| 85. Hansen, Athenian Assembly , p. 5.
|
| 86. George Forrest, "Greece: The History of the Archaic Period," in John Boardman, Jasper Griffin, and Oswyn Murray, eds., The Oxford History of the Classical World (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1986), pp. 2830.
|
| 87. Forrest, "Greece," pp. 3132. This is disputed by Mogens Hansen, who holds that the only Solonian law affecting the Ecclesia was an enactment regulating the conduct of speakers: Hansen, Athenian Assembly , p. 135, n. 19.
|
| 88. Ostwald, From Popular Sovereignty , p. 27.
|
| 89. Hansen, Athenian Assembly , pp. 910.
|
| 90. Hansen, Athenian Assembly , pp. 1214.
|
| 91. Hansen, Athenian Assembly , p. 7. "Only an eccentric like Plato [ Republic 451C7B] or a mocker like Aristophanes [ Ecclesiazusae ]," says Hansen, "could take it into their heads to enfranchise women."
|
| 92. Fitzgerald, "Limitations on Freedom of Speech," p. 181.
|
| 93. Fitzgerald, "Limitations on Freedom of Speech," p. 182. Chester G. Starr, The Birth of Athenian Democracy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990), pp. 3435, shows by way of comparison with American society in the nineteenth century that of the total census returns of 31,443,321 in the year 1860, only about 6,300,000 would have been adult white males who were eligible to voteabout 20 percent of the
|
|