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Slavery in ancient Greece

Slavery was a widely accepted practice in ancient Greece, as it was in contemporaneous societies.[2] The principal use of slaves was in agriculture, but they were also used in stone quarries or mines, and as domestic servants.[3]

Funerary stele of Mnesarete, daughter of Socrates; a young servant (left) is facing her dead mistress.[1] Attica, c. 380 BC. (Glyptothek, Munich)

Modern historiographical practice distinguishes between chattel slavery (where the slave was regarded as a piece of property, as opposed to a member of human society) and land-bonded groups such as the penestae of Thessaly or the Spartan helots, who were more like medieval serfs (an enhancement to real estate).[4] The chattel slave is an individual deprived of liberty and forced to submit to an owner, who may buy, sell, or lease them like any other chattel.[5]

The academic study of slavery in ancient Greece is beset by significant methodological problems.[6] Documentation is disjointed and very fragmented, focusing primarily on the city-state of Athens. No treatises are specifically devoted to the subject, and jurisprudence was interested in slavery only as much as it provided a source of revenue. Greek comedies and tragedies represented stereotypes, while iconography made no substantial differentiation between slaves and craftsmen.[7]

Terminology edit

 
A master (right) and his slave (left) in a phlyax play, Silician red-figured calyx-krater, c. 350 BC–340 BC. Louvre Museum, Paris.

The ancient Greeks had several words to indicate slaves, which leads to textual ambiguity when they are studied out of their proper context. In the works of Homer, Hesiod and Theognis of Megara, the slave was called δμώς (dmōs).[8] The term has a general meaning but refers particularly to war prisoners taken as booty (in other words, property). During the classical period, the Greeks frequently used ἀνδράποδον (andrapodon), (literally, "one with the feet of a man") as opposed to τετράποδον (tetrapodon), "quadruped" or livestock. The most common word for slaves is δοῦλος (doulos), used in opposition to "free man" (ἐλεύθερος, eleútheros); an earlier form of the former appears in Mycenaean inscriptions as do-e-ro, "male slave" (or "servant", "bondman"; Linear B: 𐀈𐀁𐀫), or do-e-ra, "female slave" (or "maid-servant", "bondwoman").[9] The verb δουλεὐω (which survives in Modern Greek, meaning "work") can be used metaphorically for other forms of dominion, as of one city over another or parents over their children. Finally, the term οἰκέτης (oiketēs) was used, as meaning "one who lives in house", referring to household servants.

Other terms used to indicate slaves were less precise and required context:

  • θεράπων (therapōn) – At the time of Homer, the word meant "companion" (Patroclus was referred to as the therapōn of Achilles and Meriones that of Idomeneus); but during the classical age, it meant "servant".
  • ἀκόλουθος (akolouthos) – literally, "the follower" or "the one who accompanies". Also, the diminutive ἀκολουθίσκος, used for page boys.
  • παῖς (pais) – literally "child", used in the same way as "houseboy", also used in a derogatory way to call adult slaves.
  • σῶμα (sōma) – literally "body", used in the context of emancipation.

Pre-classical Greece edit

 
Women as plunder of war: Ajax the Lesser taking Cassandra, tondo of a red-figure kylix by the Kodros Painter, c. 440–430 BC, Louvre.

Slaves were present through the Mycenaean civilization, as documented in numerous tablets unearthed in Pylos 140. Two legal categories can be distinguished: "slaves (εοιο)" and "slaves of the god (θεοιο)", the god in this case probably being Poseidon. Slaves of the god are always mentioned by name and own their own land; their legal status is close to that of freemen.[10] The nature and origin of their bond to the divinity is unclear. The names of common slaves show that some of them came from Kythera, Chios, Lemnos, or Halicarnassus and were probably enslaved as a result of piracy. The tablets indicate that unions between slaves and freemen were common and that slaves could work and own land. It appears that the major division in Mycenaean civilization was not between a free individual and a slave but rather if the individual was in the palace or not.

There is no continuity between the Mycenaean era and the time of Homer, where social structures reflected those of the Greek Dark Ages. The terminology differs: the slave is no longer do-e-ro (doulos) but dmōs.[9] In the Iliad, slaves are mainly women taken as booty of war, while men were either ransomed or killed on the battlefield.

In the Odyssey, the slaves also seem to be mostly women. These slaves were servants and sometimes are concubines.

There were some male slaves, especially in the Odyssey, a prime example being the swineherd Eumaeus. The slave was distinctive in being a member of the core part of the oikos ("family unit", "household"): Laertes eats and drinks with his servants; in the winter, he sleeps in their company. Eumaeus, the "divine" swineherd, bears the same Homeric epithet as the Greek heroes. Slavery remained, however, a disgrace: Eumaeus declares, "Zeus, of the far-borne voice, takes away the half of a man's virtue, when the day of slavery comes upon him".

It is difficult to determine when slave trading began in the archaic period. In Works and Days (8th century BC), Hesiod owns numerous dmōes although their exact status is unclear. The presence of douloi is confirmed by lyric poets such as Archilochus or Theognis of Megara. According to epigraphic evidence, the homicide law of Draco (c. 620 BC) mentioned slaves. Draco, the first Athenian lawgiver, allowed a wide space for private violence against the slave.[9] According to Plutarch, Solon (c. 594–593 BC) forbade slaves from practising gymnastics and pederasty. By the end of the period, references become more common. Slavery becomes prevalent at the very moment when Solon establishes the basis for Athenian democracy. Classical scholar Moses Finley likewise remarks that Chios, which, according to Theopompus, was the first city to organize a slave trade, also enjoyed an early democratic process (in the 6th century BC). He concludes that "one aspect of Greek history, in short, is the advance hand in hand, of freedom and slavery."[11]

Economic role edit

 
Agriculture, a common use for slaves, black-figure neck-amphora by the Antimenes Painter, British Museum

All activities were open to slaves with the exception of politics. For the Greeks, politics was the only occupation worthy of a citizen, the rest being relegated wherever possible to non-citizens. It was status that was of importance, not occupation.

The principal use of slavery was in agriculture, the foundation of the Greek economy.[12] Some small landowners might own one slave, or even two. An abundant literature of manuals for landowners (such as the Economy of Xenophon or that of Pseudo-Aristotle) confirms the presence of dozens of slaves on the larger estates; they could be common labourers or foremen. The extent to which slaves were used as a labour force in farming is disputed. It is certain that rural slavery was very common in Athens, and that ancient Greece did not have the immense slave populations found on the Roman latifundia.

Slave labour was prevalent in mines and quarries, which had large slave populations, often leased out by rich private citizens.[12] The strategos Nicias leased a thousand slaves to the silver mines of Laurium in Attica; Hipponicos, 600; and Philomidès, 300. Xenophon indicates that they received one obolus per slave per day, amounting to 60 drachmas per year. This was one of the most prized investments for Athenians. The number of slaves working in the Laurium mines or in the mills processing ore has been estimated at 30,000. Xenophon suggested that the city buy a large number of slaves, up to three state slaves per citizen, so that their leasing would assure the upkeep of all the citizens.

Slaves were also used as craftsmen and tradespersons. As in agriculture, they were used for labour that was beyond the capability of the family. The slave population was greatest in workshops: the shield factory of Lysias employed 120 slaves, and the father of Demosthenes owned 32 cutlers and 20 bedmakers.

Ownership of domestic slaves was common, the domestic male slave's main role being to stand in for his master at his trade and to accompany him on trips. In time of war he was batman to the hoplite. The female slave carried out domestic tasks, in particular bread baking and textile making.

Demographics edit

Population edit

 
An Ethiopian slave attempts to break in a horse, date unknown, National Archaeological Museum of Athens

It is difficult to estimate the number of slaves in ancient Greece, given the lack of a precise census and variations in definitions during that era. It seems certain that Athens had the largest slave population, with as many as 80,000 in the 6th and 5th centuries BC, on average three or four slaves per household. In the 5th century BC, Thucydides remarked on the desertion of 20,890 slaves during the war of Decelea, mostly tradesmen. The lowest estimate, of 20,000 slaves, during the time of Demosthenes, corresponds to one slave per family. Between 317 BC and 307 BC, the tyrant Demetrius Phalereus ordered a general census of Attica, which arrived at the following figures: 21,000 citizens, 10,000 metics and 400,000 slaves. However, some researchers doubt the accuracy of the figure, asserting that thirteen slaves per free man appear unlikely in a state where a dozen slaves were a sign of wealth, nor is the population stated consistent with the known figures for bread production and import. The orator Hypereides, in his Against Areistogiton, recalls that the effort to enlist 15,000 male slaves of military age led to the defeat of the Southern Greeks at the Battle of Chaeronea (338 BC), which corresponds to the figures of Ctesicles.

According to the literature, it appears that the majority of free Athenians owned at least one slave. Aristophanes, in Plutus, portrays poor peasants who have several slaves; Aristotle defines a house as containing freemen and slaves. Conversely, not owning even one slave was a clear sign of poverty. In the celebrated discourse of Lysias For the Invalid, a cripple pleading for a pension explains "my income is very small and now I'm required to do these things myself and do not even have the means to purchase a slave who can do these things for me." However, the huge individual slave holdings of the wealthiest Romans were unknown in ancient Greece. When Athenaeus cites the case of Mnason, a friend of Aristotle and owner of a thousand slaves, this appears to be exceptional. Plato, owner of five slaves at the time of his death[citation needed], describes the very rich as owning fifty slaves.

Thucydides estimates that the isle of Chios had proportionally the largest number of slaves.

Sources of supply edit

There were four primary sources of slaves: war, in which the defeated would become slaves to the victorious unless a more objective outcome was reached; piracy (at sea); banditry (on land); and international trade.

War edit

By the rules of war of the period, the victor possessed absolute rights over the vanquished, whether they were soldiers or not. Enslavement, while not systematic, was common practice. Thucydides recalls that 7,000 inhabitants of Hyccara in Sicily were taken prisoner by Nicias and sold for 120 talents in the neighbouring village of Catania. Likewise in 348 BC the population of Olynthus was reduced to slavery, as was that of Thebes in 335 BC by Alexander the Great and that of Mantineia by the Achaean League.

The existence of Greek slaves was a constant source of discomfort for Greek citizens. The enslavement of cities was also a controversial practice. Some generals refused, such as the Spartans Agesilaus II and Callicratidas. Some cities passed accords to forbid the practice: in the middle of the 3rd century BC, Miletus agreed not to reduce any free Knossian to slavery, and vice versa. Conversely, the emancipation by ransom of a city that had been entirely reduced to slavery carried great prestige: Cassander, in 316 BC, restored Thebes. Before him, Philip II of Macedon enslaved and then emancipated Stageira.

Piracy and banditry edit

Piracy and banditry provided a significant and consistent supply of slaves, though the significance of this source varied according to era and region. Pirates and brigands would demand ransom whenever the status of their catch warranted it. Whenever ransom was not paid or not warranted, captives would be sold to a trafficker. In certain areas, piracy was practically a national specialty, described by Thucydides as "the old-fashioned" way of life. Such was the case in Acarnania, Crete, and Aetolia. Outside of Greece, this was also the case with Illyrians, Phoenicians, and Etruscans. During the Hellenistic period, Cilicians and the mountain peoples from the coasts of Anatolia could also be added to the list. Strabo explains the popularity of the practice among the Cilicians by its profitability; Delos, not far away, allowed for "moving myriad slaves daily". The growing influence of the Roman Republic, a large consumer of slaves, led to development of the market and an aggravation of piracy. In the 1st century BC, however, the Romans largely eradicated piracy to protect the Mediterranean trade routes.

Slave raids were a specific form of banditry that was a primary method of gathering slaves. In regions such as Thrace and the eastern Aegean, natives, or barbaroi, captured in slave raids were the primary source of slaves, rather than prisoners of war. As described by Xenophon, and Menander in Aspis, after the slaves were captured in raids, their actual enslavement took place when they were resold through slave-dealers to Athenians and other slaveowners throughout Greece. After the slaves were captured, they were sold in slave markets. From the 6th century BC on, the vast majority of slaves were bought in these slave markets.

Slave trade edit

There was slave trade between kingdoms and states of the wider region. The fragmentary list of slaves confiscated from the property of the mutilators of the Hermai mentions 32 slaves whose origins have been ascertained: 13 came from Thrace, 7 from Caria, and the others came from Cappadocia, Scythia, Phrygia, Lydia, Syria, Ilyria, Macedon, and Peloponnese. Local professionals sold their own people to Greek slave merchants. The principal centres of the slave trade appear to have been Ephesus, Byzantium, and even faraway Tanais at the mouth of the Don via the Black Sea slave trade. Some "barbarian" slaves were victims of war or localised piracy, but others were sold by their parents.

There is a lack of direct evidence of slave traffic, but corroborating evidence exists. Firstly, certain nationalities are consistently and significantly represented in the slave population, such as the corps of Scythian archers employed by Athens as a police force—originally 300, but eventually nearly a thousand. Secondly, the names given to slaves in the comedies often had a geographical link; thus Thratta, used by Aristophanes in The Wasps, The Acharnians, and Peace, simply meant a Thracian woman. Finally, the nationality of a slave was a significant criterion for major purchasers: Ancient practice was avoid a concentration of too many slaves of the same ethnic origin in the same place, in order to limit the risk of revolt. It is also probable that, as with the Romans, certain nationalities were considered more productive as slaves than others.

The price of slaves varied in accordance with their ability. Xenophon valued a Laurion miner at 180 drachmas (i.e. about 775 grams of silver); while a workman at major works was paid one drachma per day. Demosthenes' father's cutlers were valued at 500 to 600 drachmas each. Price was also a function of the quantity of slaves available; in the 4th century BC they were abundant and it was thus a buyer's market. A tax on sale revenues was levied by the market cities. For instance, a large helot market was organized during the festivities at the temple of Apollo at Actium. The Acarnanian League, which was in charge of the logistics, received half of the tax proceeds, the other half going to the city of Anactorion, of which Actium was a part.

Buyers enjoyed a guarantee against latent defects: The transaction could be invalidated if the purchased slave turned out to be crippled and the buyer had not been warned about it.

Status of slaves edit

The Greeks had many degrees of enslavement. There was a multitude of categories, ranging from free citizen to chattel slave, and including penestae or helots, disenfranchised citizens, freedmen, bastards, and metics.[13] The common ground was the deprivation of civic rights.

Moses Finley proposed a set of criteria for different degrees of enslavement:

  • Right to own property
  • Authority over the work of another
  • Power of punishment over another
  • Legal rights and duties (liability to arrest and/or arbitrary punishment, or to litigate)
  • Familial rights and privileges (marriage, inheritance, etc.)
  • Possibility of social mobility (manumission or emancipation, access to citizen rights)
  • Religious rights and obligations
  • Military rights and obligations (military service as servant, heavy or light soldier, or sailor).[14]
 
Funerary loutrophoros; on the right, a bearded slave carries his master's shield and helm, 380–370 BC, National Archaeological Museum of Athens

Athenian slaves were the property of their master (or of the state). Masters could dispose of their slaves as they saw fit by selling or renting them, or by granting them freedom. Slaves could have a spouse and children, but slave familial relationships were not recognized by the state, and the master could scatter the family members at any time.[15]

Slaves had fewer judicial rights than citizens and were represented by their masters in all judicial proceedings. A misdemeanor that would result in a fine for the free man would result in a flogging for the slave; the ratio seems to have been one lash for one drachma. With several minor exceptions, the testimony of a slave was not admissible except under torture.[15] Slaves were tortured in trials because they often remained loyal to their masters.[15] A famous example of a trusty slave was Themistocles's Persian slave Sicinnus (the counterpart of Ephialtes of Trachis), who, despite his Persian origin, betrayed Xerxes and helped Athenians in the Battle of Salamis. Despite torture in trials, the Athenian slave was protected in an indirect way: if he was mistreated, the master could initiate litigation for damages and interest (δίκη βλάβης / dikē blabēs). Conversely, a master who excessively mistreated a slave could be prosecuted by any citizen (γραφὴ ὕβρεως / graphē hybreōs); this was not enacted for the sake of the slave, but to avoid violent excess (ὕβρις / hubris).

Isocrates claimed that "not even the most worthless slave can be put to death without trial"; the master's power over his slave was not absolute. Draco's law apparently punished with death the murder of a slave; the underlying principle was: "was the crime such that, if it became more widespread, it would do serious harm to society?" The suit that could be brought against a slave's killer was not a suit for damages, as would be the case for the killing of cattle, but a δίκη φονική (dikē phonikē), demanding punishment for the religious pollution brought by the shedding of blood. In the 4th century BC, the suspect was judged by the Palladion, a court which had jurisdiction over unintentional homicide; the imposed penalty seems to have been more than a fine but less than death—maybe exile, as was the case in the murder of a Metic. Corinthian black-figure terra-cotta votive tablet of slaves working in a mine, dated to the late seventh century BC. However, slaves did belong to their master's household. A newly bought slave was welcomed with nuts and fruits, just like a newly-wed wife. Slaves took part in most of the civic and family cults; they were expressly invited to join the banquet of the Choes, the second day of the Anthesteria, and were allowed initiation into the Eleusinian Mysteries. A slave could claim asylum in a temple or at an altar, just like a free man. The slaves shared the gods of their masters and could keep their own religious customs if any.

Slaves could not own property, but their masters often let them save up to purchase their freedom, and records survive of slaves operating businesses by themselves, making only a fixed tax-payment to their masters. Athens also had a law forbidding the striking of slaves: if a person struck what appeared to be a slave in Athens, that person might find himself hitting a fellow citizen because many citizens dressed no better. It astonished other Greeks that Athenians tolerated back-chat from slaves. Athenian slaves fought together with Athenian freemen at the battle of Marathon, and the monuments memorialize them. It was formally decreed before the Battle of Salamis that the citizens should "save themselves, their women, children, and slaves".

Slaves had special sexual restrictions and obligations. For example, a slave could not engage free boys in pederastic relationships ("A slave shall not be the lover of a free boy nor follow after him, or else he shall receive fifty blows of the public lash."), and they were forbidden from the palaestrae ("A slave shall not take exercise or anoint himself in the wrestling-schools."). Both laws are attributed to Solon.

The sons of vanquished foes would be enslaved and often forced to work in male brothels, as in the case of Phaedo of Elis, who at the request of Socrates was bought and freed from such an enterprise by the philosopher's rich friends. On the other hand, it is attested in sources that the rape of slaves was prosecuted, at least occasionally.

Slaves in Gortyn edit

A fragment of the Gortyn code in Gortyn, Crete

In Gortyn, in Crete, according to a code engraved in stone dating to the 3rd century BC, slaves (doulos or oikeus) found themselves in a state of great dependence. Their children belonged to the master. The master was responsible for all their offences, and, inversely, he received amends for crimes committed against his slaves by others. In the Gortyn code, where all punishment was monetary, fines were doubled for slaves committing a misdemeanour or felony. Conversely, an offence committed against a slave was much less expensive than an offence committed against a free person. As an example, the rape of a free woman by a slave was punishable by a fine of 200 staters (400 drachms), while the rape of a non-virgin slave by another slave brought a fine of only one obolus (a sixth of a drachm).

Slaves did have the right to possess a house and livestock, which could be transmitted to descendants, as could clothing and household furnishings. Their family was recognized by law: they could marry, divorce, write a testament and inherit just like free men.

Debt Bondage edit

Debt, especially in the agricultural field, was a very common occurrence in Ancient Greece.[16] A large portion of the Greek population was composed of peasants, of varying degrees of freedom, who survived on subsistence farming.[16] Thus, lending and borrowing, and consequently incurring debts, was central to peasant life. Peasants could incur debt for a number of reasons. First, given the nature of their agricultural labor, they often borrowed tools, livestock, or sowing material, and these debts could roll over to the next day. As soon as debts surpassed day-to-day reciprocity, it became more and more difficult for peasants to pay off their loans. Thus, the laborer became indebted to the owner of the land they were working on, becoming indebted to the creditor. Soon after, the debtor might have had to give his property, and eventually his wife, children, and ultimately himself, over to the creditor, thus becoming entirely dependent and virtually enslaved to the creditor.[16]

Prior to its interdiction by Solon, Athenians practiced debt enslavement: a citizen incapable of paying his debts became "enslaved" to the creditor. Debt bondage primarily concerned peasants known as hektēmoroi who, unable to pay their rents, worked land owned by rich landowners. In theory, debt bondage slaves would be liberated when their original debts were repaid.[17]

Solon put an end to debt bondage with the σεισάχθεια / seisachtheia, literally "the shaking off of burdens", or liberation of debts, which prevented all claim to the person by the debtor and forbade the sale of free Athenians, including by themselves.[17] Scholars believe that Solon got the idea for the cancellation of debts from Mesopotamian law.[16] Aristotle in his Constitution of the Athenians quotes one of Solon's poems:

"And many a man whom fraud or law had sold

Far from his god-built land, an outcast slave,

I brought again to Athens; yea, and some,

Exiles from home through debt’s oppressive load,

Speaking no more the dear Athenian tongue,

But wandering far and wide, I brought again;

And those that here in vilest slavery (douleia)

Crouched ‘neath a master’s (despōtes) frown, I set them free."[18]

Though much of Solon's poem is reminiscent of ”traditional” slavery, debt bondage slavery was different in that the enslaved Athenian remained an Athenian, dependent on another Athenian, in his place of birth. It is in these lines that Solon put an end to debt bondage. This measure, which received much praise in antiquity, was merely a cancellation of debts.[18] The seisachtheia were not intended to free all Greek slaves but only those enslaved by debt. The reforms of Solon left two exceptions: the guardian of an unmarried woman who had lost her virginity had the right to sell her as a slave, and a citizen could "expose" (abandon) unwanted newborn children.

Manumission edit

The practice of manumission is confirmed to have existed in Chios from the 6th century BC. It probably dates back to an earlier period, as it was an oral procedure. Informal emancipations are also confirmed in the classical period. It was sufficient to have witnesses, who would escort the citizen to a public emancipation of his slave, either at the theatre or before a public tribunal. This practice was outlawed in Athens in the middle of the 6th century BC to avoid public disorder.

The practice became more common in the 4th century BC and gave rise to inscriptions in stone which have been recovered from shrines such as Delphi and Dodona. They primarily date to the 2nd and 1st centuries BC, and the 1st century AD. Collective manumission was possible; an example is known from the 2nd century BC in the island of Thasos. It probably took place during a period of war as a reward for the slaves' loyalty, but in most cases the documentation deals with a voluntary act on the part of the master (predominantly male, but in the Hellenistic period also female).

The slave was often required to pay for himself an amount at least equivalent to his market value. To this end they could use their savings or take a so-called "friendly" loan (ἔρανος / eranos) from their master, a friend or a client like the hetaera Neaira did.

Emancipation was often of a religious nature, where the slave was considered to be "sold" to a deity, often Delphian Apollo, or was consecrated after his emancipation. The temple would receive a portion of the monetary transaction and would guarantee the contract. The manumission could also be entirely civil, in which case the magistrate played the role of the deity.

The slave’s freedom could be either total or partial, at the master’s whim. In the former, the emancipated slave was legally protected against all attempts at re-enslavement—for instance, on the part of the former master’s inheritors. In the latter case, the emancipated slave could be liable to a number of obligations to the former master. The most restrictive contract was the paramone, a type of enslavement of limited duration during which time the master retained practically absolute rights. If a former master sued the former slave for not fulfilling a duty, however, and the slave was found innocent, the latter gained complete freedom from all duties toward the former. Some inscriptions imply a mock process of that type could be used for a master to grant his slave complete freedom in a legally binding manner.

In regard to the city, the emancipated slave was far from equal to a citizen by birth. He was liable to all types of obligations, as one can see from the proposals of Plato in The Laws: presentation three times monthly at the home of the former master, forbidden to become richer than him, etc. In fact, the status of emancipated slaves was similar to that of metics, the residing foreigners, who were free but did not enjoy a citizen’s rights.

Spartan slaves edit

Spartan citizens used helots, an enslaved group (that formed the majority of the population) collectively owned by the state. It is uncertain whether Spartan citizens had chattel slaves as well. There are mentions of people manumitted by Spartans, which was supposedly forbidden for helots, or sold outside of Laconia. For example, the poet Alcman; a Philoxenos from Cytherea, reputedly enslaved with all his fellow citizens when his city was conquered, was later sold to an Athenian; a Spartan cook bought by Dionysius the Elder or by a king of Pontus, both versions being mentioned by Plutarch; and the famous Spartan nurses, much appreciated by Athenian parents.

Some texts mention both slaves and helots, which seems to indicate that they were not the same thing. Plato in Alcibiades I cites "the ownership of slaves, and notably helots" among the Spartan riches, and Plutarch writes about "slaves and helots". Finally, according to Thucydides, the agreement that ended the 464 BC revolt of helots stated that any Messenian rebel who might hereafter be found within the Peloponnese was "to be the slave of his captor", which means that the ownership of chattel slaves was not illegal at that time.

Most historians thus concur that chattel slaves were indeed used in the Greek city-state of Sparta, at least after the Lacedemonian victory of 404 BC against Athens, but not in great numbers and only among the upper classes. As it was in the other Greek cities, chattel slaves could be purchased at the market or taken in war.

Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges mentions that there was a hierarchy of classes superposed one above the other in the Spartan society. If the Helots and the Laconians are left out, the hierarchy would be as follows: first there were the Neodamodes (former slaves freed), then the Epeunactae (helots who slept with Spartan widows in order to help Sparta with manpower shortage because of war casualties), then the Mothaces (very similar to domestic clients) and then the bastards (who though descended from true Spartans, were separated).

Athenian slaves edit

 
Funerary loutrophoros; on the right, a bearded slave carries his master's shield and helm, 380–370 BC, National Archaeological Museum of Athens

Social Death edit

Orlando Patterson's theory of social death says that the institution of slavery robs the slave of his or her "socially recognized existence outside of his master", effectively transforming the slave into a "social nonperson."[10] By this definition, Greek slaves can be considered socially dead. According to Patterson's definition, there were several criteria that qualified a slave as socially dead. First, they were likely uprooted from kin groups and their homeland, and displaced in a new foreign land.[10] The effect of physically relocating slaves was that they were seen as fundamentally different from the citizen population at any given time, alienating the slave and thus making it easier to justify their abuse and maltreatment.[15] Second, the slaves subjection was permanent, and could only be terminated by the master. Third, socially dead slaves were "dishonored, devalued, and victims of gratuitous violence."[10]

Looking at slavery in Ancient Greece through the lens of social death, a theory developed by Orlando Patterson, offers insight regarding the daily lived experiences of Ancient Greek slaves. According to Patterson, "slavery is the permanent, violent domination of natally alienated and generally dishonored persons," and all slaves are socially dead.[10] The aforementioned aspects of social death shall be examined below in the context of Ancient Greek slavery: the natal alienation of slaves, the permanence of a slave's enslavement, and the dishonor, domination, and violence.[10]

Natal Alienation edit

Patterson argues that the alienation of the slave from their birthplace and natal culture was the single most salient factor in determining whether a slave was socially dead or not. In Ancient Greece, a binary system of classification categorized all people into one of two categories: Greek or non-Greek. Non-Greek peoples were called barbaroi, they could have either been born outside Greece, or have born inside Greece to foreigners.[19] This dichotomy reinforced the view of non-Greeks as fundamentally "The Other". This “Othering” of foreigners very likely made it psychologically easier for Athenians to “deny personhood” to someone who was seen as essentially different from themselves, thus making it easier to enslave non-Greeks and deprive them of their humanity.[19] Consequently, barbarois became inextricably associated with slaves, and conversely, eleutheros became synonymous with Greek citizenship.[19]

The capture of prisoners of war and slave raids during warfare between Greek and non-Greek territories were two primary ways of obtaining slaves in Classical Greece.[19] This meant that the majority of the slave population was composed of non-Greeks. This relocation of slaves alienated them from the birthrights from their natal clan, village, or community, relegating the enslaved population to permanent outsiders.[20]

Permanence edit

While it was possible for individual Ancient Greek slaves to be freed, manumission was always in the hands of the owner.[15] Slavery was heritable, meaning that even if an individual slave was granted freedom, their children would still likely be slaves.[15] The permanence of many Greek slaves subjection and the perpetuity of enslavement over generations of a family was therefore indicative of their status as unfree members of society, since their freedom was on someone else's terms and never their own.[15]

General Dishonor, Domination and Violence edit

Perhaps the most salient feature of the social death of slaves was the dishonor and dehumanization they experienced at the hands of the slave-owning class. Slaves were seen as property: their only value was tied to their physical capacity for labor.[19] This is reflected in Aristotle's work Politics, in which he provides a blunt conceptualization of slaves as property: they are nothing but "living tools" and "animate property".[15] This viewpoint was shared by the rest of free Greek society.[15]

Slaves were subject to corporal punishment, while free citizens were not, further differentiating the slave class from the rest of society.[19] Flogging, verbal chastisement, and various forms of torture were characteristic of a slave's subjection.[19] There was also a legal requirement that slave testimony in court be extracted via torture.[15] Litigants would offer up their slave, who would be stretched out on a rack and whipped, and sometimes even killed, while giving their testimony.[15] It is also not surprising that slaves were subject to physical violence in the private sphere as well: owners were free to whip, torture, and even kill their slaves.[15]

Slavery conditions edit

It is difficult to appreciate the condition of Greek slaves. According to Aristotle, the daily routine of slaves could be summed up in three words: "work, discipline, and feeding". Xenophon notes the accepted practice of treating slaves as domestic animals, that is to say punishing them for disobedience and rewarding them for good behaviour. For his part, Aristotle prefers to see slaves treated as children and to use not only orders but also recommendations, as the slave is capable of understanding reasons when they are explained.

Greek literature abounds with scenes of slaves being flogged; it was a means of forcing them to work, as were control of rations, clothing, and rest. This violence could be meted out by the master or the supervisor, who was possibly also a slave. Thus, at the beginning of Aristophanes' The Knights (4–5), two slaves complain of being "bruised and thrashed without respite" by their new supervisor. However, Aristophanes himself cites what is a typical old saw in ancient Greek comedy:

He also dismissed those slaves who kept on running off, or deceiving someone, or getting whipped. They were always led out crying, so one of their fellow slaves could mock the bruises and ask then: 'Oh you poor miserable fellow, what's happened to your skin? Surely a huge army of lashes from a whip has fallen down on you and laid waste your back?'

The condition of slaves varied very much according to their status; the mine slaves of Laureion and the pornai (brothel prostitutes) lived a particularly brutal existence, while public slaves, craftsmen, tradesmen and bankers enjoyed relative independence. In return for a fee (ἀποφορά / apophora) paid to their master, they could live and work alone. They could thus earn some money on the side, sometimes enough to purchase their freedom. Potential emancipation was indeed a powerful motivator, though the real scale of this is difficult to estimate.

Ancient writers considered that Attic slaves enjoyed a "peculiarly happy lot": Pseudo-Xenophon deplores the liberties taken by Athenian slaves: "as for the slaves and Metics of Athens, they take the greatest licence; you cannot just strike them, and they do not step aside to give you free passage". This alleged good treatment did not prevent 20,000 Athenian slaves from running away at the end of the Peloponnesian War at the incitement of the Spartan garrison at Attica in Decelea. These were principally skilled artisans (kheirotekhnai), probably among the better-treated slaves, although some researchers believe them to be mainly workers of the mines of Laurion, whose conditions were infamously harsh. The title of a 4th-century comedy by Antiphanes, The Runaway-catcher (Δραπεταγωγός), suggests that slave flight was not uncommon.

Conversely, there are no records of a large-scale Greek slave revolt comparable to that of Spartacus in Rome. It can probably be explained by the relative dispersion of Greek slaves, which would have prevented any large-scale planning. Slave revolts were rare, even in Rome. Individual acts of rebellion of slaves against their master, though scarce, are not unheard of; a judicial speech mentions the attempted murder of his master by a boy slave, not 12 years old.

Views of Greek slavery edit

Historical views edit

 
Depiction of a slave seated on an altar, looking at the purse he is about to steal, c. 400–375 BC, Louvre

Very few authors of antiquity call slavery into question. To Homer and the pre-classical authors, slavery was an inevitable consequence of war. Heraclitus states that "[w]ar is the father of all, the king of all...he turns some into slaves and sets others free."[21] Aristotle also felt this way, stating "the law by which whatever is taken in war is supposed to belong to the victors."[22] He also states that it might have a few issues though, ”For what if the cause of war be unjust?”[22] If the war was because of an unfair or incorrect reason, should the victors of that war be allowed to take the losers as slaves?

During the classical period the main justification for slavery was economic.[23] From a philosophical point of view, the idea of "natural" slavery emerged at the same time; thus, as Aeschylus states in The Persians, the Greeks "[o]f no man are they called the slaves or vassals",[24] while the Persians, as Euripides states in Helen, "are all slaves, except one"—the Great King.[25] Hippocrates theorizes about this latent idea at the end of the 5th century BC. According to him, the temperate climate of Anatolia produced a placid and submissive people.[26] This explanation is reprised by Plato,[27] then Aristotle in Politics,[28] where he develops the concept of "natural slavery": "for he that can foresee with his mind is naturally ruler and naturally master, and he that can do these things with his body is subject and naturally a slave."[29] As opposed to an animal, a slave can comprehend reason but "…has not got the deliberative part at all."[30]

Alcidamas, at the same time as Aristotle, took the opposite view, saying: "nature has made nobody a slave".[31]

In parallel, the concept that all men, whether Greek or barbarian, belonged to the same race was being developed by the Sophists[32] and thus that certain men were slaves although they had the soul of a freeman and vice versa.[33] Aristotle himself recognized this possibility and argued that slavery could not be imposed unless the master was better than the slave, in keeping with his theory of "natural" slavery.[34] The Sophists concluded that true servitude was not a matter of status but a matter of spirit; thus, as Menander stated, "be free in the mind, although you are slave: and thus you will no longer be a slave".[35] This idea, repeated by the Stoics and the Epicurians, was not so much an opposition to slavery as a trivialization of it.[36]

The Greeks could not comprehend an absence of slaves. Slaves exist even in the "Cloud cuckoo land" of Aristophanes' The Birds. The utopian cities of Phaleas of Chalcedon and Hippodamus of Miletus are based on the equal distribution of property, but public slaves are used respectively as craftsmen[37] and land workers.[38] The "reversed cities" placed women in power or even saw the end of private property, as in Lysistrata or Assemblywomen, but could not picture slaves in charge of masters. The only societies without slaves were those of the Golden Age, where all needs were met without anyone having to work. In this type of society, as explained by Plato,[39] one reaped generously without sowing. In Telekleides' Amphictyons[40] barley loaves fight with wheat loaves for the honor of being eaten by men. Moreover, objects move themselves—dough kneads itself, and the jug pours itself. Similarly, Aristotle said that slaves would not be necessary "if every instrument could accomplish its own work... the shuttle would weave and the plectrum touch the lyre without a hand to guide them", like the legendary constructs of Daedalus and Hephaestus.[41] Society without slaves is thus relegated to a different time and space. In a "normal" society, one needs slaves. Aristotle argues that slaves are a necessity though, saying "Property is part of the household, ... For no man can live well or indeed live at all, unless he be provided with necessaries."[22] He also argues that slaves are the most important part of the property as they "take precedence of all the instruments."[22] This would suggest that at least some slaves would be treated well for the same reason one would take great care of their most important tools. By viewing slaves as tools of a household, it creates another reason for acceptance of slavery. Aristotle says "indeed the use of slaves and of tame animals is not very different," showing as well that at least in part, some slaves were thought of no higher than the common tamed animals in use at the time. Antiphon viewed slaves as a bit more than common animals or tools. On the topic of a man killing his own slave, he says that the man should "purify himself and withhold himself from those places prescribed by law, in the hope that by doing so he will best avoid disaster."[42] This suggests that there still is some sense of inappropriateness in killing a slave, even one owned by the killer.

Punishment of slaves would have been swift and harsh. Demosthenes viewed punishment for slaves as acceptable in the form of physical harm or injuries for all that they may have done wrong, stating "the body of a slave is made responsible for all his misdeeds, whereas corporal punishment is the last penalty to inflict on a free man."[43] This was spoken about in legal proceedings, suggesting that it would have been a widely accepted way of treating slaves.

Modern views edit

 
Theatre mask of a First slave in Greek comedy, 2nd century BC, National Archaeological Museum of Athens

Slavery in Greek antiquity has long been an object of apologetic discourse among Christians, who are typically awarded the merit of its collapse. From the 16th century the discourse became moralizing in nature. The existence of colonial slavery had significant impact on the debate, with some authors lending it civilizing merits and others denouncing its misdeeds.[44] Thus Henri-Alexandre Wallon in 1847 published a History of Slavery in Antiquity among his works for the abolition of slavery in the French colonies.[45]

In the 19th century, a politico-economic discourse emerged. It concerned itself with distinguishing the phases in the organisation of human societies and correctly identifying the place of Greek slavery. According to Karl Marx, the ancient society was characterized by development of private ownership and the dominant (and not secondary as in other pre-capitalist societies) character of slavery as a mode of production.[46] The Positivists represented by the historian Eduard Meyer (Slavery in Antiquity, 1898) were soon to oppose the Marxist theory. According to him slavery was the foundation of Greek democracy. It was thus a legal and social phenomenon, and not economic.[47]

Current historiography developed in the 20th century; led by authors such as Joseph Vogt, it saw in slavery the conditions for the development of elites. Conversely, the theory also demonstrates an opportunity for slaves to join the elite. Finally, Vogt estimates that modern society, founded on humanist values, has surpassed this level of development.[48]

In 2011, Greek slavery remains the subject of historiographical debate, on two questions in particular: can it be said that ancient Greece was a "slave society", and did Greek slaves comprise a social class?[49]

Footnotes edit

References edit

  1. ^ A traditional pose in funerary steles, see for instance Felix M. Wassermann, "Serenity and Repose: Life and Death on Attic Tombstones" The Classical Journal, Vol. 64, No. 5, p.198.
  2. ^ Polakoff, Murray E.; Dhrymes, Phoebus J. (1958). "The Economic and Sociological Significance of Debt Bondage and Detribalization in Ancient Greece". Economic Development and Cultural Change. 6 (2): 88–108. doi:10.1086/449759. ISSN 0013-0079. JSTOR 1151738. S2CID 154209570.
  3. ^ Morris, Sarah P.; Papadopoulos, John K. (2005). "Greek Towers and Slaves: An Archaeology of Exploitation". American Journal of Archaeology. 109 (2): 155–225. doi:10.3764/aja.109.2.155. ISSN 0002-9114. JSTOR 40024509. S2CID 147684885.
  4. ^ Hunt, Peter (2016-12-19). "Slaves or Serfs?: Patterson on the Thetes and Helots of Ancient Greece". On Human Bondage. pp. 55–80. doi:10.1002/9781119162544.ch3. ISBN 9781119162483.
  5. ^ "Modern Day Abolition – National Underground Railroad Freedom Center". freedomcenter.org. Retrieved 2023-03-12.
  6. ^ Hunt, Peter (2017). Ancient Greek and Roman slavery. John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated. ISBN 978-1-78785-697-4. OCLC 1176434948.
  7. ^ "Review of: Reconstructing the Slave: the Image of the Slave in Ancient Greece". Bryn Mawr Classical Review. ISSN 1055-7660.
  8. ^ Harris, Edward. "Homer, Hesiod, and the 'Origins' of Greek Slavery". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  9. ^ a b c Harper, Kyle (2016-12-19). "Freedom, Slavery, and Female Sexual Honor in Antiquity". On Human Bondage. pp. 109–121. doi:10.1002/9781119162544.ch5. ISBN 9781119162483.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Patterson, Orlando (2016-12-19). "Revisiting Slavery, Property, and Social Death". On Human Bondage. pp. 265–296. doi:10.1002/9781119162544.ch14. ISBN 978-1119162483.
  11. ^ Cartledge, Paul (October 1993). "Like a worm I' the bud? A heterology of classical Greek slavery". Greece and Rome. 40 (2): 163–180. doi:10.1017/s0017383500022762. ISSN 0017-3835. S2CID 161818422.
  12. ^ a b Morris, Sarah P.; Papadopoulos, John K. (2005-04-01). "Greek Towers and Slaves: An Archaeology of Exploitation". American Journal of Archaeology. 109 (2): 155–225. doi:10.3764/aja.109.2.155. ISSN 0002-9114. S2CID 147684885.
  13. ^ Sosin, Joshua D. (2016). "A Metic was a Metic". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 65 (1): 2–13. doi:10.25162/historia-2016-0001. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 45019214. S2CID 161953761.
  14. ^ Finley, Moses I. (1968). Slavery in classical antiquity: views and controversies. Heffer, etc. OCLC 67417944.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Forsdyke, Sara (2021-06-08). Slaves and Slavery in Ancient Greece. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781139505772. ISBN 978-1-139-50577-2. S2CID 236293051.
  16. ^ a b c d Julia, LS Oude geschiedenis en antieke cultuur OGKG - Antieke Cultuur Blok, J.H. Krul (December 2017). Debt and its aftermath: The Near Eastern background to Solon's seisachtheia. American School of Classical Studies at Athens. OCLC 1358266370.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  17. ^ a b "Did Solon Abolish Debt-Bondage?", Democracy and the Rule of Law in Classical Athens, Cambridge University Press, pp. 249–270, 2006-04-17, doi:10.1017/cbo9780511497858.013, ISBN 9780521852791, retrieved 2023-03-13
  18. ^ a b James, H. R. (1930). Our Hellenic heritage. Macmillan and Co. Ltd. OCLC 498683728.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g Rosivach, Vincent J. (1999). "Enslaving "Barbaroi" and the Athenian Ideology of Slavery". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 48 (2): 129–157. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 4436537.
  20. ^ Derrick, Jonathan (2022-08-04), "Black African Slaves and Serfs", Africa's Slaves Today, London: Routledge, pp. 83–109, doi:10.4324/9781003310747-5, ISBN 9781003310747, retrieved 2023-03-11
  21. ^ Heraclitus, frag.53.
  22. ^ a b c d Aristotle. "The Politics- On Slavery". Internet History Sourcebooks. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  23. ^ Mactoux (1980), p.52.
  24. ^ The Persians, v.242. Trans. ed. Herbert Weir Smyth, accessed 17 May 2006.
  25. ^ Helen, v.276.
  26. ^ Hippocratic corpus, Of Airs, Waters, and Places (Peri aeron hydaton topon), 23.
  27. ^ Republic, 4:435a–436a.
  28. ^ Politics, 7:1327b.
  29. ^ Politics, 1:2, 2. Trans. H. Rackham, accessed 17 May 2006.
  30. ^ Politics, 1:13, 17.
  31. ^ John D. Bury and Russell Meiggs (4th ed. 1975): A History of Greece to the Death of Alexander the Great. New York: St. Martin's Press, page 375
  32. ^ For instance Hippias of Elis apud Platon, Protagoras, 337c; Antiphon, Pap. Oxyr., 9:1364.
  33. ^ An idea already expressed by Euripides, Ion, 854–856frag.831.
  34. ^ Politics, 1:5, 10.
  35. ^ Menander, frag. 857.
  36. ^ Garlan, p.130.
  37. ^ Apud Aristotle, Politics, 1267b.
  38. ^ Apud Aristotle, Politics, 1268a.
  39. ^ Politics, 271a–272b.
  40. ^ Apud Athenaeus, 268 b–d.
  41. ^ Aristotle, Politics, Book 1 Part 4
  42. ^ Antiphon. "On the Choreutes". Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  43. ^ Demosthenes. "Against Timocrates". Internet History Sourcebooks. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  44. ^ Garlan, p.8.
  45. ^ Finley, Moses I. (1980). Ancient Slavery and Modern Ideology (PDF). Chatto & Windus. p. 12. ISBN 9780701125103.
  46. ^ Garlan, p.10–13.
  47. ^ Garlan, p.13–14.
  48. ^ Garlan, p.19–20.
  49. ^ Garlan, p.201.

References edit

  • (in French) Brulé, P. (1978a) "Signification historique de la piraterie grecque ", Dialogues d'histoire ancienne no.4 (1978), pp. 1–16.
  • (in French) Brulé, P. (1992) "Infanticide et abandon d'enfants", Dialogues d'histoire ancienne no.18 (1992), pp. 53–90.
  • Burkert, W. Greek Religion. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 1985. ISBN 0-631-15624-0, originally published as Griechische Religion der archaischen und klassischen Epoche. Stuttgart: Kohlhammer Verlag, 1977.
  • (in French) Carlier, P. Le IVe siècle grec jusqu'à la mort d'Alexandre. Paris: Seuil, 1995. ISBN 2-02-013129-3
  • Cartledge, P. "Rebels and Sambos in Classical Greece", Spartan Reflections. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003, p. 127–152 ISBN 0-520-23124-4
  • (in French) Chantraine, P. Dictionnaire étymologique de la langue grecque. Paris: Klincksieck, 1999 (new edition). ISBN 2-252-03277-4
  • (in French) Dareste R., Haussoullier B., Reinach Th. Recueil des inscriptions juridiques grecques, vol.II. Paris: E. Leroux, 1904.
  • (in French) Ducat, Jean. Les Hilotes, BCH suppl.20. Paris: publications of the École française d'Athènes, 1990 ISBN 2-86958-034-7
  • (in French) Dunant, C. and Pouilloux, J. Recherches sur l'histoire et les cultes de Thasos II. Paris: publications of the École française d'Athènes, 1958.
  • Finley, M. (1997). Économie et société en Grèce ancienne. Paris: Seuil, 1997 ISBN 2-02-014644-4, originally published as Economy and Society in Ancient Greece. London: Chatto and Windus, 1981.
  • Garlan, Y. Les Esclaves en Grèce ancienne. Paris: La Découverte, 1982. 1982 ISBN 2-7071-2475-3, translated in English as Slavery in Ancient Greece. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1988 (1st edn. 1982) ISBN 0-8014-1841-0
  • Kirk, G.S. (editor). The Iliad: a Commentary, vol.II (books 5–8). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990. ISBN 0-521-28172-5
  • Jameson, M.H. "Agriculture and Slavery in Classical Athens", Classical Journal, no.73 (1977–1978), pp. 122–145.
  • Jones, A.H.M. Athenian Democracy. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 1957.
  • (in German) Lauffer, S. "Die Bergwerkssklaven von Laureion", Abhandlungen no.12 (1956), pp. 904–916.
  • (in French) Lévy, E. (1995). La Grèce au Ve siècle de Clisthène à Socrate. Paris: Seuil, 1995 ISBN 2-02-013128-5
  • (in French) Lévy, E. (2003). Sparte. Paris: Seuil, 2003 ISBN 2-02-032453-9
  • (in French) Mactoux, M.-M. (1980). Douleia: Esclavage et pratiques discursives dans l'Athènes classique. Paris: Belles Lettres, 1980. ISBN 2-251-60250-X
  • (in French) Mactoux, M.-M. (1981). "L'esclavage comme métaphore : douleo chez les orateurs attiques", Proceedings of the 1980 GIREA Workshop on Slavery, Kazimierz, 3–8 November 1980, Index, 10, 1981, pp. 20–42.
  • (in French) Masson, O. "Les noms des esclaves dans la Grèce antique", Proceedings of the 1971 GIREA Workshop on Slavery, Besançon, 10–11 mai 1971. Paris: Belles Lettres, 1973, pp. 9–23.
  • (in French) Mele, A. "Esclavage et liberté dans la société mycénienne", Proceedings of the 1973 GIREA Workshop on Slavery, Besançon 2–3 mai 1973. Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 1976.
  • Morrow, G.R. "The Murder of Slaves in Attic Law", Classical Philology, Vol. 32, No. 3 (Jul., 1937), pp. 210–227.
  • Oliva, P. Sparta and her Social Problems. Prague: Academia, 1971.
  • (in French) Plassart, A. "Les Archers d'Athènes," Revue des études grecques, XXVI (1913), pp. 151–213.
  • Pomeroy, S.B. Goddesses, Whores, Wives and Slaves. New York: Schoken, 1995. ISBN 0-8052-1030-X
  • Pritchett, W.K. and Pippin, A. (1956). "The Attic Stelai, Part II", Hesperia, Vol.25, No.3 (Jul.–Sep., 1956), pp. 178–328.
  • Pritchett (1961). "Five New Fragments of the Attic Stelai", Hesperia, Vol.30, No. 1 (Jan.–Mar., 1961), pp. 23–29.
  • Wood, E.M. (1983). "Agriculture and Slavery in Classical Athens", American Journal of Ancient History No.8 (1983), pp. 1–47.
  • Von Fritz, K. "The Meaning of ἙΚΤΗΜΟΡΟΣ", The American Journal of Philology, Vol.61, No.1 (1940), pp. 54–61.
  • Wood, E.M. (1988). Peasant-Citizen and Slave: The Foundations of Athenian Democracy. New York: Verso, 1988 ISBN 0-86091-911-0.

Further reading edit

General studies

  • Bellen, H., Heinen H., Schäfer D., Deissler J., Bibliographie zur antiken Sklaverei. I: Bibliographie. II: Abkurzungsverzeichnis und Register, 2 vol. Stuttgart: Steiner, 2003. ISBN 3-515-08206-9
  • Bieżuńska-Małowist I. La Schiavitù nel mondo antico. Naples: Edizioni Scientifiche Italiane, 1991.
  • De Ste-Croix, G.E.M. The Class Struggle in the Ancient Greek World. London: Duckworth; Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1981. ISBN 0-8014-1442-3
  • Finley, M.:
    • The Ancient Economy. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999 (1st edn. 1970). ISBN 0-520-21946-5
    • Ancient Slavery & Modern Ideology. Princeton: Markus Wiener, 1998 (1st edn. 1980). ISBN 1-55876-171-3
    • Slavery in Classical Antiquity. Views and Controversies. Cambridge: Heffer, 1960.
  • Forsdyke, Sara. Slaves and Slavery in Ancient Greece Cambridge University Press, 2021.
  • Garnsey, P. Ideas of Slavery from Aristotle to Augustine. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. ISBN 0-521-57433-1
  • Fisher, Nicolas R. E. Slavery in Classical Greece. London: Bristol Classical Press, 1993.
  • Hall, Edith, Richard Alston, and Justine McConnell, eds.Ancient Slavery and Abolition: From Hobbs to Hollywood. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 2011.
  • McKeown, Niall. The Invention of Ancient Slavery? London: Duckworth, 2007.
  • Morris, Ian. "Archaeology and Greek Slavery." In The Cambridge World History of Slavery. Vol. 1, The Ancient Mediterranean World. Edited by Keith Bradley and Paul Cartledge, 176–193. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Univ. Press, 2011.
  • Vidal-Naquet, P.:
    • "Women, Slaves and Artisans", third part of The Black Hunter : Forms of Thought and Forms of Society in the Greek World. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1988 (1st edn. 1981). ISBN 0-8018-5951-4
    • with Vernant J.-P. Travail et esclavage en Grèce ancienne. Bruxelles: Complexe, "History" series, 2006 (1st edn. 1988). ISBN 2-87027-246-4
  • Wiedemann, T. Greek and Roman Slavery. London: Routledge, 1989 (1st edn. 1981). ISBN 0-415-02972-4
  • Westermann, W.L. The Slave Systems of Greek and Roman Antiquity. Philadelphia: The American Philosophical Society, 1955.

Specific studies

  • Brulé, P. (1978b). La Piraterie crétoise hellénistique, Belles Lettres, 1978. ISBN 2-251-60223-2
  • Brulé, P. and Oulhen, J. (dir.). Esclavage, guerre, économie en Grèce ancienne. Hommages à Yvon Garlan. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, "History" series, 1997. ISBN 2-86847-289-3
  • Ducrey, P. Le traitement des prisonniers de guerre en Grèce ancienne. Des origines à la conquête romaine. Paris: De Boccard, 1968.
  • Foucart, P. "Mémoire sur l'affranchissement des esclaves par forme de vente à une divinité d'après les inscriptions de Delphes", Archives des missions scientifiques et littéraires, 2nd series, vol.2 (1865), pp. 375–424.
  • Gabrielsen, V. "La piraterie et le commerce des esclaves", in E. Erskine (ed.), Le Monde hellénistique. Espaces, sociétés, cultures. 323-31 av. J.-C.. Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2004, pp. 495–511. ISBN 2-86847-875-1
  • Hunt, P. Slaves, Warfare, and Ideology in the Greek Historians. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-521-58429-9
  • Ormerod, H.A. Piracy in the Ancient World. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 1924.
  • Thalmann, William G. 1998. The Swineherd and the Bow: Representations of Class in the “Odyssey.” Ithaca, NY: Cornell Univ. Press.

External links edit

  • – The International Group for Research on Slavery in Antiquity (in French)
  • at Nomoi
  • Documents on Greek slavery on the Ancient History Sourcebook.
  • Manumission records of women at Delphi at attalus.org
  • – subject index on slavery and related topics, by author (in French)
  • – free library (in French)
  • Greek Manumission Project

slavery, ancient, greece, slavery, widely, accepted, practice, ancient, greece, contemporaneous, societies, principal, slaves, agriculture, they, were, also, used, stone, quarries, mines, domestic, servants, funerary, stele, mnesarete, daughter, socrates, youn. Slavery was a widely accepted practice in ancient Greece as it was in contemporaneous societies 2 The principal use of slaves was in agriculture but they were also used in stone quarries or mines and as domestic servants 3 Funerary stele of Mnesarete daughter of Socrates a young servant left is facing her dead mistress 1 Attica c 380 BC Glyptothek Munich This article contains special characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Slavery in ancient Greece news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Modern historiographical practice distinguishes between chattel slavery where the slave was regarded as a piece of property as opposed to a member of human society and land bonded groups such as the penestae of Thessaly or the Spartan helots who were more like medieval serfs an enhancement to real estate 4 The chattel slave is an individual deprived of liberty and forced to submit to an owner who may buy sell or lease them like any other chattel 5 The academic study of slavery in ancient Greece is beset by significant methodological problems 6 Documentation is disjointed and very fragmented focusing primarily on the city state of Athens No treatises are specifically devoted to the subject and jurisprudence was interested in slavery only as much as it provided a source of revenue Greek comedies and tragedies represented stereotypes while iconography made no substantial differentiation between slaves and craftsmen 7 Contents 1 Terminology 2 Pre classical Greece 3 Economic role 4 Demographics 4 1 Population 4 2 Sources of supply 4 2 1 War 4 2 2 Piracy and banditry 4 2 3 Slave trade 5 Status of slaves 5 1 Slaves in Gortyn 5 2 Debt Bondage 5 3 Manumission 5 4 Spartan slaves 5 5 Athenian slaves 6 Social Death 6 1 Natal Alienation 6 2 Permanence 6 3 General Dishonor Domination and Violence 7 Slavery conditions 8 Views of Greek slavery 8 1 Historical views 8 2 Modern views 9 Footnotes 10 References 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksTerminology edit nbsp A master right and his slave left in a phlyax play Silician red figured calyx krater c 350 BC 340 BC Louvre Museum Paris The ancient Greeks had several words to indicate slaves which leads to textual ambiguity when they are studied out of their proper context In the works of Homer Hesiod and Theognis of Megara the slave was called dmws dmōs 8 The term has a general meaning but refers particularly to war prisoners taken as booty in other words property During the classical period the Greeks frequently used ἀndrapodon andrapodon literally one with the feet of a man as opposed to tetrapodon tetrapodon quadruped or livestock The most common word for slaves is doῦlos doulos used in opposition to free man ἐley8eros eleutheros an earlier form of the former appears in Mycenaean inscriptions as do e ro male slave or servant bondman Linear B 𐀈𐀁𐀫 or do e ra female slave or maid servant bondwoman 9 The verb doyleὐw which survives in Modern Greek meaning work can be used metaphorically for other forms of dominion as of one city over another or parents over their children Finally the term oἰkeths oiketes was used as meaning one who lives in house referring to household servants Other terms used to indicate slaves were less precise and required context 8erapwn therapōn At the time of Homer the word meant companion Patroclus was referred to as the therapōn of Achilles and Meriones that of Idomeneus but during the classical age it meant servant ἀkoloy8os akolouthos literally the follower or the one who accompanies Also the diminutive ἀkoloy8iskos used for page boys paῖs pais literally child used in the same way as houseboy also used in a derogatory way to call adult slaves sῶma sōma literally body used in the context of emancipation Pre classical Greece edit nbsp Women as plunder of war Ajax the Lesser taking Cassandra tondo of a red figure kylix by the Kodros Painter c 440 430 BC Louvre Slaves were present through the Mycenaean civilization as documented in numerous tablets unearthed in Pylos 140 Two legal categories can be distinguished slaves eoio and slaves of the god 8eoio the god in this case probably being Poseidon Slaves of the god are always mentioned by name and own their own land their legal status is close to that of freemen 10 The nature and origin of their bond to the divinity is unclear The names of common slaves show that some of them came from Kythera Chios Lemnos or Halicarnassus and were probably enslaved as a result of piracy The tablets indicate that unions between slaves and freemen were common and that slaves could work and own land It appears that the major division in Mycenaean civilization was not between a free individual and a slave but rather if the individual was in the palace or not There is no continuity between the Mycenaean era and the time of Homer where social structures reflected those of the Greek Dark Ages The terminology differs the slave is no longer do e ro doulos but dmōs 9 In the Iliad slaves are mainly women taken as booty of war while men were either ransomed or killed on the battlefield In the Odyssey the slaves also seem to be mostly women These slaves were servants and sometimes are concubines There were some male slaves especially in the Odyssey a prime example being the swineherd Eumaeus The slave was distinctive in being a member of the core part of the oikos family unit household Laertes eats and drinks with his servants in the winter he sleeps in their company Eumaeus the divine swineherd bears the same Homeric epithet as the Greek heroes Slavery remained however a disgrace Eumaeus declares Zeus of the far borne voice takes away the half of a man s virtue when the day of slavery comes upon him It is difficult to determine when slave trading began in the archaic period In Works and Days 8th century BC Hesiod owns numerous dmōes although their exact status is unclear The presence of douloi is confirmed by lyric poets such as Archilochus or Theognis of Megara According to epigraphic evidence the homicide law of Draco c 620 BC mentioned slaves Draco the first Athenian lawgiver allowed a wide space for private violence against the slave 9 According to Plutarch Solon c 594 593 BC forbade slaves from practising gymnastics and pederasty By the end of the period references become more common Slavery becomes prevalent at the very moment when Solon establishes the basis for Athenian democracy Classical scholar Moses Finley likewise remarks that Chios which according to Theopompus was the first city to organize a slave trade also enjoyed an early democratic process in the 6th century BC He concludes that one aspect of Greek history in short is the advance hand in hand of freedom and slavery 11 Economic role editSee also Economy of ancient Greece nbsp Agriculture a common use for slaves black figure neck amphora by the Antimenes Painter British MuseumAll activities were open to slaves with the exception of politics For the Greeks politics was the only occupation worthy of a citizen the rest being relegated wherever possible to non citizens It was status that was of importance not occupation The principal use of slavery was in agriculture the foundation of the Greek economy 12 Some small landowners might own one slave or even two An abundant literature of manuals for landowners such as the Economy of Xenophon or that of Pseudo Aristotle confirms the presence of dozens of slaves on the larger estates they could be common labourers or foremen The extent to which slaves were used as a labour force in farming is disputed It is certain that rural slavery was very common in Athens and that ancient Greece did not have the immense slave populations found on the Roman latifundia Slave labour was prevalent in mines and quarries which had large slave populations often leased out by rich private citizens 12 The strategos Nicias leased a thousand slaves to the silver mines of Laurium in Attica Hipponicos 600 and Philomides 300 Xenophon indicates that they received one obolus per slave per day amounting to 60 drachmas per year This was one of the most prized investments for Athenians The number of slaves working in the Laurium mines or in the mills processing ore has been estimated at 30 000 Xenophon suggested that the city buy a large number of slaves up to three state slaves per citizen so that their leasing would assure the upkeep of all the citizens Slaves were also used as craftsmen and tradespersons As in agriculture they were used for labour that was beyond the capability of the family The slave population was greatest in workshops the shield factory of Lysias employed 120 slaves and the father of Demosthenes owned 32 cutlers and 20 bedmakers Ownership of domestic slaves was common the domestic male slave s main role being to stand in for his master at his trade and to accompany him on trips In time of war he was batman to the hoplite The female slave carried out domestic tasks in particular bread baking and textile making Demographics editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Population edit nbsp An Ethiopian slave attempts to break in a horse date unknown National Archaeological Museum of AthensIt is difficult to estimate the number of slaves in ancient Greece given the lack of a precise census and variations in definitions during that era It seems certain that Athens had the largest slave population with as many as 80 000 in the 6th and 5th centuries BC on average three or four slaves per household In the 5th century BC Thucydides remarked on the desertion of 20 890 slaves during the war of Decelea mostly tradesmen The lowest estimate of 20 000 slaves during the time of Demosthenes corresponds to one slave per family Between 317 BC and 307 BC the tyrant Demetrius Phalereus ordered a general census of Attica which arrived at the following figures 21 000 citizens 10 000 metics and 400 000 slaves However some researchers doubt the accuracy of the figure asserting that thirteen slaves per free man appear unlikely in a state where a dozen slaves were a sign of wealth nor is the population stated consistent with the known figures for bread production and import The orator Hypereides in his Against Areistogiton recalls that the effort to enlist 15 000 male slaves of military age led to the defeat of the Southern Greeks at the Battle of Chaeronea 338 BC which corresponds to the figures of Ctesicles According to the literature it appears that the majority of free Athenians owned at least one slave Aristophanes in Plutus portrays poor peasants who have several slaves Aristotle defines a house as containing freemen and slaves Conversely not owning even one slave was a clear sign of poverty In the celebrated discourse of Lysias For the Invalid a cripple pleading for a pension explains my income is very small and now I m required to do these things myself and do not even have the means to purchase a slave who can do these things for me However the huge individual slave holdings of the wealthiest Romans were unknown in ancient Greece When Athenaeus cites the case of Mnason a friend of Aristotle and owner of a thousand slaves this appears to be exceptional Plato owner of five slaves at the time of his death citation needed describes the very rich as owning fifty slaves Thucydides estimates that the isle of Chios had proportionally the largest number of slaves Sources of supply edit There were four primary sources of slaves war in which the defeated would become slaves to the victorious unless a more objective outcome was reached piracy at sea banditry on land and international trade War edit By the rules of war of the period the victor possessed absolute rights over the vanquished whether they were soldiers or not Enslavement while not systematic was common practice Thucydides recalls that 7 000 inhabitants of Hyccara in Sicily were taken prisoner by Nicias and sold for 120 talents in the neighbouring village of Catania Likewise in 348 BC the population of Olynthus was reduced to slavery as was that of Thebes in 335 BC by Alexander the Great and that of Mantineia by the Achaean League The existence of Greek slaves was a constant source of discomfort for Greek citizens The enslavement of cities was also a controversial practice Some generals refused such as the Spartans Agesilaus II and Callicratidas Some cities passed accords to forbid the practice in the middle of the 3rd century BC Miletus agreed not to reduce any free Knossian to slavery and vice versa Conversely the emancipation by ransom of a city that had been entirely reduced to slavery carried great prestige Cassander in 316 BC restored Thebes Before him Philip II of Macedon enslaved and then emancipated Stageira Piracy and banditry edit Piracy and banditry provided a significant and consistent supply of slaves though the significance of this source varied according to era and region Pirates and brigands would demand ransom whenever the status of their catch warranted it Whenever ransom was not paid or not warranted captives would be sold to a trafficker In certain areas piracy was practically a national specialty described by Thucydides as the old fashioned way of life Such was the case in Acarnania Crete and Aetolia Outside of Greece this was also the case with Illyrians Phoenicians and Etruscans During the Hellenistic period Cilicians and the mountain peoples from the coasts of Anatolia could also be added to the list Strabo explains the popularity of the practice among the Cilicians by its profitability Delos not far away allowed for moving myriad slaves daily The growing influence of the Roman Republic a large consumer of slaves led to development of the market and an aggravation of piracy In the 1st century BC however the Romans largely eradicated piracy to protect the Mediterranean trade routes Slave raids were a specific form of banditry that was a primary method of gathering slaves In regions such as Thrace and the eastern Aegean natives or barbaroi captured in slave raids were the primary source of slaves rather than prisoners of war As described by Xenophon and Menander in Aspis after the slaves were captured in raids their actual enslavement took place when they were resold through slave dealers to Athenians and other slaveowners throughout Greece After the slaves were captured they were sold in slave markets From the 6th century BC on the vast majority of slaves were bought in these slave markets Slave trade edit There was slave trade between kingdoms and states of the wider region The fragmentary list of slaves confiscated from the property of the mutilators of the Hermai mentions 32 slaves whose origins have been ascertained 13 came from Thrace 7 from Caria and the others came from Cappadocia Scythia Phrygia Lydia Syria Ilyria Macedon and Peloponnese Local professionals sold their own people to Greek slave merchants The principal centres of the slave trade appear to have been Ephesus Byzantium and even faraway Tanais at the mouth of the Don via the Black Sea slave trade Some barbarian slaves were victims of war or localised piracy but others were sold by their parents There is a lack of direct evidence of slave traffic but corroborating evidence exists Firstly certain nationalities are consistently and significantly represented in the slave population such as the corps of Scythian archers employed by Athens as a police force originally 300 but eventually nearly a thousand Secondly the names given to slaves in the comedies often had a geographical link thus Thratta used by Aristophanes in The Wasps The Acharnians and Peace simply meant a Thracian woman Finally the nationality of a slave was a significant criterion for major purchasers Ancient practice was avoid a concentration of too many slaves of the same ethnic origin in the same place in order to limit the risk of revolt It is also probable that as with the Romans certain nationalities were considered more productive as slaves than others The price of slaves varied in accordance with their ability Xenophon valued a Laurion miner at 180 drachmas i e about 775 grams of silver while a workman at major works was paid one drachma per day Demosthenes father s cutlers were valued at 500 to 600 drachmas each Price was also a function of the quantity of slaves available in the 4th century BC they were abundant and it was thus a buyer s market A tax on sale revenues was levied by the market cities For instance a large helot market was organized during the festivities at the temple of Apollo at Actium The Acarnanian League which was in charge of the logistics received half of the tax proceeds the other half going to the city of Anactorion of which Actium was a part Buyers enjoyed a guarantee against latent defects The transaction could be invalidated if the purchased slave turned out to be crippled and the buyer had not been warned about it Status of slaves editThe Greeks had many degrees of enslavement There was a multitude of categories ranging from free citizen to chattel slave and including penestae or helots disenfranchised citizens freedmen bastards and metics 13 The common ground was the deprivation of civic rights Moses Finley proposed a set of criteria for different degrees of enslavement Right to own property Authority over the work of another Power of punishment over another Legal rights and duties liability to arrest and or arbitrary punishment or to litigate Familial rights and privileges marriage inheritance etc Possibility of social mobility manumission or emancipation access to citizen rights Religious rights and obligations Military rights and obligations military service as servant heavy or light soldier or sailor 14 nbsp Funerary loutrophoros on the right a bearded slave carries his master s shield and helm 380 370 BC National Archaeological Museum of AthensAthenian slaves were the property of their master or of the state Masters could dispose of their slaves as they saw fit by selling or renting them or by granting them freedom Slaves could have a spouse and children but slave familial relationships were not recognized by the state and the master could scatter the family members at any time 15 Slaves had fewer judicial rights than citizens and were represented by their masters in all judicial proceedings A misdemeanor that would result in a fine for the free man would result in a flogging for the slave the ratio seems to have been one lash for one drachma With several minor exceptions the testimony of a slave was not admissible except under torture 15 Slaves were tortured in trials because they often remained loyal to their masters 15 A famous example of a trusty slave was Themistocles s Persian slave Sicinnus the counterpart of Ephialtes of Trachis who despite his Persian origin betrayed Xerxes and helped Athenians in the Battle of Salamis Despite torture in trials the Athenian slave was protected in an indirect way if he was mistreated the master could initiate litigation for damages and interest dikh blabhs dike blabes Conversely a master who excessively mistreated a slave could be prosecuted by any citizen grafὴ ὕbrews graphe hybreōs this was not enacted for the sake of the slave but to avoid violent excess ὕbris hubris Isocrates claimed that not even the most worthless slave can be put to death without trial the master s power over his slave was not absolute Draco s law apparently punished with death the murder of a slave the underlying principle was was the crime such that if it became more widespread it would do serious harm to society The suit that could be brought against a slave s killer was not a suit for damages as would be the case for the killing of cattle but a dikh fonikh dike phonike demanding punishment for the religious pollution brought by the shedding of blood In the 4th century BC the suspect was judged by the Palladion a court which had jurisdiction over unintentional homicide the imposed penalty seems to have been more than a fine but less than death maybe exile as was the case in the murder of a Metic Corinthian black figure terra cotta votive tablet of slaves working in a mine dated to the late seventh century BC However slaves did belong to their master s household A newly bought slave was welcomed with nuts and fruits just like a newly wed wife Slaves took part in most of the civic and family cults they were expressly invited to join the banquet of the Choes the second day of the Anthesteria and were allowed initiation into the Eleusinian Mysteries A slave could claim asylum in a temple or at an altar just like a free man The slaves shared the gods of their masters and could keep their own religious customs if any Slaves could not own property but their masters often let them save up to purchase their freedom and records survive of slaves operating businesses by themselves making only a fixed tax payment to their masters Athens also had a law forbidding the striking of slaves if a person struck what appeared to be a slave in Athens that person might find himself hitting a fellow citizen because many citizens dressed no better It astonished other Greeks that Athenians tolerated back chat from slaves Athenian slaves fought together with Athenian freemen at the battle of Marathon and the monuments memorialize them It was formally decreed before the Battle of Salamis that the citizens should save themselves their women children and slaves Slaves had special sexual restrictions and obligations For example a slave could not engage free boys in pederastic relationships A slave shall not be the lover of a free boy nor follow after him or else he shall receive fifty blows of the public lash and they were forbidden from the palaestrae A slave shall not take exercise or anoint himself in the wrestling schools Both laws are attributed to Solon The sons of vanquished foes would be enslaved and often forced to work in male brothels as in the case of Phaedo of Elis who at the request of Socrates was bought and freed from such an enterprise by the philosopher s rich friends On the other hand it is attested in sources that the rape of slaves was prosecuted at least occasionally Slaves in Gortyn edit A fragment of the Gortyn code in Gortyn CreteIn Gortyn in Crete according to a code engraved in stone dating to the 3rd century BC slaves doulos or oikeus found themselves in a state of great dependence Their children belonged to the master The master was responsible for all their offences and inversely he received amends for crimes committed against his slaves by others In the Gortyn code where all punishment was monetary fines were doubled for slaves committing a misdemeanour or felony Conversely an offence committed against a slave was much less expensive than an offence committed against a free person As an example the rape of a free woman by a slave was punishable by a fine of 200 staters 400 drachms while the rape of a non virgin slave by another slave brought a fine of only one obolus a sixth of a drachm Slaves did have the right to possess a house and livestock which could be transmitted to descendants as could clothing and household furnishings Their family was recognized by law they could marry divorce write a testament and inherit just like free men Debt Bondage edit Debt especially in the agricultural field was a very common occurrence in Ancient Greece 16 A large portion of the Greek population was composed of peasants of varying degrees of freedom who survived on subsistence farming 16 Thus lending and borrowing and consequently incurring debts was central to peasant life Peasants could incur debt for a number of reasons First given the nature of their agricultural labor they often borrowed tools livestock or sowing material and these debts could roll over to the next day As soon as debts surpassed day to day reciprocity it became more and more difficult for peasants to pay off their loans Thus the laborer became indebted to the owner of the land they were working on becoming indebted to the creditor Soon after the debtor might have had to give his property and eventually his wife children and ultimately himself over to the creditor thus becoming entirely dependent and virtually enslaved to the creditor 16 Prior to its interdiction by Solon Athenians practiced debt enslavement a citizen incapable of paying his debts became enslaved to the creditor Debt bondage primarily concerned peasants known as hektemoroi who unable to pay their rents worked land owned by rich landowners In theory debt bondage slaves would be liberated when their original debts were repaid 17 Solon put an end to debt bondage with the seisax8eia seisachtheia literally the shaking off of burdens or liberation of debts which prevented all claim to the person by the debtor and forbade the sale of free Athenians including by themselves 17 Scholars believe that Solon got the idea for the cancellation of debts from Mesopotamian law 16 Aristotle in his Constitution of the Athenians quotes one of Solon s poems And many a man whom fraud or law had soldFar from his god built land an outcast slave I brought again to Athens yea and some Exiles from home through debt s oppressive load Speaking no more the dear Athenian tongue But wandering far and wide I brought again And those that here in vilest slavery douleia Crouched neath a master s despōtes frown I set them free 18 Though much of Solon s poem is reminiscent of traditional slavery debt bondage slavery was different in that the enslaved Athenian remained an Athenian dependent on another Athenian in his place of birth It is in these lines that Solon put an end to debt bondage This measure which received much praise in antiquity was merely a cancellation of debts 18 The seisachtheia were not intended to free all Greek slaves but only those enslaved by debt The reforms of Solon left two exceptions the guardian of an unmarried woman who had lost her virginity had the right to sell her as a slave and a citizen could expose abandon unwanted newborn children Manumission edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The practice of manumission is confirmed to have existed in Chios from the 6th century BC It probably dates back to an earlier period as it was an oral procedure Informal emancipations are also confirmed in the classical period It was sufficient to have witnesses who would escort the citizen to a public emancipation of his slave either at the theatre or before a public tribunal This practice was outlawed in Athens in the middle of the 6th century BC to avoid public disorder The practice became more common in the 4th century BC and gave rise to inscriptions in stone which have been recovered from shrines such as Delphi and Dodona They primarily date to the 2nd and 1st centuries BC and the 1st century AD Collective manumission was possible an example is known from the 2nd century BC in the island of Thasos It probably took place during a period of war as a reward for the slaves loyalty but in most cases the documentation deals with a voluntary act on the part of the master predominantly male but in the Hellenistic period also female The slave was often required to pay for himself an amount at least equivalent to his market value To this end they could use their savings or take a so called friendly loan ἔranos eranos from their master a friend or a client like the hetaera Neaira did Emancipation was often of a religious nature where the slave was considered to be sold to a deity often Delphian Apollo or was consecrated after his emancipation The temple would receive a portion of the monetary transaction and would guarantee the contract The manumission could also be entirely civil in which case the magistrate played the role of the deity The slave s freedom could be either total or partial at the master s whim In the former the emancipated slave was legally protected against all attempts at re enslavement for instance on the part of the former master s inheritors In the latter case the emancipated slave could be liable to a number of obligations to the former master The most restrictive contract was the paramone a type of enslavement of limited duration during which time the master retained practically absolute rights If a former master sued the former slave for not fulfilling a duty however and the slave was found innocent the latter gained complete freedom from all duties toward the former Some inscriptions imply a mock process of that type could be used for a master to grant his slave complete freedom in a legally binding manner In regard to the city the emancipated slave was far from equal to a citizen by birth He was liable to all types of obligations as one can see from the proposals of Plato in The Laws presentation three times monthly at the home of the former master forbidden to become richer than him etc In fact the status of emancipated slaves was similar to that of metics the residing foreigners who were free but did not enjoy a citizen s rights Spartan slaves edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Spartan slaves Slaves in Sparta news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Spartan citizens used helots an enslaved group that formed the majority of the population collectively owned by the state It is uncertain whether Spartan citizens had chattel slaves as well There are mentions of people manumitted by Spartans which was supposedly forbidden for helots or sold outside of Laconia For example the poet Alcman a Philoxenos from Cytherea reputedly enslaved with all his fellow citizens when his city was conquered was later sold to an Athenian a Spartan cook bought by Dionysius the Elder or by a king of Pontus both versions being mentioned by Plutarch and the famous Spartan nurses much appreciated by Athenian parents Some texts mention both slaves and helots which seems to indicate that they were not the same thing Plato in Alcibiades I cites the ownership of slaves and notably helots among the Spartan riches and Plutarch writes about slaves and helots Finally according to Thucydides the agreement that ended the 464 BC revolt of helots stated that any Messenian rebel who might hereafter be found within the Peloponnese was to be the slave of his captor which means that the ownership of chattel slaves was not illegal at that time Most historians thus concur that chattel slaves were indeed used in the Greek city state of Sparta at least after the Lacedemonian victory of 404 BC against Athens but not in great numbers and only among the upper classes As it was in the other Greek cities chattel slaves could be purchased at the market or taken in war Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges mentions that there was a hierarchy of classes superposed one above the other in the Spartan society If the Helots and the Laconians are left out the hierarchy would be as follows first there were the Neodamodes former slaves freed then the Epeunactae helots who slept with Spartan widows in order to help Sparta with manpower shortage because of war casualties then the Mothaces very similar to domestic clients and then the bastards who though descended from true Spartans were separated Athenian slaves edit This section is empty You can help by adding to it October 2023 nbsp Funerary loutrophoros on the right a bearded slave carries his master s shield and helm 380 370 BC National Archaeological Museum of AthensSocial Death editOrlando Patterson s theory of social death says that the institution of slavery robs the slave of his or her socially recognized existence outside of his master effectively transforming the slave into a social nonperson 10 By this definition Greek slaves can be considered socially dead According to Patterson s definition there were several criteria that qualified a slave as socially dead First they were likely uprooted from kin groups and their homeland and displaced in a new foreign land 10 The effect of physically relocating slaves was that they were seen as fundamentally different from the citizen population at any given time alienating the slave and thus making it easier to justify their abuse and maltreatment 15 Second the slaves subjection was permanent and could only be terminated by the master Third socially dead slaves were dishonored devalued and victims of gratuitous violence 10 Looking at slavery in Ancient Greece through the lens of social death a theory developed by Orlando Patterson offers insight regarding the daily lived experiences of Ancient Greek slaves According to Patterson slavery is the permanent violent domination of natally alienated and generally dishonored persons and all slaves are socially dead 10 The aforementioned aspects of social death shall be examined below in the context of Ancient Greek slavery the natal alienation of slaves the permanence of a slave s enslavement and the dishonor domination and violence 10 Natal Alienation edit Patterson argues that the alienation of the slave from their birthplace and natal culture was the single most salient factor in determining whether a slave was socially dead or not In Ancient Greece a binary system of classification categorized all people into one of two categories Greek or non Greek Non Greek peoples were called barbaroi they could have either been born outside Greece or have born inside Greece to foreigners 19 This dichotomy reinforced the view of non Greeks as fundamentally The Other This Othering of foreigners very likely made it psychologically easier for Athenians to deny personhood to someone who was seen as essentially different from themselves thus making it easier to enslave non Greeks and deprive them of their humanity 19 Consequently barbarois became inextricably associated with slaves and conversely eleutheros became synonymous with Greek citizenship 19 The capture of prisoners of war and slave raids during warfare between Greek and non Greek territories were two primary ways of obtaining slaves in Classical Greece 19 This meant that the majority of the slave population was composed of non Greeks This relocation of slaves alienated them from the birthrights from their natal clan village or community relegating the enslaved population to permanent outsiders 20 Permanence edit While it was possible for individual Ancient Greek slaves to be freed manumission was always in the hands of the owner 15 Slavery was heritable meaning that even if an individual slave was granted freedom their children would still likely be slaves 15 The permanence of many Greek slaves subjection and the perpetuity of enslavement over generations of a family was therefore indicative of their status as unfree members of society since their freedom was on someone else s terms and never their own 15 General Dishonor Domination and Violence edit Perhaps the most salient feature of the social death of slaves was the dishonor and dehumanization they experienced at the hands of the slave owning class Slaves were seen as property their only value was tied to their physical capacity for labor 19 This is reflected in Aristotle s work Politics in which he provides a blunt conceptualization of slaves as property they are nothing but living tools and animate property 15 This viewpoint was shared by the rest of free Greek society 15 Slaves were subject to corporal punishment while free citizens were not further differentiating the slave class from the rest of society 19 Flogging verbal chastisement and various forms of torture were characteristic of a slave s subjection 19 There was also a legal requirement that slave testimony in court be extracted via torture 15 Litigants would offer up their slave who would be stretched out on a rack and whipped and sometimes even killed while giving their testimony 15 It is also not surprising that slaves were subject to physical violence in the private sphere as well owners were free to whip torture and even kill their slaves 15 Slavery conditions editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message It is difficult to appreciate the condition of Greek slaves According to Aristotle the daily routine of slaves could be summed up in three words work discipline and feeding Xenophon notes the accepted practice of treating slaves as domestic animals that is to say punishing them for disobedience and rewarding them for good behaviour For his part Aristotle prefers to see slaves treated as children and to use not only orders but also recommendations as the slave is capable of understanding reasons when they are explained Greek literature abounds with scenes of slaves being flogged it was a means of forcing them to work as were control of rations clothing and rest This violence could be meted out by the master or the supervisor who was possibly also a slave Thus at the beginning of Aristophanes The Knights 4 5 two slaves complain of being bruised and thrashed without respite by their new supervisor However Aristophanes himself cites what is a typical old saw in ancient Greek comedy He also dismissed those slaves who kept on running off or deceiving someone or getting whipped They were always led out crying so one of their fellow slaves could mock the bruises and ask then Oh you poor miserable fellow what s happened to your skin Surely a huge army of lashes from a whip has fallen down on you and laid waste your back The condition of slaves varied very much according to their status the mine slaves of Laureion and the pornai brothel prostitutes lived a particularly brutal existence while public slaves craftsmen tradesmen and bankers enjoyed relative independence In return for a fee ἀpofora apophora paid to their master they could live and work alone They could thus earn some money on the side sometimes enough to purchase their freedom Potential emancipation was indeed a powerful motivator though the real scale of this is difficult to estimate Ancient writers considered that Attic slaves enjoyed a peculiarly happy lot Pseudo Xenophon deplores the liberties taken by Athenian slaves as for the slaves and Metics of Athens they take the greatest licence you cannot just strike them and they do not step aside to give you free passage This alleged good treatment did not prevent 20 000 Athenian slaves from running away at the end of the Peloponnesian War at the incitement of the Spartan garrison at Attica in Decelea These were principally skilled artisans kheirotekhnai probably among the better treated slaves although some researchers believe them to be mainly workers of the mines of Laurion whose conditions were infamously harsh The title of a 4th century comedy by Antiphanes The Runaway catcher Drapetagwgos suggests that slave flight was not uncommon Conversely there are no records of a large scale Greek slave revolt comparable to that of Spartacus in Rome It can probably be explained by the relative dispersion of Greek slaves which would have prevented any large scale planning Slave revolts were rare even in Rome Individual acts of rebellion of slaves against their master though scarce are not unheard of a judicial speech mentions the attempted murder of his master by a boy slave not 12 years old Views of Greek slavery editHistorical views edit nbsp Depiction of a slave seated on an altar looking at the purse he is about to steal c 400 375 BC LouvreVery few authors of antiquity call slavery into question To Homer and the pre classical authors slavery was an inevitable consequence of war Heraclitus states that w ar is the father of all the king of all he turns some into slaves and sets others free 21 Aristotle also felt this way stating the law by which whatever is taken in war is supposed to belong to the victors 22 He also states that it might have a few issues though For what if the cause of war be unjust 22 If the war was because of an unfair or incorrect reason should the victors of that war be allowed to take the losers as slaves During the classical period the main justification for slavery was economic 23 From a philosophical point of view the idea of natural slavery emerged at the same time thus as Aeschylus states in The Persians the Greeks o f no man are they called the slaves or vassals 24 while the Persians as Euripides states in Helen are all slaves except one the Great King 25 Hippocrates theorizes about this latent idea at the end of the 5th century BC According to him the temperate climate of Anatolia produced a placid and submissive people 26 This explanation is reprised by Plato 27 then Aristotle in Politics 28 where he develops the concept of natural slavery for he that can foresee with his mind is naturally ruler and naturally master and he that can do these things with his body is subject and naturally a slave 29 As opposed to an animal a slave can comprehend reason but has not got the deliberative part at all 30 Alcidamas at the same time as Aristotle took the opposite view saying nature has made nobody a slave 31 In parallel the concept that all men whether Greek or barbarian belonged to the same race was being developed by the Sophists 32 and thus that certain men were slaves although they had the soul of a freeman and vice versa 33 Aristotle himself recognized this possibility and argued that slavery could not be imposed unless the master was better than the slave in keeping with his theory of natural slavery 34 The Sophists concluded that true servitude was not a matter of status but a matter of spirit thus as Menander stated be free in the mind although you are slave and thus you will no longer be a slave 35 This idea repeated by the Stoics and the Epicurians was not so much an opposition to slavery as a trivialization of it 36 The Greeks could not comprehend an absence of slaves Slaves exist even in the Cloud cuckoo land of Aristophanes The Birds The utopian cities of Phaleas of Chalcedon and Hippodamus of Miletus are based on the equal distribution of property but public slaves are used respectively as craftsmen 37 and land workers 38 The reversed cities placed women in power or even saw the end of private property as in Lysistrata or Assemblywomen but could not picture slaves in charge of masters The only societies without slaves were those of the Golden Age where all needs were met without anyone having to work In this type of society as explained by Plato 39 one reaped generously without sowing In Telekleides Amphictyons 40 barley loaves fight with wheat loaves for the honor of being eaten by men Moreover objects move themselves dough kneads itself and the jug pours itself Similarly Aristotle said that slaves would not be necessary if every instrument could accomplish its own work the shuttle would weave and the plectrum touch the lyre without a hand to guide them like the legendary constructs of Daedalus and Hephaestus 41 Society without slaves is thus relegated to a different time and space In a normal society one needs slaves Aristotle argues that slaves are a necessity though saying Property is part of the household For no man can live well or indeed live at all unless he be provided with necessaries 22 He also argues that slaves are the most important part of the property as they take precedence of all the instruments 22 This would suggest that at least some slaves would be treated well for the same reason one would take great care of their most important tools By viewing slaves as tools of a household it creates another reason for acceptance of slavery Aristotle says indeed the use of slaves and of tame animals is not very different showing as well that at least in part some slaves were thought of no higher than the common tamed animals in use at the time Antiphon viewed slaves as a bit more than common animals or tools On the topic of a man killing his own slave he says that the man should purify himself and withhold himself from those places prescribed by law in the hope that by doing so he will best avoid disaster 42 This suggests that there still is some sense of inappropriateness in killing a slave even one owned by the killer Punishment of slaves would have been swift and harsh Demosthenes viewed punishment for slaves as acceptable in the form of physical harm or injuries for all that they may have done wrong stating the body of a slave is made responsible for all his misdeeds whereas corporal punishment is the last penalty to inflict on a free man 43 This was spoken about in legal proceedings suggesting that it would have been a widely accepted way of treating slaves Modern views edit nbsp Theatre mask of a First slave in Greek comedy 2nd century BC National Archaeological Museum of AthensSlavery in Greek antiquity has long been an object of apologetic discourse among Christians who are typically awarded the merit of its collapse From the 16th century the discourse became moralizing in nature The existence of colonial slavery had significant impact on the debate with some authors lending it civilizing merits and others denouncing its misdeeds 44 Thus Henri Alexandre Wallon in 1847 published a History of Slavery in Antiquity among his works for the abolition of slavery in the French colonies 45 In the 19th century a politico economic discourse emerged It concerned itself with distinguishing the phases in the organisation of human societies and correctly identifying the place of Greek slavery According to Karl Marx the ancient society was characterized by development of private ownership and the dominant and not secondary as in other pre capitalist societies character of slavery as a mode of production 46 The Positivists represented by the historian Eduard Meyer Slavery in Antiquity 1898 were soon to oppose the Marxist theory According to him slavery was the foundation of Greek democracy It was thus a legal and social phenomenon and not economic 47 Current historiography developed in the 20th century led by authors such as Joseph Vogt it saw in slavery the conditions for the development of elites Conversely the theory also demonstrates an opportunity for slaves to join the elite Finally Vogt estimates that modern society founded on humanist values has surpassed this level of development 48 In 2011 Greek slavery remains the subject of historiographical debate on two questions in particular can it be said that ancient Greece was a slave society and did Greek slaves comprise a social class 49 Footnotes editReferences edit A traditional pose in funerary steles see for instance Felix M Wassermann Serenity and Repose Life and Death on Attic Tombstones The Classical Journal Vol 64 No 5 p 198 Polakoff Murray E Dhrymes Phoebus J 1958 The Economic and Sociological Significance of Debt Bondage and Detribalization in Ancient Greece Economic Development and Cultural Change 6 2 88 108 doi 10 1086 449759 ISSN 0013 0079 JSTOR 1151738 S2CID 154209570 Morris Sarah P Papadopoulos John K 2005 Greek Towers and Slaves An Archaeology of Exploitation American Journal of Archaeology 109 2 155 225 doi 10 3764 aja 109 2 155 ISSN 0002 9114 JSTOR 40024509 S2CID 147684885 Hunt Peter 2016 12 19 Slaves or Serfs Patterson on the Thetes and Helots of Ancient Greece On Human Bondage pp 55 80 doi 10 1002 9781119162544 ch3 ISBN 9781119162483 Modern Day Abolition National Underground Railroad Freedom Center freedomcenter org Retrieved 2023 03 12 Hunt Peter 2017 Ancient Greek and Roman slavery John Wiley amp Sons Incorporated ISBN 978 1 78785 697 4 OCLC 1176434948 Review of Reconstructing the Slave the Image of the Slave in Ancient Greece Bryn Mawr Classical Review ISSN 1055 7660 Harris Edward Homer Hesiod and the Origins of Greek Slavery a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c Harper Kyle 2016 12 19 Freedom Slavery and Female Sexual Honor in Antiquity On Human Bondage pp 109 121 doi 10 1002 9781119162544 ch5 ISBN 9781119162483 a b c d e f Patterson Orlando 2016 12 19 Revisiting Slavery Property and Social Death On Human Bondage pp 265 296 doi 10 1002 9781119162544 ch14 ISBN 978 1119162483 Cartledge Paul October 1993 Like a worm I the bud A heterology of classical Greek slavery Greece and Rome 40 2 163 180 doi 10 1017 s0017383500022762 ISSN 0017 3835 S2CID 161818422 a b Morris Sarah P Papadopoulos John K 2005 04 01 Greek Towers and Slaves An Archaeology of Exploitation American Journal of Archaeology 109 2 155 225 doi 10 3764 aja 109 2 155 ISSN 0002 9114 S2CID 147684885 Sosin Joshua D 2016 A Metic was a Metic Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 65 1 2 13 doi 10 25162 historia 2016 0001 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 45019214 S2CID 161953761 Finley Moses I 1968 Slavery in classical antiquity views and controversies Heffer etc OCLC 67417944 a b c d e f g h i j k l Forsdyke Sara 2021 06 08 Slaves and Slavery in Ancient Greece Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781139505772 ISBN 978 1 139 50577 2 S2CID 236293051 a b c d Julia LS Oude geschiedenis en antieke cultuur OGKG Antieke Cultuur Blok J H Krul December 2017 Debt and its aftermath The Near Eastern background to Solon s seisachtheia American School of Classical Studies at Athens OCLC 1358266370 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Did Solon Abolish Debt Bondage Democracy and the Rule of Law in Classical Athens Cambridge University Press pp 249 270 2006 04 17 doi 10 1017 cbo9780511497858 013 ISBN 9780521852791 retrieved 2023 03 13 a b James H R 1930 Our Hellenic heritage Macmillan and Co Ltd OCLC 498683728 a b c d e f g Rosivach Vincent J 1999 Enslaving Barbaroi and the Athenian Ideology of Slavery Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 48 2 129 157 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 4436537 Derrick Jonathan 2022 08 04 Black African Slaves and Serfs Africa s Slaves Today London Routledge pp 83 109 doi 10 4324 9781003310747 5 ISBN 9781003310747 retrieved 2023 03 11 Heraclitus frag 53 a b c d Aristotle The Politics On Slavery Internet History Sourcebooks Retrieved December 2 2016 Mactoux 1980 p 52 The Persians v 242 Trans ed Herbert Weir Smyth accessed 17 May 2006 Helen v 276 Hippocratic corpus Of Airs Waters and Places Peri aeron hydaton topon 23 Republic 4 435a 436a Politics 7 1327b Politics 1 2 2 Trans H Rackham accessed 17 May 2006 Politics 1 13 17 John D Bury and Russell Meiggs 4th ed 1975 A History of Greece to the Death of Alexander the Great New York St Martin s Press page 375 For instance Hippias of Elis apud Platon Protagoras 337c Antiphon Pap Oxyr 9 1364 An idea already expressed by Euripides Ion 854 856frag 831 Politics 1 5 10 Menander frag 857 Garlan p 130 Apud Aristotle Politics 1267b Apud Aristotle Politics 1268a Politics 271a 272b Apud Athenaeus 268 b d Aristotle Politics Book 1 Part 4 Antiphon On the Choreutes Retrieved December 2 2016 Demosthenes Against Timocrates Internet History Sourcebooks Retrieved December 2 2016 Garlan p 8 Finley Moses I 1980 Ancient Slavery and Modern Ideology PDF Chatto amp Windus p 12 ISBN 9780701125103 Garlan p 10 13 Garlan p 13 14 Garlan p 19 20 Garlan p 201 References edit in French Brule P 1978a Signification historique de la piraterie grecque Dialogues d histoire ancienne no 4 1978 pp 1 16 in French Brule P 1992 Infanticide et abandon d enfants Dialogues d histoire ancienne no 18 1992 pp 53 90 Burkert W Greek Religion Oxford Blackwell Publishing 1985 ISBN 0 631 15624 0 originally published as Griechische Religion der archaischen und klassischen Epoche Stuttgart Kohlhammer Verlag 1977 in French Carlier P Le IVe siecle grec jusqu a la mort d Alexandre Paris Seuil 1995 ISBN 2 02 013129 3 Cartledge P Rebels and Sambos in Classical Greece Spartan Reflections Berkeley University of California Press 2003 p 127 152 ISBN 0 520 23124 4 in French Chantraine P Dictionnaire etymologique de la langue grecque Paris Klincksieck 1999 new edition ISBN 2 252 03277 4 in French Dareste R Haussoullier B Reinach Th Recueil des inscriptions juridiques grecques vol II Paris E Leroux 1904 in French Ducat Jean Les Hilotes BCH suppl 20 Paris publications of the Ecole francaise d Athenes 1990 ISBN 2 86958 034 7 in French Dunant C and Pouilloux J Recherches sur l histoire et les cultes de Thasos II Paris publications of the Ecole francaise d Athenes 1958 Finley M 1997 Economie et societe en Grece ancienne Paris Seuil 1997 ISBN 2 02 014644 4 originally published as Economy and Society in Ancient Greece London Chatto and Windus 1981 Garlan Y Les Esclaves en Grece ancienne Paris La Decouverte 1982 1982 ISBN 2 7071 2475 3 translated in English as Slavery in Ancient Greece Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press 1988 1st edn 1982 ISBN 0 8014 1841 0 Kirk G S editor The Iliad a Commentary vol II books 5 8 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1990 ISBN 0 521 28172 5 Jameson M H Agriculture and Slavery in Classical Athens Classical Journal no 73 1977 1978 pp 122 145 Jones A H M Athenian Democracy Oxford Blackwell Publishing 1957 in German Lauffer S Die Bergwerkssklaven von Laureion Abhandlungen no 12 1956 pp 904 916 in French Levy E 1995 La Grece au Ve siecle de Clisthene a Socrate Paris Seuil 1995 ISBN 2 02 013128 5 in French Levy E 2003 Sparte Paris Seuil 2003 ISBN 2 02 032453 9 in French Mactoux M M 1980 Douleia Esclavage et pratiques discursives dans l Athenes classique Paris Belles Lettres 1980 ISBN 2 251 60250 X in French Mactoux M M 1981 L esclavage comme metaphore douleo chez les orateurs attiques Proceedings of the 1980 GIREA Workshop on Slavery Kazimierz 3 8 November 1980 Index 10 1981 pp 20 42 in French Masson O Les noms des esclaves dans la Grece antique Proceedings of the 1971 GIREA Workshop on Slavery Besancon 10 11 mai 1971 Paris Belles Lettres 1973 pp 9 23 in French Mele A Esclavage et liberte dans la societe mycenienne Proceedings of the 1973 GIREA Workshop on Slavery Besancon 2 3 mai 1973 Paris Les Belles Lettres 1976 Morrow G R The Murder of Slaves in Attic Law Classical Philology Vol 32 No 3 Jul 1937 pp 210 227 Oliva P Sparta and her Social Problems Prague Academia 1971 in French Plassart A Les Archers d Athenes Revue des etudes grecques XXVI 1913 pp 151 213 Pomeroy S B Goddesses Whores Wives and Slaves New York Schoken 1995 ISBN 0 8052 1030 X Pritchett W K and Pippin A 1956 The Attic Stelai Part II Hesperia Vol 25 No 3 Jul Sep 1956 pp 178 328 Pritchett 1961 Five New Fragments of the Attic Stelai Hesperia Vol 30 No 1 Jan Mar 1961 pp 23 29 Wood E M 1983 Agriculture and Slavery in Classical Athens American Journal of Ancient History No 8 1983 pp 1 47 Von Fritz K The Meaning of ἙKTHMOROS The American Journal of Philology Vol 61 No 1 1940 pp 54 61 Wood E M 1988 Peasant Citizen and Slave The Foundations of Athenian Democracy New York Verso 1988 ISBN 0 86091 911 0 Further reading editGeneral studies Bellen H Heinen H Schafer D Deissler J Bibliographie zur antiken Sklaverei I Bibliographie II Abkurzungsverzeichnis und Register 2 vol Stuttgart Steiner 2003 ISBN 3 515 08206 9 Biezunska Malowist I La Schiavitu nel mondo antico Naples Edizioni Scientifiche Italiane 1991 De Ste Croix G E M The Class Struggle in the Ancient Greek World London Duckworth Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press 1981 ISBN 0 8014 1442 3 Finley M The Ancient Economy Berkeley University of California Press 1999 1st edn 1970 ISBN 0 520 21946 5 Ancient Slavery amp Modern Ideology Princeton Markus Wiener 1998 1st edn 1980 ISBN 1 55876 171 3 Slavery in Classical Antiquity Views and Controversies Cambridge Heffer 1960 Forsdyke Sara Slaves and Slavery in Ancient Greece Cambridge University Press 2021 Garnsey P Ideas of Slavery from Aristotle to Augustine Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1996 ISBN 0 521 57433 1 Fisher Nicolas R E Slavery in Classical Greece London Bristol Classical Press 1993 Hall Edith Richard Alston and Justine McConnell eds Ancient Slavery and Abolition From Hobbs to Hollywood Oxford Oxford Univ Press 2011 McKeown Niall The Invention of Ancient Slavery London Duckworth 2007 Morris Ian Archaeology and Greek Slavery In The Cambridge World History of Slavery Vol 1 The Ancient Mediterranean World Edited by Keith Bradley and Paul Cartledge 176 193 Cambridge UK Cambridge Univ Press 2011 Vidal Naquet P Women Slaves and Artisans third part of The Black Hunter Forms of Thought and Forms of Society in the Greek World Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 1988 1st edn 1981 ISBN 0 8018 5951 4 with Vernant J P Travail et esclavage en Grece ancienne Bruxelles Complexe History series 2006 1st edn 1988 ISBN 2 87027 246 4 Wiedemann T Greek and Roman Slavery London Routledge 1989 1st edn 1981 ISBN 0 415 02972 4 Westermann W L The Slave Systems of Greek and Roman Antiquity Philadelphia The American Philosophical Society 1955 Specific studies Brule P 1978b La Piraterie cretoise hellenistique Belles Lettres 1978 ISBN 2 251 60223 2 Brule P and Oulhen J dir Esclavage guerre economie en Grece ancienne Hommages a Yvon Garlan Rennes Presses universitaires de Rennes History series 1997 ISBN 2 86847 289 3 Ducrey P Le traitement des prisonniers de guerre en Grece ancienne Des origines a la conquete romaine Paris De Boccard 1968 Foucart P Memoire sur l affranchissement des esclaves par forme de vente a une divinite d apres les inscriptions de Delphes Archives des missions scientifiques et litteraires 2nd series vol 2 1865 pp 375 424 Gabrielsen V La piraterie et le commerce des esclaves in E Erskine ed Le Monde hellenistique Espaces societes cultures 323 31 av J C Rennes Presses Universitaires de Rennes 2004 pp 495 511 ISBN 2 86847 875 1 Hunt P Slaves Warfare and Ideology in the Greek Historians Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1998 ISBN 0 521 58429 9 Ormerod H A Piracy in the Ancient World Liverpool Liverpool University Press 1924 Thalmann William G 1998 The Swineherd and the Bow Representations of Class in the Odyssey Ithaca NY Cornell Univ Press External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Slavery in ancient Greece GIREA The International Group for Research on Slavery in Antiquity in French Greek law bibliographic database at Nomoi Documents on Greek slavery on the Ancient History Sourcebook Manumission records of women at Delphi at attalus org Index thematiques de l esclavage et de la dependance subject index on slavery and related topics by author in French Bibliotheque numerique ISTA free library in French Greek Manumission Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Slavery in ancient Greece amp oldid 1206434397, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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