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Metic

In ancient Greece, a metic (Ancient Greek: μέτοικος, métoikos: from μετά, metá, indicating change, and οἶκος, oîkos 'dwelling')[1] was a foreign resident of Athens, one who did not have citizen rights in their Greek city-state (polis) of residence.

Origin

The history of foreign migration to Athens dates back to the archaic period. Solon was said to have offered Athenian citizenship to foreigners who would relocate to his city to practice a craft.[2][3] However, metic status did not exist during the time of Solon.[4]

Scholars have tended to date the development of metic status to the reforms of Cleisthenes in 508 BC.[4] However, the rate of the increase in the Athenian population in the years following 480 BC is difficult to explain by purely natural growth – suggesting that immigrants to Athens could still become Athenians citizens at this point, and metic status did not yet exist.[5] The first known use of the word metoikos is in Aeschylus' play Persians, first performed in 472 BC.[4] However, James Watson argues that the word was used in Persians in a non-technical sense, meaning nothing more than "immigrant".[4] Rebecca Futo Kennedy dates the origin of metic status in Athens to the 460s,[6] while Watson argues that the legal status of being a metic did not develop until 451 BC – the same year as Pericles introduced his citizenship law.[7]

Metics in Classical Athens

One estimate of the population of Attica at the start of the Peloponnesian War in 431 BC found the male metic population to be ~25,000, roughly a third of the total. The majority of metics probably came to Athens from nearby cities, seeking economic opportunities or fleeing from persecution, although there are records of immigrants from non-Greek places such as Thrace and Lydia.[8]

In other Greek cities (poleis), foreign residents were few, with the exception of cosmopolitan Corinth, of which however we do not know their legal status. In Sparta and Crete, as a general rule with few exceptions, foreigners were not allowed to stay (Xenelasia). There are also reported immigrants to the court of tyrants and kings in Thessaly, Syracuse and Macedon, whose status is decided by the ruler. Due to these complications, the legal term metic is most closely associated with Classical Athens. At Athens, the largest city in the Greek world at the time, they amounted to roughly half the free population. The status applied to two main groups of people—immigrants and former slaves. As slaves were almost always of foreign origin they can be thought of as involuntary immigrants, drawn almost exclusively from non-Greek speaking areas, while free metics were usually of Greek origin. Mostly they came from mainland Greece rather than the remote parts of the Greek world.

Metics held lower social status primarily due to cultural rather than economic restraints. Some were poor artisans and ex-slaves, while others were some of the wealthiest inhabitants of the city. As citizenship was a matter of inheritance and not of place of birth, a metic could be either an immigrant or the descendant of one. Regardless of how many generations of the family had lived in the city, metics did not become citizens unless the city chose to bestow citizenship on them as a gift. This was rarely done. From a cultural viewpoint such a resident could be completely "local" and indistinguishable from citizens. They had no role in the political community but might be completely integrated into the social and economic life of the city. In the urbane scene that opens Plato's Republic—the dialogue takes place in a metic household—the status of the speakers as citizen or metic is never mentioned.

Metics typically shared the burdens of citizenship without any of its privileges. Like citizens, they had to perform military service and, if wealthy enough, were subject to the special tax contributions (eisphora) and tax services ("liturgies", for example, paying for a warship or funding a tragic chorus) contributed by wealthy Athenians. Citizenship at Athens brought eligibility for numerous state payments such as jury and assembly pay, which could be significant to working people. During emergencies the city could distribute rations to citizens. None of these rights were available to metics. They were not permitted to own real estate in Attica, whether farm or house, unless granted a special exemption. Neither could they sign contracts with the state to work in the silver mines, since the wealth beneath the earth was felt to belong to the political community. Metics were subject to a tax called the metoikion, assessed at twelve drachmas per year for metic men and their households, and six for independent metic women.[9] In addition to the metoikion, non-Athenians wishing to sell goods in the agora, including metics, seem to have been liable to another tax known as the xenika.[10]

Although metics were barred from the assembly and from serving as jurors, they did have the same access to the courts as citizens. They could both prosecute others and be prosecuted themselves. A great many migrants came to Athens to do business and were in fact essential to the Athenian economy. It would have been a severe disincentive if they had been unable to pursue commercial disputes under law. At the same time they did not have exactly the same rights here as citizens. Unlike citizens, metics could be made to undergo judicial torture and the penalties for killing them were not as severe as for killing a citizen. Metics were also subject to enslavement for a variety of offences. These might either be failures to abide by their status obligations, such as not paying the metoikon tax or not nominating a citizen sponsor, or they might be "contaminations" of the citizen body like marrying a citizen or claiming to be citizens themselves.

How long a foreigner could remain in Athens without counting as a metic is not known. In some other Greek cities the period was a month, and it may well have been the same at Athens. All metics there were required to register in the deme (local community) where they lived. They had to nominate a citizen as their sponsor or guardian (prostates, literally 'one who stands on behalf of'). The Athenians took this last requirement very seriously. A metic without a sponsor was vulnerable to a special prosecution. If convicted, his property would be confiscated and he himself sold as a slave. For a freed slave the sponsor was automatically his former owner. This arrangement exacted some extra duties on the part of the metic, yet the child of an ex-slave metic apparently had the same status as a freeborn metic. Citizenship was very rarely granted to metics. More common was the special status of "equal rights" (isoteleia) under which they were freed from the usual liabilities. In the religious sphere all metics were able to participate in the festivals central to the life of the city, except for some roles that were limited to citizens.

The status divide between metic and citizen was not always clear. In the street no physical signs distinguished citizen from metic or slave. Sometimes the actual status a person had attained became a contested matter. Although local registers of citizens were kept, if one's claim to citizenship was challenged, the testimony of neighbours and the community was decisive. (In Lysias 23,[11] a law court speech, a man presumed to be a metic claims to be a citizen, but upon investigation—not by consulting official records but by questions asked at the cheese market—it transpires that he may well be a runaway slave, so the hostile account attests.)

Metics whose family had lived in Athens for generations may have been tempted to "pass" as citizens. On a number of occasions there were purges of the citizen lists, effectively changing people who had been living as citizens into metics. In typical Athenian fashion, a person so demoted could mount a challenge in court. If however the court decided the ejected citizen was in fact a metic, he would be sent down one further rung and sold into slavery.

In studying the status of the metics, it is easy to gain the impression they were an oppressed minority. But by and large those who were Greek and freeborn had at least chosen to come to Athens, attracted by the prosperity of the large, dynamic, cosmopolitan city and the opportunities not available to them in their place of origin.[citation needed] Metics remained citizens of their cities of birth, which, like Athens, had the exclusionary ancestral view of citizenship common to ancient Greek cities.

The large non-citizen community of Athens allowed ex-slave metics to become assimilated in a way not possible in more conservative and homogenised cities elsewhere. Their participation in military service, taxation (for the rich of Athens a matter of public display and pride) and cult must have given them a sense of involvement in the city, and of their value to it. Though notably, while Athenians tended to refer to metics by their name and deme of residence (the same democratic scheme used for citizens), on their tombstones freeborn metics who died in Athens preferred to name the cities from which they had come and of which they were citizens still.

Aftermath

The term metic began to lose its distinctive legal status in 4th century BC, when metics were allowed to act in the court without a prostate (patron) and came to an end in Hellenistic Athens, when the purchase of citizenship became very frequent. The census of Demetrius Phalereus in ca. 317 BC gave 21,000 citizens, 10,000 metics and 400,000 slaves (Athenaeus, vi. p. 272 B). In the Greco-Roman world, free people (non-citizens) living on the territory of a polis were called paroikoi (see etymology of parish), and in Asia Minor katoikoi.[12]

Modern French usage

In French, métèque was revived as a xenophobic term for immigrants to France. This sense was popularized in the late 19th century by the nationalist writer Charles Maurras, who identified metics as one of the four primary constituents of the traitorous "Anti-France", along with Protestants, Jews, and Freemasons.[13] This pejorative sense remains current in the French language, and has to some extent been reclaimed by French people of immigrant background. In 1969 the Greco-French singer Georges Moustaki recorded a song, Le Métèque, which has since been covered by several artists of immigrant descent.

Notable metics

In popular culture

See also

References

  1. ^ μέτοικος: μετά, οἶκος. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project
  2. ^ The poetics of appearance in the Attic korai, Mary Clorinda Stieber Page 134 ISBN 0-292-70180-2
  3. ^ Athenian democracy, Peter John Rhodes Page 31 ISBN 0-7156-3220-5 (2004)
  4. ^ a b c d Watson, James (2010). "The Origin of Metic Status at Athens". The Cambridge Classical Journal. 56: 265. doi:10.1017/S1750270500000348. S2CID 170451210.
  5. ^ Watson, James (2010). "The Origin of Metic Status at Athens". The Cambridge Classical Journal. 56: 264. doi:10.1017/S1750270500000348. S2CID 170451210.
  6. ^ Kennedy, Rebecca Futo (2014). Immigrant Women in Athens: Gender, Ethnicity and Citizenship in the Classical City. p. 14.
  7. ^ Watson, James (2010). "The Origin of Metic Status at Athens". The Cambridge Classical Journal. 56: 266. doi:10.1017/S1750270500000348. S2CID 170451210.
  8. ^ Renshaw, James (2008). In Search of the Greeks. London: Bristol Classical Press. pp. 201, 202. ISBN 978-1-8539-9699-3.
  9. ^ Kennedy, Rebecca Futo (2014). Immigrant Women in Athens: Gender, Ethnicity and Citizenship in the Classical City. Page 2.
  10. ^ Kennedy, Rebecca Futo (2014). Immigrant Women in Athens: Gender, Ethnicity and Citizenship in the Classical City. Page 9.
  11. ^ "Lysias, Against Pancleon, section 1".
  12. ^ Encyclopedia of ancient Greece By Nigel Guy Wilson Page 470 ISBN 978-0-415-97334-2 (2006)
  13. ^ L'Action française, 6 juillet 1912.

Sources

  • Hansen M.H. 1987, The Athenian Democracy in the age of Demosthenes. Oxford.
  • Whitehead D. 1977, The ideology of the Athenian metic. Cambridge.
  • Garlan, Y 1988, Slavery in Ancient Greek. Ithaca. (trans. Janet Lloyd)

metic, ancient, greece, metic, ancient, greek, μέτοικος, métoikos, from, μετά, metá, indicating, change, οἶκος, oîkos, dwelling, foreign, resident, athens, have, citizen, rights, their, greek, city, state, polis, residence, contents, origin, classical, athens,. In ancient Greece a metic Ancient Greek metoikos metoikos from meta meta indicating change and oἶkos oikos dwelling 1 was a foreign resident of Athens one who did not have citizen rights in their Greek city state polis of residence Contents 1 Origin 2 Metics in Classical Athens 2 1 Aftermath 3 Modern French usage 4 Notable metics 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 8 SourcesOrigin EditThe history of foreign migration to Athens dates back to the archaic period Solon was said to have offered Athenian citizenship to foreigners who would relocate to his city to practice a craft 2 3 However metic status did not exist during the time of Solon 4 Scholars have tended to date the development of metic status to the reforms of Cleisthenes in 508 BC 4 However the rate of the increase in the Athenian population in the years following 480 BC is difficult to explain by purely natural growth suggesting that immigrants to Athens could still become Athenians citizens at this point and metic status did not yet exist 5 The first known use of the word metoikos is in Aeschylus play Persians first performed in 472 BC 4 However James Watson argues that the word was used in Persians in a non technical sense meaning nothing more than immigrant 4 Rebecca Futo Kennedy dates the origin of metic status in Athens to the 460s 6 while Watson argues that the legal status of being a metic did not develop until 451 BC the same year as Pericles introduced his citizenship law 7 Metics in Classical Athens EditOne estimate of the population of Attica at the start of the Peloponnesian War in 431 BC found the male metic population to be 25 000 roughly a third of the total The majority of metics probably came to Athens from nearby cities seeking economic opportunities or fleeing from persecution although there are records of immigrants from non Greek places such as Thrace and Lydia 8 In other Greek cities poleis foreign residents were few with the exception of cosmopolitan Corinth of which however we do not know their legal status In Sparta and Crete as a general rule with few exceptions foreigners were not allowed to stay Xenelasia There are also reported immigrants to the court of tyrants and kings in Thessaly Syracuse and Macedon whose status is decided by the ruler Due to these complications the legal term metic is most closely associated with Classical Athens At Athens the largest city in the Greek world at the time they amounted to roughly half the free population The status applied to two main groups of people immigrants and former slaves As slaves were almost always of foreign origin they can be thought of as involuntary immigrants drawn almost exclusively from non Greek speaking areas while free metics were usually of Greek origin Mostly they came from mainland Greece rather than the remote parts of the Greek world Metics held lower social status primarily due to cultural rather than economic restraints Some were poor artisans and ex slaves while others were some of the wealthiest inhabitants of the city As citizenship was a matter of inheritance and not of place of birth a metic could be either an immigrant or the descendant of one Regardless of how many generations of the family had lived in the city metics did not become citizens unless the city chose to bestow citizenship on them as a gift This was rarely done From a cultural viewpoint such a resident could be completely local and indistinguishable from citizens They had no role in the political community but might be completely integrated into the social and economic life of the city In the urbane scene that opens Plato s Republic the dialogue takes place in a metic household the status of the speakers as citizen or metic is never mentioned Metics typically shared the burdens of citizenship without any of its privileges Like citizens they had to perform military service and if wealthy enough were subject to the special tax contributions eisphora and tax services liturgies for example paying for a warship or funding a tragic chorus contributed by wealthy Athenians Citizenship at Athens brought eligibility for numerous state payments such as jury and assembly pay which could be significant to working people During emergencies the city could distribute rations to citizens None of these rights were available to metics They were not permitted to own real estate in Attica whether farm or house unless granted a special exemption Neither could they sign contracts with the state to work in the silver mines since the wealth beneath the earth was felt to belong to the political community Metics were subject to a tax called the metoikion assessed at twelve drachmas per year for metic men and their households and six for independent metic women 9 In addition to the metoikion non Athenians wishing to sell goods in the agora including metics seem to have been liable to another tax known as the xenika 10 Although metics were barred from the assembly and from serving as jurors they did have the same access to the courts as citizens They could both prosecute others and be prosecuted themselves A great many migrants came to Athens to do business and were in fact essential to the Athenian economy It would have been a severe disincentive if they had been unable to pursue commercial disputes under law At the same time they did not have exactly the same rights here as citizens Unlike citizens metics could be made to undergo judicial torture and the penalties for killing them were not as severe as for killing a citizen Metics were also subject to enslavement for a variety of offences These might either be failures to abide by their status obligations such as not paying the metoikon tax or not nominating a citizen sponsor or they might be contaminations of the citizen body like marrying a citizen or claiming to be citizens themselves How long a foreigner could remain in Athens without counting as a metic is not known In some other Greek cities the period was a month and it may well have been the same at Athens All metics there were required to register in the deme local community where they lived They had to nominate a citizen as their sponsor or guardian prostates literally one who stands on behalf of The Athenians took this last requirement very seriously A metic without a sponsor was vulnerable to a special prosecution If convicted his property would be confiscated and he himself sold as a slave For a freed slave the sponsor was automatically his former owner This arrangement exacted some extra duties on the part of the metic yet the child of an ex slave metic apparently had the same status as a freeborn metic Citizenship was very rarely granted to metics More common was the special status of equal rights isoteleia under which they were freed from the usual liabilities In the religious sphere all metics were able to participate in the festivals central to the life of the city except for some roles that were limited to citizens The status divide between metic and citizen was not always clear In the street no physical signs distinguished citizen from metic or slave Sometimes the actual status a person had attained became a contested matter Although local registers of citizens were kept if one s claim to citizenship was challenged the testimony of neighbours and the community was decisive In Lysias 23 11 a law court speech a man presumed to be a metic claims to be a citizen but upon investigation not by consulting official records but by questions asked at the cheese market it transpires that he may well be a runaway slave so the hostile account attests Metics whose family had lived in Athens for generations may have been tempted to pass as citizens On a number of occasions there were purges of the citizen lists effectively changing people who had been living as citizens into metics In typical Athenian fashion a person so demoted could mount a challenge in court If however the court decided the ejected citizen was in fact a metic he would be sent down one further rung and sold into slavery In studying the status of the metics it is easy to gain the impression they were an oppressed minority But by and large those who were Greek and freeborn had at least chosen to come to Athens attracted by the prosperity of the large dynamic cosmopolitan city and the opportunities not available to them in their place of origin citation needed Metics remained citizens of their cities of birth which like Athens had the exclusionary ancestral view of citizenship common to ancient Greek cities The large non citizen community of Athens allowed ex slave metics to become assimilated in a way not possible in more conservative and homogenised cities elsewhere Their participation in military service taxation for the rich of Athens a matter of public display and pride and cult must have given them a sense of involvement in the city and of their value to it Though notably while Athenians tended to refer to metics by their name and deme of residence the same democratic scheme used for citizens on their tombstones freeborn metics who died in Athens preferred to name the cities from which they had come and of which they were citizens still Aftermath Edit The term metic began to lose its distinctive legal status in 4th century BC when metics were allowed to act in the court without a prostate patron and came to an end in Hellenistic Athens when the purchase of citizenship became very frequent The census of Demetrius Phalereus in ca 317 BC gave 21 000 citizens 10 000 metics and 400 000 slaves Athenaeus vi p 272 B In the Greco Roman world free people non citizens living on the territory of a polis were called paroikoi see etymology of parish and in Asia Minor katoikoi 12 Modern French usage EditIn French meteque was revived as a xenophobic term for immigrants to France This sense was popularized in the late 19th century by the nationalist writer Charles Maurras who identified metics as one of the four primary constituents of the traitorous Anti France along with Protestants Jews and Freemasons 13 This pejorative sense remains current in the French language and has to some extent been reclaimed by French people of immigrant background In 1969 the Greco French singer Georges Moustaki recorded a song Le Meteque which has since been covered by several artists of immigrant descent Notable metics EditAnacharsis Aristotle Aspasia Diogenes of Sinope Lysias ProtagorasIn popular culture EditCorinna in The Crown of VioletSee also EditHistory of Athens XenelasiaReferences Edit metoikos meta oἶkos Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project The poetics of appearance in the Attic korai Mary Clorinda Stieber Page 134 ISBN 0 292 70180 2 Athenian democracy Peter John Rhodes Page 31 ISBN 0 7156 3220 5 2004 a b c d Watson James 2010 The Origin of Metic Status at Athens The Cambridge Classical Journal 56 265 doi 10 1017 S1750270500000348 S2CID 170451210 Watson James 2010 The Origin of Metic Status at Athens The Cambridge Classical Journal 56 264 doi 10 1017 S1750270500000348 S2CID 170451210 Kennedy Rebecca Futo 2014 Immigrant Women in Athens Gender Ethnicity and Citizenship in the Classical City p 14 Watson James 2010 The Origin of Metic Status at Athens The Cambridge Classical Journal 56 266 doi 10 1017 S1750270500000348 S2CID 170451210 Renshaw James 2008 In Search of the Greeks London Bristol Classical Press pp 201 202 ISBN 978 1 8539 9699 3 Kennedy Rebecca Futo 2014 Immigrant Women in Athens Gender Ethnicity and Citizenship in the Classical City Page 2 Kennedy Rebecca Futo 2014 Immigrant Women in Athens Gender Ethnicity and Citizenship in the Classical City Page 9 Lysias Against Pancleon section 1 Encyclopedia of ancient Greece By Nigel Guy Wilson Page 470 ISBN 978 0 415 97334 2 2006 L Action francaise 6 juillet 1912 Sources EditHansen M H 1987 The Athenian Democracy in the age of Demosthenes Oxford Whitehead D 1977 The ideology of the Athenian metic Cambridge Garlan Y 1988 Slavery in Ancient Greek Ithaca trans Janet Lloyd Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Metic amp oldid 1157956042, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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