We shall begin this paper with a few general remarks on the development of advocacy from the time of classical Greece through to Rome. It was the esteemed jurists of these societies who, in their work, provided the basis for the development of European and modern law.
Creativity in Greek humanistic literature reached a peak prior to the Peloponesian war; thereafter, it exhibited a marked decline in all but one field, that of rhetoric, or the school of oratory. In this field, particularly in the context of political-jurisprudential literature, the development was impressive.
Around the middle of the fifth century B.C.E., the Sophists (“Sophist” means “clever” in Greek) appeared in Greece. These were the teachers of wisdom and higher education in all the fields of science and humanities then known in Greece, such as mathematics, astronomy, philosophy and logic, and of course, literature and linguistics. The Sophists wandered from city to city and spread their teachings; they have been described by some as “itinerant universities”.