BBC History Magazine

Democrats and slaves

Is it a paradox that the society that created the world’s first citizen democracy – in its original sense of people-power – also created the world’s first society with large numbers of slaves, in the fullest sense of wholly owned human chattels? Or was there some essential causal connection between these two inventions by the ancient Greek city of Athens? It seems a problem worth constantly re-exploring, not least today, when freedom and democracy – always coupled together – are two of the most powerful political slogans on offer.

They managed these things differently, once upon a time. A little over 150 years ago, the northern and southern states of the (dis) United States went to war – in large part, over these very issues. That wasn’t entirely

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC History Magazine

BBC History Magazine2 min read
Encounters
DIARY EXPLORE TRAVEL Muncaster Castle, Cumbria Warsaw, Poland In 1534, Michelangelo bade farewell to his home in Florence and set off in the direction of Rome. Over the next three decades, the ancient city would bear witness to the Renaissance artist
BBC History Magazine2 min read
Alfred Russel Wallace 1823-1913
Alfred Russel Wallace was a British naturalist, explorer, geographer, anthropologist and biologist. Besides independently conceiving the idea of evolution through natural selection at around the same time as Charles Darwin, he explored the Amazon riv
BBC History Magazine1 min read
BBC History Magazine
Editor Rob Attar robertattar@historyextra.com Deputy editor Matt Elton mattelton@historyextra.com Senior production editor Spencer Mizen Production editor Jon Bauckham Staff writer Danny Bird Picture editor Samantha Nott samnott@historyextra.com Art

Related Books & Audiobooks