Euphemus (archon)
{{Other uses|Euphemus (mythology)}}
Euphemus ({{langx|grc|Εύφημος}}) was archon of Athens in 417/416 BC. In Thucydides, he is given a speech which portrays Athens as a tyrannical city.
Archonship
Euphemus gives his name to the year of his archonship in 417/416 BC.Benjamin D. Meritt, "The Spartan Gymnopaidia", Classical Philology, Vol 26, No 1, (January 1931), pp 70-84, {{JSTOR|264683}} accessed 23 November 2011. During his archonship, the Argive alliance with Athens is renewed and the Melian expedition is undertaken.Jacob Geerlings, "The Athenian Calendar and the Argive Alliance", Classical Philology, Vol 24, No 3 (July 1929), pp 239-244 {{JSTOR|262846}} accessed 23 November 2011.
Thucydides
His speech rendered in Thucydides, Book 6 (72-88.2), as Athenian ambassador to Camarina gives reply to Hermocrates the Syracusan: "Euphemus responds in terms that characterize all Athenian political strategy as an assessment of imperial expediency."Thomas F. Scanlon, "Thucydides and Tyranny", Classical Antiquity, Vol 6, No 2 (Oct, 1987), pp 286-301, {{JSTOR|25010872}} accessed 23 November 2011{{Rp|290}} Athens has become a tyrant.P. J. Rhodes, "Democracy and Empire" in Loren J. Samons II (ed), The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Pericles, Cambridge University Press, 2007, Cambridge Collections Online accessed 24 November 2011 {{doi|10.1017/CCOL9780521807937.002}}