Section 3
Part 45
In former times the Council had full powers to inflict fines and imprisonment
and death; but when it had consigned Lysimachus to the executioner, and
he was sitting in the immediate expectation of death, Eumelides of Alopece
rescued him from its hands, maintaining that no citizen ought to be put
to death except on the decision of a court of law. Accordingly a trial
was held in a law-court, and Lysimachus was acquitted, receiving henceforth
the nickname of 'the man from the drum-head'; and the people deprived the
Council thenceforward of the power to inflict death or imprisonment or
fine, passing a law that if the Council condemn any person for an offence
or inflict a fine, the Thesmothetae shall bring the sentence or fine before
the law-court, and the decision of the jurors shall be the final judgement
in the matter.
The Council passes judgement on nearly all magistrates, especially
those who have the control of money; its judgement, however, is not final,
but is subject to an appeal to the lawcourts. Private individuals, also,
may lay an information against any magistrate they please for not obeying
the laws, but here too there is an appeal to the law-courts if the Council
declare the charge proved. The Council also examines those who are to be
its members for the ensuing year, and likewise the nine Archons. Formerly
the Council had full power to reject candidates for office as unsuitable,
but now they have an appeal to the law-courts. In all these matters, therefore,
the Council has no final jurisdiction. It takes, however, preliminary cognizance
of all matters brought before the Assembly, and the Assembly cannot vote
on any question unless it has first been considered by the Council and
placed on the programme by the Prytanes; since a person who carries a motion
in the Assembly is liable to an action for illegal proposal on these
grounds.
Part 46
The Council also superintends the triremes that are already in
existence, with their tackle and sheds, and builds new triremes or quadriremes,
whichever the Assembly votes, with tackle and sheds to match. The Assembly
appoints master-builders for the ships by vote; and if they do not hand
them over completed to the next Council, the old Council cannot receive
the customary donation-that being normally given to it during its successor's
term of office. For the building of the triremes it appoints ten commissioners,
chosen from its own members. The Council also inspects all public buildings,
and if it is of opinion that the state is being defrauded, it reports the
culprit to the Assembly, and on condemnation hands him over to the
law-courts.
Part 47
The Council also co-operates with other magistrates in most of
their duties. First there are the treasurers of Athena, ten in number,
elected by lot, one from each tribe. According to the law of Solon-which
is still in force-they must be Pentacosiomedimni, but in point of fact
the person on whom the lot falls holds the office even though he be quite
a poor man. These officers take over charge of the statue of Athena, the
figures of Victory, and all the other ornaments of the temple, together
with the money, in the presence of the Council. Then there are the Commissioners
for Public Contracts (Poletae), ten in number, one chosen by lot from each
tribe, who farm out the public contracts. They lease the mines and taxes,
in conjunction with the Military Treasurer and the Commissioners of the
Theoric fund, in the presence of the Council, and grant, to the persons
indicated by the vote of the Council, the mines which are let out by the
state, including both the workable ones, which are let for three years,
and those which are let under special agreements years. They also sell,
in the presence of the Council, the property of those who have gone into
exile from the court of the Areopagus, and of others whose goods have been
confiscated, and the nine Archons ratify the contracts. They also hand
over to the Council lists of the taxes which are farmed out for the year,
entering on whitened tablets the name of the lessee and the amount paid.
They make separate lists, first of those who have to pay their instalments
in each prytany, on ten several tablets, next of those who pay thrice in
the year, with a separate tablet for each instalment, and finally of those
who pay in the ninth prytany. They also draw up a list of farms and dwellings
which have been confiscated and sold by order of the courts; for these
too come within their province. In the case of dwellings the value must
be paid up in five years, and in that of farms, in ten. The instalments
are paid in the ninth prytany. Further, the King-archon brings before the
Council the leases of the sacred enclosures, written on whitened tablets.
These too are leased for ten years, and the instalments are paid in the
prytany; consequently it is in this prytany that the greatest amount of
money is collected. The tablets containing the lists of the instalments
are carried into the Council, and the public clerk takes charge of them.
Whenever a payment of instalments is to be made he takes from the pigeon-holes
the precise list of the sums which are to be paid and struck off on that
day, and delivers it to the Receivers-General. The rest are kept apart,
in order that no sum may be struck off before it is
paid.
Part 48
There are ten Receivers-General (Apodectae), elected by lot, one
from each tribe. These officers receive the tablets, and strike off the
instalments as they are paid, in the presence of the Council in the Council-chamber,
and give the tablets back to the public clerk. If any one fails to pay
his instalment, a note is made of it on the tablet; and he is bound to
pay double the amount of the deficiency, or, in default, to be imprisoned.
The Council has full power by the laws to exact these payments and to inflict
this imprisonment. They receive all the instalments, therefore, on one
day, and portion the money out among the magistrates; and on the next day
they bring up the report of the apportionment, written on a wooden notice-board,
and read it out in the Council-chamber, after which they ask publicly in
the Council whether any one knows of any malpractice in reference to the
apportionment, on the part of either a magistrate or a private individual,
and if any one is charged with malpractice they take a vote on
it.
The Council also elects ten Auditors (Logistae) by lot from its
own members, to audit the accounts of the magistrates for each prytany.
They also elect one Examiner of Accounts (Euthunus) by lot from each tribe,
with two assessors (Paredri) for each examiner, whose duty it is to sit
at the ordinary market hours, each opposite the statue of the eponymous
hero of his tribe; and if any one wishes to prefer a charge, on either
public or private grounds, against any magistrate who has passed his audit
before the law-courts, within three days of his having so passed, he enters
on a whitened tablet his own name and that of the magistrate prosecuted,
together with the malpractice that is alleged against him. He also appends
his claim for a penalty of such amount as seems to him fitting, and gives
in the record to the Examiner. The latter takes it, and if after reading
it he considers it proved he hands it over, if a private case, to the local
justices who introduce cases for the tribe concerned, while if it is a
public case he enters it on the register of the Thesmothetae. Then, if
the Thesmothetae accept it, they bring the accounts of this magistrate
once more before the law-court, and the decision of the jury stands as
the final judgement.
Part 49
The Council also inspects the horses belonging to the state. If
a man who has a good horse is found to keep it in bad condition, he is
mulcted in his allowance of corn; while those which cannot keep up or which
shy and will not stand steady, it brands with a wheel on the jaw, and the
horse so marked is disqualified for service. It also inspects those who
appear to be fit for service as scouts, and any one whom it rejects is
deprived of his horse. It also examines the infantry who serve among the
cavalry, and any one whom it rejects ceases to receive his pay. The roll
of the cavalry is drawn up by the Commissioners of Enrolment (Catalogeis),
ten in number, elected by the Assembly by open vote. They hand over to
the Hipparchs and Phylarchs the list of those whom they have enrolled,
and these officers take it and bring it up before the Council, and there
open the sealed tablet containing the names of the cavalry. If any of those
who have been on the roll previously make affidavit that they are physically
incapable of cavalry service, they strike them out; then they call up the
persons newly enrolled, and if any one makes affidavit that he is either
physically or pecuniarily incapable of cavalry service they dismiss him,
but if no such affidavit is made the Council vote whether the individual
in question is suitable for the purpose or not. If they vote in the affirmative
his name is entered on the tablet; if not, he is dismissed with the
others.
Formerly the Council used to decide on the plans for public buildings
and the contract for making the robe of Athena; but now this work is done
by a jury in the law-courts appointed by lot, since the Council was considered
to have shown favouritism in its decisions. The Council also shares with
the Military Treasurer the superintendence of the manufacture of the images
of Victory and the prizes at the Panathenaic festival.
The Council also examines infirm paupers; for there is a law which
provides that persons possessing less than three minas, who are so crippled
as to be unable to do any work, are, after examination by the Council,
to receive two obols a day from the state for their support. A treasurer
is appointed by lot to attend to them.
The Council also, speaking broadly, cooperates in most of the duties
of all the other magistrates; and this ends the list of the functions of
that body.
Part 50
There are ten Commissioners for Repairs of Temples, elected by
lot, who receive a sum of thirty minas from the Receivers-General, and
therewith carry out the most necessary repairs in the
temples.
There are also ten City Commissioners (Astynomi), of whom five
hold office in Piraeus and five in the city. Their duty is to see that
female flute-and harp-and lute-players are not hired at more than two drachmas,
and if more than one person is anxious to hire the same girl, they cast
lots and hire her out to the person to whom the lot falls. They also provide
that no collector of sewage shall shoot any of his sewage within ten stradia
of the walls; they prevent people from blocking up the streets by building,
or stretching barriers across them, or making drain-pipes in mid-air with
a discharge into the street, or having doors which open outwards; they
also remove the corpses of those who die in the streets, for which purpose
they have a body of state slaves assigned to them.
Part 51
Market Commissioners (Agoranomi) are elected by lot, five for Piraeus,
five for the city. Their statutory duty is to see that all articles offered
for sale in the market are pure and unadulterated.
Commissioners of Weights and Measures (Metronomi) are elected by
lot, five for the city, and five for Piraeus. They see that sellers use
fair weights and measures.
Formerly there were ten Corn Commissioners (Sitophylaces), elected
by lot, five for Piraeus, and five for the city; but now there are twenty
for the city and fifteen for Piraeus. Their duties are, first, to see that
the unprepared corn in the market is offered for sale at reasonable prices,
and secondly, to see that the millers sell barley meal at a price proportionate
to that of barley, and that the bakers sell their loaves at a price proportionate
to that of wheat, and of such weight as the Commissioners may appoint;
for the law requires them to fix the standard weight.
There are ten Superintendents of the Mart, elected by lot, whose
duty is to superintend the Mart, and to compel merchants to bring up into
the city two-thirds of the corn which is brought by sea to the Corn
Mart.
Part 52
The Eleven also are appointed by lot to take care of the prisoners
in the state gaol. Thieves, kidnappers, and pickpockets are brought to
them, and if they plead guilty they are executed, but if they deny the
charge the Eleven bring the case before the law-courts; if the prisoners
are acquitted, they release them, but if not, they then execute them. They
also bring up before the law-courts the list of farms and houses claimed
as state-property; and if it is decided that they are so, they deliver
them to the Commissioners for Public Contracts. The Eleven also bring up
informations laid against magistrates alleged to be disqualified; this
function comes within their province, but some such cases are brought up
by the Thesmothetae.
There are also five Introducers of Cases (Eisagogeis), elected
by lot, one for each pair of tribes, who bring up the 'monthly' cases to
the law-courts. 'Monthly' cases are these: refusal to pay up a dowry where
a party is bound to do so, refusal to pay interest on money borrowed at
12 per cent., or where a man desirous of setting up business in the market
has borrowed from another man capital to start with; also cases of slander,
cases arising out of friendly loans or partnerships, and cases concerned
with slaves, cattle, and the office of trierarch, or with banks. These
are brought up as 'monthly' cases and are introduced by these officers;
but the Receivers-General perform the same function in cases for or against
the farmers of taxes. Those in which the sum concerned is not more than
ten drachmas they can decide summarily, but all above that amount they
bring into the law-courts as 'monthly' cases.
Part 53
The Forty are also elected by lot, four from each tribe, before
whom suitors bring all other cases. Formerly they were thirty in number,
and they went on circuit through the demes to hear causes; but after the
oligarchy of the Thirty they were increased to forty. They have full powers
to decide cases in which the amount at issue does not exceed ten drachmas,
but anything beyond that value they hand over to the Arbitrators. The Arbitrators
take up the case, and, if they cannot bring the parties to an agreement,
they give a decision. If their decision satisfies both parties, and they
abide by it, the case is at an end; but if either of the parties appeals
to the law-courts, the Arbitrators enclose the evidence, the pleadings,
and the laws quoted in the case in two urns, those of the plaintiff in
the one, and those of the defendant in the other. These they seal up and,
having attached to them the decision of the arbitrator, written out on
a tablet, place them in the custody of the four justices whose function
it is to introduce cases on behalf of the tribe of the defendant. These
officers take them and bring up the case before the law-court, to a jury
of two hundred and one members in cases up to the value of a thousand drachmas,
or to one of four hundred and one in cases above that value. No laws or
pleadings or evidence may be used except those which were adduced before
the Arbitrator, and have been enclosed in the urns.
The Arbitrators are persons in the sixtieth year of their age;
this appears from the schedule of the Archons and the Eponymi. There are
two classes of Eponymi, the ten who give their names to the tribes, and
the forty-two of the years of service. The youths, on being enrolled among
the citizens, were formerly registered upon whitened tablets, and the names
were appended of the Archon in whose year they were enrolled, and of the
Eponymus who had been in course in the preceding year; at the present day
they are written on a bronze pillar, which stands in front of the Council-chamber,
near the Eponymi of the tribes. Then the Forty take the last of the Eponymi
of the years of service, and assign the arbitrations to the persons belonging
to that year, casting lots to determine which arbitrations each shall undertake;
and every one is compelled to carry through the arbitrations which the
lot assigns to him. The law enacts that any one who does not serve as Arbitrator
when he has arrived at the necessary age shall lose his civil rights, unless
he happens to be holding some other office during that year, or to be out
of the country. These are the only persons who escape the duty. Any one
who suffers injustice at the hands of the Arbitrator may appeal to the
whole board of Arbitrators, and if they find the magistrate guilty, the
law enacts that he shall lose his civil rights. The persons thus condemned
have, however, in their turn an appeal. The Eponymi are also used in reference
to military expeditions; when the men of military age are despatched on
service, a notice is put up stating that the men from such-and such an
Archon and Eponymus to such-and such another Archon and Eponymus are to
go on the expedition.
Part 54
The following magistrates also are elected by lot: Five Commissioners
of Roads (Hodopoei), who, with an assigned body of public slaves, are required
to keep the roads in order: and ten Auditors, with ten assistants, to whom
all persons who have held any office must give in their accounts. These
are the only officers who audit the accounts of those who are subject to
examination, and who bring them up for examination before the law-courts.
If they detect any magistrate in embezzlement, the jury condemn him for
theft, and he is obliged to repay tenfold the sum he is declared to have
misappropriated. If they charge a magistrate with accepting bribes and
the jury convict him, they fine him for corruption, and this sum too is
repaid tenfold. Or if they convict him of unfair dealing, he is fined on
that charge, and the sum assessed is paid without increase, if payment
is made before the ninth prytany, but otherwise it is doubled. A tenfold
fine is not doubled.
The Clerk of the prytany, as he is called, is also elected by lot.
He has the charge of all public documents, and keeps the resolutions which
are passed by the Assembly, and checks the transcripts of all other official
papers and attends at the sessions of the Council. Formerly he was elected
by open vote, and the most distinguished and trustworthy persons were elected
to the post, as is known from the fact that the name of this officer is
appended on the pillars recording treaties of alliance and grants of consulship
and citizenship. Now, however, he is elected by lot. There is, in addition,
a Clerk of the Laws, elected by lot, who attends at the sessions of the
Council; and he too checks the transcript of all the laws. The Assembly
also elects by open vote a clerk to read documents to it and to the Council;
but he has no other duty except that of reading aloud.
The Assembly also elects by lot the Commissioners of Public Worship
(Hieropoei) known as the Commissioners for Sacrifices, who offer the sacrifices
appointed by oracle, and, in conjunction with the seers, take the auspices
whenever there is occasion. It also elects by lot ten others, known as
Annual Commissioners, who offer certain sacrifices and administer all the
quadrennial festivals except the Panathenaea. There are the following quadrennial
festivals: first that of Delos (where there is also a sexennial festival),
secondly the Brauronia, thirdly the Heracleia, fourthly the Eleusinia,
and fifthly the Panathenaea; and no two of these are celebrated in the
same place. To these the Hephaestia has now been added, in the archonship
of Cephisophon.
An Archon is also elected by lot for Salamis, and a Demarch for
Piraeus. These officers celebrate the Dionysia in these two places, and
appoint Choregi. In Salamis, moreover, the name of the Archon is publicly
recorded.
Part 55
All the foregoing magistrates are elected by lot, and their powers
are those which have been stated. To pass on to the nine Archons, as they
are called, the manner of their appointment from the earliest times has
been described already. At the present day six Thesmothetae are elected
by lot, together with their clerk, and in addition to these an Archon,
a King, and a Polemarch. One is elected from each tribe. They are examined
first of all by the Council of Five Hundred, with the exception of the
clerk. The latter is examined only in the lawcourt, like other magistrates
(for all magistrates, whether elected by lot or by open vote, are examined
before entering on their offices); but the nine Archons are examined both
in the Council and again in the law-court. Formerly no one could hold the
office if the Council rejected him, but now there is an appeal to the law-court,
which is the final authority in the matter of the examination. When they
are examined, they are asked, first, 'Who is your father, and of what deme?
who is your father's father? who is your mother? who is your mother's father,
and of what deme?' Then the candidate is asked whether he possesses an
ancestral Apollo and a household Zeus, and where their sanctuaries are;
next if he possesses a family tomb, and where; then if he treats his parents
well, and pays his taxes, and has served on the required military expeditions.
When the examiner has put these questions, he proceeds, 'Call the witnesses
to these facts'; and when the candidate has produced his witnesses, he
next asks, 'Does any one wish to make any accusation against this man?'
If an accuser appears, he gives the parties an opportunity of making their
accusation and defence, and then puts it to the Council to pass the candidate
or not, and to the law-court to give the final vote. If no one wishes to
make an accusation, he proceeds at once to the vote. Formerly a single
individual gave the vote, but now all the members are obliged to vote on
the candidates, so that if any unprincipled candidate has managed to get
rid of his accusers, it may still be possible for him to be disqualified
before the law-court. When the examination has been thus completed, they
proceed to the stone on which are the pieces of the victims, and on which
the Arbitrators take oath before declaring their decisions, and witnesses
swear to their testimony. On this stone the Archons stand, and swear to
execute their office uprightly and according to the laws, and not to receive
presents in respect of the performance of their duties, or, if they do,
to dedicate a golden statue. When they have taken this oath they proceed
to the Acropolis, and there they repeat it; after this they enter upon
their office.
Part 56
The Archon, the King, and the Polemarch have each two assessors,
nominated by themselves. These officers are examined in the lawcourt before
they begin to act, and give in accounts on each occasion of their
acting.
As soon as the Archon enters office, he begins by issuing a proclamation
that whatever any one possessed before he entered into office, that he
shall possess and hold until the end of his term. Next he assigns Choregi
to the tragic poets, choosing three of the richest persons out of the whole
body of Athenians. Formerly he used also to assign five Choregi to the
comic poets, but now the tribes provide the Choregi for them. Then he receives
the Choregi who have been appointed by the tribes for the men's and boys'
choruses and the comic poets at the Dionysia, and for the men's and boys'
choruses at the Thargelia (at the Dionysia there is a chorus for each tribe,
but at the Thargelia one between two tribes, each tribe bearing its share
in providing it); he transacts the exchanges of properties for them, and
reports any excuses that are tendered, if any one says that he has already
borne this burden, or that he is exempt because he has borne a similar
burden and the period of his exemption has not yet expired, or that he
is not of the required age; since the Choregus of a boys' chorus must be
over forty years of age. He also appoints Choregi for the festival at Delos,
and a chief of the mission for the thirty-oar boat which conveys the youths
thither. He also superintends sacred processions, both that in honour of
Asclepius, when the initiated keep house, and that of the great Dionysia-the
latter in conjunction with the Superintendents of that festival. These
officers, ten in number, were formerly elected by open vote in the Assembly,
and used to provide for the expenses of the procession out of their private
means; but now one is elected by lot from each tribe, and the state contributes
a hundred minas for the expenses. The Archon also superintends the procession
at the Thargelia, and that in honour of Zeus the Saviour. He also manages
the contests at the Dionysia and the Thargelia.
These, then, are the festivals which he superintends. The suits
and indictments which come before him, and which he, after a preliminary
inquiry, brings up before the lawcourts, are as follows. Injury to parents
(for bringing these actions the prosecutor cannot suffer any penalty);
injury to orphans (these actions lie against their guardians); injury to
a ward of state (these lie against their guardians or their husbands),
injury to an orphan's estate (these too lie against the guardians); mental
derangement, where a party charges another with destroying his own property
through unsoundness of mind; for appointment of liquidators, where a party
refuses to divide property in which others have a share; for constituting
a wardship; for determining between rival claims to a wardship; for granting
inspection of property to which another party lays claim; for appointing
oneself as guardian; and for determining disputes as to inheritances and
wards of state. The Archon also has the care of orphans and wards of state,
and of women who, on the death of their husbands, declare themselves to
be with child; and he has power to inflict a fine on those who offend against
the persons under his charge, or to bring the case before the law-courts.
He also leases the houses of orphans and wards of state until they reach
the age of fourteen, and takes mortgages on them; and if the guardians
fail to provide the necessary food for the children under their charge,
he exacts it from them. Such are the duties of the Archon.
Part 57
The King in the first place superintends the mysteries, in conjunction
with the Superintendents of Mysteries. The latter are elected in the Assembly
by open vote, two from the general body of Athenians, one from the Eumolpidae,
and one from the Ceryces. Next, he superintends the Lenaean Dionysia, which
consists of a procession and a contest. The procession is ordered by the
King and the Superintendents in conjunction; but the contest is managed
by the King alone. He also manages all the contests of the torch-race;
and to speak broadly, he administers all the ancestral sacrifices. Indictments
for impiety come before him, or any disputes between parties concerning
priestly rites; and he also determines all controversies concerning sacred
rites for the ancient families and the priests. All actions for homicide
come before him, and it is he that makes the proclamation requiring polluted
persons to keep away from sacred ceremonies. Actions for homicide and wounding
are heard, if the homicide or wounding be willful, in the Areopagus; so
also in cases of killing by poison, and of arson. These are the only cases
heard by that Council. Cases of unintentional homicide, or of intent to
kill, or of killing a slave or a resident alien or a foreigner, are heard
by the court of Palladium. When the homicide is acknowledged, but legal
justification is pleaded, as when a man takes an adulterer in the act,
or kills another by mistake in battle, or in an athletic contest, the prisoner
is tried in the court of Delphinium. If a man who is in banishment for
a homicide which admits of reconcilliation incurs a further charge of killing
or wounding, he is tried in Phreatto, and he makes his defence from a boat
moored near the shore. All these cases, except those which are heard in
the Areopagus, are tried by the Ephetae on whom the lot falls. The King
introduces them, and the hearing is held within sacred precincts and in
the open air. Whenever the King hears a case he takes off his crown. The
person who is charged with homicide is at all other times excluded from
the temples, nor is it even lawful for him to enter the market-place; but
on the occasion of his trial he enters the temple and makes his defence.
If the actual offender is unknown, the writ runs against 'the doer of the
deed'. The King and the tribe-kings also hear the cases in which the guilt
rests on inanimate objects and the lower animal.
Part 58
The Polemarch performs the sacrifices to Artemis the huntress and
to Enyalius, and arranges the contest at the funeral of those who have
fallen in war, and makes offerings to the memory of Harmodius and Aristogeiton.
Only private actions come before him, namely those in which resident aliens,
both ordinary and privileged, and agents of foreign states are concerned.
It is his duty to receive these cases and divide them into ten groups,
and assign to each tribe the group which comes to it by lot; after which
the magistrates who introduce cases for the tribe hand them over to the
Arbitrators. The Polemarch, however, brings up in person cases in which
an alien is charged with deserting his patron or neglecting to provide
himself with one, and also of inheritances and wards of state where aliens
are concerned; and in fact, generally, whatever the Archon does for citizens,
the Polemarch does for aliens.
Part 59
The Thesmothetae in the first place have the power of prescribing
on what days the lawcourts are to sit, and next of assigning them to the
several magistrates; for the latter must follow the arrangement which the
Thesmothetae assign. Moreover they introduce impeachments before the Assembly,
and bring up all votes for removal from office, challenges of a magistrate's
conduct before the Assembly, indictments for illegal proposals, or for
proposing a law which is contrary to the interests of the state, complaints
against Proedri or their president for their conduct in office, and the
accounts presented by the generals. All indictments also come before them
in which a deposit has to be made by the prosecutor, namely, indictments
for concealment of foreign origin, for corrupt evasion of foreign origin
(when a man escapes the disqualification by bribery), for blackmailing
accusations, bribery, false entry of another as a state debtor, false testimony
to the service of a summons, conspiracy to enter a man as a state debtor,
corrupt removal from the list of debtors, and adultery. They also bring
up the examinations of all magistrates, and the rejections by the demes
and the condemnations by the Council. Moreover they bring up certain private
suits in cases of merchandise and mines, or where a slave has slandered
a free man. It is they also who cast lots to assign the courts to the various
magistrates, whether for private or public cases. They ratify commercial
treaties, and bring up the cases which arise out of such treaties; and
they also bring up cases of perjury from the Areopagus. The casting of
lots for the jurors is conducted by all the nine Archons, with the clerk
to the Thesmothetae as the tenth, each performing the duty for his own
tribe. Such are the duties of the nine Archons.
Part 60
There are also ten Commissioners of Games (Athlothetae), elected
by lot, one from each tribe. These officers, after passing an examination,
serve for four years; and they manage the Panathenaic procession, the contest
in music and that in gymnastic, and the horse-race; they also provide the
robe of Athena and, in conjunction with the Council, the vases, and they
present the oil to the athletes. This oil is collected from the sacred
olives. The Archon requisitions it from the owners of the farms on which
the sacred olives grow, at the rate of three-quarters of a pint from each
plant. Formerly the state used to sell the fruit itself, and if any one
dug up or broke down one of the sacred olives, he was tried by the Council
of Areopagus, and if he was condemned, the penalty was death. Since, however,
the oil has been paid by the owner of the farm, the procedure has lapsed,
though the law remains; and the oil is a state charge upon the property
instead of being taken from the individual plants. When, then, the Archon
has collected the oil for his year of office, he hands it over to the Treasurers
to preserve in the Acropolis, and he may not take his seat in the Areopagus
until he has paid over to the Treasurers the full amount. The Treasurers
keep it in the Acropolis until the Panathenaea, when they measure it out
to the Commissioners of Games, and they again to the victorious competitors.
The prizes for the victors in the musical contest consist of silver and
gold, for the victors in manly vigour, of shields, and for the victors
in the gymnastic contest and the horse-race, of oil.
Part 61
All officers connected with military service are elected by open
vote. In the first place, ten Generals (Strategi), who were formerly elected
one from each tribe, but now are chosen from the whole mass of citizens.
Their duties are assigned to them by open vote; one is appointed to command
the heavy infantry, and leads them if they go out to war; one to the defence
of the country, who remains on the defensive, and fights if there is war
within the borders of the country; two to Piraeus, one of whom is assigned
to Munichia, and one to the south shore, and these have charge of the defence
of the Piraeus; and one to superintend the symmories, who nominates the
trierarchs arranges exchanges of properties for them, and brings up actions
to decide on rival claims in connexion with them. The rest are dispatched
to whatever business may be on hand at the moment. The appointment of these
officers is submitted for confirmation in each prytany, when the question
is put whether they are considered to be doing their duty. If any officer
is rejected on this vote, he is tried in the lawcourt, and if he is found
guilty the people decide what punishment or fine shall be inflicted on
him; but if he is acquitted he resumes his office. The Generals have full
power, when on active service, to arrest any one for insubordination, or
to cashier him publicly, or to inflict a fine; the latter is, however,
unusual.
There are also ten Taxiarchs, one from each tribe, elected by open
vote; and each commands his own tribesmen and appoints captains of companies
(Lochagi). There are also two Hipparchs, elected by open vote from the
whole mass of the citizens, who command the cavalry, each taking five tribes.
They have the same powers as the Generals have in respect of the infantry,
and their appointments are also subject to confirmation. There are also
ten Phylarchs, elected by open vote, one from each tribe, to command the
cavalry, as the Taxiarchs do the infantry. There is also a Hipparch for
Lemnos, elected by open vote, who has charge of the cavalry in Lemnos.
There is also a treasurer of the Paralus, and another of the Ammonias,
similarly elected.
Part 62
Of the magistrates elected by lot, in former times some including
the nine Archons, were elected out of the tribe as a whole, while others,
namely those who are now elected in the Theseum, were apportioned among
the demes; but since the demes used to sell the elections, these magistrates
too are now elected from the whole tribe, except the members of the Council
and the guards of the dockyards, who are still left to the
demes.
Pay is received for the following services. First the members of
the Assembly receive a drachma for the ordinary meetings, and nine obols
for the 'sovereign' meeting. Then the jurors at the law-courts receive
three obols; and the members of the Council five obols. They Prytanes receive
an allowance of an obol for their maintenance. The nine Archons receive
four obols apiece for maintenance, and also keep a herald and a flute-player;
and the Archon for Salamis receives a drachma a day. The Commissioners
for Games dine in the Prytaneum during the month of Hecatombaeon in which
the Panathenaic festival takes place, from the fourteenth day onwards.
The Amphictyonic deputies to Delos receive a drachma a day from the exchequer
of Delos. Also all magistrates sent to Samos, Scyros, Lemnos, or Imbros
receive an allowance for their maintenance. The military offices may be
held any number of times, but none of the others more than once, except
the membership of the Council, which may be held twice.
Part 63
The juries for the law-courts are chosen by lot by the nine Archons,
each for their own tribe, and by the clerk to the Thesmothetae for the
tenth. There are ten entrances into the courts, one for each tribe; twenty
rooms in which the lots are drawn, two for each tribe; a hundred chests,
ten for each tribe; other chests, in which are placed the tickets of the
jurors on whom the lot falls; and two vases. Further, staves, equal in
number to the jurors required, are placed by the side of each entrance;
and counters are put into one vase, equal in number to the staves. These
are inscribed with letters of the alphabet beginning with the eleventh
(lambda), equal in number to the courts which require to be filled. All
persons above thirty years of age are qualified to serve as jurors, provided
they are not debtors to the state and have not lost their civil rights.
If any unqualified person serves as juror, an information is laid against
him, and he is brought before the court; and, if he is convicted, the jurors
assess the punishment or fine which they consider him to deserve. If he
is condemned to a money fine, he must be imprisoned until he has paid up
both the original debt, on account of which the information was laid against
him, and also the fine which the court as imposed upon him. Each juror
has his ticket of boxwood, on which is inscribed his name, with the name
of his father and his deme, and one of the letters of the alphabet up to
kappa; for the jurors in their several tribes are divided into ten sections,
with approximately an equal number in each letter. When the Thesmothetes
has decided by lot which letters are required to attend at the courts,
the servant puts up above each court the letter which has been assigned
to it by the lot.
Part 64
The ten chests above mentioned are placed in front of the entrance
used by each tribe, and are inscribed with the letters of the alphabet
from alpha to kappa. The jurors cast in their tickets, each into the chest
on which is inscribed the letter which is on his ticket; then the servant
shakes them all up, and the Archon draws one ticket from each chest. The
individual so selected is called the Ticket-hanger (Empectes), and his
function is to hang up the tickets out of his chest on the bar which bears
the same letter as that on the chest. He is chosen by lot, lest, if the
Ticket-hanger were always the same person, he might tamper with the results.
There are five of these bars in each of the rooms assigned for the lot-drawing.
Then the Archon casts in the dice and thereby chooses the jurors from each
tribe, room by room. The dice are made of brass, coloured black or white;
and according to the number of jurors required, so many white dice are
put in, one for each five tickets, while the remainder are black, in the
same proportion. As the Archon draws out the dice, the crier calls out
the names of the individuals chosen. The Ticket-hanger is included among
those selected. Each juror, as he is chosen and answers to his name, draws
a counter from the vase, and holding it out with the letter uppermost shows
it first to the presiding Archon; and he, when he has seen it, throws the
ticket of the juror into the chest on which is inscribed the letter which
is on the counter, so that the juror must go into the court assigned to
him by lot, and not into one chosen by himself, and that it may be impossible
for any one to collect the jurors of his choice into any particular court.
For this purpose chests are placed near the Archon, as many in number as
there are courts to be filled that day, bearing the letters of the courts
on which the lot has fallen.
Part 65
The juror thereupon, after showing his counter again to the attendant,
passes through the barrier into the court. The attendant gives him a staff
of the same colour as the court bearing the letter which is on his counter,
so as to ensure his going into the court assigned to him by lot; since,
if he were to go into any other, he would be betrayed by the colour of
his staff. Each court has a certain colour painted on the lintel of the
entrance. Accordingly the juror, bearing his staff, enters the court which
has the same colour as his staff, and the same letter as his counter. As
he enters, he receives a voucher from the official to whom this duty has
been assigned by lot. So with their counters and their staves the selected
jurors take their seats in the court, having thus completed the process
of admission. The unsuccessful candidates receive back their tickets from
the Ticket-hangers. The public servants carry the chests from each tribe,
one to each court, containing the names of the members of the tribe who
are in that court, and hand them over to the officials assigned to the
duty of giving back their tickets to the jurors in each court, so that
these officials may call them up by name and pay them their
fee.
Part 66
When all the courts are full, two ballot boxes are placed in the
first court, and a number of brazen dice, bearing the colours of the several
courts, and other dice inscribed with the names of the presiding magistrates.
Then two of the Thesmothetae, selected by lot, severally throw the dice
with the colours into one box, and those with the magistrates' names into
the other. The magistrate whose name is first drawn is thereupon proclaimed
by the crier as assigned for duty in the court which is first drawn, and
the second in the second, and similarly with the rest. The object of this
procedure is that no one may know which court he will have, but that each
may take the court assigned to him by lot.
When the jurors have come in, and have been assigned to their respective
courts, the presiding magistrate in each court draws one ticket out of
each chest (making ten in all, one out of each tribe), and throws them
into another empty chest. He then draws out five of them, and assigns one
to the superintendence of the water-clock, and the other four to the telling
of the votes. This is to prevent any tampering beforehand with either the
superintendent of the clock or the tellers of the votes, and to secure
that there is no malpractice in these respects. The five who have not been
selected for these duties receive from them a statement of the order in
which the jurors shall receive their fees, and of the places where the
several tribes shall respectively gather in the court for this purpose
when their duties are completed; the object being that the jurors may be
broken up into small groups for the reception of their pay, and not all
crowd together and impede one another.
Part 67
These preliminaries being concluded, the cases are called on. If
it is a day for private cases, the private litigants are called. Four cases
are taken in each of the categories defined in the law, and the litigants
swear to confine their speeches to the point at issue. If it is a day for
public causes, the public litigants are called, and only one case is tried.
Water-clocks are provided, having small supply-tubes, into which the water
is poured by which the length of the pleadings is regulated. Ten gallons
are allowed for a case in which an amount of more than five thousand drachmas
is involved, and three for the second speech on each side. When the amount
is between one and five thousand drachmas, seven gallons are allowed for
the first speech and two for the second; when it is less than one thousand,
five and two. Six gallons are allowed for arbitrations between rival claimants,
in which there is no second speech. The official chosen by lot to superintend
the water-clock places his hand on the supply tube whenever the clerk is
about to read a resolution or law or affidavit or treaty. When, however,
a case is conducted according to a set measurement of the day, he does
not stop the supply, but each party receives an equal allowance of water.
The standard of measurement is the length of the days in the month Poseideon....
The measured day is employed in cases when imprisonment, death, exile,
loss of civil rights, or confiscation of goods is assigned as the
penalty.
Part 68
Most of the courts consist of 500 members...; and when it is necessary
to bring public cases before a jury of 1,000 members, two courts combine
for the purpose, the most important cases of all are brought 1,500 jurors,
or three courts. The ballot balls are made of brass with stems running
through the centre, half of them having the stem pierced and the other
half solid. When the speeches are concluded, the officials assigned to
the taking of the votes give each juror two ballot balls, one pierced and
one solid. This is done in full view of the rival litigants, to secure
that no one shall receive two pierced or two solid balls. Then the official
designated for the purpose takes away the jurors staves, in return for
which each one as he records his vote receives a brass voucher market with
the numeral 3 (because he gets three obols when he gives it up). This is
to ensure that all shall vote; since no one can get a voucher unless he
votes. Two urns, one of brass and the other of wood, stand in the court,
in distinct spots so that no one may surreptitiously insert ballot balls;
in these the jurors record their votes. The brazen urn is for effective
votes, the wooden for unused votes; and the brazen urn has a lid pierced
so as to take only one ballot ball, in order that no one may put in two
at a time.
When the jurors are about to vote, the crier demands first whether
the litigants enter a protest against any of the evidence; for no protest
can be received after the voting has begun. Then he proclaims again, 'The
pierced ballot for the plaintiff, the solid for the defendant'; and the
juror, taking his two ballot balls from the stand, with his hand closed
over the stem so as not to show either the pierced or the solid ballot
to the litigants, casts the one which is to count into the brazen urn,
and the other into the wooden urn.
Part 69
When all the jurors have voted, the attendants take the urn containing
the effective votes and discharge them on to a reckoning board having as
many cavities as there are ballot balls, so that the effective votes, whether
pierced or solid, may be plainly displayed and easily counted. Then the
officials assigned to the taking of the votes tell them off on the board,
the solid in one place and the pierced in another, and the crier announces
the numbers of the votes, the pierced ballots being for the prosecutor
and the solid for the defendant. Whichever has the majority is victorious;
but if the votes are equal the verdict is for the defendant. Each juror
receives two ballots, and uses one to record his vote, and throws the other
away.
Then, if damages have to be awarded, they vote again in the same
way, first returning their pay-vouchers and receiving back their staves.
Half a gallon of water is allowed to each party for the discussion of
the damages. Finally, when all has been completed in accordance with the
law, the jurors receive their pay in the order assigned by the
lot.
THE END