-
Menexenus is not to be
confused with the
character of the same name who
appears in Plato's
dialogues Menexenus and Lysis. Socrates' sons
Menexenus and...
- Ion. The
speakers are
Socrates and
Menexenus, who is not to be
confused with Socrates' son
Menexenus. The
Menexenus of Plato's
dialogue appears also in...
-
Socrates and
mother of
their three sons: Lamprocles, Sophroniscus, and
Menexenus. She was
likely much
younger than Socrates,
perhaps by as much as 40 years...
-
Hippothales but is just anno**** by it.
Menexenus - Son of Demophon, of the same age as Lysis.
Probable namesake of the
Menexenus.
Socrates finds himself in a wrestling...
- Λαμπροκλῆς) was Socrates' and Xanthippe's
eldest son. His two
brothers were
Menexenus and Sophroniscus.
Lamprocles was a
youth (μειράκιον meirakion) at the...
-
authorship of the
Funeral Oration is also not certain. Plato, in his
Menexenus,
ascribes authorship to Pericles's companion, Aspasia. The
Funeral Oration...
-
authenticity of at
least some of these.
Jowett mentions in his
Appendix to
Menexenus, that
works which bore the
character of a
writer were
attributed to that...
-
poisoning Spouse(s) Xanthippe,
Myrto (disputed)
Children Lamprocles,
Menexenus,
Sophroniscus Family Sophroniscus (father),
Phaenarete (mother), Patrocles...
- of
sources for the treaty. For this as the
possible date, see Plato,
Menexenus, 241d-242a.
Ancient sources describing these events include, Diodorus...
- is
consistently su****ious of the
ability of
oratory to teach, in the
Menexenus he
demonstrates a
theoretical interest in the
project of
funeral oratory...