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Social Policy 4.6

Ancient Greek hilltops shifted from symbols of pride to icons of tyranny

A new study reveals how the meaning of the Greek akropolis transformed over centuries—from civic monument to metaphor for oppressive rule. The findings highlight how physical structures acquire political meanings that evolve with history, offering insights into how societies reframe symbols of authority and control across time.

Originaltitel: Greek akropoleis: Fortified hilltops, places of cult, and symbols of freedom and oppression

Abstrakt

This article examines the functions and meanings of akropoleis in Greek antiquity, drawing on references from ancient textual sources from Homer until the second century AD. Despite its rarity in literature and epigraphy, the word ‘akropolis’ carried a wide array of often conflicting connotations throughout antiquity. This study highlights how the symbolic meaning of ‘akropolis’, in parallel with historical developments, developed from an overall marker of civic pride in Classical-period texts to a metaphor of oppressive rule in later literature. While acknowledging local and temporal variation, the study argues for a careful, historically grounded application of the term in scholarship. Ultimately, akropoleis emerge not only as architectural features but as potent cultural signifiers with enduring resonance in the political and philosophical imagination of antiquity.

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