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 Athens in Draco's time? A provision on justifiable homicide cited by Demosthenes (23. 53) might afford a clue to the solution of this problem. The concluding phrase of it seems to imply that in earlier times intentional homicide as well as unintentional was punished by exile. A Locrian law on settlement (525-500 BC?) may serve as a supporting evidence for this. The text of it suggests that in Locris it was provided by the homicide law that the killer should be banished and his house demolished. It seems very likely that this is just the same as what was customarily established in older days ; for Demosthenes gives a detailed account of the extr...