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  1. Socrates’ Tomb in Antisthenes’ Kyrsas and its Relationship with Plato’s Phaedo.Menahem Luz - 2022 - International Journal of the Platonic Tradition 1176 (2):163-177.
    Socrates’ burial is dismissed as philosophically irrelevant in Phaedo 115c-e although it had previously been discussed by Plato’s older contemporaries. In Antisthenes’ Kyrsas dialogue describes a visit to Socrates’ tomb by a lover of Socrates who receives protreptic advice in a dream sequence while sleeping over Socrates’ grave. The dialogue is a metaphysical explanation of how Socrates’ spiritual message was continued after death. Plato underplays this metaphorical imagery by lampooning Antisthenes philosophy and his work (Phd. 81b-82e) and subsequently precludes him (...)
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  • Socrates’ Burial in Plato and Euclides.Menahem Luz - 2022 - International Journal of the Platonic Tradition 16 (1):1-14.
    In Phaedo 115c-e Socrates scornfully rebukes Crito for enquiring how Socrates should be buried for Crito had not been persuaded by the previous arguments that burying Socrates’ body is not equal to burying Socrates. A parallel account is found in Aelian and Diogenes Laertius where Apollodorus is rebuked for attempting to persuade Socrates that he should be bothered how his remains would be clothed when laid out. Several scholars have suggested this should not be considered a copy of Plato but (...)
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  • Attitudes toward Death in Archaic Greece.Ian Morris - 1989 - Classical Antiquity 8 (2):296-320.
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  • Rituals in stone: early Greek grave epigrams and monuments.Joseph W. Day - 1989 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 109:16-28.
    The goal of this paper is to increase our understanding of what archaic verse epitaphs meant to contemporary readers. Section I suggests their fundamental message was praise of the deceased, expressed in forms characteristic of poetic encomium in its broad, rhetorical sense, i.e., praise poetry. In section II, the conventions of encomium in the epitaphs are compared to the iconographic conventions of funerary art. I conclude that verse inscriptions and grave markers, not only communicate the same message of praise, but (...)
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  • The Nyktophylaxia of Delos.A. Schachter - 1999 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 119:172-174.
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  • Gods around the Grave: Hermes and Hekate in early Attic curse tablets.Athanassia Zografou - 2021 - Kernos 34:187-217.
    Τhe aim of this article is to examine (on the basis of up-to-date and recently published epigraphic material) the ways in which divine powers are involved in early Attic defixiones in order to show that the rubric “chthonian gods” encompasses a variety of divinities and modes of action that are not necessarily or exclusively related to the realm of Hades. To that end, I have used the pair of Hekate and Hermes as my main case study. In curse tablets, these (...)
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