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Athens is the capital and largest city in modern Greece, but Athens also has a long
history that dates back 7000 years. Modern ideas about democracy first developed in ancient
Athens. Unlike Sparta, it was difficult for the rulers of ancient Athens to have complete
control over their citizens. Athens developed as a merchant poli whose ships traded with
many faraway places. The traders were exposed to many new ideas.
The first Athenian rulers were warriors who controlled the poli by force. The warrior
families called themselves aristocrats. Aristoi- comes from a Greek word meaning “best people.”
The tyrant was the leader of the aristocrats. Today we use the term tyrant to describe a
cruel ruler, but many of the Athenian tyrants were kind and effective leaders. One tyrant
named Draco created a written legal system and a court to enforce his laws. Draco’s
court meted out harsh punishments for even minor offenses. Today we use the word draconian
to describe laws that are unnecessarily harsh or unjust.
The Athenian army fought in a phalanx, a military formation of soldiers with overlapping shields
that moved together as a unit. The mighty phalanx was more powerful than any individual
aristocratic warrior. Soldiers no longer needed to be wealthy enough to afford a horse, so
Athenians from less prosperous families could join the army. The aristocratic leaders learned
to consider the needs of all Athenian families to keep from losing support from the army.
In 594BCE, Solon became the leader of Athens. Solon repealed Draco’s harshest laws assembled
a group of ordinary citizens to vote on how Athens was to be governed. The Assembly gathered
forty times a year and was open to all male citizens with at least two years of military
service. The word for people in ancient Greek was demos.
Kratos meant rule. The government created by Solon was a democracy, where the people
ruled the polis. Most democratic nations have elected representatives to make laws, but
Athens was a direct democracy because the citizens acted as lawmakers. Direct democracy
was possible in ancient Athens and is how many small towns govern today, but gathering
all citizens together to make decisions is not practical in large countries such as the
United States. A council known as the boule managed the daily
affairs of the polis. Members of the boule were not elected; they were chosen randomly
from the Assembly so that every qualified person had an equal opportunity to serve on
the council. At the end of the year, members of the boule appeared before the Assembly
to account for their work. Only adult males born in Athens participated
in the assembly. Athens encouraged outsiders to move to their polis, but only free-born
males could vote. Women could own property but were not allowed to vote. The members
of the Assembly had time to work on public affairs because slaves did most of the physical
work in the polis. About one in four people living in Athens were slaves. The members
of the Assembly accounted for only about one-fourth of the total population of Athens.
Participation in government by common people was an idea that eventually became a model
for other governments. The democratic government in Athens inspired the writers of the American
Constitution. Athenian democracy was limited, but it gave some people the opportunity to
make decisions about how they were governed.