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A Day in Old Athens; a Picture of Athenian Life

Chapter 2: Preface
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About This Book

A guided imaginative visit reconstructs daily life in ancient Athens, beginning with the city's physical setting and street scenes and moving through the Agora, private houses, and household routines. It surveys social roles—including women, slaves, children, and youths—alongside clothing, education, medical practice, funerary customs, and leisure. Chapters treat economic activities such as crafts, trade, and banking, describe military organization and naval architecture, and outline legal processes and democratic assemblies. Descriptive attention to material culture, ceremonies, and civic institutions combines practical detail with broader sketches of urban rhythms and social organization.

Preface

This little book tries to describe what an intelligent person would see and hear in ancient Athens, if by some legerdemain he were translated to the fourth century B.C. and conducted about the city under competent guidance. Rare happenings have been omitted and sometimes, to avoid long explanations, probable matters have been stated as if they were ascertained facts; but these instances are few, and it is hoped no reader will be led into serious error.

The year 360 B.C. has been selected for the hypothetical time of this visit, not because of any special virtue in that date, but because Athens was then architecturally almost perfect, her civic and her social life seemed at their best, the democratic constitution held its vigor, and there were few outward signs of the general decadence which was to set in after the triumph of Macedon.

I have endeavored to state no facts and to make no allusions, that will not be fairly obvious to a reader who has merely an elementary knowledge of Greek annals, such information, for instance, as may be gained through a good secondary school history of ancient times. This naturally has led to comments and descriptions which more advanced students may find superfluous.

The writer has been under a heavy debt to the numerous and excellent works on Greek “Private Antiquities” and “Public Life” written in English, French, or German, as well as to the various great Classical Encyclopædias and Dictionaries, and to many treatises and monographs upon the topography of Athens and upon the numerous phases of Attic culture. It is proper to say, however, that the material from such secondary sources has been merely supplementary to a careful examination of the ancient Greek writers, with the objects of this book kept especially in view. A sojourn in modern Athens, also, has given me an impression of the influence of the Attic landscape upon the conditions of old Athenian life, an impression that I have tried to convey in this small volume.

I am deeply grateful to my sister, Mrs. Fannie Davis Gifford, for helpful criticism of this book while in manuscript; to my wife, for preparing the drawings from Greek vase-paintings which appear as illustrations; and to my friend and colleague, Professor Charles A. Savage, for a kind and careful reading of the proofs. Thanks also are due to Henry Holt and Company for permission to quote material from their edition of Von Falke’s “Greece and Rome.”

W. S. D.

University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis, Minnesota.
May, 1914.

Contents

Chapter I. The Physical Setting of Athens.
1. The Importance of Athens in Greek History
2. Why the Social Life of Athens is so Significant
3. The Small Size and Sterility of Attica
4. The Physical Beauty of Attica
5. The Mountains of Attica
6. The Sunlight in Attica
7. The Topography of the City of Athens
8. 360 B.C.—The Year of the Visit to Athens

Chapter II. The First Sights in Athens.
9. The Morning Crowds bound for Athens
10. The Gate and the Street Scenes
11. The Streets and House Fronts of Athens
12. The Simplicity of Athenian Life

Chapter III. The Agora and its Denizens.
13. The Buildings around the Agora
14. The Life in the Agora
15. The Booths and Shops in the Agora
16. The Flower and the Fish Vendors
17. The Morning Visitors to the Agora
18. The Leisured Class in Athens
19. Familiar Types around the Agora
20. The Barber Shops

Chapter IV. The Athenian House and its Furnishings.
21. Following an Athenian Gentleman Homeward
22. The Type and Uses of a Greek House
23. The Plan of a Greek House
24. Modifications in the Typical Plan
25. Rents and House Values
26. The Simple yet Elegant Furnishings of an Athenian House

Chapter V. The Women of Athens.
27. How Athenian Marriages are Arranged
28. Lack of Sentiment in Marriages
29. Athenian Marriage Rites
30. The Mental Horizon of Athenian Women
31. The Honor paid Womanhood in Athens
32. The Sphere of Action of Athenian Women

Chapter VI. Athenian Costume.
33. The General Nature of Greek Dress
34. The Masculine Chiton, Himation, and Chlamys
35. The Dress of the Women
36. Footwear and Head Coverings
37. The Beauty of the Greek Dress
38. Greek Toilet Frivolities

Chapter VII. The Slaves.
39. Slavery an Integral Part of Greek Life
40. The Slave Trade in Greece
41. The Treatment of Slaves in Athens
42. Cruel and Kind Masters
43. The “City Slaves” of Athens

Chapter VIII. The Children.
44. The Desirability of Children in Athens
45. The Exposure of Infants
46. The Celebration of a Birth
47. Life and Games of Young Children
48. Playing in the Streets
49. The First Stories and Lessons
50. The Training of Athenian Girls

Chapter IX. The Schoolboys of Athens.
51. The Athenians Generally Literate
52. Character Building the Aim of Athenian Education
53. The Schoolboy’s Pedagogue
54. An Athenian School
55. The School Curriculum
56. The Study of the Poets
57. The Greeks do not study Foreign Languages
58. The Study of “Music”
59. The Moral Character of Greek Music
60. The Teaching of Gymnastics
61. The Habits and Ambitions of Schoolboys
62. The “Ephebi”

Chapter X. The Physicians of Athens.
63. The Beginnings of Greek Medical Science
64. Healing Shrines and their Methods
65. An Athenian Physician’s Office
66. The Physician’s Oath
67. The Skill of Greek Physicians
68. Quacks and Charlatans

Chapter XI. The Funerals.
69. An Athenian’s Will
70. The Preliminaries of a Funeral
71. Lamenting the Dead
72. The Funeral Procession
73. The Funeral Pyre
74. Honors to the Memory of the Dead
75. The Beautiful Funeral Monuments

Chapter XII. Trade, Manufactures, and Banking.
76. The Commercial Importance of Athens
77. The Manufacturing Activities of Athens
78. The Commerce of Athens
79. The Adventurous Merchant Skippers
80. Athenian Money-changers and Bankers
81. A Large Banking Establishment
82. Drawbacks to the Banking Business
83. The Pottery of Athens
84. Athenian Pottery an Expression of the Greek Sense of Beauty

Chapter XIII. The Armed Forces of Athens.
85. Military Life at Athens
86. The Organization of the Athenian Army
87. The Hoplites and the Light Troops
88. The Cavalry and the Peltasts
89. The Panoply of the Hoplites
90. The Weapons of a Hoplite
91. Infantry Maneuvers
92. The Preliminaries of a Greek Battle
93. Joining the Battle
94. The Climax and End of the Battle
95. The Burial Truce and the Trophy after the Battle
96. The Siege of Fortified Towns
97. The Introduction of New Tactics

Chapter XIV. The Peiræus and the Shipping.
98. The “Long Walls” down to the Harbor Town
99. Munychia and the Havens of Athens
100. The Glorious View from the Hill of Munychia
101. The Town of Peiræus
102. The Merchant Shipping
103. The Three War Harbors and the Ship Houses
104. The Great Naval Arsenal
105. An Athenian Trierarch
106. The Evolution of the Trireme
107. The Hull of a Trireme
108. The Rowers’ Benches of a Trireme
109. The Cabins, Rigging, and Ram of a Trireme
110. The Officers and Crew of a Trireme
111. A Trireme at Sea
112. The Tactics of a Naval Battle
113. The Naval Strength of Athens

Chapter XV. An Athenian Court Trial.
114. The Frequency of Litigation in Athens
115. Prosecutions in Athens
116. The Preliminaries to a Trial
117. The Athenian Jury Courts
118. The Juryman’s Oath
119. Opening The Trial. The Plaintiff’s Speech
120. The Defendant’s Speech. Demonstrations by the Jury
121. The First Verdict
122. The Second and Final Verdict
123. The Merits and Defects of the Athenian Courts
124. The Usual Punishments in Athens
125. The Heavy Penalty of Exile
126. The Death Penalty of Athens

Chapter XVI. The Ecclesia of Athens.
127. The Rule of Democracy in Athens
128. Aristocracy and Wealth. Their Status and Burdens
129. Athenian Society truly Democratic up to a Certain Point
130. The Voting Population of Athens
131. Meeting Times of the Ecclesia
132. The Pnyx (Assembly Place) at Athens
133. The Preliminaries of the Meeting
134. Debating a Proposition
135. Voting at the Pnyx
136. The Ecclesia as an Educational Instrument

Chapter XVII. The Afternoon at the Gymnasia.
137. The Gymnasia. Places of General Resort
138. The Road to the Academy
139. The Academy
140. The Social Atmosphere and Human Types at the Academy
141. Philosophers and Cultivated Men at the Gymnasia
142. The Beautiful Youths at the Academy
143. The Greek Worship of Manly Beauty
144. The Detestation of Old Age
145. The Greeks unite Moral and Physical Beauty
146. The Usual Gymnastic Sports and their Objects
147. Professional Athletes: the Pancration
148. Leaping Contests
149. Quoit Hurling
150. Casting the Javelin
151. Wrestling
152. Foot Races
153. The Pentathlon: the Honors paid to Great Athletes

Chapter XVIII. Athenian Cookery and the Symposium.
154. Greek Meal Times
155. Society desired at Meals
156. The Staple Articles of Food
157. Greek Vintages
158. Vegetable Dishes
159. Meat and Fish Dishes
160. Inviting Guests to a Dinner Party
161. Preparing for the Dinner: the Sicilian Cook
162. The Coming of the Guests
163. The Dinner Proper
164. Beginning the Symposium
165. The Symposiarch and his Duties
166. Conversation at the Symposium
167. Games and Entertainments
168. Going Home from the Feast: Midnight Revelers

Chapter XIX. Country Life around Athens.
169. The Importance of his Farm to an Athenian
170. The Country by the Ilissus: the Greeks and Natural Beauty
171. Plato’s Description of the Walk by the Ilissus
172. The Athenian Love of Country Life
173. Some Features of the Attic Country
174. An Attic Farmstead
175. Plowing, Reaping, and Threshing
176. Grinding at the Mill
177. The Olive Orchards
178. The Vineyards
179. Cattle, Sheep, and Goats
180. The Gardens and the Shrine

Chapter XX. The Temples and Gods of Athens.
181. Certain Factors in Athenian Religion
182. What constitutes “Piety” in Athens
183. The Average Athenians Idea of the Gods
184. Most Greeks without Belief in Immortality
185. The Multitude of Images of the Gods
186. Greek Superstition
187. Consulting Omens
188. The Great Oracles
189. Greek Sacrifices
190. The Route to the Acropolis
191. The Acropolis of Athens
192. The Use of Color Upon Athenian Architecture and Sculptures
193. The Chief Buildings on the Acropolis
194. The Parthenon
195. A Sacrifice on the Acropolis
196. The Interior of the Parthenon and the Great Image of Athena
197. Greek Prayers

Chapter XXI. The Great Festival of Athens.
198. The Frequent Festivals in Athens
199. The Eleusinia
200. The Holy Procession to Eleusis
201. The Mysteries of Eleusis
202. The Greater Dionysia and the Drama
203. The Theater of Dionysus
204. The Production of a Play
205. The Great Panathenaic Procession
206. The View from the Temple of Wingless Victory

Index

Maps, Plans, and Illustrations.

1. Athenian Acropolis
2. Sketch Map of Attica
3. Sketch Map of Athens
4. Peasant going to Market
5. At the Street Fountain
6. A Wayside Herm
7. A Carpenter
8. Conjectural Plan for the house of a Wealthy Athenian
9. Spinning
10. The Maternal Slipper
11. Athenian Funeral Monument
12. At the Smithy
13. Hoplite in Armor
14. The Town of Peiræus and the Harbors of Athens
15. Fishermen
16. An Athenian Trireme
17. The Race in Armor
18. Itinerant Piper with his Dog
19. Women pounding Meal
20. Gathering the Olive Harvest
21. Rural Sacrifice to a Wooden Statue of Dionysus
22. Sketch Map of the Acropolis of Athens
23. Sacrificing a Pig
24. Athena Parthenos
25. Comic Actors dressed as Ostriches
26. Actor in Costume as a Fury