Online Encyclopedia

ASPASIA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 766 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ASPASIA  , an Athenian courtesan of the 5th

century B.C., was born either at Miletus. or at
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Megara, and settled in Athens, where her beauty and her accomplishments gained for her a
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great reputation . Pericles, who had divorced his wife (445), made her his
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mistress, and, after the
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death of his two legitimate sons, procured the passing of a law under which his son by her was recognized as legitimate . It was the fashion, especially among the comic poets, to regard her as the adviser of Pericles in all his
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political actions, and she is even charged with having caused the Samian and Peloponnesian
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wars (Aristoph . Acharn . 497)• Shortly before the latter war, she was accused of impiety, and nothing but the tears and entreaties of Pericles procured her acquittal . On the death of Pericles she is said to have become the mistress of one Lysicles, whom, though of ignoble birth, she raised to a high position in the state; but, as Lysicles died a
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year after Pericles (428), the story is unconvincing . She was the chief figure in the
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dialogue Aspasia by Aeschines the Socratic, in which she was represented as criticizing the manners and training of the
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women of her time (for an attempted reconstruction of the dialogue see P . Natorp in Philologus, li. p . 489, 1892); in the Menexenus (generally ascribed to
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Plato) she is a teacher of rhetoric, the instructress of
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Socrates and Pericles, and a funeral oration in honour of those Athenians who had given their lives for their country (the authorship of which is attributed to Aspasia) is repeated by Socrates;
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Xenophon (Oecon. lii . 14) also speaks of her in favourable terms, but she is not mentioned by Thucydides . In opposition to this view, Wilamowitz-Mollendorff (Hermes,
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xxxv . 1900) regards her simply as a courtesan, whose personality would readily, become the subject of rumour, favour-able or unfavourable .

There is a bust bearing her name in the Pio Clementino Museum in the Vatican . See Le

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Coi to de Bievre,
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Les Deux Aspasies (1736) ; J . B .
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Capefigue, Aspasie et le siecle de Pericles (1862) ; L . Becq de Fouquieres, Aspasie de Milet (1872) ; H . Houssaye, Aspasie, Cleojidtre, Theodora (1899) ; R . Hamerlingi,Aspasia (a
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romance; Eng. trans. by M . J . Safford, New York, 1882); J . Donaldson, Woman (1907) . Also PERICLES .

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