The laws he chose were the ones that changed the outlook of slavery. That is how Solon promoted democracy in Athens
The citizens of Athens.
Solon introduced trial by jury, established the Areopagus (or council of elders of Athens) as the main consultative and administrative body, introduced new laws (esp covering debt and taxation), remodeled the calendar, regulated weights and measures, created a court for low classes, and offered citizenship to foreign skilled laborers.
Living from the early 7th to the late 6th century BCE, the ancient Athenian Solon is considered to be one of the central founders of Athenian democracy. For instance, against the tendency to focus power in the hands of a few wealthy citizens, Solon worked to put political power in the hands of citizen-groups and to ensure that all classes of society would be represented in the society's decisions and laws.
In Athens in the fifth century, B.C., laws were determined by a vote among all male citizens. This was an example of pure democracy.
America uses a variant of this, representative democracy, or a republic. The people elect others to make laws and decisions for them. This is less fair but quicker than Athenian democracy.
Solon did not bring democracy to Athens - he implemented a settlement of a standoff between opposing factions in Athens. Democracy began over 50 years later when Cleisthenes in 508 BCE implemented the democratic principle of putting laws before a citizen assembly to vote on.
The citizens of Athens.
Solon introduced trial by jury, established the Areopagus (or council of elders of Athens) as the main consultative and administrative body, introduced new laws (esp covering debt and taxation), remodeled the calendar, regulated weights and measures, created a court for low classes, and offered citizenship to foreign skilled laborers.
only people who were over the age of 30 and were citizens. to be a citizen you had to be a man who was born in Athens, and hadn't convicted a crime.
Solon outlaw debt slavery, and introduced legal concept that any citizen could bring charges against wrongdoers.Cleisthenes broke up the power of nobility by organizing citizens into ten groups based on where they lived rather than wealth. He increased the power of assembly by allowing all citizens to submit laws for debt and passage.
A direct democracy(A democracy in which people decide laws and policies at mass meetings)
Citizens directly made the laws themselves.
well i think that we have similair laws!
Laws that are made directly by the people are known as initiatives or referendums. Initiatives are proposed laws that are placed on the ballot for voters to approve or reject, while referendums are laws passed by the legislature that are then voted on by the public. Both allow citizens to have a direct impact on the laws that govern them.
Athens was the birthplace of democracy. When Philip the 2nd conquered Greece, Athens was still making its own laws but was supervised. Eventually their democracy was ended and never really began again.
Is this your homework question? It sounds like it. I suggest you research the following individuals, however: Solon, Pisistratos, Hippias and Hipparchos (Pisistratos' sons), and Kleisthenes/Cleisthenes. They are some of the key figures in the beginning of the democracy. Read a book to find out more - I recommend Greece in he Making by Robin Osborne, which you should be able to find in a city or school library.
Democracy first flourished in the Greek city-state , reaching its fullest expression in ancient Athens . There the citizens, as members of the assembly, participated directly in the making of their laws.!!