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Browsing named entities in a specific section of A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith). Search the whole document.
Found 15 total hits in 13 results.
324 BC (search for this): entry aeschines-bio-1
346 BC (search for this): entry aeschines-bio-1
347 BC (search for this): entry aeschines-bio-1
348 BC (search for this): entry aeschines-bio-1
314 BC (search for this): entry aeschines-bio-1
342 BC (search for this): entry aeschines-bio-1
343 BC (search for this): entry aeschines-bio-1
345 BC (search for this): entry aeschines-bio-1
Ae'schines
(*Ai)sxi/nhs), the orator, was born in Attica in the demus of Cothocidae, in B. C. 389, as is clear from his speech against Timarchus (p. 78), which was delivered in B. C. 345, and in which he himself says that he was then in his forty-fifth year.
He was the son of Tromes and Glaucothea, and if we listen to the account of Demosthenes, his political antagonist, his father was not a free citizen of Athens, but had been a slave in the house of Elpias, a schoolmaster.
After the return o ors, charging them with high treason against the republic, because they were bribed by the king. Timarchus accused Aeschines, and Hyperides Philocrates. But Aeschines evaded the danger by bringing forward a counter-accusation against Timarchus (B. C. 345), and by showing that the moral conduct of his accuser was such that he had no right to speak before the people.
The speech in which Aeschines attacked Timarchus is still extant, and its effect was, that Timarchus was obliged to drop his accusa
340 BC (search for this): entry aeschines-bio-1
362 BC (search for this): entry aeschines-bio-1