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The Public Orations of Demosthenes, Volume 2

By Demosthenes

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Book Id: WPLBN0000618761
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Title: The Public Orations of Demosthenes, Volume 2  
Author: Demosthenes
Volume:
Language: English
Subject: Literature & thought, Literature and history, Literature & philosophy
Collections: Classic Literature Collection, Project Gutenberg Consortia Center
Historic
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Publisher: Project Gutenberg Consortia Center

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Demosthenes, B. (n.d.). The Public Orations of Demosthenes, Volume 2. Retrieved from https://self.gutenberg.org/


Excerpt
Introduction. Late in the year 343 (some time after the acquittal of Aeschines) Philip invaded Epirus, made Alexander, brother of his wife Olympias, king of the Molossi instead of Arybbas, and so secured, his own influence in that region. Arybbas was honorably received at Athens. Philip next threatened Ambracia and Leucas, which were colonies of Corinth, and promised to restore Naupactus, which was in the hands of the Achaeans, to the Aetolians. But Athens sent Demosthenes, Hegesippus, Polyeuctus and others to rouse the Corinthians to resistance, and also dispatched a force of citizens to Acarnania to help in the defense against Philip. Philip thereupon returned, captured Echinus and Nicaea on the Malian Gulf, and established a tetrarch in each division of Thessaly (343 B.C., or early in 342). In 342 Philistides was established, by Philip?s influence, as tyrant at Oreus in Euboea (as Cleitarchus had been at Eretria in the preceding year), and the democratic leader Euphraeus committed suicide in prison.[1] The town of Chalcis, however, under Callias and Taurosthenes, remained friendly to Athens, and made a treaty of alliance with her.

 
 



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