He proposed maintenance in the Prytaneum, which means that he receive free meals, an honor ordinarily reserved for Olympian athletes and other state benefactors. Such meals would be provided in the Tholos, the official state dining room. He then said his punishment should be a fine of thirty minae. Since a mina was equal to 100 drakhmai, and a drakhma was the average daily wage, 30 minae would have been 3000 days' wages, or over eight years' salary.
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Socrates proposed that he should be rewarded for his service to the city, rather than being punished. He suggested that he should be given free meals for life in recognition of his dedication to philosophy and the pursuit of wisdom. However, the court ultimately sentenced him to death by drinking poison.
Socrates proposed to pay a small fine as punishment for his crimes, rather than face exile or imprisonment. However, the jury decided on a harsher penalty and sentenced him to death by drinking poison (hemlock).
At his trial, Socrates proposed free meals for life in recognition of his contributions to Athens, rather than being sentenced to death.
The jury in Athens voted to execute Socrates by a margin of 280 to 220, finding him guilty of corrupting the youth and impiety. He was given the opportunity to suggest an alternate punishment but chose to stick by his principles and opted not to propose a different penalty, leading to his eventual death by drinking poison hemlock.
Socrates was sentenced to death by drinking poison called hemlock. This punishment was carried out after he was found guilty of corrupting the youth and impiety in ancient Athens in 399 BC.
Socrates did not kill himself; he was sentenced to death by drinking poison hemlock as punishment for corrupting the youth of Athens and impiety towards the gods. Socrates had the opportunity to escape but chose to accept the verdict, as he believed in upholding the laws of the city.