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[Object]  AO 49: Ostrakon of Themistokles Neokleos

Βάση μελαμβαφούς κύλικος, (Θεμιστοκλής Νεοκλέους). Διάφοροι χείρες.

[Object]  AO 64: Ostrakon of Themistokles Neokleos

Βάση μελαμβαφούς κύλικος, χείρ. C. (Θεμιστοκλής Νεοκλέους).

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[Object]  P 29373: Ostrakon of Alkibiades Kleiniou

Joins P 29374. Broken on all sides. Reused fragment of pan tile. On black surface: ΑΛΚΙΒΙΑΔΗΣ ΚΛΕΙΝΙΟ Coarse beige clay. Crossroads enclosure, layer 10. Protect from abrasion. 1766 Leica, 87-185, 84-7-19 ... 27 March 1972

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[Object]  P 31179: Ostrakon of Nikias

Fragment from the handle of a large coarseware jar or amphora, oval in section, broken at both ends. Two lines of text running along length of handle: Orange clay with light inclusions, covered with ... 18 May 1981

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[Drawing]  PD 1908: Restored perspective drawing of the Metroon.

M.H. McAllister ... Scanned. DB: 74 (05/03/2001) 86-523

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[Drawing]  PD 2678: Perspective view inside the Old Bouleuterion.

Richard C. Anderson ... Scanned. DB: 46 (05/03/2001)

[Website]  The Birth of Democracy: Administration and Bureaucracy

The economy of Athens was supervised by numerous boards of officials in charge of the mint, the marketplace, weights and measures, and the grain and water supplies. Most of these officials held office ...

[Website]  The Birth of Democracy: Democracy from the Past to the Future

Searching for models for the new government they were creating, America's Founding Fathers studied both the democracy of Athens and the republic of Rome, but they favored the latter. In The Federalist ...

[Website]  The Birth of Democracy: Factional Politics

A group of ostraka found together in a pit on the North Slope of the Acropolis is of special interest. There were 190 ostraka, mostly the round feet of drinking cups, all inscribed with the name of Themistokles ...

[Website]  The Birth of Democracy: Introduction

Classical Athens saw the rise of an achievement unparalleled in history. Perikles, Aischylos, Sophokles, Plato, Demosthenes, and Praxiteles represent just a few of the statesmen and philosophers, playwrights ...

[Website]  The Birth of Democracy: Marble Stele

In 338 B.C. Philip II of Macedon and his son Alexander defeated the Athenians and other Greek states in a battle at Chaironeia in central Greece. In the following year (337/6 B.C.) the Athenians passed ...

[Website]  The Birth of Democracy: Overthrow and Revolution

In 514 B.C. the tyrant Hipparchos was stabbed to death. The murder, actually the result of a love feud, was quickly deemed a political act of assassination and the perpetrators, Harmodios and Aristogeiton, ...

[Website]  The Birth of Democracy: Political Organization of Attica

Each tribe was divided into three parts, and each third (trittys) was from one of the three regions of Attica, plain, coast, or hills. Every trittys was itself made up of several smaller units called ...

[Website]  The Birth of Democracy: Practice of Ostracism

Soon after their victory over the Persians at the battle of Marathon in 490 B.C., the Athenians began the practice of ostracism, a form of election designed to curb the power of any rising tyrant. They ...

[Website]  The Birth of Democracy: Slaves and Resident Aliens

Also excluded from political participation were two other large segments of the population: slaves and metics (resident aliens). Slavery was common in antiquity, and the Athenians used thousands of slaves ...

[Website]  The Birth of Democracy: Sokrates

The philosopher Sokrates was one of many Athenians critical of the people and their control over affairs of state. His probing public debates with fellow citizens led to his trial for impiety and corrupting ...

[Website]  The Birth of Democracy: Solon the Lawgiver

By the early 6th century B.C. social tensions in Athens had become acute, pitting the poorer citizens against rich and powerful landowners. Many citizens were reduced to the status of share croppers, ...

[Website]  The Birth of Democracy: Sources and Documents

Our understanding of the workings and history of Athenian democracy comes from a variety of sources. Most useful, perhaps, are the ancient literary texts that survive, many of which have been cited repeatedly ...

[Website]  The Birth of Democracy: State Religion

There was no attempt in Classical Athens to separate church and state. Altars and shrines were intermingled with the public areas and buildings of the city. A single magistrate, the archon Basileus or ...