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ACHEAN CONFEDERATION. [ 17 ] ACHEAN CONFEDERATION.

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Dyme, Patræ, Tritæa, and Pharæ (Polybius, ii. 41), seeing the difficulties in which Antigonus Gonatas, King of Macedonia, was involved, formed a union for mutual protection, B.C. 281. Five years afterwards Ægium ejected its garrison, and Bura killed its tyrant, which examples moved locas, who was then tyrant of the neighbouring town of Ceryneia, to surrender his authority, and save his life. These three towns joined the new league. In B.C. 251, Aratus having delivered Sicyon, which was not an Achæan town, brought it over to the confederacy, of which he was elected general in B.C. 245. In 243, having driven the Macedonian garrison out of the stronghold of Corinth, which is the key of Southern Greece, this town also joined the league. Megaris, Epidaurus, and Træezen, followed soon after. During the long career of Aratus other Peloponnesian states were included in the union; and in fact Aratus is called by Polybius the founder of the confederation. In the year B.C. 208, five years after the death of Aratus, Philopomen was elected general of the confederacy, to which he gave a new life by his activity and wisdom. As the Romans had now humbled Philip V. of Macedonia (B.C. 197), and reduced him to the rank of a dependent king, it was their policy to weaken the power of the confederation; and this was easily effected by the Roman and anti-Roman parties, which had been for some time growing up in the Greek cities. In 191, however, Sparta became a member of the Achæan league, and the design of its leaders was to include all the Peloponnesus within its limits. After the death of Philopomen (B.c. 183) the Roman party grew still stronger under the influence of Callicrates, and the league remained, in appearance at least, on the side of the Romans in their final struggle with Perseus, king of Macedonia, which ended in the defeat and death of the king (B.c. 168). The influence of Callicrates was now almost supreme, and, so far from opposing, he urged the Romans to demand 1000 of the noblest Achæans to be sent to Rome to answer for their conduct in the Callicrates and his party had named more than 1000, of whose guilt, however, no proof was adduced; his only

late war.

object was to humble the party of his opponent Lycortas. Among the accused who were sent to Rome, and there detained for seventeen years, was the historian Polybius, the son of Lycortas, and the strongest support of his father's party.

The last war of the league was with Sparta, which was brought about (B.C. 150) through the influence of Critolaus, one of those who had been detained at Rome. This, which the Romans considered as a kind of attack on themselves, joined to the contumacious treatment of the Roman commissioners at Corinth, which will be presently mentioned, induced the Republic to send L. Mummius to chastise the Achæans; and a fitter man for the purpose could not have been found. The treatment of the Roman commissioners did not tend to soften the ferocity of their barbarian opponent. The Achæan general Diæus met Mummius on the isthmus of Corinth, and fell an easy prey to the Roman general, who, after the battle, burned Corinth to the ground (B.C. 146). Mummius and ten other senators then changed Greece into the Roman province of Achæa, leaving, however, to certain cities, such as Athens, Delphi, and others, the rank of free towns. Corinth afterwards received a Roman colony.

The ob

To those who study the history of civil polity, it is a matter of some interest to trace the formation of federative systems, or those by which a number of states unite for certain general purposes, while each maintains all its sovereignty except that portion which is surrendered to the sovereignty of the united states. ject of such associations is twofold-to secure peace and a ready intercourse_between all the states, and all the members of them; and secondly, to facilitate all transactions with foreign states, by means of the power given to the united body. Defence against foreign aggression is one of the main objects of such a union; while foreign conquest is, strictly speaking, incompatible with it.

The history of the Grecian states presents us with several examples of federal unions, but the Achæan confederation is better known than any other, though our information about its constitution is very defective.

Each state had an equal political rank, retained its internal regulations, and its coins, weights, and measures, though the general government also had its coins, weights, and measures, which were uniform. The ordinary general assemblies were held twice a year at Ægium (afterwards at Corinth), and they deliberated for three days. Extraordinary assemblies might meet at other places, as, for instance, at Sicyon. The general assemblies decided upon all matters which affected the general interest, on war and peace, and made all such regulations as were required for the preservation of the union. At the Spring meeting, about the time of the vernal equinox, the public functionaries were chosen; the strategos, or general of the confederation, was there chosen, with the hipparchus, or master of the horse, who held the next rank, and ten functionaries called demiurgi: there was also a chief priest chosen to superintend the religious affairs of the confederation. This was the time of election, during the life of Aratus at least. In the earlier times of the league they had two strategi and a secretary, as the Romans had two consuls; but, in B.C. 256, after twenty-five years' experience, it was found that one head was better than two. The strategos was elected for a single year, and appears not to have been reeligible till he had been one year out of office. But Aratus filled the office of strategos seventeen times in twenty-nine years, and Philopomen was elected eight times in twenty-four years; Marcus of Ceryneia was the first sole strategos. If the strategos died in office, his predecessor assumed the functions till the legal meeting of the congress. The functions of the ten demiurgi are not clearly ascertained; they probably possessed the right to summon and preside in the ordinary meetings; and certainly they must have prepared the business which was to be so summarily despatched in three days. It seems that they had the power, within some limits, of referring matters to the public body or not, according to a ma-penses of those who attended the e jority of votes in their own body: they were, in fact, a committee, having a kind of initiatory (Liv. xxxii. 22). They probably also formed a kind of adminis

|trative body for the direction of affairs between the times of the public meetings. It may be asked how was the general council composed, particularly after the league comprised within itself so many states? Did the states send deputies? Had they, in fact, a representative govern ment? It is difficult to answer this ques tion, though we are inclined to that think there was no strict system of represents tion. The short time for discussion, the two yearly meetings, the general charac ter of Greek democracy, as well as most passages in which the congress is spoken of, lead us to infer that this deliberativ body consisted of every qualified citizen of the confederate states who chose attend. It appears that all the citizens the several states, who were thirty year of age, and rich enough not to carry any handicraft in order to get a living might attend the yearly meetings, speak and vote. That this, however, could o lị be the case with the wealthier class, and that the poor could not attend to sus business so far from home, must be self evident. It is also certain that, on extra ordinary occasions, a much larger num ber of men assembled than was usa when things were going in a more re lar course. We read of one insta. when the Roman commissioners were kicked out of the congress, then sitting at Corinth, with scorn (B.C. 147); and Poly bius adds, by way of explanation, **for there was assembled a number of the working class, and of those who followed mechanical occupations, greater than on any former occasion." As Corinth, however, was one of the greatest manufacturing towns of Greece, and the working class occupied a higher station there tha those in most places, it is possible that the regular meeting was disturbed by a body of intruders, as we sometimes have seen at our own elections. Another passage of Polybius tells us that Eumenes offered the congress, then sitting at Meza lopolis, a large sum of money, that they might, with the interest of it, pay the ex

"gress: this would perhaps imply that number was in some way limited. TE offer of Eumenes was rejected.

Some writers have attempted to show

that the demiurgi, or senate, as they have been called, was composed of representatives, one of whom was sent by each of the twelve states; and the number of twelve is made up by including among the senate the strategos, or general, and the secretary. But this conjecture is open to many objections, and supported by feeble evidence and little probability (art. Achaïscher Bund, in Rotteck and Welcker, Staats-Lexicon). But though we are so imperfectly acquainted with the federal constitution of the Achæans, and unable to reconstruct it completely from the scanty fragments which remain, we may safely conclude that it was no inefficient union which called forth from Polybius the following commention: "Their union is so entire and perfect, that they are not only joined together in bonds of friendship and alliance, but even make use of the same laws, the same weights, coins, and measures, the same magistrates, counsellors, and judges: so that the inhabitants of this whole tract of Greece seem in all respects to form but one single city, except only that they are not enclosed within the circuit of the same walls. In every other point, both through the whole republic, and in every Separate state, we find the most exact resemblance and conformity" (Polybius, 37, Hampton's translation). It might be inferred from the first part of this passage that the union was effected by the formation of one state out of many; but this inference is obviated by the concluding sentence which contrasts the whole republic with the several states: and indeed the history of the league shows that it was a federal union of independent

states.

The chief authority for the history of the Achæan league is Polybius, book ii., &c.; the particular authorities are referred to in the article in Rotteck and Welcker, Staats- Lexicon, in Hermann, Lehrbuch der Griechischen Staatsalterthümer, and other modern works.

ACT. This word is a form of the Latin actum, from the verb agere, which is used generally to express the doing of any act. The Latin word Actio, from which our word Action is derived, had, among other significations, various legal

meanings. Of these meanings one of the most common was the proceeding by which a man pursued a claim in a court of justice, who was accordingly in such case called the Actor. In this sense we have in our language the expression Action at law. The word Act, a thing done, is sometimes used to express an act or proceeding of a public nature, of which sense the most signal instance among us is the term Act of Parliament, which means an act in which the three component parts of the sovereign power in this country, King, Lords, and Commons, unite, in other words, a Law properly so called. The word Act is also sometimes applied to denote the record of the Act; and by the expression Act of Parliament is now generally understood the record of an Act of the Parliament, or the written record of a Law. In the French language also, the word acte denotes a written record of a legal act, the original document, which is either private, acte sous seing privé, which requires the acknowledgment of the parties in order to be complete evidence, or a public authenticated act, acte authentique, which without such acknowledgment is considered genuine and true. This meaning of the word Act or Acts is derived from the Romans, among whom Acta signified the records of proceedings, and especially public registers and protocols in which the acts and decrees of the public bodies or functionaries were entered, as Acta Principum, Senatus, Magistratuum. The Acta Publica, or Diurna or Acta Urbis, was a kind of Roman newspaper, or a species of public journal for all Rome, as opposed to the private journal (diurna) which, according to the old Roman love of order, each family had to keep. Augustus had one kept in his house, in which were entered the employments and occupations of the younger members of his family. Julius Cæsar established the practice of drawing up and publishing the Acta both of the senate and the people. (Suetonius, Julius Caesar, 20.) Augustus subsequently forbade the publication, but not the drawing up of the Acta, and the practice of keeping such records continued, in some shape or other, even to the time

of the Emperor Julian. Only a few frag- | ments of them are extant. They are not unfrequently referred to as authorities by the Roman writers. These Acta were journals of the proceedings of the bodies to which they belonged, and of the chief events that took place in Rome. When Suetonius says (Augustus, 36) that Augustus forbade the publication of the Acta of the Senate, it must not be supposed, with some critics, that the Senatus Consulta are included in the Acta.

Under the Germanic Empire the term Acta Publica denoted the official transactions of the empire, decrees and the reports of the same, which were first collected under this title by Caspar Loedorpius, Frankfort, 1629, and his continuators.

The word Acta has been used in an analogous way in other instances in modern times. The Acta Sanctorum denote generally all the old stories of the martyrs of the church; and specially, that large work, begun in 1643, by the Jesuit Bolland, and continued by his successors to 1794, in fifty-three folio volumes, which contains such accounts. The Acta Eruditorum Lipsiensia was the title of the first learned and critical review that was published in Germany, after the model of the French Journal des Savans, and the Roman Giornale de' Litterati. It was established in 1680, by Otto Mencken, a professor of Leipzig, and written in Latin. Other journals of a like kind also adopted the name of Acta. The name of Transactions is now given in England to the Acts of most learned and scientific bodies: the Acts of the Courts of Justice, so far as they are made public, are called Reports, while the proceedings of the courts as registered are called Records. (Rotteck and Welcker, Staats-Lexicon, art. by W.) ACT OF PARLIAMENT. [STATUTE.]

ACTION. [ACT.]

ACTUARY, a word which, properly speaking, might mean any registrar of a public body, but which is generally used to signify the manager of a joint-stock company under a board of directors, particularly of an insurance company; whence it has come to stand generally

for a person skilled in the doctrine of life annuities and insurances, and who is in the habit of giving opinions upon cases of annuities, reversions, &c. Most of those called actuaries combine both the public and private part of the character.

An actuary combines with the duties of a secretary those of a scientific adviser to the board which gives him his office, in all matters involving calculation, on which it may be supposed that the members of the board are not generally competent to form opinions themselves.

The name has a legal character from its being recognised in the statute 59 Geo. III. c. 128 (or the Friendly Societies" Act of 1819), which enacts that no justice of the peace shall allow of any tables, &c. to be adopted in any Friendly Society, unless the same shall have been approved by "two persons, at the least, known to be professional actuaries, or persons skilled in calculation"-a definition much too vague to be any sufficient guide. The Committee on Friendly Societies of 1825 reported that "petty schoolmasters or accountants, whose opinion upon the probability of sickness and the duration of life is not to be depended upon," had been consulted under this title, and recommended that the actuary of the National Debt Office should be the only recognised. authority for the purposes above meationed; in which recommendation the Committee of 1827 joined. In the 10 Geo. IV. c. 56, however, no alteration was made in the law on this point. By the Act of 1819, no Friendly Society can be dissolved, or any division of money made otherwise than in the ordinary course, without the certificate of two actuaries, that the interests of all the members have been consulted in the proposed dissolution or payment. The 4 & 5 Wm. IV. c. 40, which amerus the above Act, provides that no distribution of the funds of any Friendly Society shall take place without a certificate from the actuary of one of the Life A surance Offices in London appointed by the Board.

The registrar of the Lower House of Convocation is called the actuary. Bishop Gibson says that he is an officer of th archbishop, the president of the convo

cation, and cites as follows, from the fees established by Archbishop Whitgift (1583-1603) for the vicar-general's office: --"Feoda Actuario Domus inferioris Convocationis solvenda." (Gibson's Synodus Anglicana, 1702.)

dinate to the first actuary, are often called registrars or judicial notaries. Every actuary must be an independent functionary, sufficiently qualified for his difficult office, and must have undergone an examination and be bound by oath, and as such he is responsible for the accuracy and sufficient completeness of his notes and acts. As a judicial person he can be objected to as an actuary on the ground of incapacity or of partiality, especially on the ground of near relationship to the judge. According to the general rule of law, it is necessary to the validity of a judicial protocol that both the judge should be present and a duly qualified actuary. The judge and the actuary mutually control one another. The actuary, in order that he may maintain his independence and be really responsible, is not bound to follow the dictation of the judge, except when the judge is merely uttering his own words, or putting his own questions, or giving his own proper orders. It would be an impediment to the careful consideration required of a judge, and to the independent action and mutual control exercised by the judge and actuary over each other, if the judge himself should have to perform the part of actuary; and the independent, careful, and exact discharge of the actuary's duty would be impeded, if he did not draw up the protocol as far as possible in the words of the party, and according to his own understanding of them, subject indeed to the control of the judge, and upon his own responsibility. When these forms are not duly observed, it is a sufficient ground for annulling the process and the protocol. (StaatsLexicon, Rotteck and Welcker, art. by W.)

The word Actuary is from the Roman "actuarius," which was used in various senses; but its earlier and more common meaning was "short-hand writer." (Suetonius, Julius Caesar, 55.) The actuarii militiæ, under the later empire, were persons who kept the army accounts, and had the distribution of the soldiers' rations. (Facciolati, Lex, art. Actuarius.) In Germany an Actuary (Actuar) is that public officer who is attached to a public functionary, and, in a narrower sense, to a judicial functionary, and is qualified and sworn to note down official proceedings, and to draw up registrations and protocols, and to collect and keep the records of official acts. Acts which are approved in legal form, that is to say, after being first read over, and when the law requires it, as the Prussian law does, are signed by the parties, and are drawn up, collected, and kept by the actuary, and also the copies which are compared by him and certified as true, have public credit, or are taken as complete evidence. Both such acts and their contents are considered as genuine and true until they are proved to be false, so far as the actuary, pursuant to his authority, intends to be security for their genuineness and truth, according to the nature of the case. For example, the actuary intends that a deposition taken down in writing by him, or a memorial accepted and kept by him, is truly and completely the deposition or memorial of the party. Their truth in other respects he does not vouch for. According to the various functionaries or offices to which they are attached, actuaries have various names. When attached to ecclesiastical courts, and frequently when attached to the ordinary courts bearing a tract of future time," as anof justice, they are called Protonotarii nuities, pensions, lands, &c.; and has in (prothonotaries); to the higher provincial general been extended to all such property colleges, Secretaries; to public func- capable of being applied to the liquidationaries, official actuaries or official tion of debts, as is not attachable by the clerks (Amstactuarien, Amtschreiber). simpler process of arrestment. The oriThe secondary actuaries, who are subor-gin of this process of adjudication is to be

ÁDJUDICATION, in the law of debtor and creditor in Scotland, is a process for attaching heritable or real property. It is applicable not merely to land and its accessories, but to all rights

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