- Ancient Greek clubs
Ancient Greek clubs were associations of ancient Greeks who were united by a common interest or goal.
Types
The earliest reference of clubs in
ancient Greece appears in the law ofSolon and is quoted incidentally in the "Digest" ofJustinian I (47.22). This guaranteed the administrative independence of the associations if they kept within the bounds of the law. The Digest mentions associations forreligious practices,burial ,trade ,privateering , andcommunal meals. It also mentionsdeme s, citizen groups based on subdivisions of land andphratries ,kinship groups. Information about the clubs have been found primarily oninscriptions including those related to burial practices and common meals.Political
During the time span of 448 and 431 BC, that is between the end of
Persian Wars and the start of thePeloponnesian War , there were political clubs called "hetairies", within both theoligarchic anddemocratic parties. Supposed members included:Themistocles , a leader in theAthenian democracy ,(Plut. "Anistides," 2);Pericles , a statesman,orator , and general of Athens, (Plut. "Per." 7 and 13);Cimon , an Athenianstatesman andgeneral , who had a hundred club member, "hetairoi", following him (Plut. "Cim." 17). The purpose of these associations was to secure favourable results atelection s and in thecourts (Thuc. viii. 54). At this time their actions were not regarded as harmful or illegal by ancient Greek society.The bitterness of party struggles in Greece during the Peloponnesian War meant that in many states they became a threat to local
constitution s, and to democratic institutions.Aristotle mentions ("Politics," p. 1310 a) a secret oath taken by the members of oligarchic clubs, containing the promise, "I will be an enemy to the people, and will devise all the harm I can against them." At Athens in413 BC a conspiracy against theirdemocracy was engineered by these clubs, which existed there and in the other cities of theDelian League (Thuc. viii. 48 and 54). This is an example of how some of these political clubs had become secret conspiracies working outside theconstitution .Religious
Ancient Greek religious
club s focused on the worship of a particulardeity and had several names including "thiasi , eranoi" and "orgeones,". The "thiasi" and "orgeones" clubs were often connected withdeitie s foreign to the area and whose rites were of an orgiastic nature. These were deities that were not formally recognised and guaranteed by thestate which meant no state provision was made for their worship. Private individuals or groups had to providepriest s, temples,sacrifice s for non-state deities and this was purpose of many of the religious clubs. The state, as the law of Solon shows, had no problem with the introduction of worship of foreign deities provided it did not infringe the law and was not morally unwholesome. These religious clubs had all the rights of legalcorporation s.There were clubs supporting the cults of foreign deities such as
Sabazius ,Mater Magna (see Great mother of the gods) andAttis ,Adonis ,Isis ,Serapis ,Men Tyrannos . These were especially prevalent in seaports like thePeiraeus ,Rhodes , Smyrna. A passage inDemosthenes ("de Corona," sect. 259 foll.) shows that the initiation at an early age in the rites of Sabazius did not gain credit forAeschines in the eyes of the "best men". The members of these religious clubs included women, freedmen, foreigners and slaves but rarely people who heldcitizenship by birth. An inscription found by Sir Charles Thomas Newton atCnidus contains a mutilated list of members of a "thiasos" includes apparently only one Cnidian citizen out of twelve, four slaves, and probably seven foreigners. This would suggest that it was the foreign population in the cities of Greece that tended to participate in this type of religious club. [Foucart, Paul (1873), "Les Associations religieuses chez les Grecs", Paris]Organisation
A lot of the evidence about the organisation of religious clubs comes from inscriptions from
Greece . The religious associations took on organizational forms in imitation of the constitution of the city in which they were based. The clubs had laws, an assembly, magistrates or officers (i.e. secretary, treasurer) as well as priests or priestesses, and organised finances. Rules regulated the conditions of admission, which involved an entrance fee and an examination as to character; the contributions, payable by the month, and the steps to be taken to enforce payment, e.g. exclusion in case of persistent neglect of this duty. Rules also governed the use to be made of the revenues, such as the building or maintenance of temple or club-house, and the cost of crowns or other honours voted by the assembly to its officers. This assembly, in accordance with the law, elected its officers once a year, and these, like those of the state itself, took an oath on entering office, and gave an account of their stewardship at the end of the year. For further details on these points of internal government see Foucart's work (pp. 20 foll.), chiefly derived from inscriptions of the "orgeones" engaged in the cult of the Mother of the Gods at the Peiraeus. Foucart states that these clubs did not function in any sense as benefit clubs, or offer relief to the sick and needy. [Foucart, Paul (1873), "Les Associations religieuses chez les Grecs", Paris]Religious clubs increased in number and importance in the later periods of Greek history, and a large proportion of the inscriptions relating to them belong to the
Macedon ian andRoman empire s. One of the most interesting, found in1868 , belongs to the2nd century A.D. and reveals the worship of Men Tyrannos atLaurium (Foucart, pp. 119 foll.). ThisPhrygia n deity was introduced into Attica by a Lycian slave, employed by a Roman in working the mines at Laurium. He founded the cult and the "eranos" which was to maintain it, and seems also to have drawn up the law regulating its ritual and government. This may indicate how similar religious clubs were organised earlier in the period.ee also
Associations in Ancient Rome References
Further reading
Grote, "Hist. of Greece," v. 360; AHJ Greenidge, "Handbook of Greek Constitutional History," 208 foll.
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