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OSTRACISM

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Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 360 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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OSTRACISM  , a

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political
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device instituted, probably by
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Cleisthenes in 508 B.C., as a constitutional safeguard for the Athenian democracy . Its effect was to remove from Athens for a period of ten years any person who threatened the harmony and tranquillity of the
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body politic . A similar device existed at various times in
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Argos, Miletus, Syracuse and
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Megara, but in these cities it appears to have been introduced under Athenian influence . In Athens in the
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sixth prytany of each
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year the representatives of the Boule asked the Ecclesia whether it was for the welfare of the state that ostracism should take place . If the answer was in the affirmative, a day was fixed for the voting in the eighth prytany . No names were mentioned, but it is clear that two or three names at the most could have been under consideration . The
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people met, not as usual in the Pnyx, but in the
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Agora, in the presence of the Archons, and recorded their votes by placing in urns small fragments of pottery (which in the ancient
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world served the purpose of waste-paper) (ostraca) on which they wrote the name of the person whom they wished to banish . As in the case of other privilegia, ostracism did not take effect unless six thousand votes in all were recorded . Grote and others hold that six thousand had to be given against one person before he was ostracized, but it seems unlikely that the attendance at the Ecclesia ever admitted of so large a
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vote against one man, and the view is contradicted by Plut . Arist. c . 7 . The ostracized person was compelled to leave Athens for ten years, but he was not regarded as a traitor or criminal .

When he returned, he resumed

possession of his
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property and his civic status was unimpaired . The adverse vote simply implied that his power was so
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great as to be injurious to the state . Ostracism must therefore be carefully distinguished from exile in the
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Roman sense, which involved loss of property and status, and was for an indefinite period (i.e. generally for
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life) . Certain writers have even spoken of the " honour " of ostracism . At the same time it was strictly unjust to the victim, and a heavy punishment to a cultured citizen for whom Athens contained all that made life worth living . Its political importance really was that it transferred the
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protection of the constitution from the Areopagus to the Ecclesia . Its place was afterwards taken by the Graphe Paranomon . There is no doubt that Cleisthenes'
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object was primarily to get rid of the Peisistratid faction without perpetual recourse to armed resistance (so Androtion,
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Ath . Pol . 22, Ephorus, Theopompus, Aristotle, Pol. iii . 13, 1284 a 17 and 36; viii . (v.), 3, 1302 b 15) .

Aristotle's Constitution of Athens (c . 22) gives a

list of ostracized persons, the first of whom was a certain Hipparchus of the Peisistratid
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family (488 B.C.) . It is an extra-ordinary fact that, if ostracism was introduced in 508 B.C. for the purpose of expelling Hipparchus it was not till twenty years later that he was condemned . This has led some critics (see Lugebil in Das Wesen . . . der Ostrakismos, who arrives at the conclusion that ostracism could not have been introduced till after 496 B.C.) to suspect the unanimous evidence of antiquity that Cleisthenes was the inventor of ostracism . The problem is difficult, and no satisfactory answer has been given . Aelian's story that Cleisthenes himself was the first to be ostracized is attractive in view of his overtures to
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Persia (see CLEISTHENES), but it has little
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historical value and conflicts with the chapter in Aristotle's Constitution—which, however, may conceivably be simply the list of those recalled from ostracism at the time of Xerxes' Invasion, all of whom must have been ostracized less than ten years before 481 (i.e. since
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Marathon) . With the end of the Persian
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Wars, the
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original object of ostracism was removed, but it continued in use for
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forty years and was revived in 417 B.C . It now became a mere party weapon and the farcical result of its use in 417 in the case of Hyperbolus led to its abolition either at once, or, as Lugebil seeks to prove, in the archonship of Euclides(403 B.C.) . Such a device inevitably lent itself to abuse (see Aristotle, Pol . 38, 1284 b 22 07QO'ta n-Lx&S EXpWYTO) . Grote maintains that ostracism was a useful device, on the grounds that it removed the danger of tyranny, and was better than the perpetual
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civil strife of the previous century .

The second

reason is strictly beside the point, and the first has no force after the Persian Wars . As a factor in party politics it was both unnecessary and injurious to the state . Thus in the Persian Wars, it deprived Athens of the wisdom of Xanthippus and Aristides, while at the
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battle of Tanagra and perhaps at the time of the
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Egyptian expedition the assistance of Cimon was lacking . Further, it was a blow to the
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fair-
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play of party politics; the defeated party, having no leader, was reduced to desperate
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measures, such as the assassination of Ephialtes . To defend it on the ground that it created and stimulated the
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national consciousness is hardly reconcilable with the historic remark of the voter who voted against Aristides because he wished to hear no more of his incorruptible integrity; moreover in democratic Athens the " national consciousness " was, if anything, too frequently stimulated in the ordinary course of government . Aristotle, admitting its usefulness, rightly describes ostracism as in theory tyrannical; Montesquieu (Esprit
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des lois, xii. cc . 19, 29, &c.) defends it, as a mild and reasonable institution . On the whole, the
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history of its effect in Athens, Argos, Miletus, Megara and Syracuse (where it was called Petalismus), furnishes no sufficient defence against its admitted disadvantages . The following is a list of persons who suffered ostracism:—Hipparchus (488); Megacles (487), Xanthippus (485), Aristides (483), Themistocles (471?); Cimon (461?) Thucydides, son of Melesias (444),
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Damon, Hyperbolus (417) and possibly Cleisthenes himself (q.v.) . i . 62o; Muller's Handbuch, iv . 1, 121; Gilbert, Gr .

St. i . 446-466 and

Greek Constitutional Antiquities (Eng. trans., 1895) ; A . H . J . Greenidge, Handbook of Greek Constitutional Antiquities (1896); histories of
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Greece in general . The view maintained in the text as to the number of votes necessary is supported by Duruy (H. of G . ii . 1, 36), Boeckh, Wachsmuth, &c.; opposed by Grote,
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Oman and (on the whole) by Evelyn Abbott . On the danger of privilegia in general see
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Cicero, de Legibus, iii . 4, and note that in Athens, ostracism gratuitously anticipated a crime which, if committed, would have been punishable in the popular Heliaea . Cf. also article ExILE . (J .

M .

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