A juror or judge in ancient Athens who was chosen by lottery to participate in trials and vote on legal cases.
From Greek dikastes (δικαστης), from dike (justice/trial). Ancient Athenian word referring to the common citizens who made up the judicial system.
Ancient Athens trusted regular citizens with justice through lottery—any adult male could be a dicast, making it the world's first mass jury system and a wild gamble on democracy!
Ancient Greek judicial officers (dikastai) were exclusively male citizens. The role excluded women from democratic participation in law, enshrining gendered civic exclusion into the term.
Use 'judicial officer' or 'magistrate' for modern contexts to avoid archaic male-default assumption.
["judicial officer","magistrate","juror"]
Women were systematically barred from Athenian dikasteria; recovering their exclusion is essential to honest historical analysis.
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