Hardcover(5th printing/1st pub.1927)

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Overview

The foreigner whose style shaped Athens’ greatest orator.

Though he occupies a firm place in the canon of the ten Attic orators, Isaeus seems not to have been an Athenian, but a metic, being a native of Chalcis in Euboea. From passages in his work he is inferred to have lived from about 420 to 350 BC. But no contemporary mentions him, and it is from Dionysius of Halicarnassus that we learn he was the teacher of Demosthenes, a fact confirmed by several unmistakable examples of borrowing from or imitation of him by his great pupil.

Isaeus took no part in politics, but composed speeches for others, particularly in cases of inheritance. While he shares with Lysias the merits of a pure Attic and a lucidity of style, Isaeus is more aggressive and more flexible in his presentation; and in these respects he undoubtedly influenced Demosthenes. We learn of the existence in ancient times of at least fifty orations, but all that has come down to us are eleven speeches on legacy cases and a large fragment of a speech dealing with a claim of citizenship.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674992221
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 01/01/1927
Series: Loeb Classical Library , #202
Edition description: 5th printing/1st pub.1927
Pages: 512
Product dimensions: 4.25(w) x 6.38(h) x 1.00(d)
Language: Greek, Ancient (to 1453)

About the Author

Edward Seymour Forster (1879–1950) was Lecturer in Classics at the University of Sheffield.

Table of Contents

Series Editor's Preface (Michael Gagarin)Translator's Preface (Michael Edwards)Series Introduction (Michael Gagarin)Oratory in Classical AthensThe OratorsThe Works of the OratorsGovernment and Law in Classical AthensThe Translation of Greek OratoryAbbreviationsNote on CurrencyBibliography of Works CitedISAEUS (Michael Edwards)IntroductionLifeWorksStyle and MethodIsaeus' Modern ReputationThe Family, Property, and Athenian Inheritance LawThe TextFurther Reading1. On the Estate of Cleonymus2. On the Estate of Menecles3. On the Estate of Pyrrhus4. On the Estate of Nicostratus: Supplementary Speech5. On the Estate of Dicaeogenes6. On the Estate of Philoctemon7. On the Estate of Apollodorus8. On the Estate of Ciron9. On the Estate of Astyphilus10. Against Xenaenetus on the Estate of Aristarchus11. On the Estate of Hagnias12. On Behalf of EuphiletusLost Speeches and FragmentsAppendixIndex
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