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Title: Slavery in Ancient Greece
Subtitle: The History of Slaves Across the Greek City-States
Author: Charles River Editors
Narrator: Ken Teutsch
Format: Unabridged
Length: 1 hr and 22 mins
Language: English
Release date: 12-20-16
Publisher: Charles River Editors
Genres: History, Ancient
Publisher's Summary:
Slavery was a universal and totally accepted feature of ancient Greek society, so much so that while the conditions under which slaves lived and worked varied considerably, many ordinary citizens kept at least one slave, often working alongside their owners, while larger commercial enterprises involved huge numbers, many of whom could rise to positions of authority and wealth. It was possible for some slaves to buy their freedom, while others lived and died in conditions of appalling brutality, notably in the silver mines at Laurium. The revenues from these mines paid for the fleet with which Athens defeated Xerxes and were the basis of the Attic owls, the four drachma coins that revolutionized the Athenian economy. The mines were often leased to contractors and worked by slaves and condemned criminals. The galleries averaged approximately three and a half feet in height, so most miners had to work on their hands and knees. Another specific group of slaves that suffered particularly brutal treatment was the pornai, slaves used in the brothels as prostitutes.
While those sound like the conditions of slavery people are accustomed to hearing about in more modern times, other forms of slavery in Greece were quite unique, and perhaps fittingly, Sparta might have had the most unusual system of all. Sparta will forever be known for its military prowess, but the importance the Spartans placed upon being a warrior society meant their way of life was entirely dependent on a class of indentured servants known as the helots. The Spartans needed the helots to maintain the domestic front, but they also frequently brought helots to the battlefield with them, and they repeatedly had to turn their own hoplites on unruly helots to suppress potential rebellions.
As this makes clear, however unpalatable it may be to modern historians who expound on the virtues of the Greek legacy to western civilization, it is indisputably the case that slavery constituted a central part of that legacy. Indeed, slavery underpinned to a large extent the very foundations of the classical Greek way of life.
Members Reviews:
One Star
this was horrible
The basis of democracy has practiced by the Greeks was based on slavery that gave their masters time for political matters
the e-book Slavery in Ancient Greece: The History of Slaves across the Greek City-States was quite interesting. I found most interesting Aristotle's notes on the doctrine of natural slavery, which simply said some people were born to be slaves especially barbarians/ non-Greeks. The Greeks had many words for slave or slavery. The treatment of slaves was based on the type of work expected of the slaves and which city state contained the slaves. For the most part they found it easier to buy slaves then to let them breed because childbirth might cause the death of the slave mother and raising the young to an age when they might be useful was expensive.
It's sort of funny to realize that the concept of democracy has practiced by the Greeks was based on slavery. There's no question that if one did not have slaves, he probably had very little time to be involved in the political process in Athens and other city states. Until I read this book I did not realize that the majority of freemen owned slaves so that they could have time to practice democracy. This book was very interesting and enlightening.