PEDIÆAN, in Grecian antiquity. The city of Athens was anciently divided into three different parts; one on the descent of a hill; another on the sea-shore; and a third in a plain between the other two. The inhabitants of the middle region were called pedians, Pediæans, formed from pedia, "plain," or "flat;" or as Aristotle will have it, Pediæi: those
of the hill, Diacrians; and those of the shore, Paralians.
These quarters usually composed so many different factions. Pisistratus made use of the Pediæans against the Diacrians. In the time of Solon, when a form of government was to be chosen, the Diacrians chose it democratic; the Pediæans demanded an aristocracy; and the Paralians a mixed government.