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ORATOR


'Orator' is an originally Latin word for (public) 'speaker'.

Contents
Word history
History
Formal titles
Pulpit orator
Other famous orators
Ancient and medieval orators
Modern orators
Notes
Sources and references

Word history


It is recorded in English since c.1374, meaning "one who pleads or argues for a cause," from Anglo-French ''oratour'', from Old French ''orateur'' (14c.), from Latin ''orator'' "speaker," from ''orare'' "speak before a court or assembly, plead," from a Proto-Indo-European base
★ ''or-'' "to pronounce a ritual formula". The modern meaning "public speaker" is attested from c.1430. Orators along with poets wer the first humanists (humanism).
The derived word 'oration', originally used for prayer since c.1375, now means (recorded since 1502) any formal speech, as on a ceremonial occasion or delivered in similar high-flown or pompous manner. Also another word for 'oratist'.
Its etymological doublet 'orison' is recorded since c.1175, from Anglo-French ''oreison'', Old French ''oraison'' "oration" (12c.), from Latin ''oratio'' "speech, oration," notably in Church Latin "prayer, appeal to God," from orare as above, but retained its devotional specialisation.
One meaning of the word 'oratory' is abstract: the art of public speaking.
There is also the equivalent Greek word ''rhētōr'', hence the abstract noun ''rhetoric''.

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).
It later was developed into rhetoric.
In the 18th century, 'Orator' John Henley was famous for his eccentric sermons.
In the 19th century, orators and lecturers, such as Mark Twain, Charles Dickens, and Col. Robert G. Ingersoll were major providers of popular entertainment.

Formal titles


In the young revolutionary French republic, ''Orateur'' (French for Orator, but compare the Anglosaxon parliamentary speaker) was the term for the delegated members of the Tribunat to the Corps législatif to motivate their ruling on a presented bill.
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.
'Grand Orator' is a high rank in the Grand Lodges of Freemasonry in certain US states (including Alabama, Arizona, ,California (where 'The Grand Orator shall deliver an address at each Annual Communication of the Grand Lodge upon matters appertaining to the Craft and deliver such other addresses as the Grand Master may request.' - California Masonic Code #3050), Missouri, North Carolina)

Pulpit orator


This term denotes Christian authors, often clergymen, who are renowned for their ability to write and/or deliver (from the pulpit in church, hence the word) rhetorically skilled religious sermons.
Examples are:

William Lindsay Alexander

Jean-Nicolas Beauregard

Jean-Baptiste-Charles-Marie de Beauvais

Henry Ward Beecher

Henry Whitney Bellows

Jaques Bossuet

Louis Bourdaloue

Charles de Bouvens

Athanase Laurent Charles Coquerel

Thomas Guthrie

Robert Hall

Vincent Houdry

Joseph de Jouvancy

Thomas Ken

Jean-Baptiste-Henri-Dominique Lacordaire

Jean de La Haye

William Jay

Jean-François-Anne Landriot

Hugh Latimer

William Laud

Camille Lefebvre

Jose Agostinho De Macedo

James Martineau

Jacques-Marie-Louis Monsabré

Timoléon Cheminais de Montaigu

David Moriarty

Gian Paolo Oliva

Péter Pázmány

Berthold of Ratisbon

Father Abram J. Ryan

Girolamo Savonarola

Georg Scherer

Robert South

Valentin Thalhofer

Gioacchino Ventura di Raulica

Antonio Vieira

Nikolaus von Dinkelsbühl

Johann Geiler von Kayserberg

Friedrich Ludwig Zacharias Werner

Minister Louis Farrakhan

Minister Jesse Jackson

Other famous orators


Ancient and medieval orators


Perikles, Athenian statesman

★ the ten Attic orators (Greece)


Demosthenes (champion of the philippica), best-known


Aeschines


Andocides


Antiphon (person)


Dinarchus


Hypereides


Lysias


Isaeus


Isocrates


Lycurgus of Athens

Aristogeiton (two orators)

Julius Caesar, Roman dictator

Claudius Aelianus ''meliglossos'' 'honey-tongued'

Decimus Magnus Ausonius

Cicero

Domitius Afer

Eumenius

Francesco Petrarch, father of humanism

Gaius Scribonius Curio

Hegesippus, Athenian

Hermagoras of Temnos, Rhodian school

Cato the Elder (Roman Republic- calling for the final Punic war)

Licinius Macer Calvus Roman republican poet and orator

Marcus Licinius Crassus (Roman)

Nazarius

Paul of Tarsos, thirteenth Apostle

Peter the Hermit, calling for the First Crusade

Quintus Hortensius

Marcus Fabius Quintilianus

Seneca the Rhetorician, father of Nero's better-known teacher
Modern orators


William Jennings Bryan (Cross of Gold speech)

Fidel Castro (Cuban Marxist revolutionary leader > President)

Winston Churchill (WWII British PM)

Henry Clay

John C. Calhoun

Charles De Gaulle ('Free French' general; President)

Frederick Douglass

Ralph Waldo Emerson

Edward Everett

George Galloway

William Lloyd Garrison

Joseph Goebbels

John Henley

Patrick Henry

Adolf Hitler (Führer of Nazi Germany)

Robert G. Ingersoll

John F.Kennedy (US President)

Martin Luther King, Jr.

Vladimir Lenin

Abraham Lincoln (US President)

Douglas MacArthur

Jawaharlal Nehru

Richard M. Nixon (US President)

Patrick Pearse (Irish Republican leader)

Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh (Osho)

Ronald Reagan (US President)

Franklin D. Roosevelt (US President)

Daniel Webster

Malcolm X

Notes


Sources and references


(incomplete)

American Rhetoric

EtymologyOnLine

Catholic Encyclopaedia (passim)

★ 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica (passim)

Californian mason site

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