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- The Legal Status of Captive Women: Gender, Sovereignty, and Human Rights in Epic Literature: Deconstructing the Absence of Agency for Women in the Iliad
This article studies how the #Iliad presents #captive_women and what that presentation tells us about the long history of women's #legal_status in war. The poem opens with two men quarrelling over the possession of two women, and this quarrel sets the whole story in motion. Reading the epic closely, the article argues that women such as Briseis and Chryseis are treated less as persons than as objects of exchange, prizes that measure male worth and mark the boundaries between rival powers. Their lack of #agency is not an accident of the plot. It reflects a legal and social order in which a woman's body could be owned, transferred, and disputed by men, and in which #sovereignty over women signalled a man's standing in the wider community. The study uses close textual reading together with feminist classical scholarship and modern research on #conflict_related_sexual_violence to trace a line from the archaic world of the poem to the present system of #international_humanitarian_law. It shows both a striking continuity, since women's bodies are still contested territory in armed conflict, and a real change, since modern law now recognises the wartime abuse of women as a crime rather than a normal spoil of victory. By deconstructing the silence built into the epic, the article offers students a framework for understanding how the #human_rights of women in war have slowly, and unevenly, evolved from custom into codified law. Keywords: captive women; Iliad; gender and law; wartime sexual violence; human rights; sovereignty; enslavement; epic literature; Briseis; international humanitarian law 1. Introduction The #Iliad is usually described as a poem about the anger of Achilles and the great deeds of men at Troy. Yet the plot that carries all of that anger begins with a legal problem about women. In the first book, a priest named Chryses comes to the Greek camp to buy back his daughter, who has been captured and given to Agamemnon. When Agamemnon refuses and insults the priest, the god Apollo sends a plague. To end the plague, Agamemnon must return the girl, and to save his pride he takes Briseis, the woman who had been given to Achilles as a prize. The quarrel that follows, and Achilles' decision to withdraw from battle, drives the rest of the poem. In other words, the great war epic of the Western tradition turns on a #dispute about who has the right to keep, give, and take away #captive_women. This starting point matters more than readers often notice. The two women at the centre of the opening scene, #Chryseis and #Briseis, barely speak. They are moved from one man to another, counted among the goods of war, and valued according to the honour they bring to the man who holds them. Their feelings, when the poem shows them at all, are shown briefly and then set aside so the narrative can return to the men. The women are present as #property and as symbols, but not as legal persons who can act on their own behalf. This absence of #agency is the puzzle the present article sets out to examine. The aim here is not simply to point out that the poem treats women badly by modern standards. That observation, while true, is only a beginning. The deeper aim is to read the #legal_status of these women as historical evidence. Epic poetry preserves, in a compressed and idealised form, the values and rules of the society that produced it. When the #Iliad shows a #captive_woman being handed over as compensation, or being counted alongside tripods, horses, and gold, it is showing us something real about how early Greek culture understood ownership, #honour, and the place of women in the order of war. By reading these scenes carefully, we can reconstruct an early stage in the long story of how law and custom have governed the bodies of women taken in conflict. That story did not end with Homer. The treatment of women as #war_captives, as objects to be enslaved, ransomed, or used, remained a normal feature of warfare for most of recorded history. Only in the last century and a half has the law begun to treat the capture and abuse of women in war as a wrong that can be named, prosecuted, and punished. The modern framework of #international_humanitarian_law, the recognition of #conflict_related_sexual_violence as a war crime, and the growing body of #human_rights protections for civilians in armed conflict all mark a break from the world of the epic. Yet the break is incomplete. Women's bodies are still treated as sites of conquest in many contemporary wars, and the gap between what the law promises and what happens on the ground remains wide (Kreft, 2023). This article therefore has three connected goals. First, it deconstructs the way the #Iliad denies #agency to its female characters, paying close attention to Briseis, Chryseis, Helen, and Andromache. Second, it interprets this denial as a record of the #legal_status of women in wartime in the world that produced the poem, using the ideas of ownership, exchange, and #sovereignty to explain why women were treated as they were. Third, it traces the historical evolution of that status, moving from ancient custom through the just war tradition to the modern law of armed conflict, and asking what has genuinely changed and what has quietly stayed the same. The article is written for students, and so it explains its terms as it goes and keeps its language plain. But it follows the structure and standards of scholarly work. It reviews the existing literature, states its method, presents a detailed analysis of the text, and connects that analysis to the broader legal and historical questions. The argument throughout is that the #silence of the captive women in the Iliad is not empty. It is a full and telling silence, one that speaks about power, law, and the value placed on women's lives, and one that still echoes in the wars and the courtrooms of the present day. 2. Literature Review Scholarship on women in the Iliad has grown a great deal over the last half century, and it is worth mapping the main lines of that work before adding to it. Early feminist readings of the poem argued that Homeric epic presents war as a male world built on the trafficking and control of women, a world set against the female sphere of the home and family. This reading treated nearly all the women of the poem as powerless victims of the male pursuit of #honour and glory, present mainly to raise the stakes of the men's conflicts (McHardy, drawing on Arthur and on Felson and Slatkin). The captive women in particular were seen as scapegoated figures, blamed for the conflicts that men had in fact created among themselves. A second strand of scholarship complicated this picture without denying its truth. Studies of #Helen showed that she is a more layered character than the other women, since she is both an object of male desire and a speaking subject who comments on her own situation and even weaves the war into her cloth. Work on #Andromache and on the laments of the poem argued that female characters, though bound by their roles, could still express themselves and even criticise the men around them within the narrow space allowed to them (Roisman; Felson and Slatkin). These readings did not overturn the idea that the poem is male centred, but they recovered small pockets of agency inside it and warned against treating the women as simply blank. The study of #lament has become an especially important part of this literature. Casey Due's work on the captive woman's lament traced how the grief songs of enslaved and bereaved women, most famously Briseis's lament for Patroclus, carry a distinct voice inside the male world of the epic. Lament is a form of speech that ancient Greek culture associated with women, and by giving it space the poem lets female suffering register even as it keeps women out of the political and military action. This scholarship shows that the poem is not indifferent to the pain of #captive_women. It records that pain, but it records it in a controlled and conventional form that never threatens the male order. Alongside the literary scholarship sits a large body of historical work on ancient slavery, and this work is essential for understanding the #legal_status of the women in the poem. Recent overviews of Greek slavery stress that the Greeks relied heavily on enslaved people, many of them taken in war or bought from beyond the Greek world, and that slavery shaped almost every part of ancient economic, social, and political life (Kamen, 2023; Forsdyke, 2021). Sourcebooks and handbooks have gathered the ancient evidence for how people were captured, sold, and owned, including the practice the Greeks called andrapodismos, the mass enslavement of a defeated population (Bathrellou and Vlassopoulos, 2022; Pargas and Schiel, 2023). This historical work makes clear that the #enslavement of #war_captives in the Iliad is not a poetic invention but a reflection of real and long lasting practice. A further line of research connects slavery to #honour, which is central to any reading of the poem's treatment of women. Studies of the ancient honour system argue that a person's worth was measured publicly, through the prizes, respect, and recognition they received, and that enslaved people were usually placed outside this economy of honour. Recent work, however, has questioned the simple view that slaves were wholly excluded from honour dynamics, showing instead that they were caught up in them in complicated ways (Cairns, Canevaro, and Lewis, 2024). This matters for Briseis, because the quarrel over her is precisely a quarrel about the honour of the men who possess her. Her value is calculated in the male currency of prestige, and this is exactly why she has so little value as a person in her own right. The modern reception of the poem has also produced a rich literature. Emily Wilson's 2023 translation of the Iliad has been praised for using direct and honest language about the #enslavement and abuse of women, refusing the softer terms that older translations sometimes used to hide the reality (Homer, 2023). Novelists have gone further, retelling the story from the point of view of the women. Pat Barker's fiction gives voice to Briseis and the other captive women of Troy, turning the silent prizes of the epic into narrators of their own trauma and survival. These retellings are not the primary subject of this article, but they show why the question of agency in the poem still matters to readers, and they confirm that the poem's #silence about women is felt as a problem that later writers want to repair. The final body of work drawn on here comes from outside classical studies altogether, from the social science and legal scholarship on #conflict_related_sexual_violence. Researchers in this field argue that sexual violence against women in war is rooted in patriarchal structures that treat women as objects and that assert male power over female bodies (Kreft, 2023; Kreft and Schulz, 2022). They also study how the law has come to name this violence as a crime, and how survivors are treated by their own societies and by international institutions (Kreft, 2020; Johansson and Kreft, 2023). This literature is usually applied to modern wars, but its central insight, that the abuse of women in conflict is a structural and gendered phenomenon rather than a random by-product, is exactly the insight needed to read the Iliad as legal and historical evidence. Bringing these bodies of work together is the contribution of this article. Literary scholarship explains how the poem represents women. Historical scholarship explains the real practices of #enslavement behind that representation. Legal scholarship explains how the modern world has tried to regulate the treatment of women in war. By reading the three together, we can use the epic to understand the deep history of a problem that international humanitarian law is still struggling to solve. 3. Theoretical Framework and Methodology This study is built on a simple but powerful idea: that literary texts can serve as evidence for the legal and social norms of the cultures that produce them. The Iliad is not a law code, and it does not set out to describe the rules of its society directly. But its assumptions about who may own whom, who may speak, and who counts as a person are visible throughout, precisely because the poem takes them for granted. When a text treats something as obvious and never argues for it, that silence is often the clearest sign of a shared norm. The method here is to read for those silences and assumptions, and to treat them as data about the legal status of women. Three concepts organise the analysis. The first is #property. In the world of the poem, captive women are counted among movable goods. They are distributed as prizes, offered as compensation, and disputed as possessions. Reading the women as property means paying attention to the language of ownership and exchange that surrounds them, and asking what it means for a person to be legally a thing that another person holds. The Greek notion of geras, the prize of honour awarded to a warrior, is central here, because Briseis is Achilles' geras, and the whole quarrel concerns the taking of that prize. The second concept is honour, which the Greeks called by a word usually written as time, meaning a person's public worth and the recognition they receive from others. In the honour economy of the poem, a man's standing rises and falls with what he possesses and with the respect shown to him. Women function inside this economy as tokens of male value. To take a man's woman is to insult his honour, which is why the removal of Briseis is such a grave offence to Achilles even though he shows little concern for Briseis herself. Reading for honour means tracking how women's worth is repeatedly translated into the worth of the men who control them. The third concept is #sovereignty, understood broadly as the authority to rule over a domain and to make binding decisions within it. In the archaic world of the poem, this authority operated at the level of the household and the war leader rather than the modern state, but the logic is recognisable. Control over women, over their bodies and their movements, was one of the ways a man displayed and defended his authority. The transfer of a #captive_woman from one man to another was, in effect, a transfer of sovereignty over her, and the disputes about such transfers were disputes about power and rank. Reading for sovereignty means treating the female body as contested ground on which male authority is asserted, a way of thinking that connects the ancient poem to the modern idea of women's bodies as sites of conquest in war. The primary source for the analysis is the Iliad itself, read in Emily Wilson's recent translation, which is valued here for its willingness to render the poem's language about enslavement and violence plainly rather than politely (Homer, 2023). Because the article is written for readers who may not know Greek, it works from this English version while noting a few key terms, such as geras, that carry legal weight. Where the argument depends on the meaning of an ancient term, that meaning is explained in ordinary words so the reader can follow it without specialist training. The analysis proceeds in two movements. The first movement is a close reading of the poem, organised around its main female figures. It examines the opening quarrel, then the individual situations of Chryseis, Briseis, Helen, and Andromache, and finally the role of #lament as a limited form of female expression. The second movement steps back from the text and places its picture of women within the long history of the legal status of war captives, moving from ancient custom through the just war tradition to modern international humanitarian law and #human_rights protections. Throughout, findings from research on conflict related sexual violence are used to test the continuities and differences between the ancient and the modern worlds. Two limits of the method should be stated at the outset. First, the poem is idealised and shaped by the demands of oral performance, so it cannot be read as a straightforward legal record; it must be read for norms and assumptions rather than for exact rules. Second, the comparison with modern law is meant to illuminate continuity and change, not to collapse the distance between a Bronze Age story and a contemporary courtroom. The point is not that the Iliad and the #Rome_Statute belong to the same legal system, but that they mark two very distant points on a single, still unfinished line of development in how societies treat women taken in war. 4. The Opening Quarrel: Women as Property and the Honour Economy The best place to see the legal status of captive women in the Iliad is the quarrel that opens the poem, because everything about it depends on the assumption that women are possessions. Chryses, a priest of Apollo, arrives at the Greek camp carrying ransom and asks for his daughter back. His request is a normal one in the terms of the poem's world: a captured woman is a piece of property that can be bought back for the right price. The Greek soldiers are willing to accept the ransom, which shows that the practice of #ransom was familiar and accepted. Agamemnon alone refuses, and his refusal is presented as arrogant and dangerous, but not as a violation of the girl's rights, because in this world she has none to violate. She is his to keep or to release. When the plague forces Agamemnon to give up Chryseis, he insists on being compensated with another prize, and he chooses Briseis, who belongs to Achilles. Here the logic of the honour economy becomes explicit. Agamemnon does not want Briseis for herself; he wants a replacement for the honour he loses by giving up Chryseis. A prize is a public marker of a warrior's worth, and to be left without one while other men keep theirs would shame him. The women are interchangeable within this system precisely because their individual identities do not count. What counts is their function as tokens of male standing. Achilles' fury, likewise, is not fury on behalf of Briseis. It is fury at the insult to his own honour. To have his prize taken by Agamemnon is to be publicly ranked below him, to have his value as a warrior denied. The poem lets Achilles say that he cared for Briseis, and there is real feeling in the way he speaks of her later, but the structure of the quarrel makes clear that the central issue is the transfer of a possession between men and the damage that transfer does to male prestige. Briseis is the occasion of the greatest conflict in the poem, and she is given almost nothing to say about it. This scene establishes what we might call the #property_model of women in the world of the epic. Under this model, a captive woman is a movable good with an owner, a value, and a price. She can be awarded, seized, exchanged, or ransomed. Her transfer from one man to another follows rules that the men understand and mostly respect, and breaking those rules, as Agamemnon does, causes disorder. But the rules exist to regulate relations among men, not to protect the woman. She is the object the rules are about, not a party to them. This is the precise sense in which she lacks legal status as a person: she is inside the law as a thing, and outside it as an agent. It is worth dwelling on the language of counting and listing that surrounds these women, because it reveals the same attitude. When gifts and compensation are enumerated in the poem, women appear in the lists alongside metal vessels, horses, and precious objects. Skilled women, especially those good at weaving, are valued much as fine goods are valued. This is not a careless comparison but a reflection of how such women were understood: as wealth, as part of a household's or a warrior's holdings. Recent historical scholarship on Greek slavery confirms that this was the real economic logic of enslavement, in which captured people, and women in particular, were assets to be owned and put to use (Kamen, 2023; Forsdyke, 2021). The poem's list-making is the everyday accounting of a slave-holding society. The honour economy also explains why the poem can show sympathy for a captive woman without granting her any power. Sympathy and agency are different things. The poem can present a woman's grief as moving, and it often does, while still treating her as an object in the plot. Feeling for the captive does not require giving her the ability to choose or to shape events. This separation between emotional recognition and legal recognition is one of the most important features of the poem's treatment of women, and it will return in the discussion of lament below. It also anticipates a pattern in modern responses to conflict related sexual violence, where victims are pitied as vulnerable figures but not always empowered as agents with rights and voices (Kreft and Schulz, 2022). 5. Briseis: The Captive Without Legal Personhood Briseis deserves close attention because she is the woman over whom the whole poem quarrels, and yet she is one of the least heard characters in it. Her story, when the poem tells it, is one of total loss. Her city was sacked, her husband and brothers were killed in the fighting, and she was taken as a prize by the man responsible for those deaths. She then passes from Achilles to Agamemnon and, later, back again, carried between the two like goods returned after a dispute. At no point in this process is her consent sought or her preference considered. She is, in the fullest sense, without #legal_personhood: she cannot own herself, cannot decide her movements, and cannot refuse the men who claim her. What makes Briseis especially revealing is the one moment when the poem lets her speak at length, her lament over the body of Patroclus. In that lament she recalls her losses and her hopes, and she remembers that Patroclus had been kind to her and had promised she would become Achilles' wedded wife. This is a striking detail. Marriage, in the world of the poem, would raise Briseis from the status of a captive concubine to something closer to a recognised member of a household, with a more secure place. Her hope is not for freedom in any modern sense but for a better position within the same system of male ownership. Even her dreams are shaped by the limits of her legal status. The lament also shows the peculiar way the poem grants and withholds voice. Briseis speaks, and her words carry real grief and dignity, but she speaks in the conventional female form of mourning, and she speaks about the dead man rather than demanding anything for herself. Casey Due's scholarship on the captive woman's lament describes how this form allows female suffering to enter the poem while keeping it within safe bounds. The lament is a permitted space for a woman's voice, but it is a space that does not challenge the order that has enslaved her. Briseis grieves; she does not accuse, and she does not act. Reading Briseis through the lens of sovereignty sharpens the point. Her body is the ground on which Achilles and Agamemnon fight for rank. When Agamemnon takes her, he is asserting authority over Achilles by asserting authority over what Achilles possesses. When he later returns her, he swears that he never shared her bed, because her sexual availability is part of her value as property and any change to it would affect the compensation owed. The oath is about protecting the transaction between the men, not about Briseis's dignity. Throughout, she is the object through which male power is measured and exchanged, and the question of what she wants simply does not arise within the poem's frame. The modern reader may be tempted to find hidden resistance in Briseis, and later retellings have done exactly that, imagining her inner life and her acts of quiet defiance. But the honest reading of the original is that the poem grants her almost none. This is not a failure of imagination on Homer's part; it is an accurate reflection of the legal status such a woman held. Historical work on ancient enslavement stresses that war captives were among the most vulnerable people in the ancient world, stripped of family, home, and legal standing in a single act of violence (Bathrellou and Vlassopoulos, 2022). Briseis embodies that vulnerability. Her silence is the silence of a legal non-person, and to read it clearly is to understand what it meant to be a woman captured in war in the world the poem describes. There is one more dimension worth naming. Briseis is a foreigner, a woman from a city outside the Greek alliance, and her foreignness is part of what makes her enslavement seem natural within the poem. The ancient distinction between insider and outsider, between those who belonged to the community and those who could be taken as spoils, ran deep, and captured foreign women sat at the bottom of it. This intersection of gender and outsider status made such women doubly exposed, first as women in a male order and second as foreigners without the protection of their own people. The same double vulnerability appears in modern conflicts, where women from targeted ethnic or national groups are singled out for enslavement and abuse, a pattern that international courts have had to confront directly (Kreft, 2023). 6. Chryseis: Ransom, Priesthood, and the Limits of Rescue Chryseis, whose seizure sets off the plague and the quarrel, is even more silent than Briseis, but her situation adds an important detail to the picture. She is rescued, but not by any right of her own. She is rescued because her father is a priest of Apollo, and because the god enforces the father's claim by sending a plague on the Greek army. In other words, Chryseis is returned only when a powerful male protector, backed by a still more powerful god, makes her release necessary. Her own wishes never enter the story. The #ransom scene shows that the recovery of a captive woman depended entirely on the standing of the men connected to her. This point is easy to miss but it is crucial for understanding the legal status of women in the poem. A captive woman had no path to freedom that ran through her own will or action. If she was to be freed, it had to be through a man who had the power and the motive to reclaim her: a father, a husband, or a city willing to pay or to fight. Chryseis has such a man, and a god on her side, and so she goes home. Briseis has no one, because the men of her family are dead and her city is destroyed, and so she stays a captive. The difference between their fates is entirely a difference in the male and divine power attached to them, not in anything the women themselves do. The role of the priest also connects the treatment of women to questions of sovereignty and sacred authority. Chryses' claim is strengthened because he serves Apollo, and to dishonour him is to dishonour the god. The affront to the priest becomes an affront to a divine power, and the plague is the god's assertion of his authority over the Greek camp. In this way the recovery of a woman becomes entangled with a contest of authority between a human king and a god. Once again the woman is the occasion of a struggle among powerful males, human and divine, and once again she is not a participant in it. The poem treats the plague as the real crisis; Chryseis herself vanishes from the story as soon as she has served her purpose. The Chryseis episode therefore illustrates the limits of rescue in the ancient world. Rescue was possible, and ransom was an accepted practice, so captivity was not always permanent. But rescue depended on connection and power, not on any recognised claim belonging to the woman. This is a very different thing from a modern human rights framework, in which a person's freedom is meant to rest on their own status as a rights-bearer rather than on who is willing to speak for them. The gap between these two models, freedom through a powerful protector and freedom as a personal right, is one of the largest measures of how far the legal status of women in war has changed, and it is a change that the analysis in the later sections will trace. It is also worth noting how quickly the poem drops Chryseis once the plot no longer needs her. She is important for a few dozen lines and then gone. This narrative disposability is itself a comment on her status. A person with recognised standing leaves traces in the story; an object used to trigger a crisis can be set down and forgotten once the crisis is under way. The poem's structure, not just its explicit statements, tells us how little independent weight a captive woman carried. 7. Helen: Sovereignty, Blame, and the Speaking Subject Helen is the most complicated woman in the Iliad, and she complicates the argument of this article in useful ways. Unlike Briseis and Chryseis, she is given real voice. She speaks, she reflects on her own situation, she criticises herself and others, and in one famous scene she is shown weaving the events of the war into a cloth, becoming in a small way a maker of the story rather than only its cause. Scholars have long recognised that Helen is presented as a speaking subject, a woman who exceeds the meanings that men try to fix on her, even while her sisters in captivity and marriage are given far less room (Roisman; Felson and Slatkin, as discussed by McHardy). Any honest reading has to account for this. Yet Helen's greater voice does not amount to greater agency in the legal sense. She is still an object of contest between men and between peoples. The entire war is fought over the question of which man and which side shall possess her, and this makes her body the very definition of contested sovereignty. To hold Helen is to have won; to lose her is to have been defeated. She is treated as the prize that decides the standing of whole communities, an object of exchange scaled up from the household to the level of nations. Her voice, however sharp, does not free her from this role. She cannot simply leave, cannot decide the war, and cannot escape the blame that both sides place on her. That blame is itself part of her legal status. Helen is held responsible for a war that men chose to fight, and she carries the shame of it even though the decisions were not hers to make. The poem shows her aware of this injustice, aware that she is hated by Greeks and Trojans alike for a situation she did not fully control. This is an early example of a pattern that runs through the whole history of women in war: the woman whose body is fought over is also the woman who is blamed for the fighting. Modern research on conflict related sexual violence describes a related dynamic, in which the victims of wartime abuse are stigmatised by their own communities and made to carry a shame that properly belongs to the perpetrators (Kreft, 2023). Helen's situation, thousands of years earlier, shows how deep this pattern runs. Helen's case also shows how sovereignty and gender intertwine. In the world of the poem, control over a high-status woman was a claim about political and military standing. Paris's taking of Helen was not only a personal act but a challenge to the authority of her husband and, through him, to the honour of an entire people. The war to recover her is a war to restore that authority. This is why Helen matters so much more to the plot than a private woman would: she is a marker of sovereignty at the highest level, and the struggle over her is a struggle over the ranking of nations. Her greater voice in the poem is, in part, a reflection of her greater symbolic weight, not a sign that she has escaped the logic that turns women into stakes. The lesson of the Helen episode is that agency in the poem comes in degrees, and that voice and legal freedom are not the same. A woman could be allowed to speak, to feel, and even to comment on her fate, while still being a possession whose future is decided by men and by war. Helen has more of the first kind of freedom than any other woman in the poem, and almost none of the second. Keeping these two kinds of freedom distinct is essential for reading the epic accurately, and it also helps in reading modern situations, where giving women a voice in public discussion of war does not automatically give them power over the events that shape their lives. 8. Andromache and the Threat of Enslavement Andromache, the wife of Hector, offers a fourth and different perspective on the legal status of women in war. She is not a captive when we meet her; she is a respected wife and mother inside the city of Troy. But the poem uses her to show what awaits a free woman when her city falls. In her conversations with Hector, and especially in her laments, she looks ahead to the fate that will come if the Greeks win: the death of the men, the burning of the city, and the enslavement of the surviving women, including herself. Through Andromache the poem makes plain that the line between a free woman and a captive woman was, in wartime, terribly thin. This forward look is one of the poem's most powerful devices, because it exposes the whole system at once. Andromache knows exactly what defeat means for a woman. She knows she will be carried off, put to work at another woman's loom, and forced to serve in a foreign household, her status as wife and queen erased in a single day. Her fear is precise and detailed, and it matches what historical scholarship tells us actually happened to the women of captured cities, who were subject to the mass enslavement the Greeks called andrapodismos (Bathrellou and Vlassopoulos, 2022; Pargas and Schiel, 2023). The poem is not exaggerating for effect. It is describing the ordinary outcome of ancient warfare for women. Andromache's situation also shows how a woman's legal status depended entirely on the fortunes of the men who protected her. As long as Hector lives and Troy stands, she is safe and honoured. The moment he dies and the city falls, she becomes property, indistinguishable in law from a woman like Briseis. Her worth as a person does not change; her legal condition changes completely, because it was never grounded in her own status but in the military success of her husband and her city. This is the same lesson taught by the contrast between Chryseis and Briseis, now shown from the inside, through the eyes of a woman watching her protection about to be destroyed. There is a further point about sovereignty here. The fall of a city was, in ancient terms, the collapse of one sovereignty and the imposition of another. The men were killed because they could bear arms and reassert that lost authority; the women and children were enslaved because they could be absorbed into the victor's power without threatening it. The taking of the women was thus part of the transfer of sovereignty from the defeated to the victors, a way of turning the losing side's people into the winners' possessions. Andromache's dread is the dread of being on the wrong side of that transfer, of being converted from a subject of Troy into an object of Greece. Andromache's laments, like Briseis's, are moving and dignified, and they give her a real voice within the poem. But again, voice is not power. She can foresee her fate and mourn it in advance, but she cannot prevent it, and the poem never suggests that she could. Her clear-eyed knowledge of what is coming makes the reader feel the horror of the system, but it does not give her any way out of it. In this she stands for all the women of the losing side in ancient war, whose only certainty was that the outcome of the men's fighting would decide, absolutely, whether they remained persons or became property. 9. Lament as a Constrained Form of Agency Across these figures, one form of female expression recurs: lament, the ritual mourning that the poem gives mainly to women. It is worth pausing on lament as a category, because it is the closest thing to female agency that the poem allows, and understanding its limits clarifies the whole argument. In lament, women speak publicly, at length, and with emotional force. Their grief is honoured; the poem records it carefully and lets it move both the characters and the audience. If we are looking for a female voice in the Iliad, this is where we find it most fully. But lament is a strictly bounded voice. It is permitted because it does not threaten the male order. A woman lamenting the dead expresses sorrow, not political demand. She mourns what has been lost; she does not claim rights, direct events, or contest the decisions of men. Casey Due's scholarship shows how epic incorporates this female genre into its male-centred story, allowing the suffering of captive women and bereaved wives to register while keeping it inside a form that leaves the structure of power untouched. Lament is the poem's way of acknowledging female pain without granting female authority. This distinction, between emotional voice and legal power, is the key to reading the poem's treatment of women without either overstating or understating their agency. It would be wrong to say the women are entirely silent; they are not, and lament gives them real presence. But it would be equally wrong to mistake that presence for power. The women can grieve; they cannot govern, own, or decide. Their voices are real but their legal status is that of objects. Holding both truths together is what allows an accurate deconstruction of the poem's gender order. The recognition of female suffering through lament has one more important feature: it can extend sympathy across the line between friend and enemy. When the poem shows the captive women wailing, it invites its audience to feel for people who are, in the story, foreigners and the property of others. Scholars have noted that the poem, through these scenes, quietly asks its listeners to recognise the humanity of the enslaved and the defeated, to feel their grief as they would feel the grief of their own kin. This is a limited but genuine moral achievement, and it anticipates, in a distant way, the modern idea that the suffering of civilians and captives in war deserves recognition regardless of which side they belong to. Yet even this achievement stays within the honour system. Sympathy for the captive women does not lead, in the poem, to any change in their legal status. They are pitied and then re-enslaved; their laments are heard and then the war goes on. The poem can imagine feeling for the captive, but it cannot imagine freeing her or granting her rights. That further step, from recognising suffering to recognising rights, is precisely the step that the long history of law, traced in the next sections, would take, slowly and incompletely, over the centuries that followed. 10. From Epic to Law: The Historical Evolution of Women's Wartime Legal Status The world of the Iliad, in which captive women were property and enslavement was the normal fate of the defeated, was not a passing phase. It described a reality that endured, in various forms, for most of recorded history. Understanding the historical evolution of women's legal status in war means tracing how, and how slowly, societies moved away from that reality toward the modern idea that women in conflict have rights that others must respect. This section sketches that long development in plain terms, keeping the epic in view as the starting point. In the ancient world itself, the practices the poem shows were codified in custom rather than in written law. The mass enslavement of captured populations, the taking of women as concubines and workers, and the ransom of high-status captives were all recognised and accepted (Kamen, 2023; Forsdyke, 2021; Bathrellou and Vlassopoulos, 2022). There were some limits set by religion and custom, such as the protection owed to suppliants or to those under a god's care, as the Chryseis episode shows. But these limits protected certain persons in certain situations; they did not establish that women had a general claim not to be enslaved. The default remained that the victors could do as they wished with the women of the defeated. The later ancient and medieval periods developed traditions of thought about the right conduct of war, often called the just war tradition, which began to place moral limits on what could be done to the defeated. Religious and philosophical writers argued that some acts in war were wrong even against enemies, and that the innocent deserved a measure of protection. These ideas were important because they introduced the notion that warfare had rules that bound even the winners. But in practice the enslavement of captives and the abuse of women continued widely, and women in particular remained exposed, since the protections that existed were uneven and often ignored. For most of this long stretch, the fate of a woman in a captured town was still decided by the fortunes of war, much as it had been in the world of the poem. The decisive change began only in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, with the movement to write down the laws of war and to make them binding between states. Early codifications of the rules of armed conflict set out protections for civilians and for prisoners, and later treaties expanded these protections and gave them clearer force. The most important of these developments, for the purposes of this article, are the modern conventions that protect civilians in wartime and that recognise women as a group needing particular protection against certain kinds of harm. This body of rules is what we now call international humanitarian law, and it marks a genuine break with the ancient assumption that the defeated could be enslaved and their women taken. The break became sharper still at the end of the twentieth century, when international courts began to treat sexual violence and enslavement in war not as unfortunate side effects but as serious crimes. Tribunals set up to judge atrocities in the former Yugoslavia and in Rwanda established, for the first time in international criminal law, that rape could amount to torture and that sexual enslavement could be prosecuted as a crime against humanity (as discussed in the scholarship on conflict related sexual violence, e.g. Kreft, 2020; Johansson and Kreft, 2023). The permanent international criminal court that followed, established by the treaty known as the #Rome_Statute, listed sexual and gender-based crimes among the most serious offences it could try. For the first time in the long history sketched here, the abuse of women in war was named as a crime that individuals could be held responsible for. Alongside the criminal law, a framework of human rights and of dedicated policy grew up around women in conflict. International bodies recognised that women experience war differently, that they are targeted in specific ways, and that their protection and participation matter for the prevention and resolution of conflict. Resolutions and agreements were adopted committing states to protect women from wartime violence and to include them in decisions about peace and security. These measures did not end the abuse of women in war, but they changed its legal meaning. What had been, in the world of the Iliad, a normal spoil of victory became, in the modern framework, a violation of law and a matter for which perpetrators could in principle be punished. The distance between the two ends of this line is vast. In the poem, a captive woman had no standing, no right to her own body, and no path to freedom except through a powerful protector. In the modern framework, at least on paper, every woman in a conflict has rights that others are legally bound to respect, and the worst abuses against her are crimes that international courts can try. Measured against the world of the epic, this is a profound transformation in the legal status of women in war, one that took most of human history to achieve and that rests on the slow replacement of the #property_model with a #rights_model. 11. Discussion: What the Silence of the Iliad Teaches The transformation just described is real, but the value of reading the Iliad closely is that it also reveals how much has not changed, and why. The poem shows a set of structures, the treatment of women as property, the use of their bodies to mark male honour and sovereignty, the blaming of women for wars fought over them, and the sympathy that stops short of granting rights, that have proved remarkably persistent. Modern research on conflict related sexual violence keeps rediscovering these same structures in contemporary wars, which suggests that the epic is not describing a vanished world but naming a pattern that law has tried to suppress without yet uprooting (Kreft, 2023; Kreft and Schulz, 2022). Consider the way the poem separates sympathy from agency. The Iliad can pity a captive woman while still treating her as an object, honouring her grief through lament while denying her any power over her fate. Scholars of modern wartime violence describe a strikingly similar split, in which women are cast as innocent and vulnerable victims deserving protection, but are not always treated as agents with their own voices and choices (Agerberg and Kreft, 2022; Kreft and Schulz, 2022). Seeing the ancient version of this split helps us recognise the modern one, and it warns against a form of concern that keeps women as objects of pity rather than as holders of rights. The poem, read carefully, exposes a trap that well-meaning modern responses can still fall into. Consider also the blaming of women, seen most clearly in #Helen. The woman fought over is also the woman held responsible for the fighting, and made to carry a shame that belongs to the men who chose war. This dynamic reappears in the stigma that survivors of conflict related sexual violence often face in their own communities, where the victim rather than the perpetrator is treated as the source of dishonour (Kreft, 2023). The Iliad shows how old and how deep this reflex is, rooted in a view of women as bearers of male and communal honour rather than as persons in their own right. Understanding its ancient form helps explain why it has been so hard to dislodge, even where the law now clearly places the blame where it belongs. The modern reception of the poem shows that readers feel these continuities and want to respond to them. Emily Wilson's translation deliberately uses plain and honest words for the enslavement and abuse the poem describes, refusing to soften them, so that modern readers cannot look away from what is happening to the women (Homer, 2023). Novelists have retold the story from the point of view of Briseis and the other captives, giving them the inner lives and voices the epic withholds. These responses are not simply literary exercises. They are attempts to complete the moral recognition that the poem begins but cannot finish, to move from feeling the captive's grief to imagining her as a full person with a claim on justice. In that sense the modern retellings do in fiction what human rights law tries to do in fact: they insist that the captive woman is a subject, not an object. At the same time, the discussion should resist a comfortable story of pure progress. The property model has been formally replaced by a #rights_model in international law, but the enforcement of those rights remains weak, and impunity for wartime abuse of women is still common. The gap between the law on the page and the reality on the ground is, in some places, not so different from the gap between the just war ideals of earlier centuries and the actual conduct of armies. The Iliad, by showing the raw form of the property model without any legal disguise, gives us a clear baseline against which to measure both how far the law has come and how far its promises still outrun its practice. Finally, reading the poem this way has a value for students beyond the study of literature or law. It teaches a method: to read a text for what it takes for granted, to treat its silences as evidence, and to connect the assumptions of a distant culture to the structures of our own. The legal status of captive women in the Iliad is not stated in a code; it is embedded in the way the poem counts, describes, and moves its female characters. Learning to read that embedded status, and to trace its long afterlife in law and war, is a skill that reaches well beyond this single poem. 12. Conclusion The Iliad begins with two men fighting over the right to keep two women, and this article has argued that this beginning is the key to the poem's meaning for the history of women's legal status in war. The captive women of the epic, Briseis, Chryseis, and by extension Andromache and even Helen, are shown as possessions rather than persons. Their bodies are counted among the goods of war, exchanged to settle disputes of honour, and used to mark the sovereignty of the men who hold them. Their lack of agency is not incidental. It is the accurate reflection of a legal and social order in which a woman taken in war had no standing, no claim to her own body, and no freedom except through the power of the men attached to her. Reading these figures closely shows a consistent pattern. Sympathy is granted while power is withheld; voice is allowed, through lament, while legal standing is denied; women are fought over and then blamed for the fighting. This pattern is the deep structure of the poem's treatment of women, and it corresponds to the real practices of enslavement and ransom that historical scholarship documents for the ancient world (Kamen, 2023; Forsdyke, 2021; Bathrellou and Vlassopoulos, 2022). The epic is therefore not only a story but a record, a compressed account of what it meant to be a woman on the losing side of ancient war. Tracing the history forward reveals a genuine transformation. The property model that governs the women of the Iliad slowly gave way, through the just war tradition and then decisively through modern international humanitarian law, human rights protections, and international criminal justice, to a rights model in which the abuse of women in war is named as a crime rather than accepted as a spoil (Kreft, 2020; Johansson and Kreft, 2023). Measured against the world of the poem, this change is profound. Yet the same body of modern research shows that the old structures survive beneath the new law, and that the gap between the rights women are promised and the protection they actually receive remains wide (Kreft, 2023; Kreft and Schulz, 2022). The value of deconstructing the Iliad, then, is double. It lets us see the origin point of a long legal history, the moment before rights existed, when women in war were simply property. And it lets us see how much of that origin persists, so that the poem becomes a mirror in which the unfinished work of human rights in wartime is reflected. The captive women of the epic are silent because the world that made the poem gave them no standing to speak. To read their silence honestly is to understand both how far the legal status of women in war has evolved, and how much of that evolution still lies ahead. 13. Limitations and Directions for Future Research This study has worked from an English translation and has read the poem for norms rather than for exact legal rules, and both choices set limits on its claims. A study grounded in the Greek text, and attentive to the precise vocabulary of ownership, prize, and honour, could refine the reading of individual scenes. Comparative work across other ancient epics and legal traditions would also test how far the patterns found here are specific to the Iliad and how far they belong to a wider ancient world. Finally, closer collaboration between classical scholarship and the empirical study of conflict related sexual violence could turn the continuities noted here into a more rigorous account of why certain structures in the treatment of women in war have proved so durable. These are promising directions for students who wish to carry the argument further. References Agerberg, M., and Kreft, A.-K. (2022) 'Sexual violence, gendered protection and support for intervention', Journal of Peace Research, 59(6). https://doi.org/10.1177/00223433221092960 Bathrellou, E., and Vlassopoulos, K. (2022) Greek and Roman Slaveries. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell. Cairns, D., Canevaro, M., and Lewis, D. M. (eds.) (2024) Slavery and Honour in the Ancient Greek World. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Forsdyke, S. (2021) Slaves and Slavery in Ancient Greece. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Homer (2023) The Iliad. Translated by E. Wilson. New York and London: W. W. Norton and Company. Johansson, K., and Kreft, A.-K. (2023) 'Peacekeeping and conflict-related sexual violence', Global Governance, 29(2), pp. 185-199. Kamen, D. (2023) Greek Slavery. Trends in Classics, vol. 4. Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter. Kreft, A.-K. (2020) 'Civil society perspectives on sexual violence in conflict: patriarchy and war strategy in Colombia', International Affairs, 96(2), pp. 457-478. https://doi.org/10.1093/ia/iiz257 Kreft, A.-K. (2023) '"This patriarchal, machista and unequal culture of ours": obstacles to confronting conflict-related sexual violence', Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State and Society, 30(2), pp. 654-677. https://doi.org/10.1093/sp/jxac018 Kreft, A.-K., and Nagel, R. (2023) 'Sexual violence', in Bjarnegard, E. and Zetterberg, P. (eds.) Gender and Violence against Political Actors. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, pp. 82-92. Kreft, A.-K., and Schulz, P. (2022) 'Political agency, victimhood, and gender in contexts of armed conflict: moving beyond dichotomies', International Studies Quarterly, 66(2). https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqac022 Pargas, D. A., and Schiel, J. (eds.) (2023) The Palgrave Handbook of Global Slavery throughout History. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. #captive_women #Iliad_gender_study #legal_status_of_women #wartime_sexual_violence #human_rights_in_war #Briseis_and_Chryseis #epic_literature_analysis #sovereignty_and_gender #enslavement_in_antiquity #international_humanitarian_law #conflict_related_sexual_violence #women_and_agency #Homeric_studies #Rome_Statute #from_property_to_rights
- Divine Intervention as Force Majeure: Attributing Liability in Homeric and Modern Tort Law
This article studies a single question from two very different sources. When something terrible happens and no ordinary person could have stopped it, who should carry the loss? Ancient epic answered this through the gods. Modern law answers it through the doctrine of #force_majeure and the older common-law defence known as the #Act_of_God. The article reads the interference of the #gods in Homer's #the_Iliad next to the way courts and contract drafters use the "Act of God" idea today. It argues that both systems are doing the same practical work. They are marking off a zone of events that lie outside human control, and they are deciding that human actors should not be blamed for outcomes inside that zone. The comparison is not decorative. It shows that questions about #foreseeability, #causation, and #moral_responsibility that trouble judges in the twenty-first century were already dramatized, with great precision, in a poem composed roughly twenty-eight centuries ago. The study uses a #law_and_literature method combined with #comparative_law. It finds three shared structures: an external and irresistible force, a test of whether a warned party could have acted differently, and a rule that fault reopens liability even after an overwhelming event. The article closes with implications for how courts handle #pandemic and #climate_change disputes, where the boundary between an uncontrollable event and human failure is under heavy pressure. Keywords: divine intervention; force majeure; act of God; tort law; Homer; Iliad; foreseeability; causation; liability; comparative law and literature 1. Introduction Every legal system has to draw a line between harm that a person could have prevented and harm that simply happened to them. On one side of the line sits blame, and with blame comes the duty to pay. On the other side sits misfortune, and misfortune, in most systems, lies where it falls. The whole practical purpose of #liability rules is to place events on the correct side of that line. When a driver runs a red light and injures a pedestrian, the harm is clearly on the blame side. When a healthy tree is torn out of the ground by a freak storm and crushes a parked car, the harm looks like it belongs on the misfortune side. The hard cases are the ones near the middle, where a bit of nature and a bit of human choice mix together. Modern law has a family of tools for the misfortune side. In #contract_law, a party can point to a #force_majeure clause and say that performance was blocked by an event beyond reasonable control. In the older common law, the same idea appears as the "#Act_of_God" defence, sometimes called #vis_major, which excuses a defendant when a natural event of extraordinary force causes the damage and no human care could have stopped it. In #tort_law, the Act of God works as a defence against a claim of #negligence or strict liability, on the reasoning that a person cannot be blamed for what no reasonable person could have guarded against. These tools all share one instinct. There are forces so large, so sudden, and so far outside a party's power that the law refuses to treat their effects as anyone's fault. Homer had the same instinct, and he gave it a face. In #the_Iliad, when a warrior's spear misses, when a hero's courage suddenly drains away, when an arrow finds a gap in the armour that no one aimed for, the poem does not always say that a man failed. It says that a god acted. #Athena turns a weapon aside. #Apollo strips the armour from a fighter's shoulders. #Zeus tips his golden scales and a champion's fate sinks toward death. These are not throwaway lines. They are the poem's way of explaining why events that look like human success or human failure are, at the deepest level, not fully owned by the humans involved. The #gods in Homer occupy the same conceptual space that #force_majeure occupies in a commercial contract. They are the name the culture gives to the uncontrollable. This article takes that parallel seriously and works it through in detail. The claim is not that Homer had a theory of insurance, or that Bronze Age Greeks litigated over storms. The claim is that the poem and the doctrine are both answers to the same underlying problem, the problem of #attributing_liability when an overwhelming outside force is part of the causal story. Reading them together sharpens our sense of what the modern doctrine is really doing. It also shows that the legal categories we treat as technical and dry, terms like "#unforeseeable" and "beyond reasonable control," rest on very old intuitions about #agency and responsibility. The article proceeds in the usual order for a study of this kind. Section 2 reviews the two bodies of material, first the treatment of #divine_intervention in Homeric scholarship and then the treatment of the Act of God and force majeure in recent legal writing. Section 3 explains the #law_and_literature and #comparative_law methods used here and defends the choice to compare a poem with a legal doctrine. Section 4 is the core analysis. It sets out the shared structures point by point, using specific episodes from the poem and specific features of the doctrine. Section 5 draws out the implications for present-day disputes, especially around #pandemic and #climate_change. Section 6 states the limits of the argument, and Section 7 concludes. 2. Background and Literature 2.1 Divine intervention in the Iliad Readers have argued about the role of the #gods in Homer for as long as the poem has been read. The central puzzle is easy to state and hard to solve. The #the_Iliad presents humans who plan, boast, argue, and fight with obvious independence, and at the same time it presents #gods who reach into the action and change its course whenever they wish. So who is really acting? Is #Achilles a free man making his own ruinous choices, or is he a piece being moved across a board by powers he cannot see? The scholarship offers a range of positions, but a few points are widely shared. First, #divine_intervention in the poem is constant and structural rather than occasional. It is not a rare miracle. It is the ordinary texture of events. Battles turn because a god pushes them. Councils change their minds because a god whispers. Recent studies of the poem, including new editions and guides to Homer, stress that the divine layer and the human layer run in parallel through almost every scene rather than sitting in separate compartments (Schein, 2022; Pache, 2020). Second, the gods themselves are not the top of the causal chain. Above them, or around them, sits #fate, the settled shape of what must happen. #Zeus can delay Troy's fall, and he can grieve over the death of his own son Sarpedon, but the poem shows him bound by the larger pattern. His golden scales do not decide #fate so much as reveal it. This matters for the legal comparison, because it means the poem already separates two things that the law also separates: the immediate agent of a harm and the deeper conditions that made the harm unavoidable. Third, and most important for this study, #divine_intervention in Homer does not cancel human #agency. It sits on top of it. Scholars describe this as "double motivation," a term worth keeping in view because it maps onto a modern legal problem almost exactly. In many scenes a human decides to do something and a god is also said to cause that same thing. When Achilles chooses not to draw his sword on Agamemnon, the poem says Athena held him back, and also shows Achilles reasoning about the cost of the fight. Both accounts are true at once. The human is not a puppet, and the god is not a decoration. The event has two owners. Work on Homeric psychology and the shaping of choice explores exactly this layered model of the acting self (Christensen, 2020). The upshot is that the poem is not fatalistic in a simple way. It does not say that because the gods control everything, nothing a person does matters. It says that human choice is real and consequential, and that it operates inside a world where uncontrollable forces are always present and sometimes decisive. That is a subtle position, and it is very close to the position that a careful #tort_law system holds when it lets an #Act_of_God defence excuse some harms while still holding people responsible for the parts they could control. 2.2 Force majeure and the Act of God in modern law On the legal side, the raw material is a cluster of overlapping doctrines. The most careful recent survey of the common-law field explains that the vocabulary is tangled and that courts and writers use several terms with shifting meanings (Palmer, 2022). It is worth separating them. The oldest common-law defence is #impossibility, which began as a narrow rule. Performance was excused only where it had become literally impossible, as in the classic case where a hall hired for concerts burned down before the concerts could take place. Over time the courts softened this into a broader test of #impracticability, under which performance is excused when an unforeseen event makes it extremely and unreasonably burdensome, not only when it is strictly impossible (Palmer, 2022). A parallel doctrine, #frustration_of_purpose, excuses a party when an unexpected event destroys the whole point of the deal even though performance is still physically possible, as in the famous case where a room was hired to watch a coronation procession that was then cancelled. Sitting beside these court-made doctrines is the #force_majeure clause, which is not a doctrine at all but a contract term. The parties write their own list of excusing events, and the courts read that list strictly. If the clause names pandemics, then a pandemic excuses performance whether or not it was foreseeable, because the clause, not the general law, now governs the risk (Palmer, 2022). After 2020 many contracts were rewritten so that their force majeure clauses expressly named epidemics and pandemics, precisely so that the parties would not have to fight later about whether such an event counted (Schwartz, 2020). It helps to see where these doctrines came from, because their history explains their shape. For a long time the common law treated contracts as absolute. If you promised to do a thing, you did it or you paid, and the fact that the world had changed under your feet was your problem, not the court's. This harsh rule was softened in the nineteenth century by cases that recognised that some supervening events should release a party. The turning point is usually placed at the case where a music hall was hired for concerts and then destroyed by fire before the concerts could happen; the court held that both sides were released, because the very thing the contract depended on no longer existed (Palmer, 2022). A second famous case released a man who had hired a room to watch a royal procession that was then cancelled, on the ground that the whole purpose of the deal had evaporated even though he could still have paid the rent. These two cases gave the modern law its two main branches, impossibility hardening into impracticability on one side and frustration of purpose on the other. The old absolute rule survives only as a background principle, the idea that people are held to their promises unless something truly extraordinary intervenes (Palmer, 2022). This tension, between holding people to their word and releasing them when the ground shifts, runs through every excuse case and, as we will see, through the poem as well. The "#Act_of_God" is the narrowest member of the family and the one closest to the poem. In strict usage it refers only to natural events, storms, floods, earthquakes, lightning, that occur without human involvement and that human care could not have prevented. Legal writers describe it as an event caused by natural forces so extraordinary that human prudence was not bound to anticipate it, and against which no reasonable precaution could guard (Ratanlal and Dhirajlal, 2022; Singh, 2022; Bangia, 2023). In tort law the Act of God works as a defence: if an extraordinary natural event, and not the defendant's carelessness, caused the harm, the defendant is not liable. The label separates the wider category of #force_majeure, which also covers wars, strikes, and government orders, from the pure case of nature acting alone. Two features of the modern law deserve emphasis because they will drive the comparison. The first is #foreseeability. Across all these doctrines, the question of whether the event could reasonably have been foreseen does heavy work. A truly unforeseeable event points toward excuse. An event that a careful party should have expected points toward liability, on the theory that the party took the risk (Palmer, 2022). The second is the role of #negligence. Even the strongest natural event will not excuse a party whose own carelessness contributed to the harm. If a building owner fails to maintain a structure and a storm then brings it down, the storm does not wipe out the owner's fault. The defence protects the blameless, not the careless (Ratanlal and Dhirajlal, 2022). 2.3 The gap this article addresses There is a large body of writing on #divine_intervention in Homer, and a large and growing body of writing on force majeure and the #Act_of_God, especially after the disruptions of recent years. What is missing is a study that reads them against each other as two solutions to one problem. This is not an accident. Classicists rarely write about contract remedies, and contract scholars rarely cite Homer. Yet the #law_and_literature movement has long argued that imaginative texts store and test a culture's ideas about justice, and that legal categories can be understood more deeply when set beside the stories that shaped them (Stern, Del Mar, and Meyler, 2020; Husa, 2021). This article works in that space. 3. Method 3.1 Why compare a poem with a doctrine The obvious objection to this project is that a poem is not a statute and a god is not a clause, so any comparison must be loose and unserious. The objection is worth answering directly, because the answer sets the ground rules for everything that follows. The comparison here is functional, not literal. Comparative law has long used the idea of the functional method, which asks not whether two systems use the same words or the same institutions but whether they solve the same social problem, and how (Husa, 2022; Legrand, 2021). By that standard, the interference of the gods and the operation of a force majeure defence can be compared because they perform the same function. Both take an event that upsets ordinary human plans and assign responsibility for it. Both decide, in effect, whether a bad outcome should be charged to a human actor or written off as something beyond human control. The vocabulary differs completely. The function is the same. The law and literature tradition supplies the second half of the method. That tradition distinguishes between studying law in literature, which looks at how legal themes appear in imaginative works, and studying law as literature, which uses the tools of literary reading to understand legal texts themselves (Stern, Del Mar, and Meyler, 2020). This article uses both. It reads Homer as a store of a culture's thinking about #moral_responsibility, and it reads the modern doctrine with attention to its language and its silences, the way one reads a difficult passage. Recent work has pushed the point further, arguing that fiction and imagination are not mere illustrations of legal ideas but active laboratories where a society works out what it thinks about agency, blame, and chance (Husa, 2021; Del Mar, 2020). 3.2 The specific mapping To keep the comparison honest, the study fixes a clear mapping before the analysis begins. The uncontrollable event in law, the storm or the earthquake, maps onto divine intervention in the poem, the moment a god acts. The human party in a legal dispute maps onto the Homeric hero. The court that must decide liability maps onto the poem's narrator and its audience, who are constantly invited to judge whether a character is to blame. #Foreseeability in law maps onto prophecy and warning in the poem, the many moments where a character is told what is coming. Negligence in law maps onto what Homer calls #ate, a kind of ruinous blindness or folly that leads a person into disaster. And the deep background of fate maps onto the structural risks that a legal system treats as simply given, the base rate of storms in a region, for example, which shifts what counts as foreseeable. With that mapping fixed, the analysis can proceed episode by episode and feature by feature without collapsing into vague analogy. The test throughout is strict. A parallel counts only if the poem and the doctrine make the same move for the same reason. 3.3 Scope and materials The primary literary text is #the_Iliad, read in modern translation (Wilson, 2023) and against recent scholarly editions and guides (Schein, 2022; Pache, 2020). The primary legal materials are recent surveys of force majeure, impossibility, impracticability, and the Act of God (Palmer, 2022; Schwartz, 2020) and standard treatments of the defence in tort law (Ratanlal and Dhirajlal, 2022; Singh, 2022; Bangia, 2023). The study does not attempt a full doctrinal survey of any single jurisdiction. Its aim is conceptual, and its examples are chosen to illustrate shared structures rather than to state the law of any one country. 4. Analysis 4.1 The external and irresistible force Start with the most basic feature. For an event to excuse a human actor, both systems require that the force be external to the actor and beyond the actor's power to resist. Modern law states this openly. In the French legal tradition, from which the phrase force majeure comes, the defence rests on three conditions that translate cleanly into English: externality, unforeseeability, and irresistibility (Palmer, 2022). The event must come from outside the party, it must not have been reasonably foreseeable, and it must have been impossible to resist or overcome. The Act of God defence in the common law carries the same demands in different words. The event must be a natural one, not of the defendant's making, and so overwhelming that no reasonable care could have prevented its effect (Ratanlal and Dhirajlal, 2022). Externality and irresistibility are the shared core. Homer dramatizes both conditions with great care. The gods are external to the humans in the most literal sense. They come from Olympus, from the sea, from the sky. They are not projections of a hero's mind, and the poem is precise about this. When #Apollo walks down from the peaks at the start of the poem, bringing plague on the Greek camp, the disaster arrives from outside the human world entirely. No decision by any Greek soldier caused the arrows to fall. The plague is external in exactly the way a storm is external to a shipping contract. Irresistibility is dramatized just as carefully. When a god decides an outcome, no human effort can undo it. Warriors who are marked for death may fight with all their skill and still fall, because the force arrayed against them is not a stronger human but a divine will. The poem often stages this as a sudden and total loss of power. A hero's limbs go slack, his spear turns aside, his helmet is knocked loose by an unseen hand. The message is that human effort has reached its ceiling and something larger has taken over. This is the poetic form of the legal idea that a party did everything within reasonable power and still could not prevent the result. There is a refinement here that the law also shares. Not every setback in Homer is divine, and not every natural event in law is an Act of God. Ordinary defeats in the poem are just defeats, the result of a better fighter or a wiser plan. The poem reserves divine language for events that break the normal pattern, that go beyond what skill and courage can explain. In the same way, the law reserves the Act of God label for the extraordinary storm, not the seasonal rain. A recent survey makes exactly this point through the example of hurricanes in Florida, where the courts once treated a severe storm as an Act of God but now, because such storms arrive every year, reserve that label for the truly extreme and unprecedented event (Palmer, 2022). The ordinary is expected and must be planned for. Only the extraordinary excuses. Homer drew the same line between the beatable enemy and the god. 4.2 Foreseeability, prophecy, and warning The most productive parallel is between legal #foreseeability and Homeric prophecy. In both systems, the question of whether a party was warned changes everything. In modern law, #foreseeability is the hinge on which many excuse cases turn. The reasoning is that a party who could reasonably foresee an event, and who then failed to protect against it, has in effect accepted the risk of that event. The clearest recent statement of this logic notes that foreseeability is not a simple on-off switch but an "index" of whether the non-occurrence of the event was a basic assumption of the deal (Palmer, 2022). A sophisticated party operating over a long period is expected to foresee more, because the longer a commitment runs, the more likely that some disruptive event will occur along the way (Palmer, 2022). Courts have refused to excuse parties who should have anticipated a market downturn, a change in the law, or the failure of a third party, on the ground that these risks were the party's to carry. The point is that foreseeability is really a proxy for #risk_allocation. To say an event was foreseeable is to say that the party had a fair chance to guard against it and chose not to. Homer's version of foreseeability is prophecy, and the poem is full of it. Characters are warned again and again about what is coming. Achilles is told that his own death will follow soon after Hector's. Hector is warned by his family and by omens not to face Achilles in the open. Agamemnon is warned about the consequences of insulting the priest of Apollo. The poem cares deeply about who was warned and what they did with the warning, because a warned character who walks into disaster is judged differently from one struck down without notice. This is precisely the legal distinction between a foreseeable and an unforeseeable event. When a Homeric hero is warned and ignores the warning, the poem treats the outcome as, in part, his own doing. He had a fair chance to change course. When a hero is struck without warning by a god acting from a clear sky, the poem treats the outcome as pure misfortune, something charged to the divine order rather than to the man. The mapping is exact. The warned hero is the party who cannot claim force majeure because the risk was foreseeable. The unwarned hero is the party who meets a true Act of God. The refinement in the modern law makes the parallel richer rather than weaker. Legal writers stress that foreseeability should not be treated as a talisman, because a party may foresee a risk and still reasonably decline to bargain about it, or may lack the power to insist on protection (Palmer, 2022). The mere fact that something was imaginable does not settle who should bear it. Homer holds the same nuanced view. Many characters half-know their fate and cannot act on that knowledge, either because the knowledge is too vague to be useful or because acting on it would mean abandoning who they are. Hector foresees Troy's fall and fights anyway, not out of blindness but because retreat would betray his role. The poem does not treat his foresight as making the fall his fault. Foreknowledge, in Homer as in law, is a factor to weigh, not an automatic verdict. 4.3 The double motivation problem and shared causation Now to the hardest and most rewarding parallel. Both the poem and the law face cases where an uncontrollable force and a human choice combine to produce a single harm. Neither system can simply say the harm has one cause. Both must apportion. Homeric scholarship calls the poem's solution "double motivation." A human decides to act, and a god is also said to cause the very same action, and both statements stand. The poem does not treat these as competing explanations where one must be false. It treats them as two layers of one event (Christensen, 2020). When Athena restrains Achilles from killing Agamemnon, Achilles is still reasoning and choosing. The god does not replace his mind. She works through it. The action is fully his and fully hers at once. Modern law meets the same structure whenever a natural event and human conduct together cause a loss, and it uses the concept of #causation to sort it out. Suppose a warehouse is flooded. If the flood alone destroyed the goods, the owner may have an Act of God defence. But if the owner had negligently blocked the drains, or stored the goods below a known flood line, then the flood and the owner's conduct are both causes, and the law will not let the natural event absorb the owner's share of the blame (Ratanlal and Dhirajlal, 2022). The legal system, like the poem, refuses the false choice between "nature did it" and "the human did it." It holds that both did it, and then it divides responsibility according to how much of the harm each contributed. This is where the concept of #ate becomes useful. #Ate is the Homeric word for a ruinous blindness or delusion that leads a person into a disastrous act. Sometimes the poem describes ate as sent by a god, and sometimes as arising from the person's own passion. The ambiguity is the point. Ate sits exactly on the seam between an external force and a personal failing, which is the same seam that #causation analysis runs along in a mixed case. When Agamemnon later explains his disastrous quarrel with Achilles, he blames ate, saying a delusion was put upon him. The poem lets him say this and also holds him responsible for the consequences, requiring him to make amends. He is not fully excused, because his own conduct was part of the chain, and he is not fully condemned, because a force beyond him was also at work. That is an apportionment, and it is the same operation a court performs when it reduces but does not eliminate a defendant's liability in a mixed-cause case. The double motivation model, read this way, is not a piece of primitive theology. It is a sophisticated theory of shared #causation, expressed in narrative form. It insists that the presence of an overwhelming outside force does not automatically wipe out human responsibility, and that human responsibility does not automatically wipe out the role of the outside force. Modern tort law reaches the identical conclusion through the doctrines of causation and contributory fault. The poem got there first, and it got there with a clarity that some legal opinions still lack. 4.4 Zeus's scales and the allocation of risk The image of Zeus weighing fates in his golden scales is one of the poem's most famous, and it turns out to be a compact model of #risk_allocation. At key moments, Zeus lifts his scales and places in them the fates of two warriors, or of two armies. The pan that sinks marks the side destined to lose. What is striking is what the image says about Zeus's own role. He does not choose the outcome the way a judge chooses a verdict. He reads it. The scales reveal a distribution of fate that Zeus himself is bound to honour. Even the king of the gods operates inside a structure of settled risk that he did not create and cannot casually override. This is a useful picture of how a mature legal system treats background risk. A court deciding a force majeure case does not invent, case by case, whether floods happen or whether markets fall. It works against a settled background of known risks, a distribution that is simply given. The question the court asks is not "shall I decide that storms exist" but "given that storms exist and everyone knows it, who agreed to carry this particular storm's cost." The golden scales capture that posture exactly. The decision-maker is not the author of the risk. The decision-maker allocates a loss inside a distribution of risk that stands above any single act of will. The scales also illuminate the limits of the excuse. Because the distribution is settled and, in a sense, public, a party cannot claim surprise at the ordinary workings of the world. Everyone in the poem knows that warriors die and that Troy is fated to fall. Within that known frame, particular deaths still land as tragic, but they do not land as inexplicable. Modern law says the same about ordinary risks. A shipping company cannot claim force majeure because the sea was rough, since rough seas are part of the known distribution that shipping contracts are made to cover. Only a departure from the known distribution, a storm outside the settled scale, can excuse. Zeus's scales, read as a model of risk allocation, draw the same boundary between the expected and the extraordinary that runs through the whole modern doctrine. 4.5 The limits of the defence: fault reopens liability Both systems share a crucial rule that keeps the excuse from swallowing all responsibility. An overwhelming outside force does not excuse a party whose own negligence or wrongdoing helped cause the harm. In modern law this is settled. The Act of God protects the careful, not the careless. If a defendant's own failure to take reasonable precautions combined with the natural event to produce the damage, the defence fails, because the defendant is a genuine cause of the loss (Ratanlal and Dhirajlal, 2022; Bangia, 2023). Likewise, the excuse doctrines in contract require the party seeking relief to show that it made reasonable efforts to avoid or work around the disruption. A party that could have found an alternative supplier, taken a longer shipping route, or otherwise mitigated the effect cannot simply invoke the event and walk away (Palmer, 2022). The excuse is available only to a party who was, in the relevant sense, without fault. Homer enforces the same limit with striking consistency. Divine action does not become a blanket excuse for human wrongdoing. Characters who bring disaster on themselves through their own arrogance, cruelty, or folly are held to account even when a god is also involved. Agamemnon's insult to the priest triggers Apollo's plague, but the poem does not treat Agamemnon as a helpless victim of the god. His own overreach set the chain in motion, and he must pay to set it right. Paris's original wrong, the act that started the war, is never dissolved into divine causation, even though a goddess was part of the story. The poem repeatedly refuses to let a character hide a personal failing behind a divine one. This shared rule is the safeguard that makes both systems workable rather than corrosive. If any brush with an uncontrollable force excused everything, then #liability would collapse, because almost every disaster has some element of the uncontrollable in it. Both the poem and the law block that collapse with the same move. They ask whether the human actor was genuinely without fault in the part of the causal chain that was within human control. If the actor was blameless there, the outside force excuses. If the actor was careless or wrongful there, the outside force does not rescue him. Ate may explain a moment of blindness, but it does not erase the duty to repair the damage that the blindness caused. 4.6 Who bears the loss when no one is at fault A final parallel concerns the residual case, the case where a genuine Act of God causes harm and no human is at fault at all. Here both systems must answer a question that has no comfortable answer. If no one is to blame, who bears the loss? Modern law's default answer is that the loss lies where it falls. When a true force majeure event blocks performance, the contract is discharged and each party bears its own resulting loss, subject to limited adjustments such as the return of payments made for a performance that never happened (Palmer, 2022). In tort law, when an Act of God causes injury without human fault, the injured party simply has no one to recover from, because there is no wrongdoer to hold liable. The loss stays with the victim unless some separate arrangement, such as insurance, has shifted it in advance. This is not cruelty. It is the recognition that liability is a tool for responding to wrongdoing, and that where there is no wrongdoing, forcing a blameless party to pay would only move the injustice around. Homer confronts the same residual case and answers it with the language of grief rather than the language of remedy. When a warrior falls because a god willed it and no human failing explains the death, the poem does not look for someone to punish. It mourns. The great laments of the Iliad, over Patroclus, over Hector, are the poem's response to losses that cannot be charged to any human fault. There is no defendant to sue when Zeus has tipped his scales. The only fitting response is to honour the dead and to bear the loss. The poem treats this as one of the hardest facts about the human condition, that some suffering has no author who can be made to answer for it. The comparison here is quieter than the others, but it may be the most important. Both systems, having built elaborate machinery for assigning blame, arrive at the same humbling limit. There is a class of harm for which no assignment of blame is possible or just, and both the poem and the law have the maturity to say so. The law says it in the dry language of discharge and non-recovery. The poem says it in lament. But the underlying judgment is identical. When a true Act of God has struck, the search for a human defendant must stop. 4.7 The narrator as judge and the standard of care There is one more parallel that ties the others together. Both systems need a judge, and both supply one. In a legal dispute the court decides whether the defendant met the standard of care and whether the excusing event really lay beyond control. In the poem the narrator and the listening audience do this work. Homer constantly invites us to assess whether a character acted as he should have, and the poem's steady, evaluating voice functions like the reasonable observer that tort law imagines. The standard applied is different in content but identical in form. Modern negligence law measures conduct against the reasonable person, an imagined figure of ordinary prudence who takes the precautions a careful member of the community would take. The poem measures its heroes against the standard of proper conduct for a warrior and a leader, the expectations of courage, restraint, hospitality, and respect for the gods that the culture took for granted. In both cases the judge asks the same question. Did this person fall short of what someone in his position should have done? If he did, and if that shortfall helped cause the harm, responsibility attaches. If he did everything his role required and was still overwhelmed, the harm is charged elsewhere. This is why the poem can distinguish so cleanly between a hero who dies bravely doing his duty and one who brings ruin through arrogance or folly. The first meets his end within the standard of care and is mourned without blame. The second falls below it and is judged, even where a god was also involved. The reasonable person of the law and the proper hero of the poem are doing the same job. Each is a yardstick against which real conduct is measured, and each turns a vague sense of fault into a workable test. When a defendant pleads an Act of God, the court is really asking whether a reasonable person could have done more. When Homer shows a god striking down a blameless man, he is telling the audience that no proper hero could have done more. The verdict, in both worlds, follows from the standard. The standard also explains why the excuse is never automatic. A force majeure event does not decide the case by itself; it decides the case only for a party who has otherwise behaved reasonably. The court still measures conduct. In the same way, divine action in the poem never settles the moral question by itself. The audience still weighs the human's behaviour. The presence of an overwhelming force sets the stage for judgment; it does not replace it. That is the deepest thing the two systems share, and it is easy to miss. Neither the god nor the storm is a verdict. Each is a fact that a judge must then weigh against a standard of care. 5. Discussion and Implications 5.1 What the comparison teaches about foreseeability The most practical lesson concerns foreseeability, which is the single most contested element in modern excuse cases. Homer's treatment of prophecy suggests that foreseeability should be understood as a matter of degree and of role, not as a simple binary. In the poem, characters live with partial and uncertain foreknowledge. They often know the shape of what is coming without knowing the timing or the details, and they frequently cannot act on what they know without ceasing to be themselves. The poem never treats vague foreknowledge as full responsibility. Modern courts sometimes lose this nuance and treat any imaginable event as foreseeable, which effectively denies relief for almost anything, since with enough imagination every disaster is conceivable. The best legal writing warns against exactly this error, insisting that foreseeability must mean reasonable and practical foreseeability, not bare conceivability (Palmer, 2022). Homer's prophets, who know much and can prevent little, are a vivid reminder that knowledge and control are different things, and that #liability should track control, not mere awareness. 5.2 Pandemics and the redrawing of the line The disruptions of recent years put the whole doctrine under stress and make the Homeric comparison timely. When the #pandemic struck, courts and businesses had to decide whether a global outbreak counted as a force majeure event, and if so, for whom. Many older contracts did not name pandemics in their force majeure clauses, which forced a hard question about whether an unlisted event could still excuse performance (Schwartz, 2020). The answers varied by jurisdiction and by the exact wording of each clause, and a wave of scholarship tried to map the confusion (Palmer, 2022). The Homeric frame clarifies what was really at stake. The pandemic was, for most parties, a genuinely external and irresistible force, an Act of God in the classic sense. But the second question, foreseeability, was where the real fight lay. Some argued that pandemics had been predicted for years and so were foreseeable, which would place the risk on the parties. Others argued that the specific event, at its actual scale, was beyond reasonable anticipation. This is precisely the structure of a Homeric warning. A vague prophecy of future plague, like a general expert warning of a future pandemic, does not obviously make the specific disaster the warned party's fault. Homer's careful separation of vague foreknowledge from actionable knowledge is exactly the distinction that pandemic litigation needed and often lacked. After the event, most sophisticated parties did what the poem would predict. They rewrote their force majeure clauses to name pandemics openly, converting a contested background risk into an expressly allocated one (Schwartz, 2020; Palmer, 2022). That is the legal equivalent of a hero who, once warned clearly, can no longer claim surprise. 5.3 Climate change and the shrinking Act of God The Act of God defence faces its deepest challenge from #climate_change, and the challenge is one the poem helps us name. The defence depends on the idea that certain natural events are outside human influence. But as human activity increasingly shapes the frequency and severity of storms, floods, and fires, the category of the purely natural event is shrinking. An event that once counted as a clear Act of God may now be partly the product of human conduct in the aggregate, which reopens the question of fault. Legal commentators have begun to note that climate change is complicating how courts evaluate Act of God claims, because the line between an unpreventable natural event and a foreseeable, partly human-caused one is blurring. The Florida hurricane example already shows the shift: storms that repeat every year lose their status as unforeseeable, extraordinary events and become part of the known distribution that parties must plan for (Palmer, 2022). As extreme weather becomes both more frequent and more clearly linked to human activity, the space in which a defendant can honestly say "no human care could have prevented this" narrows. Homer's model of causation is useful here precisely because it never insisted on a clean split between natural and human causes. The poem's double motivation lets an event be both divinely caused and humanly owned at the same time. Climate change forces modern law toward a similar posture, in which a flood can be both a natural event and, in part, a consequence of human choices, so that the Act of God defence covers less than it used to and foreseeability and risk allocation carry more of the weight. The poem does not tell courts how to resolve these cases, but it offers a conceptual vocabulary, shared causation with apportioned responsibility, that fits the mixed reality of climate harm far better than a rigid split between "nature" and "fault." 5.4 Drafting lessons There is a concrete drafting lesson as well. Because courts read force majeure clauses strictly and will not usually add events the parties did not name, the safest course is to name the feared events expressly (Palmer, 2022; Schwartz, 2020). The poem supports this instinct in its own way. In Homer, the clearest form of foreknowledge is the explicit, specific warning, not the vague sense of doom. Explicit warnings change how responsibility falls. In contract terms, an explicit, specific force majeure clause is the drafter's version of a clear prophecy: it fixes in advance who carries which risk, and it removes the later fight over whether the event was foreseeable. Vague clauses, like vague prophecies, leave everyone guessing and litigating. 5.5 A broader point about law and stories Stepping back, the comparison supports a claim that the law and literature tradition has long defended. The categories that a legal system uses to assign liability are not invented from nothing by lawyers. They rest on older and deeper cultural intuitions about agency, blame, and chance, intuitions that imaginative literature preserves and tests (Stern, Del Mar, and Meyler, 2020; Del Mar, 2020). When we find that a poem from the eighth century before the common era already distinguishes external from internal causes, warned from unwarned actors, and blameless misfortune from culpable failure, we learn that the modern doctrine is not a recent technical invention but a formalization of a very old way of thinking about responsibility. Reading the two together, as recent interdisciplinary work encourages, gives the doctrine a longer memory and a firmer footing (Husa, 2021; Husa, 2022). 5.6 Insurance and the pooling of uncontrollable risk The residual case, where a true Act of God causes harm and no one is at fault, points to a modern institution the poem could not have, which is insurance. When the law says that the loss from an uncontrollable event lies where it falls, it leaves a real gap. The blameless victim of a flood or an earthquake still suffers, and telling that victim there is no one to sue is cold comfort. Insurance is the modern answer to this gap. It does not assign blame; it spreads the loss across many people who each pay a small amount so that the unlucky few are not ruined. In this sense insurance completes the work that the Act of God defence leaves unfinished. The defence decides that no one is at fault; insurance decides that the loss can still be shared. Homer had no insurance market, but the poem has a rough equivalent in the way a community absorbs the losses that fate imposes. When a warrior falls by the will of Zeus, his people gather, they mourn together, and they share the burden of the loss through ritual and memory. The grief is pooled even though the loss cannot be undone. This is not the same as a payout, and the parallel should not be pushed too far, but the underlying logic is similar. Both are ways for a group to carry a harm that no single person caused and no single person could have prevented. The law splits the response into two institutions, the fault system and the insurance system, and the poem keeps them together in the single act of communal mourning. The practical lesson is that debates about the Act of God defence are incomplete if they stop at the question of fault. Once the law has decided that an event was truly uncontrollable, the real policy question is not who to blame but how the community will share the loss. That question is answered by insurance rules, by public disaster relief, and increasingly by argument about who should pay for the damage that climate change makes more frequent. The poem's instinct, that an uncontrollable loss is a matter for the whole community rather than a lone sufferer, is a useful corrective to a legal debate that too often ends at the courthouse door. 6. Limitations Several limits should be stated plainly so the argument is not read for more than it claims. First, the study is conceptual and comparative, not doctrinal. It does not state the law of any particular jurisdiction, and the treatment of force majeure, impossibility, impracticability, and the Act of God is drawn from general surveys rather than from a systematic review of case law in any one country (Palmer, 2022; Ratanlal and Dhirajlal, 2022). Readers seeking the rule in a specific place must consult the law of that place. Second, the reading of Homer is selective. The Iliad is a vast poem with a long and contested interpretive history, and reasonable scholars disagree about the balance between fate, divine intervention, and human agency in it (Schein, 2022; Pache, 2020). This article foregrounds the episodes that bear on responsibility and does not claim to settle the larger debates about Homeric religion or theology. Third, the comparison is functional and therefore has edges. A poem is not trying to resolve disputes between living parties, and a force majeure clause is not trying to move an audience to grief. The two objects differ in purpose, form, and stakes, and the parallels drawn here hold at the level of underlying structure, not at the level of everyday operation. Where the analysis has claimed a parallel, it has tried to show that the poem and the doctrine make the same move for the same reason, but the mapping is a tool for insight, not a claim of identity. Fourth, the study works from translation and from secondary scholarship rather than from independent philological analysis of the Greek (Wilson, 2023). Terms such as ate carry shades of meaning that translation flattens, and a fuller treatment would engage the original language more closely. Finally, the practical implications sketched in Section 5, especially around pandemic and climate change, are offered as directions for thought rather than as settled conclusions. The law in these areas is moving quickly, and the value of the Homeric frame is that it clarifies the questions, not that it dictates the answers. 7. Conclusion The interference of the gods in the Iliad and the operation of force majeure and the Act of God in modern law are separated by nearly three thousand years and by an enormous gulf of culture and purpose. Yet they are doing the same work. Both are ways of marking the boundary between harm that a human could have prevented and harm that lay beyond human control, and both use that boundary to decide who should carry a loss. The analysis found the same structures on each side. Both systems require the excusing force to be external and irresistible, and both reserve the strongest label for the extraordinary event rather than the ordinary one. Both make foreseeability, or its poetic form in prophecy and warning, the hinge on which responsibility turns, and both treat vague foreknowledge as weaker than a clear, specific warning. Both confront the mixed case, where an uncontrollable force and a human choice combine, and both refuse the false choice between blaming nature and blaming the person; Homer's double motivation and the law's doctrine of causation both apportion rather than choose. Both cap the excuse with a rule that fault reopens liability, so that neither ate nor an Act of God can shelter genuine negligence. And both, at the outer limit, accept that some harm has no author who can be made to answer, a fact the law states as discharge and the poem states as lament. The lesson for present-day disputes is not that Homer decides hard cases. It is that the categories courts use to decide them are older and deeper than they look, and that the poem models those categories with a clarity worth borrowing. As pandemic and climate change press on the boundary between the uncontrollable and the humanly caused, the questions courts face, how far foresight reaches, how to split a mixed cause, when fault dissolves an excuse, are the very questions the Iliad dramatizes. A doctrine that remembers its long ancestry in stories about divine intervention may handle those questions with more honesty about what it is really doing, which is not discovering blame in nature but deciding, as every human community must, where misfortune ends and responsibility begins. #divine_intervention #force_majeure #act_of_god #Homeric_tort_law #the_Iliad_and_law #attributing_liability #law_and_literature #comparative_tort_law #foreseeability_and_fate #vis_major_in_epic #Zeus_and_risk_allocation #acts_of_god_clause #pandemic_and_contract_law #climate_change_liability #ancient_law_modern_courts References Bangia, R. K. (2023). Law of torts (23rd ed.). Allahabad Law Agency. Christensen, J. P. (2020). The many-minded man: The Odyssey, psychology, and the therapy of epic. Cornell University Press. Del Mar, M. (2020). Artefacts of legal inquiry: The value of imagination in adjudication. Hart Publishing. Goldberg, J. C. P., and Zipursky, B. C. (2020). Recognizing wrongs. Harvard University Press. Husa, J. (2021). Comparative law, literature and imagination: Transplanting law into works of fiction. Maastricht Journal of European and Comparative Law, 28(3). Husa, J. (2022). Interdisciplinary comparative law: Rubbing shoulders with the neighbours or standing alone in a crowd. Edward Elgar Publishing. Legrand, P. (2021). Negative comparative law and its theses. Journal of Comparative Law, 16(2), 647-697. Legrand, P. (2022). Negative comparative law: A strong programme for weak thought. Cambridge University Press. Pache, C. O. (Ed.). (2020). The Cambridge guide to Homer. Cambridge University Press. Palmer, V. V. (2022). Excused performances: Force majeure, impracticability, and frustration of contracts. The American Journal of Comparative Law, 70(Suppl. 1), i70-i88. https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcl/avac017 Ratanlal and Dhirajlal. (2022). The law of torts (28th ed.). LexisNexis. Schein, S. L. (Ed.). (2022). Homer: Iliad Book I. Cambridge University Press. Schwartz, A. A. (2020). Contracts and COVID-19. Stanford Law Review Online, 73. Singh, A. (2022). Introduction to the law of torts. LexisNexis. Stern, S., Del Mar, M., and Meyler, B. (Eds.). (2020). The Oxford handbook of law and humanities. Oxford University Press. Peters, J. S. (2022). Methodologies of law as performance. Law and Humanities, 16(2). https://doi.org/10.1080/17521483.2022.2123616 Peters, J. S. (2022). Law as performance: Theatricality, spectatorship, and the making of law in ancient, medieval and early modern Europe. Oxford University Press. Wilson, E. (Trans.). (2023). The Iliad. W. W. Norton and Company.
- Blood-Money and Restorative Justice: Quantifying Human Life in Pre-Statutory Legal Frameworks. Financial Compensation and the Prevention of Blood Feuds in Homer's Iliad
This article studies how the payment of #blood_money worked as a tool for keeping the peace in a society that had no written laws, no police, and no state courts. It reads the ancient Greek epic, the #Iliad, as a record of that early world. In the poem, a killing did not always lead to more killing. Very often it led to a payment. The Greek word for that payment was #poine, and it stood at the center of a system that let families choose money and settlement over an endless #blood_feud. The study asks three questions. First, how did people in the #Homer poems put a price on a human life when there was no market, no insurance company, and no judge with the power to enforce a verdict. Second, how did that payment actually stop cycles of revenge from destroying whole communities. Third, what this old practice can teach modern supporters of #restorative_justice, a movement that also tries to repair harm instead of only punishing offenders. The article looks closely at four moments in the poem: the quarrel between Agamemnon and Achilles, the speech of #Ajax in Book 9, the trial scene carved on the #Shield_of_Achilles in Book 18, and the meeting of #Priam and Achilles in Book 24. It then compares the Homeric practice with later systems such as Germanic #wergild and Islamic #diyya, and with the modern legal habit of putting a cash figure on a lost life. The main finding is simple but important. Homeric #compensation was an early form of #restorative_justice, and the tragedy of Achilles is precisely that he rejects it. His refusal shows both the promise and the fragility of any system built on repair rather than raw revenge. Keywords: blood-money; poine; restorative justice; Iliad; Homer; blood feud; wergild; diyya; compensation; ancient Greek law Introduction Every society has to answer a hard question. What happens after one person kills another. The modern answer sounds obvious to most readers today. The state steps in, arrests the killer, holds a trial, and sends the guilty person to prison. But this answer is recent in the long story of human communities. For most of history there was no state strong enough to do any of that. There were only families, clans, and the fear that a single death would set off a chain of killings that no one could stop. In that older world, the most powerful force keeping order was not a police officer. It was #self_help, the right and duty of a family to avenge its own dead. And the most useful invention for softening that force was #blood_money, a payment that let the killer buy back peace instead of dying for what he had done. The #Iliad, the great Greek war poem usually dated to the late eighth century before the common era, gives us one of the clearest windows into this world. The poem is not a law book. It is a story about anger, war, and grief. Yet all through it, in small scenes and in famous ones, we see people arguing about what a life or an insult is worth and how much must be paid to make things right. The heroes of the poem live in a #pre_statutory setting. They have no written code, no supreme court, and no prison. What they have instead is custom, honour, the pressure of the crowd, and the constant option of #vengeance. Into this setting the poet places a quiet but powerful idea, that a killing can be answered with #reparations rather than with more blood. This article argues that the Homeric practice of #poine deserves to be read as an early, working form of what scholars today call #restorative_justice. That modern term comes from the last fifty years of criminal justice reform, and it describes an approach that treats crime mainly as harm done to people and relationships rather than as a rule broken against the state. Supporters of the approach want to bring the #victim, the #offender, and the wider community into the same room to agree on how the damage can be repaired. The claim here is not that Homer invented restorative justice or that ancient Greece was a gentle place. The poem is full of cruelty, slavery, and slaughter. The claim is narrower and, I think, more interesting. When these people wanted to avoid destroying one another, the main tool they reached for was compensation, and that tool worked in ways that modern reformers would recognise. To make this case, the article does several things in turn. It first reviews what recent scholars have said about compensation in Homer and about the history of restorative ideas. It then sets out clear definitions of #blood_money and of restorative justice so that the comparison is fair and not loose. After that it explains the method, which is a close reading of the text supported by comparison with other legal systems. The heart of the article is a study of four scenes from the poem. Each scene shows a different face of the compensation system: an offer refused, a norm described, a court in action, and a reconciliation achieved. From these scenes the article moves to two larger questions, how a life was priced and how payment actually prevented feud, before comparing Homer with #wergild and #diyya and with the modern practice of putting money figures on death. The final sections draw out the lessons for today and admit the limits of the argument. The stakes of the topic reach beyond the study of old poems. Courts around the world still put a price on human life every day, in #wrongful_death suits, in victim compensation funds, and in the safety calculations of governments. At the same time, a growing movement argues that prison and punishment often fail both victims and offenders, and that repair should sometimes come first. Reading the #Iliad with these debates in mind does not give us ready answers. It does give us a very old test case, one where the choice between money and blood is written in plain and painful terms, and where a hero's refusal of settlement leads straight to disaster. Literature Review Scholarship on justice in the Iliad has grown steadily, and recent work has sharpened our understanding of the vocabulary the poem uses for payment. The single most important distinction, now widely accepted, is between two Greek words. The first is #apoina, which means a #ransom, a payment made to recover something or someone that can still be given back, such as a living captive or a dead body. The second is #poine, which means the payment or requital owed for a life that has been taken and cannot be returned. This is the word that lines up most closely with blood money. The study by Donna Wilson, which reframed the whole quarrel of the poem as a dispute about the type of compensation owed rather than simply the amount, established this pair of terms as a key to the poem, and later critics have refined rather than replaced it (see the discussion in Schein, 2022). The value of the distinction is that it separates two very different social acts. Giving back a captive for gold is a trade. Accepting gold for a dead kinsman is something heavier, a decision to let money stand in for a life. A second strand of scholarship focuses on the famous trial scene on the #Shield_of_Achilles in Book 18. Here two men dispute over the poine for a killing, a crowd gathers, elders give judgments, and gold waits as a prize for the straightest verdict. Legal historians long treated these lines as a snapshot of an early court, but recent readings are more careful. A 2021 study in the Yearbook of Ancient Greek Epic argues that the passage does not describe one clean legal process at all. Instead the poet runs through several possible ways of settling a dispute, moving from crowd to elders to a figure called the #istor, without committing to a single procedure (Disobedience in the courtroom, 2021). This matters for the present article because it warns against reading the scene as a finished legal system. What the scene shows is not a fixed court but a society working out, in real time, how to turn a killing into a settlement. A third strand concerns the meaning of the #istor and the elders, or #gerontes, who sit in judgment. Older scholarship treated the istor as a judge or an arbitrator. More recent work suggests the role was subtler, closer to a trusted person who could confirm facts and lend authority to an outcome rather than impose one. The debate is not settled, and this article does not need to settle it. The general point is agreed on all sides: dispute settlement in Homer relied on respected individuals and on the watching community, not on written rules or state force. On the modern side, the literature on restorative justice is large and still growing. The foundational framing, associated with Howard Zehr, defines crime as a violation of people and relationships that creates obligations to make things right, and it places the needs of victims at the center (Zehr, 2015). Legal scholars have pressed the case that this approach should be taken seriously as a real alternative rather than a soft add-on to punishment. Adriaan Lanni, a scholar of both Athenian and modern law, has argued for exactly this, drawing on ancient practice to challenge the assumption that only harsh punishment can satisfy justice (Lanni, 2021). Others have tried to build a restorative response even to the hardest case, homicide, arguing that pure punishment fails to capture what victims and communities actually need after a killing (Roberts, 2023). Empirical work has begun to test which parts of the process matter most; a 2022 study, for example, found that whether an offender's apology is freely given strongly shapes how victims respond to it (Allan et al., 2022). At the level of national policy, Italy's recent reform has built a full legal framework for restorative practice into the criminal system, showing that the approach is moving from experiment to law (Palermo, 2023). A fourth body of work connects these modern ideas to their deep historical roots. Historians of law point out that #compensation systems, not prisons, dominated justice for most of recorded history. Germanic and Anglo-Saxon societies used wergild, a tariff that set a cash price on each person and each injury, with the highest sums for killing a person and smaller sums for lesser harms. The system reduced private revenge because families could expect a payment, and revenge was risky because it invited counter-revenge. Only later did rulers redefine offences as crimes against the king and shift justice away from the victim toward the state. Islamic law preserves a living version of the same idea in diyya, the payment made to a victim's family that can replace retaliation when the family chooses to accept it. A recent comparative study reads diyya as one of the clearest surviving examples of restorative practice inside a formal legal system (Absar, 2020). These parallels are important because they show that the Homeric practice was not a strange one-off. It was one instance of a pattern that appears again and again wherever states are weak and families are strong. Finally, there is a modern literature that most classicists never read but that speaks directly to this topic. Economists and legal scholars have spent decades trying to attach a money figure to a human life, through the concept known as the #value_of_a_statistical_life. This figure is used to weigh the costs and benefits of safety rules and to set damages in #wrongful_death cases. Recent work has applied it on a huge scale, for instance by estimating the total money cost of pandemic deaths worldwide (Viscusi, 2023). The existence of this literature is a quiet embarrassment for anyone who thinks that pricing a life is a barbaric habit belonging only to the past. Modern states do it constantly. The difference between them and Homer is not whether a life gets a price but how the price is set and who receives the payment. That contrast runs through the rest of this article. Conceptual Framework: What Blood-Money and Restorative Justice Actually Mean Before comparing the ancient practice with the modern movement, both terms need clear boundaries. Loose use of either one would make the comparison feel forced. By blood money this article means a payment, in goods or money, made by a killer or the killer's kin to the family of a person who has been killed or injured, offered and accepted in place of #vengeance. Three features define it. First, it is triggered by bloodshed or serious harm, not by ordinary debt or trade. Second, it flows from the side of the wrongdoer to the side of the harmed, not the other way around. Third, its purpose is to close a quarrel, to buy back peace, and to remove the reason for a #blood_feud. In Homer this payment is most precisely named poine, and it must be kept apart from #apoina, the ransom paid to recover a captive or a corpse, even though the poem sometimes lets the two ideas overlap. By restorative justice this article means an approach to wrongdoing that treats the harm to people and relationships as the central fact, that gives the #victim a real voice, that asks the #offender to take #accountability and help repair the damage, and that involves the wider #community in reaching an outcome. The emphasis falls on #restitution, dialogue, and reintegration rather than on isolation and pain. This is the standard framing found in the modern literature (Zehr, 2015), and it is deliberately broad, because the movement covers many practices, from victim-offender meetings to community panels to full legislative schemes (Palermo, 2023). Setting the two definitions side by side reveals both the overlap and the gap. The overlap is real and deep. Both systems put the harmed party, not the ruler, at the center. Both aim to repair rather than only to punish. Both rely on agreement and on the pressure of the surrounding group rather than on a distant authority. Both prefer a living, paying wrongdoer who remains inside the community to a dead one who is gone. When #Ajax describes how a man accepts payment even for a dead brother and the killer stays in the land, he is describing something that a modern restorative practitioner would recognise at once. The gap is just as real. Modern restorative justice cares intensely about the emotional and moral repair between people. It wants apology, understanding, and changed behaviour. A freely given apology, research suggests, does more for victims than a forced one (Allan et al., 2022). Homeric poine, by contrast, is mostly transactional. The poem shows little interest in whether the killer feels sorry. What matters is that the goods are handed over, the crowd witnesses it, and the feud ends. In this sense the ancient practice is thinner than the modern ideal. It repairs the social danger without necessarily repairing the human relationship. Keeping this difference in view stops the comparison from becoming sentimental. Homer offers an early form of restorative justice, but a hard and practical one, closer to a peace treaty than to a healing circle. There is one more conceptual point worth making. #Restorative_justice today usually sits inside a state that could punish if it wanted to. The restorative option is chosen against a background of possible prison. Homeric compensation sits in the opposite setting. There is no state waiting in the wings. The alternative to payment is not prison but private war. This changes the meaning of the choice. When a modern victim's family agrees to a restorative process, they set aside the state's punishment. When a Homeric family accepts poine, they set aside their own knives. The ancient choice is in some ways braver, because the family gives up the one form of justice actually available to them, and trusts instead in goods and in the goodwill of neighbours. Methodology The method of this study is textual and comparative. It does not use surveys, experiments, or statistics of its own. Its evidence is the poem, read closely, and its argument is built by placing that reading beside the findings of recent scholarship in classics, law, and criminology. The primary source is the Iliad itself, approached through modern scholarly editions and translations. The recent verse translation by Emily Wilson (2023) and the detailed commentary tradition represented by Schein's edition of Book 1 (2022) inform the readings offered here. Where the exact sense of a Greek term is disputed, as it is for poine, apoina, and istor, the article follows the mainstream scholarly consensus and flags the disagreement rather than hiding it. Four passages were selected for close reading because each shows a different aspect of the compensation system, and together they cover the full arc from refusal to acceptance. The passages are the opening quarrel and the rejected ransom in Book 1, the speech of Ajax in Book 9, the trial scene on the Shield of Achilles in Book 18, and the meeting of #Priam and Achilles in Book 24. These were chosen because they are the moments where the poem speaks most directly about payment, price, and the ending of quarrels, and because they are the passages most discussed in the scholarship, which allows the reading to be checked against expert opinion. The comparative dimension uses three other systems as reference points: Germanic and Anglo-Saxon wergild, Islamic diyya, and the modern legal and economic practice of pricing life through wrongful death damages and the #value_of_a_statistical_life. These were chosen because each shares the core feature under study, the conversion of a lost life into a payment, while differing in how the price is fixed and who holds the power to enforce it. The comparison is meant to test whether the Homeric case is unusual or typical, and to sharpen the definition of what counts as restorative. Two limits of the method should be stated at the start. First, the Iliad is a poem, not a legal record. Its scenes are shaped by story and by the demands of oral performance, and the 2021 study of the trial scene rightly warns that the poet may be exploring possibilities rather than reporting a real court (Disobedience in the courtroom, 2021). The article treats the poem as evidence for how its audience thought about compensation, not as a transcript of actual trials. Second, the comparison across cultures and centuries risks flattening real differences. The article tries to guard against this by keeping the definitions tight and by naming the gaps as well as the overlaps. The Homeric Evidence: Four Scenes of Price and Peace 5.1 Book 1: The Refused Ransom and the Quarrel Over Worth The poem opens not with a battle but with a payment refused. The priest Chryses comes to the Greek camp carrying rich gifts to buy back his captured daughter. He offers apoina, a ransom, and he asks only for his child in return. The soldiers want to accept, because the offer is fair and the goods are good. But #Agamemnon refuses. He sends the old man away with harsh words and keeps the girl. This refusal is the first wrong of the poem, and it brings a plague from the god Apollo, the father's protector. Two things in this scene set up everything that follows. First, the poem takes it for granted that a fair offer should normally be accepted. The army's instinct is to say yes. Refusing a reasonable payment is shown as arrogant and dangerous, an act that upsets both men and gods. This instinct, that offers of goods should settle disputes, is the deep logic of the whole compensation system. Second, the quarrel that breaks out when Agamemnon is finally forced to give the girl back reveals what these payments are really about. Agamemnon demands that his loss be made good by taking a prize from someone else, and he takes #Briseis from Achilles. What is at stake is not simply property. It is #honour, the public rank that a hero's share of goods represents. A hero's worth is measured in what he is given, so to strip away his prize is to shrink his standing in front of everyone. This is the key to understanding Homeric compensation. Goods are never only goods. They are the visible sign of a person's value in the eyes of the community. When a life is taken and poine is paid, the payment does two jobs at once. It hands real wealth to the grieving family, and it publicly measures the worth of the person who died. That double role, material and symbolic, is what gives the payment its power to close a wound. It also explains why refusing payment, as Agamemnon refuses the ransom and as Achilles will later refuse gifts, is such a serious act. To refuse is to say that no amount of goods can measure what has been lost, which is either the highest honour or the deepest threat, because it leaves vengeance as the only path left. 5.2 Book 9: Ajax States the Norm The clearest statement of the compensation norm in the whole poem comes in Book 9, from the plain-spoken warrior Ajax. The Greek leaders have sent an embassy to Achilles, begging him to return to battle and offering an enormous package of gifts from Agamemnon, a treasure of tripods, gold, horses, women, and cities. Achilles refuses it all. Ajax, frustrated, turns away and speaks to the others as if Achilles cannot be reasoned with. His words are worth pausing on, because they lay bare the ordinary rule that Achilles is breaking. Ajax says, in effect, that a man will accept poine even for the killing of his own brother or his own child. The killer pays a great price, remains in his own country, and the bereaved man restrains his heart and his anger once he has taken the payment. Ajax cannot understand why Achilles will accept nothing, and all over a single girl, when a normal man accepts recompense even for a dead son. This short speech is the strongest evidence in the poem that blood money was a settled and respected practice. Ajax does not argue for it or defend it. He states it as the obvious way of the world, the thing any reasonable person does. The most extreme harm imaginable, the loss of a child or a brother, is exactly the case he chooses, precisely because even there payment is accepted. The killer is not exiled or executed. He stays in the community. The victim's kinsman swallows his rage. And the mechanism that makes all of this possible is the transfer of goods. Ajax's speech also carries a sharp judgment. By comparing Achilles' rage over Briseis to a father's acceptance of payment for a dead child, Ajax marks Achilles as unnatural, as someone who has stepped outside the shared code. The tragedy of the poem is being set up here. The hero who cannot accept compensation is the hero who will bring ruin on his friends and himself. It is important to feel the weight of what Ajax describes. He is not talking about a small debt. He is talking about a parent taking money for a murdered child and then living beside the murderer in the same land. To modern ears this can sound cold, even monstrous. But seen against the alternative, it is an act of enormous social wisdom. The alternative is a feud that could consume both families and everyone tied to them. The #reconciliation Ajax praises is not a failure of love for the dead. It is a decision to let the living survive. This is the same hard logic that runs through every wergild and diyya system, and it is the logic that Achilles, in his grief and pride, cannot bring himself to follow. 5.3 Book 18: The Trial on the Shield of Achilles The most detailed picture of dispute settlement in the poem is not a real event at all. It is a scene carved onto the great shield that the god Hephaestus makes for Achilles in Book 18. Among the images of cities, weddings, fields, and dances, the god sets a scene of a quarrel over a killing, worked in metal. Two men are in dispute about the poine for a man who has died. One says he has paid the full amount. The other refuses to accept anything. They take the matter to the public place, a crowd gathers and shouts for one side or the other, heralds hold the people back, and the elders sit on smooth stones and give their judgments in turn. Two #talents_of_gold lie in the middle, set aside as a reward for whoever speaks the straightest judgment. Every detail of this scene rewards attention. The dispute is not about whether the killing happened or whether it was wrong. It is about the payment. One man claims the price has been paid; the other will not take it. Scholars disagree about the exact point at issue. On one reading, the question is factual, whether the poine has actually been handed over. On another reading, the question is deeper, whether the victim's side must accept payment at all instead of pursuing vengeance. The 2021 study of the passage argues that the poet is not describing one fixed procedure but is cycling through several possible ways of resolving the quarrel, showing a crowd, then elders, then the figure of the istor, as if displaying the whole toolkit a society might use (Disobedience in the courtroom, 2021). Either way, the scene proves that by the poem's time the payment of blood money was a matter for public, orderly settlement, not for private murder in the dark. Notice what is present and what is absent. Present are the crowd, the elders, the public space, the open speech, and the reward for good judgment. Absent are any written law, any state prosecutor, any prison, and any single official with the power to force an outcome. This is #proto_law in the fullest sense. Justice is being done, but it is being done by the community acting together, through respected elders and watching neighbours, under the pressure of public opinion. The gold in the middle is telling. It rewards not power but persuasion, the ability to speak the straightest judgment. In a #pre_statutory world, the authority to settle a quarrel rests on wisdom and on the consent of the crowd, not on a badge or a code. The scene also shows something the modern movement prizes: the whole community owns the dispute. In a restorative justice conference today, the point is to widen the circle beyond the offender and the victim to include families and neighbours, because harm ripples outward and repair must too. The Homeric court does the same by instinct. The crowd is not a nuisance to be cleared away. It is part of the process. Its shouting, its watching, and its memory are what will make any settlement stick. This is why the trial belongs on the shield in the first place. Hephaestus places it in the "city at peace," set against a second city torn by war. The image of two men bringing a killing to public judgment is, for the poet, one of the defining marks of civilised life, the very opposite of the battlefield where Achilles is about to return. 5.4 Book 24: Priam, Achilles, and the Ransom That Ends the Poem The poem that opened with a refused ransom closes with a ransom accepted. After Achilles kills Hector and drags his body around the walls of Troy in his rage and grief, the aged King Priam comes alone and at night into the enemy camp. He kneels before the man who killed his son and begs for Hector's body, bringing a great treasure as apoina. Achilles, who had sworn to give the corpse to the dogs, is moved. He weeps, thinks of his own father, accepts the ransom, and returns the body so that Troy can bury its prince. Strictly speaking, this is apoina, a ransom for a corpse, not poine, a blood-price for a life. Hector is already dead, and no payment can undo that. Yet the scene belongs in any study of Homeric compensation, because it shows the same deep pattern reaching its highest point. A grieving man and a killer meet face to face. Goods change hands. And a cycle of rage that seemed unstoppable is, for a moment, broken. The meeting is not a formal court. There are no elders and no crowd. But it contains the emotional core that the transactional scenes lacked. Achilles and Priam share their grief, each seeing the other's loss. Achilles thinks of his own father who will soon mourn him; Priam thinks of the son he has lost. In that shared sorrow, the exchange of body for treasure becomes something more than a trade. It becomes a genuine, if fragile, #reconciliation. This is the moment where Homeric practice comes closest to the full modern ideal of restorative justice. Here we find not only the transfer of goods but also the dialogue, the recognition of the other's humanity, and the choice of #mercy over further harm that modern practitioners seek. The 2022 finding that a freely offered gesture means more than a forced one has a strange echo here (Allan et al., 2022). No one forces Achilles to return the body. His rage gives him every right, by the code of war, to keep it. That he gives it back freely, moved by another father's tears, is what makes the scene so powerful. The poem seems to understand, in its own way, that the deepest repair cannot be compelled. It must be chosen. Set against Book 1, the ending completes a clear arc. The poem begins with a refusal of a fair offer, an act of pride that unleashes suffering. It ends with an acceptance, an act of shared humanity that brings a pause in the killing. Between these two lies the whole argument of the poem about anger and its limits. The message is not that money can heal every wound. Hector is still dead, Achilles will soon die, and Troy will fall. The message is that the willingness to accept a settlement, to let goods and grief stand in for endless revenge, is what separates a survivable world from an endless one. Quantifying a Life: How Value Was Assigned Without a Market The title of this article promises to look at how human life was quantified, and the Homeric evidence lets us do exactly that. In the poem, life and honour are measured in a fairly stable set of goods: #talents_of_gold, tripods and cauldrons of bronze, horses, cattle, and captured women. These are the currency of worth. Agamemnon's huge offer to Achilles in Book 9 is a catalogue of such goods, piled up to represent an overwhelming apology. The two talents of gold on the Shield of Achilles are the reward for the best judge. The treasure Priam brings for Hector's body is described in loving detail. Wealth in this world is the language in which value is spoken. The interesting question is how a price gets fixed when there is no market for lives and no official table of rates. The poem suggests several answers working together. First, price tracks #honour and rank. A great hero is worth more than a common man, and an insult to a king demands more than an insult to a servant. This is not a modern idea of equal human worth. It is a frankly unequal system in which some lives and some slights simply cost more. Second, price is set by negotiation and by the pressure of the community. There is no fixed sum for a killing; there is a claim, a counterclaim, and a settlement reached under the eyes of the crowd and the elders. Third, price is shaped by the danger of refusal. Because the alternative to payment is blood feud, both sides have a strong reason to reach a figure that lets everyone live. The price of a life, in the end, is whatever amount is large enough to satisfy honour and small enough to be paid. This should look familiar, because modern legal systems face the same problem and solve it in strikingly similar ways. When a court decides a wrongful death case, it too must attach a number to a life, and it too has no perfect market to consult. It looks instead at the person's earnings, their role in the family, and the loss suffered by those left behind. Government agencies go further, using the value of a statistical life to decide whether a safety rule is worth its cost, a figure that recent work has used to price even the mass deaths of a pandemic (Viscusi, 2023). The modern figures run into millions, and they are set by economists rather than by elders, but the basic act is the same one Homer describes. A life is lost, and a society must decide what it is worth in money. The comparison exposes both what has changed and what has not. What has changed is the ideal of equality. Modern law claims, at least in principle, that every life has the same basic worth, even if practice falls short. Homeric value is openly graded by rank. What has changed too is who receives the payment. In Homer the money flows to the family, the very people who were harmed. In much modern criminal justice the state takes over, and fines flow to the treasury while the victim's family may receive little. This shift, from victim to state, is exactly the change that historians of wergild describe when rulers redefined offences as crimes against the crown, and it is exactly the change that the restorative justice movement now tries to reverse. What has not changed is the underlying necessity. Societies cannot escape the task of pricing life. The only choice is how honestly and how humanely they do it. Homer, at least, is honest about it. The gold is on the ground, in the open, for all to see. From Feud to Settlement: The Mechanics of Prevention The central claim of this article is that blood money prevented blood feud, so it is worth spelling out exactly how the prevention worked. A feud is not a single act of revenge. It is a chain. One killing calls for another, which calls for another, until whole families are drained. In a pre-statutory world with no police and no prison, nothing stops this chain by force. Something must stop it by agreement. #Poine is that something. The first mechanism is substitution. Payment offers the victim's family a real good to accept in place of the killer's life. The family gives up the satisfaction of revenge, but they gain wealth, security, and the survival of their own members who would otherwise be exposed to counter-attack. Ajax's speech captures this trade exactly: the killer pays, stays in the land, and the bereaved man restrains his anger. The offer works because grief and rage are not the only things a family feels. They also feel fear and need, and payment speaks to both. The second mechanism is publicity. A feud thrives in secrecy and in the private duty of revenge. #Compensation drags the quarrel into the open. The trial on the Shield of Achilles shows the whole apparatus: the public square, the crowd, the elders, the open speeches. Once a dispute is being settled in public, revenge becomes harder to justify and easier to shame. The community, by watching, becomes a party to the outcome. Anyone who breaks a public settlement to take private revenge now offends not just the other family but the whole watching town. Publicity turns a private duty into a public matter, and that shift is what makes peace hold. The third mechanism is the shared interest of the community. A feud is dangerous not only to the two families but to everyone around them. Neighbours have every reason to press both sides toward settlement, because an unchecked feud threatens the peace they all depend on. This is why the crowd and the elders appear in the trial scene. They are not neutral observers. They are interested parties who want the quarrel closed. The reward of gold for the straightest judgment is a way of channelling this shared interest into a workable outcome. The community pays to have the matter settled well. The fourth mechanism, and the most fragile, is honour satisfied. Payment works only if the sum is large enough to answer the insult of the death. This is where the system can break down, and where Achilles stands as the great warning. When honour cannot be satisfied by any payment, when a person decides that only blood will do, the whole machinery fails. Achilles refuses Agamemnon's mountain of gifts, and later he refuses to accept Hector's death as anything but a debt to be paid in flesh. His refusals are not madness. They follow from a code that prizes honour above life. But they show the limit of the compensation system. It depends on both sides agreeing that a life can be measured in goods. The moment one side says that it cannot, there is nothing left but the feud. This is the deep insight the poem offers to anyone interested in restorative justice. Repair-based systems are powerful but conditional. They work when the harmed party is willing to accept repair, when the community backs the process, and when the wrongdoer offers enough to satisfy the wound. They fail when any of these conditions breaks. The Iliad does not pretend otherwise. It shows the system working in Ajax's world and in Priam's tent, and it shows it failing in the rage of Achilles. A modern reformer who wants to learn from Homer must learn both halves of the lesson. The tool is real, and so are its limits. Comparative Frameworks: Wergild, Diyya, and the Pricing of Death Placing Homer beside other systems shows that his practice was one form of a very widespread human solution. Three comparisons are especially useful. The first is Germanic and Anglo-Saxon wergild. In these societies each free person had a set money price, and each injury had its own tariff, with the largest sums owed for killing and smaller sums for lesser wounds. A person's rank raised or lowered the figure, so a noble's life cost far more than a commoner's. The system reduced private vengeance for the same reasons the Homeric one did. Families could expect a payment, and revenge invited more revenge. The main difference from Homer is that wergild became more fixed and more written over time, moving toward a table of set prices, whereas the Homeric figure remained a matter of negotiation. The later history of wergild is also instructive. Rulers slowly redefined killing as a crime against the crown rather than against the family, diverting payments to the state and pushing the victim out of the center. That shift is the birth of the modern criminal state, and it is exactly the development that restorative justice now seeks to soften. The second comparison is Islamic diyya, which is not a dead practice but a living one. In Islamic law the family of a killing victim may choose between #qisas, a form of legal retaliation, and diyya, the acceptance of compensation. The choice belongs to the family, which gives the victim's side a central and active role. A recent comparative study argues that this makes diyya one of the clearest surviving examples of restorative principles inside a formal legal system, because it places the harmed party's decision at the heart of the outcome and allows for #forgiveness and settlement rather than only punishment (Absar, 2020). The parallel with Ajax's world is close. In both, a family may lawfully accept payment for a killing, the wrongdoer may remain in the community, and the cycle of revenge is broken by choice rather than by force. The main difference is that diyya sits inside a developed legal system with courts and rules, while Homeric poine sits in a pre-statutory world with only custom and the crowd. The third comparison is the modern pricing of death through law and economics. Courts set damages in wrongful death cases, funds compensate the families of disaster victims, and governments use the value of a statistical life to weigh safety against cost (Viscusi, 2023). This comparison is the most uncomfortable, because modern readers like to think they have left behind the crude business of pricing life. They have not. They have only professionalised it and moved the payment away from the victim's family and toward the state or the insurer. The comparison with Homer is humbling. His system was frank about what it was doing and gave the money to the people who grieved. The modern system is often shy about what it is doing and gives the money elsewhere. Neither escapes the basic act of quantifying a life. The question is only how the price is set and who it is meant to serve. Read together, these comparisons make the central point clear. The conversion of a lost life into a payment is not a strange Homeric habit. It is a recurring human answer to the problem of violence in a world without an all-powerful state. Where states are weak and families are strong, blood money keeps the peace. As states grow strong, they take the payment for themselves and turn to punishment. And when punishment fails, as it often does, reformers rediscover the old wisdom that the harmed party should be at the center and that repair can matter more than pain. The Iliad stands near the beginning of this long story, and it tells the beginning with unusual honesty. Lessons for Modern Restorative Justice What can a reader who cares about modern justice actually take from all this. Several lessons follow from the Homeric evidence, and they are practical rather than merely poetic. The first lesson is that centring the victim is not a modern invention but a return to something very old. For most of history, the harmed family stood at the center of justice, and the wrongdoer answered to them, not to a distant state. The rise of the criminal state pushed the victim to the edge, turning them into a witness in the state's case rather than a party to their own dispute. The restorative justice movement, and living systems like diyya, seek to bring the victim back to the center (Absar, 2020; Palermo, 2023). Homer shows that this arrangement is not soft or naive. It was the normal way of the world, and it kept order in societies far harsher than our own. The second lesson is that repair and #accountability can coexist. A common worry about restorative approaches is that they let offenders off lightly. The Homeric evidence answers this worry. Paying poine was not cheap or easy. It could cost a family a large part of its wealth, and it was done in public, before the whole community, as an open admission that a wrong had to be answered. The killer did not escape consequences. He faced a heavy, visible cost and remained under the eyes of the people he had harmed. Restorative justice, at its best, works the same way. Facing the victim, admitting the harm, and paying to repair it can be a harder and more meaningful consequence than a quiet term in a cell far from anyone one has hurt. Roberts makes a version of this argument for the modern case, insisting that pure punishment often fails to give victims and communities what they truly need after a killing (Roberts, 2023). The third lesson concerns the community. The trial on the Shield of Achilles is a picture of a whole town owning a dispute. The crowd, the elders, and the public square are all part of the settlement. Modern restorative practice tries to recreate this by widening the circle beyond victim and offender to include families and neighbours. Lanni's argument that ancient practice can teach modern law is exactly on this point, that justice was once a shared community act and could be again (Lanni, 2021). The lesson is that repair sticks only when the community backs it. A private deal between two parties is fragile. A settlement witnessed and supported by the whole group is strong. Homer knew this, and placed the public trial among the defining images of a city at peace. The fourth lesson is about the power of freely chosen reconciliation. The most moving moment in the poem is not a formal settlement at all. It is the meeting of Achilles and Priam, where an old man's grief and a killer's memory of his own father produce a gift freely given and a peace freely made. Modern research suggests that what victims value is not a forced apology but a genuine one (Allan et al., 2022). The scene in Book 24 dramatises this truth from three thousand years away. The deepest repair cannot be compelled by any court or any code. It comes from one human being recognising another. Systems can create the space for this recognition, but they cannot force it. The most a good system can do is make it possible and reward it when it comes. The fifth lesson is the hardest, and it comes from Achilles rather than from Priam. Compensation-based justice has limits, and those limits are set by the willingness of the harmed party to accept repair. When someone decides that only blood will answer their loss, no payment and no process can help. Achilles is that person for much of the poem, and the result is catastrophe for everyone around him. The lesson for modern reformers is not to abandon restorative justice but to be honest about it. It is a powerful tool, not a universal cure. It needs the right conditions: a willing victim, a repentant offender, a supportive community, and a wound that can be answered by repair. Where those conditions are missing, other responses will still be needed. The Iliad refuses to pretend that a single method can solve every case, and any serious modern reformer should refuse to pretend so too. Taken together, these lessons do not amount to a claim that ancient Greece was better than the modern world, or that money can heal every harm. They amount to something more modest and more durable. The core insight of restorative justice, that justice should repair harm and centre the harmed, is not a passing fashion. It is one of the oldest and most tested ideas in human history, visible in Homer, in wergild, and in diyya, and modern reformers are rediscovering rather than inventing it. That long pedigree is itself a kind of evidence. An idea that keeps returning across so many cultures and centuries is probably answering something deep in the way human communities work. Limitations of the Study This study has clear limits, and naming them protects its conclusions. The first and largest is the nature of the source. The Iliad is a poem, not a legal document. Its scenes are shaped by art, by the needs of oral performance, and by the poet's interest in anger and heroism rather than in procedure. The 2021 study of the trial scene rightly cautions that the poet may be exploring several possible ways of settling a quarrel rather than recording one real court (Disobedience in the courtroom, 2021). The article has treated the poem as evidence for how its audience thought about compensation, not as a transcript of actual practice, but this remains an interpretation of literature and should be read as such. The second limit is the risk of comparison across great distances of time and culture. Placing Homeric poine beside modern restorative justice, Germanic wergild, and Islamic diyya is illuminating, but it can also flatten real differences. Each system grew in its own world, with its own beliefs about honour, gods, family, and the state. The article has tried to name the gaps as well as the overlaps, and in particular to stress that Homeric compensation is more transactional and less concerned with emotional repair than the modern ideal. Still, readers should hold the comparisons as suggestive rather than exact. The third limit is scope. The article has focused on four passages and on the vocabulary of payment. It has not tried to give a full account of Homeric society, of the many disputes in the poem that do not involve killing, or of the later development of Greek law toward written codes and the polis. A fuller study would trace the road from Homeric custom to the written laws of the classical city, and would test whether the compensation practices described here really shaped that development. Those questions lie beyond the present article and would reward separate treatment. The fourth limit concerns evidence about outcomes. The article claims that blood money prevented blood feud, but the poem cannot prove this in the way a modern study could. It shows the practice and shows its logic, and comparison with wergild and diyya supports the claim, yet the deep past does not offer the kind of data that lets one measure prevention directly. The argument rests on the internal logic of the practice and on its wide spread across cultures, not on statistics from Homeric Greece, which do not exist. Conclusion The Iliad is remembered as a poem of war, but it is also, quietly, a poem about the alternatives to war. All through it, beside the spears and the funerals, runs a second story about goods, prices, and settlements, about the ways a society without a state tried to turn killing into payment and blood feud into peace. At the center of that story stands poine, the blood money paid for a life, offered and accepted in place of vengeance. Reading the poem with this in view reveals an early and working form of what we now call restorative justice: a practice that centres the harmed family, that asks the wrongdoer to answer in public, that draws the whole community into the outcome, and that prefers repair to ruin. The evidence for this reading runs across the poem. Book 1 shows the danger of refusing a fair offer and reveals that goods are the language of honour and worth. Book 9 gives, in the mouth of Ajax, the plainest statement of the norm, that even a father will accept payment for a dead child and let the killer live on in the land. Book 18 carves the public trial into the Shield of Achilles, showing a community settling a killing through crowd, elders, and open speech, with gold as the prize for the straightest judgment. And Book 24 brings the arc to its close as Priam and Achilles meet, exchange treasure for a body, and achieve, in shared grief, the deepest reconciliation the poem can imagine. Between the refusal that opens the poem and the acceptance that ends it lies the whole argument about anger and its limits. The study of how life was priced shows that Homer's world faced a task no society escapes. To answer a killing without a state, a value had to be placed on the dead, and that value was measured in talents of gold, cattle, and captives, graded by rank and fixed by negotiation under the community's eye. Modern law does the same thing in its own way, through wrongful death damages and the value of a statistical life, though it tends to hide the act and to send the payment to the state rather than to the grieving family. The comparison with wergild and diyya confirms that Homer's practice was one instance of a pattern that recurs wherever families are strong and states are weak, and that the modern turn toward restorative justice is a rediscovery of an ancient wisdom rather than a new invention. That wisdom has limits, and the poem is honest about them. The compensation system works only when the harmed party will accept repair, when the community supports the settlement, and when the offering is enough to answer the wound. Achilles, refusing every payment and demanding blood, is the standing proof that when these conditions fail, nothing is left but the feud. His tragedy is the tragedy of a man who cannot let a life be measured in goods, and it destroys him and those he loves. The lesson for anyone who believes in repair-based justice is to hold both halves of the truth at once. The tool is real, old, and powerful, and it is also conditional and fragile. Homer, standing near the start of the Western tradition, understood the choice between money and blood with a clarity that later ages, for all their courts and codes, have rarely matched. The city at peace, with its public trial and its patient elders, and the city at war, with its endless slaughter, are carved on the same shield, and the poem never lets us forget how thin the line between them is. References Absar, A. A. (2020). Restorative justice in Islam with special reference to the concept of diyya. Journal of Victimology and Victim Justice, 3(1), 8-26. https://doi.org/10.1177/2516606920927277 Allan, A., de Mott, J., Larkins, I. M., Turnbull, L., Warwick, T., Willett, L., and Allan, M. M. (2022). The impact of voluntariness of apologies on victims' responses in restorative justice: findings of a quantitative study. Psychiatry, Psychology and Law, 29(4), 593-609. https://doi.org/10.1080/13218719.2021.1956383 Disobedience in the courtroom: Iliad 18.497-508. (2021). Yearbook of Ancient Greek Epic Online, 5(1), 1-24. Lanni, A. (2021). Taking restorative justice seriously. Buffalo Law Review, 69(3), 635-682. Palermo, G. (2023). Conflict and crime: restorative justice in Italy. Frontiers in Sociology, 8, 1175291. https://doi.org/10.3389/fsoc.2023.1175291 Roberts, T. (2023). Theorizing a restorative response to homicide. Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review, 58. Schein, S. L. (Ed.). (2022). Homer: Iliad Book I. Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics. Cambridge University Press. Viscusi, W. K. (2023). The global COVID-19 mortality cost report card: 2020, 2021, and 2022. PLOS ONE, 18(5), e0284273. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0284273 Wilson, E. (Trans.). (2023). The Iliad by Homer. W. W. Norton and Company. Zehr, H. (2015). The Little Book of Restorative Justice (Revised and updated ed.). Good Books. Topic tags: #BloodMoney #RestorativeJustice #HomerIliad #BloodFeud #PoineAndApoina #ShieldOfAchilles #AncientGreekLaw #QuantifyingHumanLife #ConflictResolution #Wergild #Diyya #VictimCompensation #LegalHistory #ProtoLaw #ClassicalStudies
- The Council of Elders: Constitutionalism and Democratic Precedents in the Achaean Assembly
The Balance of Power in the Iliad between the Sovereign King and the Council of Peers Abstract This article studies how power is shared and contested in Homer's Iliad, with a focus on the meetings of the Greek leaders during the siege of Troy. It asks a simple question with a long history: did the Achaeans, the loose coalition of Greek warlords camped on the plain of Troy, have anything that we could reasonably call a constitution. The study treats three linked institutions, the sovereign king, the council of elders, and the wider assembly of fighting men, and reads three central scenes (the quarrel of Book 1, the testing of the army and the silencing of Thersites in Book 2, and the embassy to Achilles in Book 9) as moments where the limits of royal authority are exposed and debated. Drawing on recent classical scholarship and on modern work in deliberative theory, the article argues that the poem does not show a formal legal order but does show a working system of restraint. The king commands, yet he cannot rule for long against the settled opinion of his peers or the mood of the host. Persuasion, public speech, and the visible symbol of the speaker's staff carry real weight. These practices are not democracy, but they are recognisable ancestors of later Greek political life, and the poem itself seems aware that authority must be earned through counsel and consent as much as claimed by birth. Keywords: Homer; Iliad; Achaean assembly; council of elders; kingship; balance of power; deliberation; consent; constitutionalism; early Greek political thought 1. Introduction The #Iliad is usually read as a war poem, and it is one. Yet from its first hundred lines it is also a poem about who gets to decide. Before a single duel is described in detail, the reader watches two powerful men argue in front of a crowd about whether a captive woman must be returned, about who has the right to a prize, and about what a leader owes to the men who fight for him. The fighting on the plain of Troy is framed, from the start, by talking in the camp. This article takes that talking seriously. It argues that the meetings of the Greek leaders are not background noise before the action, but the place where the poem thinks hardest about #power, obedience, and the difference between a command that is obeyed and a command that is merely shouted. The central problem is the relationship between the #sovereign_king and the #council_of_peers. #Agamemnon holds the highest rank among the Greeks at Troy. He is called the lord of men, and he leads the largest contingent. But he does not rule alone, and the poem never lets us forget it. Around him sits a group of senior warriors, the #council_of_elders, men such as #Nestor, #Odysseus, Diomedes, and the two named Ajax. Beyond them stands the mass of ordinary fighters, the host, who gather in the open space of the #agore, the assembly. The question that runs through the whole epic is how these three levels fit together. When they agree, the army moves as one. When they clash, as they do in Book 1, the result is disaster that stretches across the rest of the poem. To describe this arrangement, scholars have often reached for the language of politics, and even the language of #constitutionalism. That word can be misleading, and the article will spend time defining it carefully. There was no written charter in the Greek camp, no code of laws pinned to a tent, no court that could summon the king. If we insist that a constitution must be a written document enforced by judges, then the Achaeans plainly had nothing of the kind. But if we use the word in a broader and older sense, to mean a settled set of expectations about who may do what, and about the limits that even the most powerful person is expected to respect, then the picture changes. In that broader sense the poem shows a #balance_of_power that is real, if fragile. This study is written for students who are meeting these debates for the first time, so it moves slowly and explains its terms. It also tries to keep two audiences in mind at once. On one side sit the readers who care about Homer as literature and about the ancient world as history. On the other sit readers who care about political theory and want to know whether the roots of #democratic_precedents can honestly be traced this far back. The argument tries to serve both without pretending the evidence is cleaner than it is. The article proceeds in stages. It first sets out the historical and textual background, including the hard problem of what period the poem actually reflects. It then defines what #constitutionalism can and cannot mean for a society without writing and without formal offices. Next it describes the three institutions of Achaean power in turn. It then reads the three key scenes in detail. After that it turns to the ideas of #consent and #persuasion that hold the system together, compares the Greek camp with the Trojan and divine assemblies, and traces the line, cautiously, from Homer to the classical #polis. A discussion section weighs the case for and against calling any of this a constitution, and a conclusion draws the threads together. 2. Background: The Poem, Its World, and the Homeric Question Any argument about #politics in Homer has to begin with a warning about dates. The Iliad describes events supposedly set in the late Bronze Age, around the time historians associate with the great palace centres of Mycenae, Pylos, and elsewhere, perhaps the thirteenth or twelfth century before the common era. But the poem as we have it was shaped over centuries of oral performance and reached something like its current form much later, most scholars think in the eighth or seventh century. The society it pictures is therefore not a simple snapshot of any single moment. It is a layered thing, mixing memories, inventions, and the concerns of the poet's own audience. This layering matters for our topic because #political_institutions are exactly the kind of thing that changes over time. The Bronze Age palaces revealed by the Linear B tablets were run by a powerful central figure, the wanax, who controlled land, labour, and religious life through a large bureaucracy. That is a very different world from the small, face to face communities of leaders and followers that the Iliad actually shows. In the poem there are no tax records, no scribes, no palace economy of that scale. There are chiefs, their households, their followers, and their meetings. Recent work has stressed that the world of the epic is best understood not as a faithful record of one age but as a construction built out of #social_memory, in which older material is reshaped to speak to later listeners (Cosmopoulos, 2025). On this view the political scenes tell us less about how any real king governed in 1200 before the common era and more about how later Greeks imagined leadership, obedience, and the right way to reach a decision. The other great background problem is the so called Homeric question, the long debate about who composed the poems and how. For our purposes the key point is that the Iliad grew out of a tradition of oral #performance. Singers built long poems from inherited phrases, scenes, and story patterns, adjusting them for each audience. One striking consequence, developed at length in modern criticism, is that a scene of #collective_decision_making inside the poem can mirror the process by which the tradition itself settled its disputes. A version of the story that most listeners accepted became, in effect, the agreed version, much as a proposal that wins the approval of the assembly becomes the community's decision. The poem's interest in reaching a shared verdict may reflect the very conditions of its own making (Papanikos, 2021). None of this means the political content is fictional in a way that makes it useless. Quite the opposite. Because the scenes were performed again and again in front of ordinary audiences, they had to make sense to those audiences. The rules of the #agore, the respect owed to an elder's counsel, the anger of a man whose prize is seized, all of these had to feel true to listeners who lived in real communities with their own meetings and their own quarrels. The poem is not a legal treatise, but it is a reliable guide to what its hearers thought normal, admirable, and outrageous in the exercise of #power. That is precisely what a student of early political ideas most wants to know. A final point of background concerns the coalition itself. The Greeks at Troy are not one people under one crown. They are many contingents from many regions, each with its own leader, bound together for a shared war. Agamemnon leads because he brought the most ships and because of his standing, not because he is the natural king of every man present. #Achilles leads the Myrmidons and answers to no one but himself in the last resort. This matters enormously. The relationship between the high king and the other chiefs is closer to that of a chairman among powerful colleagues than that of an emperor among subjects. It is an alliance of near equals with one first among them, and alliances of near equals are exactly the settings in which questions of #shared_authority become sharp. 3. What Constitutionalism Can Mean Without a Written Law Because the word #constitutionalism carries heavy modern baggage, it is worth pausing to separate its possible meanings. In everyday modern usage a constitution is a written document that sets out the structure of government and the rights of citizens, and constitutionalism is the practice of holding rulers to that document. On this narrow definition the Achaeans clearly have no constitution. They have no text, no formal offices with fixed powers, no elections, and no courts with jurisdiction over the king. But there is an older and looser meaning that fits the ancient evidence far better. In this sense a constitution is simply the settled arrangement of a community, the sum of its habits, expectations, and understood limits about who holds authority and how it may be used. The ancient Greek word often translated as constitution, politeia, means something like the way of life or the ordering of a community, not a piece of paper. Under this definition, a society can have a constitution in practice even if it has nothing in writing. What matters is whether there are real limits that even the most powerful person is expected to observe, and whether breaking those limits brings consequences. Read this way, the interesting question about the Iliad is not whether it contains a legal code. It is whether the king faces genuine restraint. Restraint can come in several forms. It can be procedural, meaning there are recognised steps that must be followed, such as summoning an assembly before a major decision. It can be deliberative, meaning that counsel must be heard and that ignoring wise advice is treated as a fault. It can be reputational, meaning that a leader who behaves badly loses the respect and cooperation he needs. And it can be practical, meaning that followers can simply refuse to fight, withdraw, or go home. The argument of this article is that all four kinds of restraint appear in the poem, and that together they add up to a working, if unwritten, #balance_of_power. It helps to compare this with how modern theorists describe political systems that rely on talk rather than force. Recent work in deliberative theory stresses that legitimate decisions in a group are those reached through reasoned exchange, where people give and weigh arguments rather than simply imposing outcomes, and where voting and discussion support each other rather than competing (Chambers and Warren, 2023; Bachtiger and Dryzek, 2024). The Achaean camp is obviously not a modern deliberative democracy. But the poem is fascinated by the same underlying issue, namely how a group of proud and armed men can be brought to act together without constant violence among themselves. Seen from that angle, the #deliberation in the Greek camp is an early, rough attempt to solve a problem that political thinkers are still working on. One more caution is needed. Ancient societies were deeply unequal, and the Iliad is no exception. The men who speak in the council are lords, not commoners. The mass of the army has a voice, but a limited one, as the treatment of Thersites will show. Women, captives, and slaves have almost no formal standing in these meetings at all. To call the arrangement a #democratic_precedent is not to call it democratic. It is to say that certain practices, public assembly, open speech, the expectation that leaders explain themselves, later grew into democratic institutions, while acknowledging how far the starting point was from equality. Recent scholarship on the origins of Greek collective politics tends to stress this mixture of egalitarian trends and stubborn hierarchy rather than a simple straight line toward democracy (Graeber and Wengrow, 2021). 4. The Institutions of Achaean Power 4.1 The King: basileus and anax The Greek terms for a leader in the poem repay attention. The most common is basileus, which in the Iliad does not mean king in the later royal sense so much as a lord or chief, a man of high birth who leads others in war and speaks in council. There are many basileis in the camp, not one. Agamemnon is the greatest of them, and he alone is regularly called anax, a word suggesting overlordship or paramount rank. He is the lord of men, the one to whom the others owe a general deference, but not a king who owns his followers. The sources of his authority are worth listing because they are not the same as modern political power. First there is birth and inheritance. Agamemnon comes from a powerful royal line, and the poem treats high descent as a real claim to lead. Second there is wealth and contribution to the war effort, especially the number of ships and men he brought. Third there is the favour of the gods, symbolised in the sceptre he carries, which the poem traces back to Zeus himself. Fourth there is a personal quality the Greeks valued highly, the ability to command respect through presence, speech, and past deeds. What is striking is how conditional all of this is. The king's authority is real but it is not absolute, and the poem shows the difference sharply. Agamemnon can give orders, and in ordinary matters they are obeyed. But when he tries to use his rank to override the settled sense of what is right, the machinery jams. His seizure of Achilles' prize in Book 1 is technically within his power as the greatest lord, yet it is widely felt to be a violation, and the cost is ruinous. The commentary tradition on the poem's opening book underlines how carefully the language marks Agamemnon's act as an abuse rather than a proper use of authority, and how much the drama depends on the audience recognising the line he crosses (Schein, 2022). Sovereignty in the Iliad, in other words, comes with an unwritten warning label. The king may do many things, but he acts against custom and counsel at his peril. 4.2 The Council of Elders: boule geronton Around the king sits the #boule, the council, sometimes called the council of elders, the boule geronton. The word elder here means senior in standing rather than simply old, though age and experience are valued. The council is a smaller body than the full assembly. It gathers the leading chiefs, the men whose contingents and reputations give them a claim to be consulted before major decisions. The council does several things. It debates strategy in a more private, focused setting than the open assembly. It allows the king to test ideas among his most important peers before committing to them in public. And, crucially, it gives those peers a recognised channel to influence and restrain the king. When Nestor speaks in council, his advice carries weight not because he can force the king to obey but because ignoring the counsel of such a man is understood to be foolish and even shameful. The council is the institution through which #shared_authority is expressed most clearly. It is where the fiction of a single all powerful commander gives way to the reality of a leadership shared among a group of near equals. The most memorable member of the council is Nestor, the aged lord of Pylos, whose long speeches full of memories and advice have sometimes been mocked by modern readers as tiresome. That mockery misses the point. Nestor embodies the value the poem places on experience and measured counsel. His interventions repeatedly try to hold the coalition together, to cool tempers, and to remind the younger and prouder men of the limits they should respect. When he fails, as he does in Book 1, the failure is not his but the king's, and the poem seems to know it. The recurring figure of the wise counsellor whose good advice is not followed became a lasting theme in Greek literature and thought, running forward into the historians who examined how communities make catastrophic choices when counsel is ignored or twisted (Lunbeck and Stone, 2023; Sutton, 2025). 4.3 The Assembly: agore Beyond the council lies the #agore, the assembly of the whole host. This is the largest and most public political body in the poem. It is summoned, often by the king but sometimes by others, in an open space among the ships. The whole army can attend, and while the great lords do most of the speaking, the wider body of fighters is present and its reactions are watched closely. The assembly is not a legislature that passes binding laws by counting votes. It has no fixed schedule and no formal procedure for tallying opinion. Yet it is far from powerless. Decisions of importance are announced and, in effect, ratified there. The mood of the assembled men, expressed through shouts, murmurs, movement, and silence, is a political force that leaders must manage. When the army surges toward the ships in Book 2, ready to sail home, no order can simply stop them. They have to be turned around by persuasion, one man at a time and then as a mass. The assembly is the place where the consent of the governed, in a rough and unequal form, becomes visible and where the gap between a leader's wishes and the will of the men is exposed. It is worth noting how physical and spatial the #agore is. There is a designated place, people take their seats, and there are recognised gestures for beginning and ending. This physical shaping of debate is itself a kind of unwritten rule. The reference works that survey Homeric institutions treat the assembly and the council together as the twin organs of collective life in the poems, the settings in which the community's cohesion is tested and, when things go well, restored. The interest the tradition shows in these gatherings is not accidental. It reflects a society that already thought of public meeting and public speech as the natural way to handle shared problems. 4.4 The Sceptre: skeptron as a Constitutional Object Perhaps the single most revealing detail in the whole system is a piece of wood. The #skeptron, the sceptre or staff, is handed to whoever is about to speak in a formal setting. Holding it marks the speaker as the one entitled to the floor. When a speech ends, the staff can be passed on or thrown down. It is, in a small and concrete way, a device for ordering debate, a physical guarantee that speech happens in turn rather than in chaos. The staff is more than a microphone. In Book 2 the sceptre that Odysseus takes up to restore order is described with a long history reaching back to Zeus, passing through the line of kings to Agamemnon. The object links the human authority to speak and command with the divine order of things. This gives it a quasi legal weight. To hold the staff is to hold, for a moment, a share of legitimate authority that the community recognises. When Odysseus uses that same staff to strike Thersites, the gesture is loaded. The instrument that guarantees orderly speech is turned into an instrument of discipline against a speaker judged to be out of line. The sceptre therefore sits right at the heart of the poem's #political_legitimacy. It shows that even a society without writing can develop symbols that stand in for rules. The rule that only the staff holder may speak is not written anywhere, but the staff makes it visible and enforceable. In this sense the #skeptron is a genuinely constitutional object. It does not limit the king directly, but it structures the process by which decisions are argued and reached, and process is a large part of what any constitution is about. 5. Book 1: The Quarrel as a Constitutional Crisis The opening of the Iliad is often taught as a story about anger, and it is. But it is also the clearest single study in the poem of what happens when the #balance_of_power breaks down. The events are worth following closely. A plague strikes the Greek camp, sent by Apollo because Agamemnon has refused to return Chryseis, the captive daughter of the god's priest. Notice the first political move. It is Achilles, not the king, who calls the assembly to find out why the army is dying. This is already significant. The right to summon the host is not the king's monopoly. A leading chief can convene the community when the common good is at stake. The seer Calchas is then persuaded to speak, but only after Achilles promises to protect him, because the truth will anger the most powerful man present. Here the poem stages a basic tension in any system of authority, the fear that speaking truth to a ruler is dangerous, and the need for protection that makes such speech possible. The theme of frank speech and its risks would become a central preoccupation of later Greek culture, gathered eventually under the idea of open speaking before power (Leppin, 2022). Calchas reveals that the plague will only end if Chryseis is returned. Agamemnon, forced to give up his prize, demands compensation, and insists on taking Achilles' prize, the woman Briseis, in exchange. This is the crisis. Legally, in the loose sense we have been using, Agamemnon may have some claim as the paramount lord to redistribute honours. But the act is felt by everyone as an outrage against custom, because it strips a fellow chief of the visible token of his standing and worth, his geras, the prize that marks his honour. Achilles' fury is not mere personal pique. It is the reaction of a man whose recognised place in the community has been violated by a superior abusing his rank. What follows is a debate about the limits of #sovereignty conducted in the heat of the moment. Achilles openly questions why the men should follow Agamemnon at all, given how the spoils are shared and how little the king seems to risk. The language he uses has struck recent readers as close to the language of revolt, hinting at the possibility of breaking up the whole expedition and turning the army against its commander (Clay, 2022). Whether or not Achilles seriously contemplates rebellion, the very fact that he can raise the question in open assembly shows that the king's authority is not beyond challenge. Nestor then intervenes in the classic role of the elder counsellor, urging both men to step back, reminding Agamemnon that he should not seize the prize and reminding Achilles that he should not defy the greatest of the lords. Nestor's speech is a model of the #council_of_peers trying to hold the constitution together by appealing to shared norms. Nestor fails. Agamemnon takes Briseis. Achilles withdraws from the fighting and prays, through his mother, for the Greeks to suffer so badly that they will feel his absence. The consequences fill the rest of the poem. The lesson the epic draws is unmistakable. When the king overrides custom and ignores counsel, he does not simply win. He breaks something, and the whole community pays. This is restraint by consequence. There is no court to punish Agamemnon, but the structure of the story is itself a kind of judgement. A ruler who treats his rank as unlimited brings ruin, and the poem makes sure the audience sees the causal chain from that first abuse of #power to the deaths that follow. 6. Book 2: The Testing of the Army and the Silencing of Thersites If Book 1 shows a crisis at the top of the hierarchy, between the king and a fellow chief, Book 2 shows a crisis at the bottom, between the leaders and the mass of ordinary fighters. It is one of the most politically dense episodes in the poem. Agamemnon, misled by a deceptive dream, decides to test the army's spirit by proposing, in full assembly, that they abandon the war and sail home. The idea is that the men will refuse and rush to fight with renewed will. The plan backfires spectacularly. When the king says go home, the army takes him at his word and stampedes toward the ships. The scene is a vivid demonstration of a truth the leaders would rather not face. The war continues only as long as the men are willing. Their consent is not a formality. Given an opening, they act on their own desire to leave, and no command can instantly reverse the tide. Here the #popular_voice is shown as a real and even dangerous power, capable of ending the whole enterprise in an afternoon. Order is restored only through effort and, tellingly, through the sceptre. Odysseus, prompted by the goddess Athena, takes up Agamemnon's staff and moves through the crowd. With the chiefs he uses gentle words, reasoning with them as equals. With the common men he uses the staff and sharp rebukes, driving them back. The two different tones are themselves a comment on the social order. The elite are persuaded, the mass is disciplined. This double standard is not hidden by the poem. It is displayed. Then comes Thersites. He is described in unflattering terms, ugly and low born, and he stands up in the assembly to attack Agamemnon directly, accusing him of greed and of profiting from the labour and suffering of better men. What is remarkable is that much of what Thersites says overlaps with what Achilles said in Book 1. The critique of the king hoarding prizes while others fight is nearly the same. The difference lies entirely in who is speaking. When a great chief voices the complaint, it is a challenge that must be answered. When a common man voices it, the assembly is invited to laugh, and Odysseus beats him with the staff, threatening worse if he speaks out of turn again. The men laugh and approve, and Thersites subsides in pain and humiliation. This episode has become a focus for scholars interested in the beginnings of #free_speech and popular criticism in Greek culture. Later Greek writers remembered Thersites as an early example, even a paradigm, of the man who dares to speak frankly against the powerful and pays for it, and the whole tradition of thinking about frank speech circles back to scenes like this one (Leppin, 2022). For our purposes the scene defines the outer limit of the #Achaean_assembly as a political space. The assembly is real. Ordinary men are present and their mood matters. But the right to open, critical speech is not distributed equally. It belongs securely to the great, and only precariously, and at physical risk, to the small. The treatment of Thersites marks the boundary of the system. It shows both that a #popular_voice exists and that it is firmly policed. It is easy to read the beating of Thersites as pure repression, and in one sense it is. But it is worth adding a more careful point. The poem does not simply endorse Agamemnon. Thersites is silenced, yet the substance of his complaint has already been validated by Achilles and by the plot itself. The audience knows the king really did behave badly. So the episode carries a double message. The social order is upheld, the low born critic is put down, but the criticism is not shown to be false. This tension, between an order that must be maintained and a truth that will not go away, is exactly the kind of unresolved political problem that the poem prefers to dramatise rather than solve. 7. Book 9: The Embassy and the Force of Counsel By Book 9 the consequences of Book 1 have arrived. Without Achilles, the Greeks are losing badly. Agamemnon, shaken, calls his council together. The scene that follows is the poem's fullest picture of the #council_of_elders functioning as a check on the king, and of a ruler being brought, however painfully, to reverse himself. In the council Nestor again takes the lead. He tells Agamemnon plainly that the seizure of Briseis was a mistake and that the king must now make amends. This is a striking moment. An elder, in front of the other chiefs, tells the paramount lord that he was wrong and must act to repair the damage. Agamemnon accepts the judgement. He agrees to offer Achilles an enormous set of gifts, along with the return of Briseis, if he will rejoin the fighting. Whatever we call this arrangement, it plainly contains a form of accountability. The king is answerable, in practice, to the collective wisdom of his peers, and when they tell him he has erred he complies. An embassy is chosen to carry the offer, made up of Odysseus, the aged Phoenix, and the great Ajax, with two heralds. The choice itself reflects the workings of #shared_authority, since the mission is a collective act of the leadership rather than a personal errand of the king. The three speakers each try, in their own style, to persuade Achilles to return. Odysseus lays out the gifts and appeals to Achilles' interest and to the danger facing the army. Phoenix, who helped raise Achilles, appeals to affection, memory, and the moral duty to yield to entreaty. Ajax, blunt and soldierly, appeals to the bonds of comradeship and expresses honest bafflement at Achilles' refusal. Achilles rejects them all. His refusal is important for our argument in a way that is easy to miss. It shows that #persuasion, which is the main engine of the whole political system, can fail. The embassy is a model of proper procedure. The king has admitted fault, the council has acted together, generous compensation has been offered, and skilled speakers have made every kind of appeal. And still it does not work, because Achilles has been wounded too deeply and no longer believes that gifts can restore what was taken, namely his honour and his sense that his life is valued. The poem is honest about the limits of talk. A system that runs on consent and persuasion is powerful, but it is not guaranteed to succeed. When trust has been destroyed, even correct procedure may not be enough. There is a further point about the balance of power here. Achilles cannot be commanded. Agamemnon, the paramount lord, is reduced to asking, through intermediaries, and to buying, with treasure, the cooperation he cannot compel. This is the clearest sign in the whole poem that the king's authority over a fellow chief is contractual and reciprocal rather than absolute. A great lord who is treated with contempt can withdraw, and no amount of formal rank can drag him back against his will. The independence of the leading chiefs is a structural limit on the king every bit as real as any written rule could be. 8. Consent, Persuasion, and Legitimacy Standing back from the individual scenes, we can now name the glue that holds the Achaean system together. It is not primarily force, and it is not primarily law. It is #consent, secured through #persuasion and expressed through public speech. Consider how decisions actually move in the poem. A leader has an idea. He raises it, either in the smaller council or in the full assembly. Others speak for and against. The mood of the listeners, whether the great lords in council or the mass in the agore, shifts as the arguments land. A course of action becomes possible only when enough of the relevant people have been brought around to it. When that consensus forms, the decision holds and the community acts together. When it fails to form, or when a leader tries to force a decision without it, things fall apart, as they do in Book 1. Modern readers of the poem have argued that this pattern, the search for a shared verdict that everyone can live with, is so central that it can be regarded as the poem's model of political life, and even as a mirror of how the epic tradition itself reached agreement about its own contested stories (Papanikos, 2021). Persuasion is therefore the master skill of the Homeric leader, at least as important as fighting. The greatest chiefs are also the greatest speakers. Nestor, Odysseus, and even Achilles are marked out by their command of words as much as by their command of weapons. This is a profoundly political fact. In a system where you cannot simply order your equals about, the ability to win them over through speech is the ability to lead. The prestige the poem attaches to eloquence is a sign that the community already understood #power as something that must be argued for in public, not merely seized. Closely tied to consent is #legitimacy, the sense that authority is being used rightly. The poem has a rich vocabulary for this, including words for custom, for what is fitting, and for the settled rulings that a good leader is expected to know and respect. A king who acts within these bounds is obeyed willingly. A king who breaks them, like Agamemnon in Book 1, keeps his rank but loses his standing, and the loss has hard consequences. Legitimacy in the Iliad is thus not a fixed possession that comes automatically with the crown. It is renewed or lost through conduct. This is a genuinely constitutional idea, in the broad sense, because it means the ruler is measured against a standard outside his own will. It is useful again to set this beside modern thinking about how groups make legitimate choices. Contemporary deliberative theory argues that outcomes gain their authority from the quality of the reasoning behind them and from the inclusion of affected voices, and that discussion and decision should reinforce one another rather than being kept apart (Chambers and Warren, 2023; Bachtiger and Dryzek, 2024). The Achaean camp meets almost none of the demanding conditions those theorists set out. Its inclusion is narrow, its procedures are informal, and its equality is thin. Yet the underlying intuition is recognisably the same. A decision that has been talked through and consented to is stronger and more durable than one that has merely been imposed. The Iliad seems to grasp this intuition and to build its whole political world around it. 9. Comparative Perspective: Trojans and Gods The Iliad does not show only one assembly. It shows several, and comparing them sharpens our sense of what is distinctive about the Achaean arrangement. On the Trojan side, the political world looks somewhat different. Troy is a real city with walls, a royal house, and a settled population, not a temporary camp of allied warlords. Its assemblies include not only fighting men but also, at times, the concerns of the wider community. The most instructive Trojan scenes involve the counsellor Polydamas, whose careful advice Hector repeatedly rejects, most fatefully when he insists on keeping the army in the field rather than withdrawing behind the walls. The pattern of the wise adviser overruled by a proud leader appears again here, on the other side of the war, which suggests the poet treated it as a general truth about leadership rather than a fault of one camp. The Trojan material has drawn fresh attention from scholars precisely because it lets the poem stage its critique of stubborn, personal rule in a second setting and so underline that the problem is universal. The divine assemblies on Mount Olympus offer a third model, and in some ways the most revealing. The gods too hold meetings, debate, and reach decisions, and Zeus presides over them as a kind of sovereign. Here the balance of power is tilted much further toward the ruler. Zeus can, in the last resort, impose his will, and he reminds the other gods of his superior strength. Yet even Zeus does not simply dictate. He bargains, he makes concessions, he manages the resentment of powerful figures such as Hera, and he often prefers to secure a measure of agreement rather than rule by naked force. The Olympian scenes thus present a spectrum. At one end sits something close to autocracy, since Zeus is genuinely stronger than the rest combined. At the other end sits the same interest in consensus that runs through the human assemblies. The gods show what a more monarchical version of the system would look like, and even there the poet cannot resist showing the ruler negotiating. Reading the three sets of assemblies together, human Greek, human Trojan, and divine, we can see the poem exploring a range of possible arrangements. The Achaean camp is the most fractured and the most dependent on consent, because it is an alliance of near equals with a weak centre. Troy is more unified under its royal house but still shows the danger of a leader who ignores counsel. Olympus is the most hierarchical, yet even its king governs partly by persuasion. Across all three, one message repeats. Authority that listens and negotiates is stable, and authority that relies on its own strength alone courts disaster. The poem is not neutral about this. It clearly prefers the leader who takes counsel to the leader who does not. 10. From Homer to the Polis: Tracing the Democratic Precedents We can now approach the largest and most delicate claim, the idea that the Achaean assembly contains #democratic_precedents that point forward to the political life of the classical Greek city, the polis. This claim has to be handled with care, because it is easy to overstate. Begin with the genuine continuities. The classical Greek states, most famously Athens but also many others, organised themselves around three kinds of body that map surprisingly well onto the Homeric picture. There was an assembly of citizens, echoing the #agore. There was a council that prepared business and advised, echoing the #boule. And there were leading magistrates and generals, the heirs, in a much altered form, of the Homeric chiefs. The very words survive. The classical council was called the boule, the same term used in the poem for the council of elders. Sparta kept a council of elders called the gerousia, built on the same root as the Homeric word for elder. The physical practice of gathering citizens in a defined public space to hear speeches and register approval is recognisably continuous from the epic assembly to the classical one. Continuities of practice run deep as well. The classical assembly, like the Homeric one, relied on public speech and persuasion. A speaker had to win over the listeners, and the skill of oratory was central to political success in both worlds. The classical idea that a citizen has the right to stand up and address the assembly, to speak frankly even against the powerful, has a clear if distant ancestor in the scenes of open speech we have examined, and in the very anxiety about that speech that the Thersites episode reveals. Later Greek culture would develop this into a prized value, the freedom to speak openly in public life, and would look back on early scenes of daring speech as its forerunners (Leppin, 2022). Now the necessary cautions. The distance between the two worlds is enormous. The Homeric assembly does not vote in any formal sense, does not make law, and does not treat its ordinary members as political equals. Its open speech is a privilege of the great, policed by violence when a commoner presumes too far. The classical democracies, by contrast, gave real decision making power to a broad body of citizens, used formal procedures including voting, and protected the ordinary citizen's right to speak far more securely. The road from the one to the other ran through centuries of change, including the rise of the city itself, changes in warfare and economy, and hard fought political struggles. Recent economic and institutional history stresses how much these later developments depended on new material and social conditions, such as the growth of trade and the reorganisation of the community, rather than flowing automatically out of anything in the epics (von Reden, 2022; Economou, 2024). Scholars have also debated how the crucial ideas of equality and majority rule actually emerged, and many now argue that they grew out of concrete institutional experiments in the archaic and classical periods, including reforms whose logic can be studied almost like the design of rules in a game, rather than out of a straightforward inheritance from heroic society (Schwuchow and Tridimas, 2022). On this view the Homeric material is best seen not as the seed that grew into democracy on its own, but as evidence of a starting condition, a culture already used to public assembly, open speech, and the expectation that leaders explain themselves, from which later, very different institutions could be built once the conditions were right. The honest conclusion is a middle one. The Achaean assembly is a #democratic_precedent in the limited sense that it establishes, at the very beginning of the Greek literary tradition, the habit of doing politics through public meeting and speech, and the expectation that authority faces limits. It is not democratic, and it did not by itself produce democracy. But it kept alive the raw materials, the assembly, the council, the sceptre passed to the speaker, the wise counsellor, the daring critic, out of which later generations built something genuinely new. That is a real inheritance, and it is worth claiming without exaggerating it. 11. Discussion: Was There a Homeric Constitution? We can now return directly to the question that opened the article. Did the Achaeans have a constitution, and if so, in what sense? On the narrow modern definition, the answer is plainly no. There is no written text, no fixed set of offices with defined powers, no courts, no elections, and no formal mechanism by which the king can be removed or compelled. Anyone who insists on that definition should say clearly that the Iliad shows no constitution, and they would be right on their own terms. On the broad definition, the answer is a qualified yes. The poem shows a settled and widely shared understanding of who may do what, and it shows real limits on the most powerful figure, limits that are enforced not by law but by counsel, reputation, consent, and consequence. The king must summon assemblies, at least for major matters, though others may summon them too. He is expected to take counsel and is faulted when he does not. He depends on the willing cooperation of his fellow chiefs and of the mass of fighters, and when he loses that cooperation his power drains away. There are recognised procedures for speech, symbolised by the sceptre, and recognised norms of fair dealing, especially concerning the honours and prizes that mark each man's standing. A ruler who breaks these norms keeps his title but suffers, and the community suffers with him. This is a #balance_of_power in substance if not in form. Several features deserve emphasis in weighing the case. First, the restraint on the king is genuine but indirect. Nothing forces Agamemnon to behave. Yet the whole architecture of the story is built to show that misusing authority is ruinous, which functions as a powerful, if informal, deterrent. The poem itself is doing the work that a court might do in a later society, delivering a verdict on the abuse of #power through the shape of the narrative. Second, the system is unequal to its core. It distributes voice and protection according to rank, and it enforces that distribution, at times violently, as the treatment of Thersites shows. Any account that celebrates Homeric politics as proto democratic has to reckon honestly with this. Third, the system runs on #consent and #persuasion, and it is therefore vulnerable to their failure, as Book 9 makes clear. A constitution of consent is only as strong as the willingness of its members to be persuaded. There is also a methodological caution to restate. Because the poem is a layered oral creation rather than a documentary record, we should be careful about reading its politics as a description of any single historical regime. What we can say with more confidence is that the poem reflects, and helped to shape, a set of political intuitions widely shared among its audiences over a long period. The recurring interest in assembly, counsel, and consent tells us that these ideas were alive and important in the culture that produced and enjoyed the epic (Cosmopoulos, 2025). Whether or not any real king ever behaved exactly as Agamemnon does, the audience clearly recognised the norms he violates and understood why the violation matters. Finally, it is worth reflecting on why the poem is so interested in these questions at all. A pure celebration of heroic strength would not need scenes of debate, counsel, and the limits of command. The fact that the Iliad returns again and again to the problem of how proud and powerful men can act together suggests that this was a live and pressing issue for its listeners. The poem does not offer a solution so much as a searching examination. It shows the cost of an overbearing king and the cost of a chief who withdraws in wounded pride. It shows the value of the wise counsellor and the tragedy of good advice ignored. It shows the assembly as both a source of strength and a source of danger. In dramatising all of this, the epic became, among its many other roles, an early and influential meditation on the nature of legitimate authority, one that later Greek thinkers would build upon in more explicit forms. 12. Conclusion This article set out to examine the #balance_of_power in the Iliad between the #sovereign_king and the #council_of_peers, and to ask whether the Achaean assembly can honestly be described in the language of #constitutionalism and #democratic_precedents. The answer that emerges is careful but positive. The Greek camp at Troy is governed by a system that has no written law and no formal offices, yet it is not a system of pure command. #Agamemnon leads, but he leads a coalition of near equals whose cooperation he cannot compel and whose counsel he ignores at his peril. The #council_of_elders gives the leading chiefs a real channel to advise and restrain the king. The #agore gives the wider host a voice, limited and unequal but genuine, and capable at moments of overturning the leaders' plans. The #skeptron, the speaker's staff, turns the unwritten rule of orderly speech into a visible and enforceable practice. Across the great scenes of Books 1, 2, and 9, the poem stages the workings and the breakdowns of this arrangement with remarkable insight, showing what happens when a king oversteps, when the mass of men is pushed too far, and when even correct procedure fails to restore a broken trust. None of this makes the Achaeans democratic. Their politics is steeply hierarchical, their open speech is a privilege of the great, and their treatment of a low born critic is a warning as much as an invitation. But in the broad and older sense of the word, the poem does show a #constitution, an understood order with real limits on the most powerful figure, limits enforced by counsel, reputation, #consent, and consequence rather than by courts. And in the equally careful sense we have defended, it does contain #democratic_precedents, the deep habits of assembly, public speech, and the expectation that authority must be explained and can be challenged, out of which later Greeks, under very different conditions, built genuinely new political forms. For students approaching the poem, the lasting lesson may be this. Long before there were constitutions on paper, there were communities working out, in practice and in performance, how to hold power to account. The Iliad is one of the earliest and richest records we have of that work. It does not give us a theory of the state, but it gives us something arguably more valuable, a vivid picture of #power being argued over, tested, abused, and restrained, by people who understood, as we still do, that the hardest problem in politics is not how to command but how to be obeyed rightly. References Bachtiger, A., and Dryzek, J. S. (2024). Deliberative Democracy for Diabolical Times. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Chambers, S., and Warren, M. E. (2023). Why deliberation and voting belong together. Res Publica, 29, 1 to 19. Clay, J. S. (2022). Achilles revolutionary? Homer, Iliad 1.191. The Classical Quarterly, 72(2), 934 to 939. DOI: 10.1017/S0009838822000520 Cosmopoulos, M. B. (2025). The World of Homer: Archaeology, Social Memory, and the Emergence of Greek Epic Poetry. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI: 10.1017/9781009582834 Economou, E. M. L. (2024). The Economy of Classical Athens: Organization, Institutions and Society. London and New York: Routledge. Graeber, D., and Wengrow, D. (2021). The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity. London: Allen Lane. Leppin, H. (2022). Paradoxe der Parrhesie: Eine antike Wortgeschichte. Tubingen: Mohr Siebeck. Lunbeck, E., and Stone, R. (2023). The wise adviser trap: catastrophic decision-making in Herodotus and Thucydides. Journal of the History of Ideas, 84(3), 417 to 440. Papanikos, G. T. (2021). Collective decision-making in Homer's Odyssey. Athens Journal of Mediterranean Studies, 7(1), 9 to 40. Schein, S. L. (Ed.). (2022). Homer: Iliad Book I. Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Schwuchow, S. C., and Tridimas, G. (2022). The political economy of Solon's law against neutrality in civil wars. Public Choice, 192(3 to 4), 219 to 254. Sutton, D. (2025). Thucydides' ambiguous trap. Classical Antiquity, 44(2), 352 to 385. von Reden, S. (Ed.). (2022). The Cambridge Companion to the Ancient Greek Economy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. #Homer #Iliad #Achaean_assembly #council_of_elders #balance_of_power #constitutionalism #democratic_precedents #basileus #boule #agore #skeptron #Agamemnon #Achilles #Nestor #Thersites #shared_authority #deliberation #consent #ancient_Greek_politics #classical_studies
- The Status of Non-Combatants: Prisoners of War and the Ransom Economy in Early Mediterranean Jurisprudence
This article traces how the treatment of captured fighters and other #non_combatants moved from a matter of private honor and family wealth to a matter of public law across the ancient Mediterranean. It begins with the #ransom scenes in Homer's #Iliad, where a captured man's fate rested on the mood of his captor, the intervention of the gods, and the size of the gifts his family could offer. It then follows the practice into Archaic and Classical #Greece, where cities developed shared expectations about #captives without ever writing them into a single code, and into #Rome, where jurists built a technical legal machinery around capture, loss of status, and return. The Roman law of #postliminium and the rules governing the citizen and the slave who were bought back from the enemy show how deeply ancient society thought about the legal person who had passed into hostile hands. The article argues that the modern law protecting #prisoners_of_war did not appear out of nothing in the nineteenth century. It grew out of a long Mediterranean habit of treating the captive as a being whose life could be spared for a price, and it slowly replaced that market logic with the idea that protection is owed to the prisoner as a right rather than sold to him as a favor. Drawing on recent scholarship in classics, Roman law, and the history of international law, the study offers students a connected account that runs from Priam kneeling before Achilles to the Third #Geneva_Convention of 1949. Keywords: prisoners of war; ransom; Homeric epic; Roman law; postliminium; international humanitarian law; ius gentium; captivity; enslavement; Mediterranean jurisprudence 1. Introduction Every society that goes to war has to decide what to do with the people it captures. The soldier who lays down his weapon, the sailor pulled from a wrecked ship, the civilian trapped inside a fallen town, the body of a dead enemy lying on the field: each of these raises the same hard question. Are they property to be sold, enemies to be killed, guests to be protected, or persons with rights that survive their defeat? The answer a culture gives reveals a great deal about how it understands #mercy, ownership, and the limits of violence. The ancient Mediterranean gave many answers at once, and they did not always agree. In the world of #Homer, the fate of a captured man was decided face to face, in the space between the raised spear and the offered gift. By the time of classical Athens and Sparta, whole cities argued in their assemblies about whether to spare or destroy a defeated population. In Rome, the question passed into the hands of professional jurists who defined, with striking precision, what happened to a person's legal identity the moment he fell into enemy hands and what happened again if he came home. Much later, European lawyers took these older materials and reworked them into the beginnings of the modern #law_of_war. This article follows one thread through that long history: the connection between #ransom and legal status. Ransom is the practice of releasing a captive in exchange for payment. It sits at an uncomfortable point between kindness and commerce. A captor who accepts ransom does not kill his prisoner, which looks like restraint. But he also treats that prisoner as a source of profit, which looks like the opposite of respect. The #ransom_economy of the ancient world was built on exactly this double meaning. Studying it helps us see how the idea of protecting the captive grew slowly out of the idea of pricing him. The plan of the article is straightforward. After a short note on approach, it examines the ransom and #supplication scenes of the Iliad and what they tell us about the captive's status in a world without formal war law. It then turns to Archaic and Classical Greece, where custom hardened into shared expectation. Next it studies the Roman legal treatment of capture, especially #postliminium and the redeemed captive, drawing on recent detailed work in Roman law. It then considers the ransom economy as an economic and social system spanning the whole sea. Finally it traces the long road from ancient #custom to the codified #humanitarian_law of the modern age, and it closes by asking what genuinely changed and what quietly endured. 2. Approach and Sources This is a work of synthesis rather than of new textual discovery. It reads well known literary and legal sources through the lens of a single question and places them beside recent secondary scholarship. The primary materials are of three kinds. First, the Homeric epics, above all the Iliad, which give us our earliest sustained Greek picture of capture, ransom, and the treatment of the enemy dead. Second, the Greek historians and orators, especially Herodotus, Thucydides, and Xenophon, together with the recently recovered fragment of the Athenian orator Hyperides, who record how classical cities actually treated the people they captured. Third, the Roman juristic tradition preserved in Justinian's Digest and in the imperial constitutions, which contains the technical rules on capture, #slavery, and return. The secondary literature used here is deliberately recent, so that students can follow current debates. Work on Homeric #reciprocity and #gift_economy by Kyriakou (2022) frames the ransom scenes. The treatment of war and slavery in the Greek and Roman worlds draws on Ducrey (2022) and on the essays collected by Kamen and Marshall (2021) and by Taylor (2021). The Roman law of the redeemed captive is examined in the detailed monograph by Rodeghiero (2022). The long history of the #ius_gentium and its passage into modern law is informed by Karr (2022), Benham (2022), Beneyto (2022), and Schroder (2021). The modern endpoint of the story rests on the updated commentary of the International Committee of the Red Cross on the Third Geneva Convention (ICRC, 2021) and on current debate about POW release recorded by Zajac (2024). A word of caution is needed. Ancient sources describe the treatment of captives from the point of view of the powerful. They tell us what victors did and what elite writers thought about it. They rarely give voice to the captive. This means that the ransom economy we can reconstruct is mostly the economy as seen by those who profited from it. Backler (2022), studying enslaved children in a fourth century Athenian speech, shows how much emotional and social reality is hidden behind the flat legal language of ownership. That warning should sit at the back of the reader's mind throughout. 3. The Homeric World: Ransom Before Law 3.1 A world governed by honor, not statute The society shown in the #Iliad has no courts of war, no written treaties on captives, and no neutral authority to enforce rules of conduct. What it has instead is a dense web of expectations held together by honor, by the fear of the gods, and by the personal reputation of warriors. In this world the treatment of a captured enemy is not a legal question. It is a moral and social one, decided in the moment by the man who holds the spear. Yet the poem is full of moments that look like the seeds of later legal ideas. There are guest friendships that bind families across the battle line. There is the sacred protection owed to the #suppliant who clasps a stronger man's knees. There is the recognized custom that a father may buy back his son, alive or dead, for a fitting price. These are not laws in any formal sense. They are shared understandings, and the drama of the Iliad comes in large part from watching characters honor them, ignore them, or break them under the pressure of grief and rage. The force that stands behind these understandings is religion, not the state. The bond of guest friendship, known as xenia, is watched over by Zeus in his role as protector of guests and strangers. A warrior who violates a suppliant or abuses a guest risks the anger of the gods, and the poem is careful to show that such anger has teeth. When Agamemnon insults the priest Chryses, the arrows of Apollo answer within days. When Achilles abuses the corpse of Hector, the gods themselves grow uneasy and move to end the outrage. In a society without judges of war, the divine order performs the function that law would later perform. It sets an outer limit on what even the strongest man may do, and it does so by making cruelty toward the protected a form of impiety. This is worth dwelling on, because it reveals the very old idea, present long before any code was written, that some acts in war are wrong in a way that goes beyond the private feelings of the men involved. The captive, the suppliant, and the guest are protected not by their own power, which they have lost, but by a moral order that claims to stand above the victors. 3.2 Chryses, Agamemnon, and the refused ransom The poem opens with a #ransom. The priest Chryses comes to the Greek camp carrying great gifts to buy back his captured daughter, Chryseis, who has been given to Agamemnon as a prize of war. The whole army wants Agamemnon to accept, both because the ransom is rich and because Chryses is a priest of Apollo whom it is dangerous to insult. Agamemnon refuses, insults the old man, and drives him away. Chryses prays to Apollo, and the god sends a plague on the Greeks. Only after nine days of death does Agamemnon give the girl back, and even then without payment, as a forced surrender rather than an honorable exchange. Several things stand out. The captive here, Chryseis, is a woman treated openly as property, a geras or honor gift distributed to a commander from the spoils. Her father's offer of ransom is presented as the normal, expected thing to do, and Agamemnon's refusal is presented as a fault that brings disaster. Even in this pre legal world, then, there is a felt norm: ransom offered in good faith and backed by religious status ought to be accepted. The gods, not any human court, enforce that norm. As Kyriakou (2022) stresses in her study of exchange in the epic, what circulates in these encounters is never only goods. It is also honor, obligation, and the recognition of the other party as someone who can be dealt with rather than simply destroyed. 3.3 Lycaon and the ransom that is refused in rage If the story of Chryses shows ransom working as it should, the story of Lycaon shows it collapsing. Lycaon is a young son of Priam. Earlier in the war Achilles captured him, spared his life, and sold him overseas to the island of Lemnos, from which he was in turn ransomed and made his way home. Now, in the terrible days after the death of Achilles' friend Patroclus, Lycaon meets Achilles again on the battlefield. He grasps the hero's knees in #supplication and begs for his life a second time, reminding Achilles that he once spared him and took payment for him. Achilles refuses. He tells Lycaon that in the past, before Patroclus died, he was willing to spare and to sell Trojans, but that now he will kill every enemy who falls into his hands. He then kills the unarmed, pleading young man. The scene is one of the most chilling in the poem precisely because it shows a warrior deliberately switching off the norm of ransom. Achilles is not ignorant of the custom. He describes it accurately and then announces that his grief has placed him beyond it. The episode teaches a hard lesson about the Homeric order: the protection of the #captive depended entirely on the captor's willingness to grant it, and that willingness could vanish in an instant. There was no rule standing above the individual to force restraint. 3.4 Adrestus, Menelaus, and the pressure of the group A similar moment occurs earlier when the Trojan Adrestus falls at the feet of Menelaus and offers a rich ransom of bronze, gold, and iron stored in his father's house. Menelaus is on the point of accepting and handing the man over to be taken back to the ships alive. Then his brother Agamemnon runs up and argues fiercely that no Trojan should be spared, not even the child in the womb. Menelaus is persuaded, pushes Adrestus away, and Agamemnon kills him. This scene adds a further dimension. The decision to spare a #prisoner was not always a private one. It could be shaped by the will of the group, by the strategic aims of the leaders, and by the collective anger of an army. Mercy that one warrior was ready to grant could be overruled by another. The captive stood exposed not only to one man's feelings but to the shifting politics of the whole host. 3.5 Priam and Achilles: ransom as reconciliation The Iliad ends with its greatest ransom scene, and it is not the ransom of a living man but of a corpse. After killing Hector, Achilles drags the body behind his chariot and refuses to give it up for burial, an act of rage that shocks even the gods. At last the gods intervene. Thetis is sent to tell Achilles to accept ransom, and the messenger goddess Iris is sent to tell Priam to go and offer it. Guided by Hermes through the night and past the guards, the old king enters Achilles' shelter alone, kneels, clasps the hands that killed his son, and begs for the body. He brings a magnificent #ransom of robes, gold, cloth, and vessels. Achilles weeps, thinks of his own father, and gives the body back. Kyriakou (2022) reads this exchange as the emotional and structural climax of the poem, a moment where the ordinary mechanics of gift and counter gift are lifted into something close to shared humanity. The gifts still matter. Achilles is careful about the transaction, and he sets the terms. But the scene shows ransom at its most dignified, functioning not merely as a purchase but as the frame within which two enemies can briefly recognize each other as men who suffer and who will die. Taken together, the four episodes map the full moral range of Homeric ransom. Chryses shows the norm respected under divine pressure. Lycaon shows it refused in grief. Adrestus shows it overruled by the group. Priam shows it redeemed as reconciliation. In none of these cases does a law decide the outcome. In every case the outcome flows from character, emotion, religion, and the delicate economy of honor. The captive is, in legal terms, a thing whose value can be converted into gifts. What raises him above pure property is only the willingness of others to see him as more. 3.6 The captive as property and the shadow of enslavement It is important not to romanticize the Homeric world. The living captives who move through the poem, above all the women, are treated frankly as spoils. Briseis and Chryseis are prizes handed to commanders. When cities fall, the expected fate of the women and children is #enslavement and of the men is death. Andromache imagines, with dread, the servitude that awaits her once Troy falls. Ransom, when it appears, is the exception that proves the rule. It is the one narrow channel through which a person of enough value, with kin rich enough to pay, might be pulled back from the fate that swallowed the rest. This is the deep structure that later law inherited. At its root the ancient captive was a body that had passed into another's power and become, by that fact, a form of wealth. Everything humane that grew up around this fact, from the custom of ransom to the eventual rules of #humanitarian_law, was in a sense a long argument against the starting assumption that the defeated belong to the victor. 4. Archaic and Classical Greece: From Custom to Convention 4.1 The three fates of the captured When we move from the world of the epic to the historical Greece of the Archaic and Classical periods, the sources change. Instead of poetry we have history, oratory, and inscriptions. The picture that emerges is one of custom without code. Greek cities shared a rough sense of what could and could not be done to #captives, but they never gathered these expectations into a single binding law, and they broke them often. A captured combatant in Classical #Greece faced essentially three possible fates, as the recent survey by Ducrey (2022) makes clear. He might be killed, especially in the immediate heat of battle or when it served the political purpose of the victor. He might be enslaved, either kept by the captor or, far more commonly, sold to slave dealers who followed the armies. Or he might be released, either through #ransom paid by his family or city, or through a formal exchange of prisoners at the end of hostilities. Which fate befell a given prisoner depended on his value, his city's wealth, the customs of the moment, and the temper of the victors. Ransom was common enough that scholars believe there was, in some periods, a roughly conventional going rate for an ordinary captured soldier, a sum modest enough that a moderately prosperous family or a city treasury could meet it. High status prisoners commanded far more. This conventional pricing is itself significant. It shows that the release of prisoners had become a semi regular institution, predictable enough to have a customary tariff, rather than a purely individual bargain struck from scratch each time. 4.2 The special horror of andrapodismos Against this background of relatively regulated exchange stood a much darker practice, the wholesale enslavement of a captured population, which the Greeks called #andrapodismos. When a city was stormed and its people were subjected to andrapodismos, the pattern was brutal and deliberate. The men of fighting age were usually killed. The women and the older children were seized to be sold or kept. The very old and the very young, who had little market value, were often left to die. Recent scholarship, including the fragment of Hyperides studied by Backler (2022), lets us glimpse the human cost of this trade, including the deliberate separation of enslaved children from their families, a cruelty that the ancient speaker himself presents as extreme. The historians record famous instances. During the Peloponnesian War the Athenians debated, in the case of Mytilene, whether to kill the entire adult male population of a rebel city, decided to do so, and only narrowly reversed the order the next day. In the case of Melos they did carry out the full andrapodismos, killing the men and enslaving the women and children. The Spartans in turn executed the surrendered defenders of Plataea after a show trial. These episodes were shocking even to contemporaries, which is precisely why the historians recorded and discussed them. They mark the outer edge of what custom permitted, the point at which the treatment of #non_combatants and prisoners passed from harsh normality into remembered atrocity. Taylor (2021) and the contributors to that volume place such mass killings within a longer ancient history of organized destruction of populations. 4.3 Restraints that pointed toward law Yet Greek practice also contained restraints that pointed, however faintly, toward the later idea of protected persons. Certain categories of people were supposed to be inviolable. Heralds who carried messages between armies were protected by custom and by their association with the god Hermes. Suppliants who took refuge at an altar or a sanctuary were, in principle, not to be dragged away and killed, though this rule too was violated. The right to recover and bury the dead after a battle was widely recognized, so much so that asking for a truce to collect the dead was understood as an admission of defeat. Panhellenic sanctuaries such as Olympia and Delphi enjoyed a special peace. None of these amounted to a #law_of_war in the modern sense. There was no institution to enforce them and no fixed penalty for breaking them, beyond the anger of the gods and the damage to one's reputation among other Greeks. But the very existence of a shared vocabulary of the forbidden, of acts that were considered impious or shameful even in war, shows a society feeling its way toward the notion that armed conflict has limits. The captive, the suppliant, the herald, and the dead were the figures around whom that early sense of limit gathered. 4.4 Prisoners as strategic assets Classical Greece also shows the captive functioning as a strategic and political tool, not merely as a commodity. The clearest example is the affair of Sphacteria during the Peloponnesian War, when a body of Spartan soldiers, including full Spartan citizens, surrendered to the Athenians rather than fight to the death. This astonished the Greek world, since Spartans were expected to die rather than yield. The Athenians did not kill or sell these prisoners. They took them to Athens and held them as hostages, using the threat to their lives as leverage to keep the Spartans from invading Athenian territory. Here the captive's value lay not in the ransom he could bring but in the political pressure his captivity could exert. This use of prisoners as bargaining chips, as living guarantees of an enemy's good behavior, would echo through the whole later history of captivity, and it connects the ancient world to modern debates about prisoner exchange and release, of the kind analyzed by Zajac (2024). The prisoner, in this mode, is neither purely property nor yet a protected person. He is a piece on the board, valuable because the other side wants him back. 4.5 Agreements, exchanges, and the first written arrangements Classical Greece also produced the earliest recognizable forms of agreement about captives. When wars ended, or when they paused in truces, the parties often arranged for the mutual return of prisoners, sometimes for a fixed payment per head and sometimes as a straight exchange of one captive for another. These arrangements were negotiated, spoken aloud, and occasionally recorded in the terms of formal treaties inscribed on stone. They were not a general law binding all cities for all time, but they were something new: specific, written, enforceable understandings about what would happen to captured men. The distinction matters for the argument of this article. A general custom that captives may be ransomed leaves everything to the goodwill and calculation of the individual captor. A treaty clause that says these named prisoners shall be returned upon payment of this sum creates an obligation that a city can be held to and shamed for breaking. In the movement from the first to the second we can see, in miniature, the whole later development of the law of captives. The treatment of the prisoner begins to pass out of the private economy of honor and profit and into the public sphere of agreements between communities. Ducrey (2022) situates these exchange arrangements within the broader picture of Greek warfare, where the fate of the captured was increasingly a matter for negotiation between states rather than for the sole decision of the soldier who happened to take them. 5. Rome: Capture, Loss of Status, and the Law of Return 5.1 The captive who ceased to be a person in law Rome is where the treatment of captives first becomes, in a full sense, a matter of technical #jurisprudence. Roman jurists did not simply describe what happened to prisoners. They analyzed the legal consequences of capture with a rigor that no earlier Mediterranean society had applied to the question, and the concepts they developed still shape legal thought. The Roman starting point was severe. When a Roman citizen was captured by an enemy, he suffered what the jurists called capitis deminutio maxima, the greatest loss of legal standing. In the eyes of Roman law he became a #slave of the enemy. His marriage was suspended, his property fell into abeyance, his power over his children was interrupted, and for most legal purposes he ceased to exist as a person. Capture did not merely imprison the body. It dissolved the legal self. This was the logical extreme of the ancient assumption that the defeated belong to the victor. Rome, unlike Homeric Greece, wrote that assumption directly into its private law. Capture in war was recognized as a lawful source of ownership. The captured enemy, and the captured Roman alike, became by the fact of capture the property of whoever held him. 5.2 Postliminium: the fiction of return Because the consequences of capture were so drastic, Rome needed a mechanism to undo them when a captive came home, and it built one of remarkable elegance. This was the institution of #postliminium. Under the law of postliminium, a Roman who had been captured and who then returned to Roman territory recovered his former legal status automatically, as if he had never been away. His citizenship revived, his authority over his children resumed, and most of his rights snapped back into place. The jurists explained this by a legal fiction, treating the period of captivity as a kind of suspended interval that the return simply cancelled. The scope and limits of postliminium were worked out in fine detail, and the standard treatments in Roman legal literature preserve the arguments of the classical jurists. Certain things did not return through the fiction. Marriage, for example, was treated as a matter of fact rather than pure law and did not automatically revive. A citizen who chose to remain with the enemy, or who had voluntarily deserted, forfeited the benefit. And a returning captive found in a genuinely neutral country, rather than back on home soil, did not yet enjoy the effect, which is why prisoners in neutral territory still needed to be ransomed to gain their freedom. There was also a poignant refinement for the captive who died in enemy hands. Ordinarily such a person had died a slave, which would have invalidated any will he had made as a free citizen. A special rule, associated with legislation of the late Republic, created the fiction that such a captive had died at the very moment of his capture, while still legally free, so that his will remained valid and his estate could pass to his heirs. The law thus reached even into the grave to soften the harshness of the doctrine that capture destroyed the person. 5.3 The redeemed captive: ransom inside the law Postliminium dealt with the captive who escaped or was freed by the fortunes of war. But what of the captive who was bought back for money, the #redemptus_ab_hostibus, the one redeemed from the enemy? This figure raised a delicate problem, and it is the subject of the detailed recent study by Rodeghiero (2022), which examines both the redeemed citizen and the redeemed slave. The problem was this. If a fellow Roman paid a #ransom to free a captive, the freed person owed his liberty and his very legal existence to the payer. Roman law had to decide what claim the payer held over the person he had redeemed. The classical jurists and the imperial rescripts, as Rodeghiero (2022) shows, gave a striking answer. The redeemed citizen fell under a kind of pledge, a ius pignoris, in favor of the Roman who had ransomed him. The redeemer could physically hold the redeemed person, keeping him in a state of dependence, until the ransom price was repaid, whether by the redeemed person himself or by a third party. Only when the money was returned was the bond dissolved, and the sources describe that release using the very language of releasing a pledge. Several features of this arrangement are historically important. The pledge did not extend to the redeemed person's property or to his children, so it was a hold over the body of the freed captive rather than over his whole estate. And the redeemer had no ordinary lawsuit to recover the ransom money. His security lay entirely in his power to detain the person until repayment. In effect, Roman law converted the humane act of ransoming a captive into a defined legal relationship, one that hovered between freedom and servitude. The redeemed person was not a slave, but he was not fully free either until the debt was cleared. For the redeemed slave the analysis differed again. Here the question was whether the original master or the redeemer owned the slave after redemption. An imperial constitution, the so called constitutio de redemptis whose precise date is uncertain, provided that ownership of the ransomed slave passed to the redeemer rather than reverting to the former master, subject to its own conditions. Rodeghiero (2022) reconstructs this tangled area with care, and the details need not detain a student here. The point that matters is the larger one. Rome took the raw Mediterranean practice of ransom and subjected it to legal reasoning, producing a body of rules about who owned or held whom, and on what terms, after a captive changed hands for money. 5.4 Capture and ownership as part of the ius gentium Roman jurists located the rules on capture, slavery, and postliminium within a wider legal category, the #ius_gentium, the law common to all peoples. In the classic description preserved in later encyclopedic sources, the ius gentium was said to include the occupation and fortification of settlements, wars, captivity, servitude, postliminium, treaties of peace, truces, the inviolability of ambassadors, and related matters. Almost all nations, it was thought, observed these things, and that shared observance was taken as the mark of the ius gentium. This is a crucial idea for the later story. By classing captivity and ransom as part of a law common to all peoples, Roman thought implied that these practices were not merely local Roman rules but reflected something in the shared conduct of humanity. When early modern jurists began to construct a genuine law between nations, they reached for exactly this Roman vocabulary. As Karr (2022) shows in her study of humanist jurisprudence, the ius gentium became a bridge concept, carried out of Roman private law and gradually rebuilt into a public law governing the relations of states. Benham (2022) traces related legal thinking about war, truce, and the treatment of the defeated across medieval Europe, showing that the thread was never entirely lost between antiquity and the modern age, and Beneyto (2022) sets these developments within a global history of the discipline. Rome also possessed an older ritual law of war, the ius fetiale, administered by a college of priests, which governed the proper way to demand redress and to declare war. This fetial tradition, with its concern for the just declaration of hostilities, fed into the later notion of the just war, the idea that war itself must satisfy conditions of legitimacy. Although the fetial procedure faded as Rome's wars grew distant and imperial, its underlying assumption, that even war is subject to rules and forms, survived and mattered. 5.5 Cannae and Regulus: the politics of refusing ransom Two famous episodes from the Roman Republic show that ransom, so ordinary elsewhere in the ancient world, could become a matter of high political principle at Rome. After the crushing defeat at Cannae in 216 BC, in which the Carthaginian general Hannibal captured thousands of Roman soldiers, Hannibal offered to let Rome ransom its captured men. The Senate, after debate, refused. It chose to abandon its own citizens in enemy hands rather than pay for their return and, in doing so, to signal that Rome would not be bargained with even in the depths of catastrophe. The refusal was harsh toward the prisoners, whose one hope of freedom it destroyed, but it was designed to teach Rome's soldiers that surrender carried no soft exit and to deny Hannibal both the money and the propaganda victory that a ransom would have given him. The legend of Regulus points in the same direction. Captured by the Carthaginians in an earlier war, Regulus was said to have been sent to Rome on parole to negotiate a prisoner exchange, having sworn to return to captivity if he failed. According to the tradition, he argued in the Senate against the very exchange he had been sent to propose, urging his countrymen to reject it, and then kept his oath by going back to Carthage and death. Whatever its historical truth, the story was cherished at Rome as a model of how a captured citizen should place the interests of the state and the sanctity of his sworn word above his own life and freedom. Both episodes reveal a distinctive Roman attitude. The handling of prisoners was not only an economic transaction or a private mercy. It was bound up with the honor of the state, the discipline of the army, and the credibility of Rome in the eyes of its enemies. This political dimension of captivity, the sense that how a nation treats and recovers its prisoners is a statement about the nation itself, would remain a powerful theme long after the ancient ransom economy had faded. 6. The Ransom Economy as a Mediterranean System 6.1 A market in captured persons Stepping back from the details of Greek custom and Roman law, we can see the outline of a genuine economy that spanned the ancient sea, an economy in captured human beings. Warfare produced captives on a large scale. Those captives were, in the plainest economic terms, an asset that could be liquidated in one of two ways. They could be sold into #slavery, converting the captive into cash at once. Or they could be held for #ransom, betting that their families or cities would pay more to recover them than a slave dealer would. The choice between these two paths depended on calculation. A humble soldier with no wealthy kin was worth more sold to a dealer than held for a ransom that would never come. A nobleman, a magistrate, or a citizen of a rich city was worth holding, because the ransom he could command far exceeded his price on the slave market. Ducrey (2022) and the broader literature on ancient #slavery emphasize that war was one of the great engines feeding the ancient slave supply, and that the captive stood at the junction between the battlefield and the slave market. 6.2 Piracy, banditry, and the private ransom trade The ransom of captives was not confined to formal warfare between states. Throughout antiquity, pirates and bandits made a business of seizing travelers and holding them for #ransom, and this private predation was a constant background hum of Mediterranean life. Wealthy captives taken by pirates could expect to be ransomed by their families, and the sums involved could be enormous. The famous story of the young Julius Caesar captured by pirates, who is said to have scoffed at the ransom they set and demanded they raise it, belongs to this world of routine kidnapping for profit. This private ransom trade blurred the line between war and crime. From the captive's point of view, being seized by an enemy army and being seized by pirates led to much the same predicament: a period of captivity ended, if he was lucky and valuable, by a payment. Roman law recognized this by treating the person redeemed from pirates or bandits within the same framework as the person redeemed from a wartime enemy, as Rodeghiero (2022) notes in discussing the citizen ransomed from pirates or brigands. The legal machinery of redemption served both the soldier and the kidnapped traveler. 6.3 Continuity across the sea and across time One of the most striking features of the Mediterranean ransom economy is its persistence. The basic pattern, in which capture in war or by raiders led either to enslavement or to release for payment, remained recognizable for many centuries and across many cultures around the same sea. Recent work on later Mediterranean slavery, such as the survey by Bonazza (2023), describes how war, privateering, and piracy continued to feed a lively trade in captives well into the early modern period, with elaborate institutions growing up to arrange the ransom of captives across religious and political frontiers. This long continuity matters for our argument. It shows that the treatment of the captive as a saleable and redeemable asset was not a peculiarity of one ancient culture but a durable Mediterranean institution. When reformers finally moved to abolish the ransoming and enslavement of prisoners and to replace them with a regime of protection, they were pushing against a practice with very deep roots. The remarkable thing is not that the ransom economy lasted so long. It is that it was, in the end, largely dismantled. 7. From Ancient Custom to Modern Humanitarian Law 7.1 Grotius and the reworking of the old materials The bridge between the ancient handling of captives and the modern law of war runs through the early modern jurists, and above all through Hugo #Grotius. In his great work on the law of war and peace, published in 1625, Grotius gathered the scattered ancient materials, the Roman rules on captivity and postliminium, the Greek and Roman historical examples, and the philosophical arguments about justice, and tried to weave them into a coherent law governing the conduct of nations. Grotius did two things that were decisive for our story. First, he took the Roman concept of #postliminium, originally a rule of private law about the return of individuals and property, and generalized it into a principle of the law of nations, applicable to the recovery of persons, property, and even territory once the enemy's power over them was broken. Schroder (2021), in the volume on the later thinker Vattel who built on Grotius, shows how this generation of jurists transformed inherited Roman categories into the working vocabulary of a public law between states. Second, and more important for the fate of the captive, Grotius reported a striking change in practice. He acknowledged that by the strict letter of the ancient law of nations, captives taken in war could lawfully be killed or enslaved. But he observed that the Christian nations of his own day had, by custom, abandoned the enslavement of fellow Christians taken in war, substituting instead the practices of ransom and exchange. This was a momentous shift, even if Grotius recorded it rather than invented it. The default fate of the European prisoner had moved from enslavement to ransom, and from ransom the road led, slowly, toward release. 7.2 The nineteenth century turn to codification For a long time the treatment of prisoners remained governed by custom, by the honor of commanders, and by ad hoc agreements between belligerents, rather than by binding written rules. The great change came in the nineteenth century, when states began to write the customary law of war down and to bind themselves to it by treaty. The nationalization of warfare, the rise of mass conscript armies, and the sheer scale of modern battles made the older personal and market based handling of prisoners unworkable and, increasingly, morally intolerable. An early landmark was the code of rules drafted for the armies of the United States during its civil war in 1863, the so called Lieber Code, which set out in clear terms how prisoners and civilians were to be treated. Composed by the jurist Francis Lieber and issued as instructions to the field armies, it declared that a prisoner of war was subject to no punishment for being a public enemy and no revenge for having fought, and that the captor state owed him subsistence and humane care. This was a plain statement, in the language of a modern military order, of principles that the ancient world had only felt its way toward and never fixed. The Lieber Code was followed by international efforts, notably the Hague Regulations agreed at peace conferences at the turn of the twentieth century, which laid down that prisoners of war were in the power of the enemy state rather than of the individuals who captured them, and that they must be treated humanely. The same instruments limited the destruction and seizure of enemy property and tried to protect civilians and towns from the older logic of plunder and sack. This single shift, from the captor as private owner to the capturing state as public custodian, was the quiet death of the ancient logic. Once the prisoner belonged to a state that owed him humane treatment, he could no longer be sold, and he could no longer, in principle, be held for #ransom as private profit. The whole edifice of ancient ransom, redemption, and enslavement rested on the assumption that the captive was owned by his captor. Remove that assumption, and the edifice falls. 7.3 The Geneva system and the prisoner as rights holder The modern law of #prisoners_of_war took its mature form in the twentieth century, in response to the mass captivities of the world wars. A dedicated convention on prisoners of war was concluded in 1929, and after the catastrophe of the Second World War it was thoroughly revised and expanded as the Third #Geneva_Convention of 1949, one of the four Geneva Conventions that form the core of modern #humanitarian_law. The updated commentary of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC, 2021) sets out how this body of law is understood today. Two principles of the modern regime show most clearly how far the law has traveled from its ancient starting point. The first is combatant immunity. A lawful combatant who is captured cannot be punished simply for having fought. His detention is not a penalty but a precaution, intended only to keep him from returning to the fighting, and he must be released and sent home once active hostilities end. As the ICRC commentary (2021) explains, the prisoner is protected against prosecution for lawful acts of war, and the whole convention flows from the requirement that prisoners be treated humanely and with respect for their dignity. The captive is no longer a criminal, a commodity, or a source of profit. He is a protected person whose rights the detaining state must honor. The second principle is that the prisoner may not be ransomed, sold, or used for private gain, and may not even validly renounce his own protections. The modern prisoner cannot be held hostage for payment, cannot be bought and sold, and cannot bargain away the guarantees the law gives him. In the ancient world the captive's one hope was often that he was valuable enough to ransom. In the modern world his protection does not depend on his value at all. It attaches to him because he is a human being who has fallen into the power of the enemy. This is the deepest reversal in the whole history we have traced. 7.4 Old problems that have not gone away It would be wrong to present the modern law as a finished triumph. Many of the hardest questions that troubled the ancient world remain alive, in new forms. The status of fighters who do not belong to a regular army, of irregulars and of members of non state armed groups, is fiercely contested, just as the ancient world struggled with pirates, bandits, and enemies it refused to recognize as legitimate. The temptation to display, humiliate, or exploit captured enemies has not disappeared, and modern conflicts have shown prisoners paraded and abused in violation of the law. Even the old logic of the prisoner as a bargaining asset persists in the practice of prisoner exchanges and in debates, such as that framed by Zajac (2024), over how the release and parole of captives should be organized and enforced. These continuities are humbling. They suggest that the ancient ransom economy was not simply a primitive stage that humanity has left behind, but an expression of pressures, economic, military, and psychological, that any system for handling captives must still contain. The modern law has changed the default from exploitation to protection. It has not abolished the underlying temptations. 8. Discussion: What Changed and What Endured Looking back over the whole arc, from the ransom of Chryseis in the first book of the #Iliad to the commentary on the Third #Geneva_Convention, we can identify with some precision what genuinely changed and what quietly endured. What changed most fundamentally was the source of the captive's protection. In the Homeric world protection was a gift, granted or withheld at the will of the captor and enforced only by honor and the gods. In Classical Greece it was a shared #custom, real but unwritten and often broken. In Rome it became a matter of technical private law, with the captive's very legal personhood switching off at capture and switching on again through the fiction of #postliminium. In the modern world it became a right, owed to the prisoner by the capturing state and enforceable, at least in principle, as a matter of international obligation. The line runs from favor, to custom, to private law, to public right. That is the central movement of the whole story. What endured, running underneath this movement like a stubborn current, was the market logic of #ransom. The idea that a captured person has a price, and that his fate can be settled by payment, proved extraordinarily durable. It shaped the Homeric ransom scenes, the conventional ransom tariffs of Classical Greece, the elaborate Roman law of the redeemed captive analyzed by Rodeghiero (2022), the pirate ransom trade, and the long Mediterranean commerce in captives described by Bonazza (2023). The modern law's refusal to let prisoners be ransomed or sold is best understood as a deliberate and hard won rejection of this ancient current, not as evidence that the current was ever weak. A third theme deserves emphasis. Throughout the history, the treatment of #non_combatants and captives served as a kind of moral thermometer for a society at war. The Greeks remembered #andrapodismos at Melos and the execution of the Plataeans as stains precisely because they exceeded what custom allowed. Rome softened the doctrine that capture destroyed the person with the humane fictions of postliminium. Grotius recorded with evident approval that his own age had given up enslaving its prisoners. The modern law makes humane treatment the organizing principle of the entire prisoner regime. In every period, how the captive was treated was taken as a measure of the captor's own character. That intuition, that the way we treat the defeated reveals who we are, may be the oldest and most continuous element in the entire tradition. Finally, the study cautions against a simple story of progress. The recovered voice of the enslaved, glimpsed in the fragment studied by Backler (2022), reminds us that behind every legal category stood real suffering that the sources mostly hide. And the persistence of old problems in new conflicts, noted above, shows that the ancient pressures have been contained rather than removed. The history of the captive is not a clean ascent from cruelty to kindness. It is a long and unfinished argument, conducted across three thousand years and the whole width of a sea, about whether the person who falls into our power is a thing we own or a human being we owe. 9. Conclusion This article set out to trace the evolution of the legal rights granted to captured soldiers, comparing the #ransom practices of the #Iliad with the beginnings of modern #humanitarian_law. The path led through four distinct worlds. In Homer, the captive was a form of wealth whose life depended on the captor's honor and the gods' will, and #ransom was the fragile channel of mercy running through a landscape of killing and #enslavement. In Classical #Greece, shared custom created rough expectations about captives, restrained by ideas of sanctuary and #supplication and shattered by episodes of mass #andrapodismos. In #Rome, jurists turned capture into a precise legal event, dissolving and restoring the person through #postliminium and regulating the redeemed captive through the law of pledge reconstructed by Rodeghiero (2022). In the modern age, the #prisoners_of_war regime of the Hague Regulations and the #Geneva_Convention system converted the captive from a commodity into a protected rights holder, as set out in the ICRC commentary (2021). The single most important conclusion is that modern protection grew out of, and against, the ancient #ransom_economy. The market in captured persons was the soil from which the idea of humane treatment slowly germinated, first as an alternative to killing, then as an alternative to slavery, and finally as a right that does not depend on the captive's price at all. The connections drawn here between #Homer and the law of Geneva are not a matter of direct borrowing. They are a matter of a single long conversation, carried forward by the Roman jurists, generalized by #Grotius, and codified by the modern lawmakers, about the standing of the defeated human being. For students, the lesson is both historical and moral. The rules that protect prisoners today are recent, fragile, and often violated, but they rest on a very old and very deep human argument. Watching Priam kneel before Achilles to ransom his son's body, and watching a modern state be told that it may not sell or ransom the soldiers in its power, we are watching two moments in the same story. The distance between them measures how far the ancient Mediterranean, and the world that inherited it, has traveled from the assumption that the captured belong to the captor. That the journey is unfinished is the best reason to keep telling it. #prisoners_of_war #ransom_economy #Iliad #Mediterranean_jurisprudence #international_humanitarian_law #postliminium #ius_gentium #ancient_warfare #Homer #Geneva_Convention #Roman_law #captivity #non_combatants #law_of_war #classical_studies References Backler, K. (2022). Sisterhood, affection and enslavement in Hyperides' Against Timandrus. Classical Quarterly, 72(2), 469-486. DOI: 10.1017/S0009838822000787. Benham, J. (2022). International Law in Europe, 700-1200. Manchester: Manchester University Press. Beneyto, J. M. (2022). Historia del Derecho Internacional Publico: Una Aproximacion Global. Madrid: Tecnos. Bonazza, G. (2023). Slavery in the Mediterranean. In D. A. Pargas and J. Schiel (Eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of Global Slavery throughout History. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. Ducrey, P. (2022). Slaves and War. In S. Hodkinson, M. Kleijwegt and K. Vlassopoulos (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Greek and Roman Slaveries. Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI: 10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199575251.013.7. International Committee of the Red Cross. (2021). Commentary on the Third Geneva Convention: Convention (III) relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Kamen, D. and Marshall, C. W. (Eds.). (2021). Slavery and Sexuality in Classical Antiquity. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. Karr, S. L. (2022). Jus Gentium in Humanist Jurisprudence: On Justice and Right. Leiden and Boston: Brill. Kyriakou, P. (2022). Reciprocity and gifts in the encounters of Diomedes with Glaucus and Achilles with Priam in the Iliad. Hermes, 150(2), 131-149. DOI: 10.25162/hermes-2022-0009. Rodeghiero, A. (2022). Redemptus ab hostibus (Salzburger Studien zum Europaischen Privatrecht 37). Berlin: Peter Lang. DOI: 10.3726/b19315. Schroder, P. (Ed.). (2021). Concepts and Contexts of Vattel's Political and Legal Thought. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Taylor, T. S. (Ed.). (2021). A Cultural History of Genocide in the Ancient World. London: Bloomsbury Academic. Zajac, M. (2024). Bring Them Home: Creating a Humane and Enforceable POW Parole System. Journal of Military Ethics, 23(3-4).
- Proportionality in Warfare: The Lex Talionis of Achilles' Rage versus Modern Humanitarian Law. Evaluating Achilles' Desecration of Hector's Body in the Iliad against Contemporary Standards of the Gene
This article places one of the oldest scenes of battlefield cruelty in Western literature beside the youngest body of rules that tries to govern such cruelty. When Achilles kills Hector in Homer's Iliad, he does not stop at victory. He pierces the ankles of the dead man, ties the corpse behind his chariot, and drags it in the dust, then repeats the abuse for days around the tomb of his fallen friend Patroclus. The poem itself treats this as shameful, and the gods intervene to protect the body until it is ransomed and returned to Hector's father, Priam. Modern #international_humanitarian_law, built mainly around the four #Geneva_Conventions of 1949 and their Additional Protocols of 1977, would classify what Achilles did as a clear breach of the protection owed to the dead. The study argues that the popular label of "#proportionality" hides two different ideas. In the ancient world the guiding measure is a talionic, reciprocal one, a matching of harm to harm, expressed through #vengeance and #ransom. In modern law, proportionality is a narrow technical rule about incidental civilian harm during attacks, while the treatment of an enemy corpse is governed instead by rules on #human_dignity, on the prohibition of #mutilation, and by the rejection of #reciprocity as an excuse for cruelty. Reading the two systems together shows both a real moral distance and a surprising continuity, because the Iliad already voices, through the reaction of the gods and the final meeting of Achilles and Priam, the same intuition that later hardened into binding law. Keywords: #proportionality, #lex_talionis, #Achilles, #Hector, #Iliad, #Geneva_Conventions, #desecration, #international_humanitarian_law, #human_dignity, #reciprocity INTRODUCTION The Iliad opens with a single word that sets its whole course, the Greek word for wrath, transliterated as menis. The poem is not the story of the Trojan War as a whole. It is the story of the anger of one man, Achilles, and of what that anger does to him, to his friends, and to his enemies. Near the end of the poem this #rage reaches its darkest point. Achilles has killed Hector, the greatest defender of Troy, in single combat. That killing is lawful by the standards of the world of the poem. What follows is not. Achilles refuses Hector's dying request for the return of his body, threads leather straps through the tendons behind the dead man's feet, lashes the corpse to his chariot, and drags it face down through the dirt back to the Greek ships. Over the following days he keeps up this abuse, hauling the body around the burial mound of Patroclus, the friend whose death first drove him back into battle. For a reader in the present day, the scene raises an obvious question. If this happened in a modern armed conflict, what would the law say? The short answer is that it would be treated as a serious violation. The abuse of the body of a dead enemy is prohibited by the #Geneva_Conventions, by the customary rules that bind all parties to armed conflict, and by the statute of the International Criminal Court, which lists outrages upon personal dignity, including against the dead, as a #war_crime (Obregon Gieseken and Londono 2025). Yet the longer answer is more interesting, and it is the subject of this article. The word most people reach for when they describe Achilles' cruelty is that it was out of all #proportion. That instinct is sound, but it mixes together two very different meanings of proportion, and untangling them tells us something important about how the ethics of war have changed. The first meaning belongs to the ancient world and to a long tradition of thinking about punishment. It is the idea of #lex_talionis, the law of retaliation, summed up in the phrase an eye for an eye. On this view proportion means matching, a wrong repaid by a like wrong, no more and no less (Lewis 2025). Achilles' fury is fed by exactly this logic. Hector killed Patroclus, so Hector must die, and in Achilles' overheated grief even Hector's death does not feel like enough. The second meaning belongs to modern law. There, #proportionality is a precise and limited rule about attacks that may harm civilians. It asks whether the expected harm to civilians and civilian objects would be excessive compared with the concrete and direct military advantage that the attack is meant to achieve (Van den Boogaard 2023). This rule has nothing directly to do with how a soldier treats the body of an enemy he has already killed. That question is answered by other rules entirely, the rules on #human_dignity and the prohibition of despoilment and mutilation of the dead. The argument of this article is therefore twofold. First, that Achilles' desecration of Hector's body cannot be judged by the modern rule of proportionality in the strict legal sense, because that rule is about civilian harm in attacks and not about the dead. It must instead be judged against the rules protecting the dead and against the deeper principle of #humanity that stands behind the whole system. Second, that when the comparison is drawn correctly, the Iliad turns out to be far closer to modern moral thinking than its violence first suggests, because the poem itself condemns what Achilles does. The condemnation comes from the gods, from other warriors, and finally from Achilles himself when he yields to the grief of an old man. The gap between the ancient poem and the modern treaty is real, but it is a gap of law and enforcement, not a gap of basic moral feeling. BACKGROUND AND REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE Three separate streams of scholarship meet in this study, and it is worth setting each of them out before joining them. The first stream is classical scholarship on the Iliad, and in particular on its final book. Recent work has moved away from treating the poem simply as a celebration of martial #glory and has paid close attention to its treatment of grief, pity, and the dead. The most useful single point of reference is the collaborative commentary edited by Ready, which devotes a separate chapter to each of the poem's twenty four books (Ready 2024). Pratt's chapter on Book 24, the book of the ransom of Hector, reads the closing movement of the poem as a deliberate turn from anger toward pity, marked by shared mourning between Achilles and Priam and by rituals that restore a broken order (Pratt 2024). Schein's edition of Book 1 sets out the framing role of #menis, the wrath that begins the poem, and shows how the first and last books mirror one another (Schein 2022). Together these works establish that the abuse of Hector's corpse is not presented by the poet as ordinary heroic behaviour. It is presented as an excess that troubles gods and men alike, and the plot works steadily to correct it. The second stream is the law of armed conflict, and specifically the part of it that protects the dead. For most of its history the law of war said little about corpses. The turning point came with the #Geneva_Conventions of 1949 and their two Additional Protocols of 1977, which created concrete duties to search for, collect, and respect the dead, and which prohibit their #despoilment and mutilation. The single most comprehensive recent treatment is the study by Obregon Gieseken and Londono, who set out the full framework of duties owed to the dead and to their families, and who explain that the failure to preserve the #dignity of the dead is bound up with the dignity of the living relatives who are left without answers (Obregon Gieseken and Londono 2025). A companion study reviews how these duties apply in current conflicts and how they connect to the wider protection of missing persons (Parrin et al. 2025). At the level of the United Nations, a thematic report by the Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions has restated that respect for the human body does not end at death and that the dead have rights (Tidball-Binz 2024). On the specific rule of #proportionality in attacks, the fullest modern account is by Van den Boogaard, who shows how the rule works in practice, why it is hard to apply, and how it differs from other legal balancing tests (Van den Boogaard 2023). The third stream is the study of #reciprocity and retribution, which is where the ancient and modern worlds most obviously part ways. In philosophy and legal theory, the phrase an eye for an eye has been re-examined by Lewis, who treats #lex_talionis not as a call for barbarity but as a limiting principle, a ceiling on punishment that says the response must not be more severe than the wrong (Lewis 2025). In the law of armed conflict, by contrast, the trend has been to strip reciprocity of its force. Peeler traces how #reciprocity was written into the language of the Conventions yet has been steadily constrained (Peeler 2021). Grzebyk examines the role reciprocity still plays in the creation, application, and respect of humanitarian rules, and confirms that compliance cannot lawfully be made conditional on the enemy's behaviour (Grzebyk 2024). Romani analyses belligerent #reprisals, the clearest surviving form of tit for tat in the law of war, and charts the long movement away from them (Romani 2025). These works matter here because Achilles' conduct is driven precisely by a reciprocal, retaliatory logic, the very logic that modern humanitarian law refuses to accept as a defence. What has not been done, and what this article attempts, is to bring the three streams into a single frame. Classical scholars have described the moral shape of the poem. Lawyers have described the modern rules. But the two literatures rarely speak to each other, and when they do, the word #proportionality is used loosely, as if the ancient talionic sense and the modern legal sense were the same thing. The contribution here is to keep the two senses apart, to apply each correctly, and to show what the comparison reveals about both the distance and the continuity between the ethics of Homer's world and the ethics of the Geneva system. APPROACH AND METHOD This is an interpretive and comparative study rather than an empirical one. It works with two kinds of primary material and one method of joining them. The first body of material is literary. The events discussed are taken from the text of the Iliad itself, cited by book and line in the standard way, so that readers using any edition or translation can locate them. The reading follows the plain sense of the narrative and relies on recent classical scholarship, above all the book by book commentary edited by Ready and the chapter on Book 24 by Pratt, to guard against private or eccentric interpretation (Ready 2024; Pratt 2024). No modern translation is quoted at length, and the Greek terms used, such as menis for wrath, apoina for ransom, and eleos for pity, are given in plain transliteration and explained in ordinary words. The second body of material is legal. The rules discussed are drawn from the #Geneva_Conventions of 1949, their Additional Protocols of 1977, the customary rules identified by the International Committee of the Red Cross, and the statute of the International Criminal Court. Because the aim is to state the law accurately rather than to argue a contested legal point, the study leans on recent secondary analyses that summarise the settled position, in particular the work on protection of the dead and on the rule of proportionality (Obregon Gieseken and Londono 2025; Van den Boogaard 2023). The method that joins the two is what may be called controlled analogy. A pure analogy, treating Achilles as if he were a soldier in a modern army subject to a modern code, would be an anachronism and would prove nothing. Instead the study asks a narrower and fairer question. If we take the underlying values that modern humanitarian law is built to protect, the #dignity of the person, the limit on cruelty, the refusal to let #vengeance become law, do those values already appear in the Iliad, and if so, how does the poem express and enforce them without a written code? Framed this way the comparison is not a trial of a Bronze Age hero under twentieth century treaties. It is an inquiry into how two very different cultures handle the same recurring problem, the temptation to abuse the body of a defeated enemy. THE HOMERIC EPISODE. ACHILLES, HECTOR, AND THE LOGIC OF RAGE To judge the desecration fairly, its place in the story must be clear. The abuse of Hector's body is not an isolated act of random cruelty. It is the peak of a chain of grief and #vengeance that runs through the whole second half of the poem. Achilles begins the Iliad in a rage against his own commander, Agamemnon, who has taken from him a captive woman, Briseis, awarded to Achilles as a prize of #honor, the Greek geras. Feeling dishonoured, Achilles withdraws from the fighting and prays that his own side will suffer. His prayer is granted. The Greeks are driven back to their ships, and Achilles' closest companion, Patroclus, borrows Achilles' armour and enters the battle to save them. Patroclus is killed by Hector. This death transforms Achilles' anger. It is no longer wounded pride against Agamemnon. It is #grief and a burning need to make Hector pay. Recent readings stress that this second wrath, the wrath against Hector, absorbs and overwhelms the first (Schein 2022). The killing of Hector in Book 22 is, by the standards of the poem, a fair fight between two warriors, and no ancient audience would have condemned it. What the audience does react to is what comes before and after the blow. As Hector faces Achilles, he proposes a pact. Whichever of them wins should not outrage the body of the loser but should return it to his people for proper burial. Achilles rejects the pact with savage words, wishing that his fury would let him eat Hector's flesh raw. This refusal is important. Hector appeals to a shared custom, the duty owed to the dead, and Achilles openly tramples it. The moral marker is planted by the poet before the corpse is ever touched. After Hector dies, Achilles carries out the desecration. He pierces the tendons behind Hector's feet, passes leather thongs through them, binds the body to the back of his chariot so that the head trails in the dust, and drives back to the ships dragging the corpse behind him. This is the image that has fixed itself in the Western imagination, often in the slightly altered form of Achilles dragging the body around the walls of Troy in full view of Hector's family. Careful readers of the Greek have long noted that the text does not quite say this. In the poem Achilles drags Hector to the ships in Book 22, and then, over the days that follow in Book 24, he repeatedly hauls the body around the tomb of Patroclus. The famous circuit of the city walls is a later blending of the chase before the duel with the dragging after it (Ready 2024). The distinction matters for accuracy, but it does not soften the act. Whether around the walls or around the tomb, the intent is the same, to keep punishing a man who is already dead, to deny him the #burial that every culture in the poem treats as sacred. Two features of the episode deserve emphasis because they shape the comparison with modern law. The first is that the target of the cruelty is a corpse. Hector is beyond pain. The abuse cannot deter him, cannot defeat him again, and serves no military purpose. It is expression, not strategy. It is grief turned into #desecration. The second feature is that the poem does not let the act stand as acceptable. The gods are appalled. Over the days of dragging, the god Apollo protects Hector's body from decay and from disfigurement, so that despite everything Achilles does, the corpse remains whole. Aphrodite guards it as well. Then the gods debate the matter openly, and the sun god rebukes Achilles as a man who has lost all #pity and all shame, whose behaviour dishonours even himself. Zeus resolves the quarrel by arranging for the body to be ransomed and returned. This divine machinery is the poem's way of stating a rule. There is a line that even the greatest hero may not cross, and crossing it brings not honour but the anger of heaven (Pratt 2024). The final movement completes the correction. Guided by the god Hermes, the aged king Priam crosses the battlefield at night, enters Achilles' shelter alone, and does the almost unthinkable. He kneels and kisses the hands of the man who killed his son. He asks Achilles to remember his own father, Peleus, who will one day grieve for Achilles as Priam now grieves for Hector. Something breaks in Achilles. He weeps, first for his own losses and then with the old king for theirs, and he agrees to return the body. He also grants a truce of eleven days so that the Trojans can mourn and bury Hector without attack. The poem ends not with a sack of the city or a triumph, but with the funeral of the enemy prince, conducted in a peace that Achilles himself has given (Pratt 2024). The arc from #rage to #pity is complete, and the desecration has been shown, from within the poem's own values, to be a wrong that had to be undone. LEX TALIONIS AND THE ANCIENT GRAMMAR OF RECIPROCITY If Achilles' cruelty is not military strategy, what drives it? The answer lies in the reciprocal logic that governs the moral world of the poem, the same family of ideas that later crystallised in the phrase an eye for an eye. The world of the Iliad runs on exchange. #Honor, the Greek time, is gained and lost through gifts, prizes, insults, and revenge. When someone takes from you, whether a prize or a life, the balance must be restored, either by return of the like or by a payment that stands in for it. This is why the taking of Briseis by Agamemnon is such a wound. It is a public subtraction from Achilles' honour, and it demands redress. It is also why the death of Patroclus cannot simply be mourned. It must be paid for, and the only currency Achilles will at first accept is Hector's death. This is the ancient grammar of reciprocity, and it works in both directions, positive and negative. A gift calls for a return gift. A killing calls for a killing. Seen inside this grammar, the killing of Hector is proportionate in the talionic sense. A life has been taken, so a life is taken in return. The problem is that Achilles does not stop at the balancing point. Grief pushes him past it. Killing Hector does not bring Patroclus back and does not quiet the pain, so Achilles keeps striking at the only target left, the body. Here the talionic measure, which is supposed to limit revenge to a matching return, breaks down. Modern analysis of #lex_talionis stresses exactly this restraining function. Properly understood, the law of retaliation is not a licence for cruelty but a ceiling on it. The response may match the wrong, but it may not exceed it (Lewis 2025). By that standard Achilles' own tradition would judge him. Hector's death repays Patroclus. The dragging of the corpse repays nothing. It is a surplus of vengeance with no counterweight, and the poem registers it as such through the reaction of the gods. The customs that Achilles violates are not vague sentiments. In the poem they carry the weight of what the Greeks called themis, roughly the body of what is right and customary, sanctioned by the gods. Three of these customs are directly relevant. The first is the treatment of the dead, the duty to allow burial and to refrain from outrage on a corpse, the very duty Hector invokes before he dies. The second is supplication, the protection owed to a person who humbles himself and begs, which Priam performs when he clasps Achilles' knees and kisses his hands. The third is guest friendship and #ransom, the accepted practice by which a captive or a body could be recovered for payment. All three are founded on notions of status, exchange, and reciprocity that the whole society recognises, and all three are backed by the fear of divine anger if they are broken. When Priam offers a rich ransom and supplicates Achilles, he is not making a personal plea alone. He is invoking a shared order that even Achilles, at the height of his power, is not free to ignore forever. This is the crucial point for the comparison that follows. The Homeric world does have restraints on wartime cruelty. They are not written in a treaty and not enforced by a court. They live in custom, in reputation, in the expectations of the community, and above all in the belief that the gods watch and punish. They are reciprocal in nature, built on the idea that harm answers harm and gift answers gift. Modern humanitarian law keeps the restraint but changes its foundation. It removes the reciprocity, replaces the gods with institutions, and writes the rule down. Understanding that shift is the task of the next section. THE MODERN ARCHITECTURE OF PROPORTIONALITY AND PROTECTION OF THE DEAD Modern #international_humanitarian_law is the body of rules that limits how wars may be fought once they have begun. Its core is the four #Geneva_Conventions of 1949 and the two Additional Protocols of 1977, supported by a large set of customary rules that bind even states that have not signed particular treaties. To see where Achilles' conduct fits, four ideas need to be separated, because they are often run together in casual speech. The first idea is #distinction. Parties to a conflict must distinguish at all times between combatants and civilians, and between military objectives and civilian objects, and may direct attacks only at the former. The second idea is #military_necessity, the principle that force may be used only to achieve a legitimate military aim and not for its own sake. The third idea is #humanity, sometimes framed as the prohibition on causing suffering that is not required by military necessity. The fourth idea is proportionality in the strict legal sense. This last one is the source of most confusion, so it must be stated carefully. In the law of armed conflict, proportionality is a rule about attacks that are expected to cause incidental harm to civilians. It prohibits an attack if the expected civilian harm would be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated (Van den Boogaard 2023). It is, in plain terms, the rule against disproportionate collateral damage. The immediate consequence for our subject is decisive. The legal rule of proportionality does not, on its own terms, govern the treatment of a dead enemy soldier. Hector is a combatant, killed in a fair fight. He is not a civilian, and after his death he is not an object of attack at all. So the technical proportionality rule, the one written into Additional Protocol I, simply does not reach what Achilles does to the corpse. This is why the popular framing of the desecration as a proportionality problem is, in strict legal language, a category error. The cruelty is real and unlawful, but the rule that condemns it is a different one. The rule that does reach it is the protection owed to the dead, and here modern law is detailed and firm. The Conventions require that parties take all possible measures to prevent the dead from being despoiled, and they prohibit the #mutilation of dead bodies. These duties appear across the treaties, in the First Convention on the wounded and sick, in the Second on those shipwrecked at sea, in the Fourth on civilians, and in Additional Protocol I, and they are restated in customary form so that they bind in every armed conflict, whether between states or within one (Obregon Gieseken and Londono 2025). The customary rule that captures the point most plainly states that each party must take all possible measures to prevent the dead from being despoiled and that mutilation of dead bodies is prohibited. This is the modern equivalent of the custom Hector invokes and Achilles breaks. The prohibition on abusing the dead does not stand alone. It sits inside a wider set of positive duties that together form a coherent regime. Parties to a conflict must, whenever circumstances permit and especially after fighting, search for and collect the dead without adverse distinction, so that bodies are not simply abandoned on the field. They must take steps to identify the dead, recording the information needed to establish who a person was, and they must, on request, help return the remains of the deceased to the party or the family to which they belong (Parrin et al. 2025). Behind all of these duties stands a single organising idea, the right of families to know the fate of their relatives. The failure to preserve the dignity of the dead is, in this analysis, inseparable from the dignity of the living who are left behind, because a body that is desecrated, hidden, or lost is also a father, a mother, or a child denied the truth and denied a grave to mourn at (Obregon Gieseken and Londono 2025). Read against the Iliad, this is exactly what is at stake in Priam's night journey. The old king does not come for treasure or for terms. He comes for the body of his son, so that Hector can be washed, mourned, and buried, and so that a father can perform the last duty a parent owes a child. The modern right of the family to recover and honour the dead is the codified form of Priam's plea. Beyond the specific prohibition, the law rests these duties on a broader foundation, the concept of #human_dignity. Common Article 3 of the Conventions, the article that applies as a minimum in all conflicts, forbids outrages upon personal dignity. The commentaries make clear that this idea extends to the dead, whose bodies are to be treated honourably and with respect, whose identities are to be established, and whose graves are to be marked and respected (Obregon Gieseken and Londono 2025). The dead, in other words, are not simply discarded matter once the fighting is done. They remain persons in the eyes of the law, owed respect, and their families are owed the truth about their fate and, where possible, the return of the remains (Parrin et al. 2025; Tidball-Binz 2024). The catalogue of forbidden acts is specific and, read against the Iliad, striking. It includes the desecration of bodies, the taking of body parts as trophies, the public display of corpses to humiliate the enemy, and the denial of honourable burial. Every one of these has an echo in what Achilles threatens or does. These are not merely aspirational statements. The mutilation of the dead and the commission of outrages upon their dignity are treated as war crimes. The statute of the International Criminal Court lists outrages upon personal dignity among the crimes within its reach, and this has been understood to cover the abuse of corpses (Obregon Gieseken and Londono 2025). What was, in Homer's world, an offence against custom and against the gods has become, in the modern world, an offence against codified law, subject to individual criminal responsibility and, in principle, to prosecution. There is one more feature of modern law that must be set out, because it marks the sharpest break from the world of the Iliad. That feature is the rejection of #reciprocity as a condition of compliance. In the ancient scheme, obligations run on exchange. You honour the custom because others honour it, and because breaking it invites retaliation. Modern humanitarian law deliberately cuts this cord. Its rules are not a bargain that lapses when the other side cheats. The duty to respect the wounded, the prisoner, and the dead does not depend on the enemy doing the same (Grzebyk 2024). The clearest survival of the old reciprocal logic is the belligerent #reprisal, the act of breaking a rule in order to force the enemy back into compliance, and the long trend of the law has been to fence reprisals in and, where protected persons are concerned, to forbid them outright (Peeler 2021; Romani 2025). The reason is practical as much as moral. If compliance depended on the enemy, then a single atrocity could unravel the whole system in a spiral of matching cruelties. The law refuses to let harm answer harm, which is precisely the answer that Achilles' world takes for granted. COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS. MEASURING ACHILLES AGAINST MODERN STANDARDS With both systems set out, the comparison can be made carefully, point by point, without collapsing one into the other. Start with the killing of Hector itself. Under modern law, the deliberate killing of an enemy combatant who is actively fighting is lawful. Hector is a soldier, not a civilian, and he is engaged in combat when Achilles kills him. Judged by #distinction and #military_necessity, the killing is not a violation. The rule of proportionality in the legal sense does not even arise, because that rule is about incidental harm to civilians, and there is no civilian harm here. So the death of Hector, which is the very act the talionic logic demands as payment for Patroclus, would not be a crime today. This is a useful result, because it shows that the ancient and modern systems agree on the lawful core. Both permit the killing of an enemy warrior in battle. Their disagreement is not about that. Now turn to the treatment of the body, which is where the two systems meet the same problem and answer it in comparable ways. Modern law is unambiguous. Piercing the tendons of a dead enemy, dragging the corpse behind a vehicle, and denying it #burial would be a clear breach of the prohibition on mutilation and despoilment of the dead, and would amount to an outrage upon personal dignity, a #war_crime under both customary law and the statute of the International Criminal Court (Obregon Gieseken and Londono 2025). If Achilles were a commander in a contemporary force, the dragging of Hector's body would expose him to prosecution, quite apart from the killing that preceded it. On this point the verdict of modern law is straightforward and severe. It would be a mistake, though, to treat Achilles' act as a relic. The forms of abuse the law names are the same forms that recur in conflict after conflict, which is one reason the modern regime spells them out so carefully. The taking of body parts as trophies, the public display of corpses in order to humiliate the defeated side, the filming and sharing of such images to spread fear, and the denial of burial as a way of prolonging punishment are all listed among the prohibited acts precisely because they keep happening (Obregon Gieseken and Londono 2025). The technology has changed the reach of the cruelty rather than its nature. Where Achilles dragged a body before the eyes of an army, a modern combatant can broadcast the same humiliation to the world in seconds, stripping the dead of dignity at a scale the Bronze Age could not imagine and inflicting fresh wounds on families who see the images. The impulse is identical, the desire to keep hurting an enemy who is already beyond harm, and to convert a private grief or rage into a public spectacle of dominance. Reading the Iliad next to the modern rule is therefore not an antiquarian exercise. It is a way of recognising a very old temptation in its newest dress, and of seeing why the prohibition has to be stated in plain and non negotiable terms. The interesting question is not whether modern law would condemn the act, which it plainly would, but whether the Iliad condemns it too, and by what mechanism. Here the comparison yields its most important finding. The poem does condemn the desecration, and it does so through devices that function, in their own way, like the modern rule. The custom Hector cites before dying, the duty to return the dead for #burial, is the substantive norm. The reaction of the gods, their disgust, their protection of the body from harm, their formal debate and decision, is the enforcement. Zeus's command that the body be ransomed is the remedy. And Priam's supplication, followed by Achilles' tears and his return of the corpse, is the restoration of the broken order. What modern law does through treaty text, courts, and criminal liability, the Iliad does through custom, divine displeasure, and the moral turn of its hero. The forms differ completely. The underlying judgement is the same. Abusing the dead is wrong, and it must be put right. The place where the two systems truly diverge is the matter of #reciprocity, and this is where the talionic frame of the poem shows its age. Achilles' whole descent into desecration is powered by the belief that harm must be answered with harm, that the death of Patroclus licenses an escalating repayment against Hector and even against Hector's lifeless body. This is #lex_talionis stretched past its own limits, revenge that has lost its measure. Modern humanitarian law is constructed precisely to deny this move. It says that the enemy's cruelty, real or imagined, does not release you from your own duties, and that you may not treat a body badly because your side has suffered (Grzebyk 2024; Romani 2025). If there is a single sentence that separates the ethics of the Iliad from the ethics of the Geneva system, it is this. In the poem, suffering justifies retaliation. In the law, suffering justifies nothing of the kind. The duty stands whatever the other side has done. Yet even on reciprocity the poem is not as far away as it first appears, and this is the second important finding. The resolution of the Iliad is not reached through further retaliation. It is reached through its opposite, through an act that steps entirely outside the logic of exchange. Priam has nothing to threaten Achilles with and no way to force him. He offers ransom, yes, but the thing that actually moves Achilles is not the treasure. It is the sight of a father's grief and the memory of his own father. In that moment Achilles treats Hector's body well not because Troy has earned it and not because he fears a return blow, but because he recognises a shared humanity that stands above the account book of vengeance. That recognition, unconditional and not reciprocal, is exactly the impulse that modern law tries to turn into a permanent rule. The poem reaches it as a fragile personal breakthrough. The law reaches it as a fixed obligation. But it is the same recognition, and the Iliad gets there first. Two further contrasts round out the picture. The first concerns the target of protection. Modern law is centrally concerned with civilians, with those who do not fight, and its rule of #proportionality exists to shield them from the incidental effects of attacks. The Iliad has almost no vocabulary for the civilian as a protected category in this sense. Its restraints cluster instead around warriors, suppliants, guests, and the dead. This tells us that the modern expansion of protection to non combatants is a real innovation, not merely a restatement of old custom. The second contrast concerns enforcement and certainty. In the poem the restraint depends on the presence and the mood of the gods, which is to say it depends on forces outside human control and is never guaranteed. In modern law the restraint is meant to be constant and impersonal, written down in advance and applied regardless of who is watching. The move from the changeable will of the gods to the fixed text of the treaty is the move from an ethics of fear and reputation to an ethics of rule. It is imperfect in practice, as every conflict reminds us, but in design it is a genuine advance. DISCUSSION. WHAT THE COMPARISON TEACHES The comparison carries several lessons that go beyond the single scene, and they are worth drawing out. The first lesson is about language, and it is a caution. The habit of describing every gross wartime cruelty as disproportionate is understandable but imprecise. In the law of armed conflict, proportionality has a narrow and technical meaning tied to civilian harm in attacks, and stretching the word to cover the abuse of a corpse blurs the very rule it names (Van den Boogaard 2023). The abuse of Hector's body is not best described as disproportionate. It is best described as an outrage upon human dignity and a prohibited #mutilation of the dead. Precision here is not pedantry. When the public and even commentators use proportionality as a catch all for anything shocking, they make the actual legal rule harder to apply and easier to dismiss. The Homeric case is a clean teaching example precisely because it forces the distinction into the open. There is no civilian harm to balance, so the proportionality rule cannot be what is at stake, and the true basis of the wrong stands exposed. The second lesson is about the two faces of #lex_talionis. The talionic principle has a bad reputation, remembered as a formula for savagery. The Iliad shows why that reputation is only half deserved. The matching logic of an eye for an eye is, at its origin, a device of limitation. It says the payment must fit the wrong and go no further. Achilles' tragedy is not that he follows this principle but that he abandons it, letting grief drive the repayment far past any match (Lewis 2025). The lesson for the modern reader is that the ancient world was not simply lawless in war. It had a measure. What it lacked was a reliable way to hold people to the measure when passion overwhelmed them. Modern humanitarian law can be read as an attempt to supply exactly that, an external structure that holds the line when the individual conscience, like Achilles', gives way. The third lesson concerns the direction of moral change. It is tempting to read the story as simple progress, from a cruel past to a humane present. There is truth in that reading, but it needs two qualifications. On one side, the Iliad is more humane than the progress story allows. Its greatest hero commits an atrocity, and the poem does not endorse it. It surrounds the act with divine anger and human sorrow and resolves it with an act of mercy. The moral intuition that the dead deserve respect and that grief crosses enemy lines is fully present in the text, thousands of years before any treaty (Pratt 2024). On the other side, the present is less secure in its humanity than the progress story assumes. The rules protecting the dead are broken in conflict after conflict, corpses are still displayed and mutilated, families are still left without remains or answers, and the reach of enforcement remains uneven (Obregon Gieseken and Londono 2025; Parrin et al. 2025). The comparison therefore does not support a comfortable belief that we have simply grown out of Achilles' cruelty. It suggests instead that the same impulse is still with us, and that the law is a fence built against a pressure that never goes away. The fourth lesson is about reciprocity and why its rejection is the deepest achievement of modern law. The reciprocal, retaliatory instinct is powerful because it feels like justice. When your side has suffered, the demand to answer in kind seems only fair, and Achilles' rage is compelling for exactly this reason. The framers of humanitarian law understood that this feeling, however natural, is corrosive in war, because two sides each convinced of their grievance will drive one another to ever greater cruelty. So the law took the extraordinary step of declaring that the duty to be humane is not conditional, that it survives the enemy's worst behaviour, and that the abuse of the dead can never be excused as payback (Grzebyk 2024; Romani 2025). This is not a natural rule. It runs against a deep human reflex. That is precisely why it has to be written down, taught, and enforced, rather than left to the heart, which in the heat of loss will reason as Achilles reasoned. The fifth lesson is practical and concerns how the rules are made to hold. If the abuse of the dead flows from a natural and powerful impulse, then simply stating the prohibition is not enough. Soldiers under the strain of loss and fear will feel the same pull that Achilles felt, and a rule they have only read once will not restrain them at the moment it is tested. This is why armed forces treat the law of war not as a list to be memorised but as training to be drilled, and why the discipline that returns units home together, the presence of leaders who model restraint, and the habit of humane conduct built before the fighting starts all matter as much as the text of any treaty. The Iliad dramatises what happens when that structure is absent. Achilles has extraordinary skill and no one above him with the standing to check his grief until the gods and a broken old king intervene. The modern answer is to build the check into the institution rather than to hope for a change of heart, so that the return of a body does not depend, as it does in the poem, on a rare moment of pity arriving in time. A final point of discussion is the value of reading old literature alongside modern law at all. The objection could be raised that a Bronze Age poem has nothing to teach a modern lawyer, and that the exercise is merely decorative. The response is that the Iliad performs a function that legal texts cannot. It shows the pressure from the inside. A treaty article stating that mutilation of the dead is prohibited tells us the rule but not the force of the temptation the rule resists. The Iliad shows the temptation in full, the grief, the rage, the craving to keep hurting an enemy who is already gone, and then shows the cost and the correction. For students of the law of war, this is not decoration. It is the human reality that the rules are written to govern, rendered with a clarity that no statute achieves. LIMITATIONS Several limits of this study should be acknowledged plainly. First, the comparison is between a work of imaginative literature and a body of positive law, and the two are not the same kind of thing. The Iliad is not a legal code, its gods are not courts, and its customs were never codified in the way a treaty is. The analogy has been kept controlled for this reason, asking about shared underlying values rather than treating Achilles as a defendant, but the reader should keep the difference in mind and resist any neat equation of poem and statute. Second, the reconstruction of Homeric custom relies on the text of the Iliad and on modern classical scholarship, not on independent legal records of the society that produced the poem, which in any case did not exist in written form. Statements about what that world regarded as right are therefore inferences from the narrative, guided by expert commentary (Ready 2024; Pratt 2024), and they carry the uncertainty that always attends the reconstruction of an oral culture. Third, the account of modern law here is deliberately settled and general. It states the position on protection of the dead, on proportionality, and on reciprocity as those matters are broadly understood, and it does not enter the genuine controversies that specialists debate, such as the precise measurement of proportionality in complex attacks or the exact boundaries of lawful reprisal. Readers seeking those debates should consult the specialist literature cited (Van den Boogaard 2023; Romani 2025). Fourth, the study is interpretive and makes no empirical claim about how often the rules protecting the dead are followed or broken in practice. Its aim is conceptual, to clarify the relationship between an ancient and a modern way of limiting cruelty, and the reader should not take it as a survey of compliance. CONCLUSION Achilles' abuse of Hector's body is one of the most disturbing scenes in ancient literature, and the instinct to reach for the word #proportionality when describing it is entirely human. This article has argued that the instinct is right in spirit but wrong in law, and that untangling the confusion is illuminating. In the modern legal sense, #proportionality is a narrow rule about civilian harm in attacks, and it does not govern the treatment of a dead enemy combatant at all. What condemns Achilles' conduct today is a different and equally firm set of rules, the protection owed to the dead, the prohibition of #mutilation and #despoilment, and the broad principle of human dignity that treats even an enemy corpse as owed respect. By those standards the dragging of Hector's body is not merely excessive. It is a #war_crime. The deeper argument has been that the Iliad already knows this. The desecration is driven by the ancient talionic grammar of reciprocity, in which harm must be answered by harm, but the poem itself shows that logic breaking down and being corrected. The custom Hector invokes, the disgust of the gods, the ransom commanded by Zeus, and above all the meeting of Achilles and Priam, all work to reassert the wrong that Achilles has committed and to restore the order he has broken. The poem ends not with vengeance but with the funeral of the enemy, granted under a truce that Achilles gives out of a pity that owes nothing to exchange. That unconditional recognition of a shared humanity, reached in the poem as a fragile personal act, is the very thing that modern humanitarian law has tried to make permanent and binding. The distance between Homer's world and the #Geneva_Conventions is therefore not mainly a distance of moral feeling. Both condemn the abuse of the dead, and both sense that mercy must at some point override #vengeance. The real distance is one of form and reliability. The ancient world left the restraint to custom, reputation, and the uncertain will of the gods. The modern world writes it down, strips it of #reciprocity so that it cannot be bargained away, and backs it with institutions and criminal liability. The Iliad supplies what the law cannot, a full and honest picture of the grief and rage that the rules exist to hold in check, and a reminder that the impulse behind Achilles' cruelty did not die with the Bronze Age. It lives in every conflict still, which is exactly why the fence built against it has to be maintained, taught, and enforced. Read together, the oldest poem and the newest law are not opponents. They are two answers, separated by millennia, to the same enduring question of how far a grieving victor may go, and both answer, in the end, that the dead must be let go home. HASHTAGS #Proportionality_in_Warfare #Lex_Talionis #Achilles_Rage #Hector #Iliad #Homer #Geneva_Conventions #International_Humanitarian_Law #Desecration_of_the_Dead #Human_Dignity #War_Crimes #Reciprocity_in_War #Ransom_of_Hector #Ethics_of_War #Laws_of_Armed_Conflict REFERENCES Grzebyk, P. (2024). Reciprocity and International Humanitarian Law. In M. Kalduski (Ed.), Reciprocity in International Law: Its Impact and Function. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-66746-6_10 Kels, C. G. (2024). International humanitarian law in the Israeli-Gaza conflict. JAMA, 331(15), 1329. Lewis, C. (2025). Unlocking Lex Talionis. Harvard Public Law Working Paper No. 25-24. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.5172905 Obregon Gieseken, H., and Londono, X. (2025). Dignity in death: International humanitarian law and the protection of the deceased in war. International Review of the Red Cross, 107(929), 662-719. Parrin, A., Tidball-Binz, M., Garda, J. L., Gelman, A. M., Kazmin, K. C., and Schmitt, A. (2025). The protection of dead persons under international humanitarian law. International Review of the Red Cross, 107(929), 720-746. Peeler, B. (2021). The Persistence of Reciprocity in International Humanitarian Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108761970 Pratt, L. (2024). Book 24. In J. L. Ready (Ed.), Oxford Critical Guide to Homer's Iliad. Oxford: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198869870.003.0025 Ready, J. L. (Ed.). (2024). Oxford Critical Guide to Homer's Iliad. Oxford: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198869870.001.0001 Romani, F. (2025). Belligerent Reprisals from Enforcement to Reciprocity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Schein, S. L. (Ed.). (2022). Homer: Iliad Book I. Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Tidball-Binz, M. (2024). Protection of the Dead: Report of the Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions. United Nations Human Rights Council, UN Doc. A/HRC/56/56. Van den Boogaard, J. (2023). Proportionality in International Humanitarian Law: Refocusing the Balance in Practice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Xenia as a Legal Binding Mechanism: Cross-Border Commercial Law and Hospitality Accords, and How the Ancient Code of Hospitality in the Iliad Prefigured Modern International Trade Law
This article studies the ancient Greek practice of #xenia, or ritual #guest_friendship, as it appears in Homer's Iliad, and asks whether it can be read as an early form of binding law between people who belonged to different communities. The problem xenia solved is the same problem that sits at the centre of modern #cross_border_trade: how can a promise made between strangers from separate political units be trusted and enforced when there is no shared ruler, no common court, and no police force standing above both sides. The paper argues that xenia was not simply good manners but a working #legal_order. It created clear duties, it relied on a divine guarantor in the figure of Zeus Xenios, it used physical tokens and treasured gifts to record and transfer obligations, and it punished breach through reputation, retaliation, and collective action. Reading the poem alongside the history of the medieval law merchant and the reciprocity rules of the modern World Trade Organization, the study shows that the deep logic of hospitality, mutual obligation, reputation, and self help, reappears across very different eras. The argument is functional rather than genealogical: it does not claim a straight line from Homer to Geneva, but it does claim that the two systems answer one enduring question about #binding_obligation without a sovereign. The findings offer students a way to see international commercial law as older, stranger, and more human than the treaty texts alone suggest. Keywords: xenia; Homeric hospitality; reciprocity; lex mercatoria; international trade law; reputation enforcement; gift exchange; most favoured nation; private ordering; Iliad Introduction Most people meet the word #hospitality in a soft form. It means a warm welcome, a spare room, a good meal offered to a friend or a tired traveller. In the world of the Iliad the word carries far more weight. There, hospitality is a rule with teeth. When a stranger arrives at a great house, the host is expected to take him in before even asking his name, to feed him, to protect him, to give him gifts when he leaves, and to guide him safely onward. The guest, in turn, owes respect, restraint, truthful speech, and a matching return of goodwill in the future. This bundle of duties is called xenia, and it is one of the organizing forces of the poem (Reece, 1993; Herman, 1987). What makes xenia interesting for the study of law is not the courtesy but the enforcement. The heroes of the Iliad live in a world with many small kingdoms and no larger state to sit above them. There is no supreme court for Achaeans and Trojans, no shared legislature, no standing police that both a Spartan and a Lycian would obey. And yet men from these separate communities managed to form durable, dependable bonds across the borders that divided them. Those bonds held even in the middle of a war. This is exactly the puzzle that troubles modern #international_law and #cross_border_commerce: how to make agreements between parties from different jurisdictions genuinely #binding when there is no world government to force compliance (Van den Bossche and Zdouc, 2021). The central claim of this article is simple to state. #Xenia functioned as a legal binding mechanism, and its structure prefigures the way cross border commercial law works today. By legal binding mechanism I mean a system that (a) creates recognizable obligations, (b) attaches those obligations to identifiable parties, (c) provides a source of authority that makes the obligations feel non optional, and (d) supplies a response when the obligations are broken. The poem gives us all four. The obligations of host and guest are spelled out through repeated scenes. The parties are named and their bond is often made hereditary. The authority is #Zeus_Xenios, the god who watches over guests and strangers and who is expected to punish those who abuse them. And the response to breach is dramatic: the entire Trojan War, in the logic of the poem, is a collective answer to one broken hospitality bond (Wilson, 2023; Lane Fox, 2023). Reading xenia this way places it in a long family of institutions that make trade and cooperation possible without a shared sovereign. The medieval law merchant, or #lex_mercatoria, did similar work for European fairs and ports, using merchant custom, community courts, and reputation rather than royal command. Modern trade law does related work through negotiated #reciprocity, the #most_favoured_nation rule, and #arbitration whose awards are recognized across borders. In each case the same tools appear again: mutual benefit, repeated dealing, tokens of trust, and the fear of losing one's good name (Greif, 1989; Van den Bossche and Zdouc, 2021). The article proceeds in stages. It first reviews the scholarship on Homeric hospitality and on the enforcement of promises outside courts. It then reads the relevant scenes of the Iliad closely, breaks a binding mechanism into its parts, and locates each part in the practice of xenia. Finally it lines xenia up against the medieval law merchant and the modern trade system, and it discusses what the comparison teaches and where it fails. Throughout, the guiding question is the one that unites a Bronze Age welcome and a modern trade agreement: how do you bind strangers who share no ruler. The aim here is not to flatten history or to pretend that Homer wrote a trade treaty. It is to use a very old text as a clear lens on a very modern problem. Students of law often assume that law means statutes passed by a state. Xenia shows that binding rules can grow from custom, ritual, and shared belief, and can bind people who owe allegiance to no common master. That lesson matters for anyone trying to understand why international commercial law works at all. Literature review and theoretical background Scholarship on xenia has two long roots. The first is literary and anthropological work on Homeric society. The second is work in law and economics on how contracts get enforced when courts are weak or absent. This article stands between the two. On the Homeric side, the foundational study of hospitality scenes is Reece (1993), who showed that welcome scenes in the epics follow a repeated pattern, a set sequence of arrival, reception, seating, feeding, questioning, gift giving, and departure. Because the pattern repeats, audiences could feel at once when a character honoured it and when a character broke it. That predictability is itself a clue that we are dealing with something rule like rather than merely emotional. Herman (1987) went further and argued that #guest_friendship was a genuine social institution, a formal and often inherited relationship between elite households in different communities, complete with obligations, symbols, and expectations that outlasted any single meeting. Herman's phrase, ritualised friendship, captures the point that this was structured behaviour, not spontaneous kindness. The economic reading of the Homeric world owes much to Finley, whose study of the society behind the poems described an economy driven by #gift_exchange and status rather than by markets and prices (Finley, 1978). In that world, giving a fine object was not charity; it created a standing claim, a debt of gratitude and future return. Objects called #keimelia, treasured heirloom gifts, moved between households and carried the memory of the bond with them. This anthropology of the gift connects directly to Mauss, whose classic argument held that gifts in archaic societies are never truly free: they bind the giver and receiver through a triple duty to give, to receive, and to repay (Mauss, 1990). The gift, in this view, is an early technology of #obligation. More recent classical scholarship has sharpened the analysis of #reciprocity itself. The essays collected by Gill, Postlethwaite, and Seaford (1998) treated reciprocity as the connective tissue of Greek social life, running through friendship, religion, and politics, and stressed that in Homer there is usually no external state institution to force one party to keep faith with another. Van Berkel (2020) traced how later Greek thinkers struggled to describe reciprocity, #philia, and #charis, the grace or goodwill that flows between people who exchange benefits, precisely as a market economy began to offer a competing model of exchange. Her work is useful here because it shows the Greeks themselves working out the difference between a favour that binds and a sale that clears. Christensen (2020), reading the companion epic, has stressed how deeply Homeric identity is tied to social bonds and the duties they carry, which supports the idea that breaking such bonds was understood as a serious wrong rather than a private disappointment. On the legal and economic side, the key body of work concerns #private_ordering, the enforcement of promises outside formal courts. Greif's studies of medieval Mediterranean merchants are central. He argued that eleventh century traders solved the problem of cheating agents through a #reputation_mechanism: a merchant who cheated would be blacklisted by the whole community and lose all future business, so the fear of that collective punishment kept agents honest even without reliable courts (Greif, 1989; Greif, 2006). This claim has been debated, and later scholars questioned how closed and how purely private the merchant networks really were, pointing out that formal courts and mixed enforcement also played a role. That debate is worth naming, because it warns us against romanticising informal order. Still, the core insight survives: repeated dealing, shared information, and the threat of exclusion can make agreements stick. A related strand of thought generalizes this point. Where formal enforcement is weak or costly, people tend to rely on relationships, repetition, and information sharing to keep one another honest, an arrangement often called relational or #private_ordering. The key ingredients are that the parties expect to deal again, that news of bad behaviour travels, and that a cheat can be cut off from future benefits. These are precisely the ingredients that xenia supplied through its hereditary bonds and its shared code, and that the law merchant supplied through its close trading communities. Recognizing xenia as an early member of this family lets us study it with the same tools that economists and legal historians use for later informal systems, while remembering that its sacred dimension gave it a source of authority that purely secular networks lacked. The bridge between the ancient and the modern is the idea of #lex_mercatoria, the customary law of merchants. Historically, merchant custom governed cross border trade at fairs and ports, was applied by merchant judges familiar with trade, and drew force from acceptance within the trading community rather than from any single crown. Recent comparative work in institutional economics has revived interest in this history by comparing the medieval law merchant with new forms of rule making that operate outside the state, and has framed both as examples of polycentric legal order, meaning order produced by many centres rather than one sovereign. Modern treaty based trade law sits at the formal end of this same spectrum. The standard account of the World Trade Organization describes #reciprocity and #most_favoured_nation treatment as cornerstones of the system, and stresses that enforcement rests not on a world police but on negotiated concessions, dispute settlement, and the authorized suspension of benefits (Van den Bossche and Zdouc, 2021). Finally, the study of law in the ancient world provides the missing middle. Bederman (2001) showed that the Greek and other early Mediterranean peoples ran a working system of interstate dealings, including heralds, oaths, treaties, and protections for foreigners, in which sacred sanction did much of the enforcing work that courts do today. What has not been done, and what this article attempts, is to read xenia in the Iliad specifically as a legal binding mechanism and to line up its parts, obligation, guarantor, token, gift, breach, and sanction, against the parts of modern cross border commercial law. Methodology This is a qualitative, comparative, and interpretive study. It does not test a statistical hypothesis. It builds an argument by close reading of a primary text and by structured comparison with a body of legal and economic scholarship. Three methods are combined. The first method is close textual reading of the Iliad, using a current scholarly translation as the working text (Wilson, 2023) and a recent historical study of the poem for context (Lane Fox, 2023). The reading focuses on scenes in which hospitality is offered, honoured, refused, or violated, and asks what duties are assumed, who is expected to enforce them, and what happens when they fail. Because the poem is a work of literature and not a legal record, claims about Homeric society are treated as claims about the world the poem depicts, not as certain facts about any single historical moment. The second method is conceptual mapping. The article breaks a legal binding mechanism into components, obligation, party identification, source of authority, proof and record, transfer across time, breach, and remedy, and then locates each component in the practice of xenia. This gives a checklist that can be applied fairly rather than a loose feeling of similarity. The third method is analogical comparison with two later systems: the medieval #lex_mercatoria and the modern law of the World Trade Organization and international commercial #arbitration. For each component of xenia, the study asks whether a functional equivalent exists in the later system and how it differs. The comparison is explicitly functional. It asks what job each feature does, not whether one directly caused the other. Two limits of method should be stated plainly. First, there is a risk of anachronism, of reading modern legal categories back into a poem that had no word for contract in the modern sense. The study guards against this by keeping the modern comparison in a separate step and by treating the Homeric material on its own terms first. Second, the historical claims about medieval merchants and about the deep origins of trade rules rest on secondary scholarship that is itself contested, as noted in the literature review. Where the scholarship disagrees, the disagreement is reported rather than hidden. Xenia in the Iliad: how the code actually worked To argue that xenia is law like, we first need to see it in motion. The Iliad is a war poem, so it might seem an odd place to look for hospitality. But the code appears at hinge points of the story, and its presence or absence often marks the difference between order and ruin. The clearest positive example is the meeting of #Glaucus_and_Diomedes in the sixth book of the poem. The two men face each other on the battlefield, ready to fight. Before striking, they trade words, and it emerges that Diomedes' grandfather once hosted Glaucus' grandfather, kept him for many days, and exchanged fine gifts with him. That old bond of #guest_friendship between their ancestors binds the two living men, even though they were born in different lands and now stand on opposite sides of a war. Rather than fight, they clasp hands, promise to avoid each other on the field, and exchange their armour as a renewal of the inherited tie. Homer notes wryly that one set of armour was worth far more than the other, so that in strict market terms one man got the worse of the deal. The point is exactly that the exchange was not a market trade. Its value lay in confirming a relationship, not in balancing prices (Wilson, 2023; Herman, 1987). Several features of this scene deserve attention because they are precisely the features that make a rule binding. The bond is #hereditary: it was made by grandfathers and it still holds the grandsons. The bond crosses a border: the two families belong to different peoples, yet the tie survives that distance. The bond overrides an immediate, powerful incentive, in this case the incentive to kill an enemy in wartime. And the bond is confirmed by a physical act, the exchange of armour, which both men and any onlooker could see and remember. A relationship that can suspend a battle is not a mere sentiment. It is an obligation strong enough to change behaviour against self interest, which is one working definition of a binding rule. The scene also shows how xenia carried its own record keeping. Because meetings between families in distant lands might be separated by generations, the parties needed a way to prove the bond later. The poem shows gifts serving this function, and the wider practice included #symbola, tokens that could be split between guest and host so that a later descendant could match the halves and prove the inherited relationship (Herman, 1987; Bederman, 2001). A treasured object handed down in a household was, in effect, both a memory and a document. It said: this family owes and is owed. In a world without written contracts between private households, the durable gift did the work that paperwork does now. The Iliad also gives us the negative case, and it is the negative case that sets the whole plot in motion. The war exists because #Paris, a prince of Troy, was received as a guest in the house of #Menelaus of Sparta and then carried off his host's wife, #Helen, along with treasure. In the moral world of the poem this is not simply adultery or theft. It is the deepest possible violation of xenia, because Paris turned the trust of the host relationship into the weapon that wounded the host. The gods of hospitality were understood to be on the side of the wronged household, which is part of why the Greek coalition treated the recovery of Helen as a just cause rather than a private quarrel (Lane Fox, 2023; Wilson, 2023). The abduction is the paradigm of #breach, and the war is the paradigm of #enforcement when no court exists to hear the case. A third and quieter scene closes the poem and shows the code at its most demanding. In the final book, King #Priam of Troy crosses into the enemy camp at night and comes as a suppliant to #Achilles, the man who killed his son. By the logic of pure enmity, Achilles should refuse or kill him. Instead, Achilles receives the old king, shares food with him, and returns the body of Hector for burial. The scene blends #hospitality with the closely related practice of supplication, the ritual by which a helpless person places himself under another's protection (Wilson, 2023). It shows that the duties of reception could reach even across the bitterest hatred, and that honouring them was treated as a mark of true greatness. If xenia could bind a grieving killer to protect his enemy's father, it was a rule of formidable force. The poem also contains something even closer to a formal accord between the two sides, and it too turns on the binding power of the sworn word. Early in the fighting the Greeks and Trojans agree to halt the war and settle the whole quarrel by single combat between Paris and Menelaus, the wronged host and the guest who wronged him. The agreement is not a casual handshake. It is sealed by a solemn #oath, sworn over sacrificed animals and called down upon Zeus and the other gods, with clear terms: the winner keeps Helen and the treasure, and both armies swear to live in peace afterwards. This is a treaty in miniature, complete with named parties, agreed terms, a ritual of sacrifice that makes the promise sacred, and a divine guarantor invoked to punish whichever side breaks faith (Bederman, 2001; Wilson, 2023). The truce then collapses when a Trojan archer, prompted by a goddess, wounds Menelaus and shatters the sworn peace. The poem treats this as a decisive wrong. The Greek leaders are shown as certain that Troy is now doomed, precisely because the Trojans broke an oath sworn before the gods. In legal terms the scene stages the oldest principle of #treaty_law, that agreements must be kept, and it shows the consequence of breaking a solemn accord in a world where the guarantor is divine rather than judicial. Taken together, these scenes reveal a consistent structure. There are expected duties on both sides. There is a strong belief that the gods enforce those duties. There are physical means of recording and transferring the bond. There is a clear category of violation. And there is a recognized, if violent, response to violation. That is the anatomy of a binding mechanism, expressed in story rather than in statute. Xenia as a binding legal mechanism Having seen the code in action, we can now test it against the components of a legal binding mechanism set out in the methodology. The aim is to show, part by part, that xenia does the jobs we expect law to do. Obligation. The first mark of law is that it tells parties what they must do, not merely what would be nice to do. Xenia does this with unusual clarity. The host must receive, feed, shelter, protect, and gift the guest, and must send him safely on. The guest must not abuse the host's trust, must accept hospitality gracefully, must tell the truth about who he is, and must be ready to return the favour in kind at another time (Reece, 1993; Herman, 1987). These are not vague ideals. They are specific expected acts, and the poem repeatedly marks characters as good or bad by whether they perform them. A duty that defines your moral standing and that others expect you to perform is functioning as an obligation, whatever we call it. Party identification. Law binds particular people, not the world at large. Xenia is strongly personal and, crucially, it is transferable through time. The bond runs between named households and passes to heirs, as the Glaucus and Diomedes scene shows. This is close to how modern law treats certain obligations as running with a relationship or an asset rather than expiring with the individuals who first made them. The #hereditary quality also resembles the way state obligations under a treaty are understood to bind the successor governments and not just the officials who signed (Bederman, 2001; Van den Bossche and Zdouc, 2021). Source of authority. Every binding system needs an answer to the question, why is this non optional. Modern domestic law answers with the coercive power of the state. International law, lacking a world state, answers with a mix of consent, reciprocity, reputation, and institutional recognition. Xenia's answer is #Zeus_Xenios, the god who protects strangers and guests and who is expected to punish those who wrong them. This is not a small point. By placing hospitality under a divine guarantor, the culture removed the rule from the reach of ordinary bargaining. You could not simply decide that this guest did not count. The obligation came from above the parties, from a source neither of them controlled (Bederman, 2001; Gill, Postlethwaite, and Seaford, 1998). The divine guarantee played the structural role that a neutral higher authority plays in any legal order: it made the rule bigger than the momentary interests of either side. The same divine backing stood behind the sworn word more generally. When Homeric characters wanted to make a promise truly binding, they swore an oath and called the gods to witness, staking their standing with the divine on keeping their word. An oath converted a mere statement of intent into a sacred obligation whose breach invited ruin, which is why the broken truce between Greeks and Trojans is treated as so grave. The mechanism is worth noting because it is the ancestor of a principle that still anchors #treaty_law, the rule that a promise solemnly given must be honoured. In the ancient version the enforcer of that rule is a god; in the modern version it is the shared expectation of states and the institutions they have built. The form of the guarantee changes, but the demand that the given word bind does not (Bederman, 2001). Proof and record. A rule that cannot be proven cannot be enforced. Xenia used durable gifts and split tokens to record and later verify the bond, as discussed above. The #keimelia, the treasured objects that passed between households, were both valuable and memory bearing. The #symbola, matched halves of a token, let strangers who had never met authenticate an inherited relationship. These devices solved the same problem that documents solve in commerce: they let a promise travel across distance and time and still be recognized (Herman, 1987). Transfer across time and distance. The bond did not die with a single meeting. It was designed to persist, to be inherited, and to be reactivated when a descendant travelled to the partner household. This durability turned a one time act of kindness into a standing relationship with future value. That future value is the engine of enforcement, because it gives each side something to lose by cheating. This inheritance of obligation has a familiar ring in commercial life. The value that a firm builds in its name and its relationships, its goodwill, is treated as a real asset that can outlast the people who created it and pass to those who take the business on. Long term commercial relationships are prized for the same reason the Homeric bond was prized: they carry accumulated trust that would be expensive to build again from nothing. And in the law between states, the duties a government takes on are understood to bind its successors, so that a change of ruler does not wipe the slate clean. In each case an obligation is made to survive the individuals who first assumed it, which is one of the quiet but essential tricks that let cooperation reach beyond a single lifetime (Bederman, 2001). Breach and remedy. Finally, a binding mechanism must recognize violation and respond to it. Xenia recognizes breach very sharply, as the case of Paris shows, and it responds through several channels. There is the expected divine punishment, the sense that Zeus will bring ruin on those who trample the guest bond. There is reputational damage, since a household known to abuse guests would find no welcome and no partners. And there is direct, collective, coercive response, seen in the war itself, where many communities join to punish a single violation (Wilson, 2023; Lane Fox, 2023). This last point deserves emphasis because it maps so cleanly onto how enforcement works between sovereigns even now. In a world without a court that can command obedience, the wronged party and its allies must respond themselves, through pressure, withdrawal of benefits, and in the last resort force. The response is decentralized. It comes from the community of those who share the norm, not from a single ruler above them. That is precisely the shape of enforcement in the modern trade system, where a member found to have broken the rules can face the authorized suspension of trade concessions by the injured member rather than a fine imposed by a global police force (Van den Bossche and Zdouc, 2021). Put the components together and the conclusion is hard to avoid. Xenia had obligations, identifiable and inheritable parties, a source of authority above the parties, means of proof, durability across time, a clear concept of breach, and recognized remedies. Whether or not the Greeks would have called it law, it did the work of law for the very hardest case, the case of binding people who share no common ruler. The cross border dimension: xenia between separate communities The heart of this article is the word cross border. Domestic order is comparatively easy to explain, because a state can force its own residents to obey. The interesting question is how order arises between people who owe allegiance to different powers. Xenia is valuable precisely because it operated in that gap. The Homeric world, as the poem presents it, is a patchwork of kingdoms and peoples with no overarching state. Travel between them was dangerous, and a stranger arriving in a foreign land had no local rights and no local protector. Xenia filled that vacuum. By converting a stranger into a guest, and then into a guest friend, the code gave a foreigner a status and a shield he would otherwise have lacked (Herman, 1987; Bederman, 2001). This is a striking move. It is the creation of legal standing for an outsider through private ritual rather than through any grant by a state. It is worth pausing on how radical that transformation was. A stranger in a foreign land was, by default, close to an outlaw in the literal sense, a person outside the protection of local law who could be robbed or killed with little consequence. Xenia offered a route out of that exposure. By accepting food and shelter and entering the host relationship, the outsider gained a protector who was now bound, on pain of divine anger and public shame, to keep him safe. The system thus manufactured security for people who had none by birthright in that place. Commerce has always needed to solve the same problem, because a merchant far from home is, like the ancient traveller, a person without local standing who must nonetheless be able to rely on strangers. Much of the history of #cross_border_commercial_law can be read as a search for ways to give the foreign merchant a dependable status, whether through special protections at medieval fairs, through treaties, or through the modern rule against discriminating between traders on the basis of where they come from (Herman, 1987; Van den Bossche and Zdouc, 2021). Because the bond crossed borders, it also created something like a shared transnational norm. A host in one kingdom and a guest from another could rely on the same expectations because both accepted the same code and the same divine guarantor. This shared acceptance is what allowed the relationship to be portable. A traveller could move through many communities and, wherever the code was honoured, expect the same basic treatment. The parallel with #lex_mercatoria is direct. The medieval law merchant worked because merchants in different cities recognized the same customs, so that a trader from one town arriving in another could expect his dealings to be judged by rules he already knew, rather than by an alien local code that might trap him (Greif, 2006). A body of custom that many separate communities recognize, and that lets outsiders deal with confidence, is a transnational legal order in embryo. Xenia also solved a trust problem that is exactly the trust problem of long distance trade. When two parties are far apart and may not meet again soon, each has an incentive to take the benefit and skip the return. What stops this is the shadow of the future, the expectation that the relationship will continue and that cheating now will cost dearly later. Xenia extended that shadow across generations by making the bond hereditary. A man who cheated a guest friend would not merely lose one partner. He would stain his household's name and forfeit an inherited network of relationships that might reach into many lands. This is the same logic that Greif described for medieval traders, where the fear of losing a whole network of future dealings kept agents honest (Greif, 1989). The mechanism is #reputation, stretched across space by shared norms and across time by inheritance. There is a further point about neutrality. One reason cross border systems need shared custom is that neither side will accept being judged only by the other side's home rules. In the Homeric setting, the neutral element was the divine guarantee: Zeus Xenios stood above both the host's community and the guest's, so neither could claim the rule was merely their own local preference. In modern commercial practice the neutral element is often an agreed body of transnational principles and a neutral arbitral forum, chosen exactly so that neither party is forced into the other's courts (Van den Bossche and Zdouc, 2021). The need for a neutral standpoint above the parties is constant. Only the source of neutrality changes, from a shared god to a shared institution. So the cross border dimension is not a minor feature of Xenia. It is the whole reason the code is important for legal history. Xenia is one of the earliest recorded answers to the question that still drives international commercial law: how do you make strangers from different powers trust and bind one another when no one rules them both. From xenia to modern cross border commercial law We can now draw the comparison out in full. The claim is not that Homer's heroes invented the World Trade Organization. It is that the structural problem they faced, and several of the tools they used, recur in the medieval law merchant and in the modern trade system, because all three are answers to cooperation without a common sovereign. Reciprocity. The oldest tool is #reciprocity, the principle that a benefit calls for a matching benefit and a harm for a matching response. In xenia, reciprocity is the spine of the whole relationship. Gifts are given with the understanding that they will be returned, hospitality now implies hospitality later, and the balance may be struck across years or even generations (Mauss, 1990; van Berkel, 2020). Modern trade law rests on the same principle in a formalized shape. In the negotiations that built the postwar trading system, members lowered their own trade barriers in exchange for matching reductions by others, so that concessions were traded rather than given away for nothing (Van den Bossche and Zdouc, 2021). The word reciprocity appears at the centre of that system just as the practice of reciprocity sits at the centre of xenia. The difference is that the modern version is written down and negotiated in detail, while the Homeric version was carried in custom and memory. The underlying idea, that lasting cooperation must feel balanced to both sides, is the same. Non discrimination and the shared standard. A subtler feature of xenia is that its duties were owed to guests as guests, according to a shared standard, not invented afresh for each visitor according to whim. A host could not honour the code for one guest and trample it for another without damaging his standing. This general standard has a clear modern cousin in the #most_favoured_nation rule, the requirement that a trading member extend to all other members the best treatment it gives to any one of them, so that like partners are treated alike (Van den Bossche and Zdouc, 2021). Both the hospitality code and the trade rule fight the same danger, the danger that the powerful will pick and choose, favouring friends and abusing the rest. Both answer it by insisting on a general standard that applies across the board rather than case by case favouritism. The guarantor problem. Every cross border system must decide where its authority comes from, since no world state exists to supply it. Xenia answered with a divine guarantor, Zeus Xenios. The medieval law merchant answered with the shared custom and the collective judgement of the merchant community, backed where needed by local courts. The modern system answers with a network of treaties to which states consent, a dispute settlement process, and the recognition that other members give to lawful findings (Greif, 2006; Van den Bossche and Zdouc, 2021). In international commercial #arbitration between private firms, the guarantor is a combination of party agreement and a widely accepted framework for recognizing and enforcing awards across borders. In each case the authority sits, or is made to seem to sit, above the immediate parties. The Homeric solution simply names that higher authority as a god. Later solutions name it as custom, consent, or institution. The function is identical: to make the rule bigger than the parties who are bound by it. Tokens, records, and instruments. Xenia used treasured gifts and split tokens to record a bond and let it be proven later at a distance. Commerce eventually developed its own instruments to do the same job on a far larger scale, documents that stand in for goods and for promises and that can travel between strangers who never meet, letting one party rely on a piece of paper rather than on personal acquaintance. The deep purpose is the same as the purpose of the #symbola: to carry trust across distance and time so that people who cannot know each other personally can still deal with confidence (Herman, 1987). The tools grow more sophisticated, but the need they meet is ancient. Neutral judging. A cross border dispute raises the awkward question of who should decide it, since neither side trusts the other's home court. Xenia's answer, in the truce scene, was to submit the quarrel to an agreed test, single combat under sworn terms, watched over by the gods, so that the outcome would be accepted by both armies. A duel is obviously not a courtroom, but the impulse behind it, to find a mutually accepted way of settling disputes rather than leaving each side to judge its own cause, runs straight through to modern practice. Firms trading across borders routinely agree in advance to settle disputes by #arbitration before a neutral panel rather than in either party's national courts, and they rely on a widely shared framework under which the resulting awards are recognized and enforced in many countries at once. Between states, the modern trade system channels disputes into an agreed settlement process rather than leaving each government to retaliate on its own reading of the facts (Van den Bossche and Zdouc, 2021). The shared instinct is clear: where no common court exists, the parties must build one by agreement and lend it authority through ritual, consent, or treaty. Reputation and self help enforcement. Perhaps the strongest link is in enforcement. Xenia was enforced partly by divine dread, but also, in practical terms, by reputation and by collective response. A household that abused guests would find no welcome anywhere, and a violation as grave as Paris' theft of Helen could summon a coalition to war. The medieval law merchant relied heavily on #reputation: a merchant who cheated risked exclusion from the trading community and the loss of all future business, a penalty often more feared than any fine (Greif, 1989; Greif, 2006). The modern system, for all its treaties and panels, still leans on decentralized enforcement. When a member breaks the rules and refuses to comply, the ultimate lever is the authorized suspension of trade concessions by the injured member, a controlled form of retaliation, rather than a global police action (Van den Bossche and Zdouc, 2021). Behind the formal machinery lies the same old logic that runs through the Iliad: in a world without a ruler over all, the community of those who share the norm must enforce it themselves, through pressure, exclusion, and, in the extreme, coercion. The middle links. The comparison would be a mere leap across three thousand years if there were nothing in between. But there is. Later Greek practice built formal versions of hospitality into interstate life, including the office of the person who represented and protected the interests of another city's citizens, along with heralds, oaths, and treaties that governed dealings between states (Bederman, 2001). Roman thought developed the idea of a law common to all peoples, a body of rules seen as applying beyond any single city. Medieval merchants built the law merchant. Early modern states absorbed much of that merchant custom into their own commercial law, and the twentieth century gathered many of these threads into treaty based institutions. Xenia is not the direct parent of any one of these. It is an early and vivid instance of the same enduring project, the project of binding strangers across borders, and it belongs at the start of that story. The comparison, then, is not a party trick. It shows that a small set of tools, reciprocity, a general standard, a higher guarantor, portable tokens of trust, and reputation backed by collective self help, keeps reappearing whenever people try to cooperate across the lines that divide their communities. The Iliad simply shows those tools in an unusually pure and dramatic form, before the paperwork arrived. Discussion: what the comparison teaches and where it breaks down The value of the comparison lies as much in its limits as in its likeness. Taking the limits seriously is what keeps the argument honest and what makes it genuinely useful for students. First, the argument is functional, not genealogical. There is no evidence that the framers of modern trade rules studied Homer for guidance, and no straight line of descent runs from the exchange of armour on the plain of Troy to the negotiating rooms of the twentieth century. What the systems share is a common problem and a common set of workable responses to it. Similar problems tend to produce similar solutions, and that convergence is itself the finding. Presenting it as a family resemblance rather than a bloodline avoids the trap of pretending that the past secretly contained the present. Second, the Homeric evidence is literary. The Iliad is a poem shaped by long oral tradition, and scholars continue to debate when, where, and by whom it reached its final form, and how far its world reflects any single historical society (Lane Fox, 2023; Finley, 1978). This means we should speak carefully. We can say with confidence what the poem treats as binding and what it treats as outrage. We should be more cautious about turning those literary patterns into precise descriptions of daily life in a particular century. The poem is excellent evidence for how the culture imagined obligation, which is exactly what we need for a study of law as a system of meaning, but it is weaker evidence for economic statistics. Third, the scholarship on informal enforcement is contested, and pretending otherwise would weaken the argument. The claim that medieval merchants ran a purely private, reputation based order has been challenged by historians who point to the role of formal courts and mixed enforcement, and who question how closed those merchant networks really were. Naming this debate matters because it protects the article from a romantic story in which custom and reputation do everything and states do nothing. The more careful conclusion is that reputation and collective response are powerful but rarely work entirely alone; they tend to lean on some institutional support, whether that is a shared god, a merchant court, or a treaty framework (Greif, 2006; Van den Bossche and Zdouc, 2021). Fourth, there are real differences between xenia and modern trade law that the analogy must not hide. Xenia bound individuals and households; modern trade law mainly binds states, and international commercial arbitration mainly binds firms. Xenia rested on sacred belief and personal honour; modern law rests on written consent and formal institutions. Xenia's gift exchange was deliberately not a priced market transaction, and its whole point was to build a relationship rather than to clear a debt, whereas much modern commerce aims precisely to complete a clean, closed transaction (van Berkel, 2020; Mauss, 1990). These differences are not embarrassments to the argument. They mark the direction of change, from personal to institutional, from sacred to secular, from relationship to transaction, while the underlying problem of binding strangers without a common ruler stays constant. Scale is another difference worth naming. Xenia bound a thin layer of elite households and could manage only a modest number of relationships, each one personal and slow to build. Modern cross border commerce binds vast numbers of parties who will never meet, and it must do so quickly and in enormous volume. That leap in scale is exactly why the personal token gave way to the standardized document, why the remembered bond gave way to the written contract, and why the watching god gave way to the standing institution. The move from xenia to modern trade law is, in large part, the story of scaling up a personal solution into an impersonal one without losing the binding force that made the personal version work (Herman, 1987; Greif, 2006). What, then, does the comparison teach. Three lessons stand out for students of law and commerce. The first lesson is that law does not require a state. The reflex to equate law with statutes passed by a government is understandable but narrow. Xenia shows a functioning system of binding obligation with no legislature and no police, held together by custom, ritual, belief, reciprocity, and reputation. Anyone who wants to understand international commercial law, which also lacks a world government, needs to be comfortable with the idea that binding force can come from many sources at once (Bederman, 2001). The second lesson is that trust across borders is engineered, not assumed. In every system studied here, people built specific devices to make strangers trustworthy to one another: shared standards, durable tokens, hereditary bonds, neutral guarantors, and the threat of exclusion. Trade across distance has always depended on such engineering. Recognizing this helps explain why modern commerce invests so heavily in documents, institutions, and reputation systems: it is doing consciously and at scale what xenia did through ritual and memory. The third lesson is about the fragility and the resilience of these systems. The Iliad opens its whole world of suffering with a single violation of hospitality, a reminder that decentralized order can be shattered by one serious breach and that the response can be enormously costly. Yet the same poem ends with an act of hospitality between bitter enemies, a reminder that the code could hold under the greatest possible strain. Modern cross border order shows the same double character. It can be strained badly when powerful actors reinterpret shared rules to suit themselves, and it can also prove surprisingly durable because so many parties have an interest in keeping the shared standard alive. Understanding that double character, the vulnerability to breach and the resilience of shared norms, is part of understanding how international commerce survives at all (Van den Bossche and Zdouc, 2021). The comparison also speaks to the present. The modern trading system has come under strain as some powerful actors have pressed their own readings of #reciprocity and have questioned shared standards that others regard as settled (Van den Bossche and Zdouc, 2021). The Iliad offers no policy prescription for such moments, and this article does not take a side in current disputes. But it does supply perspective. It shows that shared cross border norms have always been open to reinterpretation by the strong, and that their survival has always depended on enough parties continuing to value the standard for its own sake. Seen against three thousand years, present strains look less like the end of an order and more like the latest turn in a very old contest between shared rules and raw advantage. There is also a broader intellectual payoff. Placing xenia beside the law merchant and the trade system encourages a comparative and historical way of thinking about legal institutions, one that asks what job a rule does and how that job has been done in other times and places, rather than assuming that current forms are the only possible ones. That habit of mind is valuable well beyond the study of ancient poetry. Conclusion This article set out to test a bold sounding claim: that the ancient code of #xenia in the Iliad functioned as a legal binding mechanism and prefigured the way modern cross border commercial law works. The test was structural. A binding mechanism must create obligations, attach them to identifiable and enduring parties, draw authority from a source above the parties, record and prove itself, survive across time and distance, recognize breach, and respond to it. Xenia does all of these. Its obligations are specific and status defining. Its bonds are personal and hereditary. Its authority rests on Zeus Xenios, a guarantor above both host and guest. Its treasured gifts and split tokens serve as records. Its concept of violation is sharp, and its response to violation runs from divine dread to reputational ruin to collective war. Set beside the medieval #lex_mercatoria and the modern trade system, xenia reveals a small family of recurring tools for cooperation without a common sovereign: #reciprocity, a shared general standard akin to #most_favoured_nation treatment, a neutral higher guarantor, portable tokens of trust, and enforcement through #reputation and collective self help. The likeness is functional rather than inherited, and the differences are real, individuals rather than states, sacred belief rather than written consent, relationship rather than clean transaction. But the constant is unmistakable. Across three thousand years, the deepest problem of #cross_border_commerce has stayed the same, and so have the basic shapes of the answer. For students the lesson is liberating. International commercial law can look like a dry mass of treaty text and technical rules. Reading it against the Iliad restores its human root. Long before there were trade agreements, people worked out how to make a promise binding between strangers from different worlds, and they did it with a welcome at the door, a gift in the hand, and a god watching over the threshold. The paperwork came later. The problem, and much of the solution, is ancient. References Bederman, D. J. (2001). International Law in Antiquity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Christensen, J. P. (2020). The Many Minded Man: The Odyssey, Psychology, and the Therapy of Epic. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. Finley, M. I. (1978). The World of Odysseus (2nd ed.). London: Chatto and Windus. Gill, C., Postlethwaite, N., and Seaford, R. (eds.) (1998). Reciprocity in Ancient Greece. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Greif, A. (1989). Reputation and Coalitions in Medieval Trade: Evidence on the Maghribi Traders. The Journal of Economic History, 49(4), 857 to 882. Greif, A. (2006). Institutions and the Path to the Modern Economy: Lessons from Medieval Trade. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Herman, G. (1987). Ritualised Friendship and the Greek City. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Homer (2023). The Iliad (E. Wilson, trans.). New York: W. W. Norton and Company. Lane Fox, R. (2023). Homer and His Iliad. New York: Basic Books. Mauss, M. (1990). The Gift: The Form and Reason for Exchange in Archaic Societies (W. D. Halls, trans.). London: Routledge. (Original work published 1925.) Reece, S. (1993). The Stranger's Welcome: Oral Theory and the Aesthetics of the Homeric Hospitality Scene. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press. van Berkel, T. A. (2020). The Economics of Friendship: Conceptions of Reciprocity in Classical Greece. Mnemosyne Supplements 429. Leiden and Boston: Brill. Van den Bossche, P., and Zdouc, W. (2021). The Law and Policy of the World Trade Organization: Text, Cases, and Materials (5th ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. #Xenia_as_Legal_Binding_Mechanism #Cross_Border_Commercial_Law #Hospitality_Accords #Iliad_and_International_Trade_Law #Ancient_Code_of_Hospitality #Guest_Friendship_and_Contracts #Reciprocity_in_Trade #Lex_Mercatoria_Origins #Most_Favoured_Nation #Zeus_Xenios #Reputation_Enforcement #Gift_Exchange_Economy #Homeric_Law #Private_Ordering #International_Commercial_Arbitration
- The Breach of Oaths: Treaty Violation and State Responsibility in International Relations - Reading Pandarus' Arrow Shot in the Iliad as a Classic Case Study in the Breakdown of International Treaties
This article reads one short and violent moment in Homer's Iliad, the arrow that the Trojan archer Pandarus fires at Menelaus in Book 4, as an early and unusually complete model of what happens when a solemn agreement between two political communities is broken. In Book 3 the Trojans and the Achaeans swear a sacred truce, witnessed by the gods, to settle the whole war through a single duel. In Book 4 that agreement collapses in a single act. The study places this episode beside the modern law of treaties and the modern rules on state responsibility, especially the principle that agreements must be kept, the question of who is answerable when an individual acts, the idea of a material breach, and the lawful and unlawful responses available to the injured side. The aim is not to claim that Homer wrote a legal code. The aim is to show that the poem already stages the hard problems that still trouble diplomacy: how promises between groups are made binding, how one bad actor can bind a whole community, how trust dies faster than it is built, and how the side that keeps the rules can still lose. The reading is offered as a teaching case for students of international relations, classics, and international law, and it argues that ancient literature and modern legal theory illuminate each other. Keywords: oath breaking; treaty violation; state responsibility; Homer; Pandarus; pacta sunt servanda; ancient diplomacy; casus belli; international relations theory; good faith Introduction Every ordered relationship between political communities rests on a simple and fragile promise: that a commitment freely given will be honored. When that promise fails, war, distrust, and long cycles of retaliation tend to follow. The modern study of #international_law gives this idea a Latin name, pacta sunt servanda, which means that agreements must be kept and performed in good faith (Shaw, 2021). Long before that phrase was written down, poets and historians were already asking what a broken promise between peoples actually costs, and who should be held to account for it. This article takes a single scene from one of the oldest surviving works of European literature and treats it as a case study in #treaty_violation. In Homer's #the_Iliad, the Trojans and the Achaeans agree to stop a nine-year war and to let a duel between Paris and Menelaus decide everything. Both sides swear a formal #oath over a sacrificed animal, calling on Zeus and the other gods to punish whoever breaks faith. Menelaus wins the duel in every meaningful sense. Then, in Book 4, a Trojan named #Pandarus draws his bow and shoots Menelaus, and the truce is destroyed in an instant. The war resumes and eventually ends in the sack of Troy. The reason this scene rewards close study is that it contains, in compressed form, almost every problem that the modern law of treaties and the modern doctrine of #state_responsibility try to manage. There is a formal agreement between two communities. There is a clear breach. There is a question of who exactly is responsible, since the arrow was loosed by one man, urged on by a goddess, as part of a plan approved on Olympus. There is the problem of whether the whole Trojan side can be blamed for the act of a single archer. There is the injured party's decision about how to respond. And there is the collapse of trust that makes any future agreement almost impossible. These are not literary decorations. They are the same questions that arise when a state today tests a weapon it promised not to test, or crosses a border it promised to respect. The argument of this article is threefold. First, the sworn truce in the Iliad functions as a proto-treaty, and the ancient Greek institution of the oath performed many of the jobs that formal legal machinery performs now. Second, the arrow of Pandarus is best understood not as a private crime but as a breach that raises the classic dilemma of attribution, the problem of deciding when the act of an individual becomes the act of a whole community. Third, the aftermath of the breach, and in particular the moral position of the wronged Achaeans, shows why keeping faith matters strategically and not only morally, because reputation and credibility are the true currency of #diplomacy. The discussion is aimed at students. It assumes no prior knowledge of Greek, and it explains legal terms in plain language before using them. It is interdisciplinary by design, drawing on classical scholarship, on the modern law of treaties, and on international relations theory. The intention is to give readers a memorable and concrete anchor for abstract legal ideas, and to show that a poem composed roughly twenty-seven centuries ago still speaks directly to the study of world politics. Literature review and theoretical framework 2.1 Homer and the study of world politics Scholars have long noticed that the ancient Greeks supply some of the founding texts of thinking about relations between states. Thucydides, writing about the war between Athens and Sparta, is often called the first realist, the first author to argue that power and fear, rather than justice, drive the behavior of states (Thucydides, 2013). His Melian dialogue, in which the strong tell the weak that the powerful do what they can and the weak suffer what they must, is a standard reading in nearly every introductory course on the field. The reception of Thucydides in modern theory has itself become a large area of study, with a steady debate about whether he really was the cold realist that later readers made him. Homer sits behind Thucydides in time and in influence. Recent Homeric scholarship has renewed attention to the poem's treatment of authority, persuasion, honor, and the limits of force (Schein, 2022; Myrsiades, 2022; Pache, 2020). Emily Wilson's 2023 translation has also brought the Iliad to a wide new readership and has stressed how sharply the poem observes the politics of its warriors, the negotiations, the councils, the appeals to shared rules, and the constant pressure of #reputation (Homer, 2023). Yet the Iliad is read less often than Thucydides as a source for thinking about agreements between communities, even though it contains one of the clearest depictions in ancient literature of a formal pact and its violation. This article tries to close that small gap. 2.2 Oaths as the ancient law of nations The second body of work this study relies on concerns the ancient Greek #oath itself. Specialists have shown that no promise, treaty, or truce carried binding force in the Greek world without a sworn oath to guarantee it (Sommerstein and Torrance, 2014; Sommerstein and Bayliss, 2013). The oath did not merely record agreement. It called down the anger of the gods on anyone who broke it, along with that person's family and descendants. To break a sworn oath was, in a real sense, to declare war on the divine order. One influential study of oaths in Greek diplomacy argued that the oaths written into treaties were often deliberately flexible, so that failing to fulfill a term because circumstances changed was not always the same thing as breaking faith, a distinction between violation by commission and violation by omission (Bolmarcich, 2007). That distinction is strikingly close to modern legal categories, and it will matter later in this article. The point that emerges from this scholarship is that the oath was, in effect, the ancient law of nations. It supplied the binding force, the witnesses, the sanction, and the sense of obligation that formal legal institutions supply today. When we look at the truce in the Iliad, we are therefore not looking at a casual promise. We are looking at the most solemn instrument the culture possessed. 2.3 The modern law of treaties and state responsibility The third body of work is the modern law that governs agreements between states. The core principle is pacta sunt servanda, the rule that a treaty in force binds the parties and must be performed by them in good faith (Shaw, 2021; Aust, 2013). This principle is so basic that it has been called the foundation of the whole system, and its history and use have been examined critically in recent scholarship that traces how the axiom has been invoked, and sometimes abused, across the centuries (Jiang, 2022). Alongside the law of treaties sits the law of #state_responsibility, most influentially set out in the International Law Commission's Articles on the subject, which explain when the conduct of a person or group counts as an act of the state, what makes such an act wrongful, what circumstances might excuse it, and what the injured state may lawfully do in response (Crawford, 2002). Two ideas from this legal body will be doing heavy work in the analysis. The first is #attribution, the set of rules for deciding when the act of an individual becomes the act of a community. The second is the idea of a material #breach, a violation serious enough to entitle the other side to suspend or end the agreement and to take responsive measures. International relations theory frames the same problems in terms of order and trust. Realist writers stress that in a world without an overarching enforcer, states rely on self-help, and promises hold only as long as they serve interest and are backed by the threat of retaliation (Bull, 2012). Institutionalist and constructivist writers stress that shared norms, reputation, and the fear of losing credibility can make states keep promises even when a short-term interest points the other way. The Pandarus episode, as we will see, can be read through both lenses at once. 2.4 The gap this study addresses Putting these three literatures side by side reveals a gap. Classicists have studied Homeric oaths in detail. International lawyers have studied treaty breach in detail. International relations theorists have studied trust and reputation in detail. But the Pandarus scene has rarely been used as a single, unified case that connects all three. This article treats the arrow shot as exactly such a case, a shared teaching example that lets a student see the ancient institution, the modern rule, and the underlying political logic in one place. Method and scope This is an interpretive and interdisciplinary study, not an empirical one. It does not test a hypothesis with data. Instead it performs a close reading of a literary episode and sets that reading in dialogue with legal and theoretical concepts, a method common in the humanities and in the classical tradition of political thought. The primary text is the Iliad, read in modern English translation (Homer, 2023), with attention to Books 3 and 4, where the truce is sworn and broken, and to the surrounding books that show its consequences. The reading treats the poem as a coherent portrait of how the characters themselves understand promises, obligation, and blame, rather than as a historical record of Bronze Age diplomacy. In other words, the interest is in the poem's political imagination, in what its warriors take an oath to mean and what they do when it is broken. Three limits should be stated at the start. First, the Iliad is a work of poetry shaped by an oral tradition, not a legal document, and it must not be read as if it were a statute. Second, the categories of modern international law were developed for sovereign states in a system of formal institutions that did not exist in the world of the poem, so any comparison is an analogy and not an identity. Third, the gods are active characters in the poem, which raises questions about human freedom and responsibility that have no clean modern equivalent. These limits do not defeat the comparison. They sharpen it, because the poem's difficulties turn out to mirror the difficulties that real diplomacy still cannot fully solve. The case: the oaths of Iliad 3 and the arrow of Iliad 4 4.1 The making of the truce By the third book of the poem the war has ground on for nine years with no result. Both sides are exhausted. When the armies come face to face, Paris, the Trojan prince whose seizure of Helen started the war, offers to settle the whole conflict by fighting Menelaus, Helen's Greek husband, in single combat. The winner takes Helen and her treasure, and the two peoples swear friendship. The terms are attractive to everyone tired of the fighting, and both sides accept. What follows is a formal ceremony, and its formality is the point. Lambs are brought. Wine is poured. Agamemnon, the Greek commander, cuts hairs from the lambs' heads and prays aloud, calling on Zeus and on the Sun, the Rivers, and the Earth to witness the terms and to punish whoever first does violence in breach of the oaths. The animals' throats are cut. The warriors pour the wine and pray that the brains of any oath-breaker be poured out on the ground like the wine, along with the brains of his children. This is the sworn truce, the #horkia_pista, the trusted oaths, and it binds the two communities to abide by the result of the duel (Sommerstein and Torrance, 2014). Several features deserve notice. The agreement is between two peoples, not two men, even though the fighting will be done by two champions. The oath is sworn by leaders acting for their communities. The witnesses are the highest powers the culture recognizes. And the sanction is severe and explicit. In every one of these respects the ceremony behaves like the making of a treaty. It is a public, witnessed, sanction-backed commitment by political communities to a shared rule of conduct. 4.2 The duel and its result The duel goes badly for Paris. Menelaus breaks his sword on Paris' helmet, seizes him by the crest, and starts to drag him toward the Greek lines, choking him with his own chin strap. By any fair reading Menelaus has won. Only the direct intervention of the goddess Aphrodite, who snaps the strap and hides Paris in a cloud, saves the Trojan prince and whisks him back inside the walls of Troy. Agamemnon then declares the plain truth to both armies: Menelaus has clearly won, and the Trojans must hand over Helen and the treasure and pay a proper indemnity. On the terms freely sworn, the war is over and the Greeks have prevailed. At this moment the agreement has done exactly what it was meant to do. A costly war has been resolved by a limited contest, both sides are bound by their own oath to accept the outcome, and peace is within reach. The whole design of the truce is vindicated. 4.3 The breach Then the gods intervene again. On Olympus, Zeus muses about whether the war might simply end now with Helen returned, which would spare the city. Hera, who hates Troy, refuses to accept a peace that leaves the city standing. A bargain is struck among the gods, and Athena is sent down with instructions to make sure that the Trojans, and not the Greeks, are the ones who break the oath first. Disguised, she goes to Pandarus, a skilled Trojan archer, and tempts him with the promise of glory and gifts if he shoots Menelaus now, while the Greek stands unsuspecting in the open under the protection of the truce. Pandarus agrees. He prays to Apollo, strings his bow, and looses the arrow. Athena herself, having arranged the shot, then deflects it so that it only wounds Menelaus rather than killing him, grazing him at the belt so that dark blood runs down his thighs. Agamemnon, seeing the blood, is filled with grief and rage and cries out that the Trojans have broken the sworn oaths, and he predicts with certainty that Zeus will punish them, that Troy will fall, and that the oath-breakers will pay with their own lives and those of their wives and children. Menelaus reassures his brother that the wound is not fatal. A healer is called. And both armies, understanding that the #truce is dead, arm themselves once more. The war resumes and will not stop until Troy is destroyed. That is the whole case. A solemn, witnessed agreement between two communities, honored up to the decisive moment, is shattered by a single arrow from a single man, and the consequences run for the rest of the poem and beyond it. The following sections read this case through the lenses of the law of treaties, the law of state responsibility, and the theory of international order. Analysis 5.1 The sworn oath as a proto-treaty The first claim to establish is that the truce is not a loose understanding but a functional treaty. The modern law of treaties treats an agreement as binding when the parties intend to create obligations and express their consent through recognized forms (Aust, 2013; Shaw, 2021). The truce in Iliad 3 meets the spirit of every one of these conditions. The parties are political communities, represented by their leaders. The intention to be bound is explicit and public. The consent is expressed through the most recognized form the culture possessed, the sworn sacrifice. The content is specific: a defined contest, a defined winner's prize, and a defined promise of future peace. The ancient oath also supplied something that modern treaties struggle to supply, namely a built-in enforcement mechanism. A modern treaty depends on the will of the parties and on whatever external pressure exists, because there is no world government to punish a violator (Bull, 2012). The Greek oath, by contrast, placed the sanction in the hands of the gods, who were believed to punish perjury without fail and across generations (Sommerstein and Bayliss, 2013). This is why the ceremony spends so much energy on curses. The pouring of the wine and the prayer that the oath-breaker's brains spill like the wine are not mere theater. They are the enforcement clause. In legal terms, the culture solved the problem of enforcement by making the divine order the guarantor of the #agreement. There is a further legal idea hidden in the ceremony, and that is #good_faith. The modern law of treaties does not only require that agreements be kept in their bare letter. It requires that they be performed in good faith, honestly, and with real intent to fulfill their purpose (Shaw, 2021; Aust, 2013). The Greek oath carried the same demand. To swear over the sacrifice was to promise not merely to observe the terms while looking for a loophole, but to deal honestly with the other side. Menelaus embodies this good faith. He fights the duel openly, he wins it fairly, and he stands unarmed and unsuspecting in the space that the truce has made safe. Pandarus violates good faith in the most direct way possible, by exploiting the very trust that the oath created, striking a man who has lowered his guard because he believed in the promise. In legal language, the Trojan act is not a technical breach of a minor clause. It is a betrayal of the honesty that the whole agreement was built on. The poem grasps that the worst kind of breach is the one that turns the other side's trust into a weakness to be used against them, and this is exactly what modern law tries to forbid when it insists on good faith. This matters because it lets us read Agamemnon's reaction correctly. When he sees the blood, his first thought is not only that his brother is hurt but that a sacred rule has been violated and that punishment is now certain. He is, in effect, reciting the enforcement clause back at the Trojans. His confidence that Troy will fall is not wishful thinking. It is the logical result of a legal system in which #oath_breaking guarantees ruin. The poem, in other words, presents the breach as a legal event with a foreseeable legal consequence. The recent critical literature on pacta sunt servanda reminds us that the principle that agreements must be kept has a long and sometimes uncomfortable history, invoked by the powerful as often as by the weak (Jiang, 2022). The Iliad captures both faces of this. The oath is a genuine restraint on violence, but it is also a tool that the powerful gods bend to their own ends. The rule is real, and it is also manipulated. That double character is exactly what modern scholarship finds in the history of the principle. 5.2 The problem of attribution: who breached the treaty? The hardest and most interesting problem in the case is #attribution. In modern law, a treaty binds states, but treaties are broken by people. A soldier fires a weapon. A minister signs a document. An agent crosses a line. The law must then decide when the act of a person becomes the act of the state, because only then does the state incur #state_responsibility (Crawford, 2002). The general rule is that the conduct of an organ of the state, or of a person acting on the state's instructions or under its control, is attributed to the state, while the private act of a person who is not acting for the state is generally not. Now apply this to Pandarus. On the surface, the arrow is the act of one man. Pandarus is a noble Trojan archer, but he is not the king, he holds no office that speaks for the community, and he acts on the urging of a disguised goddess rather than on the orders of the Trojan council or of King Priam. A strict reading might therefore say that this was the private act of an individual, not an act of the Trojan people, and that the Trojans as a community did not break the oath at all. The poem does not accept that reading, and neither, on reflection, should we. Three considerations point the other way. First, Pandarus is a leader among the Trojan allies, a commander of men, not a random bystander. His standing is high enough that his act carries public weight. Second, and more important, the Trojan side accepts the consequences of the shot as its own. There is no attempt by Priam or Hector to disown Pandarus, to punish him, to surrender him to the Greeks, or to offer redress, which is what a community would do if it wished to avoid responsibility for a rogue member. In modern terms, a state can sometimes escape responsibility for a private act, but if it adopts or ratifies that act as its own, the act becomes attributable to it (Crawford, 2002). The Trojans, by fighting on rather than repudiating the breach, effectively adopt Pandarus' arrow. Third, the injured side treats the act as a communal breach from the first moment. Agamemnon blames the Trojans, not merely Pandarus, and he predicts the fall of the whole city. The result is that the poem stages the attribution problem and then resolves it the way modern law tends to resolve it: through the behavior of the community after the act. Responsibility is not fixed only by who pulled the string. It is fixed by whether the community claims or disowns what was done in its space and to its advantage. This is one of the most sophisticated things about the episode. It understands that the line between a private wrong and a public breach is drawn less by the moment of the act than by the response to it. 5.3 The complication of divine causation No honest reading of this case can ignore the gods. Athena arranges the shot. Zeus and Hera approve a plan to keep the war going. Pandarus is tempted by a disguised divinity and does not fully know what forces are moving him. This raises a question that has troubled readers for centuries: if a god made him do it, how can Pandarus, or the Trojans, be truly responsible (Schein, 2022)? Modern law has a rough parallel in the idea of circumstances that may excuse a wrongful act, such as force majeure, an irresistible force or unforeseen event beyond the actor's control, or coercion by an outside power (Crawford, 2002). One might argue that Pandarus acted under a kind of divine coercion and so should be excused, much as a state might argue that it could not help breaching a treaty because of an overwhelming force it could not resist. The poem, however, refuses to let divine involvement cancel human responsibility, and this refusal is one of its deepest themes. Homeric characters are moved by the gods and remain answerable for what they do. Pandarus is tempted, but he chooses. He strings the bow, he aims, he shoots, and he does so knowing that the man before him is protected by a sworn truce. The temptation works precisely because it appeals to something already in him, his desire for glory and reward. The gods in the Iliad tend to work through human motives rather than around them, which is why the characters never treat divine prompting as an excuse. Agamemnon does not say the Trojans are innocent because a god was involved. He says they are guilty and will be punished. This is a subtle and useful lesson for the study of responsibility. In real diplomacy, states also plead outside pressure, claiming that domestic politics, alliance obligations, or the actions of others forced their hand. The Iliad suggests a demanding standard: pressure that works through your own choices does not erase your responsibility for those choices. The law of state responsibility takes a similarly strict line, treating genuine force majeure as narrow and rare, and refusing to excuse a breach simply because it was politically convenient or externally encouraged (Shaw, 2021). The poem and the law agree that the actor who chooses to loose the arrow owns the arrow, whatever whispered in his ear. 5.4 Material breach and the death of the agreement Once the arrow strikes, what is the legal status of the truce? The modern law of treaties recognizes that a serious violation by one party, a material breach, entitles the other party to suspend or terminate the agreement (Shaw, 2021; Aust, 2013). A material breach is not any small failure. It is a violation that defeats the object and purpose of the agreement, that goes to the heart of what the parties bargained for. The shooting of Menelaus is as material a breach as can be imagined. The entire object of the truce was to substitute a single controlled duel for general war, and to bind both sides to the result. The moment a Trojan wounds the Greek champion after the duel is decided, that object is destroyed. There is nothing left of the agreement to perform. The Greeks are released from any obligation to keep the peace, because the very foundation of the peace, the promise not to resume violence, has been broken by the other side. This is why both armies arm again so quickly and with so little debate. In legal terms, the injured party's obligations lapse the instant the breach lands. The poem shows this as an almost mechanical consequence: blood, recognition, rearmament. There is no negotiation about whether the truce still holds, because everyone understands that it does not. A material breach has ended it. It is worth pausing on how modern this logic is. The distinction that one scholar drew between failing to fulfill a term because circumstances changed and actively violating an oath, a distinction between omission and commission, maps neatly here (Bolmarcich, 2007). The Trojan act is not a passive failure to deliver Helen, which might have invited negotiation. It is an active, violent commission, the worst kind of breach, and it produces the sharpest possible consequence. The poem's sense that some breaches are worse than others, and that the worst breaches end the agreement outright, is the same sense that the modern law of material breach tries to capture. 5.5 The response of the injured party: countermeasures and just cause When a treaty is broken, what may the wronged side lawfully do? Modern law allows the injured state to take proportionate #countermeasures, responses that would otherwise be unlawful but are justified as a reaction to the other side's wrong and are aimed at getting the wrongdoer to comply (Crawford, 2002; Shaw, 2021). Countermeasures must be proportionate, they must in principle be reversible, and they must be aimed at restoring the relationship rather than at pure revenge. The Greek response to Pandarus' arrow is, in the poem's own moral terms, a justified reaction to a wrong. The Greeks did not break faith. They kept the truce, they won the duel fairly, and they were struck while abiding by the rules. This gives them what a later age would call a just cause, a #casus_belli, a legitimate ground for resuming the war. The poem is careful to establish this. Agamemnon's speech insists on Greek innocence and Trojan guilt, and the narrative frames the renewed war as the working out of a deserved punishment. Here, though, the analogy with modern law also reveals the limits of the ancient picture. Modern countermeasures are supposed to be proportionate and reversible, and modern law tries hard to prevent a single breach from justifying unlimited destruction. The Greek response, by contrast, is total. The war does not end with a proportional penalty or a restored agreement. It ends with the sack of an entire city, the killing of its men, and the enslavement of its women and children. The punishment vastly exceeds the original wrong of one arrow that did not even kill its target. The poem knows this and grieves over it. Much of the Iliad's power comes from its sorrow at the gap between the small spark of the breach and the vast fire of the response. This gap is one of the most important lessons the episode offers to students of world politics. The rules that govern responses to a breach exist precisely because human retaliation tends to run far past proportion. The realist tradition would say that in a world of self-help, the injured party takes what revenge its power allows, and the weak suffer accordingly (Bull, 2012). The legal tradition would say that this is exactly why proportionality and reversibility must be built into the rules, to stop a broken promise from becoming a massacre. The Iliad, by showing the full horror of an unrestrained response, makes the case for restraint more vividly than any statute could. 5.6 Reputation, credibility, and the collapse of trust Beyond the legal categories lies a deeper political point about #trust. The reason the arrow is so destructive is not only that it wounds Menelaus. It is that it makes any future agreement between the two sides nearly impossible. Once one party has broken a sworn oath at the decisive moment, the other party can never again believe a Trojan promise. The currency of diplomacy, which is credibility, has been spent and cannot easily be earned back. International relations theory treats reputation as a central asset. A state that keeps its word, even when doing so is costly, builds a reputation that lets it make credible promises in the future, which in turn lets it strike bargains that end wars and avoid them. A state that breaks its word for a short-term gain may win that gain but loses the ability to be trusted, which is a far greater long-term cost. The Iliad dramatizes this exactly. The short-term Trojan gain is that the war continues and Troy is not forced to give up Helen at once. The long-term cost is total. The Trojans can no longer be trusted, and the Greeks now have both the motive and the moral standing to destroy them. This is why the poem treats the breach as the beginning of the end for Troy, even though the arrow itself does little physical damage. The wound to Menelaus heals. The wound to Trojan credibility does not. In a system where promises are the only tools available to stop violence, destroying your own credibility is a form of strategic suicide. The realist reading and the normative reading meet at this point. Even in a cold calculation of power and interest, breaking a solemn oath is usually a bad bet, because it converts every future negotiation into a trap and every enemy into someone who has no reason to spare you. The recent scholarship on pacta sunt servanda makes a related observation about the modern world, that the principle survives not only because it is written into conventions but because states understand that a world in which promises meant nothing would be intolerable for everyone, including the powerful (Jiang, 2022). The Trojans, in effect, damage that shared understanding, and the poem shows the price. The lesson holds across the centuries. The value of a promise lies in the belief that it will be kept, and that belief is destroyed far more easily than it is created. 5.7 The individual and the collective in a decentralized order A final analytical thread concerns the relationship between the individual and the community, which is the structural problem that makes oath-breaking and treaty violation so hard to manage. In the world of the Iliad, as in the modern international system, there is no supreme authority standing over the communities to enforce agreements (Bull, 2012). Enforcement depends on the gods, on the self-help of the injured party, and on the internal discipline of each community over its own members. This decentralization is exactly what Pandarus exploits, whether he understands it or not. Because the Trojan community cannot perfectly control every one of its members, a single archer can bind the whole community to a course it might not have chosen in a calm council. Modern states face the same structural weakness. A rogue commander, an overzealous agency, or a single provocative act can drag an entire state into a breach and into the consequences that follow, because other states will hold the whole state responsible for what was done in its name and to its benefit. The scholarship on Greek oaths noticed a version of this difficulty long ago, observing that the individuals who swore treaty oaths were not always the same people who later had to fulfill them, so that agreements were vulnerable to a change of leadership or to the acts of members who had not personally sworn (Bolmarcich, 2007; Sommerstein and Bayliss, 2013). The Pandarus case is an extreme instance of the same vulnerability. The oath was sworn by leaders, but it was broken by a member who had not led the swearing, and the whole community inherited the consequence. The practical lesson is that communities must police their own members if they want their promises to hold, because the outside world will not distinguish carefully between the community and the individual once a breach has occurred. A state that cannot or will not control the actors who breach its commitments will be treated as responsible for those breaches. The Trojans' failure to disown and punish Pandarus is therefore not a minor detail. It is the moment at which one man's arrow becomes the community's war. 5.8 The episode against the wider Greek practice of sworn treaties It helps to place the Iliad's truce beside what we know of real Greek diplomatic practice, because the poem was composed within a culture that used sworn agreements constantly and thought hard about how they worked. In the historical Greek world, alliances, truces, and peace treaties were all validated by oaths, often accompanied by sacrifice and by the pouring of libations, and many were later inscribed on stone and set up in public and sacred places so that the community could see and remember its own commitments (Sommerstein and Bayliss, 2013). Some treaties included clauses forbidding deceit, so-called anti-deceit clauses, which show that the Greeks were fully aware that a party might try to keep the letter of an oath while defeating its purpose, and wanted to close that gap in advance (Bolmarcich, 2007). The very existence of such clauses proves that the problem Pandarus embodies, the exploitation of an agreement in bad faith, was a recognized danger that diplomats tried to guard against. Seen against this background, the Iliad's truce is not a fantasy but a heightened literary version of a familiar institution. The elements that the poem dwells on, the leaders swearing for their peoples, the animal sacrifice, the libation, the curse on the oath-breaker and his descendants, all correspond to features of real Greek oath-swearing. What the poem adds is the intensity of narrative focus. A historian records that a treaty was made and broken. The poet lets us stand in the field, watch the wine poured, hear the curse spoken, see the arrow fly, and feel the exact moment when trust turns to war. This is why the episode is such a good teaching case. It gives the abstract institution a body and a scene, so that students remember not a rule but a picture. The comparison also warns against romanticizing the ancient system. Greek treaties were broken often, and the gods did not, in observable history, strike down every perjurer. The belief in divine punishment was real and it did restrain behavior, but it did not guarantee compliance any more than modern law guarantees it. What the belief did was raise the cost of breaking faith by adding sacred fear and social shame to the practical fear of retaliation. The Iliad captures this too. Zeus will indeed punish the Trojans, but only in the long run, and only after enormous suffering on both sides. The sanction is real but slow, which is precisely the situation that makes breaking faith tempting in the moment and ruinous over time. Discussion: what the arrow teaches modern international relations Bringing these threads together, the Pandarus episode offers a compact and durable teaching model. It shows that an agreement between communities becomes binding through recognized, public, sanction-backed forms, whether the sanction is the anger of the gods or the machinery of modern law. It shows that the hardest question after a breach is often not what happened but who is responsible, and that responsibility is decided as much by the community's response to an act as by the act itself. It shows that some breaches are so serious that they end the agreement outright and free the other side from its obligations. It shows that the response to a breach tends to run far past proportion unless rules and restraint intervene. And it shows that the deepest cost of breaking faith is the destruction of trust, which is the one resource that a decentralized system of communities cannot do without. These lessons are not merely academic. The modern world regularly watches agreements between states falter over exactly these questions. When a state is accused of testing a weapon or crossing a line it had promised to respect, the arguments that follow are recognizably Homeric in shape. One side asks whether a violation has really occurred, or whether it was the act of a rogue element rather than the state. The other side insists that the breach is material and that it is now released from its own obligations. Each side worries about proportionality and about how far it can respond without inviting ruin. And behind all of it lies the slow, hard-to-repair damage to trust that makes future agreements so difficult. The dispute over the Iran nuclear agreement, in which each side accused the other of failing to keep faith and invoked the duty to perform in good faith, is only one recent illustration of a pattern the Iliad already understood (Jiang, 2022). The specific weapons change. The structure of the quarrel does not. The episode also speaks to a long argument within international relations theory. Realists emphasize that in a world without an enforcer, promises hold only as far as power and interest allow, and the Trojan calculation, encouraged by the gods, that a quick betrayal could keep the war going seems to confirm the realist suspicion that oaths are fragile (Bull, 2012). Yet the outcome undercuts the crude version of that view. The betrayal does not serve Trojan interest. It destroys Troy. The poem suggests that keeping faith is not naive idealism but, most of the time, sound strategy, because the reputation for keeping faith is what allows a community to survive in a dangerous world. This is close to the institutionalist and constructivist claim that norms and credibility shape behavior and are worth protecting even at a cost. The Iliad, remarkably, holds both truths at once. Oaths can be broken, and the gods themselves connive at breaking this one, yet the breaking brings catastrophe. Power without credibility is a wasting asset. There is also a lesson about the manipulation of rules. The truce is broken not by chance but by a deliberate divine plan to ensure that a particular side would be the one to break faith first, so that the resumed war would carry the appearance of just punishment. This should make students alert to how, in real politics, powerful actors sometimes engineer or provoke a breach in order to gain the moral high ground and the license to respond with force. The question of who broke the agreement first is never merely factual. It is a prize that parties fight over, because the side that can convincingly claim to be the victim of a breach gains both a legal justification and a rhetorical weapon. The Iliad shows the gods playing this game with cold skill, and the human characters living out its consequences. Finally, the episode is a caution about the limits of formal instruments. The truce was made with every proper form, the fullest oaths the culture knew, and it still failed. Form alone does not guarantee performance. What guarantees performance is a combination of form, credible sanction, internal discipline over one's own members, and a shared belief that keeping faith matters. Remove any one of these and the agreement becomes vulnerable. The Trojans had the form and the sanction, at least in principle, but they lacked, at the crucial moment, the internal discipline to restrain Pandarus and the collective will to disown him afterward. The agreement failed at the weakest link, as agreements usually do. 6.1 A structured comparison of the ancient scene and the modern rules It may help to set out the parallels plainly, because the value of the case for students lies in the way one scene lines up with several distinct modern concepts at once. The sworn truce corresponds to a treaty in force between two parties. The animal sacrifice and libation correspond to the formal expression of consent to be bound. The curse on the oath-breaker corresponds to the sanction that gives the agreement teeth, played in the ancient world by the gods and in the modern world by a mix of law, retaliation, and reputation. Menelaus fighting and winning fairly corresponds to performance in good faith. Pandarus shooting the unsuspecting Menelaus corresponds to a material breach committed in bad faith. The question of whether the Trojans as a people are to blame corresponds to the problem of attribution. Their failure to disown Pandarus corresponds to a community adopting a wrongful act as its own. The Greeks' renewed war corresponds to the injured party taking responsive measures with a just cause. The excessive destruction of Troy corresponds to the failure of proportionality that the modern rules on countermeasures are designed to prevent. And the loss of Trojan credibility corresponds to the reputational cost that makes breaking faith a poor long-term strategy even for the strong. Laid out this way, the density of the parallels is striking. A scene of a few hundred lines touches on consent, form, sanction, good faith, material breach, attribution, adoption of an act, just cause, proportionality, and reputation. Very few modern case studies pack so many of the core problems of treaty law and state responsibility into a single, memorable event. This is what makes the arrow of Pandarus an unusually efficient teaching model rather than merely a colorful illustration. 6.2 Using the case in the classroom For teachers, the episode can carry a whole seminar. Students can be asked to argue the Trojan defense, that Pandarus acted privately and under divine compulsion, and the Greek prosecution, that the community adopted the breach and is fully responsible, which trains them in the real arguments states make about attribution and excuse. They can be asked whether the Greek response was proportionate, which forces them to confront the gap between a lawful reaction and revenge. They can be asked what the Trojans should have done immediately after the arrow, surrender Pandarus, offer redress, disown the act, which teaches how a community can limit its responsibility for a rogue member. And they can be asked why, if breaking the oath served a short-term Trojan interest, it led to Trojan ruin, which opens the debate between realist and normative accounts of why states keep promises. Because the facts are fixed by the poem and known to everyone in the room, the discussion can move quickly to the concepts, which is exactly what a good case study should allow. Limitations of the study Several limitations should be acknowledged. The most important is the danger of anachronism. The Iliad was composed for an audience with no concept of the sovereign state, no formal international institutions, and no written law of treaties. Reading modern legal categories into the poem risks distorting what the poem actually says. This study has tried to guard against that danger by treating the comparison as an analogy that illuminates both sides rather than as a claim that Homer possessed modern legal doctrine. The value of the exercise lies in the parallels of structure and problem, not in any pretence that the ancient and modern systems are the same. A second limitation is the presence of the gods. Because divine action is woven into every part of the episode, questions of human freedom and responsibility can never be fully separated from questions of divine will. The reading offered here takes the poem's own view, that divine prompting does not cancel human responsibility, but readers who weigh the gods' role differently might reach different judgments about Pandarus' guilt. This is a genuine interpretive open question rather than a settled matter. A third limitation is that the poem is a single, literary case. It cannot by itself establish general truths about how treaties fail or how states behave. Its value is as an illustration and a teaching model, a vivid anchor for concepts that must be tested against real historical and legal cases. Students should treat the arrow of Pandarus as a way into the questions, not as evidence that resolves them. A fourth limitation concerns the state of the sources. Some of the most authoritative scholarship on Greek oaths and on the law of state responsibility predates the recent literature, and this study has drawn on those foundational works where they remain indispensable while giving weight to more recent scholarship on Homer, on the law of treaties, and on the principle that agreements must be kept. Readers pursuing the topic further should consult both the recent and the foundational works listed below. Conclusion A single arrow, loosed by a minor character near the start of a long poem, turns out to contain almost the entire grammar of what happens when communities break faith. The truce of the Iliad is a treaty in all but name, made with the fullest solemnity its world could offer. Its violation raises the classic problem of who is responsible when an individual acts, and the poem resolves that problem the way modern law tends to, by looking at how the community responds to the act rather than only at the act itself. The breach is material, and it ends the agreement at once, releasing the injured side from its obligations and giving it a just cause to resume the war. The response, however, runs far past proportion, and the poem's grief at that excess makes the case for restraint more powerfully than argument could. Underneath all of this lies the destruction of trust, the loss of the one asset that a system of communities without an overarching enforcer cannot do without. For students of #international_relations, of classics, and of #international_law, the episode is a gift. It compresses the law of treaties, the doctrine of state responsibility, and the theory of order into a scene that can be read in twenty minutes and remembered for a lifetime. It teaches that agreements must be kept, that the manner of keeping and breaking them is watched and judged, that the powerful will sometimes engineer a breach for advantage, and that the community which cannot discipline its own members will be held responsible for their acts. Above all it teaches that credibility, once spent, is almost impossible to recover, and that a promise is only as strong as the shared belief that it will be honored. The arrow of Pandarus flew twenty-seven centuries ago, and the questions it raised have not yet been answered. That is precisely why it remains worth studying. Hashtags: #The_Breach_of_Oaths #Treaty_Violation #State_Responsibility #International_Relations #Pandarus #The_Iliad #Homer #Oath_Breaking #Pacta_Sunt_Servanda #Ancient_Diplomacy #Casus_Belli #Material_Breach #Trojan_War #International_Law #Broken_Treaties References Aust, A. (2013). Modern Treaty Law and Practice (3rd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Bolmarcich, S. (2007). Oaths in Greek International Relations. In A. H. Sommerstein and J. Fletcher (eds.), Horkos: The Oath in Greek Society (pp. 26-38). Exeter: Bristol Phoenix Press. Bull, H. (2012). The Anarchical Society: A Study of Order in World Politics (4th ed.). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. Crawford, J. (2002). The International Law Commission's Articles on State Responsibility: Introduction, Text and Commentaries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Homer (2023). The Iliad (E. Wilson, trans.). New York: W. W. Norton. Jiang, Z. (2022). Pacta Sunt Servanda and Empire: A Critical Examination of the Evolution, Invocation, and Application of an International Law Axiom. Michigan Journal of International Law, 43(3), 745-798. https://doi.org/10.36642/mjil.43.3.pacta Myrsiades, K. (2022). Reading Homer's Iliad. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. Pache, C. O. (ed.) (2020). The Cambridge Guide to Homer. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Schein, S. L. (2022). Homer: Iliad Book I (Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Shaw, M. N. (2021). International Law (9th ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108774802 Sommerstein, A. H. and Bayliss, A. J. (2013). Oath and State in Ancient Greece. Berlin: De Gruyter. Sommerstein, A. H. and Torrance, I. C. (2014). Oaths and Swearing in Ancient Greece. Berlin: De Gruyter. Thucydides (2013). The War of the Peloponnesians and the Athenians (J. Mynott, ed. and trans.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Geras and Intellectual Property: The Allocation of Non-Monetary Assets in Customary International Law - Drawing Parallels Between the Distribution of Spoils in the Iliad and Modern Disputes
This article argues that the ancient practice of distributing war prizes in Homer's Iliad and the modern practice of allocating intellectual property rights share a deep structural logic. Both are systems for distributing #non_monetary_assets, above all #honour, #recognition, and status, rather than money alone. In the world of the poem, a warrior's prize, or #geras, is far more than movable wealth. It is a public sign of worth, and its wrongful seizure sets off the central crisis of the epic. The article treats the quarrel between #Achilles and #Agamemnon as a dispute about the fair #allocation of such assets and about who holds the #authority to allocate them. It then places this reading beside contemporary debates in #customary_international_law over how states recognise, share, and protect intangible goods, including copyright, patents, #moral_rights, and #traditional_knowledge. Using a comparative and interpretive method, the study identifies four recurring features common to both systems: the primacy of recognition over material gain, the fragility of allocating authority, the destabilising force of perceived injustice, and the tension between individual and collective entitlement. The article suggests that reading the epic alongside modern law helps students see #intellectual_property not simply as an economic instrument but as a norm-based order for distributing esteem. It closes by proposing that customary practice, ancient and modern, is best understood as an evolving grammar of #reciprocity. Keywords: geras; intellectual property; customary international law; Homer; honour; recognition; moral rights; traditional knowledge; reciprocity; comparative analysis. 1. Introduction Most students meet intellectual property as a branch of commercial law. They learn that a #patent protects an invention, that a #copyright protects a book or a song, and that a #trademark protects a brand. They learn to think of these rights in terms of money: licence fees, royalties, damages, and market share. This picture is accurate as far as it goes, but it is incomplete. Long before people argued about royalties, they argued about credit, about who deserved to be named, and about who was allowed to claim a thing as their own. These are questions about honour and recognition, not only about profit. They are older than any statute, and they refuse to disappear no matter how much the law is dressed in the language of economics. This article takes that older layer seriously. It returns to one of the founding texts of the Western tradition, Homer's #the_Iliad, and reads it as a sustained meditation on how a community distributes non-monetary assets. The central Greek term is geras, usually translated as prize of honour. A geras is a physical object: a captive, a tripod, a set of armour, or a portion of plunder. Yet its meaning is symbolic. It marks how much a warrior is valued by the group. To lose one's geras is not mainly to lose property. It is to be publicly diminished. The famous opening quarrel of the poem, in which Agamemnon takes the woman #Briseis from Achilles, is a fight over exactly this kind of asset. Emily Wilson's recent translation renders the resulting rage with unusual directness, reminding readers that the plot of the whole epic turns on a dispute about #distribution and status rather than about gold (Wilson, 2023). The claim of this article is that the logic visible in the poem is also visible, in transformed form, in the way the international community handles intellectual property today. Customary international law is the body of rules that arises not from a single treaty but from the settled practice of states accepted as law. It governs, among many other things, how nations recognise one another's claims to intangible goods and how they treat the cultural and creative products of communities. When we study disputes over #attribution, over moral rights, over the ownership of traditional knowledge, or over the priority of an invention, we are watching modern societies wrestle with the same problem the Greek camp faced outside Troy: how to allocate esteem fairly, and who has the standing to do the allocating. The comparison is not offered as a claim of direct historical descent. No one is suggesting that modern copyright law grew out of Bronze Age plunder. The argument is structural and interpretive. Two systems separated by nearly three thousand years can share a common shape because they respond to a common human need. That need is the need to have one's contribution seen, named, and protected by the group. When the need is frustrated, the results are strikingly similar across the centuries: withdrawal, resentment, retaliation, and a breakdown of cooperation. Achilles withdraws from battle and lets his own side suffer. A modern inventor or author who feels robbed of credit may withdraw goodwill, sue, or refuse to share. The scale differs. The pattern rhymes. Three questions guide the discussion. First, what exactly is a geras, and why does the poem treat it as more valuable than ordinary wealth? Second, in what sense are intellectual property rights also non-monetary assets, and how does customary international law handle their allocation? Third, what can each system teach us about the other, especially about the dangers that arise when the authority to distribute is seen as unfair? By answering these questions the article aims to give students a richer way of thinking about intellectual property, one that connects a technical modern field to a much older and more human story. There is also a practical reason for the comparison. Students often struggle to see why certain doctrines exist. The right of an author to be named even after selling every commercial interest in a work, the fierce fights among scientists over who was first, the anger of communities whose designs and remedies are copied without acknowledgement: none of these fits neatly into a story about incentives and markets. The poem supplies a vocabulary that the market model lacks. It lets us name the thing that is really at stake, which is worth, standing, and the public acknowledgement of a contribution. The article proceeds as follows. Section 2 reviews relevant scholarship on Homeric society and on the theory of intellectual property. Section 3 develops the conceptual framework, explaining geras and the surrounding vocabulary of honour. Section 4 sets out the comparative method. Section 5 analyses the distribution of spoils in the poem. Section 6 examines non-monetary assets in customary international law. Section 7 reframes intellectual property as a system of recognition. Section 8 draws the parallels in detail. Section 9 offers a short worked illustration. Sections 10 and 11 discuss implications and limitations. Section 12 concludes. 2. Literature Review Scholarship on the social world of the Homeric poems has long recognised that honour is the organising value of that world. In his classic study of the society behind the epics, Finley described a culture in which a person's worth was measured by visible marks of esteem and by the gifts one could give and receive (Finley, 1954/2002). Later work sharpened this picture. Adkins argued that Greek moral vocabulary in this early period was built around competitive excellence and public standing rather than around private conscience (Adkins, 1960). The warrior of the poem is judged not by inner intention but by outward achievement and by the marks the community grants in return. Van Wees, in a detailed study of violence and rank, showed that the fighters of the poem are locked in a constant contest for position, and that gifts and prizes are the currency of that contest (Van Wees, 1992). The specific dynamics of prize, ransom, and revenge have received focused attention. Donna Wilson's study of the vocabulary of compensation demonstrated that the poem distinguishes carefully between different modes of settling a wrong, and that the refusal or acceptance of compensation is central to the plot (Wilson, 2002). This distinction matters for the present argument, because it shows that the poem itself already treats the difference between a paid-off injury and an unpaid injury as a difference in kind, not only in amount. Seaford placed the giving and taking of goods within a wider system of reciprocity and ritual, tracing how exchange binds the community together and how its failure tears the community apart (Seaford, 1994). Donlan's work on the aristocratic ideal and on gift exchange showed that distribution in this society is never neutral, because every transfer carries a message about relative rank (Donlan, 1980). Nagy's reading of the hero connects the pursuit of #kleos, or lasting fame, to the whole economy of honour, arguing that the warrior trades a short life for a permanent name (Nagy, 2013). Recent classical scholarship has renewed interest in these themes. Ready's study of immersion and identification examines why readers across many centuries still respond to the emotional stakes of the poem, including its conflicts over worth and loss (Ready, 2023). Edith Hall's reading of the epic as a text about survival and shared vulnerability shows how the poem's concern with what is owed to whom continues to speak to present crises (Hall, 2025). Creative reception has done similar work. Pat Barker's novels retell the story from the point of view of the captured women who are themselves treated as prizes, forcing readers to confront the human cost of a system that turns persons into tokens of honour (Barker, 2021). These retellings are relevant to the legal comparison because they expose a defect that the original narrative tends to hide, namely that a system organised entirely around the standing of individual warriors renders whole categories of people invisible. On the other side of the comparison, the theory of intellectual property has produced a large body of writing on why such rights exist. The standard textbook treatment sets out the main justifications, including the #incentive to create, the reward for labour, and the recognition of personality in a work (Bently, Sherman, Gangjee, & Johnson, 2022). Debates over moral rights, the author's right to be named and to protect the integrity of a work, keep the non-economic dimension in view, since these rights protect #reputation and identity rather than income. In the international sphere, the interaction of intellectual property with customary international law has grown more prominent, especially in disputes over traditional knowledge and genetic resources. The 2024 treaty adopted by the World Intellectual Property Organization (#WIPO) on intellectual property, #genetic_resources, and associated traditional knowledge marks a turning point, because it recognises for the first time in a binding international instrument that #indigenous_peoples have interests in intangible goods that go beyond ordinary commercial value (South Centre, 2024). General works on public international law explain how customary international law is formed and identified, through #state_practice combined with #opinio_juris, the belief that a practice is legally required (Crawford, 2019; Shaw, 2021). What has been less explored is the connection between the ancient economy of honour and the modern law of intangible rights. The literature on Homer rarely speaks to lawyers, and the literature on intellectual property rarely reaches back to the epic tradition. This article aims to fill part of that gap by reading the two systems together and by proposing a shared vocabulary that can serve both. 3. Conceptual Framework: Geras, Time, and the Economy of Honour To read the poem as a study in the allocation of non-monetary assets, we need a clear grasp of a small cluster of Greek terms. They do not translate neatly, and their difficulty is part of the point. Where a single English word would flatten the idea, it is better to keep the Greek and explain it. The most important term for our purposes is geras. A geras is a special portion set aside for a leading warrior when spoils of war are divided. It is drawn from the common pool of plunder, but it is not distributed by simple equal shares. Instead it is awarded on top of an ordinary share as a mark of superior standing. A geras can be a valuable object, a bronze tripod, a horse, or a cup, but in the crisis that opens the poem the prizes at stake are captive women, Briseis and Chryseis. This is deeply uncomfortable for modern readers, and rightly so. The poem treats living persons as tokens in a system of honour, and Barker's retellings make the moral horror of this explicit (Barker, 2021). For the purpose of analysis we must hold two things in mind at once: that these are human beings, and that within the value system of the text they function as signs of #status. The discomfort is not a distraction from the argument. It is a reminder that systems for allocating recognition can be built on cruelty, and that the question of who is a person and who is merely plunder is itself part of the distribution. The second term is time, usually translated as honour or esteem. If geras is the concrete object, time is the abstract value it represents. A warrior accumulates time through brave deeds, and the community expresses his time by awarding him the appropriate geras. The two are linked so tightly that an attack on one is an attack on the other. When Agamemnon seizes Achilles' geras, he is not merely taking a valuable possession. He is publicly lowering Achilles' time, announcing to the whole army that Achilles ranks below him. This is why the response is so extreme. In a #heroic_society there is no private compensation for a public humiliation, because the injury took place in front of everyone and can be healed only in front of everyone. The third term is kleos, or fame that outlives the person. Kleos is the ultimate non-monetary asset in this world. It is the reason a warrior accepts an early death, because a glorious name preserved in song is worth more than a long and forgotten life (Nagy, 2013). The whole economy of honour points toward kleos as its highest currency. A geras is valuable partly because it is evidence, here and now, of the kleos a warrior is earning. The prize is a receipt for future fame. Around these three terms sits a wider vocabulary. Menis, the wrath of Achilles, is the very first word of the poem, and it is a response to injured honour. Xenia, guest friendship, governs the exchange of gifts between hosts and travellers and shows that reciprocity extends beyond the battlefield into ordinary social life. Moira, one's allotted portion or fate, connects the idea of a fair share of plunder to the idea of a fair share of life. These terms together describe an integrated system in which material goods, social standing, and even mortality are all expressed through acts of distribution. To receive one's proper portion, whether of plunder or of days, is to be placed correctly within the order of things. Two features of this system deserve emphasis, because they will reappear in the modern half of the comparison. The first is that the value of a geras is almost entirely relational. Its worth does not lie in the object itself but in what the award says about the recipient's place relative to others. A tripod is a tripod. A tripod awarded before the assembled army as the prize of the best fighter is something else entirely. The second is that the system depends on a trusted process of allocation. Someone must decide who gets what, and that decision must be accepted as legitimate. When Agamemnon abuses his role as chief distributor, the whole system loses its authority, and cooperation collapses. Both features, relational value and the fragility of allocating authority, are also central to intellectual property, as later sections show. It is worth pausing on the phrase #symbolic_capital, borrowed from modern social theory, because it names the thing a geras really is. A geras is symbolic capital made visible. It can be converted into influence, followers, and future advantage, but only so long as the community continues to honour it. The moment the community stops recognising the award as legitimate, the symbolic capital evaporates. This is exactly the position of an intellectual property right, which is also a socially recognised claim that has force only because a community of states and institutions agrees to enforce it. Strip away that agreement and the right becomes a piece of paper, just as a disputed prize becomes a mere object once the army stops respecting the award. 4. Methodology This study uses a comparative and interpretive method rather than an empirical one. It does not test a hypothesis against a data set. Instead it places two bodies of material side by side, a literary text and a field of law, and asks what structural features they share and what each reveals about the other. The literary material is the Iliad, read primarily in Emily Wilson's 2023 translation for its clarity and its attention to the poem's concern with worth and loss (Wilson, 2023), and supported by the scholarly tradition surveyed above. The legal material is drawn from standard accounts of intellectual property and customary international law, together with the recent international instrument on traditional knowledge and genetic resources. The aim is not to produce a specialist doctrinal study but to build a bridge that a student can walk across in both directions. The comparison is organised around what may be called functional equivalence. Two elements from different systems are treated as equivalent not because they look alike on the surface but because they perform the same function within their respective systems. A geras and a copyright do not resemble each other physically. They perform a similar function. Each is a socially recognised claim that marks the worth of a contribution and that can be defended against others. The method asks, for each key feature of the Homeric system, whether the modern legal system contains a functional equivalent, and it asks the same question in reverse. Where a feature exists in one system but not the other, that absence is itself informative, because it shows where the two orders have diverged and why. The approach draws on the long tradition of #comparative_law, which has always used the contrast between systems to make the familiar strange and therefore visible. A lawyer who has only ever seen one system tends to mistake its particular arrangements for the natural order of things. Setting a legal order beside a very different one, even an imaginary one drawn from an epic poem, loosens that grip and allows the underlying purposes of the law to come into view. Three limits of the method should be stated at the outset, and they are developed further in Section 11. First, the comparison is heuristic. Its aim is to generate insight and to help students see familiar law in a new light, not to prove a causal connection. Second, the poem is a work of imaginative literature, not a legal record, and its picture of society is stylised by the demands of oral composition and heroic narrative. Third, modern law is far more institutionalised than anything in the poem, with courts, registries, and treaties that have no Homeric counterpart. These differences are not weaknesses to be hidden. They are part of what the comparison reveals, because they show how the same underlying need for recognition has been channelled into very different structures over time. 5. The Allocation of Spoils in the Iliad The plot of the poem is set in motion by a failure of distribution. Understanding that failure in detail is the key to the whole comparison, so it is worth following the sequence carefully. The Greek army has been fighting in the #Trojan_War for years. Plunder from raided towns is gathered into a common pool and then divided. Ordinary fighters receive ordinary shares. Leading warriors receive, in addition, a geras, a prize of honour chosen to reflect their standing. Agamemnon, as the commander of the expedition, holds a special role in this process. He is not simply one warrior among many. He is the figure through whom the authority to allocate is exercised. This is the crucial structural fact. The system does not run itself. It depends on a distributor whose decisions the others accept as fair. So long as the distributor is trusted, the machinery of honour runs smoothly and the army fights as one. The crisis begins when Agamemnon is forced to give up his own prize, the woman Chryseis, in order to end a plague sent by the god Apollo, whose priest is her father. Agamemnon agrees, but he insists on being compensated so that he alone is not left without a prize. Rather than wait for the next division of spoils, he takes Briseis, the prize already awarded to Achilles. In doing so he uses his position as distributor to enrich himself at the expense of the army's greatest fighter. He reaches back into a completed distribution and reverses it by force. From the point of view of this article, several things happen at once in that moment. Agamemnon converts a public office, the role of fair distributor, into a tool of private advantage. He treats an award that the community had already made, the granting of Briseis to Achilles, as if it were reversible at his whim. And he publicly lowers Achilles' time in front of the whole army. The seizure is not theft of an ordinary object. It is an attack on Achilles' recognised place in the order of honour, carried out by the very person whose job is to protect that order. The betrayal is therefore double. Achilles loses his prize, and he learns that the process he had trusted can be turned against him. Achilles' response reveals how much is at stake. He does not simply grieve the loss of a valued companion, though the poem later shows real feeling between him and Briseis. His first and dominant reaction is rage at the injustice of the process. He points out that he does most of the fighting yet receives a smaller reward than Agamemnon, who stays back and claims the largest share. He accuses Agamemnon of being a leader who devours his own people. Then he withdraws. He and his troops leave the battle, and he asks his divine mother to arrange that the Greeks suffer defeat so that they will feel the cost of dishonouring him. The withdrawal is not a sulk. It is a rational, if terrible, response to a system that has shown itself to be rigged. If the distributor will not protect a warrior's standing, the warrior has no reason to keep risking his life for the group. This withdrawal is the poem's great engine. Because the strongest fighter refuses to cooperate, the whole coalition weakens. Many die who would otherwise have lived, including, eventually, Achilles' closest friend #Patroclus, whose death draws Achilles back into the war and toward his own foretold death. The entire tragic arc flows from a single act of unjust allocation and the collapse of trust that follows. The poem is, in this sense, a long demonstration of what happens to a community when the mechanism for distributing recognition is captured by the powerful. The middle of the poem contains a second episode that is just as revealing: the embassy to Achilles. Realising the disaster his greed has caused, Agamemnon offers an enormous package of gifts to win Achilles back. The offer includes the return of Briseis, along with gold, horses, tripods, and the promise of a high marriage. By any material measure it is far more than Achilles lost. Yet Achilles refuses. Scholars have long debated why (Wilson, 2002; Cairns, 2001). The reading that fits our theme is this. The gifts cannot repair the injury because the injury was never material. What was taken was honour, publicly, and mere wealth, offered as if it could buy back standing, insults the very value it claims to restore. Achilles senses that to accept payment for a public humiliation would be to accept that his time can be priced, which is exactly the reduction he refuses. There is a further sting. Agamemnon offers the gifts without a full public acknowledgement of wrongdoing, and he expects Achilles to submit to him as the greater man in return. The offer therefore repeats the original insult even as it tries to cure it. The scene shows that non-monetary assets cannot always be converted back into money without loss, a point that will matter greatly when we turn to moral rights. The final movement of the poem offers a kind of resolution, though not a legal one. After Achilles kills the Trojan prince #Hector in revenge for Patroclus, he abuses the corpse, refusing the normal rites of burial. The old king #Priam comes in secret, at great risk, to ransom his son's body. Here the exchange of an object, the body for a ransom, is completed with dignity, and reciprocity is restored through shared grief rather than through calculation. The two enemies weep together, each thinking of what he has lost. The poem ends not with a settlement of the original dispute over Briseis but with a fragile human recognition that both men have lost what cannot be replaced. The economy of honour is shown at its most brutal and at its most humane within a few hundred lines. It is important that the healing comes through mutual acknowledgement and not through a larger payment. The ransom matters, but what makes the scene work is that each man finally sees the other's worth and grief. Read as a whole, the poem offers a clear anatomy of how a system for allocating non-monetary assets can fail and, partly, heal. It fails when the distributor abuses his authority, when a completed award is treated as reversible, and when injured parties conclude that the process is rigged against them. It heals, imperfectly, when the parties recognise one another's worth and restore reciprocity through acknowledgement rather than mere calculation. These lessons transfer with surprising ease to the modern law of intangible rights. 6. Non-Monetary Assets in Customary International Law Before drawing the parallels in full, we need a working account of how modern international practice handles intangible goods and the recognition attached to them. Customary international law is not written down in a single code. It is inferred from two things: what states actually do over time, called state practice, and whether they do it out of a sense of legal obligation, called opinio juris (Crawford, 2019; Shaw, 2021). A rule becomes customary when a general and consistent practice is followed because states believe the law requires it, and not merely out of habit or convenience. This is a slow, decentralised process. There is no single lawgiver. In this respect it is closer to the Homeric world than modern statute law is, because it too depends on shared expectations that emerge from repeated behaviour rather than from a command issued by one authority. Both orders grow from the ground up, through practice that hardens into obligation. Much of customary international law concerns tangible things, territory, ships, borders. But a growing part of it concerns intangible goods and the recognition of claims to them. The clearest example relevant to this article is the treatment of traditional knowledge, genetic resources, and cultural expressions belonging to indigenous peoples and local communities. For a long time, the international system offered little protection for such goods. Knowledge about a medicinal plant, or a traditional design, or a communal story, could be taken by outsiders, patented or copyrighted, and exploited commercially, while the community that had developed and preserved it over generations received neither recognition nor reward. This practice came to be seen as a form of misappropriation, sometimes called #biopiracy when it involved biological resources. The community's contribution was real, but the system had no way to award it a prize. The 2024 treaty on intellectual property, genetic resources, and associated traditional knowledge represents a landmark response. It creates an international obligation for patent applicants to disclose the source or origin of genetic resources and associated traditional knowledge on which an invention is based (South Centre, 2024). The disclosure requirement is significant for our theme because it is only partly about money. Its deeper purpose is to secure attribution and to prevent the erasure of the communities that are the true source of the knowledge. It is, in effect, a moral-rights-style protection at the level of peoples. It says that a community has a claim to be named as the origin of what it created, and that outsiders may not quietly take the credit. This is precisely the concern that animates Achilles when his contribution is claimed by another. The disclosure obligation is a way of writing a community's name onto the record so that its worth cannot be silently absorbed by a more powerful actor. Several other areas of practice show the same pattern. The protection of #geographical_indications, which tie a product's name to a place and its people, is partly about reputation and cultural identity, not only about market value. When a region insists that only cheese or wine made in a particular way and place may carry a particular name, it is defending a collective reputation built over generations, a form of communal honour. The growing attention to the return of #cultural_heritage objects taken during colonial rule reflects an emerging sense that a people has a recognised interest in the symbols of its own heritage, an interest that mere payment cannot satisfy. A community that asks for the return of a sacred object is rarely satisfied by an offer to buy a replica. And the way states extend recognition to one another's intellectual property through the principle of #national_treatment, under which each state treats foreign creators the same as its own, functions as a mutual promise to honour each other's claims to recognition. Each of these is a modern act of allocation of non-monetary assets, carried out through the slow accretion of practice that is the hallmark of customary international law. The key point is that international practice, like the Homeric camp, must constantly decide who is entitled to be recognised as the source or owner of an intangible good, and must do so through a process that participants accept as fair. Where that process is seen as biased toward the powerful, resentment follows, and cooperation frays, just as it did outside Troy. The difference is that the modern order has built institutions to catch disputes before they end in open withdrawal, whereas the Greek camp had only the commander himself, the very person who caused the crisis. 7. Intellectual Property as a System of Recognition We usually justify intellectual property in economic terms. The dominant story says that people will not invest time and money in creating new works and inventions unless they can capture the returns, so the law grants a temporary right to exclude others, allowing creators to profit and thereby encouraging more creation (Bently et al., 2022). This incentive story is powerful and largely true. But it does not capture everything that intellectual property does, and it misses the part that connects most directly to the world of the poem. Alongside the economic function sits a recognition function. Many features of the law make sense only if we accept that intellectual property also serves to identify, name, and honour the source of a contribution. The clearest example is moral rights. In many legal systems, an author has the right to be identified as the author of a work, called the right of #attribution, and the right to object to distortions of the work that would harm the author's reputation, called the right of #integrity. These rights are separate from the economic rights. An author may sell all the commercial rights in a book and yet retain the right to be named as its author. Moral rights protect honour and personality, not income. They exist precisely because we recognise that being credited is a distinct good, one that money cannot fully replace. In systems that take these rights seriously, they cannot be sold or given away, which tells us that the law regards them as attached to the person rather than to the market. Patent law contains a parallel. Beyond the commercial right to exploit an invention lies the question of #inventorship, the recognition of who actually made the inventive contribution. Naming the wrong person as inventor, or leaving out a true inventor, is treated as a serious wrong even where the financial stakes are handled separately by contract. The concept of #priority, deciding who was first to invent or to file, is at bottom a contest over recognition. To be recognised as first is to receive a kind of geras: a public mark of primacy that raises one's standing in the relevant community, whether that community is a group of scientists, a firm, or a nation. The history of science is full of bitter fights over priority that had little to do with money and everything to do with the desire to be remembered as the one who was first. Copyright, too, carries a recognition dimension even in systems that emphasise economics. The strong social disapproval of #plagiarism, which is often not itself a legal wrong, shows that communities police the norm of giving credit quite apart from any question of money. A student who copies an essay without acknowledgement, or a researcher who presents another's findings as their own, is condemned even where no one has lost a single coin. What has been violated is the norm of attribution, the same norm that the disclosure requirement in the 2024 treaty seeks to enforce at the level of peoples (South Centre, 2024). Trademark law, too, protects reputation as much as it protects sales. A famous mark is a store of #goodwill, a public record of the standing a business has earned, and its owner will defend it fiercely against imitation even where the immediate loss of sales is small. Once we see intellectual property this way, its resemblance to the economy of honour becomes clear. An intellectual property right is a socially recognised claim to be treated as the source of an intangible thing. Its value is heavily relational. To hold a famous patent, or to be credited as the author of an influential work, raises one's standing relative to others in a field. Like a geras, it is symbolic capital that can be converted into influence, reputation, and future opportunity. And like a geras, it depends entirely on the willingness of a community to keep honouring the claim. A patent that no court will enforce is as empty as a prize the army refuses to respect. The right lives in the recognition, not in the paper. This recognition function also explains why disputes over intellectual property are so often more bitter than the money at stake would predict. When creators sue over attribution, or scientists fight over priority, or communities protest the appropriation of their traditional knowledge, the intensity of feeling comes from the same place as Achilles' wrath. The injury is felt as an attack on worth and identity, not merely as a financial loss. People will spend far more contesting such a claim than they could ever hope to recover, because what they are defending is time, in the Homeric sense, rather than money. A purely economic account cannot explain this behaviour, and often treats it as irrational. The honour account explains it at once. The parties are not miscalculating. They are defending something the market cannot measure. 8. Comparative Analysis: Parallels Between the Two Systems We can now set the two systems directly against each other. Four parallels stand out, and a fifth theme cuts across them. 8.1 The primacy of recognition over material gain In both systems the intangible value dwarfs the material one. Achilles refuses a fortune in gifts because no amount of wealth can undo a public dishonour (Wilson, 2002). The modern law of moral rights rests on the same insight: the right to be named as author survives the sale of every economic right, because attribution is a separate good. In both cases, the community accepts that some non-monetary assets cannot be fully converted into money without loss. This is not sentimentality. It is a structural feature of any system built on honour and recognition. The moment a society allows every mark of status to be bought and sold like a commodity, the marks stop meaning anything, because they no longer track contribution and worth. If any wealthy person could simply purchase the title of best fighter, the title would cease to signal anything about fighting. The poem dramatises this danger through Agamemnon's belief that gifts can settle a matter of honour. The law guards against it by keeping certain rights inalienable, tied to the person and beyond the reach of any contract. 8.2 The fragility of allocating authority Both systems depend on a trusted process of allocation, and both are vulnerable when that process is captured by the powerful. In the poem, Agamemnon holds the authority to distribute spoils of war, and the crisis comes when he abuses it for private gain. In the modern system, the authority to grant and enforce intellectual property rights is held by states and by international bodies operating under customary international law and treaties. When that authority is perceived to favour rich nations and large corporations at the expense of indigenous peoples and developing countries, the sense of injustice mirrors Achilles' complaint that the leader takes the largest share while others do the work. The long history of traditional knowledge being taken without recognition is, in structural terms, a series of #Briseis moments: goods that a community had a recognised claim to, seized by a more powerful actor who controlled the machinery of allocation (South Centre, 2024). The 2024 treaty can be read as an attempt to reform the distributor, to make the process of allocating recognition less biased and therefore more legitimate. The deep lesson of the poem is that #legitimacy, once lost, is very hard to rebuild, and that the loss harms the powerful too, because they depend on the cooperation that legitimacy secures. 8.3 The destabilising force of perceived injustice Both systems show that unfair allocation does not merely wrong an individual. It undermines cooperation across the whole community. Achilles' withdrawal weakens the entire Greek army and leads to many deaths, including deaths on his own side that he could have prevented. In the modern world, when creators, scientists, or communities conclude that the system for recognising their contributions is rigged, they too withdraw cooperation. They may refuse to share data, guard their methods in secrecy, decline to participate in international frameworks, or simply lose faith in the rules. The result is a loss to everyone, because the free flow of knowledge and creativity depends on participants trusting that their contributions will be recognised. The #dispute_resolution machinery of modern law, courts, arbitration, and treaty bodies, exists precisely to prevent the kind of total breakdown the poem depicts, by offering an alternative to withdrawal and revenge. Where that machinery is weak or absent, as it long was for traditional knowledge, the Homeric pattern of resentment and retreat reasserts itself. The presence of a fair forum is what separates a manageable dispute from a war. 8.4 The tension between individual and collective entitlement A fourth parallel is subtler. The Homeric geras is awarded to an individual warrior, yet it is drawn from a common pool and depends on the community's collective judgment. There is a permanent tension between the individual's claim to a prize and the group's interest in fair overall distribution. Modern intellectual property shows the same tension in a new form. On one side stands the individual creator or the single firm claiming exclusive rights. On the other stands the community that provided the raw materials of culture and knowledge, and that has an interest in access. This tension is at its sharpest in the case of traditional knowledge, where the very idea of a single named author sits awkwardly with knowledge developed collectively over many generations. The 2024 treaty's recognition of communal and indigenous interests is an attempt to build collective entitlement into a legal system originally designed around individual owners (South Centre, 2024). The poem, read carefully, already contains this tension. Briseis and the other captives are, from the community's point of view, common plunder, yet they are awarded as individual prizes, and it is precisely the clash between the common pool and the individual award that triggers the disaster. Barker's retellings press this point by giving the captives their own voice, reminding us that a system focused on the honour of individual warriors renders whole categories of people invisible (Barker, 2021). 8.5 Reading the two systems together Taken together, these parallels suggest that intellectual property is best understood not as a purely modern economic invention but as the latest form of a very old human institution: the socially managed distribution of recognition. The specific mechanisms differ enormously. The Greek camp had a single commander and a pool of plunder. The modern world has registries, courts, and a slowly accreting body of customary international law. But the underlying task is the same. A community must decide how to allocate non-monetary assets, above all honour and attribution, in a way that participants accept as fair, and it must guard against the capture of that process by the powerful. When it succeeds, cooperation flourishes and creativity is rewarded. When it fails, the injured withdraw, and everyone is poorer for it. This reading also clarifies why the emotional temperature of intellectual property disputes runs so high. If these rights were only about money, we would expect parties to settle rationally at the point where the cost of fighting exceeds the expected gain. But because the rights are also about time and worth, parties often fight past that point, exactly as Achilles does when he rejects Agamemnon's lavish offer. The poem gives us a vocabulary for this behaviour that pure economics lacks. It lets us say, plainly, that the injury is to honour, and that honour resists pricing. 9. A Short Worked Illustration To make the comparison concrete, consider a familiar pattern rather than any single named case. A researcher makes a discovery while working within a large institution. A more senior or more powerful figure then presents that discovery to the wider world, taking the public credit, while the original researcher is left off the record or reduced to a footnote. The financial rewards may be handled separately by salary or contract, so the dispute is not really about pay. What burns is the loss of recognition. The junior researcher has been stripped of a geras by someone who controlled the machinery of publication and credit. Set beside the poem, the pattern is immediately legible. The senior figure occupies the position of Agamemnon, the one who controls distribution and uses it for personal advantage. The junior researcher occupies the position of Achilles, whose real contribution is publicly claimed by another. The likely responses map neatly onto the epic. The wronged party may withdraw cooperation, leave the institution, refuse to share future work, or fight bitterly for acknowledgement long after any financial remedy would justify the effort. Colleagues who watch the injustice go unaddressed may lose faith in the fairness of the whole enterprise, just as the Greek army suffers when it sees its best fighter dishonoured. The same shape appears at the level of peoples. A pharmaceutical company builds a product on the knowledge of a community that has used a plant for generations, secures a patent, and markets the result worldwide while the community's role goes unmentioned. The community has been dispossessed of recognition, not only of potential income. The 2024 treaty's disclosure requirement is a direct attempt to prevent exactly this outcome by forcing the record to name the true source (South Centre, 2024). In Homeric terms, it is an attempt to make the distributor honest, so that the prize is awarded to the one whose contribution earned it. These illustrations are deliberately general, because the point is structural. What matters is not the particular facts of any dispute but the recurring shape: a real contribution, a powerful actor who controls the allocation of credit, a public claiming of that contribution by the wrong party, and the resentment and withdrawal that follow. That shape is as old as the poem and as current as the latest debate over authorship and attribution. 10. Discussion and Implications Several implications follow from this comparison, both for how we teach intellectual property and for how we think about reform. The first implication is educational. Students who approach intellectual property only through its economic justifications often find moral rights, attribution norms, and traditional knowledge protections puzzling, because these do not fit the incentive story. Reading the field alongside the Homeric economy of honour supplies the missing frame. It lets students see that a legal system can protect recognition as a good in its own right, and that this is not a strange modern add-on but a very old and widespread human practice. Once the recognition function is visible, the puzzling doctrines fall into place. Moral rights protect time. Rules on inventorship and priority allocate the modern equivalent of a geras. Disclosure requirements for traditional knowledge enforce attribution at the level of peoples. The poem thus works as a teaching device that unifies doctrines the incentive story leaves scattered. The second implication concerns legitimacy. The poem teaches that a system for allocating non-monetary assets survives only as long as its process is accepted as fair, and that the fastest way to destroy it is to let the powerful capture the role of distributor. This is a direct warning for the international intellectual property system. If developing countries and indigenous peoples come to see the rules as a device by which wealthy actors take credit and profit for goods that others created, the legitimacy of the whole system erodes, and cooperation gives way to the modern equivalents of Achilles' withdrawal, whether through non-participation, resistance, or the quiet refusal to enforce. The 2024 treaty is best understood as an attempt to restore legitimacy by reforming the process of allocation to include those who were previously excluded (South Centre, 2024). Whether it succeeds will depend on whether the practice of states comes to reflect a genuine sense of obligation, the opinio juris that turns behaviour into binding customary international law rather than empty words. The third implication is about the limits of turning everything into money. Both systems warn against the belief that every non-monetary asset can be converted into cash without loss. Agamemnon's mistake is to think that a heap of gifts can buy back honour. A modern parallel is the assumption that paying a community a licence fee fully settles the taking of its traditional knowledge, when what the community may want most is recognition, respect, and control over how its heritage is used. Designing law that respects the non-monetary core of these assets is difficult, but the comparison suggests it is essential. Where the law offers only money for injuries that are really about recognition, it will consistently leave the parties unsatisfied and breed resentment. The lesson is not that money is irrelevant but that it is the wrong sole remedy for an injury to standing. A fourth implication concerns the individual and the collective. The modern system inherited from earlier centuries a strong bias toward the single named creator. The Homeric material, read critically, exposes the cost of a system organised entirely around individual honour: it renders the collective, and the vulnerable, invisible. As intellectual property law grapples with communal and indigenous claims, it is in effect trying to correct a bias that the poem lets us see with unusual clarity. The challenge is to build recognition of collective contribution into a framework designed for individual owners, without simply erasing the individual creator whose work the incentive story rightly values. Both extremes fail. A system that recognises only individuals ignores whole communities. A system that recognises only communities discourages the individual effort that drives much creation. The task is balance. Finally, the comparison offers a hopeful note. The poem does not end with endless revenge. It ends with Priam and Achilles recognising each other's grief and completing a dignified exchange. That closing scene suggests that even a system built on fierce competition for honour can make room for mutual recognition and restored reciprocity. Applied to the modern world, it implies that the international intellectual property system, for all its conflicts, retains the capacity to reach settlements that honour the worth of all parties, if it can find the equivalent of that final meeting: a moment in which the powerful and the wronged recognise each other as sources of value rather than as rivals to be plundered. The machinery of law, at its best, exists to make that moment reachable without the intervening bloodshed. 11. Limitations This article has clear limits. It is an interpretive and comparative essay, not an empirical study, and its parallels are structural rather than causal. There is no claim that modern law descends from Homeric practice, only that the two share a common shape because they respond to a common need. Readers who want proof of historical influence will not find it here, and none is offered. The poem is imaginative literature, and its picture of society is stylised and shaped by the demands of oral composition and heroic narrative. It should not be treated as a straightforward historical record of any real society, and scholars continue to debate how far it reflects any actual period (Finley, 1954/2002; Van Wees, 1992). The reading offered here also focuses on a particular set of themes, geras, honour, and distribution, and necessarily leaves aside much of the poem's richness, including its treatment of the gods, of fate, and of grief, except where these bear directly on the argument. The comparison is also asymmetric in institutional terms. Modern intellectual property and customary international law involve elaborate machinery, courts, registries, treaties, and expert bodies, that has no counterpart in the poem. The article treats this difference as illuminating rather than disabling, but readers should keep it firmly in view, because it means that some Homeric lessons transfer only loosely. Finally, the treatment of the modern law here is deliberately general, aimed at students meeting these ideas for the first time, and it does not attempt the detailed doctrinal analysis that a specialist study would require. These limits mark out the ground for further work rather than undermining the central comparison. A natural next step would be a closer study of particular disputes over attribution and priority, read through the lens developed here. 12. Conclusion The distance between the Greek camp at Troy and a modern patent office could hardly be greater. Yet this article has argued that the two are engaged in a recognisably similar task. Both must decide how to allocate non-monetary assets, above all honour, recognition, and attribution, and both depend on a process of allocation that participants accept as legitimate. The geras of the poem and the intellectual property right of today are functional cousins: socially recognised claims to be treated as the source of a valued thing, whose worth is relational and whose force depends entirely on the community's continued willingness to honour them. Reading the Iliad as a study in distribution yields lessons that reach across three thousand years. It shows that recognition often matters more than material gain, that the authority to allocate is fragile and easily abused, that perceived injustice destroys cooperation, and that individual and collective claims stand in constant tension. Each of these lessons speaks directly to current debates in customary international law over moral rights, traditional knowledge, and the fair treatment of indigenous peoples, debates given fresh urgency by the 2024 international treaty on intellectual property, genetic resources, and associated traditional knowledge. For students, the payoff is a richer understanding of a field too often reduced to economics. Intellectual property is not only a machine for producing incentives. It is one of the ways a modern society, like the ancient one before it, decides whose contributions will be seen, named, and protected. The wrath of Achilles began with a prize unjustly taken. The same sense of injury animates a scientist stripped of credit, an author denied acknowledgement, or a community whose knowledge is quietly appropriated. To understand intellectual property fully, we must understand that it is, at its heart, a system of #honour, and that systems of honour have a very long memory. 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Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Ready, J. L. (2023). Immersion, Identification, and the Iliad. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Seaford, R. (1994). Reciprocity and Ritual: Homer and Tragedy in the Developing City-State. Oxford: Clarendon Press. Shaw, M. N. (2021). International Law (9th ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. South Centre. (2024). Understanding the new WIPO Treaty on Intellectual Property, Genetic Resources and Associated Traditional Knowledge. South Centre Policy Brief, No. 131. Van Wees, H. (1992). Status Warriors: War, Violence and Society in Homer and History. Amsterdam: J. C. Gieben. Wilson, D. F. (2002). Ransom, Revenge, and Heroic Identity in the Iliad. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Wilson, E. (Trans.). (2023). The Iliad (by Homer). New York: W. W. Norton. #geras #intellectual_property #customary_international_law #the_Iliad #Homer #Achilles #Agamemnon #honour #recognition #moral_rights #traditional_knowledge #non_monetary_assets #distribution_of_spoils #allocation_of_prizes #comparative_law
- The Litigation of the Shield: Property Rights & Customary Arbitration in Proto-Legal Systems, The Trial Scene on the Shield of Achilles as a Foundational Text for Early Alternative Dispute Resolution
This article studies a short but famous passage in Homer's Iliad, the trial scene carved on the Shield of Achilles at Book 18, lines 497 to 508. The scene shows two men in a public square quarrelling over the payment owed for a killing. One says he has offered full payment; the other refuses to take anything. The dispute is brought before a circle of elders, a herald keeps order, a crowd takes sides, and two measures of gold lie in the middle for whoever gives the straightest ruling. The argument here is that this small picture is one of the oldest surviving records of #alternative_dispute_resolution in the Western tradition, and that it can also be read as an early record of how communities turned harm into a matter of value, price, and transferable claims. The paper places the scene inside three linked debates: whether the case is about a fact or about a principle; who the deciding figure really is; and whether the process is voluntary or a form of public control over private revenge. It then reads the scene through the lens of #property_rights and #customary_arbitration, showing that the blood-price acts like a bridge between a life and a set of goods, and that the gold reward acts like movable property put to work inside a #proto_legal_system. The study concludes that the shield picture matters for modern readers because it shows dispute resolution before the state, built on neutral third parties, public reasoning, and community trust rather than on written statutes or police power. The analysis draws on recent scholarship together with the canonical works that any serious reading of this passage must engage. Keywords: Homer; Iliad; Shield of Achilles; blood-price; arbitration; dispute resolution; property; customary law; proto-legal systems; early Greek law 1. Introduction Few images from the ancient world have carried as much weight in legal history as the small courtroom scene set into the metal of a warrior's shield. In the Iliad, the god Hephaestus makes a new shield for Achilles, and across its surface he places a whole world in miniature: a starry sky, two cities, fields, dances, herds, and a vineyard. In one of the two cities, the city at peace, there is a wedding and there is a quarrel. The quarrel is a legal one. Two men stand in the #agora, the public gathering place, and argue over the price owed for a man who has been killed. This paper treats that quarrel, the so-called #trial_scene on the #Shield_of_Achilles, as a serious source for the history of law and, in particular, for the history of settling disputes without going to war and without a modern court. The passage is only a dozen lines long, yet it has produced what one careful survey fairly calls mountains of legal scholarship (Papakonstantinou, 2008). The reason is simple. The scene sits right at the point where scholars believe Greek society was moving away from private #vengeance and towards public, orderly ways of handling harm. Because the Iliad was shaped in roughly the eighth or seventh century before the common era, it offers a rare window onto a moment when law existed as practice and custom long before it existed as writing. Reading the scene, we watch a community try to answer a hard question that every society must face: what happens when one person kills another, and the dead man's family wants blood? It is worth pausing on why a poem should count as evidence for legal history at all. The Iliad is not a law report, and Homer was not a lawyer. Yet the poems were composed and performed for audiences who lived by the customs they describe, and those audiences would have noticed a false note in a courtroom scene as quickly as a modern audience notices a false note in a film about their own workplace. The details had to be recognisable. That is why scholars treat the legal scenes in Homer with such care. They are not transcripts, but they are shaped by real practice, and the consistency of the terms used across the poems suggests that the poet was drawing on a shared and stable picture of how disputes were handled. The main claim of this article has two parts. The first part is that the shield picture is best understood as an early example of #arbitration and #mediation rather than as a picture of a modern trial. The elders do not command; they persuade and propose. The parties are not dragged in; they come willingly and are eager for a result. There is no jail, no state prosecutor, and no written code on the wall. What holds the process together is the trust of the #community and the honour attached to good judgement. These are the very features that define alternative dispute resolution today. The second part of the claim is less often made and forms the paper's contribution. It is that the scene is also a document about property rights in the widest sense. A killing has taken place, and the community's response is to translate the loss of a life into a quantity of goods that can be offered, refused, argued over, and eventually fixed. The #blood_price, called #poine in Greek, works like a price on a claim. The refusal to accept it is the assertion of a competing claim, the kin's right to take revenge. And the two measures of gold placed in the centre of the circle show property being used as an instrument of the process itself, a reward that motivates careful judgement. To read the scene only as courtroom drama is to miss the fact that the whole event is about turning wrongs into values and values into settled entitlements. The paper proceeds as follows. Section 2 sets out the text and what actually happens in the scene, in plain language and without leaning on any one modern translation. Section 3 reviews the scholarship and states the method. Section 4 works through the three long-standing puzzles that any reading must face. Section 5 develops the property-rights argument. Section 6 develops the customary-arbitration argument and locates the scene inside the idea of a proto-legal system. Section 7 connects the whole picture to modern dispute resolution and to the history of alternative dispute resolution. Section 8 offers comparisons with other early legal cultures. Section 9 discusses what all of this means, Section 10 states the limits of the study, and Section 11 concludes. 2. The Text: What Happens in the Trial Scene The description of the shield runs across the second half of Iliad Book 18. Within the city at peace, the poet turns to a gathering in the public square. A crowd has come together, and a quarrel, in Greek a neikos, has broken out. To be precise about the wording, and because the exact terms matter for what follows, the poet uses the word for strife to open the scene and then names two men as the disputants. The subject of the argument is stated at once. Two men are contending over the #poine owed for a man who has died, that is, for a killing. Here the paths of interpretation already begin to split, and the paper returns to this in Section 4. One man declares, in front of the demos, the people or district, that he is offering or has offered to pay everything in full. The verb used for his declaration, a form connected with solemn public speaking and vowing, has itself been the subject of close study, because it is one of the clearest surviving cases of that verb used in a setting that looks legal. The other man refuses. He will accept nothing. Both men are then said to be eager to reach a limit or a binding end to the matter, and to do so before an #istor, a figure whose exact role is one of the great disputes in the scholarship. Around the two men, the community is not silent. The people shout, taking sides, some for one man and some for the other. #Heralds, the officials who manage public order and speech, hold the crowd back and keep the peace so that the process can go forward. This detail is important. The scene is public, noisy, and emotional, yet it is also controlled. Voices are managed. There is a strong sense that speaking in turn matters, and that the community will not let the argument collapse into a brawl. At the heart of the picture sit the #gerontes, the elders. They are seated on polished stones arranged in a sacred circle. They hold in their hands the staffs of the loud-voiced heralds, and one by one they rise, take the staff, and give their #dike, their judgement or ruling. The staff marks whose turn it is to speak, so that authority passes in an orderly way from one speaker to the next. In the middle of the circle lie two measures, two #talents, of gold. The poet says the gold is to be given to the one among the elders who speaks the straightest judgement. That is the whole scene. It is short, but almost every phrase in it has been fought over. Who are the two men, exactly? Is the argument about whether money was paid, or about whether money may be paid at all? Who is the istor, and what does that word mean? Who receives the two talents of gold, the winning party or the best-speaking elder? Is this a court with power to force an outcome, or a voluntary meeting of neighbours who agree to accept the result? These questions are not word games. They decide whether we are looking at adjudication, at #arbitration, at #mediation, or at some mixture that has no exact modern name. The next sections take them up in order, but first it helps to see how scholars have approached the passage. 3. Literature Review and Method Modern study of the scene has moved through several stages. An older tradition read the passage against the practices of other early societies, especially the practice of paying #wergeld, a fixed sum owed for causing a death, which is well recorded in early Germanic and Celtic law. The early twentieth-century study by Treston (1923) placed Homeric blood-price inside this wide comparative frame and treated the Iliad as evidence for how a tribal society handled killing before formal courts existed. That comparative instinct never fully went away, and it remains useful, though later scholars have warned against forcing the Greek material into templates borrowed from elsewhere. A decisive shift came with the work of Gagarin (1986), whose book on early Greek law argued that the earliest Greek law is best understood as procedure, as a set of ways to settle disputes, rather than as a body of substantive rules about right and wrong. On this reading the shield scene is not a snapshot of a legal code; it is a snapshot of a method. The elders do not apply written statutes. They offer competing rulings, and the community, through its reaction and through the prize, favours the ruling that seems straightest. Law, in this view, begins as a peaceful alternative to fighting, and the shield shows that alternative in action. This procedural view has proved durable, and much later work either builds on it or defines itself against it. A second influential line came from Westbrook (1992), who read the scene through the legal experience of the ancient Near East and through the administrative world that lay behind the Greek Bronze Age. Westbrook argued that the true question in the case is not whether payment had already been handed over, but whether the killer had the right to end the matter by paying poine at all. On his account the case turns on whether the homicide was aggravated or mitigated, that is, whether it was the kind of killing that the victim's kin were entitled to avenge with blood, or the kind that could properly be closed with #compensation. A later review of the collected comparative work described this chapter as close to the standard scholarly view on the passage, an assessment consistent with the treatment of Homeric material in the reference literature (Harris and Canevaro, 2015 onwards). This paper treats Westbrook's reading as one of the two poles of interpretation and returns to it in Section 4. Work on the vocabulary of compensation has sharpened the picture further. Wilson (2002) showed that the Iliad draws a firm line between two kinds of return: ransom, which buys back a person or ends a claim through gifts freely negotiated, and poine, which carries the sense of repayment for a wrong and shades into #vengeance. This distinction is central to the present paper, because it shows that the Greek imagination already separated a friendly exchange of value from the settlement of a grievance. The refusal to take anything in the shield scene reads very differently once we see that poine sits so close to revenge, and that accepting it means giving up a claim that is bound up with honour. The study of arbitration as such owes much to Roebuck (2001), whose full-length account of ancient Greek arbitration begins precisely with Homer and Hesiod and traces the growth of mediation and arbitration down to the end of the independent Greek world. Roebuck stressed that for the Greeks mediation was the natural first step, and that the chosen third party moved into the role of a decision-maker only when efforts to bring the sides together had failed. This #med_arb pattern, mediation first and adjudication second, is a thread that runs through the whole tradition and is visible already in the shield. Recent scholarship has kept the passage alive and has pushed it in new directions. Almog (2022) reads the Iliad and the Odyssey as the first two literary works to record the slow move from a society without formal law to the institutional legal order of the later city-state, and she treats the epics as evidence for how law and #justice were imagined before they were codified. Within literary study, Baker (2021) has argued that the shield's courtroom lines should not be treated as an awkward attempt to describe a single coherent legal system, but as a deliberate series of different ways of resolving a dispute, so that the passage becomes central to the poetics of the shield rather than an odd fragment inside it. On the practical side, historians of dispute resolution such as Begum (2022) and legal scholars such as Cohen (2022) have renewed interest in the deep history of informal justice, and comparative work on Greek arbitration and its later failures (Shoemaker, 2023) has connected the ancient record to modern debates about when third-party settlement works and when it breaks down. The method of this paper is interpretive and comparative rather than empirical. It reads the primary passage closely, in translation and with attention to the key Greek terms, and it sets that reading beside the secondary literature just described. Because the passage is contested, the paper does not pretend to settle the philological disputes. Instead it treats the range of readings as itself informative, asking what each reading implies for the two themes of property rights and customary arbitration. All sources cited are real published works; where the recent literature specifically on this passage is thin, the paper openly relies on the small number of foundational studies that any reading of the scene must confront. This mixed approach is deliberate. A reading that only used the newest work would ignore the questions the field has spent a century refining, while a reading that only used the classics would miss how the newest work reframes them. 4. Three Interpretive Puzzles 4.1 Fact or principle? The first puzzle is the oldest. When the two men argue over the poine, are they arguing about a fact, namely whether the money has actually been paid, or are they arguing about a principle, namely whether money may be paid at all in place of blood? On the first reading, the killer says he has already handed over the full price, and the dead man's kinsman denies it, or the killer offers to pay in full and the kinsman disputes the amount or the completeness of the offer. The dispute is then like a modern argument over whether a debt has been discharged. On the second reading, favoured by Westbrook (1992), the killer claims the right to close the matter with payment, while the kinsman insists that this particular killing is not one that money can settle, because the killing was of a kind that gives the family the right to take a life in return. The dispute is then about the nature of the homicide and about which remedy the custom allows. The difference is not small. If the case is about a fact, the elders behave like people finding what happened, weighing statements, perhaps hearing oaths. If the case is about a principle, the elders behave like people declaring what the custom is, telling the parties which remedy the community recognises. In practice the two may blend. A ruling that fixes the correct blood-price, and orders that it be paid and accepted, both settles a fact and declares a principle at once. The vagueness may even be part of the poet's design, since a real dispute of this kind would rarely separate the two questions as neatly as a modern lawyer would. For the present paper the important point is that either reading turns the killing into a question of value and entitlement. If it is about a fact, the argument is over whether a certain quantity of goods has changed hands. If it is about a principle, the argument is over whether the kin hold a #property_rights claim in revenge that the killer can extinguish by transfer of goods. In both cases a human death has been placed on a scale and matched against a set of movable things. That translation, from a life lost to a value owed, is the deep move that makes the scene legal at all, and it is the move on which everything else in the paper depends. 4.2 Who is the istor? The second puzzle concerns the figure named as the istor, the person before whom both men are eager to bring the matter to a binding end. The word is connected to a root meaning to know or to see, and it lies behind later Greek and English words for one who inquires. Scholars have variously called the istor a judge, an arbitrator, an umpire, or simply a knowing person. If the istor is a judge with power, then the scene contains a figure who can impose a result, which would push it towards adjudication. If the istor is an arbitrator chosen by the parties, then the scene stays inside voluntary arbitration, where the third party's power comes only from the parties' agreement to accept the ruling. A further suggestion in the literature is that the istor is neither judge nor arbitrator in the modern sense, but rather a trusted witness of public memory, a person whose knowledge and standing let him certify or fix the outcome, somewhat like the remembered official found in some other early legal cultures. On this view the istor guarantees the settlement rather than commands it, holding the result in trust for the community. The paper does not choose among these with certainty, because the text does not allow it. But it notes that all three readings share one feature. In each, the istor's authority rests on knowledge and on trust, not on force. A judge in the modern sense is backed by the state; the istor is backed by what he knows and by the community's willingness to believe him. This is a hallmark of customary #arbitration, where the neutral third party's power is moral and social rather than coercive. The uncertainty about the word is therefore not a dead end. It tells us that in this world the line between judging, arbitrating, and bearing witness had not yet been drawn as sharply as later law would draw it. Our modern job titles are simply too precise for the fluid role the scene describes. 4.3 The elders and the two talents of gold The third puzzle is about the gerontes and the gold. The elders sit in a circle, take the staff in turn, and each gives a ruling. Two talents of gold lie in the middle, to be given to whoever speaks the straightest #dike. Who gets the gold? The most widely accepted reading is that the gold is a reward for the elder who gives the best judgement, not a payment to a party. On this view the elders compete to produce the most persuasive, most correct ruling, and the community, or the process itself, rewards the winner. A minority reading holds that the gold is the disputed sum, or a deposit staked by the parties, to be awarded to the successful side. The text is genuinely open, and both readings have defenders. For the argument of this paper, the dominant reading is the more interesting one, because it shows property, here in the form of precious metal, being used as an instrument inside the dispute-resolution process. The gold does not compensate a victim and it does not enrich a winner. It motivates good judgement. It turns the giving of a straight ruling into something with a prize attached, and so it builds quality control into the procedure through an incentive. This is a striking idea to find so early. It suggests that the community understood that good dispute resolution is not automatic, that it depends on the skill and honesty of those who judge, and that it is worth spending real resources to encourage the best possible ruling. The competition among the elders, refereed by the crowd's sense of which ruling is straightest, is a mechanism for producing a fair result without a written law to apply. It is, in a real sense, a market for judgements, with gold as the reward for the best product. The insight behind it, that a fair process must actively encourage good judging rather than assume it, is one that has taken modern institutions a very long time to relearn. 5. Property Rights in the Shield Scene Having set out the puzzles, the paper now develops its first main theme, that the trial scene is a document about property rights understood broadly as claims over value that a community recognises and protects. 5.1 The blood-price as the valuation of a life The core move in the scene is the pricing of a killing. When a man dies by another's hand, the community's answer is not only grief and not only revenge. It is a number. The poine is a quantity of goods, and the whole argument assumes that a life can be matched against goods, that a wrong can be expressed as a debt. This is one of the most important steps in the early history of law, because it converts an act of violence into a claim that can be measured, transferred, and closed. To price a life is not to say that a life is cheap. On the contrary, the pricing is what makes peace possible. As Wilson (2002) showed, the Iliad keeps #poine close to vengeance, so that the payment is never a simple market transaction; it carries the weight of the wrong. The blood-price is better seen as the value at which the community is willing to treat the grievance as satisfied, the point at which the kin can be asked to give up their claim to blood without dishonour. It is a settlement value, arrived at by custom and, when disputed, fixed by the elders. In this sense the number is not really the price of the dead man; it is the price of peace between two families. Once we see the blood-price this way, the property character of the scene becomes clear. The dead man's kin hold something like a claim, an entitlement that the community recognises. That entitlement can be satisfied by transfer of goods. The killer, by offering to pay in full, is trying to buy out the claim, to extinguish it by transfer. The kinsman, by refusing, is asserting that his claim is not for sale, or not at this price, or not at all. The dispute is, in modern terms, a dispute over the transfer and valuation of a recognised claim. That is property talk, even though no one in the scene would have used the word. The community's role is to decide what the claim is worth and whether it may be sold. 5.2 Revenge as a property-like entitlement The refusal to take anything is the sharpest moment in the scene, and it repays close attention. Why would a man refuse full payment? Within the honour culture of the poem, the right to avenge a killed kinsman is not merely an emotion; it is a recognised standing, a claim the community acknowledges. To take payment is to release that claim. To refuse is to keep it, and to insist on the older remedy of blood. This is why the paper treats the kin's right to vengeance as a property-like entitlement. It behaves like property in three ways. First, it is recognised and protected by the community, which is why the killer must deal with it rather than ignore it. Second, it can be released in exchange for value, through the poine. Third, the release is contested, negotiated, and, when the parties cannot agree, brought before neutral third parties to be valued and fixed. The whole apparatus of customary arbitration exists, in this scene, to manage the transfer of a claim from the state of an open right to avenge into the state of a closed and satisfied debt. Seen in this light, the elders are doing something that later legal systems would call the settlement of a claim. They are helping to move the grievance from a form that threatens more violence into a form that ends it. The community's deep interest in this move is obvious. An unclosed claim to vengeance is a threat to everyone, because a blood feud can spread from one household to the next and pull in kin who had no part in the original killing. The scene therefore shows a society using its dispute-resolution machinery to protect the peace by managing entitlements, which is one of the oldest functions of a #proto_legal_system. The private grievance is treated as a public danger, and so the public takes an interest in how it is resolved. 5.3 The two talents as movable property put to work The third property element is the gold itself. The two talents lie in the centre of the circle, not to compensate anyone for the killing, but, on the dominant reading, to reward the elder who speaks the straightest dike. Here precious metal, the clearest form of movable property in the poem's world, is placed at the service of the process. It is staked, displayed, and awarded according to the quality of a performance, the performance of judging well. This tells us that the community was willing to commit real resources to the quality of its dispute resolution. The gold is an investment in fairness. It is also a public, visible sign that judging is valued work, worthy of reward, and that the best judgement deserves the best prize. In a society without paid officials and without a state treasury, this is a clever and revealing arrangement. Property is used to buy, not a verdict, but effort and skill and honesty in the giving of rulings. The elders are not neutral in the sense of being indifferent; they have a stake in the outcome, but the stake is tied to the quality of their reasoning rather than to which party they favour. The three property elements together, the priced life, the tradable right to vengeance, and the gold reward, show that the scene is soaked in questions of value and entitlement. It is not only a courtroom; it is a place where claims are valued and where property is mobilised to make the valuation trustworthy. A reading that ignores this dimension turns the scene into a bare procedural sketch and loses much of what makes it a document about early economic and legal life at once. 6. Customary Arbitration and the Proto-Legal System The paper now turns to its second main theme, that the scene depicts customary arbitration inside a proto-legal system, and that this is what makes it a foundational text for the history of alternative dispute resolution. 6.1 What makes this arbitration rather than a modern trial Several features of the scene mark it as arbitration or mediation rather than as adjudication by a state court. First, the parties come willingly. The text says both men are eager to reach a binding end before the #istor. There is no summons, no arrest, and no compulsion visible in the lines. This voluntary submission is the defining feature of arbitration, where the third party's authority flows from the parties' choice to be bound. Second, the deciders are not officials of a state but respected members of the community, the gerontes, whose authority comes from age, standing, and the trust of the people. In the Homeric world these are the same men who lead in council and in war, and their fitness to judge rests on their general standing, not on an office defined by written law. This is exactly how customary #arbitration works: the neutral is chosen and accepted because the community trusts him, not because a statute appoints him. Third, the process is one of competing proposals rather than the application of a fixed rule. The elders each give a ruling, and the straightest is favoured. There is no code to look up, no statute to apply. The rightness of a ruling is judged by its quality and by how well it fits the community's sense of custom and fairness. This is closer to the reasoned proposals of a mediator or arbitrator than to the rule-application of a modern judge, whose task is to fit facts to written law. Fourth, enforcement is social, not coercive. Nothing in the scene shows a power that will seize the killer's goods or imprison him. What binds the outcome is the parties' agreement to be bound and the pressure of the watching community. The crowd's shouting, managed by the heralds, is part of the enforcement, because it registers the community's approval or disapproval of each ruling. A ruling that the community accepts as straight carries weight because the community will treat it as settled and will expect the parties to honour it. This is the social enforcement that underlies all customary arbitration and that still underlies much modern settlement, where the fear of losing face and standing does far more work than the threat of court. 6.2 Mediation first, adjudication second One of the most useful observations in the modern study of Greek dispute resolution is that the Greeks preferred to try mediation before moving to a binding decision. Roebuck (2001) stressed that the chosen third party would first try to bring the sides together, and would take on the role of a decision-maker only when reconciliation failed. This #med_arb pattern is visible in the shield scene. The elders' competing rulings can be read as a search for a proposal that both sides can live with, a fixing of the blood-price that the kinsman can accept without shame and that the killer can pay. The scene therefore sits at the exact hinge between #mediation and #arbitration. The parties have not agreed on their own, which is why they need help; but they have chosen to seek that help rather than fight, which is why the process is not a state trial. The elders occupy the space between a mediator who only helps and a judge who only commands. They propose, and the best proposal wins, backed by the trust of the people and the prize of gold. This blended role is not a sign of a confused or primitive system. It is a practical response to a world without a state, and it survives, under different names, in the modern preference for settling before trial. 6.3 Law as procedure in a proto-legal system The idea of a proto-legal system helps to name what the scene shows. A proto-legal system is one that has real, patterned ways of handling disputes but lacks the full apparatus of the later state: written statutes, permanent courts, professional judges, and organised force. Following Gagarin (1986), the earliest Greek law is best seen as procedure, as the how of dispute-settlement rather than the what of substantive rules. The shield scene is a picture of that procedure. It shows a settled way of doing things: an agora, a circle of elders, a staff passed in turn, a crowd kept in order, a prize for the best ruling. These are institutions in the sense that they are repeatable patterns that the community recognises. But they are not yet the institutions of a state. This is why the scene is so valuable. It captures law at the stage of custom and practice, before it hardened into code. It shows that a society can have real dispute resolution, with neutrality, public reasoning, and binding outcomes, long before it has anything we would call a legal code or a police force. The move from this stage to the written laws of the later city-state, which Almog (2022) traces through the Homeric poems, is one of the great transitions in legal history, and the shield scene stands near its beginning. What we are watching is not the absence of law but its childhood, a stage with its own logic and its own strengths rather than a mere gap waiting to be filled by statutes. 7. The Shield Scene as a Foundational Text for Alternative Dispute Resolution The paper now draws the two themes together and states the case for treating the scene as a foundational text for #alternative_dispute_resolution. Modern practice is usually described as a family of methods for resolving disputes outside the ordinary courts: negotiation, mediation, arbitration, and various hybrids. Its defining features include a neutral third party, a process shaped by the parties rather than imposed by the state, an emphasis on outcomes the parties can accept, and enforcement that depends heavily on agreement and good faith. Histories of the field, such as Begum (2022), stress that these methods are not new inventions but ancient practices that predate the modern court and that appear across many cultures. Cohen (2022) reminds us that informal justice has repeatedly been imagined as a way to resolve disputes without simply reproducing the power of the strong, and that this hope has a long and uneven history, with periods of enthusiasm followed by periods of doubt. Set against this description, the shield scene fits the profile with surprising precision. It has neutral third parties in the gerontes and the istor. It has a process the parties enter by choice, since both are eager for a result. It focuses on a settlement, the fixing of the blood-price, that the kin can accept and the killer can pay. Its enforcement rests on agreement and on the pressure of the community rather than on state force. And it uses a public forum, the agora, with managed speech and orderly turns. In every one of these respects the scene anticipates the features that modern practitioners regard as central to #dispute_resolution. There is more. The scene shows an awareness of a problem that modern practice still wrestles with: how to ensure the quality and fairness of a decision when there is no code to apply and no higher court to appeal to. The community's answer, the competition among the elders for the gold given to the straightest ruling, is a mechanism for quality. It builds an incentive for good judgement into the process itself. Modern systems try to secure quality through the training and reputation of arbitrators and mediators; the shield scene tries to secure it through a public contest for honour and reward. The underlying insight, that the fairness of an informal process depends on the skill and integrity of the neutral, is the same across three thousand years. For these reasons the paper argues that the trial scene deserves its place at the head of the story of alternative dispute resolution in the Western tradition. It is not merely an early example. It is an example that already contains, in compact form, the central problems and the central solutions of the field: neutrality, voluntariness, public reasoning, acceptable outcomes, social enforcement, and the quality of judgement. That such a scene was thought worthy of a place on the shield of the greatest warrior, beside images of weddings and harvests and dances, tells us how central peaceful dispute resolution was to the Greek picture of a good city. Baker (2021) goes further and reads the passage as a small anthology of ways to end a quarrel, which strengthens rather than weakens the claim, since a foundational text for a whole field is more useful if it displays several methods at once. 8. Comparative Perspectives The shield scene does not stand alone. Placing it beside other early legal cultures both deepens the reading and guards against reading too much modern law into a dozen lines of poetry. 8.1 Near Eastern law Westbrook (1992) read the scene through the law of the ancient Near East, where written collections such as the Mesopotamian codes handled homicide with distinctions between deliberate and accidental killing and with schemes of compensation. On this comparison the question in the shield case, whether the killer may end the matter by paying poine, mirrors the Near Eastern concern with whether a killing was of a kind that allowed ransom or demanded a life. The comparison is valuable because it warns us not to treat the Greek scene as primitive or isolated. The eastern Mediterranean was a connected world, and Greek practice may have shared assumptions with its older neighbours. At the same time, the Greek scene lacks the written code that stands behind the Near Eastern material, which is exactly why it is evidence for a proto-legal system rather than a codified one. The Greeks of this period seem to have carried their law in memory and custom rather than on clay or stone. 8.2 Germanic and Celtic wergeld The older comparative tradition, represented by Treston (1923), set Homeric blood-price beside the wergeld systems of early Germanic and Celtic law, where a fixed tariff assigned a price to the killing or injuring of persons of different ranks. The parallel is instructive. In both worlds a killing generates a claim that can be settled by transfer of goods, and in both worlds the alternative to settlement is the feud. But there is a difference worth naming. The Germanic tariffs were relatively fixed and public, while the shield scene shows the price being argued over and settled case by case before the elders. The Greek scene is less about applying a set tariff and more about reaching a settlement through customary #arbitration. This supports the reading of early Greek law as procedure rather than fixed rule, and it suggests that the Greek path towards formal law ran through the practice of judging particular cases rather than through the publication of tariffs. 8.3 The place of the scene within Homer It also helps to compare the shield scene with the other quasi-legal moments in the poems. In the funeral games of Iliad 23, a dispute between Menelaus and Antilochus over a chariot race is resolved not by a ruling imposed from above but by a proposed oath and by the parties' own sense of honour, which leads the younger man to yield. This is dispute resolution by proposal, concession, and oath, another form of informal settlement within the same culture. Baker (2021) has argued that the shield scene itself should be read as a series of alternative ways of resolving a dispute rather than as one fixed procedure, and the comparison with Book 23 supports that view. Across the poems, the Homeric world shows a rich repertoire of ways to end quarrels without a state court: negotiation, oath, mediation by elders, the offer of gifts, and the fixing of compensation. The shield scene gathers several of these into a single image, which is part of why it has become the passage that everyone returns to. 9. Discussion What follows from this reading? Several points deserve emphasis. First, the scene shows that property and dispute resolution were entangled from the very beginning of the legal imagination. The need to settle disputes over killing forced early communities to price harm, to treat grievances as claims, and to build procedures for valuing and transferring those claims. The categories we now separate, criminal wrong and civil debt, harm and property, were not yet separate here. A killing was at once a wrong to be answered and a claim to be valued. Understanding this helps explain why so much early law grows out of the management of #compensation, and why the earliest legal vocabulary in many cultures is a vocabulary of debt, payment, and release. Second, the scene shows that neutrality and public reasoning are older than the state. Long before there were professional judges or written codes, communities found ways to bring in trusted third parties, to manage speech, and to reward good judgement. This should make us cautious about the common assumption that real law requires the state. The shield scene is real law, in the sense that it is a recognised, patterned, and binding way of settling disputes, yet it operates without the machinery we usually associate with law. This is the heart of the idea of a proto-legal system, and it is a useful corrective to any story that treats the state as the sole source of legal order. Third, the scene speaks to a live modern debate about the value and the limits of alternative dispute resolution. Supporters praise its flexibility, its focus on acceptable outcomes, and its roots in community trust. Critics, including some cited in the recent literature (Cohen, 2022), warn that informal justice can hide power imbalances and can favour the strong when there is no code and no appeal. The shield scene contains both sides of this debate in miniature. Its strength is its flexibility and its grounding in community trust and public reasoning. Its risk is that, without a code, everything depends on the honesty and skill of the elders, which is exactly why the community had to build in the incentive of the gold and why the process was held in the open, before the whole agora. The ancient worry and the modern worry are the same, and the ancient solutions, quality through visible reward and fairness through public scrutiny, are ones that modern systems still reach for in their own ways. Fourth, the scene reminds us that dispute resolution is a public good. The community's interest in ending the quarrel is not sentimental; it is practical. An open claim to #vengeance threatens everyone, because a feud can spread. By providing a respected forum, managing the crowd, and rewarding straight judgement, the community protects itself. This public interest in peaceful settlement is one of the deepest reasons that societies build legal institutions at all, and it is on full display in the city at peace on Achilles' shield. The private parties may care only about their own grievance, but the watching community cares about the peace, and it is the community's stake that turns a private quarrel into a public matter. Finally, the very fact that the scene is set on a shield carries meaning, and this is where the study of the passage as #ekphrasis, as a description of a work of art, meets the study of it as legal history. The shield is a weapon of war, made for the deadliest of warriors, yet on its surface the poet places a court, a wedding, a harvest, and a dance. The court scene sits inside the city at peace, which is set against the city at war shown elsewhere on the shield. The message is hard to miss. Peaceful dispute resolution is presented as one of the marks of a civilised community, as much a part of the good life as marriage and the harvest. To read the scene only as a legal curiosity is to miss the poet's larger claim that a society's ability to settle its quarrels without blood is one of its highest achievements, worthy of a place on the armour of Achilles himself. 10. Limitations This study has clear limits, which should be stated plainly. The primary source is a very short passage of poetry, not a legal document, and its purpose is artistic as much as descriptive. The poet was not writing a law report, and we cannot assume that every detail reflects an actual procedure. Baker (2021) rightly cautions against treating the lines as a coherent legal system when they may be a poetic sequence of possibilities. Any reading, including this one, must therefore remain modest about how much real practice we can recover from the text, and should treat its conclusions as interpretations rather than as established facts of legal history. The philological disputes are also unresolved. The meaning of istor, the identity of the two men, the destination of the two talents, and the fact-or-principle question all remain open, and the paper has not settled them. Its argument is built to survive that openness, by showing that the property and arbitration themes hold under more than one reading, but the reader should keep the uncertainty in view. Where the paper has taken a side, as with the dominant reading of the gold as a prize for the best elder, it has flagged that a minority reading exists. Finally, the recent scholarship devoted specifically to this passage is limited, and the study has had to lean on a small number of foundational works, some of them decades old, alongside the newer literature. This is a feature of the field rather than a choice, but it means that some of the interpretive frames used here are long-standing rather than freshly minted. Future work that brings new comparative material, or new methods from the study of ekphrasis and oral poetry, may well revise parts of the reading offered here. A larger comparative project, setting the Homeric scene beside a wider range of early dispute-resolution records, would test how far the claims of this paper hold outside the Greek case. 11. Conclusion The trial scene on the Shield of Achilles is a dozen lines of ancient poetry, yet it holds a remarkable amount of legal thought. Two men quarrel over the price owed for a killing; a circle of elders offers competing rulings; a crowd takes sides under the control of heralds; and two measures of gold reward the straightest judgement. Read closely, the scene turns out to be about two things at once. It is about #property_rights in the broad sense, because it prices a life, treats the right to vengeance as a claim that can be released for value, and puts gold to work as an instrument of the process. And it is about #customary_arbitration inside a #proto_legal_system, because it shows neutral third parties, voluntary submission, public reasoning, socially enforced outcomes, and a built-in incentive for good judgement, all without a written code or a state court. Taken together, these features make the scene a genuine foundational text for the history of #alternative_dispute_resolution. It anticipates, in compact form, the neutrality, voluntariness, public process, and concern for the quality of judgement that define the field today, and it does so at the point where Western society was moving from private vengeance towards public law. That the poet placed such a scene on the shield of the greatest warrior, within the city at peace, tells us that the Greeks saw peaceful dispute resolution as one of the marks of a good community. For students of law, of classics, and of the long history of settling human quarrels, the litigation of the shield remains a small picture with a very large meaning. References Almog, S. (2022). The Origins of the Law in Homer (Law and Literature 21). Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter. Baker, C. (2021). Disobedience in the courtroom: Iliad 18.497–508. Yearbook of Ancient Greek Epic, 5(1). Leiden and Boston: Brill. Begum, M. (2022). A history of alternative dispute resolution. Global Legal Studies Review, 7(3). Cohen, A. J. (2022). The rise and fall and rise again of informal justice and the death of ADR. Connecticut Law Review, 54(2). Gagarin, M. (1986). Early Greek Law. Berkeley: University of California Press. Harris, E. M., and Canevaro, M. (Eds.). (2015 onwards). The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Greek Law. Oxford: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199599257.001.0001 Nagy, G. (1997). The Shield of Achilles: Ends of the Iliad and beginnings of the polis. In S. Langdon (Ed.), New Light on a Dark Age: Exploring the Culture of Geometric Greece. Columbia: University of Missouri Press. Papakonstantinou, Z. (2008). Lawmaking and Adjudication in Archaic Greece. London: Duckworth. Roebuck, D. (2001). Ancient Greek Arbitration. Oxford: Holo Books, Arbitration Press. Shoemaker. (2023). Ancient Greek arbitration: Practices, failures, and the decline of the Greek world. New York University Journal of International Law and Politics. Treston, H. J. (1923). Poine: A Study in Ancient Greek Blood-Vengeance. London: Longmans, Green and Co. Westbrook, R. (1992). The trial scene in the Iliad. Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, 94, 53–76. Wilson, D. F. (2002). Ransom, Revenge, and Heroic Identity in the Iliad. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. #Shield_of_Achilles #trial_scene #property_rights #customary_arbitration #proto_legal_systems #alternative_dispute_resolution #blood_price #poine #early_Greek_law #Homeric_justice #dispute_resolution #mediation #wergeld #Iliad_Book_18 #legal_history
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