Citizenship in Athens
Only adult male citizens had the right to vote in Athens. This excluded slaves, women, and resident foreigners (metics) but nevertheless meant that a very large portion of the population took part in the government of Athens and of other radical democracies like it. Participation greatly exceeded that of any contemporary states, and functioned more directly than in any subsequent democracies.
Citizens had to claim descent from citizens - after the reforms of Pericles from both parents, excluding children of Athenian men and foreign women (450 BC) - or had to gain approval through an elaborate procedure, in which any citizen had a veto, which was very rarely carried through. This reflected the general conception of the polis as a community, somewhat like an extended family, rather than as a territorial state.
Notable Athenians
- Solon
- Pisistratus
- Cleisthenes
- Themistocles
- Pericles
- Cleon
- Hyperbolus
- Demosthenes
See also
- Areopagus
- Boule
- Ekklesia
- Persian Wars
- Athenian empire
- Peloponnesian War
- Hellenic civilization
External Links