AGRAPHOI NOMOI E POLITEIA NEL DISCORSO FUNEBRE DI PERICLE
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.13130/1128-8221/14394Abstract
This essay examines the role of agraphoi nomoi in Pericles’ funeral speech, particularly in the context of reflection on the Athenian politeia. Pericles' choice to accentuate positively the role of agraphoi nomoi and underline the complementarity between written and unwritten nomoi deviates both from the rules of the logos epitaphios and from the contemporary debate on the nature of nomos, which affirmed the superiority of agraphos nomos as an expression of a universal and/or natural right. Conversely, Pericles affirms that the politeia of the Athenians assigns equal importance to written and unwritten laws and that the agraphoi nomoi are no less effective than the written ones in policing public behaviour, especially the disrespectful behaviour for what the Athenians considered worthy of respect (eusebeia). The agraphoi nomoi, as I argue here, were the ethe understood as customary norms and sacred regulations.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
- Authors retain the rights to their work and grant the journal the right of first publication of the work, simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike licence, which allows others to share the work, indicating the intellectual authorship and first publication in this journal.
- Authors may enter into other non-exclusive licence agreements for the distribution of the published version of the work (e.g. depositing it in an institutional repository or publishing it in a monograph), provided that they indicate that the first publication took place in this journal.
- Authors may disseminate their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) before and during the submission process, as this may lead to productive exchanges and increase citations of the published work (see The Effect of Open Access).


