The Archaia Moira: a suggestion

Classical Quarterly 45 (01):87- (1995)
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Abstract

In discussions of the complex and controversial problem of Spartan land-tenure,1 the mysterious ‘ρχαα μορα’ has assumed an importance out of all proportion to its prominence in the sources, for the actual phrase only occurs once in extant literature. It owes its importance to the fact that the reference to it has been used to support the theory that there were two categories of land in Sparta, a theory which in turn is held to explain how, when all Spartans supposedly owned equal estates, there could nevertheless be rich ones and poor ones, as authors such as Herodotos, Thucydides, Xenophon, and Aristotle make clear. The answer, it is claimed, is that although all Spartans possessed an equal share of one category of land, they could own more or less of the other category.2

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V. Aristoteles’ und Herakleides’ lakonische und kretische Politien.Carl V. Holzinger - 1894 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 52 (1-4):58-117.

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