Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Ephor
Eph′or
,Noun.
pl.
Ephors
(#)
, L. Ephori
(#)
. [L.
ephorus
, Gr. [GREEK], fr. [GREEK] to oversee; [GREEK] + [GREEK] to see: cf. F. éphore
.] (Gr. Antiq.)
A magistrate; one of a body of five magistrates chosen by the people of ancient Sparta. They exercised control even over the king.
Webster 1828 Edition
Ephor
EPH'OR
,Noun.
In ancient Sparta, a magistrate chosen by the people. The ephors were five, and they were intended as a check on the regal power, or according to some writers, on the senate.
Definition 2024
ephor
ephor
English
Alternative forms
- ephori
Noun
ephor (plural ephors)
- (historical) One of the five annually-elected senior magistrates in various Dorian states, especially in ancient Sparta, where they oversaw the actions of Spartan kings.
- 1603, John Florio, translating Michel de Montaigne, Essayes, London: Edward Blount, OCLC 946730821, II.32:
- Agesilaus was fined by the Ephories, because he had drawne the hearts and good wills of al his fellow-citizens unto himselfe alone.
- 1982, N. G. L. Hammond, 42: The Peloponnese, John Boardman, N. G. L. Hammond (editors), The Cambridge Ancient History, p.330,
- Originally associated with the social system, the agoge (see CAH III.I2, 742), the ephors rose to some constitutional importance when the senior ephor became the eponymous official of the year in 754, perhaps in connexion with the oaths made at the beginning of the year and renewed each month between the kings and the ephors: […].
- 2009, Stephanie Lynn Budin, The Ancient Greeks: An Introduction, p.197,
- For basic duties, the ephors convened both the Spartan boulê of kings and elders and the assemblies. In times of war, the ephors were responsible for mustering troops, determining what age groups of soldiers would be sent out to battle, and determining how many would be sent.
- 2011, Alfred S. Bradford, Leonidas and the Kings of Sparta, p.199,
- Moreover, as he[Cleomenes] was laying his plans, he was given a sign that he had divine sanction—an ephor told him that he had had a dream in which the ephors’ chairs had been removed and a divine voice told him that this was best for Sparta.
- 1603, John Florio, translating Michel de Montaigne, Essayes, London: Edward Blount, OCLC 946730821, II.32:
- (in modern Greece) A superintendent or curator