Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Gibbon -- the urban legend, pt. 13

In this chapter, Gibbon starts out with his tabloid trash again. You do not get to be dux in a Roman province without training hard for 40 years and you don't get to be named chief of the elite cavalry by the emperor, in the environment of the empire at this time, without substantial patronage. The idea of the little slave boy that rose to be emperor is one of those popular urban legends about leaders, and it suits what Eutropius kept saying, Romans overcome their problems. So it's a theme, not a truth; the technical term is that Eutropius is tendentious, and writes to suit his tendency.

Gibbon sneers at Diocletian because he's not the stuff Gibbon would make a hero of.

With a plague devastating Rome to the tune of 2,000 people a day, Diocletian decided to make sure disorder did not get out of hand, and sent in Maximian who was nothing if he was not a soldier. But Maximian's career took a downturn about 290 CE and he fell afoul of Constantine's rising star, eventually committing suicide on the latter's prompting.

Diocletian lost Britain, a major source of silver and tin. The Roman lifestyle in Britain carried on for about another century in high density populations, but when the port of London was abandoned, traders hesitated to go the long way to the Cornish ports and imports slowed down. A hundred years later the Saxons re-developed London starting at Aldwich, and traded all around the eastern part of the island. Contrary to the preferred story of the later Victorians, their Germanic relatives did not take over a deserted island. The high percentage of Celtic DNA even in London argues against that, and in the 400s Irish priests restored learning to Europe. Of course, Gibbon would ignore this, sharing the English prejudice against the Irish, all the more so as this was a Catholic revival. St. Columba of Ireland worshipped according to the Welsh rite. 

Finally, Diocletion split the empire. You can't say there was no going back after that. There was already no going back to anything, least of all to Gibbon's Roman Republic. Diocletian institutionalized abandonment of the west to the Germanic migrants, that's all. So you have to ask yourself, with the Vandals swanning around North Africa, what did the eastern empire do for grain?

Diocletian did two things about that. First, he increased irrigation, in the Levant, for one example. Ruling from Nicomedia, he had enough nearby grain production not to miss Egypt so much. Diocletian could do this because he confiscated uncultivated land from the rich and gave it to the government to operate. And he built reservoirs for bringing irrigation water to these lands.

https://scriptaclassica.org/index.php/sci/article/download/3399/2927

The second is, he created serfdom. That's basically what his coloni were. Serfs. After nationalizing land that the rich owned but did not cultivate, Diocletian not only needed to staff the agriculture, but also to stop all this nonsense about the peasantry rising from their class through patronage or whatever, and eventually being rich enough for a seat in the senate or on the throne.

After Diocletian, the marginal areas where he established irrigated fields were again abandoned. From 330 CE on, taxes paid in kind from Asia (Minor) and Bithynia would have gone to the eastern empire while Rome bought grain from the Vandals. And Diocletian's capital, Nicomedia, was already part of a large trade region, including fertile areas in the east, that had been paying taxes in kind for 200 years. Constantine's shift to Byzantium made transportation of grain from these regions easier because it came across the Black Sea, not across roads threatened by migrants.

https://ore.exeter.ac.uk/repository/bitstream/handle/10036/3713/GuneyH_TPC.pdf?sequence=3&isAllowed=y

It's not enough to say that Diocletian wanted at least part of the empire to not be invaded every few years. There would have been no Constantinople, except that Diocletian knew something about logistics, such as that his eastern domain could not survive without food. The pre-existing tax-in-kind setup was perfect to feed his empire.

What's more, this is why Gibbon is wrong about eunuchs. Everybody who talks about eunuchs says the same thing: they have no motive for grabbing gold because they have no heirs. Well, they have no genetic heirs, but can they make a will and testament? And if they can and do bequeath their gold to somebody, a) who better than the government and b) why wouldn't the government say no, you can't do that, it's ours, if they did bequeath it to somebody else. China was different; Cao Cao was not a eunuch, but he was adopted by a eunuch of the name of Cao, and that got him into the upper echelons of China's court. 

But in the Roman world, a will could be set aside because it did not exist on the grounds of piety, and there is nobody who owes piety to a eunuch, nor could siblings get more than 1/4 of the amount in the will if they challenged it.

https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/secondary/SMIGRA*/Testamentum.html

So whatever the Roman government paid to eunuchs who were either officials or non-slave servants, it came back to the government, which can't be said of the possessions of people who can have children. Them you have to grind it out of with taxation, and that is exactly what Diocletian and those after him did.

And then again, there's that logistics thing. Eunuchs have no genetic families to feed. The grain coming into Nicomedia or Constantinople went 1) to the throne; 2) to the court, many of whom were eunuch officials or servants; 3) to paying customers like merchants, who earned the money by trading from the Black Sea across the Mediterranean, and who also employed eunuchs; 4) to the coloni who raised the grain and other food.

So basically, eunuchs are a benefit not a drag, and the government doesn't care how much gold its eunuchs pile up because all it has to do is make laws to confiscate it when they die. 

And never underestimate greed. Though they have it but for their lifetimes, people who have no genetic heirs will not avoid accumulating wealth because of that. It's the cha-ching factor, the odometer rollover factor. Although at some point it becomes simply a number instead of the ability to do what you want, the lack of genetic heirs does not stop people from accumulating wealth. Modern examples include David Geffen, Giorgio Armani, the founder of Aldi markets who bought out the American Giant food stores, and so on. In a past age or in some parts of modern society, people may acquire wealth for their children, but it's not universal. It probably never has been.

To the PDF.

Tuesday, April 26, 2022

21st Century Classical Greek -- conditional six

Book I section 27.  This is a good time to talk about “false friends”.

Κορίνθιοι δ᾽, ὡς αὐτοῖς ἐκ τῆς Ἐπιδάμνου ἦλθον ἄγγελοι ὅτι πολιορκοῦνται, παρεσκευάζοντο στρατείαν, καὶ ἅμα ἀποικίαν ἐς τὴν Ἐπίδαμνον ἐκήρυσσον ἐπὶ τῇ ἴσῃ καὶ ὁμοίᾳ τὸν βουλόμενον ἰέναι: εἰ δέ τις τὸ παραυτίκα μὲν μὴ ἐθέλει ξυμπλεῖν, μετέχειν δὲ βούλεται τῆς ἀποικίας, πεντήκοντα δραχμὰς καταθέντα Κορινθίας μένειν. ἦσαν δὲ καὶ οἱ πλέοντες πολλοὶ καὶ οἱ τἀργύριον καταβάλλοντες.

[2] ἐδεήθησαν δὲ καὶ τῶν Μεγαρέων ναυσὶ σφᾶς ξυμπροπέμψαι, εἰ ἄρα κωλύοιντο ὑπὸ Κερκυραίων πλεῖν: οἱ δὲ παρεσκευάζοντο αὐτοῖς ὀκτὼ ναυσὶ ξυμπλεῖν, καὶ Παλῆς Κεφαλλήνων τέσσαρσιν. καὶ Ἐπιδαυρίων ἐδεήθησαν, οἳ παρέσχον πέντε, Ἑρμιονῆς δὲ μίαν καὶ Τροιζήνιοι δύο, Λευκάδιοι δὲ δέκα καὶ Ἀμπρακιῶται ὀκτώ. Θηβαίους δὲ χρήματα ᾔτησαν καὶ Φλειασίους, Ἠλείους δὲ ναῦς τε κενὰς καὶ χρήματα. αὐτῶν δὲ Κορινθίων νῆες παρεσκευάζοντο τριάκοντα καὶ τρισχίλιοι ὁπλῖται..

Your first reaction to the bolded word in subsection 1 was probably “angels? What – wait, what?”

When I took French in high school back in the dark ages, our teacher made a point of talking to us about “false friends”, words that look familiar but don’t mean what they mean in English. It’s kind of like N’Oleans beignets being like doughnuts, and French beignets being more like fritters.

It’s not just French and English however; some words in French have look-alikes with widely different meanings in Spanish. And a bilet in Russian might be a pawn ticket, instead of a ticket to an event, a love letter, or a formal invitation.

Aggeloi are messengers and from this everything else follows.

If you are reading Greek and you come across something that looks familiar from English, but you don’t know why it’s there because the meaning works out really strange, you are probably looking at a false friend. Always check the lexicon.

If you didn’t already learn παρασκευάζω, learn it now.

In subsection 1

…εἰ δέ τις τὸ παραυτίκα μὲν μὴ ἐθέλει ξυμπλεῖν,…

lies across the boundary between a reported question and the protasis of a conditional. Notice the progressive indicative which means the people making the proclamation believed that some Korinthians would not be willing to serve in the actual army but would want to participate in some other way.

If we continue to think of this as “present tense”, we have a present tense for a future action. As a progressive conceptual, however, it expresses the situation of the people who want to go or not. Notice that the expressed condition is not wanting to go; wanting to go has already been addressed by the proclamation.

In subsection 2 we have:

…εἰ ἄρα κωλύοιντο ὑπὸ Κερκυραίων πλεῖν…

If we look at this as a conditional, the protasis has an epistemic, meaning that the Korinthians didn’t really believe the Kerkyraeans would sail out to hinder them. The hupo kerkyraion might make you think it’s ergative, but the verb is not in executive voice. It’s also in progressive aspect, despite referring to a future action, and all the ergatives we have seen used an intransitive imperfective eventive.

Sunday, April 24, 2022

Knitting -- using up yarn

So I have yarn from a project to make myself some fine-gauge cotton sweaters for warm weather, and turtlenecks to wear under them in cool weather. And I had leftovers from the ones I already made, so I did this:


Yes, the patterns are identical. Both of them work pretty well, but the one with the tan background (the seller calls it parchment) shows all the subordinate colors better IMHO. (p,s, it's a sweater, I photo'd the back to make clear that the patterns are the same.) The black, brown, navy and dark green don't show well against the hollyberry background. On the other hand, I was going to use a sort of pale lilac for one of the light colors and it was invisible with the tan so I used something else.

The star motif is my creation; the other motif is from Mary McGregor's publication of the Robert Williamson 1920s Fair Isle motifs that he collected from the women he sold yarn and things to.

I used the tan sweater to practice Continental hold. You need it in Fair Isle designs to hold one of the colors, usually the non-background color. But when I tried to purl in only one color using Continental, my left hand always cramped up. I'm much better at it now.

I wore the red jumper to go to and from the auto shop on a day when it was 40s and strong breezes. I often use the tan sweater to warm my feet if I decide not to wear socks. I want to unravel the neck rib and add some rows to it that the jumper has. But I have other leftovers to use up.

Thursday, April 21, 2022

The persistence of bad information

So there's a fun video on Youtube about how Krakatoa destroyed the world in 535 CE. Unfortunately, the video was made in 1999 and we have learned a lot since then, so it becomes just another urban legend. 

The eruption definitely happened and it definitely was as severe as they say. Its results no doubt included the oldest recorded episode of bubonic plague. But we learned in, for example, 2012, that syphilis existed in Pompeii before the Vesuvius eruption, and in England in the 1200s CE. The Columbian origin of syphilis was invented by Jean Astruc in the 1700s. His other claim to infamy is inventing Documentary Hypothesis, which has a zero probability of being true due to false facts and fallacies of logic. You can read about that here. So people may have been getting bubonic plague for centuries, it's just that its symptoms were not recorded or at least not recorded well enough to recognize. 

One of the pieces of information used in the video is the Grail story from France, to suggest that England was devastated. The Grail story cited is from the 1200s CE French Vulgate cycle. All 8 volumes are available in facsimile on Internet Archive, in the early French in which they were written. Is it reliable?

If this were a record of an oral tradition, it would have examples of what Axel Olrik documented in Principles for Oral Narrative Research, about which I wrote here. One of Olrik’s findings is that oral traditions always begin from a cultural or historical reality. Written material – not so much. There are examples of Olrik's principles in the Jewish Torah, the Mahabharata, the Popul Vuh, the Romance of Three Kingdoms, as well as Africa's Mwindo epic and Sumerian mythology, Greek mythology and the fairy tales collected by the Grimm brothers.

The French Vulgate starts out as a representation of part of Christian history. By the 1200s, it could have copied from older written works. It could also contain elements of French Christian oral tradition. The repeated sets of threes at the start of the first volume point that way; so do the repeated sets of threes at the start of the Chinese Romance of Three Kingdoms.

But the Vulgate brings in a character missing from the Welsh Triads with their references to Arthur’s court. Lancelot has no origin in the Triads. He is in the Vulgate so as to be the greatest knight in the world in the material sense, only to be overthrown by his son Galahad who is greater in a moral sense. The point of Galahad’s superiority is that he gets to see the Grail, a Christian concept. There’s more resemblance in this to the Aeneid, a work invented in writing by Vergil to connect the Aeneas of the Iliad’s Troy, with Roman Romulus and Remus, and their political heir Augustus.  Whatever oral elements exist in the Vulgate, they represent a) examples of Olrik's principles and therefore they are not culture-specific; b) French Christian culture not British Christian culture; and c) medieval culture, not the culture of 7 centuries earlier. So we can't use the French Vulgate as evidence for the supposed destruction of British and Irish culture in the 500s CE, after which the Anglo-Saxons took over.

What evidence exists for a disaster in Britain in the 500s CE? How do we identify a population collapse or bottleneck? One way is through DNA. For example, the Jewish and Samaritan kohens who are descended in the male line from Aharon, the brother of Moshe, really do have a solid male DNA relationship that is unique. There is no such DNA evidence for Levites not descended from Aharon. The reason is easy to see. Kohens cannot marry widows or divorcees, meaning that the children of their wives are their children. The other Levites could have married widows or divorcees who were pregnant by their former husbands, no matter what precautions were taken.

At the time of filming, and even more so when Keys was doing his research, DNA analysis was in its infancy. The human genome project started in 1990 and was completed in 2003. Only after that could the data be analyzed to identify human populations and their migrations. The facts show that in London, up to 50% of men have Y-chromosome DNA that is Celtic, and of course it is better than 75% in Ireland. That means a population of Celtic males from west (with higher percentages) to southeast. The old supposition that in the 500s, the Anglo-Saxons nearly wiped out the British, who retreated to Wales, doesn’t hold water. The percentage is lower in the east due to immigration, but it should be much closer to zero if the Celtic population there was wiped out.

In the east of England, in the Anglo-Saxon settlements, there are also Celtic material remains. It’s either a sign of peaceful trade or of peaceful coexistence. The latter leads to the lower but well above zero percentage of male Celtic DNA in London.

What probably happened was that British settlement habits were decentralized. You’ll understand this better when I tell you that in the U.S. in 1800, 95% of residents were rural, not urban. That’s 14 centuries after the Roman withdrawal from Britain, at a time when the U.S. was putting up monumental buildings for our new government.

In Britain in the 500s CE, centers included Roman fortifications, but they were visited by traders more than they were settled by the British, and the settlers had no reason to stay once the Romans withdrew. Bath as a center of Roman culture did not long survive the Roman withdrawal, showing that the British had no nostalgia for Roman culture and did not consider centralization important even after a couple of centuries of experience. Nor did they acquire the habit of monumental building from the Romans; they got it from Christianity. The Canterbury cathedral was built in 507 – before the “British devastation” while the Anglo-Saxons were still mostly pagan.

The "Celts being wiped out" urban legend no doubt has a number of roots. One is Augustine's mission to Christianize the Anglo-Saxons. Britain and Ireland had been Christian for a century or so, but the Saxons in Germany remained pagan until Charlemagne converted them by force. 

It’s not possible that Pope Gregory didn’t know about the Christians in Britain, Ireland and Scotland. Sending Augustine to convert the Anglo-Saxons does not require that the British had been wiped out. They were already Christian and Gregory didn’t have to worry about them, unless he objected to them not forcing conversion on the Anglo-Saxons. Whoever started the myth of “Celts being wiped out,” however, all the scribes in England had to stick to that story. 

That myth stroked the egos of the Victorians, who were ruled by Germans. England was bigoted against Catholicism in general and the Irish in particular. It would have been an inconvenient truth that at the same time as Augustine's mission to England, Irish (and Scots) missions to Europe brought with them copies of Christian texts that had survived in Ireland but disappeared from Europe during the pagan invasions. These missions went on for half a century after the "catastrophe" supposedly wiped out pre-Saxon culture in the British Isles. Travel requires a reliable source of food at every point along the road; it's called logistics, and missions don't work in a devastated landscape that can't support its own inhabitants, in the same way as Napoleon's forces dwindled to relatively nothing on the retreat from Moscow over land subjected to a "scorched earth" policy.

There’s also material evidence of population in Britain. Before the Anglo-Saxons revived London as a port, trade was still coming in at Cornwall, the most important Celtic port on the island, with access to the western mines. Through this port, no doubt, came the African red slip ware found in British sites that date to the time that the Celts supposedly fled to the Welsh mountains. ARSW was a luxury product. Somebody had the money to buy it in the middle of the "catastrophe". This was an opening for the bubonic plague to reach England from Byzantium. Not from Europe, where the Roman Empire was in freefall. From Africa; the plague started in Ethiopia.

Since the Celts were not wiped out, there’s no reason to suppose that plague reached the British Isles during the “catastrophe”. We’ll need actual plague victims for that. The French Vulgate claims of devastation are an exaggeration, possibly modeled on the jeremiads in the Pentateuch. France itself didn’t undergo devastation.

The video tries to claim that France and Spain formed at this time due to the effects of the catastrophe. What we currently know about France and Spain of the 500s supports no such claim. The Frankish kingdom under the Merovingians had its capital at Paris at this time. There is no chronological coordination between their decline and the Krakatoa eruption, and in any case the Capetians were there to take up the slack. Likewise in Spain the Arian Visigothic kingdoms were in full swing. They tried to invade Africa, although they failed. 

The video ignores China except to say they were glad to see the Avars migrate west and bother somebody else (Byzantium). The final collapse of the Han Dynasty occurred in the 380s CE, over a century before the eruption. If the "catastrophe" was as bad as Keys wants us to think, China might have stayed split into the Northern and Southern Dynasties for 300 years. It didn't. The Mandate of Heaven passed, and the Sui Dynasty formed by the 590s CE. It was a natural and normal event captured in the aphorism at the start of the Romance of Three Kingdoms: 话说天下大势,分久必合,合久必,the general trend is that what is divided tends to unite; once united, it tends to divide.

The video never mentions India, which is a hell of a lot closer to Krakatoa than England. The decline at the end of the Gupta period coordinates with the attacks of the Alchon Huns and the way they damaged trade outside the subcontinent. Buddhism suffered a decline due to persecution. There was also a horrible flood -- not after the desiccation caused by the eruption, but almost at the time the eruption occurred -- in the Bihar region that was a mainstay of the Gupta empire. If nobody has looked for evidence of the Krakatoa eruption in India, it's possibly because there are strong reasons for why the Guptas fell, independent of the eruption.

Ignoring India is an example of the fallacy of sampling bias. When you commit sampling bias, you fail the Test of Occam's Razor and your conclusions cannot be accepted.

Sure, there is evidence of volcanic eruptions. There is evidence in Ireland of the Thera eruption of 1628 BCE that devastated Minoan culture on Thera and Palaikastro, which were some 160 kilometers apart. (Ireland is over 4,000 kilometers from Thera.) There could be deposits from an eruption of the 530s CE – but not of Krakatoa.

What did happen, then? Well, look at the fact that two of the biggest cities in the world suffered depopulation at the time. But you can't blame it all on Krakatoa. Keys did not know about Ilopango, in El Salvador, which was much closer to Teotihuacan than Krakatoa was. The data on Ilopango mostly was published after 2000. Ilopango would have had a much worse effect on Teotihuacan than Krakatoa, but Keys wouldn't have known about that, nor would it have been reflected in the video. There is, however, a different Youtube video that covers it. 

If there's ash in Ireland from 535 CE give or take, it is more likely to have an Ilopango chemical signature than a Krakatoa one, although El Salvador is almost twice as far from Ireland as Thera is. Probably it was darker or the sunsets were redder and the temperatures cooler than before the two eruptions, more so than what happened in the 1880s after the smaller Krakatoa eruption. But it didn’t wipe out the Celts.

So there's a double reason why the 500s CE was such a bad time in human history, but it doesn't add up to global collapse of civilization. Keys could only claim what he did because of something I talk about on my Gibbon thread. You always have to look at the provenance of the information and then see if there's later information available. If you don't, you're going to fall for claims that have been overturned, or even fall for an urban legend that you can't disbelieve because you don't know enough. 

Tuesday, April 19, 2022

21st Century Classical Greek -- pempo

Book I section 26.  Learn the verb πολιορκέω, besiege. There were lots of sieges in the war. Also learn πέμπω, send, which is high-frequency anywhere and used as a paradigm for the conversion of pi to psi in the imperfective; it is quite regular otherwise. 

πάντων οὖν τούτων ἐγκλήματα ἔχοντες οἱ Κορίνθιοι ἔπεμπον ἐς τὴν Ἐπίδαμνον ἄσμενοι τὴν ὠφελίαν, οἰκήτορά τε τὸν βουλόμενον ἰέναι κελεύοντες καὶ Ἀμπρακιωτῶν καὶ Λευκαδίων καὶ ἑαυτῶν φρουρούς.

[2] ἐπορεύθησαν δὲ πεζῇ ἐς Ἀπολλωνίαν, Κορινθίων οὖσαν ἀποικίαν, δέει τῶν Κερκυραίων μὴ κωλύωνται ὑπ᾽ αὐτῶν κατὰ θάλασσαν περαιούμενοι.

[3] Κερκυραῖοι δὲ ἐπειδὴ ᾔσθοντο τούς τε οἰκήτορας καὶ φρουροὺς ἥκοντας ἐς τὴν Ἐπίδαμνον τήν τε ἀποικίαν Κορινθίοις δεδομένην, ἐχαλέπαινον: καὶ πλεύσαντες εὐθὺς πέντε καὶ εἴκοσι ναυσὶ καὶ ὕστερον ἑτέρῳ στόλῳ τούς τε φεύγοντας ἐκέλευον κατ᾽ ἐπήρειαν δέχεσθαι αὐτούς (ἦλθον γὰρ ἐς τὴν Κέρκυραν οἱ τῶν Ἐπιδαμνίων φυγάδες, τάφους τε ἀποδεικνύντες καὶ ξυγγένειαν, ἣν προϊσχόμενοι ἐδέοντο σφᾶς κατάγειν) τούς τε φρουροὺς οὓς Κορίνθιοι ἔπεμψαν καὶ τοὺς οἰκήτορας ἀποπέμπειν.

[4] οἱ δὲ Ἐπιδάμνιοι οὐδὲν αὐτῶν ὑπήκουσαν, ἀλλὰ στρατεύουσιν ἐπ᾽ αὐτοὺς οἱ Κερκυραῖοι τεσσαράκοντα ναυσὶ μετὰ τῶν φυγάδων ὡς κατάξοντες, καὶ τοὺς Ἰλλυριοὺς προσλαβόντες.

[5] προσκαθεζόμενοι δὲ τὴν πόλιν προεῖπον Ἐπιδαμνίων τε τὸν βουλόμενον καὶ τοὺς ξένους ἀπαθεῖς ἀπιέναι: εἰ δὲ μή, ὡς πολεμίοις χρήσεσθαι. ὡς δ᾽ οὐκ ἐπείθοντο, οἱ μὲν Κερκυραῖοι (ἔστι δ᾽ ἰσθμὸς τὸ χωρίον) ἐπολιόρκουν τὴν πόλιν,.

Otherwise this is a very straightforward section about the next step toward war. This is not some interpolis battle over boundaries. It is a battle over “whose colony is this anyway, and how dare you claim a colony from your metropolis?” They may all be Hellenes now, but they are not yet Greece.

Wednesday, April 13, 2022

Gibbon -- the urban legend, pt. 12

Last time was another case of Gibbon ignoring a crucial factor in history, disease and the way it changes a culture by redefining "normal". This time he goes on with his tabloid trash and misses another important clue.

He's right about one thing. Bet you never thought I would say that! After 250 CE it didn't matter what the nature of the emperor was, how he got to the throne or how he reigned. This ought to be a warning against one-man rule but it never has been.

The point is that one-man rule only works if he can get and keep the majority of the population behind him. Getting, yes. Keeping, no. There's no such thing as freezing a social order anywhere at any time. There's no such thing as permanent order. There is always something going on somewhere that is going to impact a frozen social order, smashing it.

Gibbon knew this. He knew about the Roman slave wars, social wars, civil wars, Caesar and Augustus. He hated Augustus' government because it showed that Gibbon's "free constitution" destroyed itself in Rome, in the civil wars, and he hated Augustus for replacing it, even though it was the only way to keep Rome alive.

So he skips over pretty much everything and claims that the Antonines were the pattern government for Rome, and he ignores that they were emperors in the Augustine mode, and what happened after the Antonine plague, and what happened after debasement of the coinage, and so on.

When Gibbon gets to chapter 12, the army has been in charge of picking emperors for nearly 200 years, longer if you consider Vespasian the first in line. There is no such thing as one-man rule, there's just whoever the army is backing at the moment. If you have paid attention to history since about 1955, this is a pattern you have seen. The old leader is called corrupt and oppressive, the army throws him out, and whoever gets put on top spends a while there and then gets thrown out in turn. Unless somebody is spending massive bucks to keep him there, usually to get access to important resources.

In a true representative government, there is always a path for a peaceful transition of power. In a nation with freedom of speech and a right peaceably to assemble and petition leaders, there's no excuse for political coups. But Gibbon refuses to admit a) that such was not the case in the Roman Republic, and b) that it is exactly what the Americans eventually put in place. Britain followed suit in the 1800s with the abolishment of rotten and pocket boroughs, repeal of the Test and Exclusion Acts, and the extension of the franchise. That became the British constitution. Gibbon must have been turning over in his grave.

To the PDF

Tuesday, April 12, 2022

21st Century Classical Greek -- quoted speech

Book I section 25.  Learn the verb πολιορκέω, besiege. There were lots of sieges in the war. Also learn πέμπω,  send, which is high-frequency anywhere and used as a paradigm for the conversion of pi to psi in the imperfective; it is quite regular otherwise.

γνόντες δὲ οἱ Ἐπιδάμνιοι οὐδεμίαν σφίσιν ἀπὸ Κερκύρας τιμωρίαν οὖσαν ἐν ἀπόρῳ εἴχοντο θέσθαι τὸ παρόν, καὶ πέμψαντες ἐς Δελφοὺς τὸν θεὸν ἐπήροντο εἰ παραδοῖεν Κορινθίοις τὴν πόλιν ὡς οἰκισταῖς καὶ τιμωρίαν τινὰ πειρῷντ᾽ ἀπ᾽ αὐτῶν ποιεῖσθαι. ὁ δ᾽ αὐτοῖς ἀνεῖλε παραδοῦναι καὶ ἡγεμόνας ποιεῖσθαι.

[2] ἐλθόντες δὲ οἱ Ἐπιδάμνιοι ἐς τὴν Κόρινθον κατὰ τὸ μαντεῖον παρέδοσαν τὴν ἀποικίαν, τόν τε οἰκιστὴν ἀποδεικνύντες σφῶν ἐκ Κορίνθου ὄντα καὶ τὸ χρηστήριον δηλοῦντες, ἐδέοντό τε μὴ σφᾶς περιορᾶν φθειρομένους, ἀλλ᾽ ἐπαμῦναι.

[3] Κορίνθιοι δὲ κατά τε τὸ δίκαιον ὑπεδέξαντο τὴν τιμωρίαν, νομίζοντες οὐχ ἧσσον ἑαυτῶν εἶναι τὴν ἀποικίαν ἢ Κερκυραίων, ἅμα δὲ καὶ μίσει τῶν Κερκυραίων, ὅτι αὐτῶν παρημέλουν ὄντες ἄποικοι:

[4] οὔτε γὰρ ἐν πανηγύρεσι ταῖς κοιναῖς διδόντες γέρα τὰ νομιζόμενα οὔτε Κορινθίῳ ἀνδρὶ προκαταρχόμενοι τῶν ἱερῶν ὥσπερ αἱ ἄλλαι ἀποικίαι, περιφρονοῦντες δὲ αὐτοὺς καὶ χρημάτων δυνάμει ὄντες κατ᾽ ἐκεῖνον τὸν χρόνον ὁμοῖα τοῖς Ἑλλήνων πλουσιωτάτοις καὶ τῇ ἐς πόλεμον παρασκευῇ δυνατώτεροι, ναυτικῷ δὲ καὶ πολὺ προύχειν ἔστιν ὅτε ἐπαιρόμενοι καὶ κατὰ τὴν Φαιάκων προενοίκησιν τῆς Κερκύρας κλέος ἐχόντων τὰ περὶ τὰς ναῦς (ᾗ καὶ μᾶλλον ἐξηρτύοντο τὸ ναυτικὸν καὶ ἦσαν οὐκ ἀδύνατοι: τριήρεις γὰρ εἴκοσι καὶ ἑκατὸν ὑπῆρχον αὐτοῖς ὅτε ἤρχοντο πολεμεῖν)

Paradoien is an imperfective eventive executive uncertainty epistemic. This is not a conditional sentence, it’s a specific question, and ei, as I said before, should be translated “whether”, not “if”.

Our indirect question uses an “aorist”, although it is obviously about a future event and therefore using a past tense is nonsense. If you try to say that it’s in the past of Thucydides and his writing, I can counter with the fact that it’s clearly in the future of the people doing the speaking and Goodwin and others agree that the indirect speech should use the same tense as the original speech.

Aspectually, the Epidamnians are asking for an answer about an event that they are not sure will happen. Calling this a “future less vivid” assumes that it is a conditional, which is not correct. Calling it a future at all is a cognitive dissonance with its being in aorist tense.

Goodwin gets wrapped around the axles about “unreal conditions” but gives no examples. He refers to earlier sections about suppositions contrary to fact, which are conditionals. He is also misled by the concept of “future less vivid” which his sources tack onto “optative”.

The Epidamnians are asking should they deliberately do something without any certainty that the oracle will tell them to do it. They use the default aspect, imperfective eventive, to focus on the deed regardless of whether it has permanent results. Thus the reported speech could be using the same grammar as the original speech, without creating cognitive dissonance.

Tuesday, April 5, 2022

21st Century Classical Greek -- tell me how you want it

Book I section 24.

Ἐπίδαμνός ἐστι πόλις ἐν δεξιᾷ ἐσπλέοντι ἐς τὸν Ἰόνιον κόλπον: προσοικοῦσι δ᾽ αὐτὴν Ταυλάντιοι βάρβαροι, Ἰλλυρικὸν ἔθνος.

[2] ταύτην ἀπῴκισαν μὲν Κερκυραῖοι, οἰκιστὴς δ᾽ ἐγένετο Φαλίος Ἐρατοκλείδου Κορίνθιος γένος τῶν ἀφ᾽ Ἡρακλέους, κατὰ δὴ τὸν παλαιὸν νόμον ἐκ τῆς μητροπόλεως κατακληθείς. ξυνῴκισαν δὲ καὶ Κορινθίων τινὲς καὶ τοῦ ἄλλου Δωρικοῦ γένους.

[3] προελθόντος δὲ τοῦ χρόνου ἐγένετο ἡ τῶν Ἐπιδαμνίων δύναμις μεγάλη καὶ πολυάνθρωπος:

[4] στασιάσαντες δὲ ἐν ἀλλήλοις ἔτη πολλά, ὡς λέγεται, ἀπὸ πολέμου τινὸς τῶν προσοίκων βαρβάρων ἐφθάρησαν καὶ τῆς δυνάμεως τῆς πολλῆς ἐστερήθησαν.

[5] τὰ δὲ τελευταῖα πρὸ τοῦδε τοῦ πολέμου ὁ δῆμος αὐτῶν ἐξεδίωξε τοὺς δυνατούς, οἱ δὲ ἐπελθόντες μετὰ τῶν βαρβάρων ἐλῄζοντο τοὺς ἐν τῇ πόλει κατά τε γῆν καὶ κατὰ θάλασσαν.

[6] οἱ δὲ ἐν τῇ πόλει ὄντες Ἐπιδάμνιοι ἐπειδὴ ἐπιέζοντο, πέμπουσιν ἐς τὴν Κέρκυραν πρέσβεις ὡς μητρόπολιν οὖσαν, δεόμενοι μὴ σφᾶς περιορᾶν φθειρομένους, ἀλλὰ τούς τε φεύγοντας ξυναλλάξαι σφίσι καὶ τὸν τῶν βαρβάρων πόλεμον καταλῦσαι.

[7] ταῦτα δὲ ἱκέται καθεζόμενοι ἐς τὸ Ἥραιον ἐδέοντο. οἱ δὲ Κερκυραῖοι τὴν ἱκετείαν οὐκ ἐδέξαντο, ἀλλ᾽ ἀπράκτους ἀπέπεμψαν.

Learn the difference between pro, “before”, in subsection 5, which is used only with the -on case, and pros, “in the direction of”, in section 16.1, which is used with all the oblique cases.

The bolded words represeent a situations Goodwin does not discuss. To him, mi is used with “infinitives” or “subjunctives,” not with indicative conjugated verbs, unless in a final clause preceded by ina, opos, etc. That’s not what we have here.

This phrase is a quasi-command or imperative. As such, it is a modality called deontic; the world is not as one would wish and a deontic attempts to make it that way or expresses a wish to make it that way. Biblical Hebrew has both in several different grammars: the volitive for wishes; imperatives from an authority to a reliable person for immediate action; commandments to regulate social behavior; and the aspectless verb (“infinitive”) for on-demand actions that are due and owing under the circumstances, especially capital punishment.

Goodwin discusses deontics (although not under that name) in sections 1342ff, starting on his page 287.  He gets around to our usages here in section 1351, but we have not just an indicative, we have an impersonal gerundive.

Goodwin gets around to this use of the i.g. in section 1536, page 329. He does not list it in the commands section of his index, or in the infinitive section. You pretty much have to memorize all of Goodwin, including his confusing or misleading or downright false material, to find this explanation.

Perioiran is a progressive conceptual i.g. standing for a habit that should not be allowed to continue. Later we have ksunallaksai, an imperfective eventive i.g., thus an action to be taken. Why not an imperfective conceptual for the action to be taken?

Because that’s not what the imperfective conceptual i.g. is for. It’s for the complement of a verb like mello or elpizo. The imperative in Biblical Hebrew looks like a “future” in Mishnaic and Modern Hebrew, but in Biblical Hebrew it’s a form of the imperfect.

Also, this command is not in perfective. The command refuses to take into account the result. It only requests action.

This is a case where a tense description of Greek creates cognitive problems; if we were still thinking of “aorist, a past tense”, the command would make no sense because the action hasn’t happened yet. But since it’s imperfective, there’s no cognitive problem, besides the fact that at least one other language does the same thing. And in fact, subsection 7 shows us that the Kerkyraeans refused to act.

Illyria is the Balkan states region. Illyria is the Greek name for a multi-ethnic region and the names the peoples used for themselves have not survived.

In subsection 2 we see the seeds of the opening conflict of the Peloponnesian war. Kerkyraea itself was a colony of Korinth, and although it founded its own colony, a Korinthian led the expedition. But when troubles came, the city sent to Kerkyraea, not Korinth, and thereby hangs the tale.