In this book, James Sickinger explores the use and preservation of
public records in the ancient Athenian democracy of the archaic and
classical periods.
Athenian public records are most familiar from the survival of
inscribed stelai, slabs of marble on which were published decrees,
treaties, financial accounts, and other state documents. Working
largely from evidence supplied by such inscriptions, Sickinger
demonstrates that their texts actually represented only a small
part of Athenian record keeping. More numerous and more widely
used, he says, were archival texts written on wooden tablets or
papyri that were made, and often kept for extended periods of time,
by Athenian officials.
Beginning with the legislation of Drakon in the seventh century
B.C., Sickinger traces the growing use of written records by the
Athenian state over the next three centuries, concluding with an
examination of the Metroon, the state archive of Athens, during the
fourth century. Challenging assumptions about ancient Athenian
literacy, democracy, and society, Sickinger argues that the
practical use and preservation of laws, decrees, and other state
documents were hallmarks of Athenian public life from the earliest
times.