The most important economic duty of the Athenian
hegemony was bound up with land. Perikles,
so Thucydides (Histories 1.141) informs us, called
the Peloponnesians autourgoi: that is to say,
farmers working on their own land.
He contrasted them strongly with the Athenians,
who had plenty of land both on the islands and on the
mainland (Thucydides, Histories 1.143). In
the interval between the end of the Persian Wars and the
start of the Peloponnesian War, Athens had planted an
awesome number of communities outside Attica, mainly on
Euboea: the so-called 'cleruchies'. The polis
was handing out parcels of land to its citizens in one
region after another. Some of the acreage was worked by
Athenians, some was rented out to the locals. |
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