This article offers an analysis of the legal arguments that Demosthenes uses in his speech Against Meidias, concerning the punch to prove that Meidias, who had struck Demosthenes as he exercised his public functions as a choregos, is guilty of hybris, and that he (Demosthenes) deserves adequate (i.e. public) reparation for the outrage suffered. Demosthenes claims his right to a punishment (timoria) capable of repairing the collective, more than individual, damage. This claim appears to allow him, on the one hand, to legitimise, with effective legal argumentation, all the choices made in the aftermath of the episode of the punch, and on the other, to give a strong legal basis for requesting the death penalty for Meidias. The paragraphs 2-3 o...
Homicide, Wounding, and Battery in the Fourth-Century Attic Orators addresses the law and rhetoric o...
An historical recontextualisation seems to be necessary to understand what is at stake in Theomnesto...
It is stated in Greek sources, with some frequency, that condemning to death a citizen without subje...
This article offers an analysis of the legal arguments that Demosthenes uses in his speech Against M...
One of the key issues revolving around the value of toleration is that of its limits, i.e. that of t...
In this article, we will explore the political thought of Demosthenes (384-322 BC) as to the defense...
International audienceAt a very young age, Demosthenes (384-322 BC) lost his father, a rich Athenian...
I intend to demonstrate in this article how we can use the "Art of Rhetoric" of Aristotle to analyze...
Questo articolo si propone di indagare il modo in cui Demostene abbia adoperato a fini retorici il c...
Demosthenes’ Against Euboulides is a vibrant lawcourt speech which has rarely been given the attent...
"Herausgegeben von Eva Cantarella, Michael Gagarin, Joseph Mélèze Modrzejewski und Gerhard Thür"[Ext...
International audienceThis article explores the complex motives Demosthenes 16 (For the Megalopolita...
The paper aims to analyze the deliberation-way of the Athenians, especially according to Demosthenes...
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...
textScholarly analysis of rhetorical speeches over the last century has been concentrated on the “tr...
Homicide, Wounding, and Battery in the Fourth-Century Attic Orators addresses the law and rhetoric o...
An historical recontextualisation seems to be necessary to understand what is at stake in Theomnesto...
It is stated in Greek sources, with some frequency, that condemning to death a citizen without subje...
This article offers an analysis of the legal arguments that Demosthenes uses in his speech Against M...
One of the key issues revolving around the value of toleration is that of its limits, i.e. that of t...
In this article, we will explore the political thought of Demosthenes (384-322 BC) as to the defense...
International audienceAt a very young age, Demosthenes (384-322 BC) lost his father, a rich Athenian...
I intend to demonstrate in this article how we can use the "Art of Rhetoric" of Aristotle to analyze...
Questo articolo si propone di indagare il modo in cui Demostene abbia adoperato a fini retorici il c...
Demosthenes’ Against Euboulides is a vibrant lawcourt speech which has rarely been given the attent...
"Herausgegeben von Eva Cantarella, Michael Gagarin, Joseph Mélèze Modrzejewski und Gerhard Thür"[Ext...
International audienceThis article explores the complex motives Demosthenes 16 (For the Megalopolita...
The paper aims to analyze the deliberation-way of the Athenians, especially according to Demosthenes...
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...
textScholarly analysis of rhetorical speeches over the last century has been concentrated on the “tr...
Homicide, Wounding, and Battery in the Fourth-Century Attic Orators addresses the law and rhetoric o...
An historical recontextualisation seems to be necessary to understand what is at stake in Theomnesto...
It is stated in Greek sources, with some frequency, that condemning to death a citizen without subje...