Parasites of the God
Accountants, financiers and traders on Hellenistic Delos
Published with the support of the J.M. Kaplan Fund
Freed from Athenian tutelage in 314 BC, at a time of geopolitical changes that marked the beginnings of the Hellenistic period in the Aegean world, Delos gradually consolidated its political and economic independence. During the third and second centuries, the Delian community redefined the central place that the island had continually occupied in the economic, financial and cultural flows of the Mediterranean. This study, mainly based on epigraphic accounting sources, including more than five hundred accounts and engraved inventories that were displayed in the sanctuary of Apollo, but also on numismatic sources and archaeological remains on the seafront, re-considers the question of Delos’ place in the Hellenistic economy. Far from being an exception to be excluded from serialized comparisons, the Delian evidence is indicative of Aegean economic circumstances and demonstrates the capacities of the Greek communities to adapt to change in troubled times. Behind the numbers cut in stone appear human communities and societies whose economic activities shed fresh light on the history of this part of the Mediterranean.
Véronique Chankowski is a former member of the École française d’Athènes and is currently its director. She is professor of Greek History at Lumière-Lyon 2 University. Her work explores the organization and practices of trade and the market in the classical and Hellenistic periods through the epigraphic and numismatic sources of Delos and other cities. She is the author of Athènes et Délos à l’époque classique. Recherches sur l’administration du sanctuaire d’Apollon délien (BEFAR 331) and of several studies on the economic history of the Greek world.
- Introduction
- CHAPTER 1 – THE SANCTUARY’S STEWARDSHIP RECORDS. ACCOUNTING METHODS AND ADMINISTRATIVE PRACTICES OF THE HIEROPOIOI
- The establishment of a Delian administration
- The Origins
- The Athenian organization
- The Independence of Delos
- The Transmission of the Sacred Fortune
- The recovery of capital
- Recent debts or claims from Athenian times?
- The role of the private fortune of the Delians
- The financial policy of the city-state of Delos
- The Authority of the Delian City-State over the Sacred Treasury
- A question of aptitude?
- Public borrowing
- Loans to private individuals
- The management of space in the organization of Apollo’s treasury
- The Places Where Money Was Kept
- The Artemision and the Temple of Apollo
- Moving the funds
- The question of monetary effigies
- Forms of Storage
- The Place of the Accounts
- The accounting methods of the hieropoioi
- The Hierarchy of Records
- The deltos, a copy of the stele
- The leukomata for the monthly accounts
- The peteura for contractual operations
- Papyrus sheets: the rough draft of the accounts
- The account stele: a synthesis from several archival registers
- From Cashiers’ Practices to Accountants’ Rationales
- The formulation of account balances
- Management of the accounting balance for the financial period
- The major change in the years 230‑220 BC
- Sacred Fund and Public Fund: From Separation to Accounting Summary
- A genuine synthesis between the two funds
- A necessary advancement in accounting methods
- The invention of an accounting system
- The change in attributions
- “Double-Entry Book-Keeping”?
- Awareness of the challenges of “double entries”
- Multiple actors
- Conclusion: The purposes of the accounts of the hieropoioi
- CHAPTER 2 – THE SACRED FORTUNE: THE ASSETS STATEMENT
- The growth of the sanctuary’s cash fortune
- The Steady Increase in Funds
- The amounts mobilized in the way of loans
- The contribution of regular revenues
- Building work
- The Question of the Swelling of Cash Holdings at the End of Independence
- The year 192 BC
- The year 179 BC
- The year 177 BC
- The year 168 BC
- The Assets Statement
- The precious offerings
- The Classical Treasure
- The Treasure at the End of Independence
- Variations in the Collection
- The treasure at the beginning of Independence
- The treasure in the mid-third century BC
- Apollo’s fortune as financial power?
- The Apportionment of Assets
- Delian Apollo and the Other Gods
- Hoarding and Circulation
- Conclusion: The destiny of the Delian treasure under the Second Athenian Domination
- CHAPTER 3 – THE COMPOSITION OF THE TREASURIES: ANALYSIS OF THE FUNDS
- The sanctuary’s coined income
- Own Resources
- Other Revenues
- Reselling
- Offertory boxes
- Fines
- Subsidies and allocated funds
- The Phiale
- Subsidies for Festivals and Competitions
- The prizes for the gymnastic competitions of the Apollonia
- The wages of the flute players for the Apollonia
- Expenses for the services of technitai at the Dionysian games
- Thesmophoria, Posideia and Eileithyaia: subsidized festivals?
- Choregikon
- Prytanikon
- Horoi and Trapezai
- The endowment funds
- The Donors
- Management of the Capital
- The Histiatikon Argurion
- The composition of the funds
- A fund of specific coins
- The jars
- Composition of the Sacred Fund from the Inventory of Jars
- The Ancient Fund
- The Money of Tenos and The Minoe
- Technical terms
- The money from Tenos
- The money from the Minoe
- The use of this money
- The Other Jars
- The Hoarded Entries
- The public treasury
- The Income of the Public Fund
- Taxes
- The pentekoste
- The dekatai
- The hypotropion
- Stall fees
- The agora rents
- Loan income?
- Judicial income
- Revenues from funds and endowments
- Spending from the Public Fund
- Operating expenses
- Diplomatic expenditure
- Festivals
- The oxen and the boonia
- Public services
- Public building works
- The grain supply
- The Organizing Principles of the Public Treasury of Delos and the Diataxis of the City-State
- The apportionment of revenues
- The temple deposit
- Conclusion: Public property and sacred property on Delos
- CHAPTER 4 – MONETARY POLICY AND CURRENCY CIRCULATION ON HELLENISTIC DELOS
- The hieropoioi as money handlers: Monetary recycling in the sacred chest
- Currency Changes in the Cash Holdings
- The Evidence of the Inventories of the Second Athenian Domination
- The Athenian administrators’ methods
- The nature of the specie inventoried
- The monies handled by the hieropoioi
- The evidence of the account balances
- Changes to the cash holdings
- The role of the coinage of Alexander
- Delian coinage
- The Testimony of Coins
- The Chronology of Monetary Issues from the Accounts of the Hieropoioi
- The date of issue of the citharephorics
- The date of the issue of the phoinikophorics
- The consecration of dies
- Metrology of Local Coinage
- Accounting issues: the question of the artificial exchange rate of the Delian drachma
- Hypothesis on the change in weight of the citharephorics
- Changes in weights and measures in the Mediterranean as seen from Delos
- The 12-Chalkos Obol
- From the Amphora to the 12-Khous Metretes
- From the Epidekaton to the Ephekton
- Aegean Metrological Models from the Third to the Second Centuries BC
- The citharephorics in the Aegean monetary landscape
- The phoinikophorics in the Aegean monetary landscape
- The Cyclades: “The Island Standard”
- The Delian chalkou and its metrological challenges
- Monetary circulation on Hellenistic Delos
- The Testimony of the Treasuries
- The Role of Bankers on Delos
- Conclusion: An ever-changing monetary landscape
- CHAPTER 5 – THE DELIAN ECONOMY: THE MARKET AND PRICES
- The creation of a market
- The Recording of Prices in the Accounts of the Hieropoioi: The Expression of Demand
- The question of the state of the economy
- The sanctuary’s influence
- Difficulty with price analysis
- The Organization of Procurement for the Sanctuary
- Local stockists and suppliers
- Provenance and transport costs: the organization of stocks
- Pitch and oil
- Tiles
- Products imported from afar
- The market for everyday consumer goods
- Sacrificial animals
- Timber
- Price-Setting: Auctions and Bargaining
- The challenges of resorting to auction
- The hieropoioi as sellers
- The hieropoioi as buyers
- Price negotiations
- The characteristics of the Delian market
- The Continuity of Structures and Activities
- The classical emporion
- Population growth in the third century
- Business Premises and the Interests of the Delians
- The practices of the hieropoioi
- Stockpiling outside the sanctuary
- Competition among Delians
- The City-State’s Policy
- Price changes and redistributive commerce
- The fight against speculation
- The development of the Delian emporion
- The Volume of Exchange
- The Delian pentekoste
- The Rhodian ellimenion
- The Transit Trade
- The clues from the grain trade
- Slaves
- The ateleia
- The Commercial Infrastructures
- The Agora of the Delians
- The choma
- The Facilities
- The Storage Infrastructures
- Conclusion: From the emporion to the free port
- CONCLUSION
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- APPENDICES
- INDEX
- LIST OF TABLES
- LIST OF FIGURES
Format : 21.00 x 29.70 cm
ISBN : 9782869586116
ISSN : 02574101