The Plague of Athens is an unforeseen …
Years: 429BCE - 418BCE
The Plague of Athens is an unforeseen event that results in one of the largest recorded loss of life in ancient Greece as well as a breakdown of Athenian society.
The balance of power between citizens has changed due to many of the rich dying and their fortunes being inherited by remaining relatives of the lower class.
According to Thucydides, those who had become ill and survived are the most sympathetic to others suffering, believing that they can no longer succumb to any illness.
A number of survivors offer to assist with the remaining sick.
It has also contributed to Athens' overall loss of power and ability to expand
Many of the remaining Athenians are found to be metics who had forged their documentation or had bribed officials to hide their original status.
A number of these people are reduced to slaves once they are caught.
This resulta in stricter laws dictating who can become an Athenian citizen, reducing both their number of potential soldiers and amount of political power, but also a decline in treatment and rights for metics in Athens.
The plague deals damage to Athens two years into the Peloponnesian War, from which it will never recover.
Athenian political strength has weakened and morale among the city-state's armies as well as it's citizens has fallen significantly
Athens will now go on to be defeated by Sparta and fall from being a major superpower in Ancient Greece.
The balance of power between citizens has changed due to many of the rich dying and their fortunes being inherited by remaining relatives of the lower class.
According to Thucydides, those who had become ill and survived are the most sympathetic to others suffering, believing that they can no longer succumb to any illness.
A number of survivors offer to assist with the remaining sick.
It has also contributed to Athens' overall loss of power and ability to expand
Many of the remaining Athenians are found to be metics who had forged their documentation or had bribed officials to hide their original status.
A number of these people are reduced to slaves once they are caught.
This resulta in stricter laws dictating who can become an Athenian citizen, reducing both their number of potential soldiers and amount of political power, but also a decline in treatment and rights for metics in Athens.
The plague deals damage to Athens two years into the Peloponnesian War, from which it will never recover.
Athenian political strength has weakened and morale among the city-state's armies as well as it's citizens has fallen significantly
Athens will now go on to be defeated by Sparta and fall from being a major superpower in Ancient Greece.
Locations
People
Groups
Topics
- Iron Age Europe
- Iron Age Cold Epoch
- Classical antiquity
- Peloponnesian War, Second or Great
- Archidamian War
- Plague of Athens
