James Kierstead Profile picture
Nov 19, 2019 13 tweets 7 min read Read on X
1. Maybe the most curious institution of the classical Athenian democracy is ostracism, by which the citizenry would kick a politician out of the city for ten years. Here's a very very short introduction. #ostracismculture Image
2. Ostracism was probably introduced as part of Kleisthenes1's reforms of around 508/7 BC, which also introduced the Council of 500, 10 new tribes, and other democratic innovations. #kleisthenes Image
3. The 3rd-C AD writer Aelian says Kleisthenes1 was himself ostracised, but there's no real evidence for that; it seems to be part of a tradition of ancient anecdotes about people who were hoist by their own petard. #trickstertricked perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?do…
4. The 4th-C BC historian Androtion seems to say that ostracism was only introduced c. 488/7, but the truth is probably just that that was the first time anyone actually got ostracised (why it took 20 years isn't entirely clear). Go down to F6 here: #F6 referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/brill-…
5. After that first ostracism of Hipparchus in 488/7, we know of some dozen other men who were kicked out of Athens for ten years in this way. There's a list half-way down this page, curated by the demos: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ostracism
6. Those include some prominent names, and archaeologists have found no shortage of sherds with the names of famous Athenians on them. Here's just a sample, feat. (clockwise from top left) Aristeides 'the Just,' Themistokles, Pericles, and Kimon (followed by their father's names) Image
7. How did it work? Ostracizing someone nowadays is more of a social thing, but the Athenian practice was a highly formal one. Each year there was a vote (by show of hands) in the Assembly on the Pnyx hill about whether there should be an ostracism that year. #pnyx Image
8. If so, the ostracism proper would be held in the Agora within a couple of months. Citizens would write the name of the man they wanted kicked out on a sherd of pottery (an ostrakon). If there were more than 6000 sherds, the man with the most votes would get 'ostracised.' Image
9. He'd have to leave the city within 10 days, for 10 years, though all was not lost. This was a political process, not a legal judgment; he would incur no loss of property or status, and could come back to the city and be active in politics again when his time was up. #politics Image
10. One interesting find was 190 sherds in a well near the Acropolis with Themistocles' name on them, but apparently written by only 14 individuals. Was an anti-Themistocles crew handing them out to people? #wellwellwell Image
11. That some illiterate citizens had to get someone else to write for them is also suggested by the tale that one man, failing to recognize Aristeides, asked him to write 'Aristeides' on his sherd for him! (And he did- he was 'the Just' after all) #justly perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?do…
12. Ostracism remained on the books, but was used for the last time in 416ish. Plutarch says Hyperbolus proposed an ostracism, but the two top politicians made a deal against him and got him kicked out instead! #trickstertrickedagain perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?do…
Research on ostracism continues (I just read a very good MA thesis by one Bryant Ahrenberg). For more on the procedure, one book I can recommend is this one by Sara Forsdyke: press.princeton.edu/books/hardcove…

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More from @Kleisthenes2

May 5
1. The leftward skew of academic staff at universities in the English-speaking world (🧵)
2. Political identification of US academics over time, 1989-2014 Image
3. Number of registered Democrats for every registered Republican among academic staff in selected disciplines, 2018 Image
Read 9 tweets
Apr 23
1. This passage from a recent *Quadrant* piece by South Australian educationalist Alan Lee puts its finger on something about the choice of subjects at school (or university) that I've long struggled to define. Image
2. Basically, by offering a wider choice of subjects you get fewer students taking the more rigorous subjects. These subjects are then offered at fewer schools (and see the next post for Latin), which then effectively limits choice. Image
3. I am not sure if this is the exact equivalent of Gresham's Law, but you can see what he means - getting an 'inflated' or 'debased' qualification by taking easier subjects is probably going to be chosen by more and more people over time, crowding out tougher disciplines Image
Read 6 tweets
Jul 11, 2023
1. I very much agree with @xchrisgonz that reading the great books of the past is a worthwhile endeavour (I happen to find it one of *the most* worthwhile endeavours), though I'd add a couple more arguments to his. heterodoxacademy.org/blog/why-we-sh…
2. I think it's true, as Gonzalez says, that old books can still teach us things about human behaviour and morality, though this isn't limited to imparting additional propositional knowledge. It's also a matter of giving us a more rounded, empathic understanding of these things.
3. There's also often a simple aesthetic joy (a simole joy which is nonetheless different to other pleasures) in reading the great works of the past. There's a joy not only in the stories they tell but also in the artistry and craftmanship with which they've been constructed.
Read 5 tweets
Jan 28, 2023
I'm pleased and slightly bewildered to see my piece on Popper's *Open Society and its Enemies* and its enemies in the Journal of NZ Studies pass 10K views on academia dot edu (an order of magnitude more than some other articles I worked much harder on!) Here it is in 12 tweets.
1. In the last year of the Second World War, Karl Popper published a work entitled *The Open Society and its Enemies* in two volumes, the first subtitled *The Spell of Plato*, and the second focusing on Hegel and Marx.
2. It quickly earned praise from leading philosophers like Gilbert Ryle (writing in Mind) and Betrand Russell, who called it
Read 14 tweets
Aug 20, 2022
0. My 2015 paper, 'Democratization: A Modern Economic Theory and the Evidence from Ancient Athens' in 12 tweets. The paper takes up the influential account of democratization in the 2003 book below - can it help us understand Athens' transition to democracy with Kleisthenes1?
1. For Boix, elites fear that any democracy will redistribute their assets. Hence they allow democracy to emerge only if either a) society is so equal that elites don't even have that much to lose; or b) elite assets are of a sort that makes them hard to identify and tax.
2. Boix's theory was designed in part to try to deal with pre-industrial states. After all, if it's mostly just strong growth in modern terms that predicts the robustness of democracies (as per Przeworski et al.), how did poor Athens remain democratic for some 200 years?
Read 13 tweets
Jul 10, 2022
(taha) Greek and Latin in Niue(an), Part Ua: stele (maka) commemorating a local man called Nukai, who was trained as a missionary in Samoa and returned to the island to preach Christianity.
(ua) The reception was so hostile that he was accompanied by some 60 (!) Samoan warriors, who protected him at a fort near the village of Mutalau (where this memorial stands). en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nukai_Pen…
(tolu) In the fifth line of the inscription you can see the Niuean word 'Evangelia' - an importation of the Greek εὐαγγέλια, 'good news.'
Read 5 tweets

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