As their name suggests, megistai timai – the concomitant set of honorific portrait statue, σίτησις, and προεδρία – are one of the most prestigious honours that Athens could confer on an individual. However, some scholars have argued that the set did not constitute a legally defined reward, and that its bestowal was driven primarily by political contingency. By tracing a comprehensive history of the Athenian highest honours (from the Tyrannicides to the early 2nd century BCE), this article argues that, in fact, megistai timai were not only a legally established institution, but also a constituent part of the Athenian honorific framework; and that their zenith in the early Hellenistic period did not entail a disruption of democratic practices and ideology.
Antonio Iacoviello (Tue,) studied this question.