• Memories of Socrates: Memorabilia and Apology (Oxford World’s Classics)
  • Author: Xenophon
  • Translator: Martin Hammond
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • Publication Date: June 23, 2023
  • Print Length: 304 Pages
  • Product Description

In 399 BCE Socrates was tried in Athens on charges of irreligion and corruption of the young, convicted, and sentenced to death. Like Plato, an almost exact contemporary, in his youth Xenophon (c. 430-c. 354 BCE) was one of the circle of mainly upper-class young Athenians attracted to Socrates’ teaching. His Memorabilia is both a passionate defense of Socrates against those charges and a kaleidoscopic picture of the man he knew, painted in a series of mini-dialogues and shorter vignettes, with a varied and deftly characterized cast–entitled and ambitious young men, atheists and hedonists, artists and artisans, Socrates’ own stroppy teenage son Lamprocles, the glamorous courtesan Theodote. Topics given Socrates’ characteristic questioning treatment include education, law, justice, government, political and military leadership, democracy and tyranny, friendship, care of the body and the soul, and concepts of the divine. Xenophon sees Socrates as above all a supreme moral educator, coaxing and challenging his associates to make themselves better people, not least by the example of how he lived his own life. Self-knowledge, leading to a reasoned self-control, was for Socrates the essential first step on the path to virtue, and some found it uncomfortable. The Apology is a moving account of Socrates’ behavior and bearing in his last days, immediately before, during, and after his trial.

  • About the Translator

Martin Hammond was born in 1944 and educated at Winchester College and Balliol College, Oxford. He has taught at St Paul’s School, Harrow School, and Eton College, where he was Head of Classics from 1974 to 1980, and Master in College from 1980 to 1984. He was Headmaster of the City of London School from 1984 to 1990 and of Tonbridge School from 1990 to his retirement in 2005. He is the translator of Artemidorus’ The Interpretation of Dreams (Oxford World’s Classics, 2020).