McGlin, Michael. 2023. “Loans from Attic Temples to the State.” In “The Athenian Empire Anew: Acting Hegemonically, Reacting Locally in the Athenian Arkhē,” ed. Aaron Hershkowitz and Michael McGlin, special issue, Classics@ 23. https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HLNC.ESSAY:103490531.
Abstract
0. Introduction
1. Athenian War Financing and Loans from the Other Gods
The accounts of the Logistai (IG I3 369) are the principal source of information on Athenian lending activity during the Archidamian phase of the Peloponnesian War. They present an inscribed narrative of loan activity to the Athenian state [4] from the temple of Athena Polias and from the Other Gods during the Panathenaiac cycle of 426/5–423/2 and conclude with a summary of loans the state received throughout the period of 433/2–423/2. [5] These loans are arranged by originating institution (Athena or Treasury of the Other Gods), by year, and are further organized by prytany. These transactions are presented in standard format: the loan is numbered, the tribe in prytany is recorded along with the date of the transaction, and the loan’s principal amount and the interest to be received are listed. The following loan from 426 (IG I3 369.12–14) is a standard example:
The interest rate is not recorded. Meritt, however, has calculated this rate as 1 drachma of interest earned per day for every 5 talents loaned. [6] Loan and interest totals are provided at the close of each year.
Table 1. First Loan from the Treasury of the Other Gods 423/2.
Divinity | Principal | Interest |
Artemis Agrotera | – | 360 drachmas (+) |
Poseidon at Sounion | 5 talents 2,000 drachmas (+) |
370 drachmas (+) |
Artemis at Mounikhia | 1 talent 4,551 drachmas 1 ½ obols |
– |
Aphrodite in the Hippolytion | – | 3 drachmas 5 ½ obols (+) |
Muses | 500 drachmas (+) | 6 drachmas 2 obols |
Apollo Zoster | – | – |
Adrasteia | 86 drachmas | 1 drachma |
Bendis | 86 drachmas | 1 drachma |
Apollo | – | 8 drachmas |
Herakles at Kynosarges | 20 drachmas | 1 ½ obols |
Demophōn | – | – |
Athena at Pallenis | 1 talent 5,200 drachmas (+) |
129 drachmas 3 ¾ obols |
Apollo | – | – |
Artemis Brauronia | 1,396 drachmas 4 obols |
16 drachmas (+) |
Athena at Derioneon Palladion | 850 drachmas (+) | 11 drachmas (+) |
Poseidon Kalaureatis | – | – |
TOTALS | 30 talents 5,990 drachmas |
2,120 drachmas (+) |
(+) = more than |
Table 2. Preserved and Missing Totals from First Loan from the Other Gods.
Category | Amount |
Total Amount Loan #1 | 30 talents 5,990 drachmas |
Amount Preserved for Loan #1 | 9 talents 2,689 drachmas 5 ½ obols |
Difference | 21 talents 3,300 drachmas ½ obol |
Table 3. First Loan from the Other Gods: Order of Magnitude.
Divinity | Principal | Interest |
Herakles at Kynosarges | 20 drachmas | 1 ½ obols |
Adrasteia | 86 drachmas | 1 drachma |
Bendis | 86 drachmas | 1 drachma |
Muses | 500 drachmas (+) | 6 drachmas 2 obols |
Athena at Derioneon Palladion | 850 drachmas (+) | 11 drachmas (+) |
Artemis Brauronia |
1,396 drachmas 4 obols |
16 drachmas (+) |
Artemis Mounikhia |
1 talent 4,551 drachmas 1 ½ obols |
– |
Athena at Pallenis | 1 talent 5,200 drachmas (+) |
129 drachmas 3 ¾ obols |
Poseidon at Sounion | 5 talents 2,000 drachmas (+) |
370 drachmas (+) |
(+) = more than |
Table 4. Second Loan from the Treasury of the Other Gods 423/2.
Divinity | Principal | Interest |
Artemis Agrotera | 4 talents 1,950 drachmas |
14 drachmas 4 ½ obols |
Aphrodite in the Gardens | 2 talents 5,175 drachmas 1 obol |
9 drachmas 4 ½ obols |
? | 2,840 drachmas (+) | 1 drachma 3 ¾ obols |
Dionysos | 356 drachmas 1 obol |
1 ½ obols |
? | – | – |
Poseidon at Sounion | 4 talents 1,527 drachmas 4 ½ obols |
14 drachmas 2 ¾ obols |
? | 4,749 drachmas 4 obols |
2 drachmas 4 ½ obols |
Artemis Mounikhia |
– | – |
Theseus | 808 drachmas 4 ½ obols |
2 ¾ obols |
Hilisos (Ilissos) |
402 drachmas 1 obol |
1 ½ obols |
Hephaistos | 1 talent 1,748 drachmas |
4 drachmas 2 ½ obols |
Aphrodite in the Hippolytion | 1 drachma 2 obols (+) |
– |
Muses | 521 drachmas | 1 ¾ obols |
God of Strangers | – | – |
Herakles at Kynosarges | 80 drachmas | ½ obol |
Demophōn | – | – |
Apollo | – | – |
Artemis Brauronia | 353 drachmas 2 ½ obols |
1 ½ obols |
Athena Palladion | 2 drachmas 1 ½ obols |
– |
? | 144 drachmas 3 obols |
½ obol |
Mother at Agrai | 200 drachmas (+) | – |
Athena Zosteria | 100 drachmas (+) | – |
TOTALS | 23 talents 5,998 drachmas |
82 drachmas |
(-) less than; (+) more than |
Table 5. Preserved and Missing Totals from Second Loan from the Other Gods.
Category | Amount |
Amount Preserved in Loan | 15 talents 378 drachmas 2 obols |
Difference | 8 talents 5,621 drachmas 4 obols |
Total | 23 talents 5,998 drachmas |
Table 6. Second Loan from the Other Gods: Order of Magnitude.
Divinity | Principal | Interest |
Aphrodite in the Hippolytion | 1 drachma 2 obols (+) |
– |
Athena Palladion |
2 drachmas 1 ½ obols |
– |
Herakles at Kynosarges | 80 drachmas | ½ obol |
Athena Zosteria | 100 drachmas (+) | – |
? | 144 drachmas 3 obols |
½ obol |
Mother at Agrai | 200 drachmas (+) | – |
Artemis Brauronia |
353 drachmas 2 ½ obols |
1 ½ obols |
Dionysos | 356 drachmas 1 obol |
1 ½ obols |
Hilisos (Ilissos) |
402 drachmas 1 obol |
1 ½ obols |
Muses | 521 drachmas | 1 ¾ obols |
Theseus | 808 drachmas 4 ½ obols |
2 ¾ obols |
? | 2,840 drachmas (+) | 1 drachma 3 ¾ obols |
Athena at Pallenis |
3,418 drachmas 1 obol |
1 drachma 5 ½ obols |
? | 4,749 drachmas 4 obols |
2 drachmas 4 ½ obols |
Hephaistos | 1 talent 1,748 drachmas |
4 drachmas 2 ½ obols |
Aphrodite in the Gardens | 2 talents 5,175 drachmas 1 obol |
9 drachmas 4 ½ obols |
Poseidon at Sounion | 4 talents 1,527 drachmas 4 ½ obols |
14 drachmas 2 ¾ obols |
Artemis Agrotera | 4 talents 1,950 drachmas |
14 drachmas 4 ½ obols |
2. Analyzing the Local Temple Loans on the Accounts of the Logistai
Table 7. Comparison of Temple Lenders: First and Second Loan from the Treasury of the Other Gods.
Temple | First Loan | Second Loan |
Artemis Agrotera | X | X |
Poseidon at Sounion | X | X |
Athena Pallenis | X | X |
Demophōn | X | X |
Herakles at Kynosarges | X | X |
Artemis Mounikhia | X | X |
Aphrodite in the Hippolytion | X | X |
Muses | X | X |
Apollo | X | X |
Artemis Brauronia | X | X |
Athena at the Derioneon Palladion | X | X |
Adrasteia and Bendis | X (but separate) | – |
Apollo Zoster | X | – |
Adrasteia | X | – |
Second Apollo? | X | – |
Poseidon Kalaureatis | X | – |
Athena Zosteria | – | X |
Hephaistos | – | X |
Theseus | – | X |
Dionysos | – | X |
Mother at Agrai | – | X |
Hilisos (Ilissos) | – | X |
Aphrodite in the Gardens | – | X |
God of Strangers | – | X |
Table 8. Order of Lending Temples for First and Second Loans from the Other Gods.
First Loan | Second Loan |
Artemis Agrotera | Artemis Agrotera |
Poseidon at Sounion | Aphrodite in the Gardens |
Artemis Mounikhia | ? |
Aphrodite in the Hippolytion | Dionysos |
Muses | ? |
Apollo Zoster | Poseidon at Sounion |
Adrasteia | ? |
Bendis | Artemis Mounikhia |
Apollo | Theseus |
Herkales at Kynosarges | Hilisos |
Demophōn | Hephaistos |
Athena at Pallenis | Aphrodite in the Hippolytion |
Apollo | Muses |
Artemis Brauronia | God of Strangers |
Athena at the Derioneon Palladion | Herakles at Kynosarges |
Poseidon Kalaureatis | Demophōn |
– | Athena at Pallenis |
– | Apollo |
– | Artemis Brauronia |
– | Athena at the Derioneon Palladion |
– | ? |
– | Mother at Agrai |
– | Athena Zosteria |
Table 9. Loan Size Based on Temple Location in Attica: First Loan.
Asty | Mesogeia | Paralia | |||
Temple | Amount | Temple | Amount | Temple | Amount |
Herakles at Kynosarges | 20 drachmas | Artemis Brauronia | 1,396 drachmas 4 obols |
Poseidon at Sounion | 5 talents 2,000 drachmas (+) |
Bendis | 86 drachmas | Athena at Pallenis | 1 talent 5,200 drachmas (+) |
– | – |
Muses | 500 drachmas | – | – | – | – |
Athena Palladion | 850 drachmas | – | – | – | – |
Artemis Mounikhia | 1 talent 4,551 drachmas 1 ½ obols |
– | – | – | – |
Artemis Agrotera | [Ca. 5 talents?] | – | – | – | – |
(+) more than |
Table 10. Loan Size Based on Temple Location in Attica: Second Loan.
Asty | Mesogeia | Paralia | |||
Temple | Amount | Temple | Amount | Temple | Amount |
Aphrodite in the Hippolytion | 1 drachma 2 obols (+) |
Artemis Brauronia |
353 drachmas 2 ½ obols |
Athena Zosteria | 100 drachmas (+) |
Athena Palladion | 2 drachmas 1 ½ obols |
Athena at Pallenis | 3,418 drachmas | Poseidon at Sounion | 4 talents 1,527 drachmas 4 ½ obols |
Herakles at Kynosarges | 80 drachmas | – | – | – | – |
Mother at Agrai | 200 drachmas (+) | – | – | – | – |
Dionysos | 356 drachmas 1 obol |
– | – | – | – |
Hilisos (Ilissos) |
402 drachmas 1 obol |
– | – | – | – |
Muses | 521 drachmas | – | – | – | – |
Theseus | 808 drachmas 4 ½ obols |
– | – | – | – |
Hephaistos | 1 talent 1,748 drachmas |
– | – | – | – |
Aphrodite in the Gardens | 2 talents 5,175 drachmas |
– | – | – | – |
Artemis Agrotera | 4 talents 1,950 drachmas |
– | – | – | – |
(+) more than |
Table 11. Comparison of Temples That Extend Two Loans.
Temple | Loan 1 Amount | Loan 2 Amount | Loan Amount Difference First/Second Loan | Increase/Decline Loan Amount Percentage |
Herakles at Kynosarges | 20 drachmas | 80 drachmas | + 60 drachmas | + 400% |
Athena at Pallenis | 1 talent 5,200 drachmas (+) |
3,418 drachmas 1 obol |
-7,782 drachmas | -69% |
Artemis Brauronia |
1,396 drachmas 4 obols |
353 drachmas 2 ½ obols |
-1,043 drachmas 1 ½ obols |
-75% |
Artemis Agrotera |
[ca. 5 talents 1,820 drachmas] |
4 talents 1,950 drachmas |
-5,870 drachmas | -19% |
Poseidon at Sounion | 5 talents 2,000 drachmas (+) |
4 talents 1,527 drachmas 4 ½ obols |
-6,473 drachmas | -20% |
(+) more than | ||||
[] Reconstructed amount |
3. The Timing and Purpose of Loans from the Treasury of the Other Gods
Table 12. Chronology of Athenian Loans from Sacred Treasuries 426/5—423/2.
Lines | Year BCE |
Prytany # | Tribe | Date | Lending Source |
Amount |
2-6 | 426/25 | 2nd | Kekropis | 4 days from entry | Athena | 20 talents |
6-7 | 426/25 | 2nd | Kekropis | 7 days remaining | Athena | 50 talents |
7-9 | 426/25 | 4th | Pandion | 5 days from entry | Athena | 28 talents 5,610 drachmas 3 ½ obols |
9-11 | 426/25 | 8th | Akamantis | 5 days from entry | Athena | 44 talents 3,000 drachmas |
11-12 | 426/25 | 8th | Akamantis | 10 days from entry | Athena | 100 talents |
12-14 | 426/25 | 10th | Erechtheis | 7 days from entry | Athena | 18 talents 3,000 drachmas |
16-20 | 425/24 | 4th | Oineis | 3rd day from entry | Athena | 30 talents |
20-22 | 425/24 | 9th | Pandion | 15th day from entry | Athena | 100 talents |
25-29 | 424/23 | 1st | Hippothonis | 26th of prytany | Athena | 32 talents 5,983 drachmas |
29-30 | 424/23 | – | – | 12th of prytany | Athena | 23 talents (+) |
31-32 | 424/23 | – | Erectheis | – | Athena | 5 talents? 4,800 drachmas? |
32-33 | 424/23 | 8th | Akamantis | 30th of prytany | Athena | 100 talents |
36-40 | 423/22 | 1st | Akamantis | 12th of prytany | Athena | 64 talents 4,720 drachmas |
55-76 | 423/22 | 1st | Akamantis | 25th of prytany | Other Gods | 30 talents 5,990 drachmas |
40-41 | 423/22 | 3rd | Pandion | 12th of prytany | Athena | 2 talents 5,500 drachmas |
41-43 | 423/22 | 4th | – | 4th of prytany | Athena | 11 talents 3,300 drachmas |
43-44 | 423/22 | 8th | Aiantis | 24th of prytany | Athena | 100 talents |
45-46 | 423/22 | 10th | Leontis | 3rd of prytany | Athena | 18 talents 122 drachmas 2 ½ obols |
77-96 | 423/22 | 10th | Leontis | 20th of prytany | Other Gods | 23 talents 5,998 drachmas |
Table 13. The Size of Athenian Loans from Sacred Treasuries 426/5–423/2 BCE.
Lines | Year | Prytany # | Tribe | Date | Lending Source |
Amount |
40-41 | 423/22 | 3rd | Pandion | 12th of prytany | Athena | 2 talents 5,500 drachmas |
31-32 | 424/23 | – | Erectheis | – | Athena | 5 talents(?) 4,800 drachmas (?) |
41-43 | 423/22 | 4th | – | 4th of prytany | Athena | 11 talents 3,300 drachmas |
45-46 | 423/22 | 10th | Leontis | 3rd of prytany | Athena | 18 talents 122 drachmas 2 ½ obols |
12-14 | 426/25 | 10th | Erechtheis | 7 days from entry | Athena | 18 talents 3,000 drachmas |
2-6 | 426/25 | 2nd | Kekropis | 4 days from entry | Athena | 20 talents |
29-30 | 424/23 | – | – | 12th of prytany | Athena | 23 talents (+) |
77-96 | 423/22 | 10th | Leontis | 20th of prytany | Other Gods | 23 talents 5,998 drachmas |
7-9 | 426/25 | 4th | Pandion | 5 days from entry | Athena | 28 talents 5,610 drachmas 3 ½ obols |
16-20 | 425/24 | 4th | Oineis | 3rd day from entry | Athena | 30 talents |
55-76 | 423/22 | 1st | Akamantis | 25th of prytany | Other Gods | 30 talents 5,990 drachmas |
25-29 | 424/23 | 1st | Hippothonis | 26th of prytany | Athena | 32 talents 5,983 drachmas |
9-11 | 426/25 | 8th | Akamantis | 5 days from entry | Athena | 44 talents 3,000 drachmas |
6-7 | 426/25 | 2nd | Kekropis | 7 days remaining | Athena | 50 talents |
36-40 | 423/22 | 1st | Akamantis | 12th of prytany | Athena | 64 talents 4,720 drachmas |
11-12 | 426/25 | 8th | Akamantis | 10 days from entry | Athena | 100 talents |
20-22 | 425/24 | 9th | Pandion | 15th day from entry | Athena | 100 talents |
32-33 | 424/23 | 8th | Akamantis | 30th of prytany | Athena | 100 talents |
43-44 | 423/22 | 8th | Aiantis | 24th of prytany | Athena | 100 talents |
Table 14. Comparative Loan Size (talents) of Temple of Athena and Treasury of the Other Gods 426/5–423/2.
Lender | Loan Size (talents) | ||||||||||
– | <9 | 10-19 | 20-29 | 30-39 | 40-49 | 50-59 | 60-69 | 70-79 | 80-89 | 90-99 | 100 |
Athena | 2 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | – | – | – | 4 |
Other Gods | – | – | 1 | 1 | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
Table 15. Summary of Loans to Athens from Athena Polias and the Other Gods.
Year(s) | Athena Polias | Other Gods |
433/2–427/6 | 4,001 talents 4,522 drachmas |
766 talents 1,099 drachmas |
426/5 | 261 talents 5,610 drachmas 3 ½ obols |
– |
425/4 | 130 talents | – |
424/3 | 163 talents | – |
423/2 | 192 talents 1,642 drachmas 2 ½ obols |
54 talents 5,998 drachmas |
Total: 433/2–423/2 |
4,748 talents 5,775 drachmas |
821 talents 1,087 drachmas |
Adapted from Osborne and Rhodes 2017, #160:373. |
Table 16. State Income (talents) on Armed Forces (433/2–423/2).
Year | Tribute Amount | Other Imperial Income | Internal surplus | War Tax | War Loans | Total |
433/2 | 388 | 212 | 100 | – | 76 | 776 |
432/1 | 388 | 212 | 100 | – | 1,145 | 1,845 |
431/0 | 388 | 212 | 100 | – | 1,370 | 2,070 |
430/29 | 388 | 212 | 100 | – | 1,300 | 2,000 |
429/8 | 388 | 212 | 100 | – | 600 | 1,300 |
428/7 | 388 | 212 | 100 | 200 | 200 | 1,100 |
427/6 | 388 | 212 | 100 | 200 | 100 | 1,000 |
426/5 | 388 | 212 | 100 | 200 | 261 | 1,161 |
425/4 | 1,200 | 212 | 100 | – | 130 | 1,642 |
424/3 | 1,200 | 212 | 100 | – | 163 | 1,675 |
423/2 | 1,200 | 212 | 100 | – | 253 | 1,765 |
Annual Average: 1,485 talents | ||||||
This table is lightly adapted from Pritchard 2018:165 Table 5.1 |
4. Contextualizing Temple Loans to the State: The State Perspective
The state’s perspective of the contributory nature of these loans to the larger project of war financing and its acknowledgment of these contributions appears in Perikles’ speech to the Athenian assembly where he tries to convince the dēmos of the prospects for its future success against Sparta. Thucydides articulates Perikles’ strategy which included: evacuating the people of the countryside to inside the city walls; not offering battle to the Spartans; having their navy in a high state of readiness; and keeping firm hold on their allies. To drive home to the assembly the necessity of Athenian revenues and other resources as keys to victory, Perikles lists these resources, from monetary to manpower to physical defenses. Perikles’ discussion of finances is worth listing in full:
After providing precise figures for the annual overseas revenue including the phoros (600 talents) and the financial reserve (at one point 9,700 talents), Perikles’ exactitude transforms into generalized, round figures. Uncoined metal, dedications, and Persian war spoils amount to not less than 500 talents “οὐκ ἐλάσσονος [ἦν] ἢ πεντακοσίων ταλάντων” [45] while the golden robes of Athena, totaling 40 talents of gold, could also be melted down and coined, should the state need emergency financing. The contents of the Treasury of the Other Gods receive the most generalized treatment of any resource as the treasures therein are described as “not few in number and which they might employ.” [46] Perikles’ knowledge of Athenian financial holdings, no doubt, comes from his long-term service as general and displays itself in his impressive transmission of numbers. [47] Each successive category of funding Perikles names goes further away from what he views as the primary source of war financing, phoros, and, therefore, the increasingly more generalized figures reinforce the importance of allied tribute. The financial resources of the Other Gods are displayed as potential contributions, but ones not to the scale of league tribute.
Table 17. The Appearance of the Other Gods at Athens.
Temple | Treasury of the Other Gods | First Loan | Second Loan |
Artemis Agrotera | X | X | X |
Poseidon at Sounion | X | X | X |
Athena at Pallenis | X | X | X |
Demophōn | X | X | X |
Herakles at Kynosarges | X | X | X |
Artemis Mounikhia | X | X | X |
Adrasteia and Bendis |
X | X (but separate) | – |
Hephaistos | X | – | X |
Theseus | X | – | X |
Dionysos | X | – | X |
Mother at Agrai | X | – | X |
Hilisos (Ilissos) | X | – | X |
Aphrodite in the Gardens | X | – | X |
God of Foreigners | X | – | X |
Aphrodite in the Hippolytion | – | X | X |
Muses | – | X | X |
Apollo | – | X | X |
Artemis Brauronia | – | X | X |
Athena at the Derioneon Palladion | – | X | X |
Gaia Olympia | X | – | – |
Hera in Xypete | X | – | – |
Zeus Olympios | X | – | – |
Poseidon Hippios | X | – | – |
Hermes and Artemis | X | – | – |
Hekate | X | – | – |
Zeus Kenaios | X | – | – |
Zeus Polios | X | – | – |
Ion from Pleistieia | X | – | – |
Athena Itonia | X | – | – |
Apollo Delios in Phaleron | X | – | – |
Apollo Paionos | X | – | – |
Apollo Pythios | X | – | – |
Meliteus? | X | – | – |
Twelve Gods? | X | – | – |
Apollo Zoster | – | X | – |
Adrasteia | – | X | – |
Apollo (?) | – | X | – |
Poseidon Kalaureatis | – | X | – |
Athena Zosteria | – | – | X |
5. Contextualizing Temple Loans to the State: A Case Study of Artemis Agrotera
5.1 Sacred Finance and Artemis Agrotera
5.2 Artemis Agrotera in the Context of Imperial Athens
The transformation of dekatai from dedications of material objects of warfare and valuable objets d’art to monetary contributions extends from the sixth to the fourth century. Dekatai in sixth- and early fifth-century Athens appear as dedicatory objects such as statues, [95] cult tables, [96] and clothing. [97] Neither bullion nor coined money appears to be dedicated, but money is sometimes referenced as the source of the dedication. [98] During this same period, dekatai that are dedicated from battlefield contexts are the objects of warfare themselves; these include helmets and spear butts. [99] Nearing the end of the Archaic period and entering the Classical, dekatai from these contexts begin to transition from the objects of warfare into artistic monuments crafted from precious materials, and then, finally, to money itself. [100] In 506, Athens dedicated a dekatē of the proceeds from its sale of war captives seized from Boeotia and Chalcis as a quadriga monument. The original base of the monument (base A) reads: [101]
παῖδε[ς Ἀθεναίον ἔργμασιν ἐμ πολέμο]
[ἔθνεα Βοιοτο͂ν καὶ Χαλκιδέον δαμάσαντες] ⋮
το͂ν ℎίππος δ̣[εκάτεν Παλλάδι τάσδ’ ἔθεσαν].
The text on the following base (base B) has been heavily restored on the basis of Herodotus, which, however, transposes lines 1 and 3 from base A. [102]
[Ἔθνεα Βοιοτο͂ν καὶ Χαλκιδέον δαμάσαντες] ⋮
παῖδε[ς Ἀθεναίον ἔργμασιν ἐμ πολέμο]
[δεσμο͂ι ἐν ἀχνύεντι σιδερέοι ἔσβεσαν ℎύβ]ριν ⋮
το͂ν ℎίππος δ̣[εκάτεν Παλλάδι τάσδ’ ἔθεσαν].
The Boeotians and Chalcidian people were tamed
By the sons of Athenians in works of war,
Who quelled their arrogance in dark bonds of iron,
And set up these horses as a tithe for Pallas. [103]
The text of the quadriga monument that Herodotus quotes (base B) was, most likely, that which appeared after base A was destroyed following the Persian sack of the acropolis. The massive bronze statue of Athena Promachos, which stood around nine meters tall, was created by Pheidias as a dekatē to Athena following the victory at Marathon. [104] Artemis Agrotera’s transfer to the acropolis of this monetized dekatē is the end stage of the slow evolution of this type of dedication from a display object of military victory used in battle, to a conspicuous offering to the gods from the proceeds of the sale of war spoils, to the dedication of funds received from the sale of objects of spoil. Dedicatory behavior in the temples on the acropolis, of course, still included physical objects of warfare and artwork created from the sale of spoils, but there are two parallel developments for which Artemis Agrotera is an example: the gradual monetization of this specific form of dedication of a tithe; and the gradual monetization of dedicatory activity, which is a broader, fifth-century development in Athens itself. Whereas earlier forms of this dedication are objective signs of previous military victory, coinage can signify both funds seized from campaigns abroad, and also financial readiness for warfare, a point which Perikles himself belabors to the Athenian assembly on the eve of opening hostilities. [105]
The increased appearance of coined money at temples through allied aparkhai and epidekata fines begins to be documented as dedications from private individuals. Soon after the appearance of the records of the Treasurers of Athena in 434/3, religious dedications of coined money begin to appear on the acropolis and eventually appear in the treasuries of the Opisthodomos, [118] the Parthenon, [119] and the Hekatompedon. [120] Coinage can appear in these treasuries without any further contextual information about the dedicator or the intended dedicatory purpose of the funds. [121] In several instances, the dedicator is identified through his act. A certain Thrasyllos son of Euonymon, for example, dedicates two Aeginetan staters and a gold half-obol in the Hekatompedon (398/7). [122] Rarely is the name of the divinity included in the dedication; there is only one surviving example of this from Athens. Demeter and Kore are the recipients of forty-three gold Darics in the Hekatompedon (394/3). [123] The dedication of an aparkhē as a monetized offering from Delian League members now appears from a private individual: a certain Andron of Elaious dedicated two gold drachmas to the Hekatompedon as a first-fruits offering (398/7). [124] These dedications allow individuals to be able to participate in the religious and economic well-being of the temple by dedicating an item that could be used for its economic benefit. [125] Individuals, thus, who are dedicating coins onto the acropolis are carrying out the same actions as those who are dedicating to local Attic temples in the last quarter of the fifth century. [126] It is this context of dedicating coinage that explains the behavior, I believe, of the transfer of coinage from the temple of Artemis Agrotera to the Treasury of the Other Gods. The framework of dedicating money as an offering had already been established by the state. Both the inventory of the Treasury of the Other Gods and the accounts of the Logistai reveal the transfer of this style of dedication to local institutions and to the individuals who use them.