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APELLA
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Source
Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911) / britannica_1911
License
public_domain
Chunk ID
1911:apella:9840e7638515
Section
Hash Algorithm
sha256
Stored Hash
1e243d133f5941c785ecc69bde0a116b7dde9895877bff10f725a571c9010cd8
Computed Hash
1e243d133f5941c785ecc69bde0a116b7dde9895877bff10f725a571c9010cd8
Normalizer
ggnorm 1.0
Observed
2026-02-08 18:42:40
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Verified Text
apella, the official title of the popular assembly at sparta, corresponding to the ecclesia in most other greek states. every full citizen who had completed his thirtieth year was entitled to attend the meetings, which, according to lycurgus's ordinance, must be held at the time of each full moon within the boundaries of sparta. they had in all probability taken place originally in the agora, but were later transferred to the neighbouring building known as the skias (paus. iii. 12. 10). the presiding officers were at first the kings, but in historical times the ephors, and the voting was conducted by shouts; if the president was doubtful as to the majority of voices, a division was taken and the votes were counted. lycurgus had ordained that the apella must simply accept or reject the proposals submitted to it, and though this regulation fell into neglect, it was practically restored by the law of theopompus and polydorus which empowered the kings and elders to set aside any "crooked" decision of the people (plut. _lycurg._ 6). in later times, too, the actual debate was almost, if not wholly, confined to the kings, elders, ephors and perhaps the other magistrates. the apella voted on peace and war, treaties and foreign policy in general: it decided which of the kings should conduct a campaign and settled questions of disputed succession to the throne: it elected elders, ephors and other magistrates, emancipated helots and perhaps voted on legal proposals. there is a single reference (xen. _hell._ iii. 3. 8) to a "small assembly" ([greek: e mikra kaloumene ekklesia]) at sparta, but nothing is known as to its nature or competence. the term apella does not occur in extant spartan inscriptions, though two decrees of gythium belonging to the roman period refer to the [greek: megalai apellai] (le bas-foucart, _voyage archeologique_, ii., nos. 242a, 243). see g. gilbert, _constitutional antiquities of sparta and athens_ (eng, trans., 1895), pp. 49 ff.; _studien zur altspartanischen geschichte_ (gottingen, 1872), pp. 131 ff.; g.f. schomann, _antiquities of greece: the state_ (eng. trans., 1880), pp. 234 ff.; _de ecdesiis lacedaemoniorum_ (griefswald, 1836) [= _opusc. academ._ i. pp. 87 ff.]; c.o. muller, _history and antiquities of the doric race_ (eng. trans., 2nd ed. 1839), book iii. ch. 5, ss 8-10; g. busolt, _die griechischen staats- und rechtsaltertumer_, 1887 (in iwan muller's _handbuch der klassischen altertumsiuissenschaft_, iv. 1), s 90; _griechische geschichte_ (2nd ed.), i. p. 552 ff. (m. n. t.)