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![]() HYPEREIDES ![]() |
Hypereides
Hypereides (c. 390-322 BC), one of the ten Attic orators, was the son of Glaucippus, of the deme of Collytus. Having studied under Isocrates, he began life as a logographer (writer of speeches for the courts), and in 360 he prosecuted Autocles, a general charged with treason in Thrace (frags. 55-65, Blass). At the time of the so-called "Social War" (358-355) he accused Aristophon, then one of the most influential men at Athens, of malpractices (frags. 40-44, Blass), and impeached Philocrates (343) for high treason. From the peace of 346 to 324 Hypereides supported Demosthenes in the struggle against Macedon; but as the affair of Harpalus he was one of the ten public prosecutors of Demosthenes, and on the exile of his former leader he became the head of the patriotic party (324). After the death of Alexander, he was the chief promoter of the Lamian war against Antipater and Craterus. After the decisive defeat at Crannon (322), Hypereides and the other orators, whose surrender was demanded by Antipater, were condemned to death by the Athenian partisans of Macedonia. Hypereides fled to Aegina, but Antipater's emissaries dragged him from the temple of Neptune, where he had taken refuge, and put him to death; according to others, he was taken before Antipater at Athens near Cleonae. His body was afterwards removed to Athens for burial. Hypereides was an ardent pursuer of "the beautiful," which in his time generally meant pleasure and luxury. His temper was easy-going
and humorous; and hence, though in his development
of the periodic sentence he followed Isocrates,
the essential tendencies of his style are
those of Lysias, whom he surpassed, however,
in the richness of his vocabulary and in
the variety of his powers. His diction was
plain and forcible, though he occasionally
indulged in long compound words probably
borrowed from the Middle Comedy, with which,
and with the everyday life of his time, he
was in full sympathy. His composition was
simple. He was specially distinguished for
subtlety of expression, grace and wit, as
well as for tact in approaching his case
and pseudo-Longinus (De sublimitate, 34)
in the phrase-"Hypereides was the Sheridan
of Athens." Seventy-seven speeches were attributed to Hypereides, Of which seventy-five were regarded as spurious even by ancient critics. is said that a manuscript of most of the speeches was in existence in the 15th century in the library of Matthias Corvinus, king of Hungary, but was destroyed at the capture of the city by the Turks 1526. Only a few fragments were known until comparatively
recent times. In 1847 large fragments of
his speeches Against Imosthenes (see above)
and For Lycophron (incidentally interesting
elucidating the order of marriage processions
and other details Athenian life, and the
Athenian government of Lemnos), and the sole
of the For Euxenippus (c. 330, a locus classicus
on state prosecutions), were found in a tomb
at Thebes in Egypt, and 1856 a considerable
portion of a Funeral Oration For Leosthenes
and his comrades who had fallen in the Lamian
war, the best extant specimen of epideictic
oratory (see Churchill Babington). Towards the end of the century further discoveries were made of the conclusion of the speech Against Philippides (dealing with an indictment for the proposal of unconstitutional measure, arising out of the disputes of the Macedonian and anti-Macedonian parties at Athens), and of the whole the Against Athenogenes (a perfumer accused of fraud in the sale his business). These have been edited by F. G. Kenyon (1893). An important speech that is lost is the Deliacus (frags. 67-75, Blass) i the presidency of the Delian temple claimed by both Athens and cbs, which was adjudged by the Amphictyons to Athens.
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