What year was Socrates' trial? (

In 399 BC. The Socrates trial, which took place in 399 BC, was an event in which Socrates, the philosopher and orator of the ancient Greek city-state, was sentenced to death by the jury court and delivered a famous speech after being accused by the Athens government of blasphemy and poisoning the youth. Plato, his disciple and thinker, wrote a famous chapter on Socrates' defense. History is called "Socrates trial". Socrates was arrested as a public enemy of the Athenian people by the re-emerging Athenian democratic ruling authorities because he supported aristocratic rule and opposed Athenian democracy. In 399 BC, the jury court selected 50 1 person by lot to form a jury Committee to try him and sentenced him to death by taking poison. Socrates' view that beauty and morality are knowledge and truth, and that law is the standard that determines right and wrong and the thought that citizens must abide by have a great influence on later western philosophy, ethics and jurisprudence.