Memoirs of Solon

DISCOVERED, DECIPHERED AND TRANSLATED
BY RABBI BENJAMIN EDIDIN SCOLNIC
PUBLISHED WITH EDITORIAL NOTES
BY ALTAY COSKUN

Solon of Athens was not only considered one of the Five or Seven Sages of the ancient Greeks (Pausanius X 24.1), but some regard him as the father of democracy. However, the his ingenious political reforms of 594 BCE for which he is still remembered to this day rather make him the great-grandfather of democracy. Everything we think we know of Solon’s life is collected in his biography by Plutarch (around 100 CE), though much of it is legendary. This is already the case with our oldest source Herodotus (I 29-30), who wrote in the 5th century BCE. Many stories told about Solon dwell on his centrist spirit: his ability to listen to all sides before coming up with solutions and his insisting in everyone having to compromise yielded the recipe for sustainable solutions and achieving peace. Solon thus stands for wisdom, fairness, and pragmatism.

Solon, Roman marble copy, late-1st century, Farnese Collection, Naples.
Source: Wikimedia Commons.

I always regretted that we have so few of Solon’s own writings and that we cannot even be sure whether ‘his’ poems were indeed composed by him or later authors. I am therefore even more thrilled to learn that Ben has made yet another spectacular discovery. When studying an obscure medieval manuscript of Plutarch’s Life of Solon in a Greek, he discovered a few spurious pages that had been worked into the codex at a later date. On closer inspection, these turned out to be the very words of Solon: reflections on different phases or achievements of his life that add up to a memoir composed in old age. Ben has kindly deciphered and translated those that can still inspire us to be good citizens.

Map of Ancient Cyprus featuring Sol(o)i in the North-West, by Evil Berry 2006/7, published on Wikipedia.