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Kratos & Krater: Reconstructing an Athenian Protohistory (Paperback)
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Kratos & Krater: Reconstructing an Athenian Protohistory (Paperback)
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Athenian governance and culture are reconstructed from the Bronze
Age into the historical era based on traditions, archaeological
contexts and remains, foremost the formal commensal and libation
krater. Following Mycenaean immigration from the Peloponnesos
during the transitional years, changes in governance are
observable. Groups under aristocratic leadership, local and
immigrant, aspired to coexist under a surprisingly formal set of
stipulations that should be recognized as Athens' first
constitution. Synoikismos did not refer to a political union of
Attica, sometimes attributed to Theseus, but to a union of
aristocratic houses (oikoi). The union replaced absolute monarchy
with a new oligarchical-monarchy system, each king selected from
one of the favoured aristocratic houses and ruling for life without
inheritance. The system prevailed through the late eleventh to the
mid-eighth c. and is corroborated by Athenian traditions
cross-referenced with archaeological data from the burial grounds,
and a formerly discredited list of Athenian Iron Age kings. Some
burial grounds have been tentatively identified as those of the
Melanthids, Alcmeonids, Philaids and Medontids, who settled the
outskirts of Athens along with other migrant groups following the
decline of the elite in the Peloponnesos. While the Melanthids left
during the 11th c. Ionian Migration other aristocratic houses
remained and contributed to the evolution of the historical era
polis of Athens. One noble family, the Alcmeonids preserved their
cemetery into the Archaic period in a burial record of 600 years'
duration. Incorporated into this work is a monograph on the
Athenian formal krater used by these primarily Neleid aristocratic
houses in assembly and ritual. Some Homeric practices parallel
those found in Athens, so the Ionic poets may have documented
customs that had existed on the Mainland and were transferred to
Ionia during the Ionian Migration. The demise of both the
constitution and the standard, ancestral krater in Athens following
a mid-eighth c. watershed is testimony to an interval of political
change, as noted by Ian Morris, before the systematized
establishment of annual archonship in the following century. The
support this research has given to the validity of the King List
has resulted in a proposed new chronology, with an earlier onset
for the Geometric period at 922 BC, rather than the currently
accepted 900 BC. The relative chronology of Coldstream based on
style is generally accepted here, but some intermediate stages are
revised based on perceptible break data, such as the onset of a new
kingship, a reported war, or the demise of a governance system.
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