So Theramenes[1] met a death worthy of his life, after Kritias had condemned him.{2]
Kritios: toigartoi tês tou biou proaireseôs epaxiôs etuchen ho Thêramenês tês teleutês, Kritiou krinantos auton.
(Entry lacking, Adler reports, in mss AFV.)
An abridged version of a sentence from
delta 234, q.v. Unfortunately, the second proper name, in the genitive case
*kriti/ou, has produced, as headword here, the wrong nominative: it should be not 'Kritios' (attested as the name of an Athenian sculptor in bronze: see e.g.
Pausanias 1.8.5; A.F. Stewart in OCD(4) s.v. Critius, p. 394) but Kritias.
[1] For Theramenes, cf.
theta 342,
kappa 1909, and
delta 234 n.2.
[2] For the Athenian aristocrat Kritias (
Critias, c.460-403 BCE) -- politician, right-wing intellectual, and uncle of
Plato -- see generally Michael Gagarin in OCD(4) s.v.
Critias, p. 394).
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