Hostname: page-component-5c6d5d7d68-wbk2r Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-08-15T22:47:31.293Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

GOING THE EXTRA MILE: TRAVEL, TIME AND DISTANCE IN CLASSICAL ATTICA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 April 2019

Maeve McHugh*
Affiliation:
University of Birmingham

Abstract

The aim of this paper is to explore the physical connectivity of Attica by examining the realities of travel for Athenians wishing to engage with wider civic, social, economic and cultic institutions. This will be achieved by focussing upon the practicalities of short-, medium- and long-distance travel with the aim of differentiating aspects, modes and reasons for travel. This investigation will be realised through a series of computational scenarios created on the basis of a combination of ancient and nineteenth-century accounts of journeys through Attica along with the archaeological evidence of the Athenian road system. The results of this study shed light upon the constraints on, and opportunities for, participation in wider practices and the experience of travel for the individual traveller. Recent studies have shown there were many spaces in Attica that provided opportunities for Athenians to come together, to interact with each other and participate in civic, ritual and social institutions. The ultimate conclusions of this study will help to illustrate the fundamental connectivity and active engagement of the traveller with the Athenian landscape.

Κάνοντας ένα βήμα παραπέρα: ταξίδι, χρόνος και απόσταση στην Κλασική Αττική

Σκοπός του άρθρου είναι να εξερευνήσει την φυσική συνδεσιμότητα της Αττικής εξετάζοντας την πραγματικότητα του ταξιδιού των Αθηναίων που επιθυμούσαν να ασχοληθούν με ευρύτερους πολιτικούς, κοινωνικούς, οικονομικούς και θρησκευτικούς θεσμούς. Αυτό θα επιτευχθεί αν επικεντρωθούμε στις πρακτικότητες του ταξιδιού μικρής, μεσαίας και μακράς απόστασης με στόχο να διαφοροποιήσουμε τις πλευρές, τους τρόπους και τους λόγους του ταξιδιού. Αυτή η έρευνα θα πραγματοποιηθεί με μια σειρά υπολογιστικών σεναρίων που δημιουργήθηκαν με βάση το συνδυασμό περιγραφών ταξιδιών τόσο αρχαίων όσο και του 19ου αι., μέσα από την Αττική και σε συνδυασμό με τις αρχαιολογικές ενδείξεις του Αθηναϊκού οδικού συστήματος. Τα αποτελέσματα αυτής της μελέτης ρίχνουν φως στους περιορισμούς, τις ευκαιρίες, για τη συμμετοχή σε ευρύτερες πρακτικές και την εμπειρία του ταξιδιού για το μεμονωμένο ταξιδιώτη. Πρόσφατες μελέτες έχουν δείξει ότι υπήρχαν πολλοί χώροι στη Αττική που προσέφεραν ευκαιρίες στους Αθηναίους να συγκεντρώνονται, να αλληλεπιδρούν μεταξύ τους και να συμμετέχουν σε πολιτικούς, τελετουργικούς και κοινωνικούς θεσμούς. Τα τελικά συμπεράσματα αυτής της μελέτης θα βοηθήσουν ώστε να διευκρινιστεί η θεμελιώδης συνδεσιμότητα και η ενεργή σύμπλεξη του ταξιδιώτη με το Αθηναϊκό τοπίο.

Μετάφραση: Στέλιος Ιερεμίας.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Council, British School at Athens 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Akrigg, B. 2011. ‘Demography and Classical Athens’, in Pudsey, A. and Holleran, C. (eds), Demography and the Graeco-Roman World: New Insights and Approaches (Cambridge), 3759.Google Scholar
Alwine, A.T. 2015. Enmity and Feuding in Classical Athens (Austin).Google Scholar
Andreou, I. 1994. “Ο δήμος των Αξονίδων Αλών”, in Coulson, W., Palagia, O., Shear, T., Shapiro, H. and Frost, F. (eds), The Archaeology of Athens and Attica Under the Democracy: Proceedings of an International Conference Celebrating 2500 Years Since the Birth of Democracy in Greece, held at the American School of Classical Studies, Athens, December 4–6 1992 (Oxford), 191209.Google Scholar
Armstrong, P., Cavanagh, W. and Shipley, G. 1992. ‘Crossing the river: observations on routes and bridges in Laconia from the Archaic to Byzantine periods’, BSA 87, 293310.Google Scholar
Arrington, N. 2010. ‘Topographic semantics: the location of the Athenian public cemetery and its significance for the nascent democracy’, Hesperia 79, 499539.Google Scholar
Ault, B. 2016. ‘Building Z in the Athenian Kerameikos: home, tavern, inn, brothel?’, in Glazebrook, A. and Tsakirgis, B. (eds), Houses of Ill Repute: The Archaeology of Brothels, Houses, and Taverns in the Greek World (Philadelphia), 75102.Google Scholar
Bagnall, R. and Talbert, R. (eds) 2016. Pleiades: A Gazetteer of Past Places (available online <https://pleiades.stoa.org/> accessed March 2019).+accessed+March+2019).>Google Scholar
Bers, V. 2000. ‘Just rituals: why the rigmarole of fourth-century Athenian lawcourts?’, in Pernille, F.-J., Nielsen, T.H. and Rubinstein, L. (eds), Polis and Politics: Studies in Ancient Greek History Presented to Mogen Herman Hansen on his Sixtieth Birthday, August 20, 2000 (Copenhagen), 553–62.Google Scholar
Bevan, A. 2013. ‘Travel and interaction in the Greek and Roman world: a review of some computational modelling approaches’, in Dunn, S. and Mahoney, S. (eds), Digital Classicist (London), 324.Google Scholar
Bevan, A. and Lake, M. 2013. Computational Approaches to Archaeological Spaces (Walnut Creek).Google Scholar
Bintliff, J.L. 1994. ‘Territorial behaviour and the natural history of the Greek polis’, in Olshausen, E. and Sonnabend, H. (eds), Stuttgarter Kolloquium zur historischen Geographie des Altertums 4 (Amsterdam), 207–49.Google Scholar
Bintliff, J.L. 2002. ‘Going to market in antiquity’, in Olshausen, E. and Sonnabend, H. (eds), Stuttgarter Kolloquium zur historischen Geographie des Altertums 7: zu Wasser und zu Land (Stuttgart), 209–50.Google Scholar
Bintliff, J.L. 2006. ‘City-country relationships in the “normal polis”’, in Rosen, R. and Sluiter, I. (eds), City, Countryside, and the Spatial Organisation of Value in Classical Antiquity (Leiden and Boston), 1332.Google Scholar
Bremmer, J. 1991. ‘Walking, standing, and sitting in ancient Greek culture’, in Bremmer, J. and Roodenburg, H. (eds), Cultural History of Gesture: From Antiquity to the Present Day (Cambridge), 1535.Google Scholar
Bresson, A. 2016. The Making of the Ancient Greek Economy: Institutes, Markets, and Growth in the Greek City-States (Princeton).Google Scholar
Burford, A. 1960. ‘Heavy transport in classical antiquity’, The Economic History Review 13, 118.Google Scholar
Carey, C. 2000. Democracy in Classical Athens (London).Google Scholar
Casson, L. 1994. Travel in the Ancient World (Baltimore).Google Scholar
Charleux, L. 2015. ‘A GIS toolbox for measuring and mapping person-based space-time accessibility’, Transactions in GIS 19, 262–78.Google Scholar
Christ, M. 1998. The Litigious Athenian (Baltimore).Google Scholar
Christ, M. 2001. ‘Conscription of hoplites in Classical Athens’, CQ 51, 398422.Google Scholar
Christ, M. 2006. The Bad Citizen in Classical Athens (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Cohen, E. 2000. The Athenian Nation (Princeton).Google Scholar
Connolly, J. and Lake, M. 2006. Geographical Information Systems in Archaeology (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Costaki, L. 2006. ‘The intra muros road system of ancient Athens’ (unpublished PhD thesis, University of Toronto).Google Scholar
Crome, J.F. 1935. ‘Hipparcheioi hermai’, AM, 300–13.Google Scholar
Cubitt, G. 2007. History and Memory (Manchester).Google Scholar
Curtius, E. and Kaupert, J. 1895–1903. Karten von Attika Heft 1 (Berlin).Google Scholar
Dillon, M. 1997. Pilgrimage in Ancient Greece (London).Google Scholar
Dodwell, E. 1819. A Classical and Topographical Tour Through Greece During the Years 1801, 1805, and 1806, vol. 1 (London).Google Scholar
Dyson, S. 2008. In Pursuit of Ancient Pasts: A History of Classical Archaeology in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (New Haven).Google Scholar
ESRI 2018a. ‘Understanding cost distance analysis’ (available online <http://pro.arcgis.com/en/pro-app/tool-reference/spatial-analyst/understanding-cost-distance-analysis.htm> accessed March 2019).+accessed+March+2019).>Google Scholar
ESRI 2018c. ‘Shapefile’, GIS Dictionary (available online <https://support.esri.com/en/other-resources/gis-dictionary/search/> accessed March 2019).+accessed+March+2019).>Google Scholar
ESRI 2018d. ‘An overview of the Spatial Analyst Toolbox’ (available online <http://desktop.arcgis.com/en/arcmap/10.3/tools/spatial-analyst-toolbox/an-overview-of-the-spatial-analyst-toolbox.htm> accessed March 2019).+accessed+March+2019).>Google Scholar
Fachard, S. 2012. Eretria 21: la défense du territoire: étude de la chôra érétrienne et de ses fortifications (Gollion).Google Scholar
Fachard, S. and Knodell, A.R. forthcoming. ‘Modeling mobility in Mycenaean Attica’, in Wright, J.C., Papadimitriou, N., Fachard, S., Polychronakou-Sgouritsa, N., Andrikou, E. and Banou, E. (eds), Athens and Attica in Prehistory (Athens).Google Scholar
Fachard, S. and Pirisino, D. 2015. ‘Routes out of Attica’, in Miles, M. (ed.), Autopsy in Athens (Oxford), 139–54.Google Scholar
Farinetti, E. 2011. Boeotian Landscapes: A GIS-based Study for the Reconstruction and Interpretation of the Archaeological Datasets (Oxford).Google Scholar
Ferguson, W.S. 1911. Hellenistic Athens: An Historical Essay (London).Google Scholar
Forsdyke, S. 2005. Exile, Ostracism, and Democracy: The Politics of Expulsion in Ancient Greece (Princeton).Google Scholar
Frachetti, M. 2006. ‘Digital archaeology and the scalar structure of pastoral landscapes: modelling mobile societies of prehistoric central Asia’, in Evans, T.L. and Daly, P. (eds), Digital Archaeology: Bridging Method and Theory (London), 128–47.Google Scholar
Garnsey, P. 1988. Famine and Food Supply in the Graeco-Roman World: Responses to Risk and Crisis (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Gell, W. 1819. The Itinerary of Greece, Containing 100 Routes in Attica, Boeotia, Phocis, Locris, and Thessaly (London).Google Scholar
Gibson, E. 2007. ‘The archaeology of movement in a Mediterranean landscape’, JMA 20, 6187.Google Scholar
Glazebrook, A. 2016. ‘Is there an archaeology of prostitution?’, in Glazebrook, A. and Tsakirgis, B. (eds), Houses of Ill Repute: The Archaeology of Brothels, Inns, and Taverns in the Greek World (Philadelphia), 169–96.Google Scholar
González, E.M. and Paschidis, P. 2017. ‘The 21st-century epigraphic harvest from Macedonia’, AR 63, 181200.Google Scholar
Gounaropoulou, L., Paschidis, P. and Hatzopoulos, M.B. 2015. Έπιγραφὲς Κάτω Μακεδονίας 2 (Athens).Google Scholar
Gregory, J. 2007. ‘Donkeys and equine hierarchy in Archaic Greek literature’, CJ 102, 193212.Google Scholar
Griffith, M. 2006a. ‘Horsepower and donkeywork: equids and the ancient Greek imagination part 1’, CP 101, 185246.Google Scholar
Griffith, M. 2006b. ‘Horsepower and donkeywork: equids and the ancient Greek imagination part 2’, CP 101, 307–58.Google Scholar
Hammond, N. 1954. ‘The main road from Boeotia to the Peloponnese through the northern Megarid’, BSA 49, 102–22.Google Scholar
Hannah, R. 2009. Time in Antiquity (London).Google Scholar
Hansen, M.H. 1987. The Athenian Assembly (London).Google Scholar
Hansen, M.H. 1989a. ‘The number of rhetores in the Athenian Ecclesia, 355–322 bc’, in Hansen, M.H. (ed.), The Athenian Ecclesia II: A Collection of Articles (Copenhagen), 93127.Google Scholar
Hansen, M.H. 1989b. ‘The Athenian “politicians” 403–322 bc’, in Hansen, M.H. (ed.), The Athenian Ecclesia II: A Collection of Articles (Copenhagen), 124.Google Scholar
Hansen, M.H. 1989c. ‘Political activity and the organisation of Attica in the fourth century bc’, GRBS 30, 227–38.Google Scholar
Hansen, M.H. 1999. The Athenian Democracy in the Age of Demosthenes: Structure, Principles, and Ideology (Oxford).Google Scholar
Hansen, M.H. 2004. ‘Territory and the size of territory’, in Hansen, M.H. and Nielsen, T. (eds), An Inventory of Archaic and Classical Poleis (Oxford), 1319–28.Google Scholar
Hansen, M.H. 2006. The Shotgun Method: The Demography of the Ancient Greek City-State Culture (Columbia).Google Scholar
Henderson, J. 2008. Aristophanes Fragments (Harvard).Google Scholar
Hobhouse, J.C. 1833. A Journey Through Albanian and Other Provinces of Turkey in Europe and Asia, to Constantinople During the Years 1809 and 1810 in Two Volumes, 3rd edn (Philadelphia).Google Scholar
Horden, P. and Purcell, N. 2000. The Corrupting Sea: A Study of Mediterranean History (London).Google Scholar
Humphreys, H.C. 2008. ‘Attike and Kleisthenes’, in Matthaiou, A.P. and Polinskaya, I. (eds), Μικρός Ιερομνήμων: Studies in Honor of Michael H. Jameson (Athens), 1324.Google Scholar
Ismard, P. 2015. ‘“Playing the scales” in the classical city’, in Taylor, C. and Vlassopoulos, K. (eds), Communities and Networks in the Ancient Greek World (Oxford), 8098.Google Scholar
Jones, N.F. 1995. ‘The Athenian phylai as associations: disposition, function, and purpose’, Hesperia 64, 503–42.Google Scholar
Jones, N.F. 1999. The Associations of Classical Athens: A Response to Democracy (Oxford).Google Scholar
Jones, N.F. 2004. Rural Athens under the Democracy (Philadelphia).Google Scholar
Kakavogianni, O. 2009. “Αρχαίες οδοί στα νότια και δυτικά Μωσόγεια και τη Λαυρεωτική”, in Korres, M. (ed.), Αττικής Οδοί: αρχαίοι δρόμοι της Αττικής (Athens), 182–96.Google Scholar
Keller, D. and Hom, E. 2010. ‘Ancient land routes on the Paximadhi peninsula, Karystos, Euboea’, Mediterranean Archaeology and Archaeometry 10, 19.Google Scholar
Kellogg, D. 2013. Marathon Fighters and Men of Maple: Ancient Acharnai (Oxford).Google Scholar
Kellogg, D. 2016. ‘Migration and landscapes of value in Attica’, in McInerney, J. and Sluiter, I. (eds), Valuing Landscapes in Classical Antiquity: Natural Environment and Cultural Imagination (Leiden), 325–48.Google Scholar
Kelly-Blazeby, C. 2006. ‘Kepelion: casual and commercial wine consumption in Classical Greece(unpublished PhD thesis, University of Leicester).Google Scholar
Korres, C. and Tomlinson, R. 2002. ‘Sphettia Hodos: part of the road to Kephala and Sounion’, in Goette, H. (ed.), Ancient Roads in Greece: Proceedings of a Symposium Organised by the Cultural Association Aigeas (Athens) and the German Archaeological Institute (Athens) with the Support of the German School at Athens, November 1998 (Hamburg), 4359.Google Scholar
Korres, M. (ed.) 2009. Αττικής Οδοί: αρχαίοι δρόμοι της Αττικής (Athens).Google Scholar
Kourinou, E. 2007. ‘Representations of means of transport on reliefs in the collection of the National Archaeological Museum at Athens’, in Adams, C. and Roy, J. (eds), Travel, Geography, and Culture, in Ancient Greece, Egypt, and the Near East (Oxford), 88104.Google Scholar
Krentz, P. 2007. ‘War’, in Sabin, P., van Wees, H. and Whitby, M. (eds), The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare, vol. 1: Greece, the Hellenistic World, and the Rise of Rome (Cambridge), 147–86.Google Scholar
Lalonde, G. 1991. ‘Horoi’, in Lalonde, G., Langdon, M.K. and Walbank, M.B. (eds), The Athenian Agora, vol. 19: Inscriptions: Horoi, Poletai Records, Leases of Public Lands (Princeton), 152.Google Scholar
Lanni, A. 2016. Law and Order in Ancient Athens (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Laroux, N. (translated by Sheridan, A.) 2006. The Invention of Athens: The Funeral Oration in the Classical City, revised edn (New York).Google Scholar
Lawall, M.L. 2016. ‘Patterns of amphora discard from houses, shops, taverns, and brothels’, in Glazebrook, A. and Tsakirgis, B. (eds), Houses of Ill Repute: The Archaeology of Brothels, Houses, and Taverns in the Greek World (Phildelphia), 5974.Google Scholar
Lewis, S. 1996. News and Society in the Greek Polis (Chapel Hill).Google Scholar
Lohmann, H. 1992. ‘Agriculture and country life in Classical Athens’, in Wells, B. (ed.), Agriculture in Ancient Greece: Proceedings of the Seventh International Symposium at the Swedish Institute at Athens, 16–17 May, 1990 (Stockholm), 2958.Google Scholar
Lohmann, H. 1993. Atene: Forschungen zu Siedlungs- und Wirtschaftsstruktur des klassischen Attika (Cologne).Google Scholar
Lohmann, H. 2002. ‘Ancient roads in Attica and the Megaris’, in Goette, H. (ed.), Ancient Roads in Greece: Proceedings of a Symposium Organised by the Cultural Association Aigeas (Athens) and the German Archaeological Institute (Athens) with the Support of the German School at Athens, November 1998 (Hamburg), 7391.Google Scholar
Lolos, Y. 2003. ‘Greek roads: a commentary on the ancient terms’, Glotta 79, 137–74.Google Scholar
Lorimer, H. 1903. ‘The country cart of ancient Greece’, JHS 23, 132–51.Google Scholar
Loughlin, T. 2016. ‘Edward Dodwell and the “rediscovery of Greece”’, Archaeology Ireland 30, 2631.Google Scholar
Lynch, K. 2016. ‘Can pottery help distinguish a brothel from a tavern or house?’, in Glazebrook, A. and Tsakirgis, B. (eds), Houses of Ill Repute: The Archaeology of Brothels, Houses, and Taverns in the Greek World (Phildelphia), 1335.Google Scholar
Margaritis, E. 2014. ‘The kapeleio at Hellenistic Krania: food consumption, disposal, and the use of space’, Hesperia 83, 103–21.Google Scholar
Markle, M. 1990. ‘Participation of farmers in Athenian juries and assemblies’, Ancient Society 21, 153–9.Google Scholar
McHugh, M. 2017. The Ancient Greek Farmstead (Oxford).Google Scholar
Miller, H. 2007. ‘Place-based versus people-based geographic information science’, Geography Compass 1, 503–35.Google Scholar
Mirhady, D. 2002. ‘Athens’ democratic witnesses’, Phoenix 56, 255–74.Google Scholar
Mirhady, D. and Schwarz, C. 2011. ‘Dikastic participation’, CQ 61, 744–8.Google Scholar
Mlekuž, D. 2010. ‘Time geography, GIS, and archaeology’, in Contreras, F., Forjas, M. and Melero, F.C. (eds), Fusion of Cultures: Proceedings of the 38th Annual Conference on Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology, Granada, Spain, April 2010 (Oxford), 443–5.Google Scholar
Montiglio, S. 2005. Wandering in Ancient Greece (Chicago).Google Scholar
Moreno, A. 2007. Feeding the Democracy: Athenian Grain Supply in the Fifth and Fourth Centuries BC (Oxford).Google Scholar
Müller, K. 1855. Geographi graeci minores, volumen primum (Paris).Google Scholar
Munn, M. 1993. The Defence of Attica (Berkeley).Google Scholar
Munn, M. 2010. ‘Panakton and Drymos: a disputed frontier’, in Lohmann, H. and Mattern, T. (eds), Attika: Archäologie einer ‘zentralen’ Kulturlandschaft: Akten der internationalen Tagung vom 18.–20. Mai 2007 in Marburg (Wiesbaden), 189200.Google Scholar
Oakley, J. and Sinos, R. 1993. The Wedding in Ancient Athens (Wisconsin).Google Scholar
Ober, J. 1985. Fortress Attica: Defence of the Athenian Land Frontier 404–322 BC (Leiden).Google Scholar
Ober, J. 1993. ‘Public speech and the power of democratic Athens’, Political Science and Politics 26, 481–5.Google Scholar
Ober, J. 2008. Democracy and Knowledge: Innovation and Learning in Classical Athens (Princeton).Google Scholar
Ober, J. 2011. Political Dissent in Democratic Athens: Intellectual Critics of Popular Rule (Princeton).Google Scholar
Osborne, R. 1985. Demos: The Discovery of Classical Attika (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Osborne, R. 1987. Classical Landscape with Figures (London).Google Scholar
Osborne, R. 1991. ‘The potential mobility of human populations’, OJA 10, 231–50.Google Scholar
Osborne, R. 2000. ‘Religion, imperial politics, and the offering of freedom to slaves’, in Yatromanolakis, D. and Roilos, P. (eds), Greek Ritual Poetics (Cambridge), 7592.Google Scholar
Osborne, R. 2010. Athens and Athenian Democracy (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Osborne, R. 2011. ‘Space and memorialization in the Attic deme’, in Lambert, S.D. (ed.), Sociable Man: Essays on Ancient Greek Social Behaviour in Honour of Nick Fisher (Swansea and London), 2543.Google Scholar
Paga, J. 2010. ‘Deme theatres in Attica and the trittys system’, Hesperia 79, 351–84.Google Scholar
Peters, J. 1998. Römische Tierhaltung und Tierzucht: eine Synthese aus archäzoologischer Untersuchung und schriftlich-bildlicher Überlieferung (Rahden).Google Scholar
Pikoulas, Y. 1999. ‘The road-network of Arcadia’, in Nielsen, T. and Roy, J. (eds), Defining Ancient Arkadia (Copenhagen), 248320.Google Scholar
Pikoulas, Y. 2007. ‘Travelling by land in ancient Greece’, in Adams, C. and Roy, J. (eds), Travel, Geography, and Culture in Ancient Greece, Egypt and the Near East (Oxford), 7887.Google Scholar
Pikoulas, Y. 2012. Το οδικό δίκτυο της Λακωνικής (Athens).Google Scholar
Pritchard, D. 2004. ‘Kleisthenes, participation, and the dithyrambic contests of late Archaic and Classical Athens’, Phoenix 58, 208–28.Google Scholar
Pritchard, D, 2015. Public Spending and Democracy in Classical Athens (Austin).Google Scholar
Pritchett, W. 1965. Studies in Ancient Greek Topography, part III: Roads (Berkley).Google Scholar
Quinn, J. 2007. ‘Herms, kouroi, and the political anatomy of Athens’, GaR 54, 82105.Google Scholar
Raepsaet, G. 2002. Attelages et techniques de transport dans le monde gréco-romain (Brussels).Google Scholar
Shear, J.L. 2007. ‘Cultural change, space, and the politics of commemoration in Athens’, in Osborne, R. (ed.), Debating the Athenian Cultural Revolution: Art, Literature, Philosophy, and Politics 430–380 BC (Cambridge), 91115.Google Scholar
Shear, J.L. 2011. Polis and Revolution: Responding to Oligarchy in Classical Athens (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Siewert, P. 1982. Die Trittyen Attikas und die Heeresreform des Kleisthenes (Munich).Google Scholar
Sinclair, R. 1988. Democracy and Participation in Athens (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Sobak, R. 2015. ‘Sokrates among the shoemakers’, Hesperia 84, 669712.Google Scholar
Stanton, G. 1994. ‘The rural demes and Athenian politics’, in Coulson, W., Palagia, O., Shear, T., Shapiro, H. and Frost, F. (eds), The Archaeology of Athens and Attica under the Democracy: Proceedings of an International Conference Celebrating 2500 Years Since the Birth of Democracy in Greece, held at the American School of Classical Studies, Athens, December 4–6 1992 (Oxford), 217–24.Google Scholar
Steinhauer, G. 1994. “Παρατηρήσεις στην οικιστική μορφή των αττικών δήμων”, in Coulson, W., Palagia, O., Shear, T., Shapiro, H. and Frost, F. (eds), The Archaeology of Athens and Attica under the Democracy: Proceedings of an International Conference Celebrating 2500 Years Since the Birth of Democracy in Greece, held at the American School of Classical Studies, Athens, December 4–6 1992 (Oxford), 175–89.Google Scholar
Stoneman, R. 2010. Land of Lost Gods: The Search for Classical Greece (London).Google Scholar
Taylor, C. 2007a. ‘From the whole citizen body? The sociology of election and lot in the Athenian democracy’, Hesperia 76, 323–45.Google Scholar
Taylor, C. 2007b. ‘A new political world’, in Osborne, R. (ed.), Debating the Athenian Cultural Revolution: Art, Literature, Philosophy, and Politics, 430–380 BC (Cambridge), 7290.Google Scholar
Taylor, C. 2011. ‘Migration and the demes of Attica’, in Pudsey, A. and Holleran, C. (ed.), Demography and the Graeco-Roman World: New Insights and Approaches (Cambridge), 117–34.Google Scholar
Tobler, W. 1993. Three Presentations on Geographical Analysis and Modelling (Santa Barbara) (available online <https://escholarship.org/uc/item/05r820mz> accessed March 2019).+accessed+March+2019).>Google Scholar
Tomlinson, R. 2002. ‘Road communications in Classical Athens and the Mesogeia’, in Goette, H. (ed.), Ancient Roads in Greece: Proceedings of a Symposium Organised by the Cultural Association Aigeas (Athens) and the German Archaeological Institute (Athens) with the Support of the German School at Athens, November 1998 (Hamburg), 3342.Google Scholar
Traill, J. 1986. Demos and Trittys: Epigraphical and Topographical Studies in the Organisation of Attica (Toronto).Google Scholar
Traill, J. 1995. ‘Map 59 Attica’, in Talbert, J.A. (ed.), Barrington Atlas, vol. II (Princeton).Google Scholar
Travlos, J. 1980. Pictorial Dictionary of Ancient Athens (New York).Google Scholar
Trümper, M. 2005. ‘Modest housing in late Hellenistic Delos’, in Ault, B. and Nevett, L.C. (eds), Ancient Greek Houses and Households: Chronological, Regional, and Social Diversity (Philadelphia), 119–39.Google Scholar
Vanderpool, E. 1942. ‘An Archaic inscribed stele from Marathon’, Hesperia 11, 329–37.Google Scholar
Vanderpool, E. 1966. ‘The deme of Marathon and the Herakleion’, AJA 70, 319–37.Google Scholar
Vanderpool, E. 1978. ‘Roads and forts in northwestern Attica’, CSCA 11, 227–45.Google Scholar
Vlassopoulos, D. 2007. ‘Free spaces: identity, experience, and democracy in Classical Athens’, CQ 57, 3352.Google Scholar
Wells, B. 2002. ‘The kontoporeia: a route from Argos to Korinth’, in Ascani, K., Gabrielsen, V., Kvist, K. and Rasmussen, A. (eds), Ancient History Matters: Studies Presented to Jens Erik Skydsgaard on his Seventieth Birthday (Rome), 6977.Google Scholar
Wheatley, D. and Gillings, M. 2002. Spatial Technology and Archaeology (London).Google Scholar
Whitehead, D. 1986. The Demes of Attica 508/7 – ca. 250 BC (Princeton).Google Scholar
Whitley, J. 2001. The Archaeology of Ancient Greece (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Wilson, P. 2007. ‘Choruses for sale in Thorikos? A speculative note on SEG 34, 107’, ZPE 161, 125–32.Google Scholar
Young, J. 1956. ‘Roads in south Attica’, Antiquity 30, 94–7.Google Scholar