34. (Greek characters), is of un-certain date, and its genuineness is doubted by some of the ancients. See the Greek Argumentum.
35. (Greek characters), belongs to B.C. 350.
36 (Greek characters), falls after B.C. 347.
37. (Greek characters) is of uncertain date.
38. (Greek characters), belongs to B.C. 351 or 350, and was ascribed by some of the ancients to Deinarchus. (Dionys. Hal. Deinurch. 13.) See Böckh, Urkund. über. das Att. Seewesen, p. 22, &c.
39. (Greek characters) B.C. 347.
40. (Greek characters), of uncertain date.
41. (Greek characters), of uncertain date. The genuineness of this oration is doubted by the author of the argum. to it, Böckh, Index to Publ. Econ. of Athens, and Schaefer, Appar. Crit. v. p. 63.
42. (Greek characters), of uncertain date. See de Boor, Prolegom. zu der Rede des Demosth. gegen. Makartatus, Hamburg, 1838.
43. (Greek characters), of uncertain date.
44 and 45, The two orations against Stephanus, belong to the time previous to b. c. 343. The genuineness of the first is doubted by 1. Bekker. See C. D. Beel, Diutribe in Demosth. Oral, in Stephan., Lugdun. Bat. 1825.
46. (Greek characters), belongs to the time after B.C. 355. Its genuineness is doubted by Harpocr. s. vr (Greek characters), H. Wolf, Bockh {i.e.), and I. Bekker. See Schaefer, Appar. Crit. v. p. 216.
47.(Greek characters) after B.C. 343.
48. (Greek characters) between B.C. 363. and 354, but is considered spurious by Harpocrat. s. v. (Greek characters), Böckh, and Bekker (see Schaefer, Appar. Crit. v. p. 264). It is defended by Rumpf, de Orat. adv. Timoth., Giessen, 1821.
49. (Greek characters) after B.C. 361.
50. (Greek characters), after B.C. 361, is suspected by Becker, Demosth. als Stastsmann und. Redner, p. 465.
51.(Greek characters), spoken in B.C. 364.
52. (Greek characters), of uncertain date, was suspected by Harpocrat. s. v. (Greek characters)
53. (Greek characters), B.C. 343,
54. (Greek characters), of uncertain date.
55.(Greek characters), B.C. 329.
56. (Greek characters), after B.C. 346.
57. (Greek characters), belongs to B.C. 325, but is probably the work of Deinarchus. (Dionys. Deinarch. 10; Argum. ad Orat. c. Theocrin. p. 1321 ; Harpocrat. s. rv. (Greek characters) and (Greek characters) Schaefer, Appar. Crit. v, p, 473.)
58. (Greek characters), refers to B.C. 340, but is considered spurious both by ancient and modern writers. (Dionys. de Admir. vi dic. Dem. 57; Phrynich. p. 226 ; Harpocrat. s.rv. (Greek characters),(Greek characters), (Greek characters) , (Greek characters) and (Greek characters) Schaefer, Appar. Crit. v. p. 527.)
{{c|III. Show Speeches.
59. (Greek characters), refers to B.C. 338, but is unquestionably spurious. (Dionys. de Admir. vi dic. Dem. 23, 44; Liban. p. 6; Harpocrat. s. v. (Greek characters) and (Greek characters); Phot. Bibl. p. 491; Suid. s. v. (Greek characters) Bekker, Aneed. p. 354; Westermann, Quaest. Dem. ii. p. 49, &c.) Its genuineness is defended by Becker (Demosth. als Staatsm. u. red. ii. p. 466, &c.) and Krüger (in Seebode's Archiv; i. 2, p. 277).
60. (Greek characters), is, like the former, a spurious production. (Dionys. de Admir. vi dic. Dem. 44; Liban. p. 6; Pollux, iii. 144; Phot. Bibl. l. c.; Westermann, Quaest. Dem. ii. p, 70, &c.)
Among the lost orations of Demosthenes the following are mentioned : — (Greek characters) (Dionys, Deinarch. 11.) 2, (Greek characters) (Pollux, viii. 53; Harpocr. s. v. (Greek characters)) 3. (Greek characters) (Bekker, Anecd. p. 90.) 4. (Greek characters) (Athen. xni. p. 592) is perhaps the same as the (Greek characters). (Dionys. Ep. ad Amm. i. 12, who, however, in Demosth. 57, declares it a spurious oration.) 5.(Greek characters) was spurious according to Dionysius. (Demosth. 57.) 6. (Greek characters) (Bekker, Anecd. p. 335.) A fragment of it is probably extant in Alexand. de Figur. p. 478, ed. Walz. 7. (Greek characters) (Harpocrat. s. v. (Greek characters), where Dionysius doubts its genuineness.) 8. 'Tirep prirSpwv, probably not a work of Demosthenes. (Suid. s. v. (Greek characters), belonged according to Callimachus (ap. Phot. Bibl. p. 491 ) to Deinarchus.
Besides the ancient and modern historians of the time of Philip and Alexander, the following works will be found useful to the student of De- mosthenes : Schott, Vitae Parallelae Aristot. et Demosth. Antwerp, 1603 ; Becker, Demosthenes als Staatsmann und Redner, Halle, 1816, 2 vols. 8vo.; Westermann, Quaestiones Demosthenicae, in four parts, Leipzig, 1830 — 1837, Geschichte der Griech. Beredtsamkeit, §§ 56, 57, and Beilage, vii. p. 297, &c.; Böhneke, Studien anf dem Gebiete der Attischen Redner, Berlin, 1843.
[L. S.]
DEMO'STHENES ((Greek characters)). 1. The father of the orator. See above.
2. A Bithynian, wrote a history of his native country, of which the tenth book is quoted by Stephanus of Byzantium. (s.vv. (Greek characters) comp. s. vv. (Greek characters), (Greek characters), (Greek characters), (Greek characters), (Greek characters) ; Etym. Mag. s. v. (Greek characters)) He further wrote an account of the foundations of towns ((Greek characters)), which is likewise several times quoted by Stephanus. Euphorion wrote a poem against this historian under the title of (Greek characters), of which a fragment is still extant. (Bekker, Anecdot. p. 1383 ; comp. Meineke, de Euphorione, p. 31.)
3 A Thracian, a Greek grammarian, who wrote according to Suidas (s. v.) a work on the dithyrambic poets ((Greek characters)), a paraphrase of Homer's Iliad and of Hesiod's Theogony, and an epitome of the work of Damagetus of Heracleia. (Westermann, Quaest. Dem. iv. pp. 38, 88.)
4. Surnamed the Little ((Greek characters)), a Greek rhetorician, who is otherwise unknown; but some fragments of his speeches are extant in Bekker's Anecdota (pp. 135, 140, 168, 170, 172).
[L. S.]