logo
logo
x
바코드검색
BOOKPRICE.co.kr
책, 도서 가격비교 사이트
바코드검색

인기 검색어

실시간 검색어

검색가능 서점

도서목록 제공

The thetes of Athens: Dynamics and developments of the Athenian lower classes

The thetes of Athens: Dynamics and developments of the Athenian lower classes (seventh to fourth centuries BC) (Paperback)

Miriam Valdes Guia (지은이)
Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissen
131,250원

일반도서

검색중
서점 할인가 할인률 배송비 혜택/추가 실질최저가 구매하기
118,120원 -10% 0원
5,910원
112,210원 >
yes24 로딩중
교보문고 로딩중
notice_icon 검색 결과 내에 다른 책이 포함되어 있을 수 있습니다.

중고도서

검색중
서점 유형 등록개수 최저가 구매하기
로딩중

eBook

검색중
서점 정가 할인가 마일리지 실질최저가 구매하기
로딩중

책 이미지

The thetes of Athens: Dynamics and developments of the Athenian lower classes
eBook 미리보기

책 정보

· 제목 : The thetes of Athens: Dynamics and developments of the Athenian lower classes (seventh to fourth centuries BC) (Paperback) 
· 분류 : 외국도서 > 역사 > 고대 > 로마
· ISBN : 9783631932216
· 쪽수 : 460쪽
· 출판일 : 2025-09-22

목차

The thetes of Athens
Dynamics and developments of the Athenian lower classes (seventh-fourth centuries BC)
Miriam A. Valdes Guia
Universidad Complutense de Madrid

(Dedication of the book):
To Domingo Placido, an excellent historian and good friend
In memory of my parents, Carmen and Pedro

TABLE OF CONTENTS
List of Tables
Foreword
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
PART I. Contextualising the thetes: seventh-century processes of degradation and enslavement
Chapter 1. A historiography of the thetes
Introduction

View of the thetes ? ‘hired labourers’ ? in social history since the mid-twentieth century

The term thetes and democracy in historiography

Conclusion

Chapter 2. The thetes and hektemoroi before Solon
The Homeric and Hesiodic thes
Thetes and hektemoroi in pre-Solonian Athens and the degradation of the peasantry
Hektermoroi as sharecroppers
Two situations among the peasantry
Conclusion
Chapter 3. Atimoi and agogimoi: reflections on debt slavery in archaic Athens
Introduction

Solon’s Amnesty Law and the atimia penalty

Being ‘deprived of rights’ in seventh-century Athens and the status of pre-Solonian thetes

The meaning of agogimos in the pre-Solonian Athens and the Solonian restoration of atimoi

Conclusion

Chapter 4. Hybris in archaic Athens: the forms of exploitation and violence employed by the aristoi against the demos
Introduction
Economic exploitation
Physical violence
Ideological constraint
Institutional violence: ‘justice’

Chapter 5. The cult of Zeus and the Attic peasantry: Dike and Zeus Eleutherios
Zeus, the giver of justice and agricultural prosperity

Zeus Eleutherios

PART II. The demos ‘in the middle’: integration and evolution of the lower classes in sixth-century Athens
Chapter 6. The social and cultural background of hoplite development in archaic Athens: Peasants, debts, zeugitai and Hoplethes
Introduction
Hesiod: independent farmer or member of the elite?
Γ? ?λευθ?ρα (Sol. Fr. 36 W -30 G-P-, lin. 5 and 7): demos, debt and zeugitai
Hoplites in the collective imagination: Hoplethes, the giants in the Panathenaic Games and Heracles
Conclusion
Chapter 7. A new reading of Solon’s law on stasis: the sovereignty of the demos
Introduction
The meaning of the expression ‘θ?μενο? τ? ?πλα’. Taking up arms on behalf of the demos, the democracy, the polis or the fatherland
Solon and the assembly of the demos ‘in the middle’
Solon’s law on stasis and the Eretrian law against tyranny (and oligarchy)
A possible reconstruction of the Solonian formulation of the law
Conclusion
Chapter 8. The Attic demos in the sixth century: between agency (and political awareness) and clientelism
Introduction
The demos flocked en masse (pandemei) to the Acropolis and the Damasias episode
The social structure of seventh-century Athens
‘Vertical’ and ‘horizontal’ stasis
The demos in the political sphere and the followers of Pisistratus
The interconnection between ‘vertical’ and ‘horizontal’ stasis: Diakrioi and Hyperakrioi
The demos and the religious/cultural community of Attica under Pisistratus
The leading role and political agency of the demos after the tyranny

Chapter 9. Census’ classes, dekate and demography in 6th Century Athens
Qualifications for the Solonian census classes

Dekate

Demography

Conclusion
PART III. The identity of the thetes and zeugitai in fifth-century democracy: political and military involvement
Chapter 10. Zeugitai in fifth-century Athens: social and economic qualification from Cleisthenes to the end of the Peloponnesian War
Introduction
Evidence on zeugitai in fifth century and the scholarly debate on the use of the census classes in the military organization
Hoplites and zeugitai: numbers, wealth, and land ownership in fifth-century Athens
Cleisthenes’ measures: monetary requirements for belonging to the zeugite census class and military reforms
Conclusion
Chapter 11. Thetes, Athenian empire and demography
Introduction
The thetes as a population segment

Colonies and cleruchies

Benefits of the misthos and full employment

Conclusion

Chapter 12. Thetes epibatai in fifth-century Athens
Introduction
The Epibatai as hoplites with high socioeconomic status
Thetes epibatai

A note on the census classes and their role in fifth-century recruitment
Thetes demography
Possible allusions to thetes epibatai in the sources
Conclusion

Chapter 13. Socrates, as poor as a thes
Introduction
Socrates’ poverty

Socrates, the sculptor (lithourgos)

Socrates: a thes or a zeugites?
Conclusion
Chapter 14. The ‘Five Thousand’ and the demos in the oligarchic coup of 411: eisphora and reform of the census classes
Introduction
The ‘Five Thousand’ in the regime of the Four Hundred and the eisphora levy during the Peloponnesian War
The ‘Five Thousand’ in the government of the Five Thousand
Conclusion
PART IV. The drift of the lower classes in the fourth century: towards the revival of dependencies
Chapter 15. The resurgence of dependency in the fourth century: the spaces of thetes and misthotoi, parasitoi and beggars
Introduction
The resurgence of rural wage labour and the leasing of land to the poor
Salaried work in the asty
Ptocheia
Benefits of citizenship, euergesia and parasitism
Conclusion
Chapter 16. Debt as a source of dependency and exploitation in classical Athens
Introduction
Public debtors
Private debtors

Charis
Conclusion
Chapter 17. Some brief notes on demographics, the eisphora and the diapsephismos in fourth-century Athens
Demographics
The Eisphora
The Diapsephismos of 346
Conclusion
Conclusions
Tables
Bibliography
List of Index terms

저자소개

Miriam Valdes Guia (지은이)    정보 더보기
펼치기
이 포스팅은 쿠팡 파트너스 활동의 일환으로,
이에 따른 일정액의 수수료를 제공받습니다.
이 포스팅은 제휴마케팅이 포함된 광고로 커미션을 지급 받습니다.
도서 DB 제공 : 알라딘 서점(www.aladin.co.kr)
최근 본 책