bouleutic
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from Ancient Greek βουλευτικός (bouleutikós), ultimately from βουλή (boulḗ).
Pronunciation
[edit]Adjective
[edit]bouleutic (not comparable)
- (historical) Pertaining to the curial class from which were drawn councils in Ancient Greece.
- 2006, Mogens Herman Hansen, Studies in the Population of Aigina, Athens and Eretria, →ISBN, page 29:
- If - as is commonly believed - they were not revised until 307/6, a significant discrepancy between population and bouleutic quota must have developed in the course of two centuries during which Athens experienced dramatic expansions and contractions of its population.
- 2013, Alan H. Sommerstein, Andrew James Bayliss, Oath and State in Ancient Greece, →ISBN, page 41:
- The fact that the Ath.Pol. (22.2-3) states that the original bouleutic oath instituted in the archonship of Hermocreon (502/1 BC?) was “still in use” in the fourth century would appear to clash with the new clauses that were added to the oath throughout the fifth century.
- 2014, Lawrence A. Tritle, Phocion the Good, →ISBN, page 37:
- A bouleutic inscription of 336/5 BC, however, provides argument for Phocion's long sought demotic.