Greece, Rome, and the Bill of Rights (56 page)

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42. J. D. Lewis, "Isegoria at Athens: When Did It Begin?"
Historia
20 (1971), p. 139.
43. George Grote,
A History of Greece
, 2d ed., vol. 2 (London: John Murray, 1888), p. 19.
44. Herodotus 5.78.
45. Thucydides 2.40.2 (tr. Warner).
46. Thucydides 2.60.6.
47. Demosthenes 3.1112; 6.3.
48. Demosthenes 20.106.
49. Demosthenes 9.3.

 

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Page 202
50. Thomas R. Fitzgerald, "Limitations on Freedom of Speech in the Athenian Assembly" (Ph. D. diss., University of Chicago, 1957), pp. 18991.
51. J. A. O. Larsen, "The Judgment of Antiquity on Democracy,"
Classical Philology
49 (1954), p. 2.
52. Fitzgerald, "Limitations on Freedom of Speech."
53. Aeschines 1. 19. See also discussion of K. J. Dover,
Greek Homosexuality
(London: Duckworth, 1978), pp. 3334.
54. Aeschines 1.30.
55. Antiphanes in Athenaeus,
Deipnosophistae
10.451a.
56. Aristotle,
The Athenian Constitution
25.24.
57. Thucydides 8.65.2.
58. Thucydides 8.66 (tr. Warner).
59. Thucydides comments on the loquacity of the Athenians at 3.38.27 and 3.40.3.
60. Mogens Herman Hansen,
The Athenian Assembly in the Age of Demosthenes
(Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1987), p. 171, n. 584, questions the authenticity of the law inserted in Aeschines 1.35 prohibiting the same speaker from speaking twice on a measure, observing also that Euryptolemos was not prevented from speaking twice during the debate after the battle of Arginousai (Xenophon,
Hellenica
1.7.12, 16).
61. Jennifer Tolbert Roberts,
Accountability in Athenian Government
(Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1982), pp. 18082.

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