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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Classical Literature > Greek literature, ancient
By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z > G

Greek literature, ancient, Classical Literature

Related Category: Classical Literature

The next period of Greek literature reached its zenith in Hellenistic Alexandria, where a number of major philosophers, dramatists, poets, historians, critics, and librarians wrote and taught. New genres such as bucolic poetry emerged during the Hellenistic period, a time also characterized by scholarly editions of classics from earlier periods. The poems of Callimachus, the bucolics of Theocritus, and the epic of Apollonius Rhodius are recognized as major works of world literature.

The production of literary works at the time of the establishment of Roman control of the Mediterranean was enormous, a vast heterogeneous mixture ranging from the sublime to the pedantic and turgid. A great portion of the works produced have been lost. With the Roman political subjugation of Greece, Greek thought and culture, introduced largely by slave-tutors to the Roman aristocracy, came to exert enormous influence in the Roman world. Among the greatest writers of this period were the historians Polybius, Josephus, and Dio Cassius; the biographer Plutarch; the philosophers Philo and Dio Chrysostom; and the novelist Lucian. One great Roman work produced under Greek influence was the philosophical meditations of Marcus Aurelius.

With the spread of Christianity, Greek writing took a new turn, and much of the writing of the Greek Fathers of the Church is eloquent. Religion dominated the literature of the Byzantine Empire, and a vast treasury of writing was produced that is not generally well known to the West The most notable exception is the work of some historians (e.g., Procopius, Anna Comnena, George Acropolita, and Emperor John VI) and some anthologists (e.g., Photius).

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The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Aeschines
Aeschylus
Alcaeus
Alcman
Anacreon
Andocides
Anna Comnena
Antiphon, Athenian orator
Apollonius Rhodius
Archilochus
Aristotle
Aristophanes
Bacchylides
Callimachus, fl. c.280–45 B.C., Hellenistic Greek poet and critic
Cratinus
Demosthenes
Dio Cassius
Dio Chrysostom
Eupolis
Euripides
Greece
Hellenism
Hellenistic civilization
Herodotus
Hesiod
Hipponax
Homer
Ibycus
Isocrates
John VI, Byzantine emperor
Flavius Josephus
Lucian
Lycurgus, one of the Ten Attic Orators
Lysias
Marcus Aurelius
Menander
Philo
Pindar
Plato
Plutarch
Polybius
Procopius
Sappho
Semonides of Amorgos
Simonides of Ceos
Solon, Athenian statesman
Sophocles
Stesichorus
Theocritus
Theognis
Thucydides
Tyrtaeus
Xenophon

Related Categories:

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