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Solon

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This bust, titled 'Solon' (National Museum, Naples) is technically more sophisticated than anything produced in Solon's own time. Most of the ancient literary sources, from which history derives its knowledge of Solon, were similarly constructed long after the event.

Solon (Greek: Σολων, c. 638 BC558 BC) was a famous Athenian statesman, lawmaker, and Lyric poet. The travel writer, Pausanias (geographer), listed Solon among the Seven Sages of the ancient world [1]. Solon has acquired a place in history and in folklore through his efforts to legislate against political, economic and moral decline in archaic Athens. His reforms failed in the short term yet he is often credited with having laid the foundations for Athenian democracy [2] [3].


Solon the reformer

Solon was a voice for political moderation in Athens at a time when his fellow citizens were increasingly polarized by social and economic differences.

Some wicked men are rich, some good are poor;
We will not change our virtue for their store:
Virtue's a thing that none can take away,
But money changes owners all the day.[4]

Here translated by the English poet John Dryden, Solon's words define a 'moral high ground' where differences between rich and poor can be reconciled or maybe just ignored. Words such as these persuaded both the haves and the have-nots that Solon might be the right man to lead Athens out of its political troubles.

Other Greek city-states had seen the emergence of tyrannoi (loosely translated into English as 'tyrants'}, opportunistic noblemen who had grabbed power on behalf of sectional interests. There was, for instance, Cleisthenes of Sicyon who had usurped power on behalf of an Ionian minority, and there was Theagenes in Megara who had relieved the poor from the burdens of an oligarchy. Many Athenians hoped or feared a similar champion might arise in their country. In fact, the son-in-law of Cleisthenes, an Athenian named Cylon, had already attempted a coup around 632BC.

Cylon had staged his coup with the help of forces sent by his Megarian father-in-law, yet it had received limited support among Athenians themselves and in consequence it had been quickly and bloodily crushed [5]. Athenians and Megarians were neighbours and rivals in the Saronic Gulf. Solon's popularity was in part due to his resounding advocacy of war against Megara in a dispute over possession of the island of Salamis.

Let us go to Salamis to fight for the island
We desire, and drive away our bitter shame! [6]

Solon had backed up this poetic bravado with true valour on the battlefield [7] and Athens had subsequently gained both an island and a hero. If Athens ever had need of a 'tyrant' to fix things inside its own borders, who better than this?!

Solon was elected eponymous archon in 594/3BC and, according to ancient sources [8] [9], it was at this time that he was entrusted with dictatorial powers to reform the country as he alone saw fit. Some modern scholars [10] believe these dictatorial powers were in fact granted some years after Solon had been archon. Such special powers had the potential to corrupt anyone who held them. Solon believed they would have been too much for anyone else:

He would not have forborne nor let alone
But made the fattest milk his own.

The same sense of moral superiority, evident here in Dryden's translation, enabled Solon to take on both factions when necessary:

Before them both I held my shield of might
And let not either touch the other's right.

Each faction evidently thought it had right entirely on its side and it was therefore surprised to find Solon in opposition to it.

Formerly they boasted of me vainly; with averted eyes
Now they look askance upon me; friends no more but enemies.

After legislating a wide variety of reforms, Solon surrendered his extraordinary authority and left the country. According to Herodotus [11], the country was bound by Solon to maintain his reforms for 10 years, whereas according to Plutarch [12] and the author of Athenaion Politeia [13] (reputedly Aristotle) the contracted period was instead 100 years. A modern scholar [14] considers the time-span given by Herodotus to be historically accurate because it fits the 10 years that Plutarch [15] assigns to Solon's absence from the country. Evidence from ancient sources always requires careful sifting. Sometimes it is quicker just to consult our knowledge of human nature : would a wise man seek to impose a 100 year moratorium on reform?

Within 4 years of Solon's departure, the old social rifts re-appeared, but now with some new complications. There were irregularities in the new governmental procedures, elected officials sometimes refused to stand down from their posts and sometimes important posts were left vacant. Some people now blamed Solon for their troubles [16]. Solon later accused Athenians of stupidity and cowardice for allowing one of his own relatives to exploit the situation. This same relative, Peisistratos, eventually succeeded in making himself the tyrant of Athens [17].

Solon had failed to save Athens from its internal divisions. Never the less, he laid the foundations for democracy and he prefigured one of the greatest Athenians of the democratic age: famous for wisdom, indomitable in the face of all opposition, the conscience of a nation, a voice in the wilderness, Solon was in many ways the Socrates of his time.

Background to Solon's reforms

The social and political upheavals that characterised Athens in Solon's time have been variously interpreted by historians from ancient times to the present day. The historical account of Solon's Athens is not something carved in marble; it evolves and it has even acquired a history of its own.

Two contemporary historians [18] [19] have both identified three distinct historical accounts of Solonion Athens. In the oldest account, common among the ancients themselves, the upheavals were understood to comprise an economic and ideological struggle, featuring the politics of greed on one side and the politics of despair on the other. This sort of account emerges from Solon's poems, in which he castes himself in the role of a noble mediator between two intemperate and unruly factions. This same account is substantially taken up about three centuries later by the author of Athenaion Politeia [20] but with an interesting variation:

"...there was conflict between the nobles and the common people for an extended period. For the constitution they were under was oligarchic in every respect and especially in that the poor, along with their wives and children, were in slavery to the rich...All the land was in the hands of a few. And if men did not pay their rents, they themselves and their children were liable to be seized as slaves. The security for all loans was the debtor's person up to the time of Solon. He was the first champion of the people."

Here Solon is presented as a partisan in a democratic cause whereas, judged from the viewpoint of his own poems, he was instead a conservative aristocrat interested above all in preserving the old patriarchal order. A still more significant variation in the ancient historical account appears in the writing of Plutarch [21] about another 300 years later:

'Athens was torn by recurrent conflict about the constitution. The city was divided into as many parties as there were geographical divisions in its territory. For the party of the people of the hills was most in favour of democracy, that of the people of the plain was most in favour of oligarchy, while the third group, the people of the coast, which preferred a mixed form of constitution somewhat between the other two, formed an obstruction and prevented the other groups from gaining control.'

The ancient historical account here demonstrates a more sophisticated understanding of political process - what were two sides in Solon's account have now become three parties, each with a regional base and a constitutional platform. Plutarch then goes on to repeat the usual ancient account with its brutal landlords on one side and wretched tenants on the other. But how does this melodramatic struggle between haves and have-nots fit into a picture of three regional groupings? In fact it was not for almost another two millenia that historians began to realize a whole new account of archaic Athens was needed to explain this regional context.

'The new picture which emerged was one of strife between regional groups, united by local loyalties and led by wealthy landowners. Their goal was control of the central government at Athens and with it dominance over their rivals from other districts of Attika.'[22]
File:Attica map.jpg
Athens controlled an unusually large territory by Greek standards. (Click to enlarge the picture)

Regional factionalism was inevitable in a relatively large territory such as Athens possessed. In most Greek city states, a farmer could conveniently reside in town and travel to and from his fields every day. According to Thucydides [23], on the other hand, most Athenians continued to live in rural settlements right up until the Peloponnesian War. The effects of regionalism in a large territory could be seen in Laconia, where Sparta had gained control through intimidation and resettlement of some of its neighbours and enslavement of the rest. Attika in Solon's time seemed to be moving towards a similarly ugly solution.

More recently, however, the 'regional' interpretation has been challenged by those who believe that bonds of kinship rather than local loyalties were the decisive influence on events in archaic Athens. An Athenian belonged not only to a tribe and one of its subdivisions, the phratry or brotherhood, but also to an extended family, clan or genos. It has been argued [24] [25] that these interconnecting units of kinship reinforced a hierarchic structure with aristocratic clans at the top. Thus rivalries between aristocratic clans could engage all levels of society irrespective of any regional ties. In that case, the struggle between haves and have-nots would have been the struggle between powerful aristocrats and the weaker affiliates of their rivals. Equally, an aristocrat might bully his own affiliates in much the same way that Scottish chieftains turned on their clansmen during the Highland clearances.

The historical account of Solon's Athens has evolved over many centuries into a set of contradictory stories or a complex story that might be interpreted in a variety of ways. As further evidence accumulates, and as historians continue to debate the issues, Solon's motivations and the intentions behind his reforms will continue to attract speculation.

Solon's reforms

Solon's laws were inscribed on wooden slabs attached to a series of axles that stood upright in the Prytaneum [26] [27]. These axones appear to have operated on the same principle as a Lazy Susan, allowing both convenient storage and ease of access. Originally the axones recorded laws enacted by Draco (lawgiver) in the late 7th Century (traditionally 621BC). Nothing of Draco's codification has survived except for a law relating to homicide, yet there is consensus among scholars that it did not amount to anything like a constitution [28] [29]. Solon repealed all Draco's laws except those relating to homicide [30]. Fragments of the axones were still visible in Plutarch's time [31] but today the only records we have of Solon's laws are fragmentary quotes and comments in literary sources such as those written by Plutarch himself. Modern scholars doubt the reliability of some of these sources and our knowledge of Solon's legislation is therefore actually very limited in its details.

Generally, Solon's reforms appear to have been constitutional, economic and moral in their scope. This distinction, though somewhat artificial, does at least provide a convenient framework within which to consider the laws that have been attributed to Solon.

Constitutional reform

Previous to Solon's reforms, the Athenian state was administered by nine archons appointed or elected annually by the Areopagus on the basis of noble birth and wealth [32] [33]. The Areopagus comprised former archons and it therefore had, in addition to the power of appointment, extraordinary influence as a consultative body. The nine archons took the oath of office while ceremonially standing on a stone in the agora, declaring their readiness to dedicate a golden statue if they should ever be found to have violated the laws [34] [35]. There was an assembly of Athenian citizens (the Ekklesia) but the lowest class (the Thetes) were not admitted and its deliberative procedures were controlled by the nobles [36]. There therefore seemed to be no means by which an archon could be called to account for breach of oath unless the Areopagus favoured his prosecution.

According to Aristotle, Solon legislated for all citizens to be admitted into the Ekklesia [37] and for a court (the Heliaia) to be formed from all the citizens [38]. The Heliaia appears to have been the Ekklesia, or some representative portion of it, sitting as a jury [39]. By giving common people the power not only to elect officials but also to call them to account, Solon appears to have established the foundations of a true democracy. However some scholars have doubted whether Solon actually included the Thetes in the Ekklesia, this being considered too bold a move for any aristocrat in the archaic period [40]. Ancient sources [41] [42] credit Solon with the creation of a Council of Four Hundred, drawn from the four Athenian tribes to serve as a steering committee for the enlarged Ekklesia. However, many modern scholars have doubted this also [43].

There is consensus among scholars that Solon broadened the financial and social qualifications required for election to public office. The Solonian constitution divided citizens into four political classes defined according to assessable property [44] [45], a classification that might previously have served the state for military or taxation purposes only [46]. The standard unit for this assessment was one medimnos (approximately 12 gallons) of corn.

The Areopagus, as viewed from the Acropolis, is a monolith where Athenian aristocrats decided important matters of state during Solon's time.
  • Pentacosiomedimni
    • valued at 500 medimnoi of corn annually.
    • eligible to serve as Strategoi (Generals)
  • Hippeis
    • valued at 300 medimnoi production annually.
    • approximating to the mediaeval class of knights, they had enough wealth to equip themselves for the Cavalry
  • Zeugitae
    • valued at a 200 medimnoi production annually.
    • approximating to the mediaeval class of Yeoman, they had enough wealth to equip themselves for the infantry (Hoplite)
  • Thetes
    • valued at less than 200 medimnoi annually
    • manual workers or sharecroppers, they served voluntarily in the role of batman (army), or as auxiliaries armed for instance with the sling (weapon) or as rowers in the Navy.

Only the Pentacosiomedimnoi were eligible for election to high office as archons and therefore only they gained admission into the Areopagus. The top three classes were eligible for a variety of lesser posts and only the Thetes were excluded from all public office [47].

Depending on how we interpret the historical facts known to us, Solon's constitutional reforms were either a radical anticipation of democratic government, or they merely provided a plutocratic flavour to a stubbornly aristocratic regime, or else the truth lies somewhere between these two extremes.

Economic reform

Solon's economic reforms need to be understood in the context of the primitive, subsistance economy that prevailed both before and after his time. Most Athenians were still living in rural settlements right up to the Peloponnesian War [48]. Opportunities for trade even within the Athenian borders were limited. The typical farming family, even in classical times, barely produced enough to satisfy its own needs [49]. Opportunities for international trade were minimal. It has been estimated that, even in Roman times, goods rose 40% in value for every 100 miles they were carried over land, but only 1.3% for the same distance they were carried by ship [50], and yet there is no evidence that Athens possessed any merchant ships until around 525BC [51]. Until then, the narrow warship doubled as a cargo vessel. Athens, like other Greek city states in the 7th Century BC, was faced with increasing population pressures [52] and by about 525 BC it was able to feed itself only in 'good years' [53].

Solon's reforms can thus be seen to have taken place at a crucial period of economic transition, when a subsistence rural economy increasingly required the support of a nascent commercial sector. The specific economic reforms credited to Solon are these:

This is one of the earliest known coins. It was minted in the early 6th century BC in Lydia, one of the world's then 'superpowers'. Coins such as this might have made their way to Athens in Solon's time but it is unlikely that Athens had its own coinage at this period
    • Fathers were encouraged to find trades for their sons; if they did not, there would be no legal requirement for sons to maintain their fathers in old age [54].
    • Foreign tradesmen were encouraged to settle in Athens; those who did would be granted citizenship, provided they brought their families with them [55].
    • Cultivation of olives was encouraged; the export of all other produce was prohibited [56].
    • Competitiveness of Athenian commerce was promoted; weights and measures were revised according to successful standards already in use in Corinth and Euboia [57].

It is generally assumed, on the authority of ancient commentators [58] [59], that Solon also reformed the Athenian coinage. However, recent numismatic studies now lead to the conclusion that Athens probably had no coinage until around 560 BC, about 30 years after Solon was elected archon [60].

Solon's economic reforms succeeded in stimulating foreign trade. Athenian black-figure pottery was exported in increasing quantities and good quality throughout the Aegean between 600 BC and 560 BC, a success story that coincided with a decline in trade in Corinthian pottery [61]. The ban on the export of grain might be understood as a relief measure for the benefit of the poor. However, the encouragement of olive production for export could actually have led to increased hardship for many Athenians since it would have led to a reduction in the amount of land dedicated to grain. Moreover an olive produces no fruit for the first six years [62]. The real motives behind Solon's economic reforms are therefore as questionable as his real motives for constitutional reform. Were the poor being forced to serve the needs of a changing economy, or was the economy being reformed to serve the needs of the poor?

Moral reform

In his poems, Solon portrays Athens as being under threat from the unrestrained greed and arrogance of its citizens [63]. Even the earth (Gaia), the mighty mother of the gods, had been enslaved [64]. The visible symbol of this perversion of the natural and social order was a boundary marker called a horos, a wooden or stone pillar indicating that a farmer was in debt or under contractual obligation to someone else, either a noble patron or a creditor [65]. Up until Solon's time, land was the inalienable property of a family or clan [66] and it could not be sold or mortgaged. This was no disadvantage to a clan with large landholdings since it could always rent out farms in a sharecropping system. A family struggling on a small farm however could not use the farm as security for a loan even if it owned the farm. Instead the farmer would have to offer himself and his family as security, providing some form of slave labour in lieu of repayment. Equally, a family might voluntarily pledge part of its farm income or labour to a powerful clan in return for its protection. Farmers subject to these sorts of arrangements were loosely known as hektemoroi [67], indicating that they either paid or kept a sixth of a farm's annual yield [68]. In the event of 'bankruptcy', or failure to honour the contract stipulated by the horoi, farmers and their families could in fact be sold into slavery.

The injustices arising from the archaic and increasingly inefficient system of land tenure were associated with various forms of immoral extravagance and criminal indifference. Solon's legislation was an attempt to correct a wide range of abuses. The reforms included:

This 6th Century Athenian black-figure urn depicts the olive harvest British Museum. Many farmers, enslaved for debt, would have worked on large estates for their creditors.
    • annulment of all contracts symbolised by the horoi [69].
    • prohibition on a debtor's person being used as security for a loan [70] [71].
    • release of all Athenians who had been enslaved [72].
    • entitlement of any citizen to take legal action on behalf of another [73] [74]
    • punishment of political apathy: disenfranchisement of any citizen who might refuse to take up arms in times of civil strife [75] [76] [77].
    • abolition of extravagant dowries [78]

Later known and celebrated among Athenians as the seisactheia (shaking off of burdens)[79] [80], the removal of the horoi provided immediate economic relief for the most oppressed group in Attica, and it also brought an immediate end to the enslavement of Athenians by their countrymen. Some Athenians had already been sold into slavery abroad and some had fled abroad to escape enslavement - Solon proudly records in verse the return of this diaspora [81]. It has been cynically observed, however, that few of these unfortunates were likely to have been recovered [82]. It has been observed also that the seisachtheia not only removed slavery and accumulated debt, it also removed the ordinary farmer's only means of obtaining further credit [83].


The personal modesty and frugality of the rich and powerful men of Athens in the city's subsequent golden age have been attested to by Demosthenes[84]. Perhaps Solon, by both personal example and legislated reform, established a precedent for this decorum. An heroic sense of civic duty later united Athenians against the might of the Persians. Perhaps this public spirit was instilled in them by Solon and his reforms. His legacy is incalculable even if his motives are debatable.

Solon the poet

Solon was the first of the Athenian poets whose work has survived to the present day. His verses have come down to us in fragmentary quotations by ancient authors such as Plutarch and Demosthenes [85] who used them to illustrate their own arguments. Their literary merit is not great though Plutarch [86] professes admiration of Solon's elegy urging Athenians to capture Salamis. The same poem was said by Diogenes Laertios [87] to have stirred Athenians more than any other verses that Solon wrote. Solon the poet can be said to appear 'self-righteous' and 'pompous' at times [88] yet generally those were times when he was writing in the role of a political activist determined to assert personal authority and leadership. According to Plutarch [89], however, Solon originally wrote poetry for amusement, discussing pleasure in a popular rather than philosophical way. Solon's elegiac style is said to have been influenced by the example of Tyrtaeus [90].

Solon's works are preserved only in fragments.

  • Martin Litchfield West, Iambi et elegi Graeci ante Alexandrum cantati2 : Callinus. Mimnermus. Semonides. Solon. Tyrtaeus. Minora adespota,, Oxonii: e typographeo Clarendoniano 1972, revised edition 1992 x + 246 pp.
  • T. Hudaon-Williams, Early Greek Elegy: Ekegiac Fragments of Callinus, Archilochus, Mimmermus, Tyrtaeus, Solon, Xenophanes, and Others, # Taylor and Francis (1926), ISBN 0824077733.
  • Christoph Mülke, Solons politische Elegien und Iamben : (Fr. 1 - 13, 32 - 37 West), Munich (2002), ISBN 3598777264.
  • Eberhard Ruschenbusch Nomoi : Die Fragmente d. Solon. Gesetzeswerkes, Wiesbaden : F. Steiner (1966).
  • H. Miltner Fragmente / Solon, Vienna (1955)
  • Eberhard Preime, Dichtungen : Sämtliche Fragmente / Solon Munich (1940).

Solon the man - folklore and fiction

Details about Solon's personal life have been passed down to us by ancient authors such as Plutarch and Herodotus. Herodotus is sometimes referred to both as 'the father of history' and 'the father of lies' [91]. Plutarch, by his own admission, did not write histories so much as biographies - like any good writer, he believed that a jest or a phrase could reveal more about a person's character than could a battle that cost thousands of lives [92]. A battle of course is a matter of historical record; a jest or a phrase is not. Details drawn from sources such as these need to be taken 'with a pinch of salt'.


According to Plutarch, Solon's father Execestides could trace his ancestry back to Codrus, the last King of Athens. Solon developed a homosexual relationship with Peisistratos, to whom he also happened to be related by family (their mothers were cousins). Solon's family belonged to a noble or Eupatrid clan yet it possessed only moderate wealth.[93] and Solon was therefore drawn into an unaristocratic pursuit of commerce. [94].


Solon was given leadership of the Athenian war against Megara on the strength of a poem he wrote about Salamis Island. Supported by Peisistratos, he defeated the Megarians either by means of a cunning trick [95] or more directly through heroic battle [96]. The Megarians however refused to give up their claim to the island. The dispute was referred to the Spartans, who eventually awarded possession of the island to Athens on the strength of the case that Solon put to them [97].


Solon's friendship with the future tyrant Peisistratos was not a unique example of his questionable taste in friends. When he was archon, he discussed his intended reforms with some friends. Knowing that Solon was about to cancel all debts, these friends took out loans and promptly bought some land, for which they earned themselves the title 'The Swindlers'. Solon repayed the loans out of his own capital, amounting to some 10 talents[98].


After he had finished reforming the country, Solon travelled abroad. His first stop was Egypt. There he visited Heliopolis, where he discussed philosophy with an Egyptian expert on the subject, Psenophis. Subsequently, at Sais, he visited Neith's temple and received from the priests there an account of the history of Atlantis. Solon wrote out this history as a poem, to which Plato subsequently made references in his dialogues Timaios and Critias.[99]. Next Solon sailed to Cyprus, where he oversaw the construction of a new capital for a local king, in gratitude for which the king named it Soloi[100].


Croesus awaits fiery execution (Attic red-figure amphora, 500490 BC, Louvre G 197)

Solon's travels finally brought him to Sardis, capital of Lydia. His meeting there with King Croesus is the stuff of legend and it is attested to by both Herodotus and Plutarch. Solon gave the Lydian king some very wise advice, which however Croesos failed to appreciate until it was too late. Croesos had considered himself to be the happiest man alive and Solon had advised him along the lines "Don't count all your chickens till the eggs hatch!" It was not till after his kingdom had been taken from him by Cyrus, the Persian, while he lugubriously waited to be incinerated on a pyre, that Croesos acknowledged the wisdom of Solon's advice[101] [102].


After his return to Athens, Solon became a staunch opponent of his erstwhile lover, Peisistratos. In protest and as an example to others, Solon stood outside his own home in full armour, urging all who passed to resist the macchinations of the would-be tyrant. But his efforts were all in vain! Solon died shortly after Peisistratos usurped by force the dictatorial power that Athens had once freely bestowed upon himself.[103]


The orator Aeschines attributed to Solon (and to Athenian lawgivers in general) a set of laws that were intended to safeguard the institution of pederasty [104].

Citations

  1. ^ Pausanias 10.24.1 (e.g. Jones and Omerod trans. [1])
  2. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-500BC: A Sourcebook, Routledge, London (1990), page 76
  3. ^ Aristotle Politics 1273b 35-1274a 21
  4. ^ Plutarch Solon 1[2]
  5. ^ Thucydides 1.126 (e.g. Crawley's translation[3])
  6. ^ Solon quoted in Diogenes Laertios 1.47
  7. ^ Plutarch Solon 14.3[4]
  8. ^ Plutarch Solon 14.3[5]
  9. ^ Athenaion Politeia 5.2 (e.g. Kenyan's translation [6]
  10. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-500BC: A Sourcebook, Routledge, London (1990), page 36
  11. ^ :6. Herodotus 1.29 (e.g. Campbell's translation [7])
  12. ^ Plutarch Solon 25.1 [8]
  13. ^ Athenaion Politeia 7.2 [9]
  14. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-55BC; a Sourcebook Routledge, London (1991) page 84
  15. ^ Plutarch Solon 25.6 [10]
  16. ^ Athenaion Politeia 13 [11]
  17. ^ Plutarch Solon 30 [12]
  18. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-500BC: A Sourcebook, Routledge, London (1991), pages 3-4
  19. ^ Walters K.R. Geography and Kinship as Political Infrastructures in Archaic Athens [13]
  20. ^ Athenaion Politeia 2.1 - 2.3 [14]
  21. ^ Plutarch Solon 13 [15]
  22. ^ Walters K.R. Geography and Kinship as Political Infrastructures in Archaic Athens [16]
  23. ^ Thucydides 2.14 - 2.16
  24. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-500BC: A Sourcebook, Routledge, London (1991), pages 3-4
  25. ^ Walters K.R. Geography and Kinship as Political Infrastructures in Archaic Athens [17]
  26. ^ Oxford Classical Dictionary (1964), 'axones'
  27. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-500BC: A Sourcebook, Routledge, London (1991), page 52
  28. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-500BC: A Sourcebook, Routledge, London (1990), page 26
  29. ^ Oxford Classical Dictionary (1964), 'Draco'
  30. ^ Plutarch Solon 17 [18]
  31. ^ Plutarch Solon 25.1 [19]
  32. ^ Athenaion Politeia 3.6 [20]
  33. ^ Athenaion Politeia 8.2 [21]
  34. ^ Athenaion Politeia 7.1, 55.5 [22]
  35. ^ Plutarch Solon 25.3 [23]
  36. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-500BC: A Sourcebook, Routledge, London (1991), page 35, note 2
  37. ^ Athenaion Politeia 7.3 [24]
  38. ^ Aristotle Politics 1274a 3, 1274a 15
  39. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-500BC: A Sourcebook, Routledge, London (1990), page 67 note 2
  40. ^ Hignett C. A History of the Athenian Constitution to the End of the Fifth Century B.C. (Oxford 1952) pages117-118
  41. ^ Athenaion Politeia 8.4 [25]
  42. ^ Plutarch Solon 19 [26]
  43. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-500BC: A Sourcebook, Routledge, London (1990), page 72 note 14
  44. ^ Athenaion Politeia 7.3 [27]
  45. ^ Plutarch Solon 18 [28]
  46. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-500BC: A Sourcebook, Routledge, London (1990), page 71 note 6
  47. ^ Athenaion Politeia 7-8 [29]
  48. ^ Thucydides 2.14 - 2.16
  49. ^ Gallant T. Risk and Survival in Ancient Greece (Stanford, 1991), cited by Morris I. in The Growth of City States in the First Millenium BC (Stanford, 2005) page 7 [30]
  50. ^ Laurence R. Land Transport in Rural Italy (Parkins and Smith, 1998), cited by Morris I. in The Growth of City States in the First Millenium BC (Stanford, 2005) [31]
  51. ^ Morris I. The Growth of City States in the First Millenium BC (Stanford, 2005) page 12 [32]
  52. ^ Snodgrass A. Archaic Greece (London, 1980) cited by Morris I. in The Growth of City States in the First Millenium BC (Stanford, 2005) page 11 [33]
  53. ^ Garnsey P. Famine and Food Supply in Graeco-Roman World (Cambridge, 1988) page 104, cited by by Morris I. in The Growth of City States in the First Millenium BC (Stanford, 2005) [34]
  54. ^ Plutarch Solon 22.1 [35]
  55. ^ Plutarch Solon 24.4[36]
  56. ^ :31. Plutarch Solon 24.1 [37]
  57. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-500BC: A Sourcebook, Routledge, London (1990), page 60-63
  58. ^ Athenaion Politeia 10 [38]
  59. ^ Plutarch (quoting Androtion) Solon 15.2-5 [39]
  60. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-500BC: A Sourcebook, Routledge, London (1990), page 61 note 4
  61. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-500BC: A Sourcebook, Routledge, London (1990), page 76
  62. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-500BC: A Sourcebook, Routledge, London (1991), page 65 note 1
  63. ^ Demosthenes 19 (On the Embassy) 254-5
  64. ^ Athenaion Politeia 12.4 (quoting Solon) [40]
  65. ^ Stanton G.R. Athenian Politics c800-500BC: A Sourcebook, Routledge, London (1991), pages 55-6 notes 3 and 4
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  69. ^ Athenaion Politeia 12.4, quoting Solon [41]
  70. ^ Athenaion Politeia 6 [42]
  71. ^ Plutarch Solon 15.2 [43]
  72. ^ Athenaion Politeia 12.4, quoting Solon [44]
  73. ^ Athenaion Politeia 9 [45]
  74. ^ Plutarch Solon 18.6 [46]
  75. ^ Athenaion Politeia 8.5 [47]
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  78. ^ Plutarch Solon 20.6 [49]
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  80. ^ Plutarch Solon 15.2 [51]
  81. ^ Solon quoted in Athenaion Politeia 12.4 [52]
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  85. ^ Demosthenes 19 (On the Embassy) 254-5
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  87. ^ Diogenes Laertios 1.47
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  96. ^ Plutarch Solon 9[59]
  97. ^ Plutarch Solon 9 [60]
  98. ^ Plutarch Solon[61]
  99. ^ Plutarch Solon[http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Lives/Solon
  100. ^ Plutarch Solon[62]
  101. ^ Herodotus The Histories 1.30
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  103. ^ Solon by Plutarch
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See also