This paper considers three passages of Aristotle’s Politics which mention nomophylakia and nomophylakes. Although we cannot clear up the historical and institutional context (surely not only Athenian) which inspires Aristotle’s remarks, the nomophylakia seems to be an “aristocratic” institution, a sort of constitutional corrective which intends, on the one hand, to defend nomos and politeia from abuses by individuals and masses/groups, and, on the other hand, to ensure respect of nomos by magistrates and citizens. Furthermore, Aristotle’s treatment of nomophylakia and nomophylakes leads to challenge the hypothesis that the Athenian nomophylakes were established by Ephialtes, as Jacoby thought and as it has been recently reproposed by O’Sull...
The following paper intends to analyze the historical development of the legal rules in Athens from ...
This paper contends that, despite evidences, Aristotle's view of aristocratic constitutions displays...
Aristotle normally used historical notations to support his arguments. This is somewhat true for al...
This paper considers three passages of Aristotle\u2019s Politics which mention nomophylakia and nomo...
Pollux speaks of the Athenian nomophylakes in two lemmata, VIII, 94 nomophylakes and VIII, 102 hoi e...
"Aristotle on the non-Greek populations of the Politics and the Exemplum of Achaeans and Heniochi on...
The Politeiai and the Nomima barbarika are both fragmentary works by Aristotle (the Dikaiomata - to ...
This article investigates whether Athenian nomothesia and graphe nomon me epitedeion theinai created...
This paper focuses on two Aristotelian passages concerning the polis of Milet, Pol. 1305a15-18 and f...
According to a common trend of thought, still in the fourth century BC the Athenian legal system wou...
Mossé Claude. M. Ostwald, Nomos and the Beginnings of Athenian Democracy, 1969. In: Revue des Études...
The article surveys the evidence for nomothesia procedures in the twenty years after the end of the ...
This article attempts to demonstrate that Book II in Aristotle’s Politics is not simply pars destrue...
In this paper I investigate one central source of Aristotle\u27s dissatisfaction with a comprehensiv...
Lévêque Pierre. Martin Ostwald, Nomos and the Beginnings of the Athenian Democraty. In: L'antiquité ...
The following paper intends to analyze the historical development of the legal rules in Athens from ...
This paper contends that, despite evidences, Aristotle's view of aristocratic constitutions displays...
Aristotle normally used historical notations to support his arguments. This is somewhat true for al...
This paper considers three passages of Aristotle\u2019s Politics which mention nomophylakia and nomo...
Pollux speaks of the Athenian nomophylakes in two lemmata, VIII, 94 nomophylakes and VIII, 102 hoi e...
"Aristotle on the non-Greek populations of the Politics and the Exemplum of Achaeans and Heniochi on...
The Politeiai and the Nomima barbarika are both fragmentary works by Aristotle (the Dikaiomata - to ...
This article investigates whether Athenian nomothesia and graphe nomon me epitedeion theinai created...
This paper focuses on two Aristotelian passages concerning the polis of Milet, Pol. 1305a15-18 and f...
According to a common trend of thought, still in the fourth century BC the Athenian legal system wou...
Mossé Claude. M. Ostwald, Nomos and the Beginnings of Athenian Democracy, 1969. In: Revue des Études...
The article surveys the evidence for nomothesia procedures in the twenty years after the end of the ...
This article attempts to demonstrate that Book II in Aristotle’s Politics is not simply pars destrue...
In this paper I investigate one central source of Aristotle\u27s dissatisfaction with a comprehensiv...
Lévêque Pierre. Martin Ostwald, Nomos and the Beginnings of the Athenian Democraty. In: L'antiquité ...
The following paper intends to analyze the historical development of the legal rules in Athens from ...
This paper contends that, despite evidences, Aristotle's view of aristocratic constitutions displays...
Aristotle normally used historical notations to support his arguments. This is somewhat true for al...