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ephor
[ ef-awr, ef-er ]
noun
- one of a body of magistrates in various ancient Dorian states, especially at Sparta, where a body of five was elected annually by the people.
ephor
/ ˈɛfɔː /
noun
- (in ancient Greece) one of a board of senior magistrates in any of several Dorian states, esp the five Spartan ephors, who were elected by vote of all full citizens and who wielded effective power
Derived Forms
- ˈephorate, noun
- ˈephoral, adjective
Other Words From
- ephor·al adjective
- eph·or·ate [ef, -, uh, -reyt, -er-it], eph·or·al·ty [ef, -er-, uh, l-tee], noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of ephor1
Example Sentences
In historical times it numbered twenty-eight members, to whom were added ex officio the two kings and, later, the five ephors.
Thucydides, at the opening of his second book, fixes his main date by the year of the priestess of Hera at Argos, by the Spartan ephor, and by the Athenian archon.
The ephors summoned and presided over meetings of the Gerousia and Apella, and formed the executive committee responsible for carrying out decrees.
In later times, too, the actual debate was almost, if not wholly, confined to the kings, elders, ephors and perhaps the other magistrates.
In Sparta, however, so little was known of any despotic measure of the gerontes, that, on the contrary, the constitution was impaired when their antagonist office, the ephors, gained the ascendency in influence and power.
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