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Part II - Inhabitants

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 March 2021

Jenifer Neils
Affiliation:
American School of Classical Studies, Athens
Dylan K. Rogers
Affiliation:
University of Virginia
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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References

Further Reading

The available literature on the population and social structure of Athens is vast and continues to multiply; for that reason, what follows is necessarily selective. For questions of population, a good place to begin is Akrigg 2019, as he references much of the earlier literature on both sides of the population debate. Much of the work on Athenian society has been focused on various groups and statuses. For the phratries, the standard work is still Lambert 1993, but see also Humphreys 2018. For a general examination of status categories in Athens, see Kamen 2013. On questions of gender and citizenship, see Blok 2017. For wealth and poverty, see Taylor 2017, and Kierstead and Klapaukh 2018. On associations in Athens and their connections with citizenship, see Jones 1999, Ismard 2010 and 2018, and Humphreys 2018. On questions of kinship relations, see Humphreys 2018. On metics, the standard work is still Whitehead 1977; for metic women, Kennedy 2014. For slavery, see Vlassopoulos 2009, Lewis and Canevaro 2014, and Lewis 2018.

Bibliography

Akrigg, B. 2019. Population and Economy in Classical Athens. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blok, J. 2017. Citizenship in Classical Athens. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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Hansen, M.H. 1985. Demography and Democracy: The Number of Athenian Citizens in the Fourth Century bc. Herning.Google Scholar
Hansen, M.H. 2011. “How to Convert an Army Figure into a Population Figure.” Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies 51: 239253.Google Scholar
Humphreys, S.C. 2018. Kinship in Classical Athens. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ismard, P. 2010. La cité des réseaux: Athènes et ses associations, VIe–Ier siècle av. J.-C. Paris.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ismard, P. 2018. “Associations and Citizenship in Attika from Solon to Kleisthenes.” In Defining Citizenship in Archaic Greece, eds. Duplouy, A. and Brock, R., Oxford, 145159.Google Scholar
Jones, N.F. 1999. The Associations of Classical Athens: The Response to Democracy. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kamen, D. 2013. Status in Classical Athens. Princeton.Google Scholar
Kennedy, R.F. 2014. Immigrant Women in Athens: Gender, Ethnicity, and Citizenship in the Classical City. New York.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kierstead, J.C., and Klapaukh, R.. 2018. “The Distribution of Wealthy Athenians in the Attic Demes.” In Ancient Greek History and Contemporary Social Science, eds. Canevaro, M., Erskine, A., Gray, B., and Ober, J., Edinburgh, 376401.Google Scholar
Lambert, S.D. 1993. The Phratries of Attika. 2nd edn. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
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Lewis, D.M. 2015. “Slavery and Manumission.” In The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Greek Law, eds. Harris, E. and Canevaro, M., Oxford.Google Scholar
Lewis, D.M. 2018. Greek Slave Systems in their Eastern Mediterranean Context, c. 800–146 bc. Oxford.Google Scholar
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Taylor, M. 1997. Salamis and the Salaminioi: The History of an Unofficial Athenian Demos. Leiden.Google Scholar
Vlassopoulos, K. 2009. “Slavery, Freedom, and Citizenship in Classical Athens: Beyond a Legalistic Approach.” In Slavery, Citizenship, and the State in Classical Antiquity, eds. Vlassopoulos, K. and Geary, D.. European Review of History 16:3: 347364.Google Scholar
Whitehead, D. 1977. The Ideology of the Athenian Metic. Cambridge.Google Scholar

Further Reading

The Greek (and especially Athenian) family continues to be the focus of a wide range of discussion. For the perspectives developed in this chapter, see especially Patterson 1998, Closterman 2006, and Cohen 2011. Humphreys 1980 remains an important and fundamental article for the topic.

Bibliography

Additional resources to accompany this chapter can be found at: www.cambridge.org/NeilsRogers

Clairmont, C. 1993. Classical Attic Tombstones. Vols. 1–7. Kilchberg.Google Scholar
Closterman, W. 2006. “Family Members and Citizens: Athenian Identity and the Peribolos Tomb Setting.” In Antigone’s Answer: Essays on Death and Burial, Family, and State in Ancient Athens, ed. Patterson, C., Lubbock, 4978.Google Scholar
Cohen, A. 2011. “Picturing Greek Families.” In A Companion to Families in the Greek and Roman Worlds, ed. Rawson, B., Malden, MA, 465487.Google Scholar
Humphreys, S.C. 1980. “Family Tombs and Tomb-Cult in Classical Athens.” JHS 100: 96126.Google Scholar
Liston, M.A., Rotroff, S.I., and Snyder, L.M.. 2018. The Agora Bone Well. Princeton.Google Scholar
Patterson, C. 1998. The Family in Greek History. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Patterson, C. ed. 2006. Antigone’s Answer: Essays on Death and Burial, Family, and State in Ancient Athens. Lubbock.Google Scholar
Zelnick-Abramovitz, R. 2015. “Whose Grave Is This? The Status of Grave Plots in Ancient Greece.” Dike 18: 5198.Google Scholar

Further Reading

A recent exhibition at the Museum of Cycladic Art on ancient health practices and cults has summary essays on various aspects of health and disease (Stampolidis and Tassoulas 2014). Two collections of papers on ancient health provide a wide range of perspectives on the topic (Hope and Marshall 2000; King 2005). The Phaleron Archaeological Project being conducted at the Malcolm Weiner Laboratory for Archaeological Science of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens has, as of this writing, begun to move from cleaning and preparation to publication of 1,200 skeletons. This enormous cemetery of the early port of Athens will provide an unparalleled view of the lives of ordinary Athenians, slaves, and convicted criminals. Updates are available on the project website: http://phaleron.digital-ascsa.org/.

Bibliography

Additional resources to accompany this chapter can be found at: www.cambridge.org/NeilsRogers

Bourbou, C. 2003. “A Survey of Neoplastic Disease in Ancient and Medieval Greek Populations.” Eulimine 4: 181188.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hope, V.M., and Marshall, E., eds. 2000. Death and Disease in the Ancient City. London.Google Scholar
King, H., ed. 2005. Health in Antiquity. London.Google Scholar
Lagia, A. 2007. “Notions of Childhood in the Classical Polis: Evidence from the Bioarchaeological Record.” In Constructions of Childhood in Ancient Greece and Italy, eds. Cohen, A. and Rutter, J.B., Princeton, 293306.Google Scholar
Liston, M.A. 2012. “Reading the Bones: Interpreting the Skeletal Evidence for Women’s Lives in Ancient Greece.” In A Companion to Women in the Ancient Mediterranean, eds. James, S.A. and Dillon, S., Malden, MA, 125140.Google Scholar
Liston, M.A., and Papadopoulos, J.K. 2004. “The Rich Athenian Lady Was Pregnant: The Anthropology of a Geometric Tomb Reconsidered.” Hesperia 73.1: 738.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liston, M.A., Rotroff, S.I., and Snyder, L.M.. 2018. The Agora Bone Well. Princeton.Google Scholar
Littman, R.J. 2009. “The Plague of Athens: Epidemiology and Paleopathology.” Mount Sinai Journal of Medicine 76: 456467.Google Scholar
Mitchell-Boyask, R. 2008. Plague and the Athenian Imagination: Drama, History, and the Cult of Asclepius. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Papagrigorakis, M.J., Yapijakis, C., Synodinos, P.N., and Baziotopoulou-Valavani, E.. 2006. “DNA Examination of Ancient Dental Pulp Incriminates Typhoid Fever as a Probable Cause of the Plague of Athens.” International Journal of Infectious Diseases 10: 206214.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Papadopoulos, J.K., and Smithson, E.L., eds., with Liston, M.A., Ruscillo, D., Strack, S., and Dimitriadou, E.. 2018. The Early Iron Age: The Cemeteries. Agora 36. Princeton.Google Scholar
Prevedorou, E.-A., and Buikstra, J.E.. 2019. “Bioarchaeological Practice and the Curation of Human Skeletal Remains in a Greek Context: The Phaleron Cemetery.” Advances in Archaeological Practice 7: 6067.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Siek, T. 2019. “Reconsidering Palaeoepidemiological Investigations in Palaeo-Oncology.” PhD dissertation, University College London.Google Scholar
Smith, S.K. 2009. “Skeletal Evidence for Militarism in Mycenaean Athens.” In New Directions in the Skeletal Biology of Greece, eds. Schepartz, L.A., Fox, S.C., and Bourbou, C., Princeton, 99110.Google Scholar
Smith, S.K. 2010. “Differential Diagnosis and Discussion of a Large Nasal Neoplasm from a Late Bronze Age Athenian Male.” International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 20: 731736.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stampolidis, N.C., and Tassoulas, Y.. 2014. Hygeia: Health, Illness, Treatment from Homer to Galen. Athens.Google Scholar

Further Reading

The growing field of Animals Studies has encouraged recent publications on many aspects of ancient Greek (and thus Athenian) animals; e.g., bovines by McInerney 2010, who reflects on their symbolic value and their many functions within ancient Greek culture; birds by Mynott 2018. The best general introduction is Campbell 2014, with chapters organized according to theme, and covering much that is mentioned here, as well the economy, magic, communication, husbandry, metamorphosis, zoology, etc. For classification, terminology, and species, see Calder 2011; Korhonen and Ruonakoski 2017; and the user-friendly collections of Kitchell 2013, and Lewis and Llewelyn-Jones 2018. Fauna are covered by MacKinnon (in Campbell 2014); Ekroth and Wallensten 2013; and see Liston et al. 2018, for dogs found deposited with infants in a second-century bc well in the Agora. For animal fossils and their connections to mythology, see Mayor (in Campbell 2014). Both Kalof 2011 and Campbell 2014 place Greek animals into a wider ancient context. Hybrid creatures in Athenian literature and art are well covered in Padgett 2003 and Aston 2011, while animal-shaped vessels from Athens and elsewhere are the topic of a recent exhibition and well-illustrated catalogue (Ebbinhaus 2018).

Bibliography

Additional resources to accompany this chapter can be found at: www.cambridge.org/NeilsRogers

Aston, E. 2011. Mixanthrôpoi: Animal–Human Hybrid Deities in Greek Religion. Liège.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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Campbell, G.L., ed. 2014. The Oxford Handbook of Animals in Classical Thought and Life. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ebbinhaus, S. 2018. Animal-Shaped Vessels from the Ancient World: Feasting with Gods, Heroes, and Kings. New Haven.Google Scholar
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Jameson, M.H. 2014. Cults and Rites in Ancient Greece: Essays on Religion and Society. Cambridge.Google Scholar
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Korhonen, T., and Ruonakoski, E.. 2017. Human and Animal in Ancient Greece: Empathy and Encounter in Classical Literature. London.Google Scholar
Kurtz, D.C., and Boardman, J.. 1971. Greek Burial Customs. London.Google Scholar
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Lissarrague, F. 1990. The Aesthetics of the Greek Banquet: Images of Wine and Ritual. Princeton.Google Scholar
Liston, M.A., Rotroff, S.I., and Snyder, L.M.. 2018. The Agora Bone Well. Princeton.Google Scholar
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Mynott, J. 2018. Birds in the Ancient World: Winged Words. Oxford.Google Scholar
Padgett, M. ed. 2003. The Centaur’s Smile: The Human Animal in Early Greek Art. New Haven.Google Scholar
Popkin, M. 2012. “Roosters, Columns, and Athena on Early Panathenaic Prize Amphoras: Symbols of a New Athenian Identity.” Hesperia 81: 207235.Google Scholar
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  • Inhabitants
  • Edited by Jenifer Neils, American School of Classical Studies, Athens, Dylan K. Rogers, University of Virginia
  • Book: The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Athens
  • Online publication: 10 March 2021
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  • Inhabitants
  • Edited by Jenifer Neils, American School of Classical Studies, Athens, Dylan K. Rogers, University of Virginia
  • Book: The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Athens
  • Online publication: 10 March 2021
Available formats
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  • Inhabitants
  • Edited by Jenifer Neils, American School of Classical Studies, Athens, Dylan K. Rogers, University of Virginia
  • Book: The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Athens
  • Online publication: 10 March 2021
Available formats
×