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Gerousia

 

In ancient Sparta, the council of elders, one of two chief organs of the Spartan state, the other being the apella. The gerousia prepared business submitted to the apella and had extensive judicial powers: it alone pronounced sentences of death or exile. Its 30 members, the gerontes ("elders"), including the two kings, were chosen for life by acclamation of the citizens from among candidates of age 60 or older.

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gerousia, at Sparta, the council of elders composed of the two kings and twenty-eight other members over 60 years of age, elected for life from certain aristocratic families by measuring the acclamation of the citizens (a method which Aristotle thought childish). As a deliberative body they prepared business for the assembly (see APELLA); as a judicial body they heard cases involving death, exile, or disenfranchisement and could even put the kings on trial.

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The Spartan Constitution

The Gerousia was the Spartan senate (council of elders). It was made up of 60 year old Spartan males. It was created by the Spartan lawgiver Lycurgus in the seventh century BC, in his Great Rhetra ("Great Pronouncement"). According to Lycurgus' biographer Plutarch, the Gerousia was the first significant constitutional innovation instituted by Lycurgus.[1]

It consisted of 30 members in total, all of them 60 years of age or older. Two of these members would be the two kings.Sparta had 2 kings in order to be a huge military based government. One would go to war and then the other would rule Sparta.If one died the people would immediately vote for a new one. Of the other twenty-eight, usually several would belong to one of the two royal Spartan houses (the Agiad and the Eurypontid).[1] Members had to be over the age of 60 and were elected for life. All members would have, in their youth, gone through the Spartan military training program known as the agoge. Theoretically, any Spartan citizen of the proper age could stand, but in practice members were selected from the most important aristocratic families. While elections to the Gerousia were technically democratic, contemporary writers (such as the Athenian philosopher Aristotle) considered the fairness of the elections to be dubious at best.[1]

The Gerousia prepared motions or rhetrai ("rhetra") for the wider citizen assembly, the Apella, to vote on. The Gerousia could also veto motions passed by the Apella and was consulted by the ephors in matters of interpretation of the law. Additionally, the Gerousia filled the role of a Supreme Court. It could try murder cases - and had the power to condemn, fine, or banish. It could even try the kings for any alleged crime.[2] As a Supreme Court, it had the ultimate say as to what was or was not lawful. In effect, it was the supreme institution in the Spartan constitution, and could override any decision by any other organ in the Spartan political system.

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Cartledge, 65
  2. ^ Cartledge, 66

References

  • Cartledge, Paul. The Spartans: The World of the Warrior-Heroes of Ancient Greece. 2003. Vintage Books.

 
 
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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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