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1 φράτρα
φράτρα, ἡ, dat.A (Pergam., ii B. C.), [dialect] Ion. [full] φρήτρη, [dialect] Dor. [full] πάτρα (q. v.), Delph. [full] πατριά (q. v.), [dialect] Att. [full] φρατρία; also [full] φατρία and [full] φάτρα (v. infr.):—prop. brotherhood, but among the Greeks always in polit. sense, cf. Dicaearch.Hist.9:I in Hom., tribe, clan, κρῖν' ἄνδρας.. κατὰ φρήτρας, ὡς φρήτρη φρήτρηφιν ἀρήγῃ choose men by clans, that clan may stand by clan, Il.2.362; of the Persian royal clan (the Achaemenids), Hdt.1.125.II later, political subdivision of the φυλή, Pl.Lg. 746d, 785a, Isoc.8.88, Aeschin.2.147;φρατρίαι καὶ φυλαί Arist.Pol. 1264a8
, cf. 1300a25, 1309a12; freq. in Inscrr.,φυλῆς καὶ δήμου καὶ φρατρίας ὧν ἂν βούληται ἀπογραψάμενον IG12.110.16
; προσγραψαμένοις πρὸς φυλὴν καὶ φρατρίαν ἢν ἂν βούλωνται ib.12(5).819.21 (Tenos, ii B. C.); sub-division of a tribe, PHib. 1.28.10 (iii B. C.); of groups celebrating festivals, e.g. the Carnea at Sparta, Demetr.Sceps. ap. Ath.4.141f; or the Jewish Passover, J.AJ3.10.5, BJ6.9.3; perh. = σύνοδος 1.2, Pap. in Harvard Theological Review 29.40 (i B. C.).2 used to translate Lat. curia, Plu. Publ.7; in form [full] φράτρα, D.H.2.7, 6.89, al.3 later, of any league or association, esp. in bad sense, conspiracy (in form [full] φατρία), Lib.Or.18.141; τῶν πονηρῶν τε καὶ ἀκολάστων φατρίαι ib.17.2. (The form [full] φάτρα is found in Arcadia, IG5(2).510 (ii B. C.), and at Tenos, ib.12(5).798.23 (iii B. C.); [full] φατρία is found at Chios, Michel 997.28 (iv B. C.); at Tenos, IG12(5).816.16 (iii B. C.); and freq. in codd., e.g. Aeschin. l.c., Arist.Pol. ll.cc., cf. Hdn.Gr.1.298, 2.598, Orusap.EM789.20; cf. φρήτρη, φρητρία.—
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