International audienceThe Panathenaicus is used to be regarded as a complicated discourse and hard to analyse. As Isocrates wrote it between 342 and 339, is there a straight link with the Macedonian and Athenian current affairs as we find it in the Philip of 346? In fact, Isocrates was, at that time, trying to prove for his disciples and the Platonician Academy how significant he was. His last speech is a three shaped structure: an apologia, a demonstration and an assumed dialogue between orality and writing, and it sheds light on the old Athenian’s talent.Le Panathénaïque est souvent considéré comme un discours complexe, voire d’interprétation difficile. Composé entre 342 et 339, ce texte est-il en lien direct avec l’actualité athénienne e...
International audienceStarting from the prologue of the Panathenaic Oration - where Ælius Aristides ...
Cloché Paul. Isocrate, Discours, t. II (Panégyrique — Plataïque — A Nicoclès — Nicoclès — Évagoras —...
In his work, Isocrates the rhetorician gives vent to an exalted praise of his own intellectual and l...
A man named Isocrates took part in the games organized by Artemise, and especially in funeral oratio...
Here is proposed an overview of Isocrates’ writings according to their chronological order, with a s...
Panhellenic and Symbouleutic Speeches: from Gorgias and Lysias’ Olympic Orations to Isocrates’ Paneg...
O presente texto trata do Panatenaico, de autoria do ateniense Isócrates. O discurso, inicialmente a...
Isocrates began to write the Panathenaicus in the year 342 b.C. When he had reached paragraph 199, i...
International audienceIsocrates’ political thought, carried by his speeches, is largely turned towar...
Dans le cadre d'un ensemble d'articles sur Isocrate (rassemblés par Christian Bouchet et Pascale Gio...
An analogy between the images of two persons, Timotheus, son of Conon, and Philip of Macedon, in wr...
Isocrates's texts are full of comments and advices about kingship. And many are the kings (mythologi...
<div class="section"><div class="section"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p>The final p...
International audienceStarting from the prologue of the Panathenaic Oration - where Ælius Aristides ...
Isocrates and the vocabulary of personnel power : king, monarch and tyran. Isocrates shows some hes...
International audienceStarting from the prologue of the Panathenaic Oration - where Ælius Aristides ...
Cloché Paul. Isocrate, Discours, t. II (Panégyrique — Plataïque — A Nicoclès — Nicoclès — Évagoras —...
In his work, Isocrates the rhetorician gives vent to an exalted praise of his own intellectual and l...
A man named Isocrates took part in the games organized by Artemise, and especially in funeral oratio...
Here is proposed an overview of Isocrates’ writings according to their chronological order, with a s...
Panhellenic and Symbouleutic Speeches: from Gorgias and Lysias’ Olympic Orations to Isocrates’ Paneg...
O presente texto trata do Panatenaico, de autoria do ateniense Isócrates. O discurso, inicialmente a...
Isocrates began to write the Panathenaicus in the year 342 b.C. When he had reached paragraph 199, i...
International audienceIsocrates’ political thought, carried by his speeches, is largely turned towar...
Dans le cadre d'un ensemble d'articles sur Isocrate (rassemblés par Christian Bouchet et Pascale Gio...
An analogy between the images of two persons, Timotheus, son of Conon, and Philip of Macedon, in wr...
Isocrates's texts are full of comments and advices about kingship. And many are the kings (mythologi...
<div class="section"><div class="section"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p>The final p...
International audienceStarting from the prologue of the Panathenaic Oration - where Ælius Aristides ...
Isocrates and the vocabulary of personnel power : king, monarch and tyran. Isocrates shows some hes...
International audienceStarting from the prologue of the Panathenaic Oration - where Ælius Aristides ...
Cloché Paul. Isocrate, Discours, t. II (Panégyrique — Plataïque — A Nicoclès — Nicoclès — Évagoras —...
In his work, Isocrates the rhetorician gives vent to an exalted praise of his own intellectual and l...