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Lesche

Lesche ( Gr. ) is an Ionic Greek word, signifying council or conversation, and a place for council or conversation. There is frequent mention of places of public resort, in the Greek cities, by the name of leschai (, the Greek plural of lesche), some set apart for the purpose, and others so called because they were so used by loungers; to the latter class belong the agora and its porticoes, the gymnasia, and the shops of various tradesmen, especially those of the smiths, which were frequented in winter on account of their warmth, and in which, for the same reason, the poor sought shelter for the night.

In these passages, however, in which are the earliest examples of the use of the word, it seems to refer to places distinct from the smiths' workshops, though resorted to in the same manner; and we may gather from the grammarians, that there were in the Greek cities numerous small buildings or porticoes, furnished with seats, and exposed to the sun, to which the idle resorted to enjoy conversation, and the poor to obtain warmth and shelter, and which were called leschai: at Athens alone there were 360 such. The Suda, referring to a passage in Hesiod, explains lesche by means of the word kaminos (, "oven" or "furnace").

By Aeschylus and Sophocles the word is used for a solemn council; but elsewhere the same writers, as well as Herodotus, employ it to signify common conversation.

In the Dorians states the word retained the meaning of a place of meeting for deliberation and intercourse, a council-chamber or club-room. At Sparta every phyle had its lesche, in which and in the gymnasium the elders passed the greater part of the day in serious and sportive conversation, and in which the newborn children were presented for the decision of the elders as to whether they should be brought up or destroyed. Some of these Spartan leschae seem to have been halls of some architectural pretensions: Pausanias mentions two of them, the lesche krotanon and the lesche poikile . They were also used for other purposes.

There were generally chambers for council and conversation, called by this name, attached to the temples of Apollo, one of whose epithets was Apollo Leschenorios . Of such leschae the chief was the Lesche of the Knidians, which was erected at Delphi by the Cnidians, and which was celebrated throughout Greece, less for its own magnificence, than for the paintings with which it was adorned by Polygnotus.

Lesche (disambiguation)

Lesche or Lesches can have several meanings:

  • Lesche, an ancient Greek word meaning, among other things, council or conversation
  • Lesches, a semi-legendary early Greek poet
  • Verné Lesche, a Finnish speed skater
  • Lesches, Seine-et-Marne, a French commune located in the Seine-et-Marne département
  • Lesches-en-Diois, a village and commune in the Drôme département of south-eastern France

Usage examples of "lesche".

I directed our path toward the Lesche, the great hall erected by the people of Cnidus, a meeting and discussion place.

I headed up to the Lesche, hoping that Ampheus might be there on some administrative duty.

I looked over toward the Lesche with its painting of the fall of Troy.

At Delphi he painted on the walls of the building called Lesche two celebrated pictures, the taking of Troy and the descent of Ulysses into Hades.

His greatest and probably his earliest works were the two pictures in the Lesche at Delphi.

The building called Lesche was thought to have been of elliptical form, with a colonnade on either side, separated by a wall in the middle, and to have been about 90 ft in length.

Father Lesches had been turned down repeatedly in his requests for a parish of his own, and it was thought that he must have suffered a mental breakdown and focused the blame for his rejections upon Bishop Heffron.

Father Lesches was judged legally insane and committed to the Hospital for the Dangerously Insane at St.

Lynch, a close friend of Bishop Heffron and a known opponent of Father Lesches, was found dead, sprawled across his bed in such a manner that his body and the bed formed a cross.

Father Lynch and Father Lesches shuddered when they heard which particular passage had survived the consuming flames.