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were paid a share of the mine proceeds, in silver. Accordingly, they were considered the richest family in Athens and quite possibly in all of Greece, and the head of the family was often simply referred to as
175:, flatterers, and women. These behaviours became quite evident early in his life so that he was commonly spoken of, before his father's death, being the "evil genius" of his family. He is acclaimed in Plato's
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He apparently inherited his family's fortune in 424 BC. In 371, he was one of the
Athenian envoys sent to Sparta to negotiate peace. He is said to have spent his family's enormous wealth on
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164:(roughly the equivalent of the modern consul) to Sparta, and, as such, was chosen as one of the envoys empowered to negotiate a peace with Sparta in 371 BC. On this occasion
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210:. In the latter especially Callias' character is drawn with some vivid sketches as a dilettante highly amused with the intellectual fencing of
133:, 421 BC, as having recently entered into his inheritance. In 400 BC, he was involved in an attempt to destroy the career of the Attic orator,
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Callias' family was unusually wealthy: the major part of their fortune came from the leasing of large numbers of slaves to the state-owned
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refers. Callias died so poor that he could not afford the common necessities of life. He left a legitimate son named
Hipponicus.
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during the celebration of the
Mysteries. However, according to Andocides, the bough was actually placed there by Callias himself.
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Callias is said to have ultimately reduced himself to absolute beggary, to which the sarcasm of
Iphicrates in calling him
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Callias must have inherited the family's fortune in 424 BC, which can be reconciled with the mention of him in the
65:, flatterers, and women, and to have died in poverty. He is a character in several Socratic dialogues: Plato's
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families to bear the name of
Callias. He was regarded as infamous for his extravagance and profligacy.
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114:: "ὁ πλούσιος", "the wealthy"). The only other family that could rival their wealth were the
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Four Texts on
Socrates: Plato's Euthyphro, Apology, and Crito, and Aristophanes' Clouds
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In 392 BC, he was placed in command of the
Athenian heavy-armed troops at
567: This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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450:. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 57.
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The People of Plato: A Prosopography of Plato and Other
Socratics
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reports that
Callias gave an absurd and self-glorifying speech.
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in honour of a victory gained by the handsome young man in the
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It is said that
Callias dissipated all his inherited wealth on
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as having "paid more money to sophists than all the others."
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218:. Callias III is also an interlocutor with Socrates in
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and the third member of one of the most distinguished
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Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology
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Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology
42:
aristocrat and political figure. He was the son of
16:4th-century BC Athenian aristocrat and politician
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441:"Callias and Hipponicus s.v. 3. Callias"
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77:are set at his house, and he featured in
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46:and an unnamed woman (she later married
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526:, "On the Property of Aristophanes",
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247:List of speakers in Plato's dialogues
148:on the occasion of their defeat of a
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38:and great-great-grandfather) was an
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34:to distinguish him from his
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252:Pederasty in ancient Greece
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635:Ancient Greek LGBTQ people
160:. Callias was hereditary
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620:5th-century BC Athenians
615:4th-century BC diplomats
605:4th-century BC Athenians
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182:The scene of Xenophon's
447:Encyclopædia Britannica
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319:, "On the Mysteries",
625:5th-century BC births
610:4th-century BC deaths
220:Aeschines of Sphettus
79:Aeschines of Sphettus
188:, and also that of
116:tyrants of Syracuse
482:Hackett Publishing
208:Panathenaic Games
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365:Andocides,
315:Andocides,
233:instead of
231:metragyrtes
108:ho plousios
36:grandfather
32:Callias III
30:, known as
599:Categories
545:(editor);
537:References
466:pp. 335-38
462:Protagoras
421:0801485746
349:Xenophon,
331:Xenophon,
212:Protagoras
204:pentathlon
195:Protagoras
158:Iphicrates
127:Flatterers
74:Symposium
68:Protagoras
52:Alcmaeonid
44:Hipponicus
494:Aristotle
376:The Frogs
334:Hellenica
292:Athenaeus
200:Autolykos
185:Symposium
135:Andocides
97:mines of
640:Proxenoi
576:(1870).
559:, (1867)
524:Speeches
499:Rhetoric
317:Speeches
271:Plutarch
241:See also
235:daduchos
216:Socrates
173:sophists
166:Xenophon
162:proxenus
81:'s lost
63:sophists
56:Athenian
48:Pericles
584:(ed.).
571::
516:xii. 52
460:Plato,
224:Aspasia
206:at the
177:Apology
150:Spartan
146:Corinth
139:Eleusis
131:Eupolis
103:Calliai
99:Laurium
83:Aspasia
28:Kαλλίας
20:Callias
557:Boston
520:Lysias
504:iii. 2
418:
397:iv. 16
389:Aelian
385:iv. 67
123:comedy
95:silver
50:), an
580:. In
379:, v.
351:vi. 3
339:iv. 5
302:v. 59
258:Notes
190:Plato
156:, by
112:Greek
24:Greek
416:ISBN
355:v. 4
214:and
154:Mora
125:the
89:Life
381:432
367:130
321:110
192:'s
129:of
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