PALABRAS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADAS CON «CLERUCHIES»
cleruchies
cleruchies
collins
always
noun
plural
chies
ancient
world
special
type
athenian
colony
which
settlers
cleruchs
retained
their
citizenship
community
classical
period
politics
hegemony
establishment
peculiar
colonies
allied
regions
first
official
were
established
lemnos
wiley
library
essentially
land
doles
poor
deployed
overseas
permanent
garrisons
still
widespread
otherwise
unsupported
belief
word
finder
anagrams
words
that
start
with
created
from
cleruchy
10 LIBROS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADOS CON «CLERUCHIES»
Descubre el uso de
cleruchies en la siguiente selección bibliográfica. Libros relacionados con
cleruchies y pequeños extractos de los mismos para contextualizar su uso en la literatura.
1
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities
The Athenian Cleruchies. — " All colonies in their relation to the mother-city,"
says Roscher (op. cit. p. 44), "may be divided into iiroixiai and KXTjpoi/xioi," —
i.e. are independent or dependent. But the ancients did not observe this
distinction.
Sir William Smith, William Wayte, George Eden Marindin, 1901
2
Colony and Mother City in Ancient Greece
Cleruchies and doubtful cases The cleruchy of the fourth century and later times
is well defined by the ancient evidence.2 It was asettlement of Athenian citizens
living abroad, and was clearly described as such in inscriptions by titles like 'the ...
3
The Cambridge Ancient History
Urban unemployment is not likely to have been a problem in fifth-century Athens,
but the cleruchies did provide land for Athenian citizens at the allies' expense
and serve as an informal garrison: presumably the allies which had cleruchies ...
David M. Lewis, John Boardman, 1992
4
Greek Colonisation: An Account of Greek Colonies and Other ...
An inscription juxtaposes colonies (apoikiai) and cleruchies (klerouchiai), so that
Attic settlements abroad were grouped into these two categories—related terms
are apoikos 'colonist' and klerouchos 'cleruch' (IG I3 237. 8–9). Distinctions ...
Gocha R. Tsetskhladze, 2008
5
Studies in Classical Philology
in nine different cleruchies pertains to Psenarpsenesis ; in four cleruchies, two of
which belong also to the nine just mentioned, to Karanis ; in one cleruchy, to
Patsontis. There were thus lands of this sort in at least twelve cleruchies.
Cleruchies and colonies Klerukhiai (cleruchies) were a special kind of colony that
the Athenians established in key locations around the Aegean. Though there is
no evidence that they were a part of Kleisthenes' constitution, the system was ...
7
Athena's Justice: Athena, Athens and the Concept of Justice ...
The idea that there is a possible reference to cleruchies at 399^02 and 703-6 is
interesting, but difficult to address, since we know so very little about the nature
and number of cleruchies in the fifth century.58 The only certain fifth-century ...
Rebecca Futo Kennedy, 2009
8
Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece
Although the alliance had lost its original justification with the removal of its anti-
Persian objectives - probably stipulated in the so-called Peace of Callias with
Persia in c.449 - Athens continued to levy annual phoroi and inflicted cleruchies
on ...
lieved, at least as regards its dating, is the story of Pericles' unsuperstitious
reaction to a solar eclipse; there was no such eclipse at the time claimed.11
Plutarch suggests that cleruchies were established by Pericles in part to relieve
Athens of ...
10
The Constitutional Antiquities of Sparta and Athens
... Athenian officer for Delos, Paroa, and Haliartos.1 It may be inferred, from what
we know to have been the case at Hestiaia, that the Cleruchies were also subject
to some restric- Administra- tions in regard to the administration of justice.
NOTICIAS EN LAS QUE SE INCLUYE EL TÉRMINO «CLERUCHIES»
Conoce de qué se habla en los medios de comunicación nacionales e internacionales y cómo se emplea el término
cleruchies en el contexto de las siguientes noticias.
The Missing Century
Many of these were set up as cleruchies (military colonies) in which soldiers who married native women were given homes and fields, thus ... «Patheos, Nov 14»