In September in class, we have studied citizenship in Athens in the 5th Century BC.
We learnt what it was to be a citizen: A citizen was someone who had rights, and duties*, who could vote, who could be elected and who could express himself ( only men could be citizens in Athens at that time).
Citizenship in Athens in the 5th century BC was worth being studied because Athens in the 5th century BC was a powerful city and was the very first democracy in history! Athens defeated* the Persian Empire. The cities around Athens wanted to be allied with Athens to be protected, in return they paid a tribute*.
This way Athens became very powerful. Moreover Athens was the largest city of Greece; it controlled a wide territory called the Attica.
In Athens power was well balanced since it was distributed between:
The Ecclesia also called assembly of citizens: it gathers Athens’40 000 citizens
The Helié which had the judiciary power
The magistrates who had the executive power.
The constitution was based on equality: isonomy (equality between citizens)*. It is called democracy because power is in the hands not of a minority but of the whole people: that’s what Pericles (famous Athenian magistrate) said in the funeral oration he delivered in 430 BC. People were drawn to be in the assemblies except magistrates who were elected: it was very fair, wasn’t it? If poor people were drawn, they received the misthos* (an allowance) so they could go full time into politics.
But, Athens was not a perfect democracy because all human beings living in the Attica did not have the same rights and were not considered as citizens: there were Metics ( foreigners ), slaves and women who had no rights at all ! The misthos was not high enough, and Isonomy only concerned an élite. On top of that we must admit that drawing people could be dangerous: could you imagine drawing the president of France from the French population?
Anyway, it’s really worth studying Athens in the 5th century BC since it helps to know more about the roots of our political system!
Some help:
* duties = devoirs
* defeated = to defeat someone = battre quelqu’un ( sur le plan militaire)
* a tribute = un tribut
* isonomy = isonomie = l’égalité entre citoyens
* misthos = aide financière pour que les plus pauvres puissent participer à la
vie politique