Isocrates
![Bust of Isocrates; plaster cast in the [[Pushkin Museum](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/aa/Isocrates_pushkin.jpg)
Greek rhetoric is commonly traced to Corax of Syracuse, who first formulated a set of rhetorical rules in the fifth century BC. His pupil Tisias was influential in the development of the rhetoric of the courtroom, and by some accounts was the teacher of Isocrates. Within two generations, rhetoric had become an important art, its growth driven by social and political changes such as democracy and courts of law. Isocrates starved himself to death, two years before his 100th birthday. Provided by Wikipedia
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Published: 2000.
Superior document: The oratory of classical Greece ; v. 4
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Published: c2004.
Superior document: The oratory of Classical Greece ; v. 7
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Published: 1831
Superior document: Isocratis Orationes commentariis instructae 1
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Published: 1966
Superior document: Isocrates in three volumes 1 (1966)
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Published: 2004
Superior document: Isocrates 1
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Published: 1968
Superior document: Isocrates in three volumes 2
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Published: 1968
Superior document: Isocrates in three volumes 3 (1968)
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Published: 1902
Superior document: Isocratis Orationes 1 (1902)
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Published: 1904
Superior document: Isocratis Orationes 2
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Published: 1874
Superior document: Ausgewählte Reden 1
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Published: 1875
Superior document: Ausgewählte Reden 2
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Published: 2004
Superior document: Isocrates 2
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Published: 2003
Superior document: Beiträge zur Altertumskunde 196
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Published: 2008