Heliaia
Heliaia or Heliaea (Ancient Greek: Ἡλιαία; Doric: Ἁλία Halia) was the supreme court of ancient Athens. The view generally held among scholars is that the court drew its name from the ancient Greek verb ἡλιάζεσθαι, which means congregate.[α] Another version is that the court took its name from the fact that the hearings were taking place outdoors, under the sun.[β] Initially, this was the name of the place where the hearings were convoked, but later this appellation included the court as well.[1]
The judges were called heliasts (ἡλιασταί) or dikastes (δικασταί, ὀμωμοκότες = those who have sworn, namely the jurors). The operation of judging was called ἡλιάζεσθαι (δικάζειν).
Institution and composition of Heliaia
[edit]It is not clear whether Heliaia was instituted by Cleisthenes or Solon, but it seems that the latter initiated a function of the Assembly to sit as an appeals court.[2][γ] The court had 6,001 members, chosen annually by lot[3] among all the male citizens over 30 years old, unless they were disfranchised.[4] Those suffering from intellectual or corporeal flaws were also excepted, if their shortages prevented them from fully perceiving the proceedings. If any unqualified person participated in a jury, then information was laid against him and he was brought before the Heliaia. If convicted the court could assess against him whatever punishment or fine he was thought to deserve. If the punishment was a money fine, then the infringer had to go to prison until he had paid both the former debt, for which the information was laid, and whatever additional sum had been imposed on him as a fine by the court.[4]
Appointment of the jurymen
[edit]The public office of the heliast was not obligatory, but the citizens who wished to exert these duties had to submit a petition. Jurors were paid a salary;[5] originally one obol per day and later, at the instigation of Kleon probably in 425 BC three obols, i.e. half a drachma. According to Aristotle,[6] "Pericles first made service in the jury-courts a paid office, as a popular counter-measure against Cimon's wealth".
The 6,000 were drawn from the 10 tribes (each tribe offering 600 members) and they were then divided into chambers of 600 jurymen, 500 or 501 of whom were regular members, with the rest constituting alternate jurors. In exceptional cases the court could go into plenary sessions.[7] Sometimes, the chambers had 201 to 401 members or 1001 to 1501 members.[δ] After the selection by lot, the heliasts had to take the Heliastic Oath once every year.[1] After the swearing-in, the jurors received one box-wood ticket, with their own names and that of their father and deme written on it, and one letter of the alphabet as far as kappa[8] and the jurors of each tribe were divided into ten sections, approximately an equal number under each letter.[4] Moreover, each juror was given a color-coded staff that represented their court designation, which reinforced their status as a unique group responsible for voting on cases and making decisions.[9]
Jurisdiction
[edit]Initially, the Heliaia's jurisdiction was limited to judging the archons and, probably, some other similar accusations against public office-holders.[10] It was when Ephialtes and Pericles prompted a binding resolution through the ecclesia,[11] stripping the Areios Pagos of most of the cases it judged,[12] that the Heliaia started judging almost all the civil and penal cases. The Areios Pagos kept its competence only for the crimes of murder and arson,[13] while the archons could impose some minor fines. The Heliaia's jurisdiction also included litigation which involved Athenians and citizens of other cities or Athens and another city as subjects of international law. Namely, the Heliaia functioned as a court for litigation of public, criminal and private international law.[ε]
Taking the jurisdiction over the so-called graphe paranomon,[14] the Heliaia replaced the Areios Pagos in the execution of the legal control of the decisions of the ecclesia. Until Ephialtes' reforms the Areios Pagos had the duty of guarding the laws and to keep watch over the greatest and the most important of the affairs of state.[15]
Procedure
[edit]The Heliaia was in session every normal day, except for the three last days of each month and for the days during which the ecclesia was in session. The sessions took place in the open within a marked-off area, since there was no specific building where they could be lodged. The location of the hearing was confined within a special hedge, outside of which the audience could stand.[16] The details of the legal procedure were as follows:
The hegemon (ἡγεμών[στ]) of the court was responsible for the registration of the suits and complaints. After holding a preliminary investigation, he also had to subpoena the litigant parties and the witnesses before the jury. In the morning of the day of hearings, the hegemon had to determine by lot the jury that would judge the case as well as the place where it would convene. After the formation of the jury, the hegemon had to submit the conclusions of his preliminary investigation, announcing and defining the litigation on which the court should decide. Then it was the time for the plaintiff, the defendant and the witnesses to be heard. The arguments were exposed by the litigants themselves, without the legal support of a lawyer,[ζ] in the form of an exchange of single speeches timed by water clock. In a public suit each litigant had three hours to speak, whereas they had much less in private suits (though here it was in proportion to the amount of money at stake). In this way the judicial cases became a vehement fight of impressions, since the jurors did not constitute a little group of mature citizens, such as the Court of Areios Pagos, which was interested only in the correct application of the law. Additionally, before the Chambers of Heliaia each citizen had to become an effective orator and to act solely in his capacity as citizen, in order to protect his interests and to enforce his views.[17]
Decisions were made by voting without any time set aside for deliberation. Nothing, however, stopped jurors from talking informally among themselves during the voting procedure and juries could be unruly, shouting out their disapproval or disbelief of things said by the litigants. This may have had some role in building a consensus. The voting procedure was public and transparent. Each heliast had received two votes, one "not guilty" and one "guilty". Then the herald (κήρυξ) would, first, ask the heliasts if they wanted to submit any objections against the witnesses and, then, he would call them to cast their votes in two different amphoras, one of copper for the "non-guilty" votes and one of wood for the "guilty" votes. The voting was secret,[18] since each juror had to cover the vote with his fingers, so that nobody could see in which amphora he threw it. In the civil cases the voting procedure was different, because the amphoras were as many as the litigant parties and the jurors had to vindicate one of them by casting their vote.
After the votes were counted, the herald announced the final result. In cases of a tie, the defendant was acquitted, because he was thought to have got "the vote of Athena".
Sentences
[edit]The Heliaia is considered the highest court in ancient Athens. Heliasts could impose either fines (for civil and penal cases) or "corporeal sentences" (only for penal cases). The fines of Heliaia were higher than the fines of the archons. The lato sensu "corporeal sentences" included death, imprisonment (for the non-Athenian citizens), atimia (sometimes along with confiscation) and perpetual exile (ἀειφυγία). Heliaia was the primary court in ancient Athens, composed of large juries selected from the citizens to ensure democratic participation in judicial processes. It was a democratic court with 6,000 citizens who served as jurors.
Famous trials before the Heliaia
Socrates' trial
[edit]Socrates was accused of asebeia (impiety) by Meletus, Anytus and Lycon. His trial took place in 399 BC and the jury found him guilty with 280 votes to 220.[19] His death sentence was decided in a second round of voting, which was even worse for the philosopher. Nonetheless, Socrates did not lose his calm demeanor and, although during the trial he could propose to the jury his self-exile, he did not do it when his friends offered to help him flee afterward, since life away from his beloved city was pointless for him.
Pericles' trial
[edit]According to Plutarch,[20] Pericles faced, twice, serious accusations. The first one was just before the eruption of the Peloponnesian War and the second one was during the first year of the war, when he was punished with a fine, the amount of which was either fifteen or fifty talents. Before the war a bill was passed, on the motion of Dracontides, according to which Pericles should deposit his accounts of public moneys with the prytanes and the jurors should decide upon his case with ballots which had lain upon the altar of the goddess on the acropolis. This clause of the bill was however amended with the motion that the case be tried before fifteen hundred jurors in the ordinary way, whether one wanted to call it a prosecution for embezzlement and bribery, or malversation.
Location
[edit]The name "Heliaia" has often been attached to a large unroofed rectangular enclosure at the southwestern corner of the Classical Agora of Athens. The identification was tentatively suggested by the excavator when the structure was discovered in the 1950s, but in the absence of any positive evidence to support it, he admitted that it was "nothing more than a likely hypothesis."[21] For lack of a better suggestion the name became widely used and appeared on plans of the site, but the uncertainty remained, and in a comprehensive final publication of the lawcourts in the Athenian Agora, published in 1995, the structure was referred to simply as the "Rectangular Peribolos," a neutral descriptive label that assumed no specific identification.[22] A few years later, a thorough review of the question, prompted by new epigraphical evidence, led to the suggestion that the enclosure was in fact the Aiakeion, a shrine dedicated to the hero Aiakos of Aegina,[23] and this identification has since been widely accepted.[24] The location of the Heliaia itself remains unknown.
See also
[edit]- Areopagus
- Athenian democracy
- Atimia (loss of citizen rights)
- Attic calendar
- Boule
- Ecclesia (ancient Athens)
- Graphe paranomon
- History of Athens
- Law court (ancient Athens)
Notes
[edit]α. ^ In Argos the place where its court was seated was also called ἁλιαία.
β. ^ Sun = ἥλιος and the verb ἡλιοῦσθαι (passive voice) = enjoy the sun.
γ. ^ According to Mogens Herman Hansen, The Athenian Ecclesia: A Collection of Articles 1983-1989, page 260, "apart from Plutarch, who quotes the Ath. Pol., there is no other evidence that the heliaia was a court of appeal, and the scanty contemporary sources indicate that it was a court of first instance."
δ. ^ When certain chambers were merged. This was the case of Pericles' trial.[25]
ε. ^ The cases of private international law were initially judged by the session of the Athenian alliance in Delos.[1]
στ. ^ This was not a judge or a juror, but a kind of archon, chosen by lot or by ordination for about a month.[26]
ζ. ^ That is why the profession of the logographer, or professional speechwriter, such as Lysias, flourished in ancient Athens.[27]
Citations
[edit]- ^ a b c The Helios
- ^ Aristotle, Constitution of Athens, 9.1 and Archaic Times to the End of the Peloponnesian War, Cambridge University Press, page 209
- ^ Aristotle, Constitution of Athens, 63.1 and Archaic Times to the End of the Peloponnesian War, Cambridge University Press, page 209
- ^ a b c Aristotle, Constitution of Athens, 63.3
- ^ Aristophanes, Wasps, 662
- ^ Aristotle, Constitution of Athens, 27.2.4-5
- ^ Andocides, Speeches, 1.17 and Mogens Herman Hansen, The Athenian Ecclesia: A Collection of Articles 1983-1989, page 260
- ^ Demosthenes, On the Crown, 210
- ^ Adamidis, Vasileios (2024). "Mind the Audience: Forensic Rhetoric, Persuasion, and Identification by Reference to the Social Identity of Athenian dikastai". Rhetorica. 42 (1): 1–30. doi:10.1353/rht.2024.a925230. ISSN 1533-8541.
- ^ Jones, Lesley Ann (1987). "The Role of Ephialtes in the Rise of Athenian Democracy". Classical Antiquity. 6 (1): 53–76. doi:10.2307/25010858. ISSN 0278-6656. JSTOR 25010858.
- ^ Plutarch, Pericles, IX
- ^ Aristotle, Politics, 1274a
- ^ Demosthenes, On the Crown, 133
- ^ Sealey, Raphael (1982). "On the Athenian Concept of Law". The Classical Journal. 77 (4): 289–302. ISSN 0009-8353. JSTOR 3297006.
- ^ Aristotle, Constitution of Athens, 8.1
- ^ Demosthenes, On the Crown, 196
- ^ Stephen Usher, The Orations in Ancient Attica in The Orations in the Modern Educational Systems, page 184
- ^ R.K Sinclair, Democracy and Participation in Athens, page 20
- ^ Comments on Socrates' Apology, page 17 (in Greek)
- ^ Plutarch, Pericles, 32.1 and 35.1
- ^ Thompson, Homer A. “Excavations in the Athenian Agora: 1953.” Hesperia 23 (1954): 38. Twenty years later, Thompson repeated that no dikastic equipment or other diagnostic material was found in the enclosure, and that the identification was essentially the product of "a process of elimination": Thompson, Homer A., and R. E. Wycherley. The Agora of Athens: The History, Shape, and Uses of an Ancient City Center (The Athenian Agora, vol. 14), Princeton, 1972: 62-63.
- ^ Boegehold, Alan L., II John McK. Camp, Margaret Crosby, Mabel Lang, David R. Jordan, and Rhys F. Townsend. The Lawcourts at Athens: Sites, Buildings, Equipment, Procedure, and Testimonia (The Athenian Agora, vol. 28), Princeton, 1995: 99-103. This same agnostic label also appeared on some official plans of the site: e.g., Agora Image 2008.19.009 (Agora Excavations)
- ^ Stroud, Ronald S. The Athenian Grain-Tax Law of 374/3 B. C. (Hesperia Supplement 29 ), Princeton 1998: 85-108.
- ^ It is reflected in the official publications of the Agora Excavations (e.g., Camp, John McKesson, II, The Athenian Agora: Site Guide (5th ed.), Princeton, 2010: 170-171) and on the excavation web site.
- ^ See The Helios
- ^ The Helios, article Hegemony of the court
- ^ Stephen Usher, The Orations in Ancient Attica in The Orations in the Modern Educational Systems, page 183
References
[edit]Primary sources
- Andocides, Speeches. See original text in Perseus program.
- Aristophanes, Wasps. See original text in Perseus program.
- Aristotle, Constitution of Athens. See original text in Perseus program.
- Aristotle, Politics. See original text in Perseus program.
- Demosthenes, On the Crown. See original text in Perseus program.
- Plutarch, Pericles. See original text in Perseus program.
Secondary sources
- Cambridge University Press, Archaic Times to the End of the Peloponnesian War, 1983.
- Encyclopaedic Dictionary The Helios, article Heliaia (in Greek).
- Mogens Herman Hansen, The Athenian Ecclesia: A Collection of Articles 1983-1989, 1989.
- Konstantinos Paparrigopoulos, History of the Hellenic Nation, Volume Ab (in Greek).
- R.K Sinclair, Democracy and Participation in Athens, 1991.
- Georg Friedrich Schömann, A Dissertation on the Assemblies of the Athenians, Cambridge, 1838.
- Stephen Usher, The Orations in Ancient Attica in The Orations in the Modern Educational Systems, Editions: Grigoris, 1984 (translated in Greek).
- Burrus, Virginia, and Marco Conti. The Life of Saint Helia: Critical Edition, Translation, Introduction, and Commentary. Oxford University Press, 2015.
- Jones, A.H.M. Athenian Democracy. Oxford University Press, 1957.
- Ober, Josiah. Mass and Elite in Democratic Athens: Rhetoric, Ideology, and the Power of the People. Princeton University Press, 1989.
- MacDowell, D.M. The Law in Classical Athens. Cornell University Press, 1978.
External links
[edit]- Athenian Democracy in Action: The Pnyx, the Bouleuterion, the Prytaneion, and the Heliaia
- Criminal Procedure in Ancient Greece and the Trial of Socrates
- Historical Overview
- Panagiotis Chaloulos, Legislative provisions (in Greek)
- Yannis Panagiwtopoulos, The Athenian Democracy Archived 2006-04-27 at the Wayback Machine (in Greek)
- Michael Sakelariou, The Athenian Democracy Archived 2006-04-18 at the Wayback Machine
- E.M. Soulis, Thucydides and his political and intellectual environment (in Greek)
- ^ Rotroff, Susan (January 1988). ""The long-petal bowl from the Pithos Settling Basin."". Hesperia: The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. 57 (1): 87–93. JSTOR 148204.