Albanesi2
Gesperrt
Der Ursprung des Rassismus liegt in Griechenland anscheinend haben die Illyrer und die Römer als nächsten es von euch übernommen , aber nur dies schlechte
Nämlich die Sklaverei , aus ganz anderen Kulturen und Ethien die als barbarsch und minderwertig abgestuft wurden.
www.geocities.com/protoil...acism.html
THE ORIGIN OF RACISM IN EUROPE
The history of Greece the history of racism
Greeks invent the notion of inferior races
Greek supremacy against the barbarian Europe
SLAVES
The vast majority of Greeks from Homer to Aristotle regarded slavery as an indisputable fact of life. Its existence at the heart of the Classical world is thus a source of considerable disquiet to those who admire Greek culture for its supposedly enlightened humanism. It is important to appreciate, however, that slavery was not an absolute condition but one that admitted many different statuses. It included at one end of the scale chattel slaves, those who in Aristotle's telling phrase had the same (6,000 drachmas) for a slave to manage his silver mines. A slave in good health probably cost the equivalent of half a year's salary. The inscription relating to the sale of confiscated property that belonged to the Mutilators of, Herms in 414 B.C. prices a Syrian male at 240 drachmas, a Thracian female at 220 drachmas, and "a little Carian boy" at 72 drachmas. Though most Athenian slaves were purchased from abroad, some were bred in captivity, as indicated by the following remark made by Ischomachos in Xenophon's, Household Management: "As a general rule, if good slaves are permitted to breed, their loyalty increases, whereas when bad slaves live together as husband and wife they are more liable to cause trouble" (9.5).
Nämlich die Sklaverei , aus ganz anderen Kulturen und Ethien die als barbarsch und minderwertig abgestuft wurden.
www.geocities.com/protoil...acism.html
THE ORIGIN OF RACISM IN EUROPE
The history of Greece the history of racism
Greeks invent the notion of inferior races
Greek supremacy against the barbarian Europe
SLAVES
The vast majority of Greeks from Homer to Aristotle regarded slavery as an indisputable fact of life. Its existence at the heart of the Classical world is thus a source of considerable disquiet to those who admire Greek culture for its supposedly enlightened humanism. It is important to appreciate, however, that slavery was not an absolute condition but one that admitted many different statuses. It included at one end of the scale chattel slaves, those who in Aristotle's telling phrase had the same (6,000 drachmas) for a slave to manage his silver mines. A slave in good health probably cost the equivalent of half a year's salary. The inscription relating to the sale of confiscated property that belonged to the Mutilators of, Herms in 414 B.C. prices a Syrian male at 240 drachmas, a Thracian female at 220 drachmas, and "a little Carian boy" at 72 drachmas. Though most Athenian slaves were purchased from abroad, some were bred in captivity, as indicated by the following remark made by Ischomachos in Xenophon's, Household Management: "As a general rule, if good slaves are permitted to breed, their loyalty increases, whereas when bad slaves live together as husband and wife they are more liable to cause trouble" (9.5).