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Trial of Socrates (399 B.C.)

The trial and execution of of Socrates in Athens in 399 B.C.E. puzzles historians. Why, in a society enjoying more freedom and democracy than any the world had ever seen, would a seventy-year-old philosopher be put to death for what he was teaching? The puzzle is all the greater because Socrates had taught--without molestation--all of his adult life. What could Socrates have said or done than prompted a jury of 500 Athenians to send him to his death just a few years before he would have died naturally?

Finding an answer to the mystery of the trial of Socrates is complicated by the fact that the two surviving accounts of the defense (or apology) of Socrates both come from disciples of his, Plato and Xenophon. Historians suspect that Plato and Xenophon, intent on showing their master in a favorable light, failed to present in their accounts the most damning evidence against Socrates....Continued

Home Trial Account

  • The Trial of Socrates
  • The Trial of Socrates: A Chronology
  • Maps of Ancient Greek World
  • Socrates (Diogenes Laertius, circa 225)
  • Plato & Socrates
  • The Three Accusers of Socrates
  • Apology (Plato's Account)
  • Apology of Socrates (Xenophon's Account)
  • Criminal Procedure in Ancient Greece and the Trial of Socrates
  • The Clouds (by Aristophanes, 423 B.C.)
  • The Trial of Socrates: Selected Images
  • I.F. Stone Breaks the Socrates Story
  • Links & Bibliography for the Trial of Socrates
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