Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://citation.dbpedia.org/hash/12e8aa3ff4310f6e268d6ca0085554ff666c6554fad808c6f95228da4be3869f> ?p ?o }
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- 12e8aa3ff4310f6e268d6ca0085554ff666c6554fad808c6f95228da4be3869f accessdate "2015-03-30".
- 12e8aa3ff4310f6e268d6ca0085554ff666c6554fad808c6f95228da4be3869f authorlink "Henry Jackson".
- 12e8aa3ff4310f6e268d6ca0085554ff666c6554fad808c6f95228da4be3869f first "Henry".
- 12e8aa3ff4310f6e268d6ca0085554ff666c6554fad808c6f95228da4be3869f isCitedBy Coniine.
- 12e8aa3ff4310f6e268d6ca0085554ff666c6554fad808c6f95228da4be3869f last "Jackson".
- 12e8aa3ff4310f6e268d6ca0085554ff666c6554fad808c6f95228da4be3869f pages "331-338".
- 12e8aa3ff4310f6e268d6ca0085554ff666c6554fad808c6f95228da4be3869f quote "SOCRATES, son of the statuary Sophroniscus and of the midwife Phaenarete, was born at Athens, not earlier than 471 nor later than May or June 469 B.C. ... In 399, four years after the restoration and the amnesty, he was indicted as an offender against public morality. ... The accusation ran thus: “Socrates is guilty, firstly, of denying the gods recognized by the state and introducing new divinities, and, secondly, of corrupting the young.” ... Under ordinary circumstances the condemned criminal drank the cup of hemlock on the day after the trial; but in the case of Socrates the rule that during the absence of the sacred ship sent annually to Delos no one should be put to death caused an exceptional".
- 12e8aa3ff4310f6e268d6ca0085554ff666c6554fad808c6f95228da4be3869f volume "25".
- 12e8aa3ff4310f6e268d6ca0085554ff666c6554fad808c6f95228da4be3869f wstitle "Socrates".