The
Definition of Aristocracy
People
like the wealthy woman buried with the granary model at Athens and the earlier
couple from Lefkandi constituted the aristocracy that emerged during the later
part of the Greek Dark Age. The term aristocracy comes from Greek
and means "rule of the best." Although the use of this term is
traditional in accounts of ancient Greek history, it is important to remember
that "aristocracy" in this context does not mean what it often means
in,for example, French or English history. That is, ancient Greece never had an
aristocracy that was an officially recognized nobility, whose members inherited
their status regardless of their wealth or other socio-economic
characteristics. Rather, the term as used in ancient Greek history refers to
the social elite, whose status depended on a combination of factors, of which
wealth and public conduct were very important. When one speaks of a Greek
aristocrat, then, it is crucial to understand this designation as meaning
"a member of the social elite." Aristocrats in ancient Greece seem to
have possessed more wealth than others in their communities, but birth was also
a criterion in their enjoying general acknowledgment as the "best" in
their society -- that is, the people with the greatest social status and
political influence. We can only speculate about the various ways in which
families might have originally gained their designation as aristocratic and thus
became entitled to pass on this status to those born into them. Some
aristocratic families in the Dark Age might have inherited their status as
descendants of the most prominent and wealthy families of the Mycenean Age;
some might have made themselves aristocrats during the Dark Age by amassing
wealth and befriending less fortunate people who were willing to acknowledge
their benefactors' superior status in return for material help; and some might
have acquired aristocratic status by monopolizing control of essential
religious rituals.
- Thomas R. Martin, An Overview of Classical
Greek History from Mycenae to Alexander 4.5
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