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It’s 427 BCE, and the worst internal
conflict ever to occur
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in the ancient Greek world
is in its fourth year.
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The Peloponnesian War is being fought
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between the city-states of Athens and
Sparta, as well as their allies.
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The Athenians can’t match the formidable
Spartan army on land.
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So they’ve abandoned the countryside
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and moved inside the walls surrounding
their city and port,
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now provisioned by a superior fleet
and extensive maritime empire.
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The cramped conditions have taken a toll
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and a recent plague wiped out
a third of the population.
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But city life goes on.
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Archias and Dexileia live
in the center of Athens.
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As a painter of high-class pottery,
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Archias is relatively well off and takes
great interest in the city’s affairs.
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Dexileia, on the other hand, can't
participate in politics or own property.
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The couple are grateful to the gods that
three of their four children,
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a son and two daughters,
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have survived past infancy.
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Many parents see daughters as a liability
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since they require dowries
to find husbands.
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But Archias is confident that his wealth
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will allow him to make good matches
for them without going bankrupt.
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Like many Athenians,
the family owns slaves.
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Originally from Thrace,
they were captured in war.
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Thratta does most of the housework
and helps raise the children.
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Philon is a paidagôgos,
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who supervises the son’s education,
teaching him reading and writing.
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Archias is up early because there’s
a meeting of the Ekklêsia,
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the assembly of citizens,
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taking place at dawn.
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Before setting out, he burns incense
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and pours a libation at the small shrine
in the courtyard
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on behalf of his entire household.
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Dexileia will remain at home all day,
teaching her daughters domestic skills.
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Later, she’ll retire to the inner
courtyard for some fresh air.
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When Archias arrives at the Agora,
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the civic and commercial heart
of the city,
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he finds the square swarming
with his fellow-citizens,
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native-born adult males who
have completed military training.
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Attached to the central monument is
a noticeboard with the meeting’s agenda.
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Today, there’s only one item
of discussion:
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what to do with the people of Mytilene,
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a city on the island of Lesbos
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where a revolt against Athenian-rule
has just been put down.
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The meeting takes place on a hill west
of the Acropolis known as the Pnyx.
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The word means “tightly packed,"
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and the crowd of 5,000 citizens
makes it clear why.
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The heralds purify the hill by sprinkling
its boundary with pig’s blood,
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and call for order.
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As everyone sits on benches
facing the platform,
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the presiding officer opens the meeting
with the words,
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“tis agoreuein bouleutai?”–
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“Who wishes to address the assembly?”
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One by one, citizens speak, some advising
mercy, others bent on vengeance.
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A motion is proposed to execute
all the Mytileneans
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and enslave their women and children
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because they betrayed their Athenian
allies during a time of war.
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A majority raises their right hands
in favor.
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Once the meeting’s over, Archias heads
back to the Agora to buy food and wine.
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Hundreds have gathered there
to discuss the results,
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many unhappy with the decision.
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When Archias returns home,
he tells Dexileia about the debate.
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She thinks that killing the innocent
as well as the guilty
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is harsh and counterproductive,
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and tells him as much.
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Around dusk Archias goes to
a friend’s house for a symposium.
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The nine men drink wine and
discuss the meeting well into the night.
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Archias shares his wife’s opinion urging
mercy, and his friends eventually agree.
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Before dawn something
unprecedented happens.
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Heralds circulate throughout Athens
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announcing the Council
has called another meeting.
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The second debate is equally heated,
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but a new resolution,
to execute only the leaders of the revolt,
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narrowly passes.
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Yet there’s a problem –
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a ship with orders to carry out
the first resolution
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was dispatched the previous day.
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And so another ship quickly sets sail
to countermand the order –
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a race of democracy against time.