The Athenian Tribute Lists, 第 2 巻ASCSA, 1950 - 386 ページ This book is the third of four volumes presenting the standard text of, and commentary on, the inscriptions that have come to be known as the "Athenian Tribute Lists." Through the tribute lists, historians have been able to study the extent and nature of the Athenian empire that grew out of the Delian League established to combat the Persians in 478/7 B.C. The inscriptions provide evidence of the money paid to Athens by other members of the League after the tribute treasury was moved from Delos to Athens in 454 B.C. The texts persist from the 450s through to the 430s, after which the evidence is very fragmentary and often undatable. This volume provides a historical commentary on the inscriptions presented in detail in Volumes I and II, tying them into a history of the Athenian empire in narrative form. |
多く使われている語句
200 talents absent Aigina Akropolis alliance allies Amphipolis apotaxis Argilos Aristeides arrears assessment Athenian Athens believe Byzantion campaign Chersonese cities colony column Commentary Confederacy decree Delos Dikaia Diodoros doubt Drabeskos drachmai Eion Empire Ephoros Eretria Erythrai Euboia evidence figure fleet Gomme Greek Hellenic Hellenic League hellenotamiai Hellespontine Herodotos Hesperia Ionians Isokrates Karic Kimon klerouchs Kypros lines List 21 Makedonian Meritt Methone Miletos Myrina names Naupaktos Naxos Nesselhauf Othoros paid Panathenaia partial payment Pausanias Peloponnese Peloponnesian Perdikkas perhaps Perikles Period Persian Plataia Plutarch Poteidaia probably prytany quota lists record restored revolt rubric of List Samian Samos ships Sparta taktai Thasos Themistokles Thrace Thrakian Thucydides Tolmides treasurers tribute VIII Wade-Gery whole-payments Αθηναῖοι ἀπὸ γὰρ δὲ εἰς ἐκ ἐν ἐπὶ ἐς καὶ κατὰ μὲν οἱ περὶ τὰ τὰς τε τῇ τὴν τῆς τὸ τοῖς τὸν τοῦ τοὺς τῶν ὡς
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364 ページ - When they shall count the enemy's soil their own, And theirs the enemy's: when they know that ships Are their true wealth, their so-called wealth delusion.
344 ページ - If you take the total result of the lot, 'twill reach two thousand talents or near. And next put down the Justices' pay, and reckon the sums they receive a year: Six thousand Justices, count them through, there dwell no more in the land as yet, One hundred and fifty talents a year I think you will find is all they get. PHILOCLEON. Then not one tithe of our income goes to furnish forth the Justices
xix ページ - Facsimile of the codex Venetus Marcianus 474. With a preface by John Williams White . . . and an introduction by Thomas W. Allen.
xviii ページ - Robinson (David M.) Ancient Sinope. An historical account with a prosopographia sinopensis and an appendix of inscriptions.
321 ページ - Very possibly lines 295-6 will refer to some sort of trouble in Pallene, and this would surely mean Poteidaia. It is not impossible that Poteidaia remained recalcitrant till Kimon made his Five Years
131 ページ - And there was, he said, a regular standing amount of 6000 talents on the Akropolis. (The greater part of this, actually 5700 talents, was in fact still there. There had been extra disbursements from it for the Propylaia and other buildings and for Poteidaia.)" There are three variations in the scholion from our MSS.
xx ページ - INDEX scholarum publiée et privatim in Academia Georgia Augusta per semestre aestivum a d.
xiii ページ - Aevum. Rassegna di scienze storiche, linguistiche e filologiche. Pubbl. per cura délia Facoltà di lettere dell' Università cattolica del Sacro Cuore.
344 ページ - Then listen my own little pet Papa, and smooth your brow from its frowns again. And not with pebbles precisely ranged, but roughly thus on your fingers count The tribute paid by the subject States, and just consider its whole amount; And then, in addition to this, compute the many taxes and one-per-cents, The fees and the fines, and the silver mines, the markets and harbours and sales and rents. If you take the total result of the lot, 'twill reach two thousand talents or near. And next put down...
190 ページ - Peloponnese ; while the Athenians, and the allies from Ionia and the Hellespont, who had now revolted from the king, stayed behind, and laid siege to Sestos, of which the Medes were in possession.