Stasis (ancient Greece)

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In

Ancient Greek: στάσις in the sense of "faction, discord"; plural: staseis) refers to an episode of civil war within an ancient Greek city-state or polis. It was the result of opposition between groups of citizens, fighting over the constitution of the city or over social and economic problems.[1] Staseis were endemic throughout the ancient Greek world, in mainland Greece as well as in the colonies of Magna Graecia. With 19 episodes of civil strife between 650 and 214 BC, Syracuse, in Sicily, was the city with the most recorded staseis.[2]

Stasis in Ancient Greece

For centuries, stasis was an important factor in Greek history, and not only in Athens: Almost every major polis suffered from violent stasis at least once between the sixth and first centuries BCE, and many more than once (Lintott 1982; Gehrke 1985; Berger 1992). It has been argued that the Greek cities were largely pacified only at the end of the Hellenistic era with the establishment of the Roman Empire (Börm 2019). Historians have long recognized the importance of stasis and have discussed the question of the causes of stasis. The explanations proposed can be subsumed under three models:

The Aristeuein-ideal

According to the

Peisistratos by Herodotus[4] and by Aristotle in the Athenaion Politeia.[5] In addition, success at the Olympic Games, especially in the field of four-horse chariot racing, was a peaceful way to gain prestige.[6]

Stasis in Archaic Athens

Since ancient Athens before

Peisistratos
.

After Solon's retirement from Athenian politics, the struggle for might continued, because the Athenian society wasn't ready for a fixed state order yet.

Callias and Cimon had to struggle for prestige by winning in Olympia or showing off their wealth, not by becoming tyrants, while Miltiades the Elder emigrated from Athens and became head of an apoikia.[10]

References

  1. ^ Berger: Revolution and Society, p. 10.
  2. ^ Berger: Revolution and Society, p. 34. Berger records 72 staseis for all the cities of Magna Graecia.
  3. ^ Iliad 6, 208.
  4. ^ 1,60
  5. ^ 2.1
  6. ^ Herodotus (5, 71 [1]) mentions this when introducing Kylon
  7. ^ Alcaeus writes about 600 BC: "Money is the man", while both Hesiod and Solon mention aristocrats ruthlessly trying to enlarge their wealth during the 7th century BC
  8. ^ Plutarch: Solon, 13, see also Athenaion Politeia: 5,1 [2]
  9. ^ Schlange-Schöningen, p. 32
  10. ^ Herodotus (6,34)

Bibliography

  • Moshe Berent: Stasis, or the Greek invention of Politics. In: History of Political Thought 19, 1998, pp. 331ff.
  • Shlomo Berger: Revolution and Society in Greek Sicily and Southern Italy. Stuttgart 1992.
  • Iain Bruce: The Corcyraean Civil War of 427 B. C. In: Phoenix 25, 1971, pp. 108ff.
  • Henning Börm: Stasis in Post-Classical Greece. The Discourse of Civil Strife in the Hellenistic World. In: Henning Börm, Nino Luraghi (eds.): The Polis in the Hellenistic World. Stuttgart 2018, pp. 53ff. online.
  • Henning Börm: Mordende Mitbürger. Stasis und Bürgerkrieg in griechischen Poleis des Hellenismus (= Historia-Einzelschriften 258). Stuttgart 2019.
  • Hans-Joachim Gehrke: Stasis. Untersuchungen zu den inneren Kriegen in den griechischen Staaten des 5. und 4. Jh. v. Chr. (= Vestigia 35). Munich 1985.
  • Benjamin Gray: Stasis and Stability. Oxford 2015.
  • Mogens Herman Hansen: Stasis as an essential Aspect of the Polis. In: M. H. Hansen, T. H. Nielsen (eds.): An inventory of Archaic and Classical Poleis. Oxford 2004, pp. 124ff.
  • Nick Fisher: Hybris, revenge and stasis in the Greek city-states. In: H. van Wees (ed.): War and Violence in Ancient Greece. London 2000, pp. 83ff.
  • Andrew Lintott: Violence, Civil Strife and Revolution in the Classical City 750–330 BC. London 1982.
  • Dirk Loenen: Stasis. Enige aspecten van de begrippen partij- en klassen strijd in Oud-Griekenland. Amsterdam 1953.
  • Nicole Loraux: The Divided City. New York 2002.
  • Jonathan J. Price: Thucydides and internal war. Cambridge 2001.
  • Eberhard Ruschenbusch: Untersuchungen zu Staat und Politik in Griechenland. Vom 7. - 4. Jh. v. Chr. Bamberg 1978.
  • G. E. M. de Ste. Croix: The Class Struggle in the Ancient Greek World. London 1981.
  • Hans van Wees: "Stasis, Destroyer of Men": Mass, Elite, Political Violence and Security in Archaic Greece. In: C. Brélaz et al. (eds.): Sécurité Collective et Ordre Public dans les Sociétés Anciennes. Geneva 2008, pp. 1–39.
  • Ronald L. Weed: Aristotle on Stasis. A Moral Psychology of Political Conflict. Berlin 2007.
  • Aloys Winterling: Polisbegriff und Stasistheorie des Aeneas Tacticus. Zur Frage der Grenzen der griechischen Polisgesellschaften im 4. Jahrhundert v. Chr. In: Historia 40, 1991, pp. 195ff.
  • Giorgio Agamben: Stasis: Civil War as a Political Paradigm. Homo Sacer II, 2. Stanford, 2015.