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  1. ‘Donatus’ and Athenian phratries.Mark Golden - 1985 - Classical Quarterly 35 (1):9-13.
    My purpose in this paper is to reassert the traditional view that Athenian women of the classical period regularly had an association with phratries. As part of my argument I adduce an overlooked piece of evidence, a much discussed passage from the Donatus commentary on Terence; for this I provide a new interpretation. There is some evidence that Athenian women were introduced to their fathers phrateres at birth, or to their husbands' phrateres at marriage, or both. The speaker of Isaeus (...)
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  • Those Athenian Bastards.Cynthia B. Patterson - 1990 - Classical Antiquity 9 (1):40-73.
  • Atimia and Outlawry in Archaic and Classical Greece.Christopher Joyce - 2018 - Polis 35 (1):33-60.
    This article challenges the commonly held belief that atimia in its earliest Greek usage meant exile, arguing instead that atimia and outlawry were always two entirely distinct, though not mutually exclusive, concepts. It is often claimed that atimia originated as a penalty of death or exile, but that over time its harshness became modified so that those who suffered under its restrictions could not be killed or assaulted with impunity. A careful study of the evidence will show that atimia never (...)
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  • ‘Donatus’ and Athenian phratries.Mark Golden - 1985 - Classical Quarterly 35 (1):9-13.
    My purpose in this paper is to reassert the traditional view that Athenian women of the classical period regularly had an association with phratries. As part of my argument I adduce an overlooked piece of evidence, a much discussed passage from the Donatus commentary on Terence; for this I provide a new interpretation.There is some evidence that Athenian women were introduced to their fathersphrateresat birth, or to their husbands'phrateresat marriage, or both. The speaker of Isaeus 3 repeatedly asserts that a (...)
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  • Athenian Atimia and Legislation Against Tyranny and Subversion.Sviatoslav Dmitriev - 2015 - Classical Quarterly 65 (1):35-50.
    Following the idea first expressed by Heinrich Swoboda, there is a general perception that the meaning of ἀτιμία in Athens eventually evolved from the original ‘outlawry’, when an ἄτιμος was liable to being deprived of his property and slayed with impunity if he returned to the land from which he had been banished, into a certain limitation on civic status, which has often been rendered as a ‘disfranchisement’. Specific outcomes of this later form of ἀτιμία varied depending on the dating (...)
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