- Theodectes
Theodectes (c. 380 to 340 BCE) was a Greek
rhetorician and tragic poet, ofPhaselis inLycia who lived in the period which followed thePeloponnesian War . Along with the continual decay of political and religious life, tragedy sank more and more into mererhetoric al display. The school ofIsocrates produced theorator s and tragedians, Theodectes and Aphareus. He was also a pupil ofPlato and an intimate friend ofAristotle . He at first wrote speeches for the law courts though he soon moved on to compose tragedies with success. He spent most of his life atAthens , and was buried on the sacred road toEleusis . The inhabitants of Phaselis honored him with a statue, which was decorated with garlands byAlexander the Great on his way to the East.He won the prize eight times, on one occasion with his tragedy, "Mausolus", in the contest which the queen
Artemisia ofCania had instituted in honor of her dead husband,Mausolus . On the same occasion he was defeated in rhetoric byTheopompus . Mausolus was especially adapted for recitations, and, from what theSuda says, it appears that the whole contest was one of declamation. A good idea of these dramas for reading and recitation, with their accompaniment of cold, rhetorical pathos and their strong leaning toward the horrible, may be gained by the plays of Seneca. Of the fifty tragedies of Theodectes we have the names of about thirteen and a few unimportant fragments; among them were an Ajax,Oedipus ,Orestes andPhiloctetes . His treatise on the art of rhetoric (according to Suidas written in verse) and his speeches are lost. The names of two of the latter, "Socrates" and "Nomos " (referring to a law proposed by Theodectes for the reform of themercenary service) are preserved byAristotle ("Rhetoric", ii. 23, 13, 17). The "Theodectea" (Aristotle, Rhet. iii. 9, 9) was probably not by Theodectes, but an earlier work of Aristotle, which was superseded by the extant "Rhetorica".Stobaeus makes the following pessimistic quotation from an unknown tragedy of his::"All human beings grow old, and to an end :"Comes every birth of time, save only one, :"Save only wickedness; but that, methinks, :"Fast as the race of mortals doth increase, :"Increaseth equally from day to day.
References
*"The Drama: Its History, Literature and Influence on Civilization", vol. 1.
Alfred Bates . London: Historical Publishing Company, 1906. p. 331-333.
*"1911 Encyclopædia Britannica ", article "Theodectes".
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.