Archaic Greece
The Archaic period saw Greece recover from the post-Bronze-Age dark age, develop the polis, colonize the Mediterranean and Black Sea, adopt the alphabet, and experiment with tyranny, lawgiving, and early democracy.
Definition
The formative period of Greek history, c. 800–479 BC (following a preceding dark age), during which the polis, colonization, and characteristic Greek institutions took shape.
Scope
This topic covers the Greek world from the collapse of the Mycenaean palaces and the subsequent dark age through the eighth century renaissance to the eve of the Persian Wars in 479 BC, including the rise of the polis, overseas colonization, the hoplite phalanx, archaic tyranny, and the reforms of figures such as Solon and Cleisthenes.
Core questions
- How did the polis and citizen identity emerge after the Bronze Age collapse?
- What drove Greek colonization across the Mediterranean and Black Sea?
- How did hoplite warfare relate to social and political change?
- What was the role of lawgivers and tyrants in the development of Greek states?
Key theories
- Eighth-century renaissance
- Anthony Snodgrass's argument that the eighth century BC saw a rapid surge in population, settlement, sanctuary activity, and cultural production marking the formation of the Greek world.
- Hoplite revolution thesis
- The contested theory linking the adoption of hoplite arms and phalanx tactics to a broadening of political participation among the propertied citizens who served as heavy infantry.
History
The Archaic period is reconstructed largely from archaeology, including pottery, sanctuaries, and settlement evidence, supplemented by early poetry such as Homer, Hesiod, and the lyric poets, and by later traditions about lawgivers. Twentieth-century scholarship reframed it from a mere prelude to the Classical age into a dynamic 'age of experiment' in its own right.
Debates
- Reality of the hoplite revolution
- Historians disagree over whether the spread of hoplite warfare was a sudden development that drove political reform or a gradual evolution with looser connections to constitutional change.
Key figures
- Robin Osborne
- Jonathan M. Hall
- Anthony Snodgrass
- Sarah B. Pomeroy
Related topics
Seminal works
- osborne2009
- snodgrass1980
- hall2014
Frequently asked questions
- Why did the Greeks colonize the Mediterranean?
- Archaic Greeks founded colonies for reasons including population pressure, land hunger, trade, and political conflict, spreading from the Black Sea to Spain.
- What was an archaic tyrant?
- An archaic tyrant was a sole ruler who seized power outside traditional aristocratic norms, often with popular support, a common feature of many Archaic poleis.