| 6. Gagarin, Early Greek Law , p. 141. R. K. Sinclair, in Democracy and Participation in Athens (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988), acknowledges the importance of legislative sovereignty as the underlying assumption of Athenian democracy (pp. 1, 6768), but locates the compelling cause of democratic government in the victories of the Athenians, virtually unaided, against the Persians at Marathon in 490 B.C. and Salamis in 479: "These remarkable military successes engendered in the Athenians in general a high confidence in their polis and in themselves, and also a recognition of the contribution of all Athenians to the security and safety of their polis" (p. 5).
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| 7. Robert J. Bonner, Lawyers and Litigants in Ancient Athens (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1927), pp. v, 1, 135.
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| 8. Roscoe Pound, The Lawyer from Antiquity to Modern Times (St. Paul: West Publishing, 1953), pp. 2834.
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| 9. Bonner, Lawyers and Litigants , p. 110.
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| 10. Lionel Casson, "Imagine, if you will, ..." Smithsonian 18 (October 1987), p. 122: "Imagine, if you will, a time without any lawyers at all; civilization flourished in Egypt and ancient Greece with little help from lawyering, but then came Rome and our troubles began."
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| 11. Edward E. Cohen, Ancient Athenian Maritime Courts (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1973), p. 3.
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| 12. Eric A. Havelock, The Greek Concept of Justice (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1978), pp. 1314.
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| 13. Heraclitus, fragment 220 in G. S. Kirk and J. E. Raven, The Presocratic Philosophers (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1971), p. 199.
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| 14. Kirk and Raven, Presocratic Philosophers , pp. 21415.
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| 15. See Martin Ostwald, From Popular Sovereignty to the Sovereignty of Law: Law, Society, and Politics in Fifth-Century Athens (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986), pp. 260273.
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| 16. Aristotle, Politics 1294a79 (4.8.6).
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| 17. Aristotle, Nicomachaean Ethics 1098a78, b24 (1.7.14).
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