. Phil. 53). Th e Thebans will have encouraged opponent s of Athens in Geos; an initial revolt (involving at any rate Garthaea (1 . n) ; the othe r cities are not mentioned) was dealt with b the Athenia n Ghabrias , and th e agreemen t o f 11. 5 7 sqq. was set up i n Garthaea an lulis. There was no further trouble in Garthaea (cf. 11.54-5), but in lulis men who had gone into exile returned, demolishe d the text of the agreemen t an d secure d judicial verdicts which Athen s coul d regar d a s infringing th e origina l settlemen t (11. 27—41). After Athens had agai n recovered control, with the support o f its sympathizers, Aristophon, wh o (thoug h i n hi s seventies : APF] ha d bee n t o Geo s a s a general (schol . Aesch. i. Tim. 6 4 (14 5 Dilts ) cf . Hansen, Sovereignty, 3 1 no. 10) , proposed th e furthe r settlement embodied in this decree.

202

39. A T H E N I A N A R R A N G E M E N T S F O R I U L I S , 3 6 3 '2

The tid e of the me n electe d to exact money from th e islander s (11. 12-14) suggests that Geos' debt was part of a larger phenomenon, perhaps outstanding syntaxeis due to the League (cf. the similar language in 52.16—17). The stipulatio n that an outstanding debt is to be paid in Scirophorion, th e last month of the Athenian year, suggests that this decree is to be dated towards the end o f 363/2. That suggests a very tight timetable: if Diodorus' dat e fo r the Theba n naval programme i s right, the initia l revolt may have been earlier than that; alternatively, Diodorus' date may be wrong. For problems which could arise from the return of exiles cf. in general 84, 85, 101 ; and o n how states dealt with the rival claims to property o f former owners who ha d been exile d and ne w owner s who ha d bough t th e propert y i n good fait h R . Loni s in Goukowsk y & Brixhe (edd.), Hellemka Symmikta, 91—109 : in thi s case opponents o f Athens lose their property, supporters who are reinstated recover their property. For difficulties i n Athen s afte r th e democrati c restoratio n o f 403 se e P . Oxy. xii i 1606 . 1-238 = Lys. fr. i Gernet & Bizos; Isoc. xvin. Call. 23; cf. Ath. Pol. 39. iii-iv, 40. iii. For trouble caused when returning exiles try to change the political stance of their state cf. e.g. Megara in 424, where the democrats would rather hav e given in to Athens than take back the exiles, but their plot miscarried, and the exiles returned and established an extreme oligarchy (Thuc. iv. 66-74); Phlius in the 3805, where pro-Spartan exiles secured first Spartan pressure to obtain their reinstatement and then Spartan military intervention when they claimed tha t the y were unfairly treated on their return (X. H. v. ii. 8—io, iii. 10—17, 21—5) . For th e killing of a.proxenos cf. an episod e in Gorcyra in 427, where an Athenian proxenos called Peithias was first put o n trial but afte r h e was acquitted he and others were murdered (Thuc. in. 70. iii-vi). The origina l settlement , after th e firs t crisis , imposed a generta l amnest y an d allowed men wh o fel t insecur e in Geo s to live in an y member stat e of the League . However, Antipater, th e man wh o killed the Athenian proxenos, was condemned t o death by the Athenian council (11. 37—41): the council could not sentence an Athenian citizen to death; probably there was no specific statemen t of its powers with regar d to non-citizens, and if the counci l had bee n 'mad e kynd (give n authority, without a clear statement of how great its authority was) to investigate the killing that may have increased the uncertainty; but in any case in a crisis legal safeguards might fail to work (cf. Rhodes, Boule, 180). Also all lawsuits against Athenians were to be made 'subjec t

39. ATHENIA N ARRANGEMENT S FO R IULIS , 36 3 2

203

to appeal' (i.e. to Athens: 11. 73-5) (for the Athenia n distinctio n between private an public lawsuits, dikai zndgraphai, see on 40). There is more that we should like to know: was Antipater taken to Athens and tried and executed there? After the further trouble in lulis, Athens still punished only a limited number of dis sidents and gave them the opportunity to plead that they had been wrongly identified as such. Those who did so were to be tried 'in Geos and in Athens the city of appeal' (1 49). 'Declared'i n 11.42,45, is an allusion to the procedure ofapographe, 'declaration' , of property to be confiscated, and to a law-suit in connection with confiscations (cf. Har rison, Th e Law o f Athens, ii. 211—17 ; Osborne, i7//iS'cv 1985, 40—58 at 44—7) . The wor d ekkletos, referringto appeal or transfer, appears also in /Gn2 404.17 = ffiGxxxix 73.18, and in a decree for Naxos (IG n 2 179. 14); the regular Athenian term ephesis appears in 40.21, and the adjective ephesmosin. /Gir2179.16. Transfer of lawsuits is not specificall y renounced in the promises of 22. 20—41, but it was a practice for which the Athenians were notorious in the Delian League (e.g. [X.] Ath. Pol. i. 16—18), and the revival of the practice her e will surely have been see n as a breach of the promise o f freedom an d autonomy (despite Gargill, 136-40). Aristophon, the proposer o f the decree , was a leading figure in Athens through out th e first and secon d thirds o f the centur y (cf . Hyp. iv. Em. 28 : see APF, 64-6): he was particularly activ e as a proposer o f decrees, and claime d to have been prosecuted unsuccessfully in seventy-five graphaiparanomon (Aesch . in. Ctes. 194; accordin g to schol . Aesch. i. Tim. 6 4 (145 Dilts) unemended h e was successfull y prosecuted b Hyperides); he appears in a list ofproxenoi o f the Gea n city of Garthaea (IG xii. v 542. 43). Fo r Menexenus, the autho r of the earlie r decree cited in 11. 8-9, see 21. Ghabria (APF, 560-1 ) was frequently general between 390 and 356, when he died at Chios (see on 48): it is possible, but far from certain, that he is to be restored as anotherproxenos of Garthaea (/Gxn. V542.40). For Nicostratus, the secretary responsible for the publication of this decree, see 38. W e ma y not e in addition tha t 11. 27—4 2 contain 'th e mos formidably comple x sentence so far to be found in classical Athenian decrees ' (K. J. Dover, TPS1981, i—1 4 at 8— n = his Greek and the Greeks, 31—41 at 35—9, cf. 5£Gxxxii6o). In fac t th e proposer o r the secretary or the stone-cutter lost control of that comple x sentence, and i n 1. 40 TTO.po\fta\vra ha s been inscribed where the gramma r requires TrapafidvTOS.

40

Athenian regulation of Gean ruddle export, mid fourth century Two joining fragments of a bluish marble stele found on the Acropolis, now in the Epigraphical Museum. Attic-Ionic, retaining ol d o for ov i n TO\L^TOJV (11 . 25 , 26, 37) . Non-stoichedon 63—7 3 letters a line , as restored , average 68 . IGii2 1128 , XII. v 1277 ; Tod 162* . Trans. Austin and Vidal-Naquet , Economic and Social History., no. 8 6 (11 . 9—2 4 only); Meijer and van Nijf , Transport, no. 47 (11. 9—24 only). See alsoj. F. Cherry et al. in Cherry, Davis, &Mantzourani, Landscape Archaeology, 299—303 ; E. Photos-Jones et al., BSAxcii 1997 , 359—72; R. Osborn e i n Hunter an d Edmondson, La w an d Social Status, 75—92.

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5

exporting. .., the prosecutor . .. even i f . .. the Garthaeans have decreed . .. summon th e Athenians to hospitality at the prytaneion. I n orde r tha t . . . a s has been written,.. . are to take care . .. whatever good they can . .. 9 Theogene s proposed: be i t resolved by the counci l an d peopl e o f the Goresians: with regard to what thos e from th e Athenians say, th e expor t o f ruddle shal l b to Athens . .. as it was previously. And s o that th e decree s of the Athenians an d G oresians about ruddle that were made previously shall be valid, it is to be exported in whatever vessel the Athenians single out and in no other vessel, and those who work i t are t o pay t o the shipowner s as a shipping-charg e a fee of one obo l pe r talent. If anyone exports it in any othe r vessel he is to be liable . . . Write up this decree on a stone stele and deposit i t . .. of Apollo, and the law as it was previously shall be valid. Indication (endeixis) t o be to the astynomoi and the astynomoi are to give the vote about it to the court within thirty days. To the man who makes the exposure (phasis) o r indication (endeixis)... o f the halves. If a slave brings the indication , if he is slave of the exporters let him be free an d receive a third; if he is the slav e of

206

40. ATHENIAN REGULATION OF GEAN RUDDLE EXPORT

The general background of Athenian relations with Geos is set out in the commentary on 39. This inscription records Athenian actio n to secure a monopoly in the ruddle trade with three of the citie s of Geos. The to p an d right-han d sid e of the ston e have been lost, and the text is heavily restored; in detail the restorations are insecure, but the genera l conten t i s beyond disput e an d show s this to be bot h a puzzling an d a revealing document. It is puzzling because we know of no obvious reason why Athens should want a monopoly o n Gea n ruddle. I t is revealing because it shows both th e extent to which Athens was prepared to interfere in allies' activities and their policing of them, and the degree of flexibility that was allowed in allies' responses. As 11. 3 9 ff. of the inscriptio n reveal , this is an Athenian decre e recording Athen decision to send five (probably, 11. 40—41) envoys to Geos in order to persuade the cit ies there to submit the ruddle trade t o closer controls. It incorporates parts o f three

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7

someone els e let him be fre e an d . . . Whoever makes the exposur e or indicatio n is to have right o f appeal to Athens. If the Athenians pass any other decree about the securit y of the ruddle, the decree is to be valid once received. The producer s are to pay the fiftieth ta x to the collectors of the fiftieth tax . Invite the Athenians to hospitality at the prytaneion tomorrow. 25 B e it resolved by the council and people of the lulietans: with regard to what those from th e Athenians say, the export of ruddle shall be to Athens and nowhere else, from thi s day. If there is any export elsewhere , the vessel and the property i n the vessel are to be public. Half to go to the person who makes the exposure or indication. If the informant is a slave, let him be free and... have a . .. share of the money. Whoever export s ruddle fro m Geo s is to do so in the vesse l which the Athenians single out. If anyone exports it in any other vessel, he is to be liable . .. If the Athenians pass any other decree about th e securit y of the ruddle , what th e Athenians decree is to be valid. There is to be exemption from taxes... from the month Her maion. Invit e the Athenians to hospitality in the prytaneion. Indictmen t a t Athens is to be to the Eleven, in lulis those responsible for introducing the case are to be t\K prostatai. All who ar e adjudge d to be exportin g contrar y to the law, half their property is to belong to the people o f the lulietans and half to the person making the exposure. The counci l is to write up this decree and place it at the harbour . 39 Th e followin g were chosen: Andron fro m Gerameis , Lysia . . . . . .. fro m Phlya , Euphrosynus from Paeania .

Gean decrees passed in consequence. Was there also a decree of the fourth Gean city of Poeessa on th e los t part o f the stele? Th e relativ e independence o f Poeessa from the othe r three cities (compare 22. 82 and ngfF.) , an d th e absenc e of ruddle sources from it s territory, suggest there may not have been need or occasion for intervention at Poeessa) . At Goresi a it is clear tha t thi s was not th e first such intervention, since previous Athenian an d Goresia n decrees are mentioned and apparentl y reaffirmed . To judge from th e actions of the three cities, the major Athenian concerns were: that particular vessels be identified as the only ones in which ruddle is to be exported; that prosecution of offenders be encouraged by the offering of rewards to prosecutors; and that agreement be secured to accept future Athenian decisions related to the security of the ruddle trade. The contex t of the Athenian interventio n i s not clear . There i s no interna l date ,

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40. ATHENIAN REGULATION OF GEAN RUDDLE EXPORT

and letter forms do no more than indicate that the decree belongs somewhere in the middle of the fourth century. The on e man who is otherwise attested, Euphrosynus of Paeania, appear s in a list of members oftfuasoi o f Heracles dated to the middle of the fourth centur y (^PE cxx v 1999, 98—9) . We d o know quite a lot about Athenian relations with the cities of Geos in the first half of the fourth century (see abov e on 39), but not enough to place this decree precisely. Miltos, translated here a s ruddle, was the word used for ochres, characteristically but no t only for red ochre (red iron oxide mixed with clay and sand). Theophrastus, On Stones, viii. 51—4 , identifie s Gea n ruddle a s th e best , although late r i n antiquit y more reference is made to ruddle from Sinope . It was used to impart (red) colour to a variety of objects, from pottery , to stones used in buildingaaIG?Ito the r used to gather Athenia n citizen s from th e Agora int o the Pny x for the Assembly in the fifth century (Ar. Ach. 21-2, Eccl. 378-9) to triremes (Her. m. 58; but i t was pitch not ruddle that made triremes watertight), and it was also used for medical purposes (Dioscorides, De Mat. Med. v . 96 , 126 . v). The account s from Eleusi s for 329/ 8 (IG ii2 1672 ) sho w expenditure o f 14 dr. 3'/ a obols , 7 dr., an d 2 dr. 3 obols o n ruddle i n three separate prytanies; the on e supplier named is a non-Athenian, but hi s origin is unknown; the price varies between 3 dr. and 3 dr. 3 obols per stater (a stater weighed just over 100 g.). Recent work (Photos-Jones et al.] has show n that ochre s of various colours (yellow and purple, as well as red) were available on Geos, and that the red ochre from Orko s in north-east Geos (close to the border between the territory of lulis and the territory of Garthaea) had very good staining power. Nevertheless, the Athenians also derived ochre fro m th e Lauriu m mines, and, eve n allowing for the highe r qualit y o f Gean ochre, it is hard to se e any functiona l necessity for Athenian impor t o f ochre fro m Geos. We do not know how the Athenian envoys persuaded Garthaea, Goresia, and lulis to conform to their demands. It is hard to see how the agreement to export ruddle only to Athens and i n specified vessel s could be presented as in the Gea n interest, except as a way of avoiding even more direct interference. But the Athenians seem to have obliged th e Gea n citie s to agre e t o thes e measures without actuall y dictatin g thei r laws to them. The decision s of Goresia and lulis are not verbally identical, and while this is in part the consequence of reference being made at Goresia to earlier Athenian decrees, which may no t hav e applie d i n the cas e of lulis, not al l the difference s ca n be accounte d fo r in that way. Glauses appear in differen t orders , substantive items appear in one decree that d o not appear in the other, and the cities choose differen t types of location for the displa y of their decision. Neither decree is well framed. Th e Goresia decree has its publication clause , illogically, in the middle, before setting out the details of the legal procedures. The lulis decree resumes substantive matters after recording the invitation of the Athenian envoys to hospitality, and proceeds to repeat in slightly greater detail matters already dealt with (compare 36-7 wit h 28-9). The legal procedures which are referred to by Goresia and lulis bear names which

4O. ATHENIAN REGULATION OF GEAN RUDDLE EXPORT

20g

are familiar from Athens. Onphasis and endeixis see on 14 . It is more likely that Athenian an d Gea n law shared closel y similar procedures tha n tha t th e Athenians stip ulated th e procedur e t o b e employed . A t Athens a slav e coul d no t b e th e perso n responsible for an endeixis, bu t whethe r the possibilit y of slave endeixeis at Goresi a (19) indicates that endeixis meant somethin g slightly different there , o r whether it simply indicates that the Goresians (unlike the lulietans, who refer simply to slave informers (29)) di d no t full y understan d wha t endeixis meant, i s not clear . Th e tw o citie s name different magistrates as responsible for dealing with cases, but w e cannot tell how far other variations reflect differences in pre-existing legal structures. Certainly the variations between the procedures se t up by the two cities (Goresia distinguishes between slaves owned by the exporte r an d those owned by others, lulis does not) once mor e suggest that Athens did not simply supply a blueprint t o be adopted . The Athenian s her e effectivel y impos e legislative changes upo n th e Gea n cities, which those cities are expected to adopt a t a single assembly meeting. But the Athenians themselves after 403/2 distinguished between laws and decrees and passed legislation for themselves not a t a single meeting of the assembl y but onl y through th e lengthier deliberation s o f the nomothetai (see Introduction, an d se e 63 fo r th e diver gent practices of denies). More importantly , th e legislation passed by the Gean cities includes a provision, unparalleled i n Athenian law , that slave s who inform on their masters will be rewarded with freedom (as well as with part of the value of the goods confiscated). The Athenians did reward prosecutors in some commercial case s (e.g. in the phasis procedure), but the y seem to have offere d freedo m to slave informers only in cases which involved religious offence s (Osborne) . To offe r a reward a s attractive as freedom to a slave in return for the slave' s giving information against his master is potentially subversiv e in the extreme . Hunter has argue d (Policing Athens, esp. ch. 3) that in any circ*mstances slaves' knowledge of their masters' activities acted to police citizens' behaviour ; rewardin g slav e informers with freedo m will hav e powerfully increased the citizen's sense of being under surveillance . The highl y subversiv e way in which Athens seeks to enforce its ruddle monopoly , and the likelihood that Athens had n o vital need for ruddle fro m Geos , indicate this Athenian interventio n i n th e affair s o f the thre e Gea n citie s to be extremel y high handed (comparabl e indee d wit h M& L 45). Putting thes e visible sign s of the Gea n cities submittin g t o Athenian order s o n displa y o n thi s stele on th e Acropoli s mad e this exercis e of Athenian powe r highl y visible . It i s the mor e frustrating , therefore, that n o precise dat e o r political contex t ca n be established . This intervention goe s directly against the spirit, if not the letter, of 22. Whether the proximity of Geos made the Athenians particularly obsessiv e in their control, or whether the interventions in the citie s of Geos are prominent i n the record o f the Secon d Athenian Confederac y merely by fluke of epigraphic survival , canno t currentl y b e established . The wors t that modern scholarshi p has to say on the decre e ('here is another piece of evidence to sho w that Athens was very ready t o seiz e an y opportunity o f lessening the right s of the members o f the Confederac y to her ow n advantage' Marshall, Second Athenian Confederacy, 50 ) markedly understates the situation .

41 Alliance between Athens, Arcadia, Achaea, Elis, and Phlius, 362 i Two fragments of a stele., (a) found between the theatre of Dionysus and th e odeum of Herodes Atticus in Athens, (£) found on the Acropolis; now in the Epigraphical Museum. At the top of fr. a are the remains of a relief showing Zeus enthroned, approached b y Peloponnesus (? — but Lawton, 94 , suggests Hera), with Athena standin g behind. Phot. Svoronos, Das athener Nationalmuseum, Taf. cv i Nr. 148 1 (fr. a); Meyer, Die gnechischm Urkundenreliefs, Taf. 1 7 A 58; Lawton, Reliefs, pi . 1 3 no. 2 4 (the last two, top o f fr. a , with relief and 11 . i—6) . Attic-Ionic, occasionally retaining the ol d o for ou ; 1. i in larger letters; 11. 2 sqq. stoichedon 40. This is the work ofTracy's Gutte r of IGii2105 (cf. 31, 34): Athenian Democracy in Transition, 67—70 . IGii2 112 ; SIG* 181 ; Tod 144* ; Svt. 290. Trans. Harding56. Se e also L.J. Bliquez , ^PExxxv 1979, 237—40.

41. A L L I A N C E B E T W E E N A T H E N S , A R C A D I A , E L I S , A N D P I I L I U S 21

In the archonship ofMolon [362/1] . 2 Allianc e of Athens and Arcadia an d Achaea an d Eli s and Phlius. 4 Resolve d by the counci l an d th e people. Oenei s was the prytany ; Agatharchus so n o f Agatharchus fro m Oe was secretary; Xanthippus of Hermus was chairman. Periander proposed: 6 Th e heral d shall vow forthwith to Zeus Olympics and to Athena Polias and to Demeter and to Kore an d to the Twelve Gods and to the August Goddesses, that, if what is resolved about the alliance is to the advantag e of th e peopl e o f Athens, a sacrific e an d processio n shall be made o n the accomplishment o f these things as the people shall resolve. 12 Tha t is to be vowed. And, since the allies have brought in a resolution to the council, to accept the alliance as offered b y Arcadia an d Achae a an d Eli s and Phlius, and th e counci l ha s made a probouleuma o n the sam e terms, be it resolved by the people: 17 Fo r the good fortune of the people, the people of Athens an d th e allie s and Arcadi a an d Achae a an d Elis and Phlius shall be allies for all time o n this stele. 24 I f an y on e goe s agains t Attic a o r overthrow s th e people o f Athens or set s up a tyrant o r an oligarchy , the Arcadian s an d Achaean s an d Elean s an d Phliasians shal l go in suppor t o f the Athenian s with all their strength as called on by the Athenians as far as possible; and i f any on e goe s against thos e cities,

1

212 4

1

- A L L I A N C E BETWEE N A T H E N S , A R C A D I A , E L I S , A N D P I I L I U S

In 365 a war had broken out between Elis and Arcadia; but i n the course of it a split occurred between a pro-Theban faction in Arcadia led by Tegea and an anti-Theban faction led by Mantinea, an d in 363/2 the Mantinean factio n made peace with Elis and appeale d fo r suppor t t o Spart a (X . H. vii . iv . 12—v . 3 , cf . D.S. xv. 77 . i—iv, 78. ii—iii, 82 . i—iv) . Th e battl e o f Mantinea, betwee n Thebes an d he r allie s and Spart a and her allies , was fought at the end of the Athenian year 363/2 ([Plut.] X Or. 845 E, cf. Plut. Glor. Ath. 350 A, X. H. vn. v. 14). In that battle the Mantinean factio n within Arcadia (cf . on 32), Elis, and Achaea fought on the Sparta n side , and s o did Athens, but Phlius, which together with Corinth had made peace with Thebes in 365 (X. H. vn. iv. io—n ) is not mentioned (X . H. vn. v. 1—3) . Athens at that stag e had alliance s with Sparta (sinc e 369) and with Arcadia (sinc e 366: X. H. vii. iv. 2-3). This allianc of 362/1 therefore belongs to the period after the battle, when a common peace treaty had bee n mad e fro m whic h Spart a wa s excluded, and th e Mantinea n factio n was claiming to be 'Arcadia' (D.S. xv. 89. i-ii: on the chronology see Buckler, The Theban Hegemony, 260—1) . Phlius has now joined the Peloponnesians who fought on the Spar tan sid e (it is striking to see this small city listed along with three regional states) , an d they have made ajoin t approac h to Athens and the League. The allianc e cannot be placed within the year, and may be a response either to the battle and the treaty which followed i t or to the return o f the Thebans t o the Peloponnese in 361 to support th e Megalopolitan faction in Arcadia (D.S. xv. 94. i-iii). In 3 3 th e Athenia n counci l too k the initiativ e an d referre d business to th e synednon of the League to submit its opinion to the assembly: here the synedrwn has taken the initiativ e i n recommendin g th e alliance , an d th e counci l i n it s probouleuma ha s added it s own recommendation. However , th e motio n mus t t o som e exten t hav e been rewritten in the assembly, since, although th e decree has the longer enactment formula which mentions the counci l (11. 3—4), it has the shorte r motion formula which does no t mentio n th e counci l (11 . 16—17), an d i t refer s t o th e probouleuma i n a way i n which the probouleuma itself ought not t o have done (see Rhodes, Boule, 68—9 cf. 76—8). The propose r o f the decree , Periander, will be th e man, a member o f a prominen t family (APF, 461—4 ) who reforme d the trierarchi c system in 358/7 ([Dem.] XLVII . Ev. & Mnes. 21), and was himself a trierarch in 357/6 (/Gil21611. 292,1953. 5).

T 213

or overthrow s the peopl e o f Phlius o r overthrows or changes the constitution of Achaea or Arcadia or Elis, or exiles anybody, the Athenians shall go in support of these with all their strength as called on by those who are being wronged as far as possible. 34 Eac h shall have the leadership in their own territory. 35 I f it is resolved by al l the citie s to ad d anythin g else , whatever is resolved shall be within their oath. 37 Th e oat h shal l be swor n in eac h cit y by th e highes t officials o f the Peloponnesians , and o f the Athenians by the generals and th e taxiarchs an d the hipparch s and the phylarchs and the cavalry The vo w of a sacrific e an d processio n is paralleled i n Tod 14 6 ~ Hardin g 58, of the sam e year, and i n IG n2 30 = Agora, xvi 41 of 387/6. The Augus t Goddesses are the Erinyes , worshipped euphemisticall y in Athens under tha t title (cf. Paus. i . 28. vi). Blique z is certainly right t o insist that 'a s the people shall resolve' is to be under stood with the making of the sacrific e an d procession; he reads the genitive absolute 'these things being accomplished' as a future o n which that clause depends, but more probably it is present and logically misplaced, and refer s to the actual making of the alliance. The allianc e i s a defensiv e alliance ; and, although th e members o f the Athenia n League too k th e initiativ e i n recommendin g it s acceptance , an d the y ar e mentioned in 11. 18-19 , they have been omitte d from th e clause s about mutua l suppor Whereas Athens' alliances are commonly with democratic states, and each party may undertake t o suppor t th e othe r agains t attempt s to overthro w 'th e people', i.e. the democracy (e.g . Athens and Gorcyr a in 372/1: Tod 12 7 ~ Hardin g 42, cited in th e commentary on 24), of the Peloponnesian states here only Phlius is democratic, an d the others are to be protected against attempts to overthrow or change th e constitution (politeia, restored : 11. 29-34); in the cas e of Athens both tyranny and oligarch y ar envisaged a s alternatives to democrac y (11 . 24-9 : contrast79, o f 337/6, where only tyranny is envisaged). There will have been more danger of a threat to the constitution in the Peloponnesian cities than in Athens: the weakness of Sparta after Leuctra ha d removed a force making for stability (cf. X. H . vi. v. 2—11 , D.S. xv. 40 (often referred to th e perio d afte r Leuctra , thoug h no t b y Stylianou , Historical Commentary, a d loc.), 57. iii—58) ; an d i n th e aftermat h of the battl e o f Mantinea th e ris k o f constitutional upheaval will have persisted. For th e provision that each state should command i n its own territory (11. 34—5) cf. X. H . vii. v. 3 (before th e battle o f Mantinea): this clause too will have meant mor e to the Peloponnesian states than to Athens. For the provision for modification of the treaty by joint agreemen t (11 . 35—7) cf . 6 and, for 'withi n their oath', Thuc. v. 18 . xi, 23. vi. For the restored reference to 'th e highest officials' o f the Peloponnesian states (1. 38) cf. X. H. vii. v. 3.

42 Greek response to the Satraps' Revolt, 362

I

A fragment o f a stele found at Argos, no w lost. LI. 1—1 7 Attic-Ionic, wit h the ol d e for e t retained in 1 . 15; restored a s non-stoiclwdon. /Giv 556; SIG* 182 ; Tod 145* ; Svt. 292. Trans. Harding 57. See also A. Wilhelm, j'OAnii 1900, 145—6 2 = Abh. u. Beitr. i. 85—102; M. Frankel , RM'2 Ivi 1901, 234—46; Wilhelm, RM' 2 Ivi 1901, 571—86; Ryder, KoineEirene, 142—4; Bauslaugh, The Concept ofNeutmlity i n Classical Greece, 211—14. We omit a second document , apparentl y in Doric dialect, referrin g to judges and disputed territory , of which a little is preserved i n 11. 18—21 .

The ston e has been lost, and the text transcribed contain s no indication o f date: all the interpreter can do is look for a context in which the text that can be reconstructed makes sense. Suggested dates have ranged from 386 (A. Boeckh, (7/61118)10338—334 (U. Koehler ap. SIG ?I). Beloc h linked this with the declaration o f the Athenians in 344 that they would stay at peace with the King if he stayed at peace with them, but would not help him in the recovery ofEgypt (Didym. InDem. viii. 7—26 = [e.g.] Philoch. FGrH 328 F 157 , cf . D.S. xvi . 44. i [misdate d t o 351/0]: GG 2, ra. i 534-5). Most scholars , however, have followe d Wilhelm 190 0 in believing that thi s is a response to satrap s

42. G R E E

K R E S P O N S E T O TH E S A T R A P S ' REVOLT , 3 6 2 / 1 21

5

share in the common peace. Show to the man wh o ha s come fro m th e satrap s that th e Greeks hav e resolve d thei r dispute s toward s a commo n peace, so that, being freed from th e war against themselves, they may each make their own cities as great as possible and happy, an d remain usefu l to their friends an d strong . They are no t awar e that th e King has any war agains t them . If, therefore, he keeps quiet and doe s not embroi l the Greeks, and doe s not attemp t to break up the peace that has come into being fo r us by an y craf t o r contrivance , we too shall keep quie t i n matter s wit h regar d t o th e King ; bu t i f he makes wa r o n an y who hav e swor n th e oat h o r provide s money for the breaking-up o f this peace, eithe r himself in opposition to the Greeks who have made this peace or any one else of those from his territory, we shall all resist in common, worthily o f the peac e tha t ha s now com e into bein g and of what we have done before now.

who are soliciting Greek support against the Persian King, an d in dating it to 362/1, when a common peace treaty had been made afte r the battle of Mantinea (cf . on 41: if correctly dated, this text will give us the earlies t surviving documentary use of the phrase 'commo n peace') and th e Satraps' Revol t was reaching it s climax. Agesilaus was sent to support Tachos of Egypt officially by Sparta, which was not a party to that peace treaty, but the other Greeks were not officially involved after Mantinea, thoug h Ghabrias went from Athens as a free-lance (D.S . xv. 92. ii—iii). Since we lack the beginning, w e do not know what the statu s of this document is,

2l6

42. GREE

K R E S P O N S E T O TH E S A T R A P S ' REVOLT , 3 6

2

I

to whom the man fro m the satraps went or who authorized this reply. A. Momigliano insisted because of the dialect that this must emanate from Athens, and therefore dated it to 371/0, after the common peace treaty organized by Athens, and supposed that the satraps were already then looking for support against the King (RFICbdi = 2xii 1934, 494—8 = jj0 Contribute, 403—6). P. Gharneux has announced, but has not yet fulfilled, his intention ofrestoringit as aletter from Athens (.BC/:/cviii983,25111.3). However, 11.2—3 point not to a letter but to a reply composed for the benefit of a man who is present (cf.

43 The Boeotian s honour a Carthaginian, 3605—3508 A stele found at Thebes; now lost. Boeotian. IGvn 2407; SIG* 179 ; P. Roesch, REGxcvii 1984,45—6 0 at 47*. Trans. Harding 48. See also A. Wilhelm, Bull. Int. Ac . Pol. 1930, 139—4 5 = Akademieschrifien., ii . 293—9; G. Glotz, Melanges. . . JV. lorga, 331—9; Buckler, The Theban Hegemony] D . Knoepfler , Historia Testis . . . T. ^awadzki., 37—60 ; G. Vottero i n Brixhe (ed.), Hellenika Symmikta, ii. 121-32.

i 0t Dittenberger , IG; AL Dittenberger, SIG (al l edd.): ZGPJV, iiiis , ha s fiv e Boeotian instance s o f Theotelei s to on e o f Dioteleis. 5— 6 ftwoifia v Clermont-Ganneau , Recueil d'archeologie orientate., iii. 142—4; Jl£pou/3a ) Blass, UberdieAussprached.es Griechischen., ^100 = ^119—i.e . Hannibal son ofHasdrubal; but, whatever th e origina l Phoenician name s may have been, i t is unwise to think that the Boeotians cannot hav e written what R. Poco*cke read (an d see not e i n SIG). 7 VO L Poco*cke's transcript : se e commentary . 8 etraaLv Poco*cke' s transcript. 1 3 AaLraivoao Wilhelm, cf . his reading o f IGvu 2408. 16, and see commentary: AiraivBao in both inscriptions earlier edd.

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217

21. 4—5, 31. 40—1); but we remain uncertain before what body he was present, or why this Attic text was inscribed in Argos. LI. 5—7 are striking for their praise of peace, not just as the absence of war but as a foundation for prosperity and cooperation between cities: elsewhere praise of peace is focused o n benefits fo r the interna l life o f the cit y and fo r individuals within it (e.g. Ar. Acharn., Peace). For the expression 'They are no t aware . . .' (1 . 8 ) cf. Thuc. iv. 78. iv: this appears t o be forma l diplomatic language

God; Fortune (Tychd). i I n the archonship of—oteles. Resolved by the people. 3 Noba s so n o f Axioubas o f Carthage shal l b e proxenos and benefacto r of the Boeotians; and he shall have the right t o acquire lan d an d a house, and immunity both by land and by sea, during both war and peace. 12 Th e Boeotarch s were : Timon , Daetondas , Thion, Melon, Hippias, Eumaridas, Patron.

2l8 43

. TH

E B O E O T I A N S H O N O U R A C A R T H A G I N I A N , 3605-350 8

This i s one of three similar decrees, enacted in different bu t no t far-separate d years by the Boeotian federation. One fo r a Byzantine (IGvii 2408 , revised Roesch, 47-8, cf. SEGxxx.iv 355) , has a list of Boeotarchs which includes two of the men listed in our text (Hippias and Daetondas) and Malacidas and Diogeiton, the first to be restored as Boeotarch in 371 (Paus. ix. 13. vi) and both mentioned in the contex t of 364 (Plut. Pel. 35. ii). The other , for Athenaeus son ofDemonicus o f Macedon (Roesc h = SE G xxxiv 355), has a list of Boeotarchs including one of the men listed in our text (Patron), and als o Damophilus (Boeotarch in 371: Paus. ix. 13 . vi) and th e famou s Pelopidas. Epaminondas does not appear in any of the lists. Thebes is known to have been interested in Macedon i n the 360 5 but no t i n the 3705 : for the Macedonia n decree , with Pelopidas Boeotarch but not Epaminondas, 368 is excluded by the Boeotarchs named in Paus. ix. 15. i, and 365 or early 364 look most likely. Possible years for the other two, with neither Pelopidas nor Epaminondas Boeotarch, are 365, late 364 (after the death of Pelopidas at Gynoscephalae), 363, or else some time after the death of Epaminondas at Mantinea i n 362, but not 361, when the Boeotarchs included Pammenes (D.S. xv. 94 . ii), who i s not listed in the inscription s (on the chronolog y we follow Buckler, 233-62). It was suggested by Glotz that the Carthaginian was madeproxenosbecause Thebe s needed outside skills in developing the naval programme propose d by Epaminonda s (D.S. xv. 78. iv-79. ii, foreshadowed in the peace talks of 367, X. H. vii. i. 36). Many have been attracted by that suggestion, and Roesch built on it to link all three decrees with the nava l programme , notin g that Byzantiu m was among th e allie s of Athens whose suppor t Epaminonda s trie d to win (D.S . xv. 79 . i: for its support fo r Thebe s after th e Socia l War o f the 350 5 see 57), and tha t Macedo n woul d be importan t a s a sourc e of ship-building timbe r (cf . 12), and th e honorand's son , another Demoni cus, was appointed a s a trierarch by Alexander the Grea t i n 326 (Arr. Ind. 18 . iii). In that connectio n we may no w note a recently discovered inscription i n which Gnidus, on a promontory o f south-western Asia Minor between Cos and Rhodes, makes Epaminondas it s proxenos, and th e fac t tha t Rhode s wa s on e o f the state s visited by Epaminondas (SEGxliv 901 ; text reprinted and discusse d by Buckler, Mnem? Ii 1998, 192—205). However, the Thebans wer e not without naval experience; and in view of the chronological uncertainties, and of the fact that Carthaginian traders were not a

44 Alliance betwee n Athens and the Thessalian koinon, 361 o A stele with a relief at the top showing a mounted warrior, found on the south slop e of the Athenian Acropolis; now in the Epigraphical Museum an d i n poor condition . Phot . Svoronos, Das athener J^ationalmuseum, Taf. ccix Nr. i ; Meyer, Die griechischen Urkundenreliefs, Taf . 20 A 59; Lawton, Reliefs, pi . 1 3 no. 25 (the last two , relief and opening lines only).

4 3 . TH

E BOEOTIAN S HONOU R A CARTHAGINIAN , 3605-350 8

2ig

great rarity in fourth-century Greece (Gsell, Histoire andenne de I' afrique du nord, iv. 15 2 n. 3), we agree with those who regard thi s reconstruction as unduly speculative (G. L. Gawkwell, C(P xxi i 1972, 272 n. i; Buckler, 308 n. 27). Whereas the pre-386 Boeotia n federation had eleve n Boeotarchs, based on eleven electoral units, and it s decision-making body was a council of 660 (Hell. Oxy. 16 . iii—iv Bartoletti/McKechnie & Kern = 19 . iii—i v Chambers), these inscriptions sho w that the federatio n as revived in th e 370 5 had a n archon, an assembl y to make decisions, and seve n Boeotarchs (for the las t cf. D.S. xv. 53 . iii, Paus. ix. 13 . vi—vii). It i s ofte n supposed that seve n of the ol d units were used, with those assigned to Orchomenu s and Thespia e abolishe d (e.g . Buckler, 23), but ther e ar e problem s wit h tha t view ; Knoepfler, 47— 8 n . 42 , has argue d tha t al l seven Boeotarchs in th e ne w federation were Theban; and it may well be that ther e was now no rule abou t th e affiliatio n o f the Boeotarchs, and Thebans managed t o obtain many if not all of the appointments . Daetondas was probably an ancestor of the sculptor Daetondas of Sicyon (Paus. vi. 17. v). Knoepfler suggests also that ou r Daetondas shoul d be read in place of Diagondas in Gic. Legg. n. 37 as the author o f a law forbidding nocturnal religiou s rites, but Vottero (130—1) thinks the legislator was a man o f the Solonian period. Of the other Boeotarchs listed in this inscription Melon was one of the liberators of Thebes in 379/8 (X. H. v. iv. 2-3, Plut. Pel.8). A somewhat later federal decree (Roesch, Etudes beotiennes, 271-2 = SE G xxxii 476) has been found in the sanctuary of Poseidon at Onchestus, which became the federal administrative centr e after the destructio n of Thebes in 335 (Roesch, Etudes beotiennes, 265—75). It confers honours on a man fro m Pellana , in Achaea; the cities of the Boeotarchs are specified (the first from Thespiae, the second from Tanagra, after which the text breaks off") ; the names of the archon and o f the first Boeotarch have been deleted. The erro r voi for Foi appears both in 1. 7 of our inscription an d in SEG xxxii 476: Vottero (121—8) suggests that we have here an Athenian model for the award of proxenies, not full y absorbe d b y the Boeotians: he argues for a short period o f uncertainty an d dates SEG xxxii 476 to th e sam e period, bu t i n view of its location an d th e citie s of the Boeotarch s we prefer Roesch's dating . Apar t fro m th e use of digamma, Boeotian features o f the languag e includ e etjue v fo r etvcc i (4 , 7), and eTnraais (i.e . ejairaais) fo r the Attic lyKT-rjais.

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Attic-Ionic, usually retaining the ol d o for ou ; 11. 1— 4 in larger letters; 11. 5 sqq. stoichedon 41. IGii2 116 ; SIG'-' 1 184 ; Tod 147* ; Svt. 293. Trans. Harding59.

34 I f the stoichedon pattern was maintained a third letter must have been inscribed in error: IG ii2.

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Gods. 2 I n the archonshi p of Nicophemus [361/0]. 3 Allianc e of the Athenians and Thessalian s for all time. 5 Resolve d by the counci l an d th e people . Leonti s was the prytany ; Ghaerion so n of Gharinautes of Phalerum was secretary; Archippus fro m Amphitrope was chairman; on the twelfth da y of the prytany. Execestides proposed: 8 Concernin g wha t i s sai d b y th e envoy s o f th e Thessalians , b e i t decree d b y th e people: 9 Accep t the alliance , for good fortune, a s the Thessalians offer ; an d ther e shall be a n alliance fo r them with the Athenians for all time. Also all the allie s of the Athenian s shall be allies of the Thessalians, and those of the Thessalians allies of the Athenians. 14 O f the Athenians the generals and the council and the hipparchs and the cavalry shall swear the following oath: I shall go in support with all my strengt h as far as possible if any one goes against the koinon of the Thessalians for war, or overthrows the archon whom th e Thessalian s hav e appointed , o r set s up a tyrant i n Thessaly. They shall swear the lawful oath . 20 S o that the Thessalians may swear to the city, the people shall appoint five men fro m all Athenians, who shal l go to Thessaly and hav e Agelaus the archon and th e polemarchs and the hipparchs and the knights and the hieromnemones and the other official s who hol d offic e o n behalf o f the koinon o f Thessaly swea r the followin g oath: I shall go in support with all my strength as far as possible if any one goes against the cit y of Athens for war or overthrows the Athenian people. The Thessalia n envoy s who are visiting Athens shall swear the same oath in the council . 31 I t shal l not b e permitted t o put a n en d t o th e war agains t Alexander , eithe r to th e Thessalians without the Athenians or to the Athenians without the archon and koinon of the Thessalians. 34 Prais e Agelaus the archon and th e koinon of the Thessalians , because they have bee n doing well and enthusiasticall y everything concerning the city's offer t o them. Praise also the Thessalian envoy s who have come, and invite them to hospitality in theprytanaon tomorrow. 39 Th e stele for Alexander concernin g the allianc e shal l be demolished by the treasurers of the Goddess.

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Although it is framed as an alliance for all time, this treaty resulted from a particula r emergency and did not last long. The powe r o f the principa l citie s in Thessaly had bee n growin g durin g th e fifth and earl y fourth centuries, but ther e was still a Thessalian koinon, with an archon, and it was still possible for a military leader of all Thessaly to be appointed, with the title tagos', and Jason, the tyrant of Pherae in south-eastern Thessaly, claimed this position in the 3705 (X. H. vi. i. 8—9,12,18—19). He was assassinated in 370, and succeede d by two brothers, Polydorus and Polyphron, of whom the second soon killed the first; in 369 Polyphron wa s killed and succeede d by Polydorus' son Alexander (X . H. vi. iv. 29—35; compressed account D.S. xv . 60 . v, 61. i). The Thessalian s opposed to Alexander appealed first to Macedon and then, when Macedonian hel p proved a doubtful blessing, t o Thebes; an d w e learn fro m thi s inscription tha t the y claimed t o be th e Thessalian koinon and continued to appoint a n archon. 1 Since Athens and Thebes were now enemies, in 368 Athens made an alliance with Alexander, set up a statue of him, and sen t forces to support him (D.S . xv. 71 . iii-iv, cf. X. H. vn. i. 28, Plut. Pel.31. vi). In 364 the Thebans defeate d Alexander, limited his power to Pherae, and made him a subordinate ally (D.S. xv. 80. vi). Alexander, not allowed to expand on the mainlan d and linked to a Thebes which was challenging Athenian power at sea (cf. on 39, 43), undertook naval expeditions in the Aegean: in 362 he attacked Tenos ([Dem.] L. Poly. 4); in 361 he attacked Peparethus and defeated an Athenian force under Leosthenes, after which he raided the Piraeus (D.S. xv. 95. i—iii, Polyaen. vi. 2; and cf. Dem. xxin. Arist. 120). Athens consequentl y approached hi s enemies, the Thessalia n koinon: we read i n 11. 8—ii that Thessalian envoy s have come to Athens offering an alliance , but 11 . 34— suggest that they did so in response to a first move by Athens. The result is a defensive alliance in which the Athenians promise their support explicitl y to the koinon and its 1 O n office s an d title s i n Thessaly see Helly, L'Etat thzssalim, 13—68 , 329—53 , with M. Sordi , Topoivii 1997 , 177—82, and (reviewin g Helly ) Gnomonlxx 1998 , 418—21. It should be accepted that archon was the normal title for the head of the koinon, and tagos referred t o a military leader and the position was perhaps reinvented by Jason; but Helly' s claim that tetrarch was another titl e fo r the archon and th e head s of the tetrad s should have been tetradarchs is less likely to be right.

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40 T o th e envoys the treasurer of the people shall give for travelling expenses 20 drachmas each. 42 Thi s alliance shal l be written up b y the secretar y of the counci l o n a stone stele an d placed on the Acropolis; for the writing-up of the stele the treasurer of the people shall give 20 drachmas. 45 Als o Theaetetus o f Erchia, fo r speakin g best an d doin g wha t goo d h e ca n fo r th e people of Athens and the Thessalians, shall be deemed to have done his duty.

arckon, against the setting-u p of a tyrant i n Thessaly; neither party is to end the wa r against Alexander without the agreement of the other; to mark the ending of Athens' alliance with Alexander, the stele on which it is inscribed is to be demolishe d (by the treasurers of Athena (11 . 39—40), presumably because it was on the Acropolis and they had a general responsibility for monuments there: for the demolitio n ofstelai cf. 22). Theaetetus, the ma n wh o i s 'deemed to have done his duty' (11 . 45—8: for the expres sion cf . 64. 63—5) , perhaps propose d and/o r serve d on th e Athenians ' explorator y mission t o th e koinon. That i s added almos t a s an afterthought : it is possible that i t was added by way of a 'concealed amendment', although n o explicit amendment is included in this text (on problems over amendments cf. 2, 19, 20, 64). Whereas in the previous year Athens had allowe d the synednon o f her League to make the first move towards accepting the alliance offered by Peloponnesian states (41), here Athens commits them and any other allies she has without any sign that they have been consulted or will be asked to swear. Execestides, the Athenian proposer of the decree, could be identical either with the envoy to Byzantium o f Tod 12 1 ~ Hardin g 34. 1 8 or with the genera l o f 48. 22 , but despite Tod no t with both, as those two men are from differen t denies , and the name was in any case a common on e i n this period (cf . APF, 175-8). Agelaus, thearckon of the Thessalian koinon, probably belonged to the Daochid famil y of Pharsalus, whose monument a t Delphi names a fifth-century Agelaus (SIG S274 = F. Delphes in. iv 460 = CE G 795). Bengtson in Svt. follows Beloc h (GG2, in. i. 218 n. 2 ) in linking with this alliance IG n2 175 , which contains the en d o f an Athenian decree , a list of Athenian envoys, and a list of Thessalian oath-takers , beginning with four polemarchs (cf . the mention of the polemarchs after the arckon in 1. 23 of our text). It would be economica to suppose that the four polemarchs replaced the four tetrarchs based on the archaic tetrarchies, units which were to be revived by Philip of Macedon £.34 2 (Dem. ix. Phil. Hi. 26; or £.344 if 8eKa8apxta.vin.Dtm. vi. Phil. ii. 22 were to be emended to Terpapxtav), but i t is not clea r how many polemarchs ther e were in the 450 5 (SEG xvi i 243 with J. A. O. Larsen, CPlv 1960,241— 2). We have translated hippeisin 1 . 24 as 'knights', since it is hard to believe that all of Thessaly's large body of cavalry would have sworn to this alliance (Larsen, Greek Federal States, 24). Hieromnemones ('sacred remembrancers') is the

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44. A L L I A N C

E BETWEE N A T H E N S AN D TH E T I I E S S A L I A N KOINON

title given to the voting representatives in the Delphic Amphictyony, two from each of the twelv e member peoples (Roux, L'Amphictyonie, Delphes e t k temple d'Apollon, 20-36) ; but i t is also a title attested for local officials i n various places including some cities of Thessaly (e.g. IG ix. ii 459, Grannon; 541, Larisa), and i t is more likely that the hieromnemones o f our tex t were officials o f the koinon (contr. Tod). For travellin g expenses (11. 40-2) cf. 35, 44 , 48 , 58 , 95 . Alexander survived until 358/7, whe n he was assassinated by his wife Thebe , th e daughter o f Jason, an d he r brothers ; h e wa s succeede d by Tisiphonus , th e eldes t brother (X. H. vi. iv. 35-7, D.S. xvi. 14. i [under 357/6]), and the Thebans used Tisi-

45 Contributions to the rebuilding of the temple at Delphi, 361 o Fragments of a large slab, found on the pavement o f the Sacred Way at Delphi; now in the museum there. Phot . BCHxxKvii1903, pi. vi; F. Delphes, in. v, pi. ii; C. Delphes, ii , pi. iii fig. 3 . Mixed Phocia n an d Ioni c dialect; a line marking th e left-hand margin; stoichedonwith irregularities toward s the end s of lines, ending eac h lin e with the end of a word o r (occasionally) a syllable. LI. i. 57—60 are indente d to avoid a damaged part of the stone; 11. ii . 23—9, containing th e total for the year, projec t beyond th e left-han d margin of the column.

44. A L L I A N C E BETWEE N ATHENS AN D TH E TIIESSALIA N KOIMOM

225

phonus' ships against the Athenians in Euboea in 357 (schol. Aristid. Panath. 179 Dindorf = 319 Behr (iii. 298 Dindorf): for the episod e see 48). However, by the late 3505 Lycophron and Pitholaus were in power, and in the Third Sacred War for the control of Delphi th e Phocians wer e supporte d b y both Athen s and th e tyrant s o f Pherae (Isoc. Ep. vi. 3 points to an alliance between them) and opposed by both Thebes an d the komon; in 352 the tyrant s were expelled from Phera e by Philip o f Macedon (D.S. xvi. 35, 37. iii), and Phili p was elected archon of the komon ([Hammond &] Griffith, ii . 220—4; but som e have argued for a later date for his election, and Z. M. Papastylou , AaiSdiv-r) viii 1979, 37~53, denies that Philip ever took that position).

SIG* 239 . B] F . Delplws, in . v 3; Tod 140 ; C . Delplws, i i 4*. Trans. Harding 60. Se e als o Roux , UAmphictionie, Delphzs et le tempk d'Apollon; J. K. Davies , Modus Operandi . . . G. Rwkman, 1—14 ; Sanchez , L' Amphictionw, 124—32 , 168. The whol e inscription is in three columns, containin g th e record s fo r spring 36i/C D (11. i. i—ii . 29) and autum n 3(30/59 (11. ii. 30—iii. 63): like Tod, w e give the sprin g section only.

In the translation whic h follows we give sums of money in figures, although th e Greek text gives them in words. The contributor s marke d wit h an asterisk are women .

(l) (U

)

In th e archonshi p o f Aeschylu s Apollonia : 3,000 Pheidonian medimnoi [361/0], i n th e sprin g Pylaia, th e o f barley: fro m thi s there were 1,87 5 thirteenth, th e followin g of the citie s Delphi c medimnoi: th e pric e o f thi s brought thei r shar e o f th e secon d wa s 3,58 7 drachmas , qVi obols . Th e obol. Apolloniate s brough t thi s a t thei r 6 Megara : Andron: 3,444 drachmas. ow n expense to Delphi to the sea: the 9 Troezen : 33 4 drachmas: brough t b y grai n was brought by Aenesidamus of Phygon. 12 Gyphaera : Gombus: 170 drachmas. 14 Th e followin g offerings were made by cities and individuals at this Pylaw. 16 Naxos : 35 0 drachmas : brough t b y Telesicrates son of Timoclides, Aristo-

226 45

' C O N T R I B U T I O N S T O R E B U I L D I N G TH E T E M P L E A T D E L P H I

i. 38 Tjvei inscribe d over an erasur e of Spa^: the cutter originally omitted the verb.

45-

C O N T R I B U T I O N S T O R E B U I L D I N G TH E T E M P L E A T D E L P H I

(1)

demus son of Aesimus. 20 Strombo n o f Naxos: 2 drachmas. 21 Demaenetu s ofNaxos: 10 Attic drachmas: of this 7 Aeginetan drachmas. 24 Telesicrate s ofNaxos: 2 drachmas. 26 Aristodemu s ofNaxos: 2 drachmas. 28 Messene : Lysixenus, Phillis, G—th—, Eury—us: 70 drachmas. 31 Sosibiu s of Pharsalus: i drachma . 33 Andocu s of Sparta: 2 drachmas. 35 Lygdami s of Tragilus: 6 drachmas, 4 obols. 37 Naucrati s fro m Egypt : brough t b y Pythagoras: 350 drachmas. 40 Eudamu s of Syracuse: 30 drachmas. 42 Saraucu s of Arcadia: 2 drachmas. 43 Gottabu s of Arcadia: 3 drachmas. 44 *Eurydic e of Larisa: 2 drachmas. 46 *Aeschyli s of Selinus: 2 drachmas. 48 Epicharmu s of Arcadia: i drachma . 49 *Gleino i of Phlius: 3 obols. 51 *Echenic e of Phlius: i l /i obols. 53 *Gleonic a of Phlius: i Vi obols . 55 *Philostrati s of Sparta: 3 obols. 57 Gleogenes : 4 drachmas of Attic: of this 2 Aeginetan drachmas, 4 obols.

227

(ii) Delphi, Aristoclidas of Apollonia. 23 Tota l receip t i n thi s Pylai a unde r Aeschylus: 8,53 0 drachmas , 1 1 A obols.

228

45- CONTRIBUTION

S T O R E B U I L D I N G TH E T E M P L E A T D E L P H I

The templ e of Apollo at Delphi was destroyed by fire and/or earthquake in 373/2; a proposal to set up a building fund was perhaps made after the peace of spring 371 (cf. on 33). This was eventually done through the Amphictyony ('league of neighbours'), the body , consistin g mostly of central Gree k states , which was responsible both fo r the sanctuary of Apollo at Delphi and for the sanctuary of Demeter at Anthela (near Thermopylae: whenc e the nam e Pylaia give n to th e tw o major session s eac h year). Davies surveys the different serie s of documents generated by this operation, and th e politics behind the bureaucracy. Thes e payments are dated by the archon o f the city of Delphi. A commission ofnaopoioi ('temple-builders') , representing the various states within the Amphictyony, collected and spent the funds for the rebuilding of the temple. The 'first oboP , a levy of i obol per person (epikephalos obolos) on the state s belonging to th e Amphictyony, was collected from sprin g 366 to spring 361 (the first to the elevent h Pylaiai i n the numbere d series) , and a 'second obol' from sprin g 361 to autumn 356 (the elevent h to th e twenty-secon d Pylaiai). Som e member state s seem to have paid the exac t sum s which the y collected; others paid roun d sums ; voluntary contribu tions were made by states outside the Amphictyony and by individuals; and the city of Delphi made availabl e a very substantial 'credit' (opheilema: C . Delphes, i i 31—2, an d cf. 66. 9—16) . The figures for Megara and Troeze n which begin this list would reflect populations of 20,664 and 2,064 respectively. [Arist] Oec. n. 1346 A 5 mentions a poll tax (epikephahori) a s on e kin d o f tax, an d th e example s o f devices for raisin g money

4 5 - C O N T R I B U T I O N S T O R E B U I L D I N G TH E T E M P L E A T D E L P H I

229

(i) 61 Peisius : 4 drachmas o f Attic: of this 2 Aeginetan drachmas, 4 obols. 64 Gteson : 4 drachmas o f Attic: of this 2 Aeginetan drachmas, 4 obols. 67 Theodoru s o f Athens , actor : 7 0 drachmas. 70 Euteles : 2 drachmas. 71 Hegemon : 3 obols. 72 Damothemi s so n o f Euphane s o f Phaselis: 7 drachmas. 74 Ariston : i drachma. 75 Panco n o f Thebes: i drachma . 76 Timea s of Apollonia: 70 drachmas. 78 Thrasybulu s of Thespiae: i drachma.

which follow include several poll taxes. The collectio n of money and work on the temple were interrupted by the Third Sacred Wa r o f 356—346 bu t resume d afterward s (cf. 66), and th e majo r work was completed in 334 and the statues were placed in the pediments in 327/6. The naopowi were kept in existence for maintenance work , and continu e to be atteste d until the mid third century. Income is reckoned in Aeginetan currency, with 6 obols = i drachma and 70 drachmas = i mina (so that th e larger payment s tend to be 70 drachmas o r a multiple of that). Athenian currenc y is converted, at 1 0 Athenian drachma s = 7 Aeginetan (11 . i. 21-3: d.Ath.Pol. 10. ii with Rhodes adloc.,P\ut. Sol. 15 . iv) or 3 Athenian = 2 Aeginetan (i. 57-66: but contr . C . Delpkes, i i i, where the tota l shows that a small sum was converted at the rate of 10 = 7 and rounded up to the nearest obol). Likewise Lygdamis of Tragilus (i. 35-6) probably contributed 1 0 drachmas in his own currency and that has been converted at arate of3 = 2. Burford, The Greek Temple Builders at Epidauros, 83-5 , notes that contributions both by cities and by individuals to the building fun d o f the sanctuary of Asclepius at Epidaurus were on the same scale as at Delphi; but the total collection of 8,530 drachmas (c.2 talents: ii. 23) in a semester pales into insignificance by comparison with the sums which Athens had collected annually in tribute from the Delian League, or with the 6,000 talents which Athens had in the treasury of Athena at the beginning of the Peloponnesian War (Thuc . n. 13. iii). The peopl e o f Apollonia contribute d a shipment o f barley, 'a t their own expense

230

45- CONTRIBUTION

S T O R E B U I L D I N G TH E T E M P L E A T D E L P H I

. . . to the sea', i.e. to Girrha, the harbour belo w Delphi o n the Gulf of Corinth: the Delphian named with the Apolloniate as bringing it presumably escorted it from there to Delphi. 3,000 Pheidoman medimnoi (the measures associated with the archaic tyrant Pheidon of Argos: Her. vi. 127. iii; cf.Ath.Pol.lo.ii with Rhodesadloc.) were converted at a rate of 8 Pheidonian = 5 Delphic medimnoi, and the barley was sold, apparently for 2 Aeginetan drachmas per Delphi c medimnos (half the price o f wheat), with a loss of just under ^. 1A% o f the barle y in transit (J. Bousquet , BCH ci x 1985, 233— 4 = hi s Etudes, 123—4) . The Athenia n medimnos was £.52. 5 1. (c.i 1 A bushels: Hultsch, Gnechische undromischeMetrologie, 107—8 , 703; M. Lang, Agora, x. 44,55), the Spartan half as much again (Dicaearchu s ap. Ath . iv. 14 1 c wit h Plut. Lye. 12 . iii : £.72.75 1 . according t o Hultsch, 505); we do not know which standard the Delphians used. For the quantity cf. the consignments of corn sent by Gyrene in 96. Despite Tod, the 'golde n harvest' of Plut. Pyth. Or . 401 F—402 A was surely a golden image and no t thi s consignment of actual barley. Of the less well known places, Gyphaera (1. i. 12) was in Phthiotic Achaea, in south ern Thessaly ; Tragilus (i . 35) near Amphipoli s in Thrace; Apollonia (ii . i) near th e coast o f Ilryria. It i s noteworthy that contributor s come from suc h distant places as Phaselis in southern Asia Minor (i. 72-3), Naucratis 'from Egypt ' (i. 37), and Syracuse (i. 40) and Selinu s (i. 46) in Sicily . 'Arcadia' (11 . 42-3) will be th e Mantinea n factio which wa s claimin g t o b e th e Arcadia n federatio n (cf. 41). Amon g th e individua l

46 Athenian deme decree from Halai Aixonides, ^.360 Inscribed upo n th e fron t surfac e of a blue-grey marbl e cul t table i n th e templ e o f Apollo Zoster a t moder n Vouliagmeni. In situ . Phot. AA x i 1927—8 , p. 40 fig. 35 ; Gill, Greek Cult Tables, pi. 7. Attic-Ionic. The inscriptio n of the letters is unusually shallow. K. Kourouniotis , A A x i 1927—8 , 40— 1 no. 4* ; W. Peek , ylMlxvii 1942 , 9—1 0 no. 7 ; Gill, Greek Cult Tables, no . 20; .SEGxlii 112 .

45. C O N T R I B U T I O N

S T O R E B U I L D I N G TH E T E M P L E A T D E L P H I

231

contributors si x are women . Th e tw o men wh o brough t th e Naxia n contributio n added contributions of their own, and other Naxians made individual contribution s too (i . 16—1 9 with 20—7) ; but th e Apollomat e who mad e th e larg e individua l contribution o f 70 drachmas wa s no t th e ma n wh o brough t hi s city' s offerin g o f barley (i. 76— 7 with ii. 19—22) . The othe r large individua l contributio n wa s made b y Theodorus th e Athenia n acto r (i . 67—8), who wa s on e o f the mos t famous actor s o f th e time (e.g . Arist. Pol. vii. 133 6 B 27-31, Rhet. ra . 140 4 821-3, Plut. Glor. Ath. 348 E; IG ii2 2325 . 3 1 [?], 262 , cf. Pickard-Cambridge,The Dramatic Festivalsof'Athens2',112-20: see F . Salvia t i n Thasiaca, 157—60) : it i s likely that th e uncharacterize d me n name d with him were actors and Athenians too (cf. SIG?I 239 . B, n. n). The ver y small individual contributions will hardly have covered the cos t of their inscription; but i t was important t o the contributor s tha t the y shoul d be listed , an d th e inscriptio n i s not likely to have been costed with great precision in the late-twentieth-century manner. Variations i n spelling within the documen t depen d o n the naopoios who recorde d each contributio n (Bousquet , C . Delpkes, ii , p. 49) : notice particularl y th e Phocia n oSeAou in i. 4 but o/SoAo s etc. regularly in the individual entries. For othe r fourth-centur y Delphian document s see i, 66 , 67 ; and fo r a recently discovered documen t o f the Amphictyon y fro m th e firs t half o f the centur y se e F. Lefevre, BCHcxvm 1994 , 99—112, F. Salviat, BCHcxix 1995,565—7 1 (cf. SEGyliv ^25. A, xlv46g).

Resolved by the demesmen of Halai. Hagnotheus son of Ecphantides proposed: since Polystratus, when h e ha d bee n made pries t o f Apollo Zoster, executed his priestly duties in a fine and pious manner an d worthily of the god, and equipped the temple in a way that displayed extreme love of honour, and has, with those elected from th e demesmen, adorned the statues and looked after the sacrifice of the Zosteria according to the ancestra l fashion, an d gav e accoun t t o the demesme n of his stewardship. For all this praise the priest of Apollo, Polystratus son of Charm antides of Halai, and crown him with a crown of laurel for his piety and uprightness. And praise also those elected with him to look after th e temple, and crow n each o f them with a crown of laurel, Theodotus so n of Theodotus o f Halai, Aescheas son of Phileriphus of Halai, Pantacles son of Socrates of Halai, Hagnias son of Melesias of Halai. Write up thi s

232

46. ATHENIA

N D E M E D E G R E E F R O M IIALA I A I X O N I D E S , £ . 3 6 0

In almost every respect this is indistinguishable in form an d conten t from th e decre e of a minor city-state . In fact it is an entirely typical Athenian dem e decree (compare Rhodes, i n Hansen (ed.) , Sources, 91—112) . The 13 9 Kleisthenic denies of Attica were villages or wards o f the tow n which functione d as the smalles t administrative unit s in classical Athens. They had various obligations to the city, notably providing a set number o f representatives for the counci l o f five hundred an d assistin g with military recruitment, but they also had very considerable independence. The y ran their own religious calendar, raised their own finances (through local taxes, leasing of land, etc.), and honoured thei r own benefactors. They ran themselves in a democratic manne r with mor e o r les s regula r meeting s (agorai) o f demesmen an d electe d officials ; bu t unlike the city as a whole they appointed annuall y (by lot) a single man a s demarch t o run thei r affairs (se e below 63; and generally Whitehead, Denies). The dem e which passed this decree refers t o itself as Halai. Two separat e denie s refer t o themselves as Halai, but wer e in differen t tribe s and were distinguished for official purposes as Halai Aixonides, located in the area of modern Vouliagmeni and Ano Voula on the west coas t of Attica, and archaeologicall y one of the bes t known of Attic denies; and Halai Araphenides, located at Loutsa on the east coast of Attica. The findspo t o f this inscription identifie s this Halai as Halai Aixonides: it was found in the excavations of its major deme sanctuary on Gape Zoster, held to be the plac e where Leto loosed her girdl e (zoster) befor e giving birth to Artemis and Apollo (Paus. i. 31. i; in Semos (FGrH 39 6 F 20) Apollo was actually born at Gape Zoster). Part of the residential centre of the deme has also been excavated (Osborne, Demos, 22-6, for a summar y wit h furthe r references ; A A xxxii . Bi, 40—42 , xxxiii Bi, 57—9 , xxxiv Bi , 76—81, 86—7; xxxvi Bi, 48—53, xxxvii Bi, 54—8, xxxviii Bi, 49—52, xxxix Bi, 36—43, xliv Bi, 74, xlv Bi, 74 for more recent discoveries), and the sanctuar y of Aphrodite ther e has yielded further inscriptions (AM cxiii 1998, 235—48). The majorit y o f measure s inscribed b y denies , lik e th e majorit y o f measures inscribed by the city, are honours for individuals—members of the deme, other Athenians (as with Dercylus son of Autocles of Hagnous, honoured by the deme of Eleusis for his behaviour when general (/Gil 21187)) or, occasionally, non-Athenians (so /Gil2 1185/6 from Eleusis) . In this decree the demesmen of Halai Aixonides praise those of their number who have served them well, in this case a priest and those elected to look after the temple (for ad hoc deme committees see Whitehead, Demes, 145—7). ^n doing so they use the language used by honorific decrees moved by the city, but, as with decrees of other denies, they do not follow centra l practice slavishly . Particularly interestin g here is the praise of the priest as equipping the temple 'in a way that displayed extreme love o f honour' ([At]a v 0tAoTt/j,[oj]s) . Fifth-centur y Athenian decree s do no t prais e

46. ATHENIA

N D E M E D E G R E E F R O M IIALA I A I X O N I D E S , £ . 3 6 0

233

decree an d se t it up i n the templ e o f Apollo. Whateve r expens e is incurred th e treasurer is to provide an d to reckon it to the demesmen. The people of Halai Th e people of Halai (crowned) Polystratus (crowned ) the elected official s

individuals fo r their love of honour, bu t i t became commo n afte r th e middl e o f the fourth century for men to be honoured fo r their love of honour an d for bodies givin g honours t o declare that the y did so to encourage lov e of honour (Whitehead , C& M xxxiv 1983, 55—74; Demes, 241—52). This decree is one o f three deme decrees more o r less securely dated before 350 (see below) , which represent the earliest uses of'in a way that displaye d love of honour' as a term o f epigraphic approbation. The particula r phrase ([Ai]a v and 2 3° (revised Knoepfler , REGxcvai 1985 , 243-5 9=SEGxxx alliance with Eretria, in the late 3405 (in 341, LesRelations internatwnales, 346—59); another

49

Opponents of Philip II of Macedon expelled from Amphipolis, 357 6 A stek found at Amphipolis; now in the Epigraphical Museum, Athens. Phot. Hatzopoulos, Uw Donation du roi Lysimaque, pis. xvi—xvii. Euboean-Ionic (e o for e u is an Eas t Ionic feature, found also in Amphipolis and Thasos : Buck §33); stoiclwdon 16. SIG* 194 ; Tod 150* ; Buck 12 ; Hatzopoulos, Macedonian Institutions, no. 40 . Trans. Harding 63.

48. A L L I A N C

E B E T W E E N A T H E N S A N D G A R Y S T U S , 357 , 6

243

treaty between Athens an d Eretria, o f uncertain date , was published b y Knoepfler , 362-4 (cf. SEG-dv 1218) ; see also 73.

Resolved by the people, i Philo n and Stratocle s shall be exile d fro m Amphipolis and the land of the Amphipolitans fo r perpetua l exile , bot h themselve s and thei r children , an d if they are caugh t anywhere the y shall be treated a s enemies and killed with impunity. Their goods shall be public, th e tenth being sacre d propert y of Apollo and Strymon. 15 Th e prostatm shall write them up o n a stone stele. 18 I f any on e reverse s this decree o r receives them b y any craf t o r contrivance whatso ever, his goods shall be public an d he shall be exile d fro m Amphipoli s fo r perpetua l exile.

244

49- OPPONENT

S O F PHILI P I I EXPELLE D

Since 368 the Athenians had been trying to recover their colony of Amphipolis (cf. on 38). Philip o f Macedon, whe n trying at the beginning o f his reign to detach suppor t from riva l claimants , withdrew the garriso n whic h Perdicca s had sen t to defen d i t against Athens (D.S. xvi. 3. iii), and encouraged the Athenians to think that he would allow them t o regain possessio n of it (D.S. xvi. 4. i, cf. Dem. xxm. Anst. 116, 121 , n. 01. ii. 6 with Thp. FGrH 11 5 F 30, [Dem. ] vn. Hal. 27-8, Polyaen . iv. 2 . xvii: there were perhaps secre t talks but no t a treaty (cf. G. E . M. d e Ste Groix, CQ? xiii 1963, 110—19)). In 357 , however, having dealt with his rivals, he attacked Amphipolis and , though sendin g reassurances to Athens, took it for himself, leaving the Athenians to feel cheate d (D.S. xvi. 8. ii). There was a party in Amphipolis which had wanted an alliance with Athens: among the envoys to Athens we hear ofHierax, named in /Giv2. i 94. 1 8 as the recipien t of sacred envoys (thearodokos) i n Amphipolis fro m Epidaurus , and Stratocles , named i n our inscription, but no t o f Philon, the othe r man name d in ou r inscriptio n (Dem . i. 01. i. 8, Thp. FGrH 11 5 F 42). Diodorus writes that afte r taking Amphipolis Philip 'exiled those who were unfavourably disposed to him', and this decre e presumably show s the cit y passing sentences of exile on hi s behalf (but Errington, History o f Macedonia, 272- 3 n. 3, wonders if the decre e is to be date d before Philip's capture of the city).

50

Alliance between Philip II and the Ghalcidians, 357 6 A fragmen t o f a block o f limestone, foun d a shor t distance t o th e wes t o f Olynthus; no w i n the museu m a t Thessaloniki (no. 2276). Phot. TAPAlxv 1934 , pi. i ; Hatzopoulos, Macedonian Institutions, pi. iii. Facs. TAPA 1934, 104. LI. i—1 1 Euboean-Ionic, 1 2 sqq. (oracle ) Delphian; irregula r script , inscribed wit h horizontal guidelines . D. M. Robinson, TAPAlxv 1934 , 103—2 2 no. i ; M. Segre , RFIdxiii = ^xi i 1935 , 497—502; Tod 158* ; Svt. 308; Hatzopoulos, Macedonian Institutions, no. 2 . Trans. Harding 67. See also [Hammon d &] Griffith, ii . 243—52.

49. OPPONENT

S O F PHILI P I I EXPELLE D

245

It is certainly significant that formally the sentence s are decreed by the cit y rather than proclaimed b y Philip, but commentators have gone too far in remarking on 'its democracy unimpaired' (quotation from [Hammon d &] Griffith, n . 351). The enact ment formula, 'Resolved by the people', is not a very strong pointer t o democracy ; on the othe r side of the balance, ther e is no indication o f the proposer o f the decree or o f any responsible officials. I n ou r translatio n of the entrenchmen t claus e (cf. 22, 54) we use 'reverses ' for anapsephizei (1 . 19) : the ver b is found also in Thuc. vi. 14; it i not clear whether it refers here to a presiding official wh o puts a decree of reversal to the vote (which is how epipsepfuzem i s used) or to citizens who propose or vote for such a decree. Amphipolis had bee n colonize d by Athens, but a large proportion o f the settler s were not Athenian s (Thuc. iv . 106 . i) and it had bee n independen t of Athens since 424/3. The dialec t o f our inscriptio n i s the Euboea n for m o f Ionic, a s used also at Olynthus (12, 50). In 11.12—15 tithes are dedicated to Apollo and to Strymon: Amphipolis was situated on the River Strymon, near its mouth; Strymon already appears as a god in Hes. Theog. 339; in 480 the Magi sacrificed to Strymon when Xerxes crossed the river (Her. vn. 113. ii).

having allianc e 2I shall be an ally in accordance with what has been agreed. 3 Of the Ghalcidians there shall swear to Philip th e common official s an d th e envoys; to the Ghalcidians, himself and such others as the Ghalcidians command. They shall swear without deceit and without craft, by Zeus, Earth, Sun, Poseidon, that to those who keep the oath there shall be much good but to those who break the oath much ill. Both parties shall swear with oath-sacrifices.

246

50. ALLIANC

E B E T W E E N P H I L I P I I A N D TH E G I I A L G I D I A N S

For the Ghalcidians and Macedon earlie r in the fourth century see 12, 22. 101—2 , 38. Philip succeeded his brother Perdiccas as king of Macedon in 359, when the Dardanian Illyrians, to the north-west of Macedon, had defeated and killed Perdiccas, and the Paeonians, to the north, were making raids on Macedon. Whil e beginning t o revive the Macedonian arm y he made peace with the Paeonians; but in 358 he attacked and defeated first the Paeonians an d the n the Illyrians. At the sam e time he had t o deal with rival claimant s to the throne : Argaeus, backed by the Athenians, to whom h e suggested that h e would allow them t o take Amphipolis (cf. on 49) , and Pausanias , backed b y Berisades , the kin g o f western Thrace (cf . on 47) , whom h e bough t off " (D.S. xvi . 2. iv—4. vii, cf. 8. i). In 357 he alienated the Athenians by taking Amphipolis for himself, after which they declared war on him; he outbid the Athenians in gaining an alliance with the Ghalcidian state centred on Olynthus, eventually in 356 capturing Potidaea from th e Athenians and giving it to the Ghalcidians; and meanwhile, moving further east, he captured Grenides and refounded it as Philippi (D.S. xvi. 8. ii—vii: cf. 53). We learn from other sources that Philip offered the Ghalcidians Anthemus (on the rive r which flows from th e eas t into the Thermaic Gulf: cf. Zahrnt, Ofynth und die Chalhdier, 152—4) as well as Potidaea (Dem. vi. Phil. n. 20), tha t the war agains t Athens was to be wagedjointly an d endedjointly , and tha t (as in 11. 10— n o f our inscription there was provision for amendmen t b y agreemen t (Lib . hyp. 2 to Dem. i. 01. i). This alliance will have preceded the campaigning season of 356; the survivin g part of the inscription gives us not the formulation of the alliance proper but th e provisions for oath-taking, publication an d amendment, and the text of a Delphic oracle.

50. ALLIANC

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7 These writings shall be written on a stele, and the oracle given by the God about th e alliance the Ghalcidians shall dedicate in the sanctuary of Artemis at Olynthus, an d Philip a t Diurn in the sanctuary of Olympian Zeus, and copie s of the oracl e and stele shall be placed at Delphi. 10 It shal l be permitted t o amend thes e writings by commo n discussio n in a period of three months (?), whatever is resolved by Philip and the Ghalcidians. 12 The Go d responded to the Ghalcidians and Philip: 12 It is preferable and better to become friends an d allie s in accordance with the agreement. Sacrific e an d obtai n goo d omen s fro m Zeu s Teleo s an d Hypatos , Apoll o Prostaterios, Artemis Orthosia, Hermes; and pray that the alliance will be with good fortune; and give back thank-offerings t o Pythian Apollo, and remember your gifts .

If Segr e an d To d wer e right i n thei r interpretatio n o f 1. 3 there were 'commo n officials' o f a Ghalcidian state which could be distinguished from ihepohs of Olynthus. D. J. Mosle y has objected to the restoratio n of 11. 3— 4 that it was not norma l practic for th e envoy s who negotiate d a treat y t o swea r to i t (POP S2 vii 1961 , 59—63) , t he clearest exceptio n being the Peac e of Nicias in 421, where on eac h sid e the seventeen oath-taker s see m to hav e include d te n me n wh o ha d conducte d preliminar y negotiations (Thuc. v. 18 . ix, 19. ii, D.S. xn. 75. iv, with A. Andrewes & D. M. Lewis, JHS\xxvii 1957,177-80) . Zeus, Earth, Sun, and Poseidon (1. 5) represent Empedocles four element s of air, earth , fire , an d water : the y appea r i n othe r oath s i n 53 , 76 . For goo d o r ba d consequence s for keepin g o r breakin g th e oat h (11 . 5-6) cf . 39 . For oath-sacrifice s (11. 6-7) cf . e.g. M&L 3 2 ~ Fornar a 70. 44, an d i n ou r collectio n 68. For publication the Ghalcidians were to use the sanctuary of a goddess (11. 8-9), an d Robinson suggeste d that since Apollo was prominent a t Olynthus Artemis is likely to have been prominent ther e too. For Philip's sanctuar y o f Olympian Zeus at Diu m cf. Dem. xix. Embassy 19 2 with schol. (383 Dilts), D.S. xvi. 55. i). For publication in the participating states and in a major panhellenic sanctuary cf. Thuc. v. 18 . x, 47. xi: in this case the obtaining o f an oracle from Delph i made publication ther e particularl y appropriate. We know no good parallel for Segre's restoration of a provision for amendment but only within three months (11. 10—11) ; but a n early text from Eli s allows amendment u p to a limit of three times (/. Olympia 7 = Buck 64). The tex t which Tod 'hankere d after '

248

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would mean 'It shall be permitted to both parties to change using joint decision'; but the omicro n at the en d o f 1. 10 is clear in the photograph . The Delphi c oracl e (11. 12—16 ) is the mos t striking feature o f the document . State commonly consulted the oracle on religious matters (cf. 58), or else on matters which were controversial at home, in order to obtain externa l support for the line of action proposed (cf. R. G. T. Parker, Crux... G.E. M. de Ste Croix, 298—326). This consultation followed th e standar d form, o f asking whether it was 'preferable an d better' to do X or not, or to do Xor T ; but universal silence suggests that it was not normal practice to obtain an oracle before agreeing to a treaty. Philip will not have needed external support for the policy to which he chose to commit Macedon. Segre stressed that, although Delphi gave its blessing to the making of the alliance , it was not aske d to pronounce on the details, and A. D. Nock, building on that, suggested that this exceptional use of Delphi was the doin g of Philip, 'wit h an eye on Greek public opinion' (P. A. Philos. S. Ixxxv 1942,472 n. 2 = hi s Essays on Religion and the Ancient World, ii . 534—5 n. 2) . Griffith , however, thought that the consultation might have been an Olynthian device to delay the ratification of the alliance in case Olynthus might afte r al l be offered term s which would justify a n allianc e with Athens instead. The Phocians ' seizur e of Delphi i s to be date d to 356, an d th e forma l declaration o f a Sacred War agains t the Phocians , in which Philip was to join though not immediately, to winter 356/5 (N. G. L. Ham mond, JHS\vii 1937,44-7 8 = his Studies in Greek-History, 486-533; Buckler, Philip Hand the Sacred War, 148-58, agrees on those dates). Delphi was consulted and thi s alliance was made earlie r than that, i.e. at a time when Delphi was under Theban influence and hostile to Athens (cf. Slff' 17 5 = /Gn 2 iog;176): Philip had no t yet had occasio n to interest himself in Delphi, but Delphi could be expected to favour this alliance. In its

51 Arcesine honours Androtion, 357 6(?) The uppe r part of a stele found at Arcesine; now in the museum at Syros. Phot. IG xn. vii 5 (part of 11. 1—7). Attic-Ionic, retaining the ol d e for et once and o for ov three times; stoichzdon 29, but wit h additional iotas in 11. 10 (spaces 2—3 and 9—10 ) and 16 , 23 (at the end s of the lines) . /Gxn. vii 5; SIG* 193 ; Tod 152* . Trans. Harding 68 . See also F.Jacoby, FGrH^2^ Gargill , The Second Athmian League, 155—9; Harding, AndrotwnandtheAtthis.

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response it limited itself to a direct answer to the question which must have been put to it, and to religious advice which included gratitude to Pythian Apollo. The oracl e has been reconstructed by comparison with those quoted in Dem. xxi. Mid. 52, [Dem. ] XLIII . Mac. 66. Zeus Teleos will be th e fulfiHe r o f prayers, as in e.g. Find. 01. xiii . 115 , Aesch . Agam. 973 ; in Aesch . Eum. 2 8 Teleio s i s combine d wit h Hypsistos, 'highest'. Apollo is appropriately suppliedbefore Artemis: he is Prostaterios, 'protecting', in Dem. xxi. Mid. 52; Artemis Orthosia, 'making straight' (cf. Orthia, the epithet under which sh e was worshipped in Sparta ) is found i n e.g. Find. 01. iii. 30, Her. iv. 87. ii. There exists also an incompletely carved stone with the text of an alliance between the Ghalcidians and Grabus, king of the Grabaean Illyrians (on whom see 53), which presumably i s to be date d slightly earlier, before th e Ghalcidian s made thi s alliance with Philip, an d wa s superseded by this alliance (D . M. Robinson , TAPA Ixi x 1938, 44—7 no. 2 = Svt. 307). At first Philip gratified the Ghalcidians (cf. above); but th e continued expansion of his kingdom inevitably posed a threat to Ghalcidian independence. By the late 3505 the Ghalcidian s 'ha d made th e Athenians friend s an d sai d they would make the m allies' (Dem. xxin Ami. 107—9) ; Philip seem s to have made a move against Olynthus during his return from a campaign against the Thracian Gersebleptes in 351 (Dem. iv. Phil. i. 17, i. 01. i. 13); and in 349/8 he conducted a major campaign which ended with the betrayal of Olynthus to him (D.S. xvi. 53). Tod 16 6 has been restored as a decree by whic h Athen s grants Olynthia n refugee s exemptio n fro m th e metics ' tax—bu t the name o f the Olynthians is restored, and the Methonaeans (expelled when Phili p captured their city in 354: D.S. xvi. 34. iv-v) hav e also been suggested.

Resolved b y th e counci l an d th e peopl e o f Arcesine. 2 Sinc e Androtion ha s bee n a goo d ma n wit h regard t o the people o f Arcesine; and i n governing th e cit y has no t distresse d an y o f the citizens o r o f the foreigner s arriving i n th e city; and lent money to the city in a crisis and

250

5 1 . ARGESIN E HONOUR S ANDROTION ,

357 6 (?)

io Th e stone has THI.

Amorgus, in the Gyclades , had thre e cities , all on th e north-west-facin g side of the island: Aegiale towards the north-east, Arcesine towards the south-west, and Minoa , with th e bes t harbour, a short distanc e north-east o f Arcesine (see maps i n IG xn. vii; Harrington Atlas, 61). It appear s a s a singl e entity in th e tribut e list s o f the Delia n League (e.g. /Gi3 279. ii. 80) and in the inscribed list of members of the Second Athenian League (22. 124); but her e Arcesine functions a s a separate polls, enacting its own decree, and we have earlier decrees ofboth Arcesine and Minoa (/Gxn . vii i, 3; 219); for anothe r inscription from Amorgu s see 59. Despite the promises made at the time of the League's foundation, Arcesine has had t o receive an Athenian governo r an d garrison, i t ha s ha d t o pa y fo r th e garriso n itself , an d Androtio n a s governor ha s behaved well in general an d i n particular ha s lent the cit y money without chargin g interest. The remark that he has not distressed any one (11.4—6) suggests that governors were perceived as likely to cause distress. Androtion's father Andron was a member of the Four Hundred in 411 but proposed the decre e fo r the tria l o f Antiphon an d other s under th e intermediat e regim e o f 411/10 ([Plut.] XOr. 833 D—F, Harp. 'AvSpwv ( a 133 Keaney)). Androtion himselfwa s an active politician, serving twice in the council (/Gn2 6i. 6—7; Dem. xxu. Andr. 38), on a board concerned with the treasures of Athena, on a board collecting arrears of the property tax, eisphora, and on an embassy to Mausolus of Garia. He proposed honours for the council in which he served his second term, was prosecuted on the grounds that the counci l was not eligibl e fo r honours because it had no t satisfie d a ship-buildin g requirement (Dem . xxn. Andr. i s a supplementary speec h for the prosecution) , but

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was willing to take no interest; and when the city was in difficulties ove r the pay for the garrison he advanced i t from hi s own resources, and o n obtaining i t at the en d o f the year h e exacted no interest; and he caused the city to spend twelv e rnina s les s mone y eac h year ; and he ransomed those made prisoners of the enemy whom he encountered: 16 Grow n Androtion so n o f Andron o f Athens with a gold crow n of five hundred drachma s on accoun t o f his goodnes s and justic e an d good wil l toward s th e cit y o f Arcesine; an d write him up asproxenos and benefactor of the city of Arcesine, both himself and his descendants; and h e shall have immunity [ateleia] o f all things. 24 Sinc e it has als o been resolve d by the allie s likewise

appears t o have bee n acquitted . H e wa s the propose r o f 64 i n 347/6. H e wa s the author o f an Atihis, a history of Athens: the latest known allusion in it is to an episode of 344/3, where some accept a restoration that woul d make him the proposer o f a motion to give a cool response to Persia (Didym. In Dem. viii . 7—26 = Andr. FGrHyz^, F 53: restoration accepted in Didym. ed. Pearson & Stephens, Jacoby; rejected Harding). H e ende d his life a s an exil e in Megara (Plut. De Exil. 605 G-D): it is not certai n that he was exiled because of the Persian episode or that he worked on his Atthis only after he had gone into exile (maintained by Jacoby; rejected Harding). The datin g o f this decree is bound up wit h the datin g o f his second year i n th e council. The decree has been compared with 52 and has been thought appropriate to the time of the Social War; Dem . xxii. Andr. is dated to 355/4 by Dion. Hal. AdAmm. 4 (i. 260 Usener & Radermacher = ii. 312—3 Usher); and if that date is right Androtion will have been a member o f the council in 356/5 and his period o f at least two years (1.14) in Arcesine will have ended not later than 357/6. If that is so, Arcesine will have been subjecte d to a governor an d a garrison befor e the outbrea k of the Social Wa r gave Athens an excus e for taking such measures. D. M . Lewi s argued tha t Androtion's year in the council was 359/8 (BSA xli x 1954,43—4), in which case his period in Arcesine coul d com e afte r tha t an d durin g the Socia l War; but hi s arguments have not found favour (see R . Sealey , REG\xviii 1955, 89—92; G. L. Gawkwell, GSfMxxiii 1962,40-5). For Athens' original promise, unqualified, not to impose governors and garrisons, and for breaches of it in the 3705, see 22. 21-3, and commentary on 24; for breaches at

252

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357 6 (?)

the time of the Social War se e Gargill. By not charging interest Androtion has saved Arcesine 12 minas = 1,200 drachmas each year: that points to loans of i talent or more

52

Athenian precautions for Andros, 357/6 A fragment o^&stek: found on the Athenian Acropolis ; now in the Epigraphical Museum. Attic-Ionic, retaining th e ol d E for EL in 1. 5 and o for ov in 11 . i , 6, and punctuatin g with : after the abbreviate demotic in 1. 6 ; stoichzdan 26 (but one spac e lef t vacant at th e en d o f 1. 2, and 3 7 letters crowded into 1. 6 , probabl because -rrji ftoXrji Ktil was omitted i n error when the text was laid out). IGii2 123 ; SIG* 192 ; Tod 156* . Trans. Harding 69.

15 'AvSpov IG ii2: CLVTOJV earlie r edd.; To d note s avrrjs als o possible.

Andros, though close to Athens (it is immediately south-east of Euboea), did not join the Secon d Athenian League until, probably, 37 5 (22. 112), an d it s history does not suggest enthusiastic support for Athens. In 480 it had submitte d to the Persians, and after Salami s the Greeks ' attempts to extrac t money from i t and t o take it by siege were unsuccessful (Her . vin. 111—12 , 121 . i); in the Delia n League it was subjected t o

51-

ARGESINE HONOUR S ANDROTION .

357' 6 (?)

253

(Davies, APF, 33; Harding, 20), in addition to whatever he paid to ransom prisoners of war. We might well ask why a governor should see fit to do this.

In th e archonshi p o f Agathocles [357/6] ; in th e nint h prytany , o f Aegeis; t o whic h Diodotus so n o f Diodes fro m Angel e wa s secretary; of theproedroi Diotimu s of Oenoe was puttin g t o th e vote . Resolve d b y th e council an d th e people . Hegesande r proposed: 7 S o that Andros shall be safe for the people of Athens and th e people o f Andros, and tha t the garrison in Andros shall have its pay out of the syntaxeis in accordance with the resolutions of the allies, and the guard shall not be broken off" : 13 Appoint a genera l ou t o f thos e wh o hav e been elected ; the man appointe d shal l take care of Andros. 16 Als o Archedemu s shal l exac t th e mone y from th e islands which is due for the soldiers in Andros, and hand it over to the governo r in Andros so that the soldiers shall have their pay

a cleruchy , probably i n 450 (Plut. Per. n. v with Rhodes,CAH2,v. 60); it was on the Spartan sid e in 407 (X. H. i. iv. 21-3). This decree was enacted in the early summer of 356, which falls uncontroversially within the Social War. Andros already has a garrison an d a governor, but, whereas Arcesine had t o pay for its own garrison, this garrison is to be paid out of the syntaxeis

254

52. A T H E N I A N P R E C A U T I O N S FOR A N D R O S ,

357 '6

(cf. o n 2 2) 'in accordance with the resolutions of the allies', and overdue syntaxeis are to be collected for the purpose (cf. 39. 12—14). One o f the generals who have been elected, probably fo r the new year 356/5, is to 'take care of Andros', i.e. of its defence agains t dissident members of the Leagu e (cf. D.S. xvi. 21. ii) and perhaps internal dissidents too. Fo r the chronology of the Social War and Athens' use of governors and garrisons cf. 51: in this instance Athens has the backing of the synedrwn, and its declared aim is to keep Andros safe (cf. X. H. vn. iv. 4) for the Andrians, or at any rate for those of them who are pro-Athenian, a s well as for the Athenians. The fac t that this decree has been inscribed is remarkable: al l that th e survivin g text does is give one o f the general s a

53 Alliance between Athens and Thracian, Paeonian, and Illyrian kings, 356/5 Three fragment s o f a stele., at the top of which was a relief showing a prancing horse: fr. a (1—14) was found on the Athenian Acropolis, b (9—24) and c (25 sqq.) between the theatre of Dionysus and th e odeum of Herodes Atticus ; now in the Epigraphical Muesum. Phot. Svoronos, Das athener J^atwnalmuseum, Taf. ccxv Nr. 4 (frs. Dreher ; letter before /Lt^Sets 1 read as t or u Koehler, /Gn1 65, confirmed b y Lambert . 4 [T^ S JlTTtK^ s /x^Se ] edd . 5 ^B[a^66ev eiftr/^laOaL edd . 9 TOVS v6/j,ovs Koehler , Knoepfler : TO.S airovBas J. Kirchner , 5/G^ , an d othe r edd . 1 2 Lambert , compar ing 22 . 55—7 : OavaTov edd . 1 6 Lambert : Koti 97~IQ6, A. Wilhelm, E$. &px- I 9°4; 89—97, /Gxn ix 189, LSCGgz*. See also D. Knoepfle r i n Hansen (ed.), Th e Polis as an Urban Centre, 352—449 at 376—7 .

6 0vXaKEi Knoepfler : 0v\aKEi LSCG. 3

1 a y /G: ay LSCG.

7 3 - R E G U L A T I O N S F O R TH E A R T E M I S I A , E R E T R I A , £ . 3 4 0 3 6

Gods. Execestus son of Diodorus proposed: in order that we may celebrate the Artemisia as finely as possible and that as many people as possibl e ma y sacrifice , resolve d b y th e counci l an d people . 5 Th e cit y is to arrange a competition in music with a budget of i ,000 drachmas t o th e Moderato r an d Guardia n an d provid e lamb s there for five days before the Artemisia, two of them being choice animals. 8 Th e 27t h o f the mont h Anthesterio n i s to b e th e firs t da y o f the music, the music competition is to be for rhapsodes, singers to the pipes, lyre-players, singers accompanying themselve s on the lyre, and singers of parodies, and those participating in the musical contest are to compete in the processional hymn for the sacrifice in the court with the paraphernalia whic h they have in the contest. 15 Prize s are t o b e give n i n th e followin g way: to th e rhapsod e 12 0 (drachmas), to the second 50, to the third 20 ; to the boy singer to the pipes 50, to the second 30, to the third 20; to the adult lyre-player no, t o the second 70, to the third 55; to the singer accompanyin g himself on the lyre 200, to the secon d 150, to the thir d 100 ; to the singer of parodies 50, to the second 10. 21 Maintenanc e is to be granted to the competitors who are present of a drachma a day for each of them, beginning not more than three days befor e the pre-competitio n even t an d continuin g unti l th e competition takes place. 24 Le t the demarch s arrange th e competitio n in the fairest way they can, and let them punish any behaving irregularly according to the law. 26 Th e district s are to provide choice victims, an ox, every year, an d the districts are to contribute to the choice victims as for the festival ofHera. 28 Thos e who provide th e choic e victims are to take the skin s of the victims; 30 Th e official s i n charge o f the sanctuarie s are to judge th e victims according t o the law and put th e provision out to tender if one of the villages does not provide.

3

364 73

35 ei

1

- R E G U L A T I O N S F O R TH E A R T E M I S I A , E R E T R I A , £ . 3 4 0

T|e t dyopft Wllhelm : e y re t a|yope t LSCG. 4

LSCG] ytyT^Ta t Wllhelm: yeyT^Ta t LSCG. 4

° KaXXtaarij IG:

KaXXtarij LSCG]

Ouatij IG: Qvaia

4 ^P^JTTOV IG'. TrpijTTOv LSCG.

In 34 1 the people o f Eretria wer e liberated b y the Athenians fro m th e 'tyrant ' Glit archus who had installe d himself with Macedonian suppor t (Philochorus , FGrHdi> Hiller ; E[IS 'A\ \ B-i^vav Dittenberger.

I O 2 . A C T S O F H E A L I N G , A S G L E P I E U M , E P I D A U R U S , C.

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