
Contents
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Origins and Development Origins and Development
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Coercion, Cooperation, and Negotiation Coercion, Cooperation, and Negotiation
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Rights and Obligations: The Politics of Interdependence Rights and Obligations: The Politics of Interdependence
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Ecology, Economy, and the Koinon Ecology, Economy, and the Koinon
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Legitimation, Identity, and Religious Practice Legitimation, Identity, and Religious Practice
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Conclusion: A Constitution of Many Kinds Conclusion: A Constitution of Many Kinds
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Notes Notes
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References References
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11 The Greek Koinon
Get accessEmily Mackil is Assistant Professor of History at the University of California, Berkeley. A historian of the ancient Greek world, she has a special interest in issues of state formation and political economy.
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Published:28 January 2013
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Abstract
This chapter examines the history of the koinon, a form of regional state in ancient Greece comprised of multiple poleis and in some instances other forms of community, and characterized by the division of sovereignty among the regional government and its constituent communities. It explains that the koinon was a remarkably widespread phenomenon and that almost of mainland Greece and the Peloponnese became part of a koinon. The chapter suggests that the koinon arose amidst a world of poleis against a background of strong group identities and that its nature was profoundly altered in the process of the Roman conquest of Greece in the second century.
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