Isaeus (Latin;
Greek
Isaios), fl. early 4th century BC.
One of the ten
Attic Orators according to the
Alexandrian
canon. He was a student of Isocrates in Athens
, and later
taught Demosthenes while working as a
metic speechwriter for others. Only eleven of
his speeches survive, with fragments of a twelfth. They are mostly
concerned with inheritance, with one on
civil rights.
Dionysius of Halicarnassus
compared his style to
Lysias, although Isaeus
was more given to employing
sophistry.
Life
The time of his birth and death is unknown, but all accounts agree
in the statement that he flourished ( ) during the period between
the
Peloponnesian War and the
accession of
Philip II of
Macedon, so that he lived between 420 BCE and 348 BCE.
He was a
son of Diagoras, and was born at Chalcis
in Euboea
; some
sources say he was born in Athens
, probably
only because he came there at an early age and spent the greater
part of his life there.
He was instructed in
oratory by
Lysias and
Isocrates. He was
afterwards engaged in writing judicial orations for others, and
established a rhetorical school at Athens, in which
Demosthenes is said to have been his pupil. The
Suda states that Isaeus instructed him
gratis, whereas
Plutarch relates
that he received 10,000
drachmas; and it is
further said that Isaeus composed for Demosthenes the speeches
against his guardians, or at least assisted him in the composition.
All particulars about his life are unknown, and were so even in the
time of Dionysius, since
Hermippus, who
had written an account of the disciples of
Isocrates, did not mention Isaeus at all.
Works
In antiquity there were 64 orations which bore the name of Isaeus,
but only fifty were recognised as genuine by the ancient critics.
Of these, only eleven have come down to us; but we possess
fragments and the titles of 56 speeches ascribed to him. The eleven
extant are all on subjects connected with disputed inheritances;
and Isaeus appears to have been particularly well acquainted with
the laws relating to inheritance.
Ten of these orations had been known ever since the revival of
letters in the
Renaissance, and were
printed in the collections of Greek orators; but the eleventh,
On Menecles' legacy ( ), was first published in 1785 from
a Florentine manuscript by
Tyrwhitt,
and later by
Orelli in
1814. Also, in 1815
Mai discovered and
published the greater half of Isaeus' oration
On Cleonymus'
legacy ( ).
Isaeus is also known to have written a manual on speechwriting
entitled the
Technē or
Idiai technai ( ,
"Personal skills"), which, however, is lost.
List of extant speeches (available at the
Perseus
Digital Library)
- On The Estate of Cleonymus
- On the Estate of Menecles
- On The Estate Of Pyrrhus
- On the Estate of Nicostratus
- On the Estate of Dicaeogenes
- On the Estate of Philoctemon
- On The Estate of Apollodorus
- On The Estate of Ciron
- On the Estate of Astyphilus
- On The Estate Of Aristarchus
- On the Estate of Hagnias
- On Behalf of Euphiletus
Oratorical style
Although his orations were placed fifth in the Alexandrian canon,
still we do not hear of any of the grammarians having written
commentaries on him, except
Didymus
of Alexandria. But we still possess the criticism upon Isaeus
written by
Dionysius of
Halicarnassus; and by a comparison of the orations still extant
with the opinions of Dionysius, we come to the following
conclusion.
The oratory of Isaeus resembles in many points that of his teacher,
Lysias: the style of both is pure, clear, and
concise; but while Lysias is at the same time simple and graceful,
Isaeus evidently strives to attain a higher degree of polish and
refinement, without, however, in the least injuring the powerful
and impressive character of his oratory. The same spirit is visible
in the manner in which he handles his subjects, especially in their
skilful division, and in the artful manner in which he interweaves
his arguments with various parts of the exposition, whereby his
orations become like a painting in which light and shade are
distributed with a distinct view to produce certain effects. It was
mainly owing to this mode of management that he was envied and
censured by his contemporaries, as if he had tried to deceive and
misguide his hearers. He was one of the first who turned their
attention to a scientific cultivation of political oratory; but
excellence in this department of the art was not attained until the
time of
Demosthenes.
Bibliography
Print
- Forster, E.S. (ed., tr.) 1927, Isaeus (Cambridge, MA).
ISBN 0-674-99222-9
- Roussel, P. (ed., tr.) 2003, Isée. Discours,
3rd ed. (1st ed. 1922; Paris). ISBN 2-251-00170-0
- Thalheim, Th. (ed.) 1963, Isaei Orationes cum deperditarum
fragmentis, 2nd ed. (1st ed. 1903; Stuttgart). ISBN
3-598-71456-4
- Wyse, W. (ed.) 1904, The
Speeches of Isaeus (Cambridge). - PDF
References
- Dionysius, Isaeus 1; Plutarch, Lives of the Ten
Orators p. 839; Anon., γένος Ἰσαίου.
- Photius, Bibliotheca cod. 263; Dionysius and Plutarch,
locc. citt.
- Cf. Plutarch de Glor. Ath. p. 350, c.; Photius
loc. cit.
- Plutarch, Lives of the Ten Orators, loc.
cit.
- Plutarch, Lives of the Ten Orators p. 839; Dionysius
Epist. ad Ammon. i.2.
- Harpocrates, s.vv. , .
Sources
Further reading