The "Old Oligarch" : the Constitution of the Athenians attributed to Xenophon

Bibliographic Information

The "Old Oligarch" : the Constitution of the Athenians attributed to Xenophon

edited with an introduction, translation and commentary by J.L. Marr and P.J. Rhodes

(Classical texts)

Oxbow Books, c2008

  • : hbk
  • : pbk

Other Title

The Old Oligarch : the Constitution of the Athenians attributed to Xenophon

Uniform Title

Constitution of Athens

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Note

Greek text and parallel English translation on opposite pages

Includes bibliographical references (p. [xi]) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

'Old Oligarch' is a label often applied to the unknown author of the Athenian Constitution preserved with the works of Xenophon. Probably written in the mid 420s B.C., it is the earliest surviving Athenian prose text, and its author was probably a young pupil of the teachers known as sophists. It is an essay which replies to oligarchic criticisms of the Athenian democracy by agreeing with the critics that democracy is distasteful but arguing that it is appropriate for Athens as a city whose power depends on the poorer citizens who row the navy's ships, and that it is successful and could not easily be overthrown. This edition provides a Greek text and English translation, with Introduction, Commentary and Appendixes which discuss the date, authorship and character of the work, the historical background, the statements and arguments presented by the author and features of the author's style.

Table of Contents

Preface References Introduction: 1. The name 'Old Oligarch 2. The title of the work 3. dating 4. authorship 5. The author and his immediate audience 6. The self-interest theory 7. The two-fold class division: the demos versus the oligoi 8. Class designations and class labels 9. Other stylistic features 10. Structure 11. The text Dates assigned to the Constitution of the Athenians Select Bibliography Text & translation Constitution of the Athenians Commentary Appendixes: 1) The imagined criticisms answered in the work 2) Occurances of the words demos/demotikoi/demokratia 3) Qualities & characteristics ascribed to the demos and the oligoi 4) Class designations & class labels 5) Characteristic vocabulary 6) Examples of verbal repetition 7) Generalisations Index

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