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termined the pursuits and the character of its inhabitants; and this now separated them into three distinct parties,* animated each by its peculiar interests, views, and feelings. The possessions of the nobles lay chiefly in the plains. As a body, they desired the continuance of the existing state of things, on which their power and exclusive privileges depended; but, as we have seen, there were among them some mod

cept such rewards. The only boon he request- | country, which, from time immemorial, had deed was, for himself, a branch from the sacred olive-tree which grew on the citadel, the gift, it was believed, of Athené, when she claimed the land as her own, and for his country a decree of perpetual friendship and alliance between Athens and Cnossus. This pleasing monument of his visit seems to have subsisted in the time of Plato,* and a statue of the Cretan sage long adorned one of the Athenian sanctuaries. But though the visit of Epimeni-erate men, who were willing to make concesdes was attended with the most salutary consequences, so far as it applied a suitable remedy to evils which were entirely seated in the imagination, and though it may have wrought still happier effects by calming, softening, and opening hearts which had before only beaten with wild and malignant passions, still it had not produced any real change in the state of things, but had, at the utmost, only prepared the way for one. This work remained to be achiev

ed by Solon.

sions to prudence, if not to justice, and to resign a part for the sake of securing their possession of the rest. The inhabitants of the highlands, in the eastern and northern parts of Attica, do not seem to have suffered any of those evils which the rapacity and hard-heartedness of the powerful had inflicted on the lowland peasantry; but, though independent, they were probably, for the most part, poor, and had, perhaps, been less considered than their neighbours in the distribution of political rights. They generally wishThe government had long been in the hands ed for a revolution which should place them on a of men who appear to have wielded it only as level with the rich; and, uniting their cause with an instrument for aggrandizing and enriching that of the oppressed, they called for a thorough themselves. They had reduced a great part of redress of grievances, which they contended the class whose industry was employed in the could only be afforded by reducing that enormous labours of agriculture to a state of abject de- inequality of possessions, which was the source pendance, in which they were not only debarred of degradation and misery to them and their from all but, perhaps, a merely nominal share fellows. The men of the coast, who probably of political rights, but held even their personal composed a main part of that class which subfreedom by a precarious tenure, and were fre-sisted by trade, by the exercise of the mechaniquently reduced to actual slavery. The small-cal arts, and, perhaps, by the working of the er proprietors, impoverished by bad times or casual disasters, were compelled to borrow money at high interest, and to mortgage their lands to the rich, or to receive them again as tenants upon the same hard terms as were imposed upon those who cultivated the estates of the great landowners. The laws made by the nobles enabled the creditor to seize the person of his insolvent debtor, and to sell him as a slave; and this right had been frequently exer- It is probable that the wiser nobles now recised numbers had been torn from their homes, gretted the blind eagerness with which their and condemned to end their days in the service ancestors abolished the regal dignity, under of a foreign master; others were driven to the which they might, perhaps, still have retained still harder necessity of selling their own chil- their power, even if they had been compelled to dren. One who travelled at this time through exercise it with greater moderation. The peoAttica saw the dismal monuments of aristocrati-ple in general felt the need of a leader, and cal oppression scattered over its fields, in the stone posts, which marked that what was once a property had become a pledge, and that its former owner had lost his independence, and was in danger of sinking into a still more degraded and miserable condition. Such specta-qualities which could fit him for coming forward cles had frequently struck the eye of Solon, and they undoubtedly moved him no less than that which roused the holy indignation of the elder Gracchus against the Roman grandees.‡

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Those who groaned under this tyranny were only eager for a change, and cared little about the means by which it might be effected. But the population of Attica was not simply composed of these two classes. We have already noticed an ancient geographical division of the

* De Leg., i., 11. Though Plato's chronology is enormously wrong-he places the visit of Epimenides only ten years before the Persien war, about B.C. 500-we may receive his testunony in the fact stated in the text, which is also mentioned by Diogenes Laert., i., 111.

"Op. They were inscribed with the amount of the debt and the name of the creditor. Plut., Tib. Gracchus, c. 8.

mines, and now included a considerable share of affluence and intelligence, were averse to violent measures, but were desirous of a reform in the Constitution which should promote the prosperity of the country by removing all grounds of reasonable complaint, and should admit a larger number to the enjoyment of those rights which were now engrossed and abused by a few.

would have preferred even the despotic rule of one man to the tyranny of their many lords. As Solon's established reputation pointed him out as the person most capable of remedying the disorders of the state, so he united all the

as the protector of the commonalty without exciting the fears of the nobles. He belonged to the latter by birth and station, and he recommended himself to the former by the proofs he had shown of activity, prudence, justice, and humanity. He was therefore chosen, with the unanimous consent of all parties, to mediate between them, and arbitrate their quarrels; and, under the legal title of archon, was invested with full authority to frame a new Constitution and a new code of laws. (Ol. 46, 3-B.C. 594.) Such an office, under such circumstances, conferred almost unlimited power, and an ambitious man might easily have abused it to make him

*The lowlanders were called Пeditis or Пediator: the highlanders Διάκριοι: the men of the coast, Πάραλος. + Plut., Sol., 13, 29.

which this measure had wrought in the face of Attica, of the numerous citizens whose lands he had discharged, and whose persons he had emancipated, and brought back from hopeless slavery in strange lands. He was only unfortunate in bestowing his confidence on persons who were incapable of imitating his virtue, and who abused his intimacy. At the time when all men were uncertain as to his intentions, and no kind of property could be thought secure,

self absolute master of the state. The contend-1 Solon himself, in a poem which he afterward ing parties would probably have acquiesced composed on the subject of his legislation, spoke without much reluctance in such a usupration, with a becoming pride of the happy change as an evil less than those which some suffered and others feared. Solon's friends exhorted him to seize the opportunity of becoming tyrant of Athens; and they were not at a loss for fair arguments to colour their foul advice. They bade him consider that the name of a tyranny was harmless, and the thing salutary, so long as it was wisely and justly administered; and they reminded him of recent instances-of Tynnondas in Euboea, and Pittacus at Mitylene, who had exercised a sovereignty over their fel-he privately informed three of his friends of his low-citizens without forfeiting their love. Solon saw through their sophistry, and was not tempted by it to betray the sacred trust reposed in him; and he consoled himself for the taunts with which they reproached his want of spirit and prudence by the approbation of his conscience, the esteem of his countrymen, and the honour with which his name has come down to posterity. Instead of harbouring any schemes of selfish aggrandizement, he bent all his thoughts and energies to the execution of the great task which he had undertaken.

determination not to touch the estates of the landowners, but only to reduce the amount of debt. He had afterward the vexation of discovering that the men to whom he had intrusted this secret had been base enough to take advantage of it, by making large purchases of land, which at such a juncture bore, no doubt, a very low price, with borrowed money. Fortunately for his fame, the state of his private affairs was such as to exempt him from all suspicion of having had any share in this sordid transaction. He had himself a considerable sum out at interest, and was a loser in proportion by his own enactment.

We have here followed that account of Solon's measures of relief, which seems the most probable in itself, and is confirmed by the best evidence. There was, however, another, adopted by some ancient writers, which represented him as having entirely cancelled all debts, and as having only disguised the violence of this proceeding under a soft and attractive name. It does not appear that the ancients saw anything to censure in his conduct according to either view. On the other hand, in our times there will, perhaps, be some who will consider such a change in property and contracts, even upon the mildest interpretation, as unjust in principle, and as a precedent pregnant with consequences the most dangerous to society. But the example of Solon cannot be fairly pleaded by those who contend that either public or private faith may be rightly sacrificed to expe

This task consisted of two main parts: the first and most pressing business was to relieve the present distress of the commonalty; the next, to provide against the recurrence of like evils, by regulating the rights of all the citizens according to equitable principles, and fixing them on a permanent basis. In proceeding to the first part of his undertaking, Solon held a middle course between the two extremesthose who wished to keep all, and those who were for taking everything away. The most violent or needy would have been satisfied with nothing short of a total confusion of property, followed by a fresh distribution of it. They desired that all debts should be cancelled, and that the lands of the rich should be confiscated and parcelled out among the poor. Solon, while he resisted these reckless and extravagant demands, met the reasonable expectations of the public by his disburdening ordinance, and relieved the debtor, partly by a reduction of the rate of interest, which was probably made ret-diency. He must be considered as an arbitrarospective, and thus in many cases would wipe off a great part of the debt, and partly by lowering the standard of the silver coinage, so that the debtor saved more than one fourth in every payment. He likewise released the pledged lands from their encumbrances, and restored them in full property to their owners; though it does not seem certain whether this was one of the express objects of the measure, or only one of the consequences which it involved. Finally, he abolished the inhuman law which enabled the creditor to enslave his debtor, and restored those who were pining at home in such bondage to immediate liberty; and it would seem that he compelled those who had sold their debtors into foreign countries to procure their freedom at their own expense. The debt itself in such cases was, of course, held to be extinguished.

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tor to whom all the parties interested submitted their claims, with the avowed intent that they should be decided by him, not upon the footing of legal right, but according to his own view of the public interest. It was in this light that he himself regarded his office, and he appears to have discharged it faithfully and discreetly. The strongest proof of the wisdom and equity of his measures is that they subjected him to obloquy from the violent spirits of both the extreme parties. But their murmurs were soon drowned in the general approbation with which the disburdening ordinance was received: it was celebrated with a solemn festival, and Solon was encouraged, by the strongest assurances of the increased confidence of his fellow-citizens, to proceed with his work; and he now entered on the second and more difficult part of his task.

He began by repealing all the laws of Draco, except those which concerned the repression of bloodshed, which were, in fact, customs hallowed by time and by religion, and had been retained, not introduced, by his predecessor.

political rights one had any advantage over the other. They were at least distinguished from each other by the mode of their military service; the one furnishing the cavalry, the other the heavy-armed infantry. But, for their exclusion from the dignities occupied by the wealthy few, they received a compensation in the com

knights by one sixth, that of the third class by
one third.* The fourth class was excluded
from all share in the magistracy, and from the
honours and duties of the full-armed warrior,
the expense of which would in general exceed
their means: by land they served only as light
troops; in later times they manned the fleets.
In return, they were exempted from all direct
contributions, and they were permitted to take
a part in the popular assembly, as well as in
the exercise of those judicial powers which
were now placed in the hands of the people.
We shall shortly have occasion to observe how
amply this boon compensated for the loss of all
the privileges that were withheld from them.
Solon's classification, as we see, takes no no-
tice of any other than landed property; yet, as
the example of Solon himself seems to prove
that Attica must already have carried on some
foreign trade, it is not unlikely that there were
fortunes of this kind equal to those which gave
admission to the higher classes.
But it can
hardly be supposed that they placed their pos-
sessors on a level with the owners of the soil;
it is more probable that these, together with the
newly-adopted citizens, without regard to their
various degrees of affluence, were all included
in the lowest class.

As a natural consequence, perhaps, of this meas- | their privileges, or to ascertain whether in their ure, he published an amnesty, or act of grace, which restored those citizens who had been deprived of their franchise for lighter offences, and recalled those who had been forced into exile; and it seems probable that this indulgence was extended to the house of Megacles, the Alemæonids, as they were called from a remote ancestor, the third in descent from Nes-parative lightness of their burdens. They were tor, and to the partners of his guilt and punish- assessed, not in exact proportion to the amount ment: the city, now purified and tranquillized, of their incomes, but at a much lower rate, the might be supposed to be no longer polluted or nominal value of their property being, for this endangered by their presence; and it was al-purpose, reduced below the truth-that of the ways liable to be disturbed by their machinations, so long as they remained in banishment. The four ancient tribes were retained, with all their subdivisions; but it seems probable that Solon admitted a number of new citizens; for it is said that he invited foreigners to Athens by this boon, though he confined it to such as settled there with their whole family and substance, and had dissolved their connexion with their native land.* The distinguishing feature of the new Constitution was the substitution of property for birth, as a title to the honours and offices of the state. This change, though its consequences were of infinite importance, would not appear so violent or momentous to the generation which witnessed it, since at this time these two claims generally concurred in the same person. Solon divided the citizens into four classes, according to the gradations of their fortunes, and regulated the extent of their franchise, and their contributions to the public necessities, by the amount of their inThe first class, as its name expressed, consisted of persons whose estates yielded a nett yearly income or rent of 500 measures of dry or liquid produce. The qualification of the second class was three fifths of this amount; that of the third, two thirds, or more probably half, of the latter. The members of the second Solon's system then made room for all freeclass were called knights,◊ being accounted able men, but assigned to them different places, vato keep a war-horse: the name of the third rying with their visible means of serving the class, whom we might call yeomen, was derived state. His general aim in the distribution of from the yoke of cattle for the plough, which a power, as he himself explains it in a fragment farm of the extent described was supposed to which Plutarch has preserved from one of his require. The fourth class comprehended all poems, was to give such a share to the commonwhose incomes fell below that of the third, and, alty as would enable it to protect itself, and to according to its name, consisted of hired la- the wealthy as much as was necessary for retainbourers in husbandry.¶ The first class was ing their dignity-in other words, for ruling the exclusively eligible to the highest offices, those people without the means of oppressing it. He of the nine archons, and, probably, to all others threw his strong shield, he says, over both, and which had hitherto been reserved to the nobles: permitted neither to gain an unjust advantage. they were also destined to fill the highest com- The magistrates, though elected upon a differmands in the army, as in later times, when ent qualification, retained their ancient authorAthens became a maritime power, they did inity; but they were now responsible for the exthe fleet. Some lower offices were undoubted-ercise of it, not to their own body, but to the ly left open to the second and third classes, though we are unable to define the extent of

comes.

This appears to be the foundation of Plutarch's statement, Sol, 24, which is, literally, that no foreigners could be adopted as citizens but those who had either settled in Attica as above mentioned, or were banished from their own countries for life. He seems to suppose that such aliens had a legal right to the freedom of the city.

† Niebuhr takes a very different and peculiar view of this subject (History of Rome, v. it., ed. 2, p. 305, of the English translation: "By his constitution of the classes. Solon removed all the indigent eupatrids from the government without letting in the rich members of the demus." Vol. i., n. 1017.) See Appendix 1.

4 Πεντακοσιομέδιμνοι. The medimnus exceeds the bushel by six pints and a fraction.

ὁ Ἱππής.

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* As the price of the medimnus was estimated by Solon at a drachm, the lowest income of the first class was equiv alent to 500 drachms, the twelfth part of a talent; and the property which yielded this income was rated at a talent, and taxed accordingly. But the property of persons in the second class, instead of being rated at twelve times the amount of their income, or 3600 drachms, was rated at only 3000; that of the yeomen at 1200 instead of 1800. For the full proof and illustration of these statements, see Rueckh's Public Economy of Athens (book iv., ch. v.), which first threw light on this subject.

† 2 ἡμῳ μὲν γὰρ ἔδωκα τόσον κράτος όσσον ἐπαρκειν. Νie buhr (1., p 305, transl of 3d edit.) gives a different interpretation: Solon had conceded (to the demus: only so much authority in the state as could not be withheld from it.

1 Οἳ δ' εἶχον δύναμιν καὶ χρημασιν ἦσαν ἀγητοὶ καὶ τοῖς ἐφρασάμην μηδὲν ἀεικὲς ἔχειν

governed. The judicial functions of the ar- were all contained in three of the tribes - it chons were perhaps preserved nearly in their seems to raise a strong objection against the full extent; but appeals were allowed from their supposition that the real number exceeded this jurisdiction to courts numerously composed, by sixty or a hundred; since in that case, on and filled indiscriminately from all classes.* both the occasions just mentioned, we should Solon could not foresee the change of circum- probably have heard, not of the Three Hundred, stances by which this right of appeal became but either of 360 or 400 members of those aristhe instrument of overthrowing the equilibrium tocratical assemblies. We are therefore led which he hoped to have established on a solid to suspect that the old Athenian council came basis, when that which he had designed to ex- nearer in numbers to the Spartan gerusia. But ercise an extraordinary jurisdiction became an it is possible that, besides this, the eupatrids ordinary tribunal, which drew almost all causes held general assemblies of their order, either peto itself, and overruled every other power in the riodically, or as occasions arose for them. The state. He seems to have thought that, while council of Four Hundred was perhaps intendhe provided sufficiently for the security of the ed to replace both these institutions. It succommonalty, by permitting the lowest of its ceeded to the ancient council in the regular members to vote in the popular assembly, and management of public affairs, and its number to sit in judgment on cases in which the parties was probably fixed with a view to admit as were dissatisfied with the ordinary modes of many of the citizens to a share in the governproceeding, he had also ensured the stability of ment as it appeared safe to intrust with it. It his new order of things by two institutions, was a popular body as compared with an aswhich appeared to be sufficient guard against sembly of the eupatrids; for its members were the sallies of democratical extravagance-an- taken from the first three classes, each tribe chors, as Plutarch expresses it, on which the furnishing one hundred; but, on the other hand, vessel of the state might ride safely in every it was aristocratical, inasmuch as it excluded storm. These were the two councils of the one large division of the people. And there is Four Hundred and the Areopagus. even room to suspect that it may have been composed in a manner which rendered it more subject to the influence of the eupatrids than has been generally believed; for it does not seem that entire reliance can be placed on the opinion that the success of the candidates was determined, as in the latter practice, by lot.* If they were elected, it would be easy to conceive that the noble families might generally be able to bring in men of their choice. But the competitors, however appointed, were obliged to give proof of their legal capacity in a previous examination. To the security for their fitness afforded by the prescribed qualification of fortune, was added that of a mature age, none being eligible under thirty. They were changed every year, and at the end of this term were liable to render a general account of their conduct, and to meet all charges that might be brought against them, and even during its continuance they might be expelled for misconduct by their colleagues. As the council was principally designed to restrain and conduct the enlarged powers of the popular assembly, committed as they now were to a multitude of inexperienced hands, the main part of its business was to prepare the measures which were to be submitted to the votes of the assembly, and to preside over its deliberations. It was divided into sections, which, under the venerable name of prytanes, succeeded each other throughout the year as the representatives of the whole body. Each section during its term assembled daily in their session-house, the prytaneum, to consult on the state of affairs, to receive intelligence, information, and suggestions, and instantly to take such measures as the public in

The institution of the Four Hundred was uniformly attributed to Solon. But as the foundation of the Areopagus was likewise attributed to him by most of the ancients, though it is certain that he only made some changes in its constitution, there is ground for inquiring whether a similar mistake may not have prevailed in the other case. It is, indeed, highly probable that an aristocratical council existed before Solon; but we have neither evidence nor any sure analogy to guide us in determining its numbers; nor can we decide whether it represented the four tribes, or any of their subdivisions. If we knew how the eupatrids were distributed among the tribes, it might be possible to arrive at some probable conclusion on this point; but so long as there is room for the present diversity of opinions with regard to the composition of the tribes, there can be little hope of ascertaining the nature of the council, as it stood before the time of Solon. There are, however, two wellattested facts which appear to have a bearing on this question, and which, we believe, have been hitherto overlooked. We have seen that the cause of the Alemæonids was referred to an aristocratical tribunal of Three Hundred persons; and we shall see that when the chief of the Alemæonids had substituted a new council in the room of Solon's, his political antagonist having suppressed it, established one of Three Hundred in its stead. This can hardly be a merely casual coincidence. Even if it does not warrant the conclusion that three hundred was the number of the ancient council-which, indeed, cannot be unagined, unless the eupatrids

Plut., Sol., 18. Plutarch's statement on this subject seems to be generally rejected as erroneous: Wachsmuth does not even notice it; and Platner, Beitr., p. 59, thinks it clear that Plutarch confounded the ȧvákpiois with an Epcots -the magistrate's preliminary investigation with an appeal from his sentence. This would be a singular mistake. Whereas the appeal, of which Draco had left a precedent In the institution of the Ephetes, seems in itself by no means improbable, as a transition from the original plenttude of the magistrate's judicial power to its subsequent comparative nullity. Sull it must be owned that on such a point Plutarch's authority is not weighty.

* Wachsmuth, 1. 1, p. 257, refers to a collection of authorities in Tittmann relating to the council of Five Hundred, and contents himself with adding, there is no trace that Solon originally appointed an election of the council. But it seems doubtful whether this is the right way of s a ting the question, and whether, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, it ought not to be presumed that this was Solon's regulation. Where the thing itself is so probable, we might perhaps be justified in laying some stress on Plutarch's expression (Sol. 19): ano puλñ, Ékaorns Ékurdy ἄνδρες ἐπιλεξαμενος. ↑ Lukina ia.

terest rendered it necessary to adopt without | stitution. A body of 6000 citizens was every delay. Like the ancient magistrates of the year created by lot for a supreme court, called same name, they were entertained at a com- Heliæa,* which was divided into several smallmon table, together with the other guests of er ones, not limited to any precise number of the state who enjoyed that privilege either by persons. The qualifications required for this virtue of some office or as a reward of merit. were the same with those which gave admisBesides, however, the function of prompting sion into the general assembly, except that the and directing the proceedings of the popular as-members of the former might not be under the sembly, the council possessed others connected age of thirty. It was therefore, in fact, a select with the finances and other objects of adminis-portion of the latter, in which the powers of the tration, which it exercised without any restraint larger body were concentrated, and exercised except its general responsibility. In this capacity it had the power of issuing ordinances, not unlike the edicts of the Roman magistrates, which continued in force for the current year, and of inflicting fines at its discretion to a certain amount.

It

under a judicial form. That Solon himself viewed it in this light, and designed it much rather to be the guardian of the Constitution than the minister of the laws, appears from the oath which he prescribed to its members. relates, for the most part, to their political duties of resisting all attempts to subvert the democracy, and to substitute any other form of government, and all measures tending to that end; and only after these obligations have been fully described, proceeds to enumerate those which belong to the judicial character, of re

faithfully. It is not, indeed, clear that Solon intended wholly to transfer ordinary cases from the cognizance of the archons to that of the popular courts, though subsequently the magistrates only retained the functions of conducting causes to that stage in which they were ripe for the decision of the jurors, of presiding at the trial, and executing the judgment. But the peculiar sphere of action in which the jurors appeared in the plenitude of their power, as the representatives of the people, and carried into effect the proper intention of the legislator, lay in questions relating to political offences, which were brought before them chiefly by means of the prosecutions instituted against the authors of illegal measures. The person who had succeeded in causing a law or a decree to be passed which was afterward found to be inconsistent either with other laws that remained in force or with the public interest, was still held responsible for his conduct, and, if convicted within a year after his proposition had been carried, was liable to a punishment depending on the pleasure of his judges, and measured by their opinion of the motives or consequences of his act. They decided at once on the fact and the law, and the grounds of their verdict might embrace the widest field

According to the theory of Solon's Constitution, the assembly of the people was little more than the organ of the council, as it could only act upon the propositions laid before it by the latter. But, besides the option of approving or rejecting, it seems always to have had the power of modifying the measures proposed,jecting bribes, hearing impartially, and deciding without sending them back for the acceptance of the council in their altered form. There was, however, a mode by which the council might become the organ of the assembly, or, rather, the channel through which measures were introduced into it by private individuals. This happened when the council received a proposition not emanating from its own body, and merely clothed it with the legal form and sanction. These two cases probably did not enter into Solon's plan, and perhaps, if he had foreseen them, he would have endeavoured to guard against them. In his time their importance could scarcely have been perceived. The ordinary assemblies.‡ which at first, perhaps, were not held oftener than once a month, seem then not to have excited so lively an interest as in after-times. The attendance of the citizens seems to have been considered by the greater number as a burdensome duty rather than a privilege; and it was necessary to enforce it by marking and fining those who were seen to pass through the streets in a different direction at the hour of meeting. No fixed number of voters was necessary, except in a few cases, which required the presence of at least 6000 citizens. The votes on public measures were taken by show of hand, and without any distinction of classes: the vote of the poor-connected with the foreign or domestic policy est peasant weighed in itself as much as that of the richest noble, though the latter might command many by his personal influence. Every voter was allowed to speak. The exercise of this right began after the age of twenty; but, among his other precautions against the dangers that might arise from ignorance and rashness, Solon provided that in every assembly the crier should invite those who were past fifty to speak first on each question. The president had the power of repressing and punishing all breaches of order and decorum.

of the state. This jurisdiction enabled them, at the same time, to punish the individual, and warn others from following his example, and to reverse the proceedings of the legislative assembly, though they had been adopted on mature deliberation, with a full consciousness of their nature, and a strict adherence to all the legal forms.

Another important provision by which Solon endeavoured to secure the stability of his institutions, without depriving them of the flexibility necessary for a continual adaptation to alterBut the judicial power which Solon had lodged circumstances, consisted in the regulations ed in the hands of the people was the most powerful instrument on which he relied for correcting all abuses, and remedying all mischiefs that might arise out of the working of his Con

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by which he subjected them to a perpetual revision. It was a part of the ordinary business

Hλtaia, an assembly. Herod, v, 29. has the form αλίη. * Demosth., Timoer., p. 746. Η Ανάκρισις, and ἡγεμονία δικαστηρίου. 4 Γραφαὶ παρανόμων.

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