CLAS 4375: GENDER AND RACE IN ANCIENT GREEK MYTHS
Study Guide: Athenian Society
| HYPOTHETICAL TOTALS: |
|
431 BCE |
317 BCE |
| adult male citizens |
|
50,000 |
21,000 |
| metics |
|
25,000 |
10,000 |
| slaves |
|
100,000 |
50,000 |
For the total population of Attica, figures of adult male citizens should
be multiplied by approximately 4 to include women and children of citizen
families. Slaves were not permitted to have families. The total population
in Athens, then, would be 300,000 to 350,000 in 431 BCE. The traditional
view that family, clan, phratry, genos, and "tribe" were like embedded
boxes has been debunked recently. Here are the equivalents of the Greek
words traditionally interpreted as identical to modern concepts of "family,"
"brotherhood," "clan," and "tribe."
| oikos |
meant "household" rather than "family" |
| phratry |
meant "blood-brotherhood" yet ceased to be that, became a men's club,
eventually a political group (not a "party"). Phrater was important enough
to displace the first meaning, "brother of the same father," and adelphos
came to mean "brother." |
| genos |
did not mean "clan." It was an association formed in the historical
period, first among aristocrats organizing themselves in the nascent city
to guarantee their monopoly of principal cults, and then, according to
circumstance, on the model offered by the most ancient among them. |
| ethnos |
The population of Attica was divided in very early times into three:
artisans, farmers, and warriors or "Well-born." |
| phule |
The traditional myth of the "tribes" recognized four, each with a mythic
ancestor. These heroes descended from Deucalion and Pyrrha, thought to
have repopulated the world after the Great Flood: |
| Deucalion + Pyrrha |
| | |
| Hellen |
| / |
| |
\ |
| Dorus |
Aeolus |
Xuthus |
|
|
| |
\ |
|
|
Ion |
Achaeus |
The Dorians were said to descend from Dorus; the Aeolians, from Aeolus;
the Ionians, from Ion, and the Achaeans, from Achaeus. Kleisthenes created
in 508/507 ten artificial "tribes" in Athens, and assigned to each a hero.
Back to Texts Online