Wealthy Athenians possess land on the Lelantine…
451 BCE
Wealthy Athenians possess land on the Lelantine Plain in the middle of the century.
As landowning is normally restricted to nationals of the state in which the land is situated, such ownership by individual wealthy Athenians of land in the subject cities of the empire is a telling phenomenon, because the land is usually acquired in defiance of local rules.
For Athenians to acquire such land, otherwise than by inheritance as a result of marriage to a non-Athenian, is an abuse.
Inheritance of this kind is much less likely after a law of 451 restricting Athenian citizenship to persons of citizen descent on both sides.
“Mixed marriages” after 451 must be far less common.
Pericles may intend this law as a low-level political weapon for use against Cimon, who has a foreign mother.
While the upper classes certainly have no prejudice against foreign marriages, the lower classes may well have more.
Possibly, Pericles here is championing exclusivist tendencies against immigrants who might break down the fabric of Athenian society.
Cimon, recalled to Athens, negotiates the Five Years' Truce with Sparta around the same time, ending hostilities among the Greek states.