Lysias

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Ancient Greece
Ancient oratory
Athenian democracy
Athenian politics
Attic oratory
Author_Lysias
Category=DNL
Classical Athens
Democracy supporter
Dionysius I
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Eratosthenes
Graceful prose
Greek literature
Greek orators
Greek rhetoric
Historical speeches
Law courts
Legal speeches
Loeb Classical Library
Lysias
Olympic festival speech
Oratory style
Professional speechwriter
Sicily
Syracusan heritage
Thirty Tyrants
Vivid description

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674992696
  • Weight: 499g
  • Dimensions: 108 x 162mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jan 1930
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Attic eloquence.

Lysias (ca. 458–ca. 380 BC), born at Athens, son of a wealthy Syracusan settled in Attica, lived in Piraeus, where with his brother he inherited his father’s shield factory. Being a loyal supporter of democracy, Lysias took the side of the democrats at Athens against the Thirty Tyrants in 404, supplying shields and money. After one political speech in accusation of Eratosthenes (one of the Thirty) in 405, he became at Athens a busy professional speech writer for the law courts. At the Olympic festival of 388 he denounced, with riotous results, the costly display of the embassy sent by Dionysius I of Syracuse and the domination of Sicily by Dionysius.

The surviving speeches of Lysias (about thirty complete out of a very much larger number) are fluent, simple, and graceful in style yet vivid in description. They suggest a passionate partisan who was also a gentle, humorous man. We see in him the art of oratory young and fresh.

Sir Walter Rangeley Maitland Lamb (1882–1961) lectured in Classics at Trinity College, Cambridge, and was Secretary of the Royal Academy of Arts.

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