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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: STE-SUS |
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STRATEGUS (oTparfyos) , strictly the Greek word for a general, or officer in command of an army, but frequently the name of a state officer with much wider functions. Such an officer is found in many Greek states, the best known being the Athenian strategus
magistrate in the state. According to Aristotle's Constitution of Athens iv., the office existed in the time of Draco and the qualification was property to the value of roo minae (i.e. ten times as high as that for the archonship) ; but it is certain that until the end of the 6th century the archon (q.v.) was the most important state official. If, as is probable, the chapter in the Constitution is a forgery (see DRACO), we may conclude that the Strategia (board of ten generals) was a result of the tribal system of Cleisthenes, and that the college is to be ascribed to the year 501 B.C. Some maintain that Cleisthenes himself created it, but the evidence (Ath. Pol. xxii.) is against this. At all events, as late
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as low as the lochogi (commanders of Xo ot, companies) that the Ecclesia allowed them to select. From the Constitution (lxi. 3), however, it appears that in the 4th century, at any rate, the lochagi were appointed by the taxiarchs, not the strategi. By a gradual process in the course of the 5th century, the regimental command was transferred to the taxiarchs, the strategi thus becoming general officers in command, while they at the same time acquired important political functions (see below). On the other hand the strategi commanded by both land and sea, and thus held the power divided at Sparta between the kings and the nauarchus (admiral). In the course of the 5th century the powers of the strategia were increased by important political functions, especially In foreign affairs; hence the office, unlike that of the archon (q.v.), remained on in its original
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ordinary citizen that his business took precedence (the meetings always discussed first the question of national defence) and that he could in cases of emergency convene a special
Many historians in dealing with the strategia have been misled by modern analogies. The strategia was, for example, by no means analogous to the-British cabinet, which (I) has collective responsibility and (2) is executive in the sense that its members are heads of state departments. The strategi had no such characteristics; their influeace over the Ecclesia in voting was merely that of a private citizen; there was no collective responsibility, no unanimous policy. Nor was the strategia a foreign office, though it clearly performed' a ministerial act in attaching its signature to treaties. In general it had no powers of originating negotiation, but merely carried out the psephism of the Ecclesia. It was their relation to the empire which gave the strategi their authority. It was they who took the oath on behalf of Athens when an alliance was concluded, and their advice would have special
robs brXtras, Sri rite x pav, fr% nihv aerie, Er% Tits gels/sepias, and inscriptions of the 3rd century refer to others. Under the Roman domination the strategus eri ra 6rXa was the chief state officer. The law of the emperor Hadrian regarding the export of oil to Athens speaks of him as managing the corn supply and presiding over the education of the Ephebi. In general, their duty was still mainly the foreign policy, offensive and defensive, of Athens; they nominated trierarchs, and, if any nominee refused to serve, brought him before the Heliaea to defend his case. They had powers of life and death over the army in the fieldeven a trierarch might be put in irons by a strategus. They presided over certain religious festivals and processions, and appear to have been responsible for the protection of the corn supply .AUTHORITIES:'A. H. J. Greenidge Handbook of Greek Con, stitutional History (London, 1896), especially on the question of the presidency, p. 253; Gilbert, Greek Constitutional antiquities (Eng. trans., 1895) ; Hauvette-Besnault, Les Stratbges atheniens (Paris, 1885); Beloch, D. att. Politik seit Perikles, pp. 276, 277; Paulus, Frogs: v. hfaulbronn (1883, 34 seq.) ; Aristotle's Constitution of Athens passim, but especially iv., xxii., ltd.; the general histories of Greece Busolt, Meyer, Bury, Grote (ed. 1907). (J. M. M.) 1 All works written prior to 1891 must be read in the light of the Constitution of Athens. End of Article: STRATEGUS (oTparfyos) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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