There are many examples of
pallakai in literature and drama. The most lengthy is the "
Against Neaera" speech, in which a woman called
Neaera and her husband are prosecuted for claiming citizen rights falsely for her and the children she bore to her husband. This was considered a very serious crime, especially in Athens, where citizenship was restricted to those with a citizen mother and father. The case made against her alleges that she was a
pallake in
Corinth and other cities before she came to Athens. The defense speech, however, does not survive, but one such possible defense may have been that she was a mistress rather than a
prostitute, which was a normal social practice. Another such example occurs in
Antiphon's speech "
Against the Stepmother for Poisoning." In this speech for the prosecution, it is alleged that a woman persuaded a
pallake to poison her husband. ==See also==