answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

not really, they were treaten badly, especially in ancient Greece were some were even naked and lived in a silver mine.

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Did Athenian slaves have rights
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What is the Athenian polis?

The Athenian polis means the city of Athens. It also means the males that were allowed to vote. Women and slaves were not allowed any rights.


How were slaves treated in Athens?

Athenian slaves were the lowest class of athenian society They were treated like vermin and some owners sold thier slaves


Did athenian women have any rights?

no


Ancient athenian slaves?

There were about 70,000 in a city of 250,000.


What rights did citizens have in an athenian democracy?

Citizens were the free born men and non-citizens were women, slaves, and foreigners. Citizens can pass laws, vote, and speak in public meetings but not citizens couldn't.


What did ancient athenian slaves wear?

they wore clothes


What rights did Aztec slaves have?

Slaves have no rights no matter who they are. Slaves are owned by another person.


Why were the Athenian citizens endowed with so much leisure time?

Slaves outnumbered Athenian citizens more than 2 to 1


What group of people made up the larger part of the athenian society?

wich type of athenian government caame first


did spartan woman have more rights than athenian woman?

Spartan women had more rights and freedoms than Athenian women. Spartan women were educated, could own property, and participate in sports, while Athenian women had limited rights and were mostly confined to the home as wives and mothers.


What were some rights slaves didn't have?

Slaves did not have any rights. Slaves are seen as the property of their owners, so the only rights slaves had were the ones given to them by their owners.


What were the rights and responsibilities of the Athenian citizens?

people had the right to vote