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  1. Mar 19, 2020 · This paper aims to build on previous discussion of Benjamin Jowett's 1881 translation of Thucydides by applying a comparative corpus-based methodology to explore how this translator's own personal politics shaped his re-presentation of this text.

  2. Symposium: The Benjamin Jowett Translation. Plato, Hayden Pelliccia. Modern Library, 1996 - Family & Relationships - 100 pages. One of the most famous works of literature in the Western world, Plato's Symposium is also one of the most entertaining. The scene is a dinner party in Athens in 416 B.C. at which the guests - including the comic poet ...

  3. Benjamin Jowett was born in Camberwell on 15 April 1817. He was the son of a small businessman and was educated at St Paul's School. He entered Balliol as a scholar in October 1836, and spent virtually the whole of the rest of his life in the college, of which he became master in 1870. One of the recurring themes of Jowett's life was his belief ...

  4. Translated by Benjamin Jowett Adapted by Gregory Nagy, Miriam Carlisle, and Soo-Young Kim Persons of the Dialogue Phaedo, who is the narrator of the dialogue to Echecrates of Phlius Socrates Apollodorus Simmias Cebes Crito Attendant of the Prison Scene The Prison of Socrates. Place of the Narration: Phlius. Echecrates [57a] Were you yourself, Phaedo, in […]

  5. Benjamin Jowett, Master of Balliol College and Regius Profes. sor of Greek in the University of Oxford, died on October 1, 1893. He was born at Camberwell in 1817, and attended St. Paul's School in London. He was a student of Balliol, and received his Bachelor's degree at Oxford in 1839, with a first class in Liter Humaniores.

  6. Benjamin Jowett In Myth And History. Peter Hinchliff. Some nineteenth-century nineteenth-century years liberal ago theologian I wrote liberal and educationalist a book theologian and the about Benjamin and educationalist Jowett, the and famous the. head of the Oxford college where I now teach.1 It was a curious.

  7. A stand-alone version of “The Republic” taken from Volume 3 of a 5 volume edition of Plato by the great English Victorian Greek scholar, Benjamin Jowett. The scholarly apparatus is immense and detailed. The online version preserves the marginal comments of the printed edition and has links to all the notes and comments provided by Jowett.