Helots and Their Masters in Laconia and Messenia: Histories, Ideologies, Structures

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Nino Luraghi, Susan E. Alcock
Center for Hellenic Studies, Trustees for Harvard University, 2003 - Fiction - 314 pages

The name "Helots" evokes one of the most famous peculiarities of ancient Sparta, the system of dependent labor that guaranteed the livelihood of the free citizens. The Helots fulfilled all the functions that slaves carried out elsewhere in the Greek world, allowing their masters the leisure to be full-time warriors. Yet, despite their crucial role, Helots remain essentially invisible in our ancient sources and peripheral and enigmatic in modern scholarship.

This book is devoted to a much-needed reassessment of Helotry and of its place in the history and sociology of unfree labor. The essays deal with the origins and historical development of Helotry, with its sociological, economic, and demographic aspects, with its ideological construction and negotiation.

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Contents

details methodologies agencies
3
P Cartledge Raising hell? The Helot Miragea personal review
12
wars of conquest and forced labour
33
Copyright

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