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The Rise and Fall of Classical Greece

Page 61

by Ober, Josiah

Lexicon of Greek Personal Names, 83

  life expectancy, 88–89

  Linear B, 130

  literacy, 130, 132

  liturgies, 244, 250

  living standards, 70–100

  local historiography, 39–41

  location, of classical Greek states, 107

  Lorenz curve, 90, 91

  Lyceum, 247

  Lycurgus (Athenian statesman), 303

  Lycurgus (Spartan lawmaker), and Lycurgan reforms, 124, 139–44, 194, 231, 289

  Ma, John, 259, 301, 303, 330

  Macedon and Macedonia: army of, 268–69, 285–88; and Athens, 239–40, 271–76; classical Greece in relation to, 266–67; coinage in, 270–71, 285; defeat of Greek states by, 18–19; and empire, 261, 266, 279–88; governance of, 267–68; Greek states compared to, 279–82, 288; and Hellenization, 241, 267; infantry of, 286; navy of, 287; and the Persian Empire, 277–78; before Philip, 264, 266–68; rise of, under Philip, 268–76; success of, under Philip II, 279–91

  Mackil, Emily, 256, 308, 358n30

  Maddison, Angus, 342n66

  Malthusian pressure/trap, 71–72, 74, 86, 89, 94, 139, 338n13

  Mantinea, 230; battle of, 239

  Marathon, 168

  markets, 203–4, 244–47

  marriage: Macedonian polygamy, 270, 280; mixed, 200

  Massalia, 241

  mass audiences, in Athens, 234–36

  Mausolus, 238, 239–40, 262, 263, 270

  meat, 29

  medieval Europe, regime types and growth in, 122

  Mediterranean Sea, 22

  Mediterranean triad, 27, 29, 44

  Megalopolis, 299

  Megara, 146, 179, 198, 210, 213

  Melos, 216–17, 356n58

  Memnon of Rhodes, 278, 297, 298

  mercenaries: Greeks as, 137, 227–28, 238, 253, 348n25; impact of, on warfare, 226; Persian Empire’s use of, 227–28; plundering by, 253; in Sicily, 177–78, 183–85, 253

  merismos system of state budgeting, 250

  Mesopotamia, 8, 10, 79, 301

  Messene, 232, 306

  Messenia, 143, 197, 230, 232, 348n29

  Messenian Wars, 69, 138–40

  Metapontum, 133, 135

  metics, 96, 97; numbers of in Athens, 92t

  microclimates, 106

  Middle Bronze Age, 73

  middle class: in Athens, 96–98, 148, 151; in class structure, 93–94; defined, 330n6; and domination, 108–9; economic growth dependent on, 4, 94, 101; wages of, 95

  Miletus, 41, 179

  military. See warfare

  Mill, John Stuart, 168

  mining, 270, 285

  Minoan culture, 73, 125

  Minos, King of Crete, 70

  modernity: classical Greece compared to, xv–xvi, 4; democracy and economic growth as conditions of, xiii–xiv; efflorescence of, 2; exceptional character of, xiii–xiv

  moral hazard, 114–15, 149, 252

  morality: collective social action and, 50; polis living and, 51–52, 312

  Morris, Ian, xiv, 81–83, 85, 89, 91, 98, 146, 206, 336n19

  mother cities, 41, 133

  motivation and social action: under centralized authority, 59; in decentralized conditions, 46–47; factors in, 66–70; self-interest and, 46, 289–90

  Murray, Oswyn, xvi

  Mycale, battle at, 193

  Mycenaean civilization, 72–73, 104, 125–26, 129

  Mytilene, 213–15

  names, of known individuals, numbers of, 83

  Nash equilibrium, 310

  natural resources, 43–44, 104

  natural states, 10–11, 57, 116, 125, 135, 143, 268

  Naucratis, 27

  navy: Athenian, 168–69, 192–93, 206, 214, 221–22, 305; Athenian Naval League, 230, 237, 239–40; Macedonian, 287; Persian, 193; Spartan, 119, 194, 221–22, 229. See also warships

  Naxos, 196

  Neandreia, 259

  Neapolis, 37

  Nemea, 30

  Nemesis, 144

  Netz, Reviel, 206

  Nicias, 218–19

  Nicocles, 262

  Nicomachus, 251

  North, Douglass, 5, 10, 116, 125, 135

  occupations, 102, 205

  Odeon, Athens, 205

  Old Oligarch, 113, 209

  oligarchy: in Athens, 221, 300; democracy vs., 201, 307–8; as Philip II’s favored regime, 298; as regime type, 40

  olives and olive oil, 27, 29, 135, 152

  Olson, Mancur, 46, 56, 59, 67

  Olympia, 30, 135

  Olynthos, 90, 271

  opportunists, in Hellenistic world, 262–64

  opportunity egalitarianism, 110

  Orchomenos, 242

  Oropos, 239

  orphans, support of, 115

  Orwell, George, 111

  Osborne, Robin, 343n1

  ostracism, 167, 174–75, 187–88, 197, 352n26, 353n38

  outcome egalitarianism, 110

  Paeonians, 268

  Panathenaia, 153, 158, 303

  panopticon, 349n33. See also social panopticon

  Pareto optimal condition, 309

  Paros, 12

  Parthenon, Athens, 205

  path dependency, 194

  Pausanius, 1, 30

  Peace of Philocrates, 271–73

  Pearson correlation, 333n5

  Peisistratus, 153, 158

  Pella, 267

  Pelopidas, 230

  Peloponnesian League, 37–38, 119, 144, 155, 169, 198, 210

  Peloponnesian War: account of, 212–22; causes of, 41, 210–12; Greek world after, 223–27; strategies for, 212–13, 215; Thucydides on, 207–8, 210–20, 252; truce during, 216

  Peloponnesus, 138m

  per capita consumption, 82–83

  per capita growth, 81–84, 98

  Perdiccas III, King of Macedon, 268, 281, 284–85

  Pericles, 197–98, 200, 206, 208–9, 212, 263; funeral oration of, 208, 211, 213, 215, 289

  Perinthus, 274, 288, 309

  perioikoi, Spartan, 139, 142, 155

  Persian Empire, 37; advantages/disadvantages of belonging to, 193; aggressive behavior of, in fourth century, 237–38; Alexander’s defeat of, 261, 297–99; Anatolia and, 258–60; Athenian empire compared to, 199, 354n15; Athenian peace agreement with, 198; competition and predation from, 27; defeat of, 261; governance of, 199; growth of, 159; ideology of, 199; invasions of Athens by, 168, 173–74, 191; Macedonia and, 277–78; navy of, 193; population of, 199; principalagent problems of, 199, 215, 228, 238, 298; punishment of towns by, 179, 193; Spartan alliance with, 221, 227–30; as threat to Athens, 159

  petalism, 187–88, 353n38

  phalanxes, 136, 138–39, 168

  Pheidias, 206

  Philip II of Macedon, 19, 56, 258; assassination of, 264, 278; and Athens, 239–40; and centralized authority, 279–80, 291; crucial victory of, 261; factors in success of, 278–91; leadership characteristics of, 263; and the League of Corinth, 276–78; and the rise of Macedon, 268–76; rule of, 263–64; tomb of, 267

  philosophical schools, Athenian, 226, 247

  Phocis, 33, 240, 272

  Phoenicia and Phoenicians: alphabet borrowed from, 132; land area occupied by, 26, 27; political regime of, 55–56; small-state culture of, 8

  piracy, 201, 202, 272, 305

  Piraeus, 169, 203, 205, 232, 245, 303

  Pithekoussai, 133

  plague, 213, 355n48

  Plataea, 7, 69, 168, 169, 237, 242

  Plato, 47, 232; Aristotle as student of, 282; on Greek world, 223; Laws, 311; Phaedo, 21; on political regimes, 40; Protagoras, 112–13; Republic, 17, 31, 40, 42, 60, 311; school founded by, 226, 247; on specialization in governance, 17; Statesman, 40; and Syracuse, 254, 283; on walled cities, 42–43

  pluralistic ignorance, 182, 307

  Plutarch, 33, 140, 254–55, 257

  poetry, 30

  Point Mycale, battle at, 169

  polis: characteristics of, 7; naturalness of, 51–52, 31
2. See also Greek states

  political animals, humans as, 47–54, 49

  political participation rights, 243

  political regimes: in Age of Expansion, 135–36; Aristotle on, 40, 290, 311–13, 325–26; in Bronze Age, 124–26; in Early Iron Age, 126–27; growth affected by types of, 122; persistence and change of, 40; Sparta, 142; types of, 40. See also centralized authority; citizen-centered government; democracy; oligarchy

  political science: sophists’ teaching of, 206–7; of Thucydides, 207–11

  Polyidus, 288

  population: in Age of Expansion, 133; of Athens, 7, 144, 205, 278; of classical Greece, 21–22, 22f, 74, 75f, 81–82; of core Greece, 22, 22f, 85, 99f; density of, 84–88; distribution of, 87t; in Early Iron Age, 74; of England and Wales, 22; of extended Greek world, 3, 22, 22f, 85; of Holland, 22; of Laconia and Messenia, 138; of Mycenaean civilization, 73; of nineteenth- and twentieth-century Greece, 71–72, 75f; of Persian Empire, 199; of Plataea, 7; shotgun method of estimating, 85, 339n26; of Sparta, 231, 349n30; of United States, 22

  Potidaia, 238

  pottery, 153, 158

  power, Thucydides on, 207–11

  premodern Greece, population and living standards in, 71–76

  Priene, 259

  principal-agent problem, 199, 215, 228, 238, 298

  projectiles, 288

  proportionality principle, 143, 147

  prospect theory, 217, 219

  Pseudo-Aristotle, Constitution of Athens, 40, 47, 236, 249

  Pseudo-Xenophon, 113, 209

  Ptolemaic dynasty, 302

  Ptolemy “the Savior,” 301, 309

  public goods: Aristotle on, 52; characteristics of, 345n29; citizen-centered government conducive to, 54; non-citizen roles in, 335n11; nonexcludable, 196; provision of, 113–14; wealthy citizens’ contribution to, 303

  public insurance, 115, 252

  public service, 113–14, 303

  public speaking, 234–36, 249

  punishment, motivations for undertaking, 68

  Python of Byzantion, 282

  quadriremes, 299, 359n50

  quinqueremes, 299, 359n50

  Raaflaub, Kurt, 354n15

  rabbits, 29

  rainfall, 24–25

  rational choice theory, 46, 203

  Rawls, John, 349n32

  religion, 30, 136; and open access, 247

  Renaissance Italy, xiv, 7, 296

  rents and rent-seeking, 86, 108, 141, 147, 180, 204

  representative government, 164

  Rhamnous, 144, 205

  rhetoric. See public speaking

  Rhodes, 239, 261, 304, 305, 309

  Rhodes, Peter J., 251

  rights. See civic rights

  risk, protection against, 114–15, 252

  Robinson, James, 5

  Roman Warm (climate change), 106

  Rome and Roman Empire: adoption of neighbors’ expertise and technology by, 19; climate during, 106; economy of, 79–80, 341n50; and Hellenic culture, 295, 296, 315; political conditions of, 315; urbanization rate in, 87; wealth and income distribution in, 91, 94–95, 95t

  rule egalitarianism: in Athens, 151; as condition for wealth promotion, 103, 111–17; defined, 110, 344n21; limited extent of, 104; and persistence of Greek efflorescence, 296; and rise and fall of classical Greece, 293–94

  rules, institutional economics’ focus on, 343n1

  Runciman, W. G., xvii

  Rutishauser, Brian, 248

  Sacred Band, Theban, 232, 276

  Salamis, battle of, 169, 173–74, 193

  Samos, 41, 201, 238

  sarissa, 276, 286, 362n38

  Satraps’ Revolt, 238

  Scheidel, Walter, 91, 93–94, 96, 98, 334n21

  schools of fish, 45, 61

  Schumpeter, Joseph, 12

  Scott, James C., 107

  Scythians, 27–28

  seas, Greek use of, 65

  Second Sophistic, 295

  secretaries, of administrative bodies, 250–51

  Segesta, 218, 220

  Seleucid dynasty, 260

  Seleucus “the Victorious,” 300, 301

  self-interest, 46, 112, 289–90

  Selinous, 218

  Sen, Amartya, 363n24

  Serpent Column, Delphi, 279

  Sestos, 238

  shields, 130, 136, 286

  shotgun method, of demographic estimation, 85, 339n26

  Sicily, 177m; Athenian conflict with, 217–20; Carthage vs., 180, 253–57, 263; citizenship in, 184–85; economy of, 218, 255–57; Etruscans vs., 181; fall and rise of, 252–58; in fourth century, 223–24; in Hellenistic period, 300–301; in late sixth and early fifth centuries, 175–78; resurgence of, 41; after tyranny, 183–85; tyranny in, 60, 176–78, 253; wheat produced by, 12. See also Syracuse

  siege towers, 287–88

  siege warfare, 197, 226, 253, 287–88, 309, 313, 353n3

  Sikels, 184, 218

  silphium, 44

  silver, 168–69, 270, 285

  Simonides, 182

  Simonton, Matthew, 201

  Skione, 356n58

  Skyros, 229, 230

  slavery, 113

  slums, 89

  small-state cultures, 7–10

  Smith, Adam, 11, 14

  Snodgrass, Antony, 129

  social capital, 16–17

  social insects, 49, 58. See also ants; bees

  social mobility, 142–43, 215

  social networks, development of, 170–71

  social norms, citizen-centered regimes arising from, 131

  social panopticon, 141, 170, 194

  social science, xvii–xviii

  Social War, 239–40, 270

  Socrates, 165, 206–7, 222, 232

  Solon, 78, 146, 148–49, 152

  Solonian reforms, 124, 148–53, 161, 289

  sophists, 206–7, 234

  Sophocles, 206

  Sounion, 205

  Sparta: advantages of, 123; Athenian conflicts with, 160, 166, 196–98, 210–17; and Athenian tyranny, 160–61; Athens compared to, 210–11, 211t; austerity of, 141; in Bronze Age, 125–26; citizenship in, 123, 143; and colonization, 139; conflicts involving, 69; defense plan of, 192; development of, 132; economy of, 139, 210; education in, 141–42; and empire, 227–32; equality in, 140–41, 349n32; ideology of, 231; infantry of, 124, 138–39, 231; influence and prominence of, 37, 144; land area of, 33, 137–38; land holdings in, 357n16; as land power, 31; language of, 137; lifestyles in, 141, 142; Lycurgan system in, 124, 139–44, 194, 231, 289; Macedon challenged by, 299; as model for city-state, 155; navy of, 119, 194, 221–22, 229; Persian alliance with, 221, 227–30; and Persian invasion, 168, 169, 192–94; political regime in, 142; population of, 231, 349n30; private wealth in, 140–41; resistance to innovation in, 118–19; in seventh and sixth centuries, 137–44; size of, 33, 37; social crisis in, 124; social mobility in, 142–43; specialization in, 31, 124, 139, 142; state-sponsored violence in, 139; as superpolis, 140, 143, 211; and trade, 142; warfare central to, 140. See also Peloponnesian War

  spears, 130, 136, 286

  specialization: in Athens, 124; in Bronze Age, 125; centralized authority and, 14–15, 17, 344n24; in classical Greece, 11–14, 17–18, 31, 205; in Early Iron Age, 127; economic growth dependent on, 11–14; federal leagues and, 243; in fourth century, 225; market exchange and, 204; military, 139; occupational, 102, 205; rejection of, 17–18, 214–15; and slavery, 113; in Sparta, 31, 124, 139, 142

  Speusippos, 283

  standard ancient premise, about Greek economic development, 76, 80, 107

  standard modern premise, about Greek economic development, 76, 80, 88, 118, 338n7

  standard of living. See living standards

  Starr, Chester, 132, 258

  Stasavage, David, 122

  state performance, Athenian: access as factor in, 247; elite incentives as factor in, 174–75; expertise as factor in, 171–74, 248–52; federalism as factor in, 170–71; political regime type as
factor in, 166–67

  states. See Greek states

  steppe cultures, 28

  Stockwell, Stephen, 329n2

  strong ties, in networks, 171

  subsidiarity, 242

  subsidies, 115

  subsistence minimum baseline, 93, 341n50 sunoikismos (coming to dwell together), 131

  suntaxis (tax), 298

  symposia, 267

  Syracuse: advantages of, 123; Athenian conflict with, 217–20; Athens compared to, 157, 186–88, 220; Carthage vs., 180; citizenship in, 186; colonization by, 41; conflicts involving, 69; democracy in, 185–88, 252–53; economy of, 218; and empire, 56, 176, 218, 254; fall and rise of, 252–58; founding of, 133; influence and prominence of, 37; land area of, 33; size of, 33, 37; as superpolis, 179–80; after tyranny, 183–84; tyranny in, 178–82, 253

  Syria, 301

  Tachos, 263

  Tarentum, 139

  taxes: in Anatolia, 260; in Athenian empire, 203, 215–16; in Athens, 244–45, 250; direct, 250; indirect, 244–45; levied by Athens on shipping, 229; in Macedon, 284–85, 298; Peloponnesian War and, 215–16; public insurance and, 115

  technological innovations, 117, 129–30, 135, 226

  Teegarden, David, 83, 307, 364n30

  Tegea, 143

  Tellus of Athens, 78–79, 136

  Temple of Apollo, Bassae, iif

  Temple of Apollo, Delphi, 160

  Thasos, 41, 197

  Theater of Dionysus, Athens, 205, 303

  Thebes: conflicts involving, 69; Macedon and, 274–76, 278; rebuilding of, 306; rise of, in fourth century, 237–40, 242; Sparta vs., 229–32

  Themistocles, 34, 168–69, 289

  Theopompus, 283–84

  Theron, 180–81

  Theseus, 132

  Thessaly, 238, 240

  the Thirty, at Athens, 228, 231, 232–33

  Thrace, 205, 280

  Thucydides, 206; on Delian League, 196–97; on Hipparchus’ assassination, 159; historical sources used by, 40; Melian dialogue, 216–17; on Peloponnesian War, 207–8, 210–20, 252; Pericles’ funeral oration, 208, 211, 213, 215, 289; political theories of, 118, 207–11, 290; on power of Athens and Sparta, 144; on rational acquiescence to external rule, 69–70, 202; and the sophists, 207

  Timoleon, 256–57, 289

  trade: advantageous location for, 107; Athenian empire and, 201; Athens and, 152–53, 237–38, 244–47; contracts for, 246; federal leagues and, 243; and markets, 203–4; policies and practices encouraging, 244–48; Sparta and, 142

  tragedy, 158

  transaction cost economics, 250

  transaction costs, 11–12; control of, 115–16; federal leagues’ influence on, 308; in fourth century, 225–26; in labor markets, 97; for market exchanges, 204; rule egalitarianism and, 103; as source of goods for consumption, 86–88

 

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