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Attic Orators
By the 2nd cent. ad there was a list of ten Athenian orators (Lysias, Isaeus, Hyperīdēs, Isocratēs, Dīnarchus, Aeschinēs (1), Antiphōn, Lycurgus, Andocidēs, Dēmosthenēs (2) whose classic status was ...
Demosthenes
(384–322 bc),Athenian orator and statesman, who according to Plutarch overcame an initial stammer by training himself to speak with pebbles in his mouth. He is best known for his political speeches ...
Didymus
(1st cent. bc) belonged to the school founded at Alexandria by Aristarchus (2) and himself taught there. A scholar of immense learning and industry (cf. his nicknames Chalkenteros (‘Brazen-bowels’) ...
Dionysius of Halicarnassus
Greek critic and historian, lived and taught rhetoric at Rome, arriving ‘at the time Augustus put an end to the civil war’, and publishing the first part of his Roman Antiquities (Rhōmaïkē ...
Isaeus (1) (c.420–340s bc) Reference library
John Kenyon Davies
The Oxford Classical Dictionary (4 ed.)
The skimpy ancient biographical tradition ([Plut.] Mor. 839e–f, *Dionysius (7) of Halicarnassus' critical essay Isaeus, and a Life preceding the speeches in the main MSS) preserves his ...
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Isaeus Quick reference
John Kenyon Davies
Who's Who in the Classical World
Athenian speech-writer (c.420–340s
Isocrates
(436–338bc)Greek philosopher and follower of Socrates. An important source for knowledge of fourth-century Greece, Isocrates was an orator and teacher of rhetoric, and known mainly as a historian, ...
Lysias
Attic orator, d. c.380 bc. His work is discussed in Plato's Phaedrus; in Plato's Republic, his father Cephalus is an elderly Syracusan, resident as a metic in Athens, and friend of assorted Athenian ...