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Published byLizbeth Blake Modified over 9 years ago
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Lecture: Thursday 2/10/11
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Lysias(~445 BCE – ~380 BCE) Attic orator (1 of the 10 in the “Alexandrian Canon”) Remember, Peloponnesian War 431 BCE-404 BCE Family from Syracuse, moved to Athens (412) “Resident alien” in Athens, escaped purge by the 30 Tyrants (404) Lost much of his property (taxes/seizures/attempts to help return democracy to Athens) To earn a living, he wrote speeches (34 extant/200+) Known for his “plain style”
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His “speeches” Court cases, where Lysias would write defense/attack speech that the Athenian citizen would recite No lawyers- argue your own case Lysias’ speeches are known for character insight, vivid descriptions WITHOUT being pompous “elegance joined with plainness” He often employed scenes of daily life in Athens
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Lysias 1: On the Murder of Eratosthenes (ca. 400 BCE) Characters: Euphiletos (husband) Eratosthenes (adulterer- dead) Prosecution (family of Eratosthenes) Euphiletos’ wife Witnesses
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Story Euphiletos’ wife sleeps with Eratosthenes; Euphiletos kills Eratosthenes Pre-meditated? Murder Legal act of justifiable homicide Husband’s right\ Lysias’ speech serves to Discredit Eratosthenes as a known adulterer/bad guy Athens is a better place without this “super-seducer” Portray Euphiletos as a good (gullible) guy, incapable of the type of deception that Eratosthenes perpetrated
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Women in Lysias 1 Separate quarters ALWAYS subservient to men and work Failure to control your wife = disgrace Eratosthenes = corrupter of her mind The wife was not able to be active participant- Only able to be controlled or seduced Servant girl Assisted the affair Turned informant once she was threatened with torture and presented with Euphiletos’ knowledge
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