Archontes
Archontes is the plural form of archon, a term from ancient Greek meaning ruler or magistrate. The word has been used to describe both political offices in Greek city-states and, in later religious texts, a class of divine or semi-divine rulers. In classical Greece, archonship referred to senior magistracies within a city, most prominently in Athens. The office was typically held for about a year. In Athens, a system developed around several archons serving in a given year, including the archon eponymos, after whom the year was named, the archon basileus who supervised religious matters, and the archon polemarchos who had military responsibilities, with other archons handling various civil and judicial duties. Over time these offices, while prestigious, lost much of their coercive power as new institutions and reforms shifted authority to other bodies; by the late classical or Hellenistic periods the role was largely ceremonial in practice in many cities.
The term archontes also appears in non-Greek contexts as a general designation for rulers or magistrates in
In sum, archontes function as a historic political title in ancient Greece and as a literary and