Book contents
- Athens, 403 BC
- Reviews
- Classical Scholarship in Translation
- Athens, 403 BC
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Chronology
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Critias and the Oligarchs
- Chapter 2 Thrasybulus and the Democratic Resistance
- Chapter 3 Archinus or the Victory of the ‘Moderates’
- Chapter 4 Socrates and the Voices of Neutrality
- Chapter 5 Lysimache
- Chapter 6 Eutherus and the Precarious Workers
- Chapter 7 Hegeso or the Family Torn Asunder
- Chapter 8 Gerys and the World of the Merchant Agora
- Chapter 9 Nicomachus and the Servants of the City
- Chapter 10 Lysias, a Multifaceted Man
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 1 - Critias and the Oligarchs
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2025
- Athens, 403 BC
- Reviews
- Classical Scholarship in Translation
- Athens, 403 BC
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Chronology
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Critias and the Oligarchs
- Chapter 2 Thrasybulus and the Democratic Resistance
- Chapter 3 Archinus or the Victory of the ‘Moderates’
- Chapter 4 Socrates and the Voices of Neutrality
- Chapter 5 Lysimache
- Chapter 6 Eutherus and the Precarious Workers
- Chapter 7 Hegeso or the Family Torn Asunder
- Chapter 8 Gerys and the World of the Merchant Agora
- Chapter 9 Nicomachus and the Servants of the City
- Chapter 10 Lysias, a Multifaceted Man
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
‘Critias was indeed the most rapacious, the most violent and the most murderous of all those who were part of the oligarchy.’ In the ancient tradition, Critias is a man systematically described in superlatives. The ancient sources readily depict him as an extremist oligarch, a misguided disciple of Socrates, oblivious to the lessons of his former master. Incomparable Critias? This superlative representation deserves to be deconstructed. Not in order to rehabilitate his tarnished memory but because the man is a convenient bogeyman who acts as the singular representative of what was in reality a collective adventure. Not only does his role as leader of the Thirty remain to be proven, but this exclusive focus also tends to obscure the vast chorus that surrounded him: Far from being a lone wolf, Critias was the spokesman or, rather, the coryphaeus of Athenian oligarchs united by common habits and experiences. A poet and a virtuoso musician, Critias even promoted a true choral policy, striving to convince all the Athenians remaining in the city to align to his radical positions. Breaking with the democratic experiment and its multiple and competing choruses, the oligarch sought to create a single, distinctive and hermetic chorus, of which all the members had to dance in unison and where the slightest deviation was mercilessly punished. Better still, in the tumult of the civil war, Critias had a dream: to establish a permanent state of exception in order to forge a new brand of men entirely devoted to the cause of the oligarchy.
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- Athens, 403 BCA Democracy in Crisis?, pp. 31 - 70Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025