Work in the home and vegetable garden, tend poultry and domestic animals, spinning and weaving, bear and raise children.
People who were born in Ancient Athens or have been there more than 5 years working and proving there citizenship.,not the metics or the slaves.Men were only allowed to vote or participate in democracy.Also Ancient Athens is the Birthpalce of Democracy.
To be a citizen of Ancient Athens you had to be a full grown man that was born in Athens.
All adult male citizens could vote, but they had to be born in Athens.
The slaves weren't allowed to vote because they weren't citizens. To be an citizen, your parents had to be citizens so, even if you were born in that place, you couldn't be citizens.
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.
They had to be sons of Athenian citizens. At the age of 18 they were presented to their tribe and gave evidence of their birth to be accepted as a citizen.
No, the Greeks believed that women were inferior to men. This is why they couldn't vote or be part of the Assembly, and were considered second-class citizens.
I think it is all men born in Athensor maybe all men and women born in athens
Democracy developed in the ancient Greek city-state of Athens through the general will of the citizens and also the intentional effort of such dynamic individuals as Solon and Pericles, among others. It was both a direct- and a limited-democracy, with each full citizen having access to the functions and decision-making power of the society yet, at the same time, with only a small percentage of the overall population meriting the rights of full citizenship.
The main criticism of ancient Athenian democracy is the limitations Athenian law placed upon who could be considered a citizen. The only Athenians who were considered full citizens were Athens-born men of at least 18 years of age. And to be considered Athens-born, both of one's parents had to have been citizens. But while women could be considered citizens, they had no voice in the Assembly, and no real rights within the democracy. Furthermore, slaves had no voice whatsoever in the Athenian democracy.
In ancient Athens, only free male citizens were allowed to vote, which excluded women, slaves, and non-citizens. Citizenship was limited to those born to Athenian parents, and this narrow definition meant that a significant portion of the population had no political voice. Voting was a direct process, where eligible citizens participated in assemblies and voted on legislation and decisions affecting the city-state. This system emphasized civic participation among a select group, reinforcing the democratic ideals of the time while simultaneously maintaining social hierarchies.
Plato was born in Athens.