Aeschines

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For the follower of Socrates and writer of Socratic dialogues, see Aeschines Socraticus
Sketch of a statue of Aeschines
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Sketch of a statue of Aeschines
Bust of Aeschines (Roman copy of Greek original)
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Bust of Aeschines (Roman copy of Greek original)

Aeschines (in Greek Αἰσχίνης, 389314 BC), Greek statesman and one of the ten Attic orators, was born at Athens.

The statements as to his parentage and early life are conflicting; but it seems probable that his parents, though poor, were respectable. After assisting his father in his school, he tried his hand at acting with indifferent success, served with distinction in the army, and held several clerkships, amongst them the office of clerk to the Boule. The fall of Olynthus (348 BC) brought Aeschines into the political arena, and he was sent on an embassy to rouse the Peloponnese against Philip II of Macedon.

In 347 BC he was a member of the peace embassy to Philip, who seems to have won him over entirely to his side. His dilatoriness during the second embassy (346 BC) sent to ratify the terms of peace led to his accusation by Demosthenes and Timarchos on a charge of high treason. Aeschines counterattacked by claiming that his accuser Timarchos had forfeited the right to speak before the people as a consequence of youthful debauches which had left him with the reputation of being a whore. Timarchos had been the eromenos of many men in the port city of Piraeus. The suit succeeded and Timarchos was sentenced to atimia and politically destroyed, according to Demosthenes. This comment was later interpreted by Pseudo-Plutarch in his Lives of the Ten Orators as meaning that Timarchos hanged himself upon leaving the assembly, a suggestion contested by some modern historians[1]

This oration, Against Timarchos, is considered important because of the bulk of Athenian laws it cites. As a consequence of his successful attack on Timarchos, Aeschines was cleared of the charge of treason.

In 343 BC the attack was renewed by Demosthenes in his speech On the False Embassy. Aeschines replied in a speech with the same title and was again acquitted. In 339 BC, as one of the Athenian deputies (pylagorae) in the Amphictyonic Council, he made a speech which brought about the Sacred War.

By way of revenge, Aeschines endeavoured to fix the blame for these disasters upon Demosthenes. In 336 BC, when Ctesiphon proposed that his friend Demosthenes should be rewarded with a golden crown for his distinguished services to the state, he was accused by Aeschines of having violated the law in bringing forward the motion. The matter remained in abeyance till 330 BC, when the two rivals delivered their speeches Against Ctesiphon and On the Crown. The result was a complete victory for Demosthenes.

Aeschines went into voluntary exile at Rhodes, where he opened a school of rhetoric. He afterwards removed to Samos, where he died aged seventy-five. His three speeches, called by the ancients "the Three Graces," rank next to those of Demosthenes. Photius knew of nine letters by him which he called the Nine Muses; the twelve published under his name (Hercher, Epistolographi Graeci) are not genuine.

Contents

[edit] Ancient Authorities

Demosthenes, De Corona and De Falsa Legatione; Aeschines, De Falsa Legations and In Ctesiphentem; Lives by Plutarch, Philostratus and Libanius; the Exegesis of Apollonius.

[edit] Editions

  • Gustav Eduard Benseler (1855-1860) (trans. and notes)
  • Andreas Weidner (1872)
  • Friedrich Blass (Teubner, 1896)
  • Against Ctesiphon, Weidner (1872), (1878), G. A. Simcox and W. H. Simcox (1866), Drake (1872), Richardson (1889), G. Watkin and Evelyn S. Shuckburgh (1890).
  • Teubner ed. of Orationes: 1997, edited Mervin R. Dilts. ISBN 3-8154-1009-6

[edit] See also

  • Stechow, Aeschinis Oratoris vita (1841)
  • Marchand, Charakteristik des Redners Aschines (1876)
  • Castets, Eschine, l'Orateur (1875)

For the political problems see histories of Greece, esp. A. Holm, vol. iii (Eng. trans., 1896); A. Schafer, Demosth. und seine Zeit (Leipzig, 1856-1858).

On Timarchos see Aechines Encyclopedia of Homosexuality. Dynes, Wayne R. (ed.), Garland Publishing, 1990. pp. 15&16.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Nick Fisher, Aeschines: Against Timarchos, "Introduction," p.22 n.71; Oxford University Press, 2001

[edit] External links

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Attic Orators
Antiphon | Andocides | Lysias | Isocrates| Isaeus | Aeschines | Lycurgus | Demosthenes | Hypereides | Dinarchus


Athenian statesmen | Ancient Greece
Aeschines - Agyrrhius - Alcibiades - Andocides - Archinus - Aristides - Aristogeiton - Aristophon - Autocles
Callistratus - Chremonides - Cleisthenes - Cleon - Critias - Demades - Demetrius Phalereus - Demochares - Democles - Demosthenes
Ephialtes - Eubulus - Hyperbolus - Hypereides - Cimon - Cleophon - Laches- Lycurgus - Lysicles
Miltiades - Moerocles - Nicias - Peisistratus - Pericles - Philinus - Phocion - Themistocles
Theramenes - Thrasybulus - Thucydides - Xanthippus