- Gr**** Tragedy, p. 273 P. Levi, Gr**** Drama, 159 S. Saïd,
Aeschylean Tragedy, 215 S. Saïd,
Aeschylean Tragedy, 221 "Pausanias,
Description of Greece, *)attika/...
-
single author. In 1911, A.
Gercke became the
first scholar to
reject the
Aeschylean ascription,
while dismissing the
notion that a
Prometheus trilogy itself...
- Euripides'
Electra (Ancient Gr****: Ἠλέκτρα, Ēlektra) is a
tragedy probably written in the mid 410s BC,
likely before 413 BC. A
version of the myth of the...
- the
first half of the 20th
century papyrus fragments of
numerous lost
Aeschylean plays,
including the Myrmidons, were
discovered that
added much material...
- being. For a
critic to
construct an
Aeschylean theology would be as
quixotic as
designing a
typology of
Aeschylean man. The
needs of the
drama prevail...
-
audience members at a time. The play was part of one of only
eleven known Aeschylean tetralogies, or
instances where we can
confidently identify all the plays...
- 1177/00111287241258690. Zeitlin,
Froma I. (1990). "Patterns of
Gender in
Aeschylean Drama:
Seven against Thebes and the
Danaid Trilogy".
Cabinet of the Muses...
- of
Dionysus to
establish his cult in
Thrace was also the
subject of an
Aeschylean trilogy.: 28 In
another tragedy, Euripides' The Bacchae, the king of...
- Steve,"The Ἄβιοι and the Γάβιοι: An
Aeschylean Solution to a
Homeric Problem,"
American Journal of
Philology An_
Aeschylean_Solution_to_a_Homeric_Problem 122...
- Póntos), "Hospitable Sea", or
simply Pontos (ὁ Πόντος) as
early as the
Aeschylean Persians (472 BC) and Herodotus'
Histories (circa 440 BC).
Having originally...