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==Alexandrian "Canon of Ten"== * [[Aeschines]] * [[Andocides]] * [[Antiphon (person)|Antiphon]] * [[Demosthenes]] * [[Dinarchus]] * [[Hypereides]] * [[Isaeus]] * [[Isocrates]] * [[Lycurgus of Athens|Lycurgus]] * [[Lysias]] As far as [[Homer]] (8th or 9th century BC), the art of effective speaking was of considerable value in Greece. In Homer's epic, the ''[[Iliad]],'' the warrior, Achilles, was described as "a speaker of words and a doer of deeds".<ref>Iliad 9.443</ref> Until the 5th century BC, however, oratory was not formally taught. It was not until the middle of that century that the Sicilian orator, [[Corax of Syracuse|Corax]], along with his pupil, [[Tisias]], began a formal study of [[rhetoric]]. In 427 BC, another Sicilian named [[Gorgias]] of Leontini visited Athens and gave a speech which dazzled the citizens. Gorgias’s "intellectual" approach to oratory, which included new ideas, forms of expression, and methods of argument, was continued by [[Isocrates]], a 4th-century BC educator and rhetorician. Oratory eventually became a central subject of study in the formalized Greek education system. The work of the Attic orators inspired the later rhetorical movement of [[Atticism]], an approach to speech composition in a simple rather than ornate style.
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