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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Classical Literature, Biographies > Aeschylus
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Aeschylus, Classical Literature, Biographies

Related Category: Classical Literature, Biographies

Aeschylus[es´kilus, Es´–] Pronunciation Key - The Plays

The extant plays of Aeschylus are hard to date. The earliest is probably The Suppliants, simple in plot (concerning the 50 daughters of DanaUs) and with only one actor besides the chorus. The Persians (472? B.C.), glorifying the Athenian victory over Persia at Salamis, has two actors, but the new form is still unpolished. The Seven against Thebes can be dated to 467. Prometheus Bound (see Prometheus), of uncertain date, is striking for its bald attack on the vengefulness of the gods toward man, but the later two parts of its trilogy, which are lost, may have portrayed Zeus as just.

The last three tragedies of Aeschylus compose the only extant ancient trilogy, called the Oresteia, a history of the House of Atreus, with which the poet won first prize in 458. The three plays are Agamemnon, The ChoEphoroe (The Libation Bearers), and The Eumenides; in each play three actors are used : an innovation borrowed from Sophocles. Because of its scope, complexity, and the profundity of its themes (the significance of human suffering and the true meaning of justice), the Oresteia as a whole is considered by many to be the greatest Attic tragedy. Browning's Agamemnon is a poetic translation of the first play, and Eugene O'Neill's Mourning Becomes Electra is an American reworking of the trilogy. The translation by David Grene and Richmond Lattimore in The Complete Greek Tragedies is one of many English translations of his plays.

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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Athens, city, Greece
Atreus
Robert Browning
drama, Western
Euripides
Greece
Greek literature, ancient
Eugene (Gladstone) O'Neill
Pindar
Prometheus, in Greek mythology
Sophocles
tragedy

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Literature and the Arts > Classical Literature, Mythology, and Folklore
Literature and the Arts > Biographies
People > Literature and the Arts


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