Definition of "koinon"
koinon
noun
plural koina or koinons
An association or federation of distinct city-states with shared political institutions and citizenship.
Quotations
Other decrees relating to koinons give them security from taxes or from being drafted for military service in foreign states. The koinons were associations of various kinds, groups of worshippers, guilds of craftsmen, federations of states, groups of magistrates. Koinons of Asclepiasts, worshippers of Asclepius, functioned and left monuments in Athens, Colyphon, and elsewhere.
1990, Wesley D. Smith, “Introduction”, in Hippocrates: Pseudepigraphic Writings, E. J. Brill, section “The Speeches and Medical History”, page 15
After their overwhelming victory against the Spartans at Leuktra, the Boiotians likewise found ritual action a powerful means of undergirding the new and hard-won but still compromised participation of the entire region in the koinon.
2013, Emily Mackil, “Cultic Communities”, in Creating a Common Polity: Religion, Economy, and Politics in the Making of the Greek Koinon, University of California Press, section “Legitimating and Celebrating the Power of the Koinon”, page 214
The cases of the Ionian and Euboian koina serve to futher underline how misleading these mainland Greek koina can be as models for reconstructing the institutional structures of koina in the rest of the Greek world.
2019, Aneurin Ellis-Evans, “The Hellenistic Koinon of the Lesbians”, in The Kingdom of Priam: Lesbos and the Troad between Anatolia and the Aegean, Oxford University Press, section 2 (The Refoundation of the Lesbian Koinon), subsection 5 (Deliberative Bodies and Magistrates of the Koinon), page 214
While some koinons were formed by a military takeover by a dominant community, most were voluntary associations between geographically contiguous communities.
2020, Robert Inman, Daniel L. Rubinfeld, “Cooperative Federalism”, in Democratic Federalism: The Economics, Politics, and Law of Federal Governance, Princeton University Press, page 82
The introduction and continuation of this koinon on a level transgressing provincial boundaries – in addition to the civic and the provincial imperial cult – is clear testimony for the continuing importance of Greek koina in the Roman Imperial period as instruments for Greek cities to embed themselves within the larger framework of the Roman Empire.
2021, Martin Hallmannsecker, “The Ionian Koinon and the Koinon of the 13 Cities at Sardis”, in Kommission für alte geschichte und epigraphik des deutschen archäologischen instituts: Chiron 50, Walter de Gruyter GmbH, page 22