Against Euandrus 27.
... From his brother Lysias (contra Eratosth.) Against Nicomachus 31. 389 BCE – 314 BCE, Aeschines, On the Embassy 117 (with a predicative added) I make so and so 460 BCE – 420 BCE, Herodotus, Histories 3.4. Now, to prove that security was taken for him on that condition the day before, and that they then carried him off with them by force, I will produce to you witnesses. 380 BCE), born at Athens, son of a wealthy Syracusan settled in Attica, lived in Peiraeus, 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. LYSIAS 23. Go to Greek: Against Pancleon, Lysias with an English Translation.
23. It is
A commentary on Lysias, Speeches 1-11. Pp x + 783.
On the Refusal of a Pension soon after 403 BCE forensic, in public cases [A4] Lysias,an allegedly disabled man, defends himself against accusations of not being eligible for a pension before the Council (Boule). On the Refusal of a Pension soon after 403 BC forensic, in public cases [A4] Lysias,an allegedly disabled man, defends himself against accusations of not being eligible for a pension before the Council (Boule). Against Pancleon, Showing that He was not a Plataean. 1 of 4 editions. Quick-Find a Translation. This man chose to make his friends guilty of assault, as he was forcibly carried away by them, rather than be released according to the laws and obtain justice against those who seized him. 25. AGAINST PANCLEON (pp.
137-143) The connection between Plataea and Athens has been discussed in the Introduction to Lysias 3 (above). 445 BCE – 380 BCE, Lysias, Against Agoratus 23. 1 of 1 translations. By S.C. Todd, Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2007. a defendant in some other suits before the Polemarch, and had been cast in some, I took proceedings on my own part. 380 BC. Lysias (ca. On the Refusal of a Pension soon after 403 BCE forensic, in public cases [A4] Lysias,an allegedly disabled man, defends himself against accusations of not being eligible for a pension before the Council (Boule). For the Disabled Man 25. the claim of owning him as a slave, they did nothing of the sort, but carried him off and departed. Against Philon 32. forensic, in private cases [B4] 24.
To select a specific edition, see below. 1 of 4 editions. 64 Lysias 23: Against Pancleon WITNESSES [12] Thus it is easy to know that not even Pancleon considers himself to be a Plataean, much less a free man. ... Tels sont les moitis qui m'ont engagé à citer Pancleon devant le polémarque. Fluent, simple, and graceful in style yet vivid in description, they suggest a passionate partisan who was also a gentle, humorous man. So now, in the first place, I will produce to you as witnesses some Deceleans whom I questioned, and after them the other persons who have taken proceedings against him before the Polemarch and have obtained a conviction,—as many as chance to be present. Against Pancleon XXIII. To speak at length upon this matter, gentlemen of the jury, is both beyond my powers and, to my mind, unnecessary; but that I am correct in obtaining leave for my suit against this man Pancleon as being no Plataean, I … Against Pancleon uncertain (400/399?) 23 Against Pancleon 504; 24 On the Refusal of A Pension to the Invalid 516; 25 Defence Against A Charge of Subverting the Democracy 534; 26 On the Scrutiny of Evandros 558; 27 Against Epicrates and His Fellow Envoys 576; 28 Against Ergocles 586; 29 Against Philocrates 599; 30 Against Nicomachus 609; 31 Against Philon 634; 32 Against Diogeiton 656 Against Pancleon 24. LYSIAS 23. Lysias. 380 BC. Of a much larger number about thirty complete speeches by him survive. Olympic Speech 34. Lysias, like other orators, was the subject of a biographical tradition in antiquity.¹ There is a rather muddled account in Pseudo-Plutarch’s Livesof the Ten Oratorsand a more cautious one at the beginning of the essayOn Lysiasby the ancient rhetorical theorist Dionysius of Halicarnassus.The two are basically in agreement that Lysias was born in 459/8 BC and died ca. Planned for publication over several years, the series will present all of the surviving speeches from the late fifth and fourth centuries B.C. ἢ ἄγοι 1 ... Against Pancleon. forensic, in private cases [B4] 24.
Against Pancleon. On a Charge of Overthrowing the Democracy 26. Forthcoming: Classical Review.
Against Diogeiton 33. a slave of his own called Pancleon, who had deserted, and he told me his age and his business, which is that of this man. Journal of the History of Medicine and allied Sciences 65 (2010) 427-428. in new translations prepared by classical scholars who are at the forefront of the discipline.
445 BCE – 380 BCE, Lysias, Against Pancleon 9. 458–ca.