| 50. Thomas R. Fitzgerald, "Limitations on Freedom of Speech in the Athenian Assembly" (Ph. D. diss., University of Chicago, 1957), pp. 18991.
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| 51. J. A. O. Larsen, "The Judgment of Antiquity on Democracy," Classical Philology 49 (1954), p. 2.
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| 52. Fitzgerald, "Limitations on Freedom of Speech."
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| 53. Aeschines 1. 19. See also discussion of K. J. Dover, Greek Homosexuality (London: Duckworth, 1978), pp. 3334.
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| 54. Aeschines 1.30.
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| 55. Antiphanes in Athenaeus, Deipnosophistae 10.451a.
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| 56. Aristotle, The Athenian Constitution 25.24.
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| 57. Thucydides 8.65.2.
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| 58. Thucydides 8.66 (tr. Warner).
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| 59. Thucydides comments on the loquacity of the Athenians at 3.38.27 and 3.40.3.
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| 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).
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| 61. Jennifer Tolbert Roberts, Accountability in Athenian Government (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1982), pp. 18082.
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