I agree that it's plausible - but you will agree that all this has to be taken on a certain amount of trust, as we actually don't know; and that the sources could well be describing things according to the system they are familiar with, rather than the system as it actually was, we shouldn't assume that they are describing events entirely faithfully.Taphoi wrote:It need not mean that everyone had a vote, but it makes it plausible that the decisions were being taken by votes of large numbers of the citizens.marcus wrote:I cannot accept without checking that being sent "by the community" indicates that everyone actually had a vote.
Thanks for the clarification - although I still refer to my above point about the care we should take over the veracity of the description.Taphoi wrote:The verb used by Diodorus derives from psephis being a small pebble. Hence it means literally to vote in the fashion of casting pebbles into an urn (Diodorus says literally that the Tyrians "pebbled" on whether to send their women and children to Carthage). It is also used to describe votes in the Athenian democracy. There is at least an implication in the use of this verb that the voting was on a large scale - not just a show of hands by a few council members.marcus wrote:Also, perhaps it is the use of a particular Greek word - but I don't have Diodorus in Greek - but my version just says that they voted, not that it was a pebble vote.
Still, even if they didn't use pebbles in the same way, I accept that this could well be Diodorus' way of indicating a large-scale vote.
Yes, they did - but you will agree that the "oriental" monarchies did tend to be less democratic monarchies. I don't know the Phoenician system, but I would be wary of assuming that it worked with anything like the freedom of expression that pervaded the Macedonian.Taphoi wrote:The Macedonians also submitted key issues to a vote of all soldiers of fighting age, despite having a king. Perdiccas had them vote on the implementation of Alexander's Last Plans. The Tyrian king was evidently away when the Tyrians killed Alexander's envoys.marcus wrote:What purpose a king if you maintain a democratic system of government?
You might well be perfectly right in everything you assert, Andrew - it's just that I don't think we should take the sources entirely at face value over this.
And it doesn't alter the fact that, once the Macedonians had taken the city after a long and bloody siege, they were almost certainly going to vent their frustrations on the populace, due course or not!

ATB