
Kathimerini reports about a project of the French School of Athens involving building a full size marble reconstruction of an Athenian kleroterion:
It is made of marble and weighs about 300 kilos. It is 1.20 meters tall, but on its wooden base it’s the height of a tall adult. And while it looks like an inscribed column, if you get close up, you’ll find that it has many rows of slots in a vertical and horizontal arrangement. What are they for? To receive wooden tiles with the names of citizens who, through a special process, will be selected for public office, or not, at least until their luck is tested again.
It is a faithful copy of an ancient kleroterion, a randomization device similar to the one that the Athenians of the 5th and especially the 4th century BC used to select citizens to be lawmakers, state officials and jury members.
“The best method of democratic selection was to draw lots,” archaeologist and historian Veronique Chankowski, director of the French School of Athens, who coordinated the construction and study of the ancient lottery device, tells Kathimerini. “A person was selected not because they belonged to a specific family or social network, nor because they were rich. This machine chose them.”

(…) the entire action was filmed and will be part of the Greek-French documentary “Athenes: Aux origines de la democratie,” which is expected to air in Greece on Cosmote TV in 2026.
Qui vivra verra!
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(…) the entire action was filmed and will be part of the Greek-French documentary “Athenes: Aux origines de la democratie,” which is expected to air in Greece on Cosmote TV in 2026.
Qui vivra verra!
LikeLike