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DRACO (7th century B.C.) , Athenian statesman, was See also: Archon Eponymus (but see J
.
E
.
Sandys, Constitution of Athens, p
.
12, note) in 621 B.C
.
His name has become proverbial as an in-exorable lawgiver
.
Up to his See also: time the See also: laws of Athens were unwritten, and were administered arbitrarily by the Eupatridae
.
As at See also: Rome by the twelve Tables, so at Athens it was found necessary to allay the discontent of the See also: people by See also: publishing these unwritten laws in a codified See also: form, and Draco, himself a Eupatrid, carried this out
.
According to Plutarch (See also: Life of See also: Solon) : " For nearly all crimes there was the same See also: penalty of See also: death
.
The See also: man who was convicted of idleness, or who stole a See also: cabbage or an See also: apple, was liable to death no less than the robber of temples or the murderer." For the institution of the 51 Ephetae and their relation to the See also: Areopagus in criminal jurisdiction see See also: GREEK See also: LAW
.
The orator See also: Demades (d. c
.
318 B.C.) said that Draco's laws were written in See also: blood
.
Whether this implies See also: peculiar severity, or merely reflects the attitude of a more refined age to the barbarous enactments of a See also: primitive people, among whom the penalty of death was almost universal for all crimes, cannot be decided
.
According to Suidas, however, in his See also: Lexicon, the people were so overjoyed at the change he made, that they accidentally suffocated him in the theatre at See also: Aegina with the rain of caps and cloaks which they flung at him in their See also: enthusiasm
.
The appearance in 1891 of See also: Aristotle's lost See also: treatise on the constitution of Athens gave rise to a most important controversy on the subject of Draco's See also: work
.
From the statements contained in chapter iv. of this treatise, and inferences See also: drawn from them, many scholars attributed to Draco the construction of an entirely new constitution for Athens, the See also: main features of which were:
(1) extension of franchise to all who could provide themselves with a suit of armour—or, as See also: Gilbert (Constitutional Antiquities, Eng. trans. p
.
121) says, to the Zeugite class, from which mainly the hoplites may be supposed to have come; (2) the institution of a
See also: property qualification for office (archon 10 minae, See also: strategus xoo minae); (3) a council of 401 members (see BouLE); (4) magistrates and councillors to be chosen by See also: lot; further, the four Solonian classes are said to be already in existence
.
For some time, especially in See also: Germany, this constitution was almost universally accepted; now, the majority of scholars reject it
.
The reasons against it, which are almost overwhelming, may be-shortly summarized
.
(1) It is ignored by every other See also: ancient authority, except an admittedly See also: spurious passage in See also: Plato 1; whereas Aristotle says of his laws " they are laws, but he added the laws to an existing constitution" (Pol. ii
.
9
.
9)
.
(2) It is inconsistent with other passages in the Constitution of Athens
.
According to c. vii., Solon repealed all laws of Draco except those See also: relating to See also: murder; yet some of the most See also: modern features of Solon's constitution are found in Draco's constitution
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(3) Its ideas are See also: alien to the 7th century
.
It has been said that the qualification of the strategus was ten times that of the archon . This, reasonable in the 5th, is preposterous in the 7th century, when the archon was unquestionably the supreme executive official . Again, it is unlikely that Solon, a democratic reformer, would have reverted from a democraticSee also: wealth' qualification such as is attributed to Draco, to an aristocratic See also: birth quali-
1 A passage (long overlooked) in
.
See also: Cicero, De republica, shows that, by the 1st century B.c. the interpolation had already been made; the See also: quotation is evidently taken from the See also: list in c. x1i. of the Constitution, which it reproduces.fication
.
Thirdly, if Draco had instituted a hoplite census, Solon would not have substituted citizenship by birth
.
(4) The terminology of Draco's constitution is that of the 5th, not the 7th, century, whereas the chief difficulty of Solon's laws is the obsolete 6th-century phraseology
.
(5) Lastly, a comparison between the ideals of the oligarchs under See also: Theramenes (end of 5th century) and this alleged constitution shows a suspicious similarity (hoplite census, nobody to hold office a second time until all duly qualified persons had beeen exhausted, See also: fine of one drachma for non-attendance in Boule)
.
It is reasonable, there-fore, to conclude that the constitution of Draco was invented by the school of Theramenes, who wished to surround their revolutionary views with the See also: halo of antiquity; hence the allusion to " the constitution of our See also: father " (i warms iratrrei.a)
.
This hypothesis is further corroborated by a See also: criticism of the text
.
Not only is chapter iv. considered to be an interpolation in the text as originally written, but later chapters have been edited to See also: accord with it
.
Thus chapter iv. breaks the connexion of thought between chapters iii. and v
.
Moreover, an interpolator has inserted phrases to remove what would otherwise have been obvious contradictions: thus (a) in chapter vii., where we are told that Solon divided the citizens into four classes (Tlµi2ara), the interpolator had added the words " according to the division formerly existing " ( xa06:aep Scijpl7Tac «ai rrporepov), which were necessary in view of the statement that Draco gave the franchise to the Zeugites; (b) in chapter xli., where successive constitutional changes are recorded, the words " the Draconian "
iiri Aparcovros) are inserted, though the subsequent figures are not accommodated to the change
.
Solon is also here spoken of as the founder of democracy, whereas the Draconian constitution ofSee also: chap. iv. contains several democratic innovations
.
Two further points may be added, namely, that whereas Aristotle's treatise credits Draco with establishing a See also: money fine, See also: Pollux definitely quotes a law of Draco in which fines are assessed at so many oxen; secondly, if chapter iv. did exist in the See also: original text, it is more than curious that though the treatise was widely read in antiquity there is no other reference to Draco's constitution except the two quoted above
.
In any See also: case, whatever were Draco's laws, we learn from Plutarch's life of Solon that Solon abolished all of them, except those dealing with See also: homicide
.
AUTHORITIES.—Beside the See also: works of J
.
E
.
Sandys and G
.
Gilbert
voted above, see those quoted in article CONSTITUTION OF ATHENS; (See also: Grote, Hist. of See also: Greece (ed
.
1907), pp
.
9-11, with references; and histories of Greece published after 1894
.
(J
.
M
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