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Demosthenes (384-322 b.c.) was an Athenian statesman and a widely read author whose life, times, and rhetorical abilities captivated the minds of generations. Sifting through the rubble of a mostly lost tradition of ancient scholarship, Craig A. Gibson tells the story of how one group of ancient scholars helped their readers understand this man's writings. This book collects for the first time, translates, and offers explanatory notes on all the substantial fragments of ancient philological and historical commentaries on Demosthenes. Using these texts to illuminate an important aspect of Graeco-Roman antiquity that has hitherto been difficult to glimpse, Gibson gives a detailed portrait of a scholarly industry that touched generations of ancient readers from the first century B.C. to the fifth century and beyond. In this lucidly organized work, Gibson surveys the physical form of the commentaries, traces the history of how they were passed down, and explains their sources, interests, and readership. He also includes a complete collection of Greek texts, English translations, and detailed notes on the commentaries.
Speeches, addresses, etc., Greek --- Oratory, Ancient. --- History and criticism --- Theory, etc. --- Discours grecs --- Eloquence antique --- Histoire et critique --- Demosthenes --- Criticism and interpretation --- History. --- Greek orations --- Greek speeches --- Demosfen --- Dīmūstīn --- Demóstenes --- Démosthène --- Demostene --- דמוסתנס --- Δημοσθένης --- ancient greece. --- ancient world. --- antiquity. --- argumentation. --- assembly. --- athens. --- classical rhetoric. --- classicism. --- contemporary audience. --- demosthenes. --- didymus. --- fifth century. --- funeral oration. --- greece. --- greek texts. --- harpocration. --- hellenism. --- historical context. --- ideal audience. --- law. --- legal. --- linguistics. --- love. --- nonfiction. --- oratory. --- persia. --- philosophy. --- political philosophy. --- political science. --- politician. --- politics. --- public speaking. --- rhetcomp. --- rhetoric. --- spartans. --- speeches. --- statesman. --- trials.
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Greek language --- Rhetoric, Ancient --- Style. --- 807.5 --- 807.5 Grieks. Griekse taalkunde --- Grieks. Griekse taalkunde --- Classical languages --- Greek rhetoric --- Latin language --- Latin rhetoric --- Rhetoric --- Grec (Langue) --- Rhétorique ancienne --- Early works to 1800. --- Style --- Ouvrages avant 1800 --- Ancient rhetoric --- Grec (langue) --- Grec (langue) hellénistique --- Rhétorique --- Stylistique --- Grec (langue) hellénistique --- Rhétorique
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Demosthenes (384-322 b.c.) was an Athenian statesman and a widely read author whose life, times, and rhetorical abilities captivated the minds of generations. Sifting through the rubble of a mostly lost tradition of ancient scholarship, Craig A. Gibson tells the story of how one group of ancient scholars helped their readers understand this man's writings. This book collects for the first time, translates, and offers explanatory notes on all the substantial fragments of ancient philological and historical commentaries on Demosthenes. Using these texts to illuminate an important aspect of Graeco-Roman antiquity that has hitherto been difficult to glimpse, Gibson gives a detailed portrait of a scholarly industry that touched generations of ancient readers from the first century b.c. to the fifth century and beyond. In this lucidly organized work, Gibson surveys the physical form of the commentaries, traces the history of how they were passed down, and explains their sources, interests, and readership. He also includes a complete collection of Greek texts, English translations, and detailed notes on the commentaries.
Oratory, Ancient. --- Speeches, addresses, etc., Greek --- Greek orations --- Greek speeches --- History and criticism --- Theory, etc. --- Demosthenes --- Demosfen --- Dīmūstīn --- Demóstenes --- Démosthène --- Demostene --- דמוסתנס --- Δημοσθένης --- Criticism and interpretation --- History. --- Speeches, addresses, etc., Greek - History and criticism - Theory, etc.
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Progymnasmata, preliminary exercises in the study of declamation, were the cornerstone of elite education from Hellenistic through Byzantine times. Using material from Greek literary, mythological, and historical traditions, students and writers composed examples ranging from simple fables to complex arguments about fictional laws. In the Byzantine period, the spectrum of source material expanded to include the Bible and Christian hagiography and theology.This collection was written by Nikephoros Basilakes, imperial notary and teacher at the prestigious Patriarchal School in Constantinople during the twelfth century. In his texts, Basilakes made significant use of biblical themes, especially in character studies—known as ethopoeiae—featuring King David, the Virgin Mary, and Saint Peter. The Greek exercises presented here, translated into English for the first time, shed light on education under the Komnenian emperors and illuminate literary culture during one of the most important epochs in the long history of the Byzantine Empire.
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Originally written in Persian and part of a multilingual and multicultural medieval storytelling tradition, The Book of Syntipas recounts how the Persian king Cyrus’s unnamed son—a student of the fictional philosopher Sinbad, who is known in Greek as Syntipas—is falsely accused of rape by a royal concubine. While the young man awaits execution, seven philosophers and the concubine attempt to influence Cyrus’s judgment. After seven days of storytelling, the son is exonerated and demonstrates the wisdom he learned from Syntipas.The sixty-two moral tales in The Fables of Syntipas are inspired mainly by the tradition of Aesop but include fifteen that are uniquely attributed to the philosopher.This volume is the first English translation to bring together Andreopoulos’s Byzantine Greek texts.
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