Orator - Great Speakers

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An orator, or oratist, is a public speaker.


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Etymology

Recorded in English c. 1374, with a meaning of "one who pleads or argues for a cause", from Anglo-French oratour, Old French orateur (14th century), Latin orator ("speaker"), from orare ("speak before a court or assembly; plead"), derived from a Proto-Indo-European base *or- ("to pronounce a ritual formula").

The modern meaning of the word, "public speaker", is attested from c. 1430.


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History

In ancient Rome, the art of speaking in public (Ars Oratoria) was a professional competence especially cultivated by politicians and lawyers. As the Greeks were still seen as the masters in this field, as in philosophy and most sciences, the leading Roman families often either sent their sons to study these things under a famous master in Greece (as was the case with the young Julius Caesar), or engaged a Greek teacher (under pay or as a slave).

In the young revolutionary French republic, Orateur (French for "orator", but compare the Anglo-Saxon parliamentary speaker) was the formal title for the delegated members of the Tribunat to the Corps législatif, to motivate their ruling on a presented bill.

In the 19th century, orators and lecturers, such as Mark Twain, Charles Dickens, and Col. Robert G. Ingersoll were major providers of popular entertainment.

A pulpit orator is a Christian author, often a clergyman, renowned for their ability to write or deliver (from the pulpit in church, hence the word) rhetorically skilled religious sermons.

In some universities, the title 'Orator' is given to the official whose task it is to give speeches on ceremonial occasions, such as the presentation of honorary degrees.


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Orators

The following are, by necessity, those who have been noted as famous specifically for their oratory abilities, or for a particularly famous speech or speeches. Most religious leaders and politicians (by nature of their office) may perform many speeches, as may those who support or oppose a particular issue. To include them all would be prohibitive.

Classical era

  • The ten Attic orators (Greece)
    • Demosthenes, champion of the Philippic
    • Aeschines
    • Andocides
    • Antiphon
    • Dinarchus
    • Hypereides
    • Lysias
    • Isaeus
    • Isocrates
    • Lycurgus of Athens
  • Aristogeiton
  • Claudius Aelianus, meliglossos, 'honey-tongued'
  • Cicero
  • Corax of Syracuse
  • Gaius Scribonius Curio
  • Gorgias
  • Hegesippus, Athenian
  • Julius Caesar, Roman dictator
  • Licinius Macer Calvus, Roman poet and orator
  • Marcus Antonius (orator), Roman
  • Nicetas of Smyrna, 1st century AD, Greek sophist and orator
  • Pericles, Athenian statesman
  • Quintilian
  • Quintus Hortensius

Modern era

  • Allied and Axis leaders of World War II noted for their speeches:
    • Winston Churchill (British Prime Minister)
    • Charles de Gaulle (Free French general; President of France)
    • Joseph Goebbels (Nazi Propaganda Minister)
    • Adolf Hitler (Führer of Nazi Germany)
    • Douglas MacArthur - Farewell Speech to Congress
    • Benito Mussolini
    • Franklin D. Roosevelt (US President)
  • The Great Triumvirate:
    • Henry Clay
    • John C. Calhoun
    • Daniel Webster
  • Jawaharlal Nehru - Tryst with Destiny
  • William Jennings Bryan - Cross of Gold speech
  • Frederick Douglass - Self-Made Men
  • Ralph Waldo Emerson - The American Scholar
  • Patrick Henry - Give me Liberty, or give me Death!
  • John F. Kennedy (US President) - Inaugural Address
  • Martin Luther King, Jr. - I Have A Dream
  • Abraham Lincoln (US President) - Gettysburg address
  • Richard M. Nixon (US Vice-President) - Checkers speech
  • Barack Obama (US President) - The Audacity of Hope; A More Perfect Union
  • Ronald Reagan (US President) - First Inaugural Address; Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!
  • Margaret Thatcher - The lady's not for turning
  • Sojourner Truth - Ain't I a Woman?
  • Malcolm X - The Ballot or the Bullet
  • Nelson Mandela - I Am Prepared to Die
  • Leon Trotsky

Source of the article : Wikipedia



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