The Vanavsos reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Vanavsos

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βαναυσοσ is transliterated into English as vanavsos. The βαναυσοι are the peasants and the laboring class. It includes artisans, such as potters, stone masons, carpenters, etc; professional singers; artists; musicians and all persons engaged in trade. It makes no distinction between slave or free. Aristotle writes, "Those who provide necessaries for an individual are slaves, and those who provide them for society are handicraftsmen and day-laborers."

It's strict English conotation is "mechanical" but in Greek it is an epithat of contempt; it is not a complimentary term. "It is used of people who spend money with vulgar ostentation, of accomplishments inconsistent with a perception of the true purpose of life, and it is constantly coupled with the word “aneleutheros”, ‘illiberal’, ‘unworthy of a free man’."

The Greeks are concerned with the "best" state and the best state requires citizens who are the best and in consequence practice arete. This required leisure accompanied with pursuit of arete. Technical education was necessary but did not make good citizens. Leisure was a necessity of good citizenship somthing the βαναυσοι do not have. βαναυσια deforms the body rendering it useless for military and political duties. Those occupations tire out the body and therefore the mind preventing self education by reading and conversing with others. "It accustoms a man's mind to low ideas, and absorbs him in the pursuit of the mere means of life." (1)

The cities of ancient Crete, Sparta, and Thebes set up their constitutions to take this into account.

Table of contents
1 Miscellanea
2 References
3 Related Sites
4 Bibliography

Miscellanea

References

Related Sites

Bibliography