1. Education
Chapter 15 § 118. The Juryman's Oath.
A Day in Old Athens, by William Stearns Davis (1910)
Professor of Ancient History at the University of Minnesota

 Related Resources
• Preface
• Contents
• Greek and Latin Translations and E-Texts
• The Plan of a Greek House
 
 Elsewhere on the Web
• A Day In Old Athens
 

Chapter XV. An Athenian Court Trial.

118. The Juryman's Oath.--The dicasts are assumed to approach their duty with all due solemnity. They have sworn to vote according to the laws of Athens, never to vote for a repudiation of debts, nor to restore political exiles, nor to receive bribes for their votes, nor take bribes in another's behalf, nor let anybody even tempt them with such proffers. They are to hear both sides impartially and vote strictly according to the merits of the case: and the oath winds up awfully--"Thus do I invoke Zeus, Poseidon, and Demeter to smite with destruction me and my house if I violate any of these obligations, but if I keep them I pray for many blessings."[*]

[*]We have not the exact text of all the dicasts' oath, but we can reproduce it fairly completely from Demosthenes's "Oration against Timocrates."


This resource page is copyright © 2002 N.S. Gill.

Discuss in my forum

©2013 About.com. All rights reserved.