Solon watched on helplessly as Peisistratos swept away Solon's constitutional reforms, and appointed himself as tyrant of Athens. Solon had wanted the Athenians themselves to look after their new constitution and had left the city without a defender, despite his attempts by means of his reforms to prevent the rise of a tyrant. But perhaps a tyranny was inevitable. Injustice and corruption, and the wrongdoings lead to unrest [stasis]: stasis invokes powerful individuals to want to control the state of affairs. Thus is how a tyranny is born. The popular strongman of the day, Peisistratos, came to power.
The 6th century BC saw Athens having a period of phenomenal growth, especially under the tyrannies of Peisistratos and his sons (ca 560–510 BC). Around 510 BC the Alcmaeonidae family, who had been exiled from Athens, requested that Sparta help them overthrow Hippias, the son of Peisistratos wjo had succeeded his father as tyrant of Athens. The Alcmaeonidae, led by Cleisthenes, bribed the oracle at Delphi to tell the Spartans to assist them. After two attacks Cleomenes prevailed and ousted Hippias. After which Cleisthenes and the Athenian aristocrat Isagoras then fought each other for control of Athens.
Cleisthenes abolished the four traditional tribes of Athens creating ten new ones, called phyles, each one named after a local hero. To populate these tribes Cleisthenes divided the province of Attica in three zones — its urban centre (asty), its coastal strip (paralia) and an inland area (mesogeia). Each of these zones was further divided into ten districts called Trytties. Now Cleistenes created each new tribe with citizens from each of the three zones. They were no longer based on blood groupings, but residential district at the time of the reforms. Each of the new tribes was now made up of three trytties one from each of the three zones. Thus Athens was re-organised into 30 trittyes ("thirds"). The ten new tribes of Athens, or phyles, were now each composed of three trittyes, one from the coast, one from the city, and one from the inland area. To each of these trittytes were assigned between one and ten of the 139 existing settlements, villages or districts within the city, which were henceforth called demes [
]. By this means each of the citizens in Attica were united into a single democracy and everyone felt they had an equal share in the fortunes of Athens. Each deme was responsible for keeping an accurate register of its citizen electors. This became the necessary record of citizenship of Athens. Prior to this all citizenship had been based on membership of a phratry, or family group. The establishment of demes as the fundamental units of the state weakened the gene, or aristocratic family groupings.
Over time a pattern began to emerge which theoreticians called "The Kyklos". This was a term used by some classical Greek historians to describe how a cycle of different types of governments in a polis evolved. The concept of "The Kyklos" was first described by Plato in his Republic, in chapters VIII and IX. Later a more fully developed version of this theory was produced by Polybius who explained how the system of government in a polis rotated through the three basic benign forms: namely democracy, aristocracy, and monarchy which, before they each transformed into the next, because of inherent defects, they each passed through three malignant or degenerate of corrupt versions of each of these, namely the regimes of ochlocracy, oligarchy, and tyranny.
Originally society started in a state of ochlocracy [mob rule] but after time a strong person would emerges from the chaos and set up a monarchy. The monarch's descendants, who because of their family dynasty power tend to lack virtue and they turn into despots [persons holding absolute autocratic power, typically exercising it in a cruel or oppressive way]. It is thus how a monarchy degenerates by corruption into a tyranny. Because of the excesses of the ruler of a tyranny the despot is eventually overthrown by the leading citizens of the polis, who set up an aristocracy. They too quickly forget about virtue and the polis becomes ruled by corrupt version of the aristocracy which can be termed as an oligarchy. The oligarchs are eventually overthrown by a revolt of the people who set up a democracy. Democracy itself soon becomes corrupt, degenerating into ochlocracy or mob rule, and the cycle begins all over again..
It was thus how the Democracy of Classical Athens came into being. Cleisthenes'Reeforms led to a system of "Rule by All". This kind of democracy was a system of government under which the Athenian drama flourished. Indeed were it not for the democratic system classical Athenian drama may not have come into being. The young Athenian democracy needed a propaganda machine which to extol its virtues. Theatre provided just that means.
The Graeco-Persian Wars
Ionian Revolt [499-493 BC]
First Persian invasion of Greece (492–490 BC)
Because of the support Athens had given the city-states of Ionia during their revolt against Persian rule, this had incurred the wrath of Darius the Great, emperor of Persia. Darius crosses the Dardanelles and invades and subjugates Thrace and Macedon, and the Cycladic Islands are also conquered. Persia establishes control over the Aegean sea with its navy. but in its attempts to capture Athens it is unsuccessful. It is defeated at the battle of Marathon.
Second Persian invasion of Greece (480–479 BC)
The Mines of Laurion
Coinage arrived in the Greece mainland and its city-states around the mid 6th century BC. Coinage enabled some families to become hugely rich as it enabled them to accumulate their wealth year after year, unlike the wealth that might be stored in agricultural produce in barns or other storehouses, which can rot. The discovery of the silver mines at Laurion made it possible for vast quantities of coins to be minted.
Under the tyrant Pisistratus Athens began a systematic exploitation of the mineral resources of Attica. A rich vein of silver was discovered at the mines of Laurion. This meant that by the start of the second Persian invasion of Greece (480–479 BC) in which Xerxes, the son of Darius, tried to conquer all of Greece, Athens had at its disposal an enormous amount of wealth. Rather than give all this to the citizens of Athens, Themistocles proposed that it should be used to construct an Athenian navy of 200 triremes. This enabled Athens to become a sea power and led to Athens' victory against the Persians at the Battle of Salamis in 480 BC.
See Histories of Herodotus Book VII § 144
The advice of Themistocles had prevailed on a previous occasion. The revenues from the mines at Laurium had brought great wealth into the Athenians’ treasury, and when each man was to receive ten drachmae for his share, Themistocles persuaded the Athenians to make no such division but to use the money to build two hundred ships for the war, that is, for the war with Aegina. [2] This was in fact the war the outbreak of which saved Hellas by compelling the Athenians to become seamen. The ships were not used for the purpose for which they were built, but later came to serve Hellas in her need. These ships, then, had been made and were already there for the Athenians’ service, and now they had to build yet others. [3] In their debate after the giving of the oracle they accordingly resolved that they would put their trust in the god and meet the foreign invader of Hellas with the whole power of their fleet, ships and men, and with all other Greeks who were so minded.
Comment
Silver, lead, and perhaps copper mines in Attica, from which the state drew an annual revenue. Apparently when this exceeded the usual amount the general public received a largess. Even if the population numbered 30,000 (cp. Hdt. 5.97) ten drachmae per head would be only 50 talents; far too small a sum for the building of 200 ships; Herodotus cannot mean more than that the Laurium money was a contribution towards a ship-building fund.
Delian League and Athenian Empire
Ancient Greek Drama
How much was the dramatic performances in an arena like the Athenian City-Dionysia festival was what theatre historians call "popular entertainment" or "bread and circuses", and how much it was a necessary education for the masses on how their city-state functioned is open to dispute. The great Athenian dramatic festival known as the City Dionysia was very probably established during the tyranny of Peisistratos as a competitive event.
The Athenians before they invented democracy they had invented tragedy. Drama became a highly subtle, clever piece of propaganda. In democracies, elected political leaders in office must necessarily explain and justify their courses of action to an electorate. Theatre and drama through tragic productions provided an ideal platform to be able to do this. Indeed tragedians were to co-operate with the democratic leaders as did Aeschylus with Pericles.
After the conflict with Persia had ended, Themistocles continued his pre-eminence among Athenian politicians. However, he aroused the hostility of Sparta by ordering the re-fortification of Athens, and his perceived arrogance began to alienate him from the Athenians. In 472 or 471 BC, he was ostracised, and went into exile in Argos. The Spartans now saw an opportunity to destroy him, and implicated him in the alleged treasonous plot of 478 BC of their own general Pausanias. Themistocles thus fled from Greece. Alexander I of Macedon (r. 498–454 BC) temporarily gave him sanctuary at Pydna before he traveled to Asia Minor, where he entered the service of the Persian king Artaxerxes I (reigned 465–424 BC). He was made governor of Magnesia, and lived there for the rest of his life. He died in 459 BC,
In 464 BC the area around Sparta suffered a huge earthquake. In the general turmoil that followed the helots and various Messenian subjects of Sparta revolted; Sparta invoked the assistance of other Greek cities to put down the rebellion. They were obliged to Sparta's aid in accordance with various alliance agreements. Sparta sought Athens', help because of their reputed experience in siege operations. Athens sent approximately 4,000 hoplites under the leadership of Cimon, but this contingent was sent back whilst those from other cities were allowed to stay. The Spartans were worried that the Athenians might switch sides and support the helots The Athenian democracy had been entertaining political notions of a revolutionary character This fact alone posed a threat to Sparta's oligarchic regime.
During the time from the late 470s BC from the time| when Themistocles was ostracised and the reforms of Ephialtes in 462 BC the Athenian political scene was dominated by the Areopagus, a traditional court comprised of ex-archons. This period is known to historians as The Areopagite Constitution. During this time Athens was dominated by a political leader called Cimon. He was opposed by another called Ephialtes After the downgrading of the role of the Areopagus, and so fell Cimon.
Cimon [Kimon], ca 510 – 450 BC was an Athenian statesman and general in the first half of the 5th century BC. He was the son of Miltiades, the victor of the Battle of Marathon. He became a celebrated military hero in his own right and was elected to the rank of strategos after his participation and role at the Battle of Salamis.
He played a key role in creating the Delian League, the powerful Athenian maritime empire after the failure of the Persian invasion of Greece under Xerxes I in 480–479
As admiral of the trireme fleet he destroyed the Persian fleet at the Battle of the Eurymedon river in 466 BC.
Then there occurred one of the great turning points in the political history of Athens. The Democratic cause was on the rise in Athens, led by Ephialtes, who may have been poor but who was also was also considered incorruptible. He resented the traditional powers of the Areopagus, one of which was "Guardianship of the Laws and Constitution of Athens". This power allowed the Areopagus to interfere in the decisions of the lower Democratic institutions (The Boule (Council of 500) and the Assembly (Ekklesia)) whenever it liked, declaring any measure that they might pass as void on the grounds of it being unconstitutional. Ephialtes resented this.
Many of the rich, members of the Areopagus and/or their families, abused this power. Corrupt and unprincipled they got themselves elected to high positions in the government of Athens, namely the archonships, through bribery and other corrupt means. Ephialtes succeeded in undermining the reputation of Cimon and the Areopagus by several successful prosecutions of those of the rich who had committed such abuse using their wealth. And now that Cimon was away supposedly allied with Sparta attempting to put down the revolt of the Helots, Ephialtes seized this opportunity and began to pursue a campaign against the Areopgaus and its traditional powers. Among his team of prosecutors was a young lawyer called Pericles.
In 463 BC Pericles, a lawyer now one of the principal figures of the democratic cause prosecuted Cimon, the leader of the conservatives, on a charge of bribery and whom he also accused of neglecting Athens' interests in Macedon. Although Cimon was acquitted on this occasion Pericles' succeeded in demonstrating that their major political opponent was vulnerable.
In 462/1 BC Cimon [Kimon] persuaded the Ecclesia in Athens to support his proposal to send to Sparta 4,000 hoplite troops to put down a rebellion by Sparta’s helots. The helots had risen up against their masters in the aftermath of the huge earthquake which had struck the Peolopennese in 470 BC. The Ecclesia approved this and 4,000 hoplites were sent to Sparta. Ephialtes, Cimon’s rival, seized his chances. With now a large proportion of Athens’ rich and wealthy citizens now absent and away from the city on this campaign enabled Ephialtes to put forward proposals to the People’s Assembly for a massive reform of the Areopagus and its powers. Duly the Ecclesia passed these reforms :
A very definite set of powers which the Areopagus held was Guardianship of the Constitution and Fundamental Laws of Attica [Athens]. The Areopagus because it had this constitutional role this gave it the right to overrule and veto any measure passing through the Council of 500 [Boulé] or the Ecclesia as being unconstitutional. Ephialtes persuaded the Ecclesia to pass new laws which limited the powers of the Areopagus to do this He left it with only powers to deal with cases of homicide or some aspects of sacrilege. Following this reform there began a new era of "radical democracy" in Athens.
In 461 Ephilates had Cimon ostracised and sent into exile away from the city of Athens. Later that same year Ephialtes was found assassinated by some unknown killer in suspicious circumstances. This left Pericles, his deputy. being able to take over as political leader of Athens.
Age of Pericles [461-429 BC]
The rejection by Sparta to come to the aid of Athens outraged them provoking hostile relations between the two city-states. This rejection rejection brought disgrace upon Cimon which carried over to his fellow aristocrats in general. The climate for democratic reforms was ripened. A citizen of Athens called Ephialtes saw his chance and seized the opportunity in 461 BC by convincing the assembly to pass laws which limited the power of the Areopagus.
Ephialtes' reforms set up a revised system for the judicial courts. The decisions in these courts were to be decided by huge juries of male citizens over thirty years of age who had been selected randomly for each case. The reforms made it almost impossible to influence or bribe these citizen jurors because a) all trials had to be concluded in a one day sitting, and b) the juries themselves very large numbers of persons, from several hundred persons to several thousand.
There was no overall judge to direct the cases and jurors, nor lawyers to influence the proceedings, only an official to keep order and stop any fights from occurring.
Having heard the speeches and evidences brought by the accusers/plaintiffs and the defendants, who either spoke of their own behalf, or their friends and supporters spoke up for them, jurors made up their own minds. The accuser and accused were expected to speak for themselves before the court. However they could hire someone to write their speeches for them. A Majority vote by the juros decided the case. There was no opportunity for an appeal once a decision had been reached.
That same year Pericles succeeded in eliminating Cimon using Ostracism on the grounds that Cimon had betrayed his city by giving aid to Sparta, Athens' enemy.
The reforms of the Council of the Areopagus by Ephialtes (and Pericles) in 462 BC: an Athenian named Ephialtes promptly seized the moment in 461 B.C. and convinced the assembly to pass measures which limited the power of the Areopagus. More importantly, his reforms set up a judicial system of courts manned by male citizens over thirty years old chosen by lot for each case. The Areopagus was the one last traditional bastion of conservatism remaining in Athens. It had held onto powers which included the scrutiny and control of office holders, and the judicial functions in state trials. Public officeholders were now to be paid for their work. Ephialtes also reduced the property qualifications required for holding a public office. New rules defining citizenship of Athens were introduced. However Ephialtes was not live long after these reforms came into being, for soon afterwards he was assassinated, more or less certainly because some oligarchs resented the changes he had made. After that the political leadership of Athens passed to his deputy, Pericles.Pericles [ca. 495 – 429 BC) was the prominent Greek statesman, orator and general of Athens during its golden age – specifically that period between the Persian and Peloponnesian wars.
Pericles is primarily remembered for the following: Delivering a famous oration extolling the virtues the Athenian Democracy, which was recorded by Thucydides. and the rebuilding of the Acropolis and the Parthenon using monies from the treasury of the Delian League,. Generally speaking the otehr mebers of the Delian League were none too pleased with Athens about this/, for this was money meant to be used to build triremes and for the joint defence of the city-states of the Delian League.
Aeschylus
This was the period when Aeschylus' plays were being produced. Here are their dates
The Persians (472 BC) - set after the Greek victory over the Persians at Salamis and Xerxes' return to Persia. Pericles as a liturgy funded the production of this play by Aeschylus' for presentation at the Greater Dionysia festival . This honour demonstrated that he was one of the wealthier men of Athens. The play helped to show that Pericles, the young politician, supported Themistocles, the hero of Salamis, against his political opponent Cimon, whose faction had succeeded in having Themistocles ostracized shortly afterwards.
Seven Against Thebes (467 BC) - about the siege of Thebes.
Suppliants (unknown date but possibly ca. 463 BC) - about the Danaids myth.
Oresteia (458 BCE) - a trilogy about the aftermath of the Trojan War comprising Agamemnon, The Libation Bearers (Choephori), and The Furies (Eumenides).
Prometheus Bound (c. 457 BCE) - this play is in disputed whether it truly was the work of Aeschylus. It deals with Zeus' punishment of the Titan Prometheus, who stole fire from the gods and gifted it to humanity.
,
Peloponnesian War
The Peloponnesian War was the war between the city-states of Athens and Sparta 431 to 405 BC and their allies.
The causes of the Peloponnesian War were several and various, but the main one was the rapid rise in the Athenian Empire following the successes of the Persian Wars and the success of Athens' commerce and its democracy. These threatened Sparta which was ruled by a traditional oligarchy. Athens was also pursuing ambitious policies in the Greek region. This did not help matters. The imperial ambitions of the Athenian city-state upset Sparta, threatening it. The tribal and linguistic differences between the Athenians [Ionians] and the Spartans [Dorians] only exarcerbated the situation.
The prime and immediate cause was the ultimatum was sent by Sparta to Athens: Sparta told Athens it would attack it if it did not lift its economic sanctions on the Megarans.
The Athenians, unilaterally had banned the ships of Megara from its port and those of its allies. This was called the Megarian Decree. Megara kad been an ally of Sparta for a long-time and this blockade was widely resented, as it was seen as an attempt by Athens to make Megara completely dependent upon it.
Megara defected from the Spartan-dominated Peloponnesian League (c. 460 BC) to the Delian league due to border disputes with its neighbour Corinth and it became one of the causes of the First Peloponnesian War (460 – c. 445 BC). By the terms of the Thirty Years' Peace of 446–445 BC Megara was returned to the Peloponnesian League after successfully revolting from the Delian league.
Pericles persuaded the Athenians to ignore Sparta's Ultimatum.
by Sparta, the Athenians control of the Delian League and their naval alliance,
There was a truce between the warring sides lasting 6 years between The First Peloponnesian War (460–445 BC)
In 451 BC, when Cimon returned to the city, his ostracism over, the Athenians were willing to have him negotiate a truce with Sparta. Cimon arranged a five-year truce, and over the next several years Athens concentrated its efforts in the Aegean.
[Peace of Callias 449 BC]
In the end Sparta won the war after completely destroying the Athenian fleet with financial help from Persia.
The Thirty Tyrants of Athens
In the Spring of 404 BC Athens surrendered to the Spartans. Peace talks were held in Sparta. Sparta's proposed that Athens should be meted out with the same punishments that it had served on Melos and Skione, where after sieges of those cities the Atenians had put all the adult males to death and enslaved all the women and children. Sparte said that would be handing control of Attica on a plate to the Thebans. Instead Sparta imposed a caretaker government on Athens one mirrored on its system of government. This was known as the rule of The Thirty Tyrants.
Theirs was a reign of terror. The members of this government were all Laconophiles. They came from the wealthy elite, admired oligarchy and hated democracy. Their abused their power sentencing some to death and executing them just to be able to lay their hands on their wealth. Such corruption was intolerable, even to Sparta, who allowed Athens' democrats to return from exile and restore the former constitution.
Trial and Execution of Socrates - 399 BC
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Jan F. Brouwer (2012).
Classical Greek Ritual Theater. The development of classical Greek theater from cyclic and calendar rituals: Lulu.com. pp. 32–.
ISBN 978-1-105-87867-1.
Kurt A. Raaflaub; Josiah Ober; Robert Wallace (15 October 2008).
Origins of Democracy in Ancient Greece. University of California Press. pp. 3–.
ISBN 978-0-520-25809-9.
Josiah Ober (1996).
The Athenian Revolution: Essays on Ancient Greek Democracy and Political Theory. Princeton University Press. pp. 1–.
ISBN 0-691-00190-1.
Christopher Carey (12 January 2017).
Democracy in Classical Athens. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 1–.
ISBN 978-1-4742-8637-4.
David M. Pritchard (29 November 2018).
Athenian Democracy at War. Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–.
ISBN 978-1-108-42291-8.
Thomas N. Mitchell (2019).
Athens: A History of the World's First Democracy. Yale University Press.
ISBN 978-0-300-24660-5.
Aspects of Athenian Democracy. University of California Press.
Aristotle; Xenophon (28 October 2010).
Aristotle and Xenophon on Democracy and Oligarchy. Univ of California Press.
ISBN 978-0-520-26605-6.
F.G. Kenyon (ed.) (2003).
Aristotle on the Constitution of Athens. The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd.
ISBN 978-1-58477-261-3.
Josiah Ober (1996).
The Athenian Revolution: Essays on Ancient Greek Democracy and Political Theory. Princeton University Press.
ISBN 0-691-00190-1.
Eric W. Robinson (15 April 2008).
Ancient Greek Democracy: Readings and Sources. John Wiley & Sons.
ISBN 978-0-470-75219-7.
Xenophon; Petch James A (11 November 2018).
The Old Oligarch; Being the Constitution of the Athenians. FRANKLIN CLASSICS TRADE Press.
ISBN 978-0-353-39380-6.
Hugh Bowden (5 May 2005).
Classical Athens and the Delphic Oracle: Divination and Democracy. Cambridge University Press.
ISBN 978-0-521-82373-9.
Alex Gottesman (2 October 2014).
Politics and the Street in Democratic Athens. Cambridge University Press.
ISBN 978-1-107-04168-4.
William Swinton (1874).
Outlines of the World's History: Ancient, Mediæval, and Modern.
History of Greece: Ivison, Blakeman,. pp. 73–.
Greek Theatre Timeline - Ancient History Encyclopedia
Ancient Greek Government - Ancient History Encyclopedia
Draco's Law Code - Ancient History Encyclopedia
Solon - Ancient History Encyclopedia
The Cambridge Ancient History - Wikipedia
A short history of the ancient world : Smith, Charles Edward, 1905-1959 - Internet Archive
Relevant Volumes
- III.III: The Expansion of the Greek World, Eighth to Sixth Centuries B.C.
- IV: Persia, Greece and the Western Mediterranean C. 525 to 479 B.C.
- V: The Fifth Century B.C.
- VI: The Fourth Century B.C.
- VII.I: The Hellenistic World
Tragic Honours and Democracy: Neglected Evidence for the Politics of the Athenian Dionysia
Peter Wilson
The Classical Quarterly
New Series, Vol. 59, No. 1 (May, 2009), pp. 8-29
Published by: Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Classical Association
https://www.jstor.org/stable/20616659
The Political Sympathies of Aeschylus
Clara M. Smertenko
The Journal of Hellenic Studies
Vol. 52, Part 2 (1932), pp. 233-235
Published by: The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies
DOI: 10.2307/625989
https://www.jstor.org/stable/625989
ΝΟΜΟΦΥΛΑΚΙΑ and the Areopagus
G. L. Cawkwell
The Journal of Hellenic Studies
Vol. 108 (1988), pp. 1-12
Published by: The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies
DOI: 10.2307/632626
https://www.jstor.org/stable/632626
Plots and Politics in Aeschylus
C. D. N. Costa
Greece & Rome
Vol. 9, No. 1 (Mar., 1962), pp. 22-34
Published by: Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Classical Association
https://www.jstor.org/stable/640741
Maximilian Braun,
Die Eumeniden des Aischylos und der Areopag. Classica Monacensia Bd. 19. Tübingen: Gunter Narr Verlag, 1998. Pp. 261. ISBN 3-8233-4878-7.
The Role of Ephialtes in the Rise of Athenian Democracy
Lesley Ann Jones
Classical Antiquity
Vol. 6, No. 1 (Apr., 1987), pp. 53-76
Published by: University of California Press
DOI: 10.2307/25010858
Who Murdered Ephialtes?
Duane W. Roller
Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte
Bd. 38, H. 3 (3rd Qtr., 1989), pp. 257-266
Published by: Franz Steiner Verlag
https://www.jstor.org/stable/4436111
Aeschylus, the Alkmeonids and the Reform of the Areopagos
Loren J. Samons II
The Classical Journal
Vol. 94, No. 3 (Feb. - Mar., 1999), pp. 221-233
Published by: The Classical Association of the Middle West and South, Inc. (CAMWS)
Dēmos: Classical Athenian Democracy
The Athenian Boule - Peter John Rhodes - Google Books
Thomas R. Martin, An Overview of Classical Greek History from Mycenae to Alexander, Athenian Empire in the Golden Age, The Democratic Reform of the Athenian System of Justice, The Reforms of EphialtesPaul Anthony Rahe (27 September 2016).
The Spartan Regime: Its Character, Origins, and Grand Strategy. Yale University Press.
ISBN 978-0-300-22461-0.
Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, Book 1, chapter 1, section 1
Pericles convinces the Athenians to reject Sparta's ultimatum
Constitution-of-the-Athenians-in-the-4th-century-BC.png - Wikimedia Commons
Johnstone, Christopher & Graff, Richard. (2018). Situating Deliberative Rhetoric in Ancient Greece: The Bouleutêrion as a Venue for Oratorical Performance. Advances in the History of Rhetoric. 21. 2-88. 10.1080/15362426.2018.1419744. (PDF) Situating Deliberative Rhetoric in Ancient Greece: The Bouleutêrion as a Venue for Oratorical Performance
James Fredal (2006).
Rhetorical Action in Ancient Athens: Persuasive Artistry from Solon to Demosthenes. SIU Press.
ISBN 978-0-8093-2594-8.
Fred Dycus Miller (1997).
Nature, Justice, and Rights in Aristotle's Politics. Oxford University Press..
ISBN 978-0-19-823726-6.
Simon Hornblower; Antony Spawforth; Esther Eidinow (29 March 2012).
The Oxford Classical Dictionary.
ephetai: OUP Oxford. pp. 509–.
ISBN 978-0-19-954556-8
Cleisthenes The Family Curse behind Athenian Democracy
The Ancestral Laws of Cleisthenes
J. A. R. Munro
The Classical Quarterly
Vol. 33, No. 2 (Apr., 1939), pp. 84-97
Published by: Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Classical Association
https://www.jstor.org/stable/637150
Sara Forsdyke (2009).
Exile, Ostracism, and Democracy: The Politics of Expulsion in Ancient Greece. Princeton University Press.
ISBN 1-4008-2686-1.
Evelyn Abbott (1891).
Pericles and the Golden Age of Athens. G. P. Putnam's sons.
Pericles and the golden age of Athens : Abbott, Evelyn - Internet Archive
Terry Buckley (1996).
Aspects of Greek History, 750-323 BC: A Source-based Approach. Psychology Press.
ISBN 978-0-415-09957-8.
Vincent Azoulay (31 October 2017).
Pericles of Athens. Princeton University Press.
ISBN 978-0-691-17833-2.
Children and Childhood in Classical Athens : Golden, Mark - Internet Archive
Andranik Tangian (31 July 2013).
Mathematical Theory of Democracy. Springer Science & Business Media.
ISBN 978-3-642-38724-1.
The Causes of the Peloponnesian War
Raphael Sealey
Classical Philology
Vol. 70, No. 2 (Apr., 1975), pp. 89-109
Published by: The University of Chicago Press
https://www.jstor.org/stable/267930
Draco (lawgiver) - Wikipedia
Draconian Constitution - Wikipedia
Draco's Law Code - Ancient History Encyclopedia
Ionian Revolt - Wikipedia
Ionian Revolt - History of War
Solon - Wikipedia
Solonian Constitution - Wikipedia
Aristocracy - Wikipedia
Timocracy - Wikipedia
Plato's five regimes - Wikipedia
Tyrant - Wikipedia
Hippias (tyrant) - Wikipedia
Peisistratos - Wikipedia
B. M. Lavelle (2005).
Fame, Money, and Power: The Rise of Peisistratos and "Democratic" Tyranny at Athens. University of Michigan Press.
ISBN 0-472-11424-7.
Herodotus, (17 April 2008).
The Histories. On Peisistratos: OUP Oxford. pp. 25–.
ISBN 978-0-19-953566-8.
Sian Lewis (2006).
Ancient Tyranny. Edinburgh University Press.
ISBN 978-0-7486-2643-4.
Sian Lewis (1996).
News and Society in the Greek Polis. UNC Press Books.
ISBN 978-0-8078-4621-6.
News and society in the Greek polis (1996 edition) - Open Library
Johann P. Arnason; Kurt A. Raaflaub; Peter Wagner (29 April 2013).
The Greek Polis and the Invention of Democracy: A Politico-cultural Transformation and Its Interpretations. John Wiley & Sons.
ISBN 978-1-118-56167-6.
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=M6gwDwAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=Origins+of+Democracy+in+Ancient+Greece&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwi9h5T3kabzAhUMKewKHTluAdsQ6AF6BAgYEAI#v=onepage&q&f=false
Matthew Simonton (27 June 2017).
Classical Greek Oligarchy: A Political History. Princeton University Press.
ISBN 978-1-4008-8514-5.
Aristotle (1996).
Aristotle: The Politics and the Constitution of Athens. Cambridge University Press.
ISBN 978-0-521-48400-8.
Beatriz Santillian; Bernard Randall (2017).
Solon: Athenian Statesman and Poet. The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc.
ISBN 978-1-5081-7493-6.
Josiah Ober (4 October 2016).
The Rise and Fall of Classical Greece. Princeton University Press.
ISBN 978-0-691-17314-6.
Ancient Greece : social and historical documents from archaic times to the death of Socrates (c.800-399 B.C.) : Dillon, Matthew, - Internet ArchiveFifth-century Athenian history and tragedy PDF P Debnar - A Companion to Greek Tragedy, 2005 - books.google.com
Thomas Henry Dyer (1873).
Ancient Athens: Its History, Topography, and Remains. Bell and Daldy.
James Stuart; Nicholas Revett; Institute of Classical Architecture and Classical America (2008). Antiquities of Athens: Measured and Delineated by James Stuart, FRS and FSA, and Nicholas Revett, Painters and Architects. Volume II. Of The Acropolis: Princeton Architectural Press. pp. 64–. ISBN 978-1-56898-723-1.
James Stuart; Nicholas Revett; Institute of Classical Architecture and Classical America (2008).
Antiquities of Athens: Measured and Delineated by James Stuart, FRS and FSA, and Nicholas Revett, Painters and Architects. Princeton Architectural Press.
ISBN 978-1-56898-723-1.
The Topography of Athens - W.M. LeakeThe City as Comedy - Google Books
Michael Gagarin; Paul Woodruff (21 September 1995).
Early Greek Political Thought from Homer to the Sophists. Cambridge University Press.
ISBN 978-0-521-43768-4.
Two Concepts of Freedom of Speech the Greeks called isegoria and parrhesia - The Atlantic
The Party of Peisistratos
A. French
Greece & Rome
Vol. 6, No. 1 (Mar., 1959), pp. 46-57
Published by: Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Classical Association
https://www.jstor.org/stable/641975
Peisistratus - Britannica
Megacles (Alcmaeonidae) - Wikipedia
Phye - Wikipedia
Pisistratus and the Phye Incident | Athena within Ancient Greek Religion
Hippias (tyrant) - Wikipedia
Cleomenes I - Wikipedia
Isagoras - Wikipedia
Cleisthenes - Wikipedia
Ancient Greek civilization - The reforms of Cleisthenes - Britannica.com
Cleisthenes - Ancient History EncyclopediaTyrannoi and Tyrants on the Tragic Stage - Classica Cracoviensia
Isonomia - Wikipedia
Ostracism - Wikipedia
Delian League - Wikipedia
Cimon - Wikipedia
Battle of the Eurymedon River - Wikipedia
Areopagite constitution - Wikipedia
Ancient Greece - Wikipedia
Archaic Greece - Wikipedia
Classical Greece - Wikipedia
Classical Athens - Wikipedia
Battle of Marathon - Wikipedia
Battle of Marathon [12th Sept 490 BC] - History of War
Greco-Persian Wars - Wikipedia
Graeco-Persian Wars [499 - 448 BC] - History of War
Pausanias (general) - Wikipedia
Themistocles - Wikipedia
Battle of Salamis - Wikipedia
Battle of Thermopylae - Wikipedia
Achaemenid destruction of Athens [480 -479 BC] - Wikipedia
Battle of Plataea - Wikipedia
Darius the Great - Wikipedia
Xerxes I - Wikipedia
Second Persian invasion of Greece - Wikipedia
Achaemenid destruction of Athens - Wikipedia
Areopagus - Wikipedia
Areopagite constitution - Wikipedia
Boule (ancient Greece) - Wikipedia
Prytaneis - Wikipedia
Prytaneion - Wikipedia
Prytaneum and Prytanis - Britannica 1911
Bouleuterion - Wikipedia
Metroon - Wikipedia
Pnyx - Wikipedia
Ekklesiasterion - Wikipedia
Kleroterion - Wikipedia
464 BC Sparta Earthquake
Pericles - Wikipedia
Pericles - Athenian - statesman - Britannica
Plutarch-Lives (Clough) - Life_of_Pericles - Wikisource
Pericles - Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology - Wikisource
Pericles - Britannica 1911
Eucleides - Wikipedia
Helots - Wikipedia
Megarian decree - Wikipedia
Peloponnesian War - Wikipedia
Peloponnesian League - Wikipedia
Thirty Years' Peace - Wikipedia
Great or Second Peloponnesian War [431-404 BC] - History of War
Mytilenian Debate - Wikipedia
Mytilenean revolt - Wikipedia
Sicilian Expedition - Wikipedia
Thirty Tyrants - Wikipedia
Hoi polloi - Wikipedia
Oligarchy - Wikipedia
Plague of Athens - Wikipedia
Mytilenian Debate - Wikipedia
Athenian coup of 411 BC - Wikipedia
Socrates - Wikipedia
Cleon - Wikipedia
Economy of ancient Greece - Wikipedia
Mines of Laurion - Wikipedia
Ephialtes - Wikipedia
History of democracy - Wikipedia
City Walls of Athens - Wikipedia
Long Walls - Wikipedia
Older Parthenon - Wikipedia
Parthenon - Wikipedia
Athena Parthenos - Wikipedia