Kleroterion
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

A kleroterion ( grc, κληρωτήριον) was a randomization device used by the Athenian
polis ''Polis'' (, ; grc-gre, πόλις, ), plural ''poleis'' (, , ), literally means "city" in Greek. In Ancient Greece, it originally referred to an administrative and religious city center, as distinct from the rest of the city. Later, it also ...
during the period of
democracy Democracy (From grc, δημοκρατία, dēmokratía, ''dēmos'' 'people' and ''kratos'' 'rule') is a form of government in which the people have the authority to deliberate and decide legislation (" direct democracy"), or to choose g ...
to select citizens to the boule, to most state offices, to the nomothetai, and to court juries. The kleroterion was a slab of stone incised with rows of slots and with an attached tube. Citizens' tokens— pinakia—were placed randomly in the slots so that every member of each of the tribes of Athens had their tokens placed in the same column. There was a pipe attached to the stone which could then be fed dice that were coloured differently (assumed to be black and white) and could be released individually by a mechanism that has not survived to posterity (but is speculated to be by two nails; one used to block the open end and another to separate the next die to fall from the rest of the dice above it.) When a die was released, a complete row of tokens (so, one citizen from each of the tribes of Athens) was either selected if the die was coloured one colour, or discarded if it was the alternate colour. This process continued until the requisite number of citizens was selected.


History

Prior to 403 BCE, the courts published a schedule and the number of dikastes required for the day. Those citizens who wanted to be dikastes queued at the entrance of the court at the beginning of the court day. Originally, the procedure was based on a "first come, first serve" basis. Beginning in 403 BCE, Athenian allotment underwent a series of reforms, and from 370 BCE onwards, they employed the kleroterion.


Procedure

In his '' Constitution of the Athenians'', Aristotle gives an account of the selection of jurors to the ''dikastra''. Each ''
deme In Ancient Greece, a deme or ( grc, δῆμος, plural: demoi, δημοι) was a suburb or a subdivision of Athens and other city-states. Demes as simple subdivisions of land in the countryside seem to have existed in the 6th century BC and ear ...
'' divided their ''dikastes'' into ten sections, which split the use of two ''kleroteria''. Candidate citizens placed their identification token (''pinaka'') in the section's chest. Once each citizen who wished to become judge for the day placed their ''pinaka'' in the chest, the presiding archon shook the chest and drew out tokens. The citizen whose token was first drawn became the token inserter (''empektes''). The token inserter then pulled out tokens and inserted them into their corresponding sections. The ''kleroterion'' was divided into five columns, one column per tribe section (between two machines). Each row was known as a ''kanomides''. Once the token inserter filled the kleroterion, the archon then placed a mix of black and white dice (''kyboi'') into the side of the kleroterion. The number of white dice was proportional to the number of jurors needed. The archon allowed the dice to fall through a tube on the side of the ''kleroterion'' and drew them one by one. If the die was white, the top row was selected as jurors. If the die was black, the archon moved on to the next row down from the top and repeated the process until all juror positions were filled for the day.


Scholarship

The first significant examination of Athenian allotment procedures was
James Wycliffe Headlam Sir James Wycliffe Headlam-Morley, CBE (24 December 1863 – 6 September 1929) was a British academic historian and classicist, who became a civil servant and government advisor on current foreign policy. He was known as James Wycliffe Headlam unti ...
's ''Election by Lot'', first published in 1891. Aristotle's '' Constitution of the Athenians'', the text of which was first discovered in 1879 and first published as Aristotle's in 1890, became an important resource for scholars. Throughout the text, Aristotle makes references to a lottery system which was used to appoint government officials. Archaeologists first discovered ''kleroteria'' in the 1930s in the Athenian Agora, dating them to the second century BC. In ''Aristotle, the Kleroteria, and the Courts'' (1939),
Sterling Dow Sterling Dow (19 November 1903, Portland, Maine – 9 January 1995, Cambridge, Massachusetts) was an American classical archaeologist, epigrapher, and professor of archaeology at Harvard University. (with Dow's publication list) After secondary e ...
gave an overview and analysis of the discovered machines. Contrary to previous scholars, who translated ''kleroterion'' as "allotment room," Dow reasoned that ''kleroterion'' cannot be translated to mean "room," as Aristotle writes: "There are five ''kanomides'' in each of the ''kleroteria''. Whenever he puts in the ''kyboi,'' the archon draws lots for the tribe the ''kleroterion''." Dow concluded that Aristotle's fourth-century description of the ''kleroterion'' applied to the second-century ''kleroterion.'' In 1937, Dow published a catalog of his archaeological discoveries in the Athenian agora. He describes eleven ''kleroteria'c fragments:


See also

*
Sortition In governance, sortition (also known as selection by lottery, selection by lot, allotment, demarchy, stochocracy, aleatoric democracy, democratic lottery, and lottocracy) is the selection of political officials as a random sample from a large ...
*
Lottery machine A lottery is a form of gambling that involves the drawing of numbers at random for a prize. Some governments outlaw lotteries, while others endorse it to the extent of organizing a national or state lottery. It is common to find some degree o ...


References

* * * Orlandini, Alessandro (April 2018) https://www.academia.edu/36510282/KLEROTERION._simulation_of_the_allotment_of_dikastai. simulation of the allotment.


External links

* Patrice Masini
Le tirage au sort démocratique
CNRS Images (2017) (a short video by French scholars) * Alessandro Orlandini, https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=gt9H7nbZjAw, (2018) (video of the procedure simulation)
The Machine that Selected the Citizens of Athens
{{commons category, Kleroterions Ancient Greece Democracy Sampling (statistics) Athenian democracy