Witnesses and Evidence: Information and Decision in Drama and Oratory
Second International Conference on Drama and OratoryDay 3 – Thursday, March 29, 2018
Law
Chair: Athanasios Efstathiou
9:00-9:20
The Judge as Witness
By Chris Carey, Professor Emeritus of Greek at University College London
This paper looks at ways in which speakers in the Athenian courts turn the judges (at least rhetorically)
This paper looks at ways in which speakers in the Athenian courts turn the judges (at least rhetorically) into witnesses for their case. It begins with a brief survey of the complex role of the witness within Athenian forensic culture and then looks at the different ways in which speakers stretch this role both terminologically and conceptually to fit the judges facing them and in the process align them more closely with their own case and their own version of the facts at issue. It closes by looking briefly at other rhetorical games which speakers play with the notion and practice of witnessing.
9:30-9:50
Use and abuse of evidence in the Herms and Mysteries cases
By Maria Youni, Professor of History of Law, Department of Law, Democritus University of Thrace
On a summer night of 415 BCE, a few days before the campaign to Sicily, most of the Herms on the streets of Athens
10:00-10:20
Oral and written evidence in the Speeches of Isaeus
By Mike Edwards, Professor of Humanities, University of Roehampton, London
In this paper I shall re-examine the formulas for the calling of witness statements in the speeches of Isaios
10:30-10:50
Dike Pseudomartyrion and the case of Dem. 47
By Eleni Volonaki, Assistant Professor of Ancient Greek Literature, Univerisity of Peloponnese
Aristotle (Rhet. 1. 2.2; 1375a24ff.) lists five kinds of pisteis atechnoi: laws, witnesses,
Only free adult males were allowed to be witnesses. It was the duty of the litigant to secure that the witnesses named by him did actually attend at the trial or arbitration to acknowledge their testimony. The role of witnesses in the Athenian courts has been widely discussed by scholars of Greek law and oratory and the perspectives vary according to the way they were considered to contribute to justice. It is generally conceived that witnesses are not the primary source of information for the judges but it is the litigants who tell the story, frequently calling witnesses to confirm the details. A witness in Athenian trial was a supporter of one of the litigants more than a medium for finding the truth and reconstructing justice.
The present paper will focus on the legal aspect of a dike pseudomarturion and its contribution to the operation of the judicial decision making process in Athenian courts. Private and public cases may have originated different conditions and effects upon the initiation of a trial for false testimony. The legal scope of the specific procedure prevented witnesses from affirming illegitimate evidence in court and may have consequently made them reluctant to undertake their role and to comply with a litigant’s choice of argumentation. Dike pseudomarturion was an instrument that enabled both litigants before the final decision of the judges to sue witnesses produced by their opponents and rhetorically manipulate and control the development of the trial. My aim is to examine the specific legal procedure in the case of false testimony against Euergos and Mnesibolos, as presented in Demosthenes’ speech 47, involving originally a trial of assault. Apart from the variety of legal issues that arises in the specific case, it is also worth examining the use of a dike pseudomarturion as a powerful rhetorical tool to reverse the outcome of a previous trial and get the benefit from compensation. As such, dike pseudomarturion appears to be the only possible way of appeal to the court for the judges’ vote at a trial.
Rhetoric and Oratory
Chair: Lene Rubinstein
11:00-11:20
The madness argument in Greek Rhetoric
By Alberto Maffi, Professor Ordinarius of Ancient Law, Univerisita degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca
The theme of madness has been treated in the classical Greek world mainly from two points of view
11:30-11:50
Proof, truth and justice in the Epilogoi of Attic forensic oratory
By Christos Kremmydas, Reader in Greek History, Royal Holloway University of London
The epilogoi of Attic forensic oratory have not attracted much attention in recent scholarship
The
12:00-12:20
Self-Quotations as witnesses and evidence: the case of Isocrates’ Antidosis
By Pasquale Massimo Pinto, Professor of Classical Philology, University of Bari, Italy
In 354/3 BC, two years after the unfavourable outcome of a trial connected with an antidosis
12:30-12:50
Διάλειμμα / Coffee Break
13:00-13:20
Witnesses, evidence and rhetoric in D. 57 Appeal Against Euboulides
By Kostis Apostolakis, Assistant Professor of Ancient Greek Literature, Faculty of Philology, University of Crete
Demosthenes’ Against Euboulides is one of the three forensic speeches in the corpus of Attic oratory
In this paper I focus on the rhetoric of the testimonies, in the hope of showing some interesting aspects concerning the nature of Athenian citizenship. It is worth noting that the speech contains no fewer than 15 headings for witnesses and depositions. These testimonies bear the main burden of the rebuttal, and they accordingly have a structural function in the speech, being placed in its central part and either preceded or followed by relevant arguments and comments. The speaker also supports these statements with generalizations on human life and emotionally loaded arguments. Moreover, as occasion serves, he turns over the evidence used by the prosecution by adducing witnesses who support his own interpretation. An indicative passage is §§44-45, where he manipulates the allegation that his mother, having served in the past as a wet-nurse, was not an astē. Euxitheus admits that his mother was a nurse, but then he calls on the members of the family whom she had served to testify what they know, i.e. that she was an Athenian woman who was forced by poverty to undertake humble occupations (§§44-45). This particular issue is also considered in the light of similar slanders and allegations regarding the social status of well-known personalities, which occur both in political oratory and in comedy.
13:30-13:50
The Evidential Value of Religious Observance in the Speeches of Isaios
By Brenda Griffith, Honorary Research Fellow of Greek, University College London
Several of the speeches written by Isaios for litigants in disputed inheritance cases
In other speeches, similar evidence about participation in religious ceremonies (or sometimes about absence from them) is used for different purposes: to show that the speaker’s opponent was an enemy of the deceased relative whose estate he claims (Isa. 1.31, 9.21), that the speaker himself was on terms of close friendship with the deceased (Isa. 9.30), that the speaker’s mother was a legitimate Athenian citizen (Isa. 8.19), or as general evidence of an opponent’s bad character (Isa. 6.48-49). Sometimes this kind of evidence is characterized as a σημεῖον (Isa. 1.31, 6.48) or a τεκμήριον (Isa. 8.15) of the point the speaker wants to prove, and it is almost always supported by witnesses who claim to have observed the presence (or absence) of the person in question at the ceremonies described. In one exceptional case, the speaker adduces ψηφισμάτα passed by the βουλὴ as evidence of his opponent’s sacrilegious behaviour (Isa. 6.50).
A close analysis of these passages (with reference to Aristotle’s theory of proof) will show that they all have some relevance to the legal issue in the case: who is best qualified to inherit the contested estate. But evidence of religious observance is never essential to the speaker’s case, and often forms only a small part of the total evidence he produces. I conclude, nevertheless, that its persuasive effect may often have been significant because of the strength of its appeal to traditional Athenian values.
14:00-14:20
Witness testimony in assault cases: Question of fact and construction of ethos
By Iphigeneia Giannadaki, Research Associate, University College London
It is a topos in modern scholarship on the topic of Athenian witnesses to emphasise an important difficulty
It is a topos in modern scholarship on the topic of Athenian witnesses to
Building on this latter view, which in my opinion, offers a better understanding of the role of witness testimony in the Athenian law, and the well-argued case for the artful use of this ‘artless proof’ (e.g. Carey 1994), I focus on the things they are invited to confirm, from a rhetorical point of view. Therefore, this paper seeks to understand the rhetorical role of witness testimony in the wider strategy of two speeches dealing with assault: a private (Dem. 54) and a public (Dem. 21). It intends to shed light to various artful uses of witness testimony, from gathering and drafting witness testimonies to their orchestration in the strategy of the speeches—especially, to illustrate the ethos of the opponent, in order to achieve persuasion. Such artful uses of witness testimony compensate for the absence/ weakness of factual evidence to prove crucial aspects of those cases.
14:30-16:00
Μεσημεριανό / Lunch Break
16:00-16:20
Rumor and hearsay evidence in the Athenian law courts
By Asako Kurihara, Professor of History, Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University
It is well known that Herodotus privileged the direct seeing (opsis) over a theory-based approach
First, hearsay evidence was accepted more widely than usually believed in the Athenian courts. To be sure, Athenian law did impose restrictions on the use of hearsay witness. For example, Dem.57 argues that the hearsay evidence is regarded as an unreliable source of information. However, reexamination of forensic speeches that make use of hearsay witnesses will show that hearsay evidence was often represented as an eligible source of information, even though it ranked second to testimony provided by eye witnesses.
The reliance on hearsay (akoe) is further attested in the litigants’ use of rumour, too. One prominent example is Aeschines, who had succeeded in prosecuting Timarchus without presenting any direct evidence for his prostitution. For him, the rumours served as testimony confirming the common local knowledge in the Athenian community. Demosthenes, who had criticized Aeschines’ use of rumour at that time, later in the turn reemphasized the force of rumour as a form of evidence. Rumour, as common knowledge based on hearsay, did not even have to be confirmed by individual witnesses.
Here lies the democratic feature of the Athenian courts, as well as the danger. The Athenian courts distinguished between direct evidence and hearsay evidence, privileging the former over the latter. The strategies of persuasion employed in the Athenian courts, however, did include hearsay information.
16:30-16:50
Additional information in witness testimonies in classical Athens
By Noboru Sato, Associate Professor of Occidental History, Faculty of Letters, Kobe University
Scholars have discussed the role of witness in the court of law in Classical Athens:
First of all, I will show that a litigant from time to time gives more detailed information on his own liturgical services or on the opponent’s wrongdoings other than the main issue, through witness testimonies without telling anything concrete by himself. In other words, witness testimony with additional information contributes to give credibility to litigant’s character portraiture either of himself or of his opponents. Secondly, I will argue that Athenian litigants could present the court of law with wide range of his personal supporters by making use of this type of witness testimonies. Although a litigant usually present those who were thought to have best knowledge about the fact to be testified, he could presumably easily produce many supporters as witnesses of such matters as his own liturgical services or his opponents’ other bad conduct than the main issue.
17:00-17:20
Hyperides’ Ultima Ratio: Some considerations on the Phryne case
By László Horváth, Dr, Director of Eötvös József Collegium, Budapest
One of the most famous arguments extra orationem is the “performance” of the
17:30-17:50
Reshuffling the evidence: a reading of Demosthenes Against Conon 26-36
By Vassileios Lentakis, Associate Professor of Greek Philology, National & Kapodistrian University of Athens
While taking his customary stroll in the Agora Ariston is assaulted by Conon and his company
18:00-18:30
Διάλειμμα / Coffee Break
18:30-18:50
Scandals as evidence in Attic forensic oratory
By Rozalia Hatzilamprou, Assistant Professor in Ancient Greek Philology Faculty of Philology, Department of Classics, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
In this paper, I explore the inclusion of scandalous incidents in the narrative of forensic speeches
forensic speeches. My case study will be Aeschines Against Timarchos. I argue that the narration of scandalous stories in the Against Timarchos compensates for Aeschines’ lack of factual evidence mainly regarding his claim that Timarchos had prostituted himself, and contributed to the success of the action that Aeschines brought against Timarchos. In the course of the paper I will call attention to tactics employed by the orator with reference to the narration of such incidents, which reveal the understanding on behalf of the orator of the rhetorical importance and the potential persuasive power of the skilled construction and presentation within his narrative of scandalous stories, which could, and actually in this speech did, function as pieces of evidence.
19:00-19:20
Perceptions of doctors in the Athenian forensic speeches
By Christine Plastow, Lecturer in Classical Studies, Open University London
In Demosthenes 54, amongst his witnesses the speaker calls a doctor who treated him after his
In this paper, I explore how the doctor in Demosthenes 54 may have been perceived by the audience, particularly with regard to his trustworthiness and expertise as a witness. I analyse the other mentions of doctors in the orators, both those referring to specific individuals, sometimes by name, and those referring to the profession in a more general or even proverbial sense, in order to build a picture of the ways in which doctors were deployed in the orators and the popular opinions of the profession that logographers felt able to exploit. I argue that doctors were not generally perceived to be more trustworthy than any other kind of witness, and that the concept of ‘expert witnesses’ has little use in the Athenian context; thus, the doctor in Demosthenes 54 should not stand out as much as we might expect.
Byzantium and Beyond
Chair: Eleni Volonaki
19:30-19:50
Nachor le faux témoin. La métaphrase Grecque de l’apologie perdue d’Aristide dans le Roman de Barlaam et Josaphat et sa version en Ancien Français (Ms. Athon. Iviron 463)
By Emese Egedi-Kovács, Researcher at Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
In Chapters 26–27 of the novel Barlaam and Josaphat, King Abenner organises a theological
20:00-20:20
Τὸ Μικτὸ Προγύμνασμα ὡς ἕνα δυναμικὸ μέσον στὴν λήψη καταδικαστικῆς ἀπόφασης: Ὁ Βαγώας τοῦ Νικηφόρου Βασιλάκη
By Georgios Tserevelakis, PhD Candidate, Faculty of Philology, University of the Peloponnese
Ἡ Κατὰ Βαγώα μελέτη, ὡς πλήρης λόγος καὶ ὄχι ἀποσπασματικός, εἶναι ἕνα μικτὸ προγύμνασμα κατηγορητικοῦ
Τὸ μικτὸ προγυμνασματικὸ εἶδος εἶναι ἐξαιρετικὰ ἰσχυρὸ κατὰ τὴν διάρκεια λήψης μιᾶς καταδικαστικῆς ἀπόφασης, ἀφοῦ συνδυάζει μὲ τρόπο δυναμικὸ τὴν πολυμορφία ὅλων τῶν εἰδῶν προγυμνάσματος. Η συνολική ισχύς αυτού του αποτελέσματος εκφαίνεται στην χρήση της μαρτυρίας στο δικαστήριο η οποία ανακόπτει την διασάλευση της ηθικής τάξης και συνδέει ψυχικά τον ρήτορα με το ακροατήριο.
Στὴν παροῦσα ἐργασία καταβάλλεται ἡ προσπάθεια νὰ ἰχνηλατηθεῖ ἡ λειτουργία τοῦ μικτοῦ προγυμνάσματος ὡς ρητορικοῦ εἴδους ποὺ εἶναι ἐξαιρετικὰ ἰσχυρὸ πρὸς τὴν λήψη μιᾶς καταδικαστικῆς ἀπόφασης, όπως και η διαδικασία με την οποίαν η μαρτυρία υπηρετεί τους στόχους του ρήτορος και τον καταξιώνει στην συνείδηση του ακροατηρίου.
Ἡ Κατὰ Βαγώα μελέτη πληροῖ τὰ λογοτεχνικὰ κριτήρια ἑνὸς «προγυμνασματικοῦ» δικανικοῦ λόγου ἀλλὰ οὐσιαστικὰ πρόκειται γιὰ ἕνα κείμενο ποὺ δὲν ἐκφωνήθηκε ποτὲ σὲ ἀνάλογο περιβάλλον, καὶ συνεγράφη ἀπὸ τὸν ρήτορα πρὸς γλωσσικὴ ἐκγύμναση. Ἀκόμα καὶ ὑπ’ αὐτὴν τὴν αἴρεση, ἡ ἀποκάλυψη καὶ ὁ σχολιασμὸς τῶν ρητορικῶν μέσων ποὺ χρησιμοποιήθηκαν γιὰ τὴν κατασκευὴ τοῦ λόγου αὐτοῦ δεικνύουν τὴν ἰδιαίτερη σημασία του γιὰ πράξεις μὲ ἠθικὲς ἐπιπτώσεις στὸ Βυζάντιο τοῦ 12ου αἰῶνος.
20:30-21:00
Μαρτυρίες και μάρτυρες της α(Α)ληθείας. Από τον αρχαιοελληνικό στον χριστιανικό κόσμο
By Ioannis Solaris, Post-Doctoral Fellow, Faculty of Philology University of the Peloponnese
Testimony is in a relationship of interdependence with truth, through mediation of faith-trust
21:00
Δείπνο / Dinner
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