Mention834187

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so:text The population of Athens and consisted of slaves, resident aliens, and citizens. Slaves were excessively numerous. At a census taken in B.C. 309, the number of slaves was returned at 400,000, and it does not seem likely that there were fewer at any time during the classical period. They were mostlyns,ns, Thracians, andns, imported from the coasts of the Propontis. ...They were employed for domestic purposes, or were let out for hire in gangs as labourers, or were allowed to work by themselves paying a yearly royalty to their masters. ...hardly any Athenian citizen can have been without two or three. The family of Aeschines was considered very poor because it possessed only 7 slaves. On the other hand, Plutarch says that let out 1,000 and Hipponicus 600 slaves to work the gold mines in Thrace. The state possessed some slaves of its own, who were employed chiefly as policemen and clerks. Slaves enjoyed considerable liberties in Athens, and had some rights, even against their masters. They did not serve as soldiers, or sailors, except when the city was in great straits, as at the battle of Arginussae... The worst prospect in store for them was that their masters might be engaged in a lawsuit, for the evidence of a slave was not admitted in a court of justice unless he had been put to torture. Slaves were sometimes freed by their masters, with some sort of public ceremony, or by the state which paid their value to their masters. (en)
so:isPartOf https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/James_Gow_(scholar)
so:description A Companion to School Classics (1888) (en)
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