The Attic orators show that revenge could be an admitted and legitimate motive on the part of a prosecutor, and that such a personal agenda might be felt and portrayed not as contradictory to the impersonal rule of law but as a partner to it
The elusive populist phenomenon has been the focus of numerous studies in recent years, with the rel...
This thesis is an historical commentary on Lykourgos' prosecution speech Against Leokrates. The int...
It is now well established that direct anger (ὀργή) appeals were a common feature of public prosecut...
<p>The Attic orators show that revenge could be an admitted and legitimate motive on the part of a p...
This paper aims to critically analyse the testimonies concerning Athenian impiety trials of the clas...
Most comparative lawyers know a great deal about Roman law but almost nothing about the courts of cl...
Carey, Christopher, Ifigeneia Giannadaki and Brenda Griffith-Williams (ed.). Use and abuse of law in...
Bauman claims that his work is original in its comprehensiveness, combining a study of trials under ...
Homicide, Wounding, and Battery in the Fourth-Century Attic Orators addresses the law and rhetoric o...
"This study identifies specific features in the legal procedure and social perception of homicide in...
Most comparative lawyers know a great deal about Roman law but almost nothing about the courts of cl...
This dissertation explores the aims and ideals of the Athenian legal system, focusing on the issue o...
The aim of the thesis is to understand popular attitudes in Athens to judicial activity in the late ...
What was the function of classical Athenian courts? Did they intend to enforce the rule of law? The ...
The elusive populist phenomenon has been the focus of numerous studies in recent years, with the rel...
The elusive populist phenomenon has been the focus of numerous studies in recent years, with the rel...
This thesis is an historical commentary on Lykourgos' prosecution speech Against Leokrates. The int...
It is now well established that direct anger (ὀργή) appeals were a common feature of public prosecut...
<p>The Attic orators show that revenge could be an admitted and legitimate motive on the part of a p...
This paper aims to critically analyse the testimonies concerning Athenian impiety trials of the clas...
Most comparative lawyers know a great deal about Roman law but almost nothing about the courts of cl...
Carey, Christopher, Ifigeneia Giannadaki and Brenda Griffith-Williams (ed.). Use and abuse of law in...
Bauman claims that his work is original in its comprehensiveness, combining a study of trials under ...
Homicide, Wounding, and Battery in the Fourth-Century Attic Orators addresses the law and rhetoric o...
"This study identifies specific features in the legal procedure and social perception of homicide in...
Most comparative lawyers know a great deal about Roman law but almost nothing about the courts of cl...
This dissertation explores the aims and ideals of the Athenian legal system, focusing on the issue o...
The aim of the thesis is to understand popular attitudes in Athens to judicial activity in the late ...
What was the function of classical Athenian courts? Did they intend to enforce the rule of law? The ...
The elusive populist phenomenon has been the focus of numerous studies in recent years, with the rel...
The elusive populist phenomenon has been the focus of numerous studies in recent years, with the rel...
This thesis is an historical commentary on Lykourgos' prosecution speech Against Leokrates. The int...
It is now well established that direct anger (ὀργή) appeals were a common feature of public prosecut...