This study identifies specific features in the legal procedure and social perception of homicide in Athens in the time of the orators and examines how these features affected and were represented and utilised in forensic rhetoric. The socially transgressive nature of the crime in Athens resulted in homicide receiving a distinctive treatment in Athenian law, where it was ‘set apart’ from other crimes in a number of ways, including the courts in which it was tried, the procedures involved, and the fact that uniquely these laws were attributed to Drakon as mytho-historical lawgiver. Plastow explores how four distinctive features of homicide procedure and law at Athens played out in rhetoric: ideology, pollution, relevance, and the connected...
この論文は国立情報学研究所の学術雑誌公開支援事業により電子化されました。How was a man who had killed someone intentionally treated in At...
From the last part of the fifth century onwards, orators trained in rhetoric became increasingly imp...
What was the function of classical Athenian courts? Did they intend to enforce the rule of law? The ...
"This study identifies specific features in the legal procedure and social perception of homicide in...
Homicide is a potent crime in any society, and classical Athens was no exception. The Athenians impl...
Homicide, Wounding, and Battery in the Fourth-Century Attic Orators addresses the law and rhetoric o...
The elusive populist phenomenon has been the focus of numerous studies in recent years, with the rel...
This dissertation explores the aims and ideals of the Athenian legal system, focusing on the issue o...
This paper intends to examine three different aspects of political murder in the Greek classical wor...
What was the function of classical Athenian courts? Did they intend to enforce the rule of law? The ...
In varying ways, vengeance is a prominent feature in the human social experience. At first appearing...
<p>The Attic orators show that revenge could be an admitted and legitimate motive on the part of a p...
The following investigation aims to analyze the origin of the relationship between rhetoric and Crim...
"Focusing on extant speeches from the Athenian Assembly, lawcourts, and Council in the 5th-4th centu...
This book offers the first attempt at understanding interpersonal violence in ancient Athens. While ...
この論文は国立情報学研究所の学術雑誌公開支援事業により電子化されました。How was a man who had killed someone intentionally treated in At...
From the last part of the fifth century onwards, orators trained in rhetoric became increasingly imp...
What was the function of classical Athenian courts? Did they intend to enforce the rule of law? The ...
"This study identifies specific features in the legal procedure and social perception of homicide in...
Homicide is a potent crime in any society, and classical Athens was no exception. The Athenians impl...
Homicide, Wounding, and Battery in the Fourth-Century Attic Orators addresses the law and rhetoric o...
The elusive populist phenomenon has been the focus of numerous studies in recent years, with the rel...
This dissertation explores the aims and ideals of the Athenian legal system, focusing on the issue o...
This paper intends to examine three different aspects of political murder in the Greek classical wor...
What was the function of classical Athenian courts? Did they intend to enforce the rule of law? The ...
In varying ways, vengeance is a prominent feature in the human social experience. At first appearing...
<p>The Attic orators show that revenge could be an admitted and legitimate motive on the part of a p...
The following investigation aims to analyze the origin of the relationship between rhetoric and Crim...
"Focusing on extant speeches from the Athenian Assembly, lawcourts, and Council in the 5th-4th centu...
This book offers the first attempt at understanding interpersonal violence in ancient Athens. While ...
この論文は国立情報学研究所の学術雑誌公開支援事業により電子化されました。How was a man who had killed someone intentionally treated in At...
From the last part of the fifth century onwards, orators trained in rhetoric became increasingly imp...
What was the function of classical Athenian courts? Did they intend to enforce the rule of law? The ...