Aber niemand weiss besser als eine Schneiderin, dass die Menschen nicht gleich sind.
—Gerd Gaiser, Schlussball (Munich, 1958), 107
This chapter will set out to discover the standard citizen of Athens. The “standard” citizen does not mean the average citizen. Indeed it will soon become clear that the standard citizen was not as poor as the average citizen. The standard citizen is the type of citizen envisaged by the laws and institutions. He is the citizen whom the lawgiver assumed as typical in drafting laws. Lawgivers devoted much thought to drawing up rules about property, but these rules could not concern those numerous citizens who had none. Even so, it is reasonable to imagine that the standard citizen was what every citizen aspired to be. The values and norms of behavior recognized by the standard citizen determined the values and norms of behavior for the whole society.
Section I will deal with the citizen-population and an economic division within it. Section II will take note of the rest of the population, namely, the resident aliens and the slaves. Section III will survey the status of women. The distribution of citizens into demes and phratries and the admission of young men to those units will be considered in section IV, and the relation of women to the phratry will be treated in section V. Section VI will treat the institution of marriage, a topic to which section III pointed. Following on marriage, section VII will discuss the transmission of citizenship by descent. Citizenship and capacity for succession to immovable property were transmitted together in Athens, and so section VIII will outline the laws of inheritance. Section IX will state conclusions bearing on the standard citizen and say a little about his origins.
The clearest and best figures for the population of Attica come from the end of the classical period. Demetrios of Phaleron, who controlled Athens for the Macedonians from 317 to 307 B.C., held a census. The Hellenistic scholar Ktesikles (reported by Athenaios 6.272c) gave the findings of the census as 21,000 citizens, 10,000 metics, and 400,000 slaves. The figure for citizens gains some confirmation from an occurrence of 322. In that year, at the end of the Lamian War, Antipater imposed a settlement on the Athenians and one of its provisions restricted the right to vote (and doubtless eligibility for office) to those owning property worth at least 2,000 drachmas. The number of citizens retaining the franchise was 9,0 and the number disfranchised was 12,000.1
For the opening of the Peloponnesian War, Thucydides (2.13.6–8) gives an account of the forces under arms and implies that citizens were more numerous and wealthier than in 322. His figures include (1) a force of 13,000 hoplites available for expeditionary service; (2) a further force of 16,000 hoplites, serving in garrisons and fortifications and drawn from metics and from those citizens who were too old or too young for expeditionary service; and (3) cavalry and mounted archers numbering 1,200. Some of the cavalry and mounted archers may have been metics. Even so, the number of citizens of an age for expeditionary service as hoplites or cavalry was evidently more than 13,000. This total is a good deal higher than the 9,000 men of substance, who owned at least 2,000 drachmas in 322. It is not surprising to discover that men of substance were more numerous in 431, when Athens was at the height of its power.
More interest attaches to a figure attested for 411. The professed program of the revolutionaries in that year was that control should be entrusted to those most able to serve the state with their property and persons, and these were at first estimated at not more than 5,000. In the fall of the year the Athenians deposed the revolutionary council of four hundred, entrusted control to the 5,000 and defined these as the citizens able to serve as hoplites.2 A little later Polystratos was accused of complicity in the revolution. In his defense he admitted that he had served on the board charged to enroll the 5,000, but he said that he had enrolled 9,000 instead.3 If one allows for the exaggeration of a pleader, one should suppose that the board on which Polystratos served enrolled rather less than 9,000, but probably something between 8,001 and 8,999. Such a figure is strikingly similar to the 9,000 who retained the franchise in 322 under the settlement of Antipater.
The property qualification recognized for hoplite service in 411 and for the franchise in 322 can probably be translated into terms of real economics. A small-holder needs at least a recognizable minimum of land in order to maintain himself and his few dependents; his small-holding ceases to be economically viable if partial alienation decreases it below the minimum. The 9,000 citizens who retained the franchise in 322 should probably be identified as those who had at least the minimum of land needed for subsistence farming. They were accordingly available for hoplite service in defense of the territory. As men possessing land, even as poor men possessing land, they had a sense of independence. The remaining 12,000 citizens, who lost the franchise in 322, were destitute or nearly destitute. They depended for survival on the munificence of the wealthy and on employment, usually casual employment, including service on public works and in the fleet.4
It appears that there were about 9,000 men of substance among the citizens in 411 and in 322. In both years Athens had recently suffered human and economic losses. In 411 the disaster in Sicily was recent and the Athenians were fighting their enemies on the east coast of the Aegean. In 322 they had been defeated in the Lamian War. At times in the fourth century the level of general prosperity and the number of men of substance may have been higher, but it is not likely that the Athenians ever recovered the wealth enjoyed in 431. Probably in the fourth century the total of men of substance was sometimes rather more than 9,000, perhaps about 10,000, and they formed rather less than half of the adult male citizens.
The laws of Athens were designed by and primarily for Athenian citizens, but some note should be taken of the other inhabitants of Attica, namely, metics and slaves. The term “metic” (metoikos) is often and defensibly paraphrased as “resident alien.” Metics paid a tax, the metoikion, at an annual rate of twelve drachmas for a man and six drachmas for a woman.5 In the fourth century it is likely that an alien became a metic and liable for the metoikion by staying in Attica a specific number of days, perhaps a month;6 it is not likely that there was any more abstract requirement, such as an intention of permanent residence.
The census taken by Demetrios of Phaleron reported a total of 10,000 metics. Since the figure for citizens recognized only male adults, one might suppose that the figure for metics too excluded women and children. On the other hand, it is reasonable to guess that in counting metics Demetrios drew on the means employed for levying the metoikion Since that tax was exacted both from male and from female metics, the total of 10,000 metics may have included women as well as men.
There are further uncertainties. Hardly anything can be said about the distribution of wealth among metics. Some became very rich; such were Kephalos in the fifth century and Pasion the banker in the fourth.7 Doubtless they were exceptional, if it is right to suppose that there were more poor people in Athens than rich. But it is not possible to say what proportion of metics were of moderate wealth and what proportion were very poor. Thucydides’ figures for Athenian forces in 431 (page 6 above) show that an unstated number of metics could afford hoplite equipment.
People acquired metic status in each of two ways. On the one hand, there were strangers who originated from elsewhere and came to Athens. Historians have sometimes supposed that a man of this kind was the typical metic. That may be true. On the other hand, if an Athenian citizen manumitted one of his slaves, the former slave became a metic.8 A few such persons can be named. The extensive possessions of Euktemon included a lodging house in the Peiraieus and another in the Kerameikos. He entrusted the former to a freedwoman of his. Alke was at first a slave of Euktemon and was kept as a prostitute in the lodging house in the Peiraieus. Later Euktemon put her in charge of the lodging house in the Kerameikos. In old age he settled there to live with her.9 Possibly many metics were erstwhile slaves, who remained in the service of their former masters after manumission. This hypothesis helps to explain why there were so many metics in Athens as the census of Demetrios indicates, even though metic status was considered inferior and burdensome.10 People like Alke had nowhere else to go.
About slaves little is known and therefore little should be said. The census of Demetrios of Phaleron, as reported by Ktesikles (page 6 above), said that there were 400,000 slaves in Attica. In a lawsuit arising in the aftermath of the battle of Chaironeia, Hypereides (fr. 29 Kenyon) said that there were more than 150,000 slaves. Both figures are amazingly high in proportion to the free population. Hypereides’ figure is probably a guess, and the figure attributed to Demetrios may be no better, since he may not have had reason to attempt a count of slaves. Some historians have tried to ascertain the total of slaves by studying the annual consumption of grain in Attica. The method is promising, but it allows a large margin of error.11 The most cautious procedure is to start from the best-attested figure which has a bearing on slaves. Agis seized Dekeleia in northern Attica early in 413 and stayed there with a garrison until the end of the Peloponnesian War. Thucydides (7.27.5) says that “more than 20,000” slaves deserted the Athenians in consequence of the occupation of Dekeleia. The reliability of this figure has been doubted.12 But doubt here is not justified. If an officer commands a garrison in hostile territory and if professed deserters from the enemy join him, he interrogates them with care; for if he does not do so, he is not likely to succeed in his mission. Agis and his associates had grounds on which to base an estimate of the number of slaves who deserted to them. Not all of the slaves who deserted need have gone to the fortress at Dekeleia, but Thucydides, who says (5.26.5) that he had Peloponnesian sources, may have started from good information, supplied by Agis or his officers, in reaching an estimate of more than 20,000. One may conclude that the loss of more than 20,000 slaves was a large disaster.
Slaves could be employed in a great variety of activities. Doubtless the labor in the silver mines at Laureion was wholly servile. When Xenophon (Ways and Means 4) recommended increased exploitation of the mines, he envisaged slave labor. Toward estimating the role of slaves in the Athenian economy the crucial question is whether they were employed on a large scale in agriculture. Opinions on this have varied, and direct evidence is lacking. An indirect argument carries some weight. In Athens of the fourth century men who owned large amounts of land usually owned, not a compact parcel, but scattered plots. If they had relied mainly on servile labor to cultivate such holdings, the costs of supervision would have been high. It was more profitable to entrust the parcels of land to tenants on varying terms.13
Among citizens there were not only adult men but also women and children. Women were subject to severe restrictions. Isaios (10.10) cites laws which prohibited a woman or a child from making a contract where the object at stake was worth more than a medimnos of barley. The orator inferred that neither a woman nor a child could make a will. A woman had to have a guardian or master (kyrios), usually her father or, after his death, her brothers. She could not contract her hand in marriage; she was given in marriage by her kyrios, and in consequence his guardianship ceased and the husband became kyrios of the woman.14
A woman was not wholly lacking in legal personality. In the lawsuit illustrated by Isaios 3 (On the estate of Pyrrhos) both Phile, who professed to be the daughter of Pyrrhos, and the speaker’s mother claimed the estate. Moreover, each of the women is said to have initiated legal action in pursuit of her claim (3.2–3). But each of the women was represented by her kyrios, Phile by her husband and the other claimant by her son. Again in another speech of Isaios (7.31) two sisters are said to have the inheritance of their deceased brother. Even so, it is not misleading, though strictly speaking inaccurate, to say that a woman could not sue or be sued. At a hearing in court, and at the steps leading to a hearing, a woman could not speak for herself but had to be represented by her kyrios In litigation her relationship to her kyrios was much like that of client to attorney in modern practice.
A woman could commit an offense. The first speech of Antiphon was composed for delivery against a woman who was accused of bringing about the death of her husband by poisoning. The accused woman, however, did not plead in her own defense but was represented by her son. The defense probably said that the draught administered had been intended not to cause death but to restore the husband’s alienated affections.15 But the legal position of a woman taken in adultery illustrates the extent to which the law diminished her personality. If a man took another man’s wife by rape or seduction, redress was available to the aggrieved husband and he could inflict physical ill-treatment on the adulterer.16 The offense was called moicheia and the term did not distinguish between rape and seduction, since the law did not inquire into the wishes of the woman. Moreover, the woman taken in adultery was not treated as guilty of an offense. Her husband, on convicting the moichos, was required to divorce her, and she was excluded henceforth from public cults, but this exclusion was not imposed as a punishment. Only if she took part in public cults did she become subject to punishment.17
Aristotle in the Politics offered a view which, though not necessarily the origin of the disabilities of Athenian women, could be invoked to rationalize them:
The free rules over the servile in one way, the male over the female in another, and the man over the child in yet another. All the partners possess the elements of the human mind, but they possess them in different ways. The slave does not have the faculty of deliberation at all. The female has it but in an indefinite form. The child has it but in an imperfect form.18
For the most part a woman was regarded as a child who never grew up. She was not considered capable of forming a serious and constant purpose. Therefore, she could not make a contract where more than a trivial amount was at stake. Her father or, after his death, her brother(s) had the tasks of caring for her in childhood, of finding her a good husband, and of providing a dowry which was intended for her subsistence. In selecting a bridegroom a kind father might take into account the wishes of his daughter, along with other considerations, but if he allowed his daughters free choice of the men to whom they were to be given in marriage, this was remembered as an act of unusual munificence.19 Yet the law was not wholly consistent in treating women as permanent children under wardship. As noted above, if a woman committed homicide, her act was treated, not as a private matter requiring disciplinary action within the family, but as an offense to be tried in a public court.
There was customarily a marked disparity of age between husband and wife, and this disparity goes some way to explain the disabilities of women. Aristotle (Politics 7.1335a6–35) recommends that a man should marry when he is about thirty-seven years old and a woman should be given in marriage when she is about eighteen. Since his recommendations conclude an argument against excessively early marriages, it should be inferred that girls were often given in marriage before they reached eighteen. Ischomachos, whom Xenophon (Oikonomikos 7.5) portrays as conversing with Sokrates, took a wife who was not yet fifteen years old. Several centuries earlier Hesiod (Works 695–98) recommended that a man should marry when he was about thirty and that he should take as wife a woman who was four years past puberty. Solon (fr. 27 lines 9–10 West) thought that a man should marry when he was between the ages of twenty-eight and thirty-five. The elder Demosthenes, the father of the orator (27.4; 29.43), died when his daughter was five years old, and so it could be expected that she would be given in marriage ten years later.
Economic conditions probably account for the customary ages of marriage. The first speech of Lysias illustrates conditions which, though not necessarily those of the average Athenian, may well have been what the average Athenian aspired to. The speech was delivered by Euphiletos, who was accused of killing Eratosthenes. Euphiletos said that he had taken Eratosthenes in adultery with his wife. Evidently the marriage had taken place only a few years previously, for the child was still an infant. Euphiletos was a man of moderate means, for he possessed a house of two stories and some land, but he was not rich, for he went to work in the fields each day. His wife did not go out of the house, except to attend festivals. A female slave lived in the house and went to market for everyday purchases. It is noteworthy that Euphiletos, on marrying, did not take his wife to live with his relatives in a large house; he preferred the nuclear family as a residential unit to the extended family. If the circumstances of Euphiletos illustrate the ideal entertained by the Athenians, it is likely that a man waited, before marrying, until he had amassed enough economic resources to live independently of his relatives. In similar circumstances the parents of a daughter tried to give her in marriage at an early age. Since the function of a female citizen was to give birth to citizens, she was an unproductive consumer as long as she stayed in her parental house. To bring up numerous daughters was an indication of wealth and pride.20
Before considering how a young Athenian came of age and acquired the status of an active citizen, it is necessary to notice the traditional subdivisions of the body of citizens, since these subdivisions played a part in marriage and the rearing of children. As is well known, in the last years of the sixth century Kleisthenes divided the Athenians into 139 demes and distributed these to form ten new phylai This organization served henceforth for public purposes. But an older mode of organization, in which the effective units were the genos and the phratria, survived and continued to play a large part in the life of the family.
The origin of the phratry is obscure, but a theory on the following lines can well be defended and has come to be widely accepted.21 Each genos arose as a powerful family, or perhaps a small group of powerful families, or even as a powerful group of men held together by a fiction of common ancestry. In the insecure conditions of the Greek dark ages, when public authority was too weak to afford safety, poor and humble men entrusted themselves to the protection of a genos It may well be imagined that the genos gave its dependents economic help and a safeguard against arbitrary violence; in return, the dependents furnished the genos with labor of all kinds, including armed labor. The ties thus contracted were hereditary. Phratria was the term which the genos gave to its dependents collectively. It may have originated as a gesture of courtesy; members of the genos honored their dependents by calling them their “brothers” (phrateres, phratores) By the fourth century any political privileges which members of the genē may once have held had been lost, but some genē at least continued to enjoy social prestige. Some regulations of the phratry called Dekeleieis, inscribed in and after 396, show that the genos of the Demotionidai continued to hold a position of honor within the phratry. Aischines (2.147) boasted that his father belonged to the phratry which shared the same altars with the Eteoboutadai. The speaker of Isaios 7 claimed the estate of Apollodoros as his adoptive son; he told how at the festival of the Thargelia Apollodoros “led me into the presence of the members of his genos and of his phratria to the altars” (7.15). The phrase implies that the same altars served both the genos and the phratria. The speech Against Neaira tells how Phrastor tried to have his putative son accepted into membership of his phratry and in his genos.22 These sources, though scanty and scattered, suggest uniformly that in each case the genos stood to the phratry in a close relationship of a kind which might reflect an earlier condition of dominance.
If the normal pattern from which the phratry arose was that of a multitude of humble men who became hereditary dependents of a powerful family, there may have been variations on this pattern. Possibly in some cases two genē dominated a single phratry, and in others members of a single genos had a leading role in two phratries. In view of the large extent of territory controlled from Athens and the length of time through which its institutions developed before the classical age, there are likely to have been large differences. Possibly in some cases a phratry came into being without a genos to draw it together; for example, when Peisistratos and his sons maintained relatively secure conditions, some humble men may have banded together for social organization and mutual support on the model of the phratries which they could see around them. If phratries appear somewhat uniform in the fourth century, the appearance may be due to the late and scanty character of the evidence.
Was every citizen a member of a phratry? Several pieces of evidence suggest that he was. Decrees granting Athenian citizenship to aliens regularly authorize the honorand to choose his deme and his phratry.23 The Sokrates of Plato (Euthydemos 302c-d) says that the Athenians have Apollo Patroios, Zeus Herkeios and Phratrios, and Athena Phratria. The law of Drakon on homicide, as reinscribed in 409/8, provided that the involuntary killer could be admitted to aidesis by the relatives of the victim or, if there were no relatives alive, by ten members of his phratry chosen according to worth.24 This evidence is not fully conclusive. The remark of Sokrates may be imprecise. It is conceivable that there were citizens who were not members of any phratry, though no example can be cited. At least the evidence shows that the typical citizen belonged to a phratry. As the provision in the Drakontian law suggests, in the insecure conditions of the early period any Athenian who lacked an organization to protect him was highly vulnerable.
The phratry played a part in the most important events of the life of the family. When a man took a wife, he offered a sacrifice, the gamēlia, and invited the members of his phratry to take part. It will be remembered that an Athenian sacrifice was not only an offering to a god but also a festivity for the human participants. On the tenth day after the birth of a child the father held a sacrifice (dekatē) and gave the child a name, although this celebration was probably on a smaller scale, with no general invitation to the members of the phratry. On two occasions as the child grew the father offered sacrifices, the meion and the koureion, at the Apatouria with the members of his phratry participating; perhaps the meion was offered when the child was an infant and the koureion at or near puberty. Finally, the father introduced his son formally to the phratry. On this occasion the father swore to the child’s parentage, there was opportunity for challenge and argument, and the members of the phratry voted, adding the son to their list if they were satisfied of his descent. In some phratries the formal introduction took place at the same time as the koureion, but in 396 the Dekeleieis adopted a rule whereby the introduction was to take place at the Apatouria a year after the koureion.25
Although, as just indicated, the phrateres participated at many stages in the life of the family, a vote was taken and a name was added to a list at only one of these stages, namely, when the son was introduced formally to the phratry. The reforms of Kleisthenes had added a new civic organization, comprising demes, trittyes, and ten new phylai, to the old structure. In the new organization there were social and religious celebrations, to be distinguished from formal registration, and perhaps little care was taken to exclude unauthorized participants from the merely social and religious celebrations. Boiotos as a child lived in the house of his mother’s brothers, since his father, Mantias, was reluctant to acknowledge him, and he took part in choral festivities of their phylē, Hippothontis. On coming of age he compelled Mantias to acknowledge him by opening legal proceedings, and so he became a member of the phylē Akamantis.26
The decisive stage in the admission of a son to the body of citizens came when he was (probably) in his eighteenth year and was introduced by his father to his deme.27 When a father presented his son to his deme, the demesmen voted on two questions. The first was whether the son had reached the prescribed age. If the vote on this question was negative, the candidate remained among children until a later year. The second question was whether the child was “free and born according to the laws.” If the demesmen voted that he was not free, the applicant took his case to a court. If the court found that the son was not entitled to registration in the deme, the city sold him into slavery.28 But if the court found for the applicant, the demesmen were compelled to add him to their list. After the procedure of registration had thus been completed, the council of five hundred scrutinized those newly admitted. If it found that any one of them was below the prescribed age, it punished the demesmen who had admitted him. Finally, the young men entered on two years of training as ephēboi and their first parade took place at the beginning of Boedromion, the third month of the Attic year.29
Thus a young man’s claim to inherit citizenship was subjected to scrutiny and vote on two occasions, namely, when he was introduced to his phratry and when he was introduced to his deme. Even so, there may have been some imprecision in procedure and some improper enrollment. When the adoptive son of Apollodoros defended his title to the estate, he told how Apollodoros introduced him to the phratry and he commented on the care which its members took: “Among them the rules of procedure demand such a high degree of exactitude.”30 The comment suggests that some phratries may have been less careful. The conduct of Euktemon in his old age is more revealing. He introduced a son of his freedwoman, Alke, to his phratry. When Philoktemon, Euktemon’s son by his wife, objected, Euktemon induced him to desist by intimidation. A compromise was reached. The son of Alke was enrolled in the phratry but received only one farm as his share of the estate.31 In 346/45 the Athenians carried out a revision of the list of citizens;32 evidently they believed that some people had had themselves enrolled in demes although they were not entitled to citizenship.
The relation of women to the deme and the phratry was different. Passages in three court speeches require attention.
1. Isaios 8, On the estate of Kiron. Kiron had died leaving no surviving sons. The speaker of the extant speech claimed the estate, maintaining that his mother was the daughter of Kiron. His opponent claimed the estate on the grounds that his own father was the brother of Kiron. One of the arguments offered by the opponent alleged that the mother of the speaker was not the daughter of Kiron. The speaker devoted part of his speech (8.6–29) to rebutting this argument. He offered circumstantial evidence to show that his mother was the daughter of Kiron. In the course of the rebuttal he mentioned phratries twice (8.18–19): he said that his father, on marrying the speaker’s mother, provided the gamēlia for the members of his phratry, and he said that he himself was introduced formally by his own father to the latter’s phratry. But he did not say that his mother had been introduced formally to any phratry for enrollment.
2. Demosthenes 57, Against Euboulides. In 346/45 the lists of citizens were revised by means of inquiries held in the demes. The fellow-demesmen of the speaker of this speech denied his citizenship by the vote of a majority. The case was brought before a court, where this speech was delivered. At 57.18–30 the speaker rebuts the allegation that his father was not a citizen. The witnesses whom he produces to attest his father’s citizenship are first the father’s surviving relatives (57.20–22) and then some members of the father’s phratry, genos, and deme (57.23). At 57.30–45 the speaker rebuts the allegation that his mother was not a citizen. The witnesses whom he produces to attest his mother’s citizenship are her surviving relatives (57.37–39). At 57.40 the fellow phrateres and fellow demesmen of the mother’s relatives attest something on oath, and the content of the oath appears in a later passage of the speech, at 57.67–69. There the speaker resumes his arguments briefly as he approaches a close. He says, first, that the relatives, fellow phrateres, and fellow demesmen of his father attest the identity of his father (57.67); then, that the relatives of his mother attest the identity of his mother (57.68); and finally, that the fellow phrateres and fellow demesmen of the mother’s relatives attest that the latter are indeed relatives of the mother. That is, the sworn testimony of the fellow phrateres and fellow demesmen of the mother’s relatives at 57.40 merely attested that the alleged relatives of the mother were indeed her relatives.
In short, fellow phrateres attested that the speaker’s father was a member of the phratry and therefore a citizen. But there was no testimony to the effect that the speaker’s mother was a member of a phratry. Silence of similar import appears in two further passages of the speech. At 57.41 the speaker says that his father took his mother in marriage by the procedure called engyēsis; he does not say that his father introduced her to his phratry. At 57.43 the speaker says that in a previous marriage his mother gave birth to a daughter and later the daughter was given in marriage; he does not say that the daughter was enrolled in a phratry.
The conclusion to be drawn from these two speeches is clear. If citizenship or a claim to inheritance was challenged by arguments bearing on the status of a man, one could adduce the man’s membership in a phratry as proof of his status. But if the arguments bore on the status of a woman, one did not adduce the woman’s membership in a phratry as proof of her status. It seems to follow that women were not enrolled in phratries; they were neither introduced as daughters to their father’s phratry nor as brides to their husband’s phratry.33 But a difficulty arises from a passage in another speech.
3. Isaios 3, On the estate of Pyrrhos. Pyrrhos, having no sons, adopted Endios, one of the two sons of his sister. When Pyrrhos died, Endios succeeded to the estate and enjoyed it for twenty years. When Endios died, two claimants presented themselves. One of them was the sister of Pyrrhos and mother of Endios. She was represented by her surviving son, who spoke the extant speech. The other was Phile, who said that she was the daughter of Pyrrhos. She was represented by her husband, Xenokles. The case depended on the paternity of Phile and consequently on the nature of the union between Pyrrhos and the mother of Phile. Xenokles said that the mother of Phile had been given in marriage to Pyrrhos and so Phile was his daughter. The speaker of the extant speech said that the mother of Phile had been prostituted indiscriminately and so there could be no certainty about the paternity of her daughter.
The general ideas illustrated by the dispute will call for attention shortly. Here only one argument uttered by the speaker calls for note. At 3.73–76 he says that, if Pyrrhos had married the mother of Phile, he could have introduced Phile as his daughter to the phratry. At his death, the speaker continues, Pyrrhos would then have left Phile as epiklēros, to be given with the estate to the nearest male relative so that she could bear an heir to the estate. But instead of doing so Pyrrhos adopted Endios and in this way, the speaker concludes, Pyrrhos declared Phile to be spurious. The speaker presents evidence from the phrateres to show that Pyrrhos did not offer the gamēlia and that he did not introduce Phile to the phratry, although allegedly the law of that phratry would have required it.
At first sight this argument suggests that daughters could be recognized as members of their father’s phratry. Yet the possibility is presented only in a hypothetical way and the speaker does not dwell on it, as he might be expected to do if this argument were decisive. Moreover, he says nothing more than that Pyrrhos might have “introduced” Phile to the phratry. He does not say that the phrateres could have taken a vote about admitting her or that she could have been added to their list. It should be borne in mind that phratries may have varied in their customs. The argument of Isaios 3.73–76 does not necessarily show anything more than that in some phratries a father could take his daughter with him to some of the ceremonial gatherings. The suggestion derived from a first reading of this argument does not outweigh the conclusion drawn from the other two speeches (Isaios 8 and Demosthenes 57): women were not recorded in the lists of members of phratries.
Women were not included in the lists of members kept by the demes. Their absence is indicated in the opening questions asked, according to Aristotle (AP. 55.3), when men chosen to the nine archonships were scrutinized for formal qualifications. Each man undergoing scrutiny was required to state the name and deme of his father, the name of his father’s father, the name of his mother, and the name and deme of his mother’s father. The deme of the mother was not asked, because she did not belong to a deme. Wives of members of a deme could choose from among themselves women to officiate at women’s festivals celebrated by the deme,34 but a woman’s relation to the deme was the indirect connection through her husband.
The institution determining the relation of the standard Athenian citizen to women was marriage.35 Two forms of marriage were current in classical Athens. One of these was in full ἐγγύησις (ἐγγύη) ϰαὶ ἔϰδοσις. Since the first of the two parts of the procedure was more important, this form can be called briefly engyēsis The word engyēsis and the corresponding verb engyan can sometimes be rendered by “pledge” or “promise” or “entrust”; often they are best left untranslated. Engyēsis was an oral contract made between the woman’s kyrios and the prospective husband in the presence of witnesses. It could be revoked if ekdosis had not followed, but it was more than a betrothal, since it contributed to transferring kyrieia over the woman from her erstwhile kyrios to the prospective husband.36 Engyēsis included an agreement about dowry (πϱοΐξ). The dowry should be distinguished from any paraphernalia assigned to the woman for her personal use, even though these could be valuable. The dowry was an amount of money or valuables intended for the upkeep of the woman. If the marriage came to an end through dissolution, the dowry reverted with the woman to her family of origin. The dowry had to be assessed in money, even if it did not consist of money, for otherwise the woman’s original family could not reclaim it if the marriage was dissolved.37 Ekdosis, which followed some time after the contract had been made, was the transfer of the woman from her household of origin to that of her husband.
The employment of the verb engyan reveals the way in which marriage of this kind was regarded. The same verb was used for the procedure whereby a creditor accepted the assurance of a guarantor for the payment of a debt. The creditor was said to “entrust” (ἐγγυᾶν) the debtor to the guarantor; participially the creditor was expressed in the active (ὁ ἐγγυῶν), the guarantor in the middle (ὁ ἐγγυώμενος), and the debtor in the passive (ὁ ἐγγυηϑείς). The guarantor took charge of the debtor but kept him at the creditor’s eventual disposal, if the debt should not be repaid. In marriage the woman’s erstwhile kyrios “entrusted” her to the bridegroom; participially her erstwhile kyrios was expressed in the active, the bridegroom in the middle, and the woman in the passive.38 She was treated not as a person participating in the transaction but as its passive object. Moreover, marriage did not have the finality to which it aspires in some other systems of law. Marriage did not create a new community. Instead it entrusted the woman to the bridegroom for the large but not necessarily unlimited purpose of bearing heirs to his property. The rights and obligations of the woman’s erstwhile kyrios did not come to an irrevocable end. They became dormant, but they could be revived if the marriage was brought to an end through dissolution or in some cases through death of the husband.
The other form of marriage current in classical Athens was epidikasia. It applied if a man died intestate leaving a daughter (or daughters) but no sons. His nearest relatives in a fixed order were required to take the estate and to take the daughters as their wives. The archon adjudged (epidikazein) the estate and the woman to the claimant. If a dispute arose among different relatives as claimants, the matter was brought before a court for decision. The woman was said to be epiklēros and remained so all her life.39 The man who took an epiklēros by epidikasia could not alienate the property which thus came into his hands. On the contrary, it passed to the sons of himself and of the epiklēros when the sons were two years beyond puberty.40 By the age of the orators epidikasia of an epiklēros was becoming infrequent. Fathers who had no sons preferred to provide for their daughters and their property by giving or bequeathing both to heirs. The father adopted the heir as his son at the same time. The relevant law said that a father who lacked sons could only give or bequeath his property if he gave his daughter(s) with it.41 This law shows the same concern for keeping the property and the woman, the prospective mother of heirs, together as do the rules about the epiklēros
Marriage by engyēsis and marriage by the epidikasia of an epiklēros formed unions which had equal validity.42 Yet the two kinds of union were wholly disparate in their nature and their purposes. Engyēsis entrusted a woman to a man for the purpose of providing heirs to the man’s property, and a dowry accompanied the transaction for the sake of the woman’s subsistence. Epidikasia of an epiklēros brought in a man to manage the property of the deceased and to beget heirs to that property; when the heirs at last took over the property, they were required to provide subsistence for their mother,43 but no question of dowry could arise. The two procedures do not have any common element which might be considered the essence of the marital union. The point can be clarified by a contrast. The procedure of marriage today varies in different municipal systems of law, but many of them require the joint consent of the prospective husband and of the prospective wife as the central constitutive element, this principle being derived from Roman law.44 There is no central constitutive element common to engyēsis and to the epidikasia of an epiklēros
This conclusion should be borne in mind when one considers unions of a less solemn kind. The extant speeches of the Athenian orators mention occasionally a “concubine” (pallakē).45 It appears that a family could give a daughter into concubinage and make stipulations for her support; there was neither a contract of engyēsis nor a dowry. It also appears that in some circumstances the law protected a man’s relation to his concubine as carefully as it protected his relation to his wife. Concubinage is only rarely mentioned in extant speeches, but there is a reason for the rarity. Those speeches which offer information about marriage mostly arise from disputes about inheritance, and if a dispute arose because there was doubt about the nature of the union between one claimant’s parents, usually that claimant tried to show that the parents had been united in the most solemn form of union, engyēsis, but the other tried to show that the mother was a common prostitute. The dispute about the estate of Pyrrhos (Isaios 3; page 18 above) was of this kind. One party tried to show that the mother of Phile had been married to Pyrrhos by engyēsis, but the other alleged that she had been prostituted indiscriminately. One may guess that she was united to Pyrrhos by a relatively lasting type of concubinage, but it was not in the interests of either party to the dispute to say so.
The term pallakē was probably as imprecise as the English phrase “kept woman.” The conditions on which women were given into concubinage may have varied greatly. An economic consideration suggests that Athenian women were often given into concubinage. The dowry or, strictly speaking, the promise of a dowry was a characteristic item in a contract of engyēsis. Athenians gave dowries which were large in proportion to their means.46 But one could only give a dowry if one had some property to give. Men of substance, the 9,000 who were found to own at least 2,000 drachmas in 322 could give dowries, but more than half of the citizens were excluded by that property qualification. If a family was impoverished or destitute, surely the best that it could do for its daughters or sisters was to give them into concubinage and bargain over stipulations for their support.
The question accordingly arises, what was the status of a son born to a male citizen and to a woman who was a citizen but was not united to him by engyēsis or epidikasia Did the son inherit citizenship and a right to (a share of) his father’s estate? Many historians have supposed that a son of this kind was nothos as opposed to gnēsios, terms which have been translated as “illegitimate” and “legitimate.” There is adequate evidence that in the fourth century a nothos had no right of succession to property.47 Some historians have maintained that the son of a male citizen and his citizen-concubine was nothos and could not succeed to property but had citizenship;48 others have denied this. The present writer has defended elsewhere a solution which says that the Athenians allowed a son to inherit property and citizenship if and only if they were convinced of the identity of his parents as citizens.49 If a son’s right to succession and citizenship were challenged, he would usually try to show that his parents were united by engyēsis, because a union of that kind provided strong evidence of the identity of the son’s parents. But engyēsis did not confer legitimacy on the union and its offspring, in the way that marriage contracted before a public officer and manifesting joint consent as the constitutive element confers legitimacy in many modern systems of law. If the parents were united in a less solemn union, if, for example, the father had taken the mother as his pallakē (concubine, or kept woman), the son might still be entitled to (his share in) the inheritance and to citizenship, provided that he could establish the identity of his parents. Such a son was not, on this view, nothos. A child was nothos only if there were grounds to dispute his parentage. The terms gnēsios and nothos should be rendered, not as “legitimate” and “illegitimate,” but as “true” and “spurious.”
If this solution is right, it follows that one can scarcely speak of “marriage” in Athens. Men took women as their partners. If the woman’s family of origin had at least moderate means, the union was likely to be initiated by a contract of engyēsis and a dowry would be provided. But if the woman’s original family was too poor to dower her, she was likely to be given into concubinage.50 The consequent union was less secure, since the husband did not have to refund a dowry if he repudiated the woman. But the status of the children depended solely on the identity of the actual parents. The modern concept of a union which is unlawful, even though it may be lasting, a concept which has imposed disabilities and sometimes suffering on bastards, was foreign to the Athenians.
The son of Athenian parents inherited citizenship as well as (a share in) the property. A daughter too inherited citizenship, but her citizenship was of a latent kind; it consisted essentially in the capacity to give birth to sons who would be citizens. Citizenship and right of succession to property were transmitted together, because in Athens as in many Greek states only citizens could own immovable property. Resident aliens could not own “land and house” in the Athenian phrase, unless that privilege were granted to them individually by decree.51
Only a little need be said here about the history of Athenian citizenship, mainly to recognize clarification achieved in some recent studies. In 451/50 the Athenians resolved that henceforth a child should have citizenship only if both its parents were citizens. This requirement was relaxed in the later years of the Peloponnesian War, but it was renewed in 403/2 on the motion of Nikomenes. The decree of Nikomenes provided that no inquiry should be held with a view to enforcing the same rule on children born before 403/2. Whether the measure of 451/50 had a similar provision against retroactive enforcement can only be conjectured. In 403/2 another measure, proposed by Aristophon, provided that the children of a male citizen and a female alien should be nothoi. It is uncertain whether such a provision had figured in the measure of 451/50, since reports on that measure are brief.52
The law of 451/50 stated the parental condition to be fulfilled if the child was to be a citizen. It is not known what rule there was on this matter previously. The easiest hypothesis is that no rule had been reduced to writing. That is, the acceptance of a son by the phratry and the deme would depend on the custom of that phratry and that deme and on the influence of the father. The passage of the law of 451/50 implies that previously some children at least of mixed marriages had been accepted as citizens. A few prominent men of the sixth and early fifth century are known to have taken foreign wives.53 Toward the middle of the fifth century the growing prosperity of Athens probably attracted alien settlers, and some of them, like Kephalos (page 8 above), may have become rich. Intermarriage was likely to occur in many ranks of society. It has lately been observed that the law of 451/50 benefited Athenian fathers when they sought husbands for their daughters.54 If the children of a mixed marriage were to suffer the disabilities of metic status, including payment of the metoikion and incapacity to own immovable property, the daughter of an Athenian father had less competition to fear from the daughters of resident aliens. This consideration goes far to explain both the original passage of the law and the reasons why it was reenacted in 403/2 and upheld thereafter.
The mixed marriages known from the sixth and early fifth century united male Athenians to female aliens. No cases are known where female citizens were given in marriage to male aliens, but the lack of attested cases of this kind can be explained by the facts that extant sources tell more about Athens than about other cities and more about men than about women. What was the status of a child whose mother was a citizen and his father was an alien resident in Athens? There is no evidence to answer this question. If no rule was laid down before 451/50, it is not unlikely that an Athenian father could give his daughter to a resident alien and hope to persuade his phratry and his deme to accept the consequent grandson. It has accordingly been remarked that the Athenians lost heavily in the Egyptian disaster of 454. A modest estimate puts the loss of citizens at about 8,000. Loss of aliens in the crews in Egypt would surely include loss of aliens domiciled in Athens. So from 454 until 451 an Athenian father, seeking a husband for his daughter, had to face not only competition from metic daughters but also a shortage of eligible men. This consideration may explain why the law of 451/50 was passed neither earlier nor later but a few years after the Egyptian disaster.55
The measure restricting citizenship to children whose parents were both citizens sprang thus from practical considerations, which can be discerned in part, not from pride in purity of descent. Admittedly Athenians told stories expressing pride in their supposed origin. They professed to be autochthonous, and like all Ionians they claimed descent from Ion. But the reason for making descent the criterion for citizenship was more political. In the archaic period status within the community had depended on wealth as recognized in the “Solonian” property-classes. In the second century B.C. and later citizenship was granted to foreigners as a reward for services, including financial services, to Athens. Wealth and public services as the bases for juridical status had their champions in the classical period, and the conflicting claims aroused controversy and strife. Descent as the criterion of citizenship was the most widely acceptable compromise among the competing forces.56
Some picture of the standard citizen—in his relation to metics and slaves, to his phratry and his deme, and to women and children—begins to emerge from the preceding sections. A little more can be learned about him by studying the law of inheritance. The speeches in which Demosthenes prosecuted his guardians reveal a significant distinction between two words, oikia and oikos. Oikia in the speeches means “dwelling-house.” The oikia in which the elder Demosthenes had lived with his wife and children was occupied under the terms of the will by Aphobos and later ceded to the younger Demosthenes.57 But oikos in these speeches means the whole estate left by the elder Demosthenes. The word occurs often in phrases mentioning the possibility of leasing the estate or part of it to tenants in order to draw income from them.58 The wife of the elder Demosthenes is said to have brought a dowry of fifty minai “into the oikos.”59 An oikos can be burdened with a liturgy, with the property-tax (eisphora), or with a debt due to the state.60 Allusions are made to oikoi worth one talent, two talents, and fifteen talents.61
In short, the oikos in Attic usage is what has been called in a different system of law an universitas iuris, that is, “a collection of rights and duties united by the single circumstance of their having belonged at one time to some one person.”62 But it is to be noted that the Athenians conceived this collection, not in terms of rights and duties, but in a more concrete way. Oikos is patently related to oikia. In earlier Greek oikos means “house.” Near the opening of the Politics (1.1252a24–1252b27) Aristotle discusses the oikia as the first element in the polis. Although his normal word is oikia, he uses oikos interchangeably with it in this discussion (l252bl4, cf. l255bl9), and he quotes the line of Hesiod (Works 405) bidding the prospective farmer first procure an oikos In writing of the oikia Aristotle has in mind not so much the material structure as the people dwelling in it; for he recognizes the relationships of male and female and of master and slave, and says: “The primary oikia arises from these two relationships.”63
The Athenian law of intestate succession and the provisions concerning adoption and bequest had the aim of ensuring that the oikos of the deceased or of the man looking ahead to his death should not become “empty.” The risk that the estate might become empty is lamented in speeches about disputed inheritances.64 An oikos was empty if it did not have a man to defend it, to care for its sources of revenue, including land, and to perform the fiscal obligations incumbent on it.
The law of intestate succession provided that the estate should pass to the sons of the deceased in equal shares.65 A daughter had no capacity for succession, but her brothers inherited the obligation to dower her.66 If the deceased left no sons, his estate passed to his collaterals in the following order:67
1. It passed first to his brothers begotten by the same father and to sons of those brothers.
2. If there were no relatives of type 1, it passed to sisters begotten by the same father and to their children.
3. If there were no relatives of types 1 or 2, it passed to the cousins of the deceased on his father’s side and to the sons of those cousins.
4. If there were no relatives of types 1, 2, or 3, it passed to the relatives of the deceased on his mother’s side in the same order.
Athenian law recognized family relationship as far as cousins and sons of cousins, and relatives as far as this degree were called anchisteis. The law of homicide required relatives of the victim as far as that degree to join in the initial proclamation against the killer.68 The law of intestate succession did not provide for the estate to pass to ascendants. Indeed, to the student of early Roman law the Athenian rules on intestate succession seem remarkably modern. The Twelve Tables (5.4–5, cf. 5.6–7) recognize only agnatic relatives as capable of inheriting, if there is no will, and they provide that, where there are no agnates, the estate shall pass to the gentiles of the deceased. No provisions to this effect are attested among the Athenians.
Testamentary succession was regulated by a law which was attributed to Solon and read thus:
Concerning those who had not been adopted, so as neither to disclaim or claim the inheritance, when Solon entered into office, let a man be free to bequeathe his property as he wishes, provided that there are no true male sons, and provided that he does not act on account of insanity or senility or incantations or sickness, or in response to the persuasion of a woman, being out of his mind for any of these reasons or subject to constraint or tied up.69
As is well known, the orators attributed to Solon many laws which, though current in their own time, were not part of his work (cf. page 116 below), but this law has a good chance of being authentic, since it mentioned Solon’s entry into office as a terminal date. The law put three restrictions on freedom of bequest and assumed that the Athenians knew how to bequeath property. Thus the law of Solon did not introduce the practice of bequest but regulated a practice already current. Likewise in its opening clause it implied that adoption was already practiced and recognized.70
Each of the three restrictions calls for note. The last, “on account of insanity or senility . . . or tied up,” requires little attention. This clause, or at least some of the grounds it stated for challenging a will, were repealed by the Thirty to prevent malicious litigation, but it was restored in full after their overthrow.71 The first of the restrictions denied authority to make a will to sons who had been adopted before Solon took office. This restriction was extended to all adoptive sons. The adoptive son was expected to beget an heir to the estate of his adoptive father.72 Likewise, if the testator left a daughter but no sons, the heir was required to marry the daughter, and the law prohibited him from taking the property without taking the daughter.73 It is evident that the lawgiver’s aim was to ensure that oikoi, together with encumbrances on them such as daughters, should not be left empty of a man to take care of them.
The remaining restriction in the Solonian law allowed freedom of bequest only if there were no sons. This was relaxed, and one of the steps toward relaxing it can be discovered. Athenian wills were often made when the testator was approaching death.74 A special problem arose if the sons were still minors when the father was about to die. To solve this problem, an explicit law of the Athenians provided that the will made by the father should be valid if the sons did not survive to the age of two years beyond puberty.75
In fact, Athenian fathers exercised large discretion to provide legacies in their wills, even if they had sons. The will of Konon set aside 5,000 staters for dedications to Athena and Apollo at Delphi. It assigned about 10,000 drachmas to Konon’s nephew, who was serving as his treasurer in Cyprus. It gave three talents to his brother. Out of the total estate of forty talents only about seventeen talents remained for his son.76 Yet it should be recognized that a fortune of seventeen talents was large. From the few Athenian wills known it appears that fathers made wills not in order to disinherit their sons but in order to make provision for the welfare of these and other dependents. The elder Demosthenes left a widow, a son aged seven and a daughter aged five. His will entrusted the property and these persons into the care of three guardians, of whom two were relatives of the testator. Legacies were provided for the three guardians to induce them to care for the interests of the wards. One of them was instructed to marry the widow and another to marry the daughter when she should be old enough.77 If, as the younger Demosthenes asserted later, these best-laid plans went agley, it was not through any fault of the testator or of the laws. If an Athenian father had made a will to disinherit his sons, it is not clear what remedy they might have had. Perhaps they could have challenged the will on the grounds that the testator had made it on account of insanity or senility or one of the other conditions specified in the last of the three restrictions noted above.
The speaker of Isaios 7, claiming the estate of Apollodoros as his adoptive son, urged the court to uphold the gnomē of his adoptive father (7.41). Gnomē, a word of wide currency, can best be understood here as “reasoned intention.” The Athenian law concerning wills, like the law of intestate succession, is remarkably modern or, to be more precise, remarkably individualistic. It seeks to realize the reasoned intention of the testator. It is free of the formalities which a student of Roman law might expect. Witnesses were present when a will was drawn up, but they served solely to attest that the document was indeed what the testator intended, and no specific number of witnesses is known to have been required. The Athenian law of inheritance does not reveal any residual traces of a condition in which property in general, or even land in particular, could not be alienated outside the family. Athenian smallholders, like agrarian people in many places, were reluctant to part with their land, but this reluctance was due not to any legal obstacle that can be discerned but to good economic reasons.
To put the matter another way, the Athenian community, as revealed by laws of inheritance current in the fourth century and traceable in part to the time before Solon, was a community of individual persons, each person being an adult male citizen. It was not a community of families, where each family might have its mortal head as its transitory representative but persist, under a new head, after his death just as it had existed before his time. Possibly such a condition had once existed, but if so, it perished at an early stage without leaving any trace. The care, which Athenian law and Athenian citizens took to ensure that the oikos of a deceased person did not become empty, sprang, not from any concern for the family as an immortal corporation, but from pragmatic considerations about providing for dependents and for fulfillment of fiscal obligations. Likewise, the patria potestas, which the early Roman exercised over his sons, is foreign to Athenian law.78 Once the Athenian son came of age and was enrolled in his phratry and his deme, he had the full rights and obligations of a citizen.
It may well be imagined that long before, in the age of migration, many people had settled in Attica, not as individual pioneers, but as groups, each group being led by a chieftain, and that with the passage of time such groups had crystallized as genē Indeed a legend attested in the high classical period illustrates such a process. The Gephyraioi, according to their own account, originated from Eretria. When they migrated to Attica, the Athenians accepted them to be citizens on specific terms and allowed them all the privileges of citizenship except for a few insignificant matters. Their migration lay so far back in the past that Herodotos (5.57), reporting the story, could add his own belief that the Gephyraioi were originally Phoenicians and came to Attica not from Eretria but from the neighborhood of Tanagra. It is instructive to compare this story with a Roman legend of migration. In the sixth year after the expulsion of Tarquin the Proud, the Claudian gens, led by its headman Atta Clausus and bringing a large body of dependents, migrated from Sabine territory to Rome and received land to settle on.79 The Athenian story reflects a less hierarchical and more egalitarian conception of society. Any body of dependents who may have accompanied the Gephyraioi in their migration has been forgotten. So has their Atta Clausus; the headman who presumably led them to Athens is not named. The Athenians thought of their city as a community of equals, and however far this conception may have differed from socioeconomic reality, it determined their laws.
It is now possible to give some account of the standard citizen. He is a small-holder, and his ownership of land, however modest in scale, gives him a sense of independence. He has the most privileged condition among the inhabitants of Attica. He is juridically superior to metics and slaves. Small-holders constitute less than half of the body of citizens. Adult male citizens exercise the rights which are still potential in minors of his status and merely latent in women. The standard citizen inherits property and manages it, hoping to increase it. He is deterred from parting with his property, not by any legal obstacle, but by considerations of economy and shame. When he marries a wife, she brings a dowry, which he will manage along with his other property, and in return he accepts the obligation of maintaining her. He takes part regularly in festive celebrations of his phratry, which have a bearing on his marriage and the birth and maturity of his children. If he has a daughter, he will try to find her a good husband, when she reaches marriageable age, and he will dower her. He hopes that his wife will bear him sons and that at least one of them will come of age before he dies. If these hopes are not fulfilled when he finds death near, he makes a will or adopts a son, preferably from among his relatives.80 In looking ahead to his death, he tries to ensure that his estate will not be left empty of a man to maintain it and to care for its dependents.
The relation of the citizen to his household can be clarified further by noting some features of the law of theft and the law of adultery. For some kinds of theft the law provided a private action (dikē), and if the defendant was convicted, he was condemned to pay a fine. But if the owner within his own house took the thief in the act, the consequences were more severe. If the theft took place by day and the object stolen was worth fifty drachmas or more, the owner had recourse to the procedure called apagōgē. That is, he led the thief away to the Eleven, the police officials in charge of the prison, and if the accused person confessed, they put him to death, but if he denied guilt, they put him before a court with the prospect of the death penalty on conviction. If the theft took place by night, then whatever the value of the object stolen from the house, the owner could kill or wound the thief or have recourse to apagōgē with the same consequences as for theft by day. The special protection thus accorded to the contents of the house against theft is a relic of an earlier condition, when the householder could have recourse to self-help in defense of his house. Apagōgē arose when the state intruded with modesty into the sphere of private retaliation.81 Similarly the law on adultery allowed the husband recourse to apagōgē with the prospect of the death penalty for the convicted adulterer, for adultery was regarded as a violation of the house.82
In the classical law on theft and adultery the house appears as a place enjoying special protection. The relatively summary procedure of apagōgē and the provision for the death penalty show that the special protection had arisen from the self-help of an earlier age. So with only a little imagination one may suppose that at that early time John Doe and Richard Roe each had his own house, and if Doe found Roe in Doe’s house without invitation, Roe had committed an outrage and Doe was entitled to retaliate without restriction. But if Doe and Roe met in the open space outside both houses, they were in a place which may at first have been noman’s-land. No outrage had been committed, and although Doe and Roe might distrust one another, they might also negotiate with one another and perhaps reach an agreement. As time passed, public authority intruded step by step into no-man’s-land by trying to maintain the peace. Public authority had a great deal of success in this endeavor. The story of the process is the story of the growth of law (chapter 3) and above all of the sanctions by which the courts upheld the law (chapter 4). But public authority ceased at the threshold of the citizen’s house. Even in the fourth century one needed a special decree in order to enter a private house for police purposes.83