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CHAPTER XLVI - Constitutional and Judicial Changes at Athens under Periklês

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 October 2010

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Summary

The period which we have now passed over appears to have been that in which the democratical cast of Athenian public life was first brought into its fullest play and development, as to judicature, legislation, and administration.

The great judicial change was made by the methodical distribution of a large proportion of the citizens into distinct judicial divisions, by the great extension of their direct agency in that department, and by the assignment of a constant pay to every citizen so engaged. It has been already mentioned that even under the democracy of Kleisthenês, and until the time succeeding the battle of Platæa, large powers still remained vested both in the individual archons and in the senate of Areopagus; which latter was composed exclusively of the past archons after their year of office, sitting in it for life–though the check exercised by the general body of citizens, assembled for law-making in the Ekklesia and for judging in the Heliæa, was at the same time ma- terially increased. We must farther recollect, that the distinction between powers administrative and judicial, so highly valued among the more elaborate governments of modern Europe, since the political speculations of the last century, was in the early history of Athens almost unknown.

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A History of Greece , pp. 473 - 543
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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