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Browsing named entities in Demosthenes, Speeches 31-40.
Found 244 total hits in 67 results.
Athens (Greece) (search for this): speech 34, section 12
Now, men of
Athens, when this man Phormio
reached Athens, after completing his
voyage in safety on another ship, I approached him and demanded payment of the
loan. And at the first, men of Athens, he did not in any instance make the statement whichAthens, after completing his
voyage in safety on another ship, I approached him and demanded payment of the
loan. And at the first, men of Athens, he did not in any instance make the statement which he
now makes, but always agreed that he would pay; but after he had entered into an
agreement with those who are now at his side and are advocates with him, he was
then and there different and not at all the same man. Athens, he did not in any instance make the statement which he
now makes, but always agreed that he would pay; but after he had entered into an
agreement with those who are now at his side and are advocates with him, he was
then and there different and not at all the same man.
Athens (Greece) (search for this): speech 34, section 11
Lampis himself,
to whom Phormio declares he had paid the gold (pray note this
carefully), when I approached him as soon as he had returned to
Athens after the shipwreck and
asked him about these matters, said that Phormio did not put the goods on board
the ship according to our agreement, nor had he himself received the gold from
him at that time in Bosporus.Read, please, the deposition of those who were
present.
Deposition
Bosporus (Turkey) (search for this): speech 34, section 11
Lampis himself,
to whom Phormio declares he had paid the gold (pray note this
carefully), when I approached him as soon as he had returned to
Athens after the shipwreck and
asked him about these matters, said that Phormio did not put the goods on board
the ship according to our agreement, nor had he himself received the gold from
him at that time in Bosporus.Read, please, the deposition of those who were
present.
Deposition
Athens (Greece) (search for this): speech 34, section 10
After this, men
of Athens, the defendant was left in
Bosporus, while Lampis put to sea,
and was shipwrecked not far from the port; for although his ship was already
overloaded, as we learn, he took on an additional deck-load of one thousand
hides, which proved the cause of the loss of the vessel. He himself made his
escape in the boat with the rest of Dio's servants, but he lost more than
thirtyThe MS. reading is triako/sia (300), but it is
most unlikely that there were so many persons on board, unless this was a
slave ship. Such an aspiration, however, seems improbable, and does not
accord well with the statement that there was much mourning in Bosporus over the disaster. lives
besides the cargo. There was much mourning in Bosporus when they learned
Bosporus (Turkey) (search for this): speech 34, section 10
After this, men
of Athens, the defendant was left in
Bosporus, while Lampis put to sea,
and was shipwrecked not far from the port; for although his ship was already
overloaded, as we learn, he took on an additional deck-load of one thousand
slave ship. Such an aspiration, however, seems improbable, and does not
accord well with the statement that there was much mourning in Bosporus over the disaster. lives
besides the cargo. There was much mourning in Bosporus when they learned of the loss of the ship, and
Bosporus when they learned of the loss of the ship, and
everybody deemed this Phormio lucky in that he had not sailed with the others,
nor put any goods on board the ship. The same story was told by the others and
by Phormio himself.Read me, please, these
depositions.
Depositions
Pontus (search for this): speech 34, section 8
Bosporus (Turkey) (search for this): speech 34, section 8
When he came,
then, to Bosporus, having letters from
me, which I had given him to deliver to my slave, who was spending the winter
there, and to a partner of mine,—in which letter I had stated the sum
which I had lent and the security, and bade them, as soon as the goods should be
unshipped, to inspect them and keep an eye on them,—the fellow did not
deliver to them the letters which he had received from me, in order that they
might know nothing of what he was doing; and, finding that business in
Bosporus was bad owing to the war
which had broken out between PaerisadesThe King
of Pontus. and the Scythian,
and that there was no market for the goods which he had brought, he was in great
perplexity; for his creditors, who had lent him money for
Athens (Greece) (search for this): speech 34, section 7
And, whereas he was bound to
purchase at Athens a cargo worth one
hundred and fifteen minae,If the loans were all
made on the same basis (i.e. on the security of goods of a value
twice as great as the loan) we should have to read one hundred an d who sailed with Phormio,
accepted a lower rate than that demanded by Chrysippus and his partner, who
remained in Athens. if he
was to perform for all his creditors what was written in their agreements, he
purchased only a cargo worth five tho d drachmae, including the
provisions; while his debts were seventy-five minae. This was the beginning of
his fraud, men of Athens; he neither
furnished security, nor put the goods on board the ship, although the agreement
absolutely bade him do so.Take
Pontus (search for this): speech 34, section 6
I, men of Athens, lent to this man, Phormio, twenty minae for the double
voyage to Pontus and back, on the
security of goods of twice that value,Such
seems the most probable meaning of the disputed phrase. and deposited
a contract with Cittus the banker. But, although the contract required him to
put on board the ship goods to the value of four thousand drachmae, he did the
most outrageous thing possible. For while still in the Peiraeus he, without our
knowledge, secured an additional loan of four thousand five hundred drachmae
from Theodorus the Phoenician, and one of one thousand drachmae from Lampis the
shipowner.
Athens (Greece) (search for this): speech 34, section 6
I, men of Athens, lent to this man, Phormio, twenty minae for the double
voyage to Pontus and back, on the
security of goods of twice that value,Such
seems the most probable meaning of the disputed phrase. and deposited
a contract with Cittus the banker. But, although the contract required him to
put on board the ship goods to the value of four thousand drachmae, he did the
most outrageous thing possible. For while still in the Peiraeus he, without our
knowledge, secured an additional loan of four thousand five hundred drachmae
from Theodorus the Phoenician, and one of one thousand drachmae from Lampis the
shipowner.