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Search results for epsilon,842 in Adler number:
Headword:
*(ellhnotami/ai
Adler number: epsilon,842
Translated headword: Hellenotamiai, Treasurers of Greece
Vetting Status: high
Translation: The Athenians took over the leadership [among the Greeks], and the allies were willing to let them because of their hatred for
Pausanias [1]. The Athenians decided which of the cities would provide money against the Barbarian and which would provide ships: pretext for this was what they had suffered while ravaging the territory of the King. And the highest office established by the Athenians was that of the Treasurers of Greece.[2]
Greek Original:*(ellhnotami/ai: paralabo/ntes ga\r oi( *)aqhnai=oi th\n h(gemoni/an e(ko/ntwn tw=n cumma/xwn dia\ to\ *pausani/ou mi=sos, e)/tacan a(/s te e)/dei pare/xein tw=n po/lewn xrh/mata pro\s to\n ba/rbaron kai\ a(\s nau=s: pro/sxhma ga\r h)=n w(=n e)/paqon dh|ou=ntes th\n basile/ws xw/ran. kai\ *(ellhnotami/ai kate/sth toi=s *)aqhnai/ois prw/th a)rxh/.
Notes:
See also
epsilon 841,
epsilon 843.
[1] King-regent of
Sparta (
pi 820).
[2] The wording of this entry follows
Thucydides 1.96.1-2 almost verbatim but diverges from it in this last sentence and so distorts the emphasis. In
Thucydides the point is that at, or from, the first (the Greek adverb
prw=ton, not, as here, its cognate adjective) these officials were domestic Athenian ones.
References:
A.G. Woodhead, "The institution of the Hellenotamiae", Journal of Hellenic Studies 79 (1959) pp.149ff.
R. Meiggs, The Athenian Empire (Oxford 1972) 44 and index s.v.
W.K. Pritchett, "The Hellenotamiai and Athenian finance", Historia 26 (1977) pp.295ff.
S. Hornblower, A Commentary on Thucydides vol.1 (Oxford 1991) 145
Keywords: biography; constitution; definition; economics; ethics; geography; historiography; history
Translated by: William Hutton on 26 March 2000@00:21:12.
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