This paper examines how memories of the Greco-Persian Wars were reshaped and transmitted in Hellenistic Athens, with a focus on the evolving role of the Athenian ephebeia. While the Greco-Persian Wars had long been a key example of collective memory—kept alive through monuments, speeches, festivals, and rituals—the paper argues that from the late third century BCE onward, these memories were increasingly conveyed through institutionalised ephebic education. Although the ephebeia became an elite institution with declining enrolment, it remained central to civic education and the development of military and moral virtues. Special attention is given to the intentional connection between ephebic ideals and those associated with the Greco-Persian Wars. In the Hellenistic period, this link was reinforced through new practices, such as ephebic pilgrimages to Greco-Persian War sites like Salamis and Marathon, participation in commemorative festivals, and the introduction of naval training. These activities changed the way the Greco-Persian Wars were remembered, shifting from mainly rhetorical traditions to more performative and experiential ones. Rituals at Salamis, the Epitaphia at Marathon, and later naval contests allowed each group of ephebes to reenact ancestral struggles for eleutheria and homonoia within a contemporary political context shaped by opposition to Macedonian dominance. The paper concludes that through the ephebeia, Athenians reimagined the Greco-Persian Wars as a dynamic model of civic identity and military virtue—concepts later spread more broadly with the inclusion of foreign youths, especially Roman, during the late Hellenistic period.
Akiko MOROO (Tue,) studied this question.