The Attic Genos

Classical Quarterly 49 (2):484-489 (1999)
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Abstract

Over twenty years since the influential revisionist studies of Roussel and Bourriot, agreement on a satisfactory theory of the Atticgenosseems as elusive as ever. Although they differed on details, these two scholars were agreed in their rejection of the old monolithic account of thegenosas aristocratic family whose institutionalized control over state cults and phratry admissions in the historical period was a relic of a wider political dominance. Roussel and Bourriot instead proposed a tripartite model according to which the formalgenos-kome—a more or less localized community similar to the later deme, with hereditary but socio-economically diverse membership, and enjoying, as a tighter community well placed to regulate its own admissions, automatic access to the wider phratry—was distinguishable both from aristocratic families, such as the Peisistratidai or Alkmeonidai, and priestly houses, such as the Kerykes and Eumolpidai of Eleusis. Subsequent discussion has moved in several directions. My analysis of the relationship between phratry andgenosfollowed a broadly revisionist line. I found no good evidence forgenecontrolling the access to phratries of persons who were notgenosmembers and presented a new interpretation of the crucial Demotionidai decrees in which, contrary to prevailing theories, neither of the two groups mentioned in them—the Demotionidai and the House (oikos) of the Dekeleieis—was a privileged subgroup dominating the whole. Rather, I suggested that the Demotionidai were a phratry in process of fission, the Dekelean House a product of this process. Others, however, have taken the debate in the other direction, as it were reprivileging thegenos.

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Deceleans and Demotionidae again.P. J. Rhodes - 1997 - Classical Quarterly 47 (01):109-.
Phratries in Homer.A. Andrewes - 1961 - Hermes 89 (2):129-140.

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