The Herodotus Encyclopedia. Группа авторов
wheat, einkorn wheat, lentils, chickpeas, peas, and bitter vetch. These crops were all being cultivated in the Levant by 9000 BCE. The domestication of animals as livestock followed some time later, and by 6000 BCE sheep, goats, CATTLE, and PIGS were being raised in the Levant, creating the mixed subsistence pattern of agriculture. Fruit trees were domesticated much later than cereals and pulses: they were not cultivated until the Chalcolithic (5000–3000), beginning with the date palm and olive; the pomegranate, figs, and the grape vine were not cultivated until the Early Bronze Age.
In the Greek world, the practice of agriculture symbolized the separation between the “civilized” and the “other.” The nomadic populations of the Eurasian steppe epitomized the “other” in this sense. Despite this, sedentary farming communities regularly interacted with these nomadic groups, trading their produce for animal products. This is particularly evident in the Greek colonies around the EUXINE (Black) Sea, who traded with the Scythian tribes. The SCYTHIANS are an excellent example of a culture that practiced different lifestyles: although traditionally considered to be a purely nomadic people, there were nomadic, semi‐nomadic, and sedentary/agricultural tribes, with lifestyle reflecting environmental/climatic conditions (4.17–19).
The tools of ancient agriculture were simple. The wooden plow, called an ard, was used to break up the surface of the soil by producing furrows. Also called a scratch plow, the ard did not turn the soil, but scratched a line in the topsoil, necessary for sowing seeds, killing weeds, and aerating the soil. The plow was typically pulled by two oxen, and the tilling of the soil took place in the autumn. HESIOD (Op. 427–92) provides a detailed description of the plow and how it worked. It is clear that plowing was physically demanding for both man and oxen, and achieving a straight line took strength as well as considerable skill and experience. Depictions of plows frequently occur in the artistic record. For smallholders who could not afford to maintain a pair of oxen, the tools used were the spade and hoe, although the MEDITERRANEAN soil was better suited to the hoe.
The sickle was the main harvesting tool, and the curved blades are regularly found in archaeological contexts. HOMER (Il. 18.550–60) provides one of the most accurate accounts of the grain harvest and use of the sickle. Once harvested, cereal products had to be threshed, the process by which the kernels/seeds were separated from the rest of the plant. This is done on a threshing floor, a paved, circular area bordered by stones. Draught animals were hitched to a central pole and driven around the floor as the grain or corn was thrown under the hooves (Xen. Oec. 18.3–5). The threshing process was followed by winnowing, the purpose of which was to remove the chaff from the grain or corn. This was done by means of a winnowing basket or winnowing shovel. Theophrastus (Hist. pl. 8) provides a detailed botanical analysis of the various crops grown in the Mediterranean region, as well as their sowing and harvesting seasons.
The harvesting of grapes and olives required specialized tools. The harvested grapes were placed in large wicker baskets and transported to a wooden or stone pressing board. The grapes were then put in a basket or wicker sack on top of the pressing board and trodden upon to release the juice, which ran into a container. The grapes could also be put directly into a large vat for treading. The WINE fermented in pithoi before being transferred to amphorai for distribution. Olives were harvested by using long poles to beat the olives from the tree, a process still used in Greece today. The olives were collected in a basket and taken to be crushed in an oil mill, then pressed.
Animals played an important role in agriculture. Our main source for animal husbandry in the Greek world is Aristotle’s Historia Animalium in nine books (second half of the fourth century BCE). Livestock kept by farmers included donkeys, MULES, oxen, goats, sheep, PIGS, and poultry. Beekeeping was also quite common. Rarely were HORSES used for agricultural work. Throughout the Mediterranean and Near East, transhumance was a necessity for the maintenance of large herds, grazing in the highlands during the summer and moving to the lowlands for the winter.
SEE ALSO: Barbarians; Climate; Ethnography; Food; Geology; Meat; Nomads
FURTHER READING
1 Howe, Timothy. 2008. Pastoral Politics: Animals, Agriculture and Society in Ancient Greece. Claremont, CA: Regina Books.
2 Isager, Signe, and Jens Erik Skydsgaard. 1992. Ancient Greek Agriculture: An Introduction. London and New York: Routledge.
3 McGregor, James. 2015. Back to the Garden: Nature and the Mediterranean World from Prehistory to the Present. New Haven: Yale University Press.
AGRIGENTUM ( Ἄκραγας)
LELA URQUHART
Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles
Greek POLIS settled on SICILY’s central‐southern coast (BA 47 D4) around 580 BCE that became a major colonial classical city‐state, modern‐day Agrigento. “Agrigentum” is the Latinized version of the Greek “Akragas”; Herodotus only uses the city‐ethnic, “Acragantines” (Ἀκραγαντῖνοι). Literary tradition attributes its foundation to GELA (Thuc. 6.4.4), with possible joint participation from RHODES (Pind. F105 S‐M; Polyb. 9.27.8). Later sources like Diodorus Siculus (19.108.1–2) and Polyaenus (Strat. 5.1.3) claim that Agrigentum began a campaign of military expansionism into central Sicily during the tyranny of Phalaris (c. 570–555). However, the absence of Phalaris or any notice of Agrigentine territorial gains prior to 500–490 in classical‐era historical writing (notably Antiochus of Syracuse, Herodotus, or THUCYDIDES) has suggested that a Phalarid “Agrigentine conquest” was probably a late fabrication. Agrigentum’s growth in power is clearer for the fifth century, particularly in relation to THERON, the city’s “sole ruler” (μούναρχος, 7.165) who ruled between 489/8 and 473/2. Theron’s ousting of TERILLUS from the tyranny at HIMERA set in motion events leading to the Greeks’ victory over Carthaginian forces at the Battle of Himera in 480. Theron’s actions also, however, indicate the widened political influence of Agrigentum in the fifth century, as does Herodotus’ note (7.170.1) that Agrigentines inhabited the polis of CAMICUS, former seat of the Sican king Kokalos, in his time.
Many of the sanctuaries of ancient Agrigentum are visible on the lower ridge’s “Valley of Temples”; the city’s AGORA, residential sectors, and the excellent Agrigento museum are located between the lower ridge and the center of modern Agrigento.
SEE ALSO: Carthage; Colonization; Gelon; Sicania; Tyrants
FURTHER READING
1 Adornato, Gianfranco. 2012. Akragas arcaica. Modelli culturali e linguaggi artistici di una città greca d’Occidente. Milan: Edizione Universitarie di Lettere Economia Diritto.
2 Holloway, R. Ross. 1991. The Archaeology of Ancient Sicily. London and New York: Routledge.
AGRON ( Ἄγρων, ὁ)
CHRISTOPHER BARON
University of Notre Dame
Legendary king of LYDIA, great‐grandson of ALCAEUS SON OF HERACLES. Herodotus names Agron the first Heraclid king of SARDIS (i.e., Lydia, 1.7.2–3), with CANDAULES being the last of this dynasty. Since Agron’s father and grandfather are Babylonian and Assyrian gods (BELUS and NINUS), some scholars believe that Herodotus reports a Greek (or Greek‐influenced) tradition meant to connect the ancient Near Eastern kings to HERACLES (Asheri in ALC, 79–80); but Burkert (1995, 144) argues that this GENEALOGY only makes sense in the context of Lydian‐Assyrian relations in the seventh century BCE.
SEE ALSO: Assyrians; Ethnography; Gyges son of Dascylus; Heracleidae
REFERENCE
1 Burkert, Walter. 1995. “Lydia Between East and West or How to Date the Trojan War: A Study in Herodotus.” In The Ages of Homer: A Tribute to Emily Townsend Vermeule, edited by Jane B. Carter and Sarah P. Morris,