Epistles (Plato)/Seventh Letter
Appearance
- The Seventh Epistle of Plato, trans. by Thomas Taylor & Floyer Sydenham, and revised by Thomas W. Rolleston (1892) (transcription project)
- Seventh Letter, trans. by Georges Burges (1851)
is an epistle that tradition has ascribed to Plato. It is by far the longest of the epistles of Plato and gives an autobiographical account of his activities in Sicily as part of the intrigues between Dion and Dionysius of Syracuse for the tyranny of Syracuse.
English-language translations of el:Ἐπιστολαί include: