Speeches

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A01=Aeschines
Aeschines
Against Ctesiphon
Against Timarchus
Ancient Athens
Ancient Greek history
Athenian democracy
Athenian diplomacy
Athenian orators
Athenian politics
Attic oratory
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Category=DNL
Classical rhetoric
Classical speeches
Demosthenes
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Eubulus
Fourth century BC
Greek oratory
Greek political history
Greek statesman
History of Athens
History of rhetoric
On the False Embassy
Peace of Philocrates
Peloponnesian relations
Philip of Macedon
Sicily

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674991187
  • Weight: 354g
  • Dimensions: 108 x 162mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jan 1919
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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An adversarial advocate.

Aeschines, orator and statesman of Athens, 390 or 389–314 BC, became active in politics about 350. In 348 he was a member of a mission sent to the Peloponnese to stir up feeling against the growing power of King Philip of Macedon; but in 347, when part of a peacemaking embassy to Philip, was won over to sympathy with the king, and became a supporter of the peace policy of the Athenian statesman Eubulus. On a second embassy in 346 to ratify a peace Aeschines’ delaying tactics caused the famous orator Demosthenes and Timarchus to accuse him of treason, a charge that he successfully rebutted in the strong extant speech Against Timarchus. In 344–343, when Demosthenes accused him again in a speech, Aeschines replied in the fine extant speech having the same title On the False Embassy and was again acquitted. In 336, when Ctesiphon proposed that Demosthenes should be awarded a crown of gold for state service, Aeschines accused him of proposing something that would violate existing laws. At the trial Aeschines’ extant speech Against Ctesiphon was answered by Demosthenes in his masterpiece On the Crown. Aeschines, discredited, left Athens and set up a school of rhetoric at Rhodes. He died in Samos.

As examples of Greek oratory the speeches of Aeschines rank next to those of Demosthenes, and are important documents for the study of Athenian diplomacy and inner politics.

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