Sponsor
Portland State University. Department of Politics and Global Affairs
First Advisor
Shawn Smallman
Term of Graduation
Fall 2025
Date of Publication
9-24-2025
Document Type
Thesis
Degree Name
Master of Arts (M.A.) in Political Science
Language
English
Subjects
Byzantine, Greece, Mount Athos, Orthodox Christianity, Small States
Physical Description
1 online resource (vii, 122 pages)
Abstract
The Monastic Republic of Mount Athos is a unique and confounding political entity - both Greek and multi-national, democratic and theocratic, autonomous and subject to the European Union - with more than a millennia of history and institutional memory. While Athos has been amply appreciated for its religious, historical and cultural significance, the political institutions which govern this community have been neglected in the modern era and merit greater attention. Similarly, while much of the recent English-language literature on the topic focuses on the near-death and miraculous resurrection of Mount Athos in the 20th century, this work also tends to focus on the remarkable charisma of Athonite ascetics and monastic traditions as explanatory factors, rather than examining the socio-political institutions which have allowed the community to defend and renew itself over time. This thesis poses a number of questions and proposes some answers in the hopes of encouraging future research on this topic.
Two questions in particular frame the paper that follows:
- How did the political systems which governed Mount Athos contribute to its 1000-year survival, particularly in the modern era?
- How does one compare a polity like Mount Athos to any form of modern state, given that it has self-consciously retained its political form for a full millennia?
Relying on James C. Scott's definitions of 'state evading' and 'state preventing' behavior, I will argue that the Athonite political structure is designed to maximize the utility of democratic institutions to defend against the threat of external intervention, as well as to minimize any internal state-building activities which might depart from the monastic ideal. This tension between the need to pursue a 'worldly,' external political strategy to maintain autonomy, while also cultivating an aggressively anti-secular internal governance strategy, is a fundamental component of Athonite history. Through an analysis of past and present Athonite political institutions I will show how Byzantine and Eastern Orthodox Christianity have influenced the process of state formation, creating a political entity which has retained a recognizable form for well over a thousand years.
Rights
© 2025 Patrick William Reilly
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Persistent Identifier
https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/44157
Recommended Citation
Reilly, Patrick, "The Living Dead on Mount Athos: Monastic Politics of Escape" (2025). Dissertations and Theses. Paper 6948.