Revisiting Ancient Greek Colonisation

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INTRODUCTION REVISITING ANCIENT GREEK COLONISATION pp.XXIII-LXXXIII Gocha R.

Tsetskhladze

The major Greek expansion around the Mediterranean and Black Seas in the Archaic period has been called in academic literature Greek colonisation. Migration feature in every period of Greek, Roman 1 and Near Eastern history 2,but Archaic Greek colonisation is distinguished from most of the rest by its scale and extentsome comparisons may be made with Alexander the Greats campaign in the Near East and the Hellenistic period 3,3 but the nature and character of these events are different. Greece itself (both the modern mainland and ancient East Greece) had witnessed migration before the Archaic period: in the late 11th10th century B.C. the Ionians (and subsequently the Dorians and Aeolians) migrated from mainland Greece to settle the Aegean islands and the western coast of Asia Minor, where they founded 12 cities. Earlier still, the Mycenaeans had established settlements around the Mediterranean 4. The study of Greek colonies and other settlements overseas has a long history. Notwithstanding this, as C.M. Antonaccio recently remarked:
The phenomena that made up Greek settlement abroad, usually characterized as colonization, are clearly an integral part of Greek history and the development of Greek culture(s). Yet, although the so-called Western Greeks fully participated in panhellenic cult, politics and economics, and culture the colonies are often not integrated into the master-narratives of Iron Age and Archaic Greek history. This is starting to change with an expressly comparative archaeology of colonization or colonialism that is now coming to the fore and making its way into Classical Studies.... 5

She continues:
Excavating colonization has also occasioned digging into the history of the study of Greek colonization and into the relevance of other colonialisms, and led to a long-overdue dialogue between Anglophone and European scholars with their respective perspectives and agendas 6.

The state of our knowledge is frequently analysed. In one such attempt, made in 1984, J.-P. Morel concluded:
See, for example, Cornell 1995; Millar 1981; Alcock 2005; Terrenato 2005. For a recent overview of the ancient Near East, see Snell 2005. See also Stein 2002; 2005a. 3 See Shipley 2000; Rotroff 1997. For a recent overview of the period, see Erskine 2003. 4 See the two chapters by J. Vanschoonwinkel in the present volume (pp. 41142). 5 Antonaccio 2005, 97. Her observation is addressed specifically at southern Italy and Sicily. These regions have been more or less incorporated in the general discussion about Archaic Greece; other regions, such as Spain, the south of France, the Black Sea, etc., were virtually ignored, although this is now starting to change (see, for instance, Osborne 1996; Pomeroy et al. 1999; Whitley 2001; Hansen and Nielsen 2004; Morris and Powell 2006). 6 Antonaccio 2005, 97. The term the archaeology of Greek colonisation was used first in the title of a book in 1994 (Tsetskhladze and De Angelis 1994). In 1997, one of the reviewers of this book was so surprised by the term that he asked himself The archaeology of what? (Antiquity 71.272, 500). It is very interesting to see how scholarship has developed since the appearance of that book. C.M. Antonaccio not only called her 2005 paper Excavating Colonization; it is the title of her forthcoming book (University of Texas Press) (Antonaccio 2005, 112). See also Dietler 2005.
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Some subjects of research have become or are becoming less important. . . .: [1] the Myceneans in the western Mediterranean and especially the question of continuity or discontinuity of a Greek presence between the Bronze Age and the eighth century; [2] the foundation dates of the colonies and secondary colonies (one may recall the heated discussions which until very recently took place over the relative and absolute chronology of Syracuse and Megara Hyblaea and of Megara Hyblaea and Selinus); [3] the motives of Greek colonization accompanied by the debate between the agrarian and commercial hypotheses; [4] the relation between mother cities and their colonies; [5] the political history of the cities of Magna Graecia and particularly the disputes between them 7.

These remarks, once again, focus mainly on Magna Graecia and Sicily, but the same issues exist/have always existed for other areas. How far has modern scholarship advanced in the study of different aspects of Greek colonisation 8?

If not Colonisation, then what?


The Second Edition of the Oxford Classical Dictionary, published in 1970, gives the following definition of Greek colonisation (A.J. Graham, p. 264):
Colonization was always a natural activity for Greeks, living in a poor country. Mycenaean colonies of the Late Bronze Age have been revealed by archaeologists (e.g. at Miletus), the coast of Asia Minor and the islands off it were settled at the beginning of the Iron Age, and there was much colonization in Asia under Alexander and in the Hellenistic period. Nevertheless, the greatest colonizing achievement, by which Greek cities were spread round the coasts of the Mediterranean and Pontus, is that of the archaic period, c. 750c. 550.

By the Third Edition of the same work, published in 1996 (D. Ridgway, p. 362), this had changed to:
Colonization, in the language of a former imperial power, is a somewhat misleading definition of the process of major Greek expansion that took place between c. 734 and 580 B.C. In fact, the process itself was not so much Greek as directed in different ways and for different reasons by a number of independent city-states . . . This at least emerges with relative clarity from both the historical and the archaeological evidence. For the rest, the mass of general and particular information that has accumulated under these two headings is only rarely susceptible to a single uncontroversial interpretation. Although the position has greatly improved since the 1930s, it is still only too true that archaeologists and ancient historians do not always appreciate each others aims and methodsa problem that is exacerbated by the
Morel 1984, 1234; cf. Holloway 1981; Snodgrass 1994. See also Graham 1982 and Epilogue in Boardman 1999a, 26782. 8 Many issues are discussed in the following chapters. Here I shall concentrate mostly on general matters. I shall also provide literature (mainly in English) covering the whole spectrum of issues which has appeared in between the completion of the various chapters and publication (see my Preface). If I seem to be making heavy use of quotations, my view is that presenting an authors arguments in his own words provides greater clarity than any paraphrase, especially in an introductory piece such as this. It must be emphasised that southern Italy and Sicily continue to be at the forefront of our investigations. In addition to the literature cited later in the present volume, see Menndez Varela 2003; Skele 2002; Attema et al. 2002; 2005; Attema 2004; Krinzinger 2000; Gassner 2003; Burgers 2004; Greco 2002; Di Vita 2002; Bonfante 2003; Smith and Serrati 2000; Bispham and Smith 2000; D. Ridgway 2002; De Angelis 2001; Gleba 2003; etc. See also several volumes published by the Accordia Research Institute, London and chapters in the present volume by E. Greco (pp. 169200) and B. dAgostino (pp. 20138). For other regions, the most recent literature can be found in Hansen and Nielsen 2004. Page 2 of 3
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fact that on the subject of colonization ancient no less than modern authors are more than usually influenced by their own political agenda and accordingly more than usually liable to project the priorities, practices, and terminology of their own times onto the much earlier events they purport to describe.

In the quarter of a century between these two definitions the scholarly attitude to Greek colonisation changed dramatically in several respects. One matter to receive much attention was that of terminology. In a debate that still continues many have questioned whether what happened was really colonisation 9. The answer often depends on the academic background of the writerancient historian, classicist, classical archaeologist, anthropologist, specialist in the archaeology of ancient Europe, inter-disciplinary, etc. P. van Dommelens 1997 definition of the term colonialism is frequently cited:
The presence of one or more groups of foreign people in a region at some distance from their place of origin (the colonizers), and the existence of asymmetrical socioeconomic relationships of dominance or exploitation between the colonizing groups and the inhabitants of the colonized regions 10.

His more recent definition (2002) is closer to the conception of this volume:
The term colonial is widely used in Mediterranean archaeology to describe situations in which the archaeological and historical evidence shows people living in clearly distinct settlements in a foreign region or enclave at some distance from their place of origin. The situation most often referred to in these terms is the Greek presence in southern Italy and Sicily from the eighth century B.C. onward. The prominence of the Greek cities even gave this region the name Magna Graecia. Other cases are Roman occupation of the Mediterranean and northwestern Europe, the Phoenician settlements in the central and western Mediterranean, and the Greek presence on the shores of the Black Sea. While these may be less well known, they should certainly not be regarded as somehow less colonial 11.

See, for example, Osborne 1998. van Dommelen 1997, 306. 11 van Dommelen 2002, 121. He continues: The colonial terminology commonly used to refer to these situations has never been questioned, because the abundant archaeological evidence clearly shows a sharp contrast between the local cultures of, for instance, the Italian and Spanish mainland and the Greek or Phoenician presence in these regions. The arrival of both Greeks and Phoenicians in the western Mediterranean is moreover well documented by numerous classical authors who have written extensively about the foundation of new cities in foreign countries, explicitly labeling these as coloniae. It is because the colonial terminology appeared to provide a coherent and transparent framework for studying a wide variety of loosely related situations [that] colonialism has become a well-established and prominent feature of Mediterranean and classical archaeology and ancient history (van Dommelen 2002, 121). See also van Dommelen 2005.
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