© 1998 Bernard SUZANNE   Last updated November 16, 1998 
Plato and his dialogues : Home - Biography - Works and links to them - History of interpretation - New hypotheses - Map of dialogues : table version or non tabular version. Tools : Index of persons and locations - Detailed and synoptic chronologies - Maps of Ancient Greek World. Site information : About the author.

Map of Attica in Socrates and Plato's time


To go to the entry on a given location, click on its name on the map.


Attic tribes and demes

Depending on the context, Athens may refer to the city of Athens proper, exclusive of its suburbs such as Piraeus, its main harbor, or the larger urbain area including such suburbs as Piraeus, or the whole of Attica, the territory of the "city-state", in which most of its citizens would live and own land, or even the whole of the Athenian empire that spread all through the Mediterranean, grew and shrunk over the years (the same could be said with little variation of all the "city-states" of ancient Greece, such as Sparta, Thebes, Corinth, etc.). Thus, what were called citizens of Athens, were in fact people living all through Attica, not necessarily in the city of Athens itself, though they all had to go there from time to time to accomplish their civic duties.

The organisation of Attica in the time of Socrates and Plato was the result of a reform by Cleisthenes in 508. According to this organisation, all citizens of Attica entitled to participate in the political institutions of Athens were divided in ten "tribes" (phulai in Greek), named after ten eponym heroes chosen by the oracle of Delphi from a list of one hundred names (a monument with the statues of these ten heroes was built on the Agora of Athens and was used to post official publications).
Attica as a whole was divides into three areas : a peripheral zone along the coast (exclusive of the costal area close to Athens), called Paralia ; a central area called Mesogeia ; and a third one including Athens and its vicinity, called Astu, that is, the City area (astu is the common name in Greek for an urban area as opposed to the countryside, agros). Each tribe was made up of sections of each of these three areas, called trittues in Greek, that is, "Thirds". These so-called tritties were further divided into "demes" (dèmoi in Greek, from the same word, dèmos, which also means "people" and is at the root of such words as "democracy"), corresponding in general to the various villages of Attica and districts of Athens.
Each citizen of Athens was called by the name of his deme, as for instance "Socrates from Alopece" or "Callicles from Acharnæ" (see Gorgias, 495d), or else Æschines of Sphettus, etc., and he had to register in the deme of his father to enjoy his political rights as a citizen of Athens. He would stay a member of that deme even if he was no longer living on its territory.

Aside from this "political" organisation, there remained older groupings, such as "families" (genè in Greek) and "phratries" (groups of people supposed to have a common ancestor), that played a mainly religious role in Socrates' and Plato's time.

Only those demes that are in direct relationship with Plato and the dialogues have been located on the above map. Following is a list of demes arraged by tribes and tritties.

Tribe "Tritty"
Atsu (the "city") Mesogeia (inland) Paralia (costal area)
Athens proper Suburbs
Erechtheides
(after Erechtheus,
king of Athens)
  Euonymon
Agyle
Cephisia Lamptræ
Anagyrous
Ægeides
(after Ægeus,
Theseus' father)
Collytus Ancyle
Colonus
Erchia
Gargettus
Icaria
Teithrasus
Halai Araphenides
Philædæ
Pandionides
(after Pandion, one of two
kings of Athens :
Erechtheus' father
or Ægeus' father)
Cydathenæum Cytheræoi Pæania Myrrhinus
Angeleis
Prasiæ
Probalinthus
Steiria
Leontides
(after the Attic hero Leos)
Leuconoe
Cholleidæ
Scambonidæ
Halimus Eupyrides
Cropia
Pæonides
Hecale
Phrearrhoi
Sunium
Acamantides
(after Acamas,
one of Theseus' sons)
  Cerames
Cholarges
Hermeion
Sphettus
Cephale
Hagnus
Prospaltes
Thoricus
Oeneides
(after Oeneus)
Oa Laciadæ
Perithoedæ
Acharnæ Thria
Cothocidæ
Phile
Cecropides
(after Cecrops,
first king of Athens)
  Melite
Xypete
Phlia
Athmonia
Æxone
Halai Æsonides
Hippothoontides
(after the Attic hero
Hippothoon)
Coele Piræus Decelea Eleusis
Oenoe (of the west)
Æantides
(after Ajax,
king of Salamis)
  Phaleron Aphidna Marathon
Oenoe (of the east)
Rhamnus
Antiochides
(after Antiochus,
son of Heracles)
  Alopece Pallene Anaphlystus
Ægilia
Amphitrope
Ateneis
Thoræ


Plato and his dialogues : Home - Biography - Works and links to them - History of interpretation - New hypotheses - Map of dialogues : table version or non tabular version. Tools : Index of persons and locations - Detailed and synoptic chronologies - Maps of Ancient Greek World. Site information : About the author.

First published January 4, 1998 - Last updated November 16, 1998
© 1998 Bernard SUZANNE (click on name to send your comments via e-mail)
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