Democracy in Ancient Greece
Class XXXX, Section XXXX, Fall, 2012
The term democracy was invented by ancient Greece, and it came about through the system of involving all the people in ruling of their land. The ancient Athenian Greeks have been credited with developing democratic rule. Though their governing system may not have been very democratic as present day democracies, it allowed participation of diverse social class of people. This paper will attempt to answer the following questions, what are the conditions underlying the rise and fall of democracy in ancient Greece. At what point in the decline of Greek democracy do Socrates and Plato come in, and why were they advancing a return to aristocratic elitism rather than enthusiastic supporters of direct democracy?
Conditions underlying the rise and fall of democracy in ancient Greece
Ancient Greece was a made up of loose small independent states that were known as poleis, it is estimated that Greece had about 1000 poleis (Smitha, 2011). Majority of these poleis were ruled as oligarchies. The two main oligarchies states were Sparta and Athens. However, these two had different democratic systems, at least at some time in their history.
internal unrests and conflicts were the main driving force of democracy in many of Greece poleis, particularly in Sparta and Athens (Smitha, 2011). We shall use Athens city as an example to examine the conditions underlying the rise and fall of democracy in ancient Greece, which were similarly in other Greece cities.
Athens city bordered the ocean and therefore actively engaged in maritime trade. However, it also heavily depended on agriculture just like Sparta. Like other poleis, Athens was...
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