Solon
Solon (638 BC - 558 BC) was a famous Athenian law maker.
He was the son of Execestides. He first worked as a foreign trader, his poetical abilities had him lauded as one of the Seven Sages of Greece.
In the mid 590s BC he worked to promote renewed conflict against Cirrha over Salamis. In 594 BC he was made archon of Attica, in order to subdue the civil disorder that was rampant there. He introduced a set of ordinances, seisachtheia, that did much to improve conditions. His ordinances were such a success that he was given the task of rewriting the constitution, creating what was later called the Solonian Constitution.
He repealed most of the laws of Draco; introduced a timokratia, a oligarchy with a sliding scale of rights determined by property, dividing the population into four classes:
- Pentakosiomedimnoi,
- Hippeis,
- Zeugitai and
- Thetes;
He introduced the trial by jury; military obligations were codified based on class; the Council of the Four Hundred (or Boule) and the Areopagus were established as the main consultative and administrative bodies; introduced many new laws, especially those covering debt and taxation; remodelled the calendar; and regulated weights and measures. His laws were written onto special wooden cylinders and placed in the Acropolis.
Solon wrote the laws as a compromise between oligarchy and democracy, tailored to what the people would accept.
After having his constitution accepted he left Athens for over ten years, travelling to Egypt, Cyprus and Lydia. According to the historian Herodotus of Halicarnassus, in Lydia he offended Croesus when he was asked "Who is the happiest man you have ever seen?", instead of complementing the king he said "I can speak of no one as happy until they are dead". It was recalling this story which, again according to Herodotus, saved Croesus from execution when his kingdom was overcome by Cyrus's invading Persians.
Solon returned to Athens in the 550s BC during the reign of the tyrant Pisistratus. The tyrant retained some of the constitution and showed Solon considerable respect. Solon died soon afterwards.
Two places in the United States bear the name of Solon, probably in honor of the above figure:
Referenced By
558 BC | 630 BC | 630s BC | 631 BC | 632 BC | 633 BC | 634 BC | 636 BC | 637 BC | 638 BC | 639 BC | Aesop | Aesophic | Aesopus | Aias the great | Aisopos | Ajax of Cyprus | Ajax the Greater | Ajax the great | Alcemaeonidae | Alcmaeonidae | Alkmaeonidai | Amer-European | Anacharsis | Ancient Athens | Archon of Athens | Archons of Athens | Areios Pagos | Areopagus | Areopagus council | Athenian Democracy | Athenian archon | Atlantis | Aîas the great | Bordello | Boule | Brothel | Cleisthenes | Club | Council of the Four Hundred | Croesus | Croesus of Lydia | Didymus Chalcenterus | Draco | Ecclesia | Ekklesia | Eponym | Eponymous | Euboea | Euboia | Famous gay lesbian and bisexual people | Famous gay lesbian or bisexual people | Greek chronology | Gymnasium (Ancient Greece) | History of Ancient Greece timeline | History of Athens | Home Study Lesson | Home Study Lessons | Hooker | Judge | Judges | List of Greeks | List of ancient Greeks | List of famous Greeks | List of famous gay, lesbian, and bisexual people | List of famous gay, lesbian, or bisexual people | List of famous gay, lesbian or bisexual people | List of famous gay lesbian and bisexual people | List of funny gay, lesbian or bisexual people | List of jurists | Moses Mendelssohn | Negropont | Olive | Olive-tree | Olives | Peisistratos | Peisistratus | Peistratus | Peisístratos | Pesistratus | Pimping | Pisistratus | Prostitute | Prostitution | Religious prostitution | Rent boy | Rosicrucian Home Study Lesson | Rosicrucian Home Study Lessons | Rosicrucian Monograph | Rosicrucian Monographs | Sacred prostitution | Salamis Island | Seven Sages of Athens | Seven Sages of Greece | Solonian Constitution | The West | Theognis of Megara | Timeline of Ancient Greece | Timeline of Ancient Greek history | Twelve Tables ...
|