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         Aeschylus:     more books (100)
  1. Specimens of Greek Tragedy - Aeschylus and Sophocles by Goldwin Smith, 2010-03-07
  2. Prometheus Bound and Other Plays by Aeschylus, 2010-01-01
  3. The Complete Aeschylus: Volume II: Persians and Other Plays (Greek Tragedy in New Translations) by Aeschylus, Peter Burian, et all 2009-03-17
  4. Aeschylus: Persae (0) by Aeschylus, A. F. Garvie, 2009-10-25
  5. The House of Atreus by AEschylus, 2010-08-15
  6. The Complete Aeschylus Volume I: The Oresteia (Greek Tragedy in New Translations) by Aeschylus, 2010-12-09
  7. The Oresteia Trilogy: Agamemnon, the Libation-Bearers and the Furies by Aeschylus, 1996-09-24
  8. Eumenides (Bibliotheca scriptorum Graecorum et Romanorum Teubneriana) by Aeschylus, 1998-06
  9. The Oresteia: Agamemnon, Choephoroe, Eumenides (Everyman's Library) by Aeschylus, 2004-01-20
  10. The Orestes Plays of Aeschylus: Agamemnon; The Libation Bearers; The Eumenides by Aeschylus, 1996-05-01
  11. Aeschylus Plays: I: The Persians , Prometheus Bound , The Suppliants and Seven Against Thebes (Methuen World Dramatists) by Aeschylus, 1991-09-16
  12. Nine Greek Dramas by Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides and Aristophanes; Translations by E.d.a. Morshead, E.h. Plumptre, Gilbert Murray and B.b. by Aeschylus, 2010-02-09
  13. Oxford Readings in Aeschylus (Oxford Readings in Classical Studies)
  14. Collected Works of Aeschylus by Aeschylus, 2008-03-03

21. - Great Books -
aeschylus (c. 525 BC456 BC), Biography Athenian writer aeschylus' work hasa strong moral and religious emphasis. aeschylus' greatest contribution
http://www.malaspina.com/site/person_496.asp?period_id=17&category_id=16

22. Concordances Of Aeschylus - 7 Plays
Concordances aeschylus - 7 Plays. Send this site to a friend! aeschylus - 7 Plays- translated by Robert Potter. Text and Search Word Indexes of Classic Books.
http://www.concordance.com/aeschylus.htm

23. Historyforkids!
Greek Literature aeschylus aeschylus lived in Athens in the late 500's and early400's BC, so he saw the birth of Athenian democracy under Cleisthenes.
http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/greeks/literature/aeschylus.htm
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Robert C. Atkins New $27.82! (Prices May Change) Privacy Information H4K HOME Greek Literature Aeschylus Aeschylus (ESS-kill-us) is the earliest playwright whose plays survive today, though there were Greek men writing plays a little earlier. Aeschylus lived in Athens in the late 500's and early 400's BC , so he saw the birth of Athenian democracy under Cleisthenes. He fought in the battle of Marathon. Aeschylus lived at the same time as Sophocles , though Sophocles was a bit younger. Aeschylus wrote tragedies about the difficult choices men have to make, and what happens as a result. His most famous plays are the three plays Agamemnon , the Libation Bearers , and the Eumenides When Aeschylus died, his tombstone did not even mention his plays. It just said "I fought at Marathon Main Greek literature page Main Greeks page Main literature page ... Advertise on History for Kids!

24. AESCHYLUS
aeschylus 525 456 BC Greek Playwright aeschylus was the earliest of thegreat Greek tragedians and the principal creator of Greek drama.
http://www.hyperhistory.com/online_n2/people_n2/persons1_n2/aeschylus.html
AESCHYLUS
525 - 456 BC
Greek Playwright
Aeschylus was the earliest of the great Greek tragedians and the principal creator of Greek drama. He is called the 'Father of Tragedy'. Aeschylus fought for Athens at Marathon (490 BC), helping defeat invading Persia. His first prize in a dramatic contest came in 484 BC, followed eight years later by his earliest extant work, 'The Persians'. Before Aeschylus, tragedies had a single actor, who could only respond to suggestions of the chorus. By adding a second actor, Aeschylus was able to show intrigue and conflict. He reduced the chorus in size, lessening its importance in favour of dramatic dialogue. The chorus assumed a secondary role, commenting, warning or setting the mood for the action of the play which was now carried by the actors. Of the 90 or so plays Aeschylus wrote, only seven have survived in complete form, among them the 'Oresteia' trilogy, 'The Seven against Thebes' and 'Prometheus Bound'. www link :
Aeschylus

Short biography and plays

25. Aeschylus
aeschylus. 525 BC 456 BC. A monument was later erected there in his memory.It was a major step for drama when aeschylus introduced the second actor.
http://www.crystalinks.com/aeschylus.html
AESCHYLUS
525 BC - 456 BC Aeschyluswas born in the city of Eleusis, near Athens, in 525 BC and died in 456 BC. He was a Greek dramatist, the earliest of the city's great tragic poets. As the predecessor of Sophocles and Euripides, he is the founder of Greek tragedy. He fought successfully against the Persians at Marathon in 490 BC, at Salam’s in 480 BC, and possibly at Plataea in the following year. He made at least two trips, perhaps three, to Sicily, where on his final visit he died at Gela. A monument was later erected there in his memory. It was a major step for drama when Aeschylus introduced the second actor. He also attempted to involve the chorus directly in the action of the play. Aeschylus is said to have written about 90 plays. His tragedies, first performed about 500 BC, were presented as trilogies, or groups of three, usually bound together by a common theme, and each trilogy was followed by a satyr drama (low comedy involving a mythological hero, with a chorus of satyrs). The titles of 80 of his plays are known, but only 7 have survived.

26. Aeschylus Lecture Hall Aeschylus The Persians The Seven Against
aeschylus Lecture Hall Western Canon University Lecture Halls and Live Recitations. aeschylusLecture Hall Article Search Search on Keyword(s)
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Aeschylus Lecture Hall
Western Canon University Lecture Halls and Live Recitations
This lecture hall is devoted to all contemplations, musings, and queries concerning Aeschylus. We'd love to hear your suggestions regarding the best books, chapters, essays, and criticisms. Post an opinion, a question, a link to your favorite site, or a poem or short story inspired by the masterpieces of Aeschylus. We'd also like to invite you to sail on by the Aeschylus Live Recitation Chat , and feel free to use the message board below to schedule a live recitation chat. And the brave of heart shall certainly wish to sign their souls aboard The Jolly Roger Before we take to sea we walk on land,
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27. Works By Aeschylus
Works by aeschylus. Buy more than 2,000 books on a single CDROM for only $19.99. Read,write, or comment on essays about aeschylus Search for books.
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Works by Aeschylus Buy more than 2,000 books on a single CD-ROM for only $19.99. That's less then a penny per book! Click here for more information. Read, write, or comment on essays about Aeschylus Search for books Search essays Agamemnon Choephori Eumenides Persians ... Authors

28. 4Literature || Aeschylus
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29. Aeschylus - Wikipedia
Other languages Deutsch. aeschylus. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.aeschylus (525 BC 456 BC) was a playwright of ancient Greece.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeschylus
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Aeschylus
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Aeschylus 525 BC 456 BC ) was a playwright of ancient Greece . He was the first of the three great Greek tragedians, the others being Sophocles and Euripides . Aeschylus' work has a strong moral and religious emphasis. Many of his plays end more "happily" than those of the other two; namely, his masterpiece The Oresteia trilogy. Besides the literary merit of his work, Aeschylus' greatest contribution to the theater was the addition of a second actor to his scenes. Previously, the action took place between a single actor and the Greek chorus Aeschylus is known to have written over 70 plays, only seven of which remain extant:

30. CTCWeb Glossary: A (Achaeans To Aveste)
Contributor Eugene Biancheri.. aeschylus (see entry (4) in PerseusEncyclopedia) Click here to hear this word pronounced. earliest
http://ablemedia.com/ctcweb/glossary/glossarya.html
A B C D ... How to link to the Global Glossary A Achaeans (Achaians) - the aboriginal inhabitants of the Peloponnese who were conquered by the Dorians. Achilles (Achilleus, Akhilleus) (see entry in Perseus Encyclopedia) - son of Peleus and Thetis, a goddess; bathed in the river Styx as a baby by his mother, Achilles' heel did not enter the water that makes whomever bathes in it invulnerable; one myth says that an arrow shot by Paris hit Achilles in his vulnerable heel and caused his death; his parents put him in the care of the Centaur Chiron as a young boy; originally known as Ligyron, Chiron named him Achilles and fed him nothing but the entrails of wild boards and lions to give him strength, bear's marrow, and honey to make him gentle and persuasive; Achilles is the hero of the Iliad ; he was the best friend of Patroclus who was killed by Hektor with the aid of Apollo during the Trojan War; Achilles killed Hektor and held funeral games in honor of Patroclus; to learn more about Achilles following the Trojan War, see The Aftermath: Post Iliad through the Odyssey ... Odyssey acontist - javelin thrower; for an example, see

31. IH 51: Classical Foundations: Aeschylus

http://oll.temple.edu/ih/IH51/Greeks/Aeschylus/aeschylusSet.htm
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32. Aeschylus Bio
Biography of aeschylus. adapted for In other words, we do not knowwhat aeschylus wrote like as a young man. aeschylus, essentially
http://oll.temple.edu/ih/IH51/Greeks/Aeschylus/AeschylusBio.htm
INTELLECTUAL HERITAGE 51
CLASSICAL GREEK
RELIGIOUS HUMANIST ... Plato
Biography of Aeschylus
adapted for IH students by Professor Mitchell-Boyask from the Perseus on-line Encyclopedia entry
Born at Eleusis in Attica, ca. 525 B.C.E
Died Gela in Sicily, ca. 455 B.C.E.
Ancient biographies are notoriously unreliable because many traditions about artists' lives arose well after they actually lived, and often were based on events in the poets own works. Thus, you have to be very careful about any stories about the Greek poets. No reliable contemporary source provides us with any detailed information about the life of Aeschylus, but later sources allow us to piece together an outline. Aeschylus' place of birth was Eleusis, the famous center for the cult of Demeter in Greece; the "mysteries" of Eleusis were rituals designed either to prepare the soul for the afterlife or for eventual reincarnation. Aeschylus was thirty-five years old at the battle of Marathon, one of the two pivotal events in the Greek struggle against the invading Persians. Aeschylus produced his first plays sometime around 500 B.C.E. for the dramatic competition at the City Dionysian Festival in Athens, which was held annually in early spring. For these competitions Athens would select three poets who would write and stage three tragedies and a comedy known as a satyr play; the tragic poet thus had to aim for the loftiest artistic ideals while still pleasing the crowd and judges, a balancing act Aeschylus performed extremely well. He won his first victory 484 and finished first the other twelve times he competed. Currently, scholars believe that Aeschylus composed 52 plays, of which only seven (perhaps six if

33. Arts - Theatre: Aeschylus
aeschylus (525456 BC). The Father of Tragedy , aeschylus was born in 525 BC inthe city of Eleusis. This situation paralleled events in aeschylus' own life.
http://www.ancientgr.com/archaeonia/arts/theatre/aeschylus.htm
AESCHYLUS (525-456 B.C.) The "Father of Tragedy" Aeschylus was born in 525 B.C. in the city of Eleusis . Immersed early in the mystic rites of the city and in the worship of the Mother and Earth goddess Demeter , he was once sent as a child to watch grapes ripening in the countryside. According to Aeschylus, when he dozed off, Dionysus appeared to him in a dream and ordered him to write tragedies. The obedient young Aeschylus began a tragedy the next morning and " succeeded very easily ". When Aeschylus first began writing, the theatre had only just begun to evolve. Plays were little more than animated oratorios or choral poetry supplemented with expressive dance. A chorus danced and exchanged dialogue with a single actor who portrayed one or more characters primarily by the use of masks . Most of the action took place in the circular dancing area or " orchestra " which still remained from the old days when drama had been nothing more than a circular dance around a sacred object. It was a huge leap for drama when Aeschylus introduced the second actor . He also attempted to involve the chorus directly in the action of the play. In

34. Aeschylus - Classics At Oxford
III.3(a)aeschylus. Text. esp. chs. 1 2. M. Gagarin, Aeschylean Drama (California1976) C.Gr.A.355. J. Herington, aeschylus (Yale 1986) C.Gr.A.356.
http://www.classics.ox.ac.uk/lib/III3a.html
HONOUR SCHOOL OF LITERAE HUMANIORES: GREEK AND LATIN LITERATURE III.3(a):AESCHYLUS Text C.Gr.A.185 for important textual problems it is worth comparing C.Gr.A.174
Translations
Oresteia C.Gr.A.195 C.Gr.A.182 Other plays C.Gr.A.182 Persai C.Gr.A.258 Seven Suppliants C.Gr.A.300 [Per. 3974 d.420*/7 in Bookstack]
Seven C.Gr.A.286 C.Gr.A.211 C.Gr.A.213 Choephoroi C.Gr.A.221 very useful, also good introduction Eumenides C.Gr.A.244 C.Gr.A.245 Oresteia C.Gr.A.196
Books
S. Goldhill, Reading Greek Tragedy C.Gr.1156 M. Gagarin, Aeschylean Drama C.Gr.A.355 J. Herington, Aeschylus C.Gr.A.356 A. Lesky, Greek Tragic Poetry C.Gr.1207 relevant parts R. Rehm, Greek Tragic Theatre C.Gr.1248 esp. ch. 1, 6. T. G. Rosenmeyer, The Art of Aeschylus C.Gr.A.375 O. Taplin, The Stagecraft of Aeschylus C.Gr.A.379 O. Taplin, Greek Tragedy in Action C.Gr.1278 use index B. Vickers, Towards Greek Tragedy C.Gr.1293 esp. ch. 7 R. Winnington-Ingram, Studies in Aeschylus (Cambridge 1983) incorporates earlier articles C.Gr.A.357

35. SIDWELL: Guildford, Goldilocks And Greek Tragedy
The politics of aeschylus' Eumenides. Keith Sidwell. St Patrick's College Maynooth Adirect descendant of aeschylus was writing tragedies in the mid 4th century.
http://www.ucd.ie/~classics/96/Sidwell96.html
CLASSICS IRELAND
1996 Volume 3
University College Dublin, Ireland
The politics of Aeschylus' Eumenides
Keith Sidwell
St Patrick's College
Maynooth A pair of young lads from Belfast are shown talking to tramp in a London park. At the exact time this conversation is happening, a pub bombing takes place in far away Guildford. Later they experience racial jibes at a hippy squat. We subsequently see a scene in which the anti-Irish hippy shops one of the boys to the police. In both scenes, the drama underlines the part played by prejudice and ignorance in the tragedy of these young Irish rovers. Most of you will have recognised by now that my snippets come from Jim Sheridan's film In the Name of the Father , which was released here to great applause just after Christmas 1993 and in Britain on February 12th 1994. I have chosen to begin here, carefully working the word "tragedy" into my opening scenario, so as to outline some generic problems about the function and manner of dramatic storytelling. These will give you from familiar surroundings, I hope, a better grip on the unfamiliar way in which I want to approach similar questions in relation to Athenian tragedy of the fifth century. The first point to make is the obvious one. The film is made out of and about real events and real people. I suppose that when it is seen in Beijing dubbed into Cantonese it will acquire a certain universality

36. Enjoying "Prometheus Bound", By Aeschylus
Background information and links related to the story of Prometheus.Category Arts Literature aeschylus Works Prometheus Bound......Enjoying Prometheus Bound , by aeschylus Ed Friedlander MD erf@uhs.edu.The encyclopedia. aeschylus. He pronounced his own name iceKHUUH-lawss.
http://www.pathguy.com/promethe.htm
Enjoying "Prometheus Bound", by Aeschylus Ed Friedlander MD
erf@uhs.edu
The beautiful fables of the Greeks, being proper creations of the imagination and not of the fancy, are universal verities. What a range of meanings and what perpetual pertinence has the story of Prometheus!
    Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Essays"
Prometheus stole fire and gave it to the human race. For this, he was bound to a mountain and punished for centuries. This basic Greek myth was retold through the classic era and provided the plot for Aeschylus's "Prometheus Bound". This site will help you as you search the background and meaning of this play, and ideas about the story of Prometheus generally. The Myths of Prometheus Prometheus was one of the Titans, the original race of gods sprung from earth and sky. He sided with Zeus and the other major gods of classical Greece when they overthrew the other Titans.
    The titans are listed by Hesiod in his Theogony as a group of twelve major gods, including allegorically-named Kronos ("time"), Mnemosyne ("memory / remembrance"), Themis ("justice"), Phoebe ("brightness"), Oceanus ("the ocean"), Hyperion ("the high one"), Tethys and Theia (both mean "the goddess / the revered lady"). Prometheus is usually listed as the son of the titan Iapetus. This could be the same name as "Japeth", ancestor of the Europeans in the Old Testament, and/or as "Giapetto", creator of Pinocchio. Herodotus (

37. Aeschylus, Greece, Ancient History
aeschylus. aeschylus was the oldest of the most prominent tragedywriters and is generally considered the founder of Greek drama.
http://www.in2greece.com/english/historymyth/history/ancient/aeschylus.htm
Aeschylus Aeschylus was the oldest of the most prominent tragedy writers and is generally considered the founder of Greek drama. He was the first to use a second actor in his plays, which made dialogues possible. Of his best known works is the Oresteia, which is about Agamemnon's son Orestes, who revenged his father only to be persecuted by the Erinyes. As a young man Aeschylus had fought against the Persians at the battle of Marathon. He ended his days as an old man at the court of the Tyrant Hieron of Syracuse and died when an eagle dropped a turtle on his head. Webmistress V.E.K. Sandels Home
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38. Classic Literature
Translate this page aeschylus AGAMEMNON by aeschylus Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6,Part 7, Part 8, Part 9, Part 10, Part 11, Part 12, Part 13, Part 14, Part 15
http://www.greekmythology.com/Books/Classic/classic.html
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Here you can find a selection of Ancient Greece's most precious pieces of literature, philosophy and history. Browse the authors and titles below to unveil the treasures of the ancient times.
Aeschylus
Euripides Aristophanes Sophocles ... Aesop Aeschylus
AGAMEMNON by Aeschylus:
Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 ... Part 16 Euripides
ALCESTIS by Euripides:
Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 ... Part 15 Aristophanes
THE ACHARNIANS by Aristophanes:
Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 ... Part 19 Sophocles
AJAX by Sophocles
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APOLOGY by Plato:
Part 01, Part 02 Part 03 ... Part 05 Aesop
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39. On Aeschylus' Oresteia
This text is in the public domain, released July 2000. Note that references toaeschylus's text are to the translation by Robert Fagles (Penguin, 1977).
http://www.mala.bc.ca/~johnstoi/introser/aeschylus.htm
Lecture on The Oresteia
Ian Johnston, Malaspina University-College [The following notes began as a lecture delivered, in part, at Malaspina College in Liberal Studies 301 on September 25, 1995. That lecture was considerably revised in July 2000. This text is in the public domain, released July 2000. Note that references to Aeschylus's text are to the translation by Robert Fagles (Penguin, 1977)] A. Introduction My lecture today falls into two parts. In the first I want to offer some background information for our study of Aeschylus's Oresteia , specifically on the Trojan War and the House of Atreus, and in the second I will be addressing the first play in that trilogy, the Agamemnon , making relatively brief mention of the other plays in the trilogy. Other speakers today will focus in more detail on the second and third plays. B. The Trojan War With the possible exception of the narratives in the Old Testament, no story has been such a fecund artistic resource in Western culture as the Greeks' favourite tale, the Trojan War. This is a vast, complex story, which includes a great many subsidiary narratives, and it has over the centuries proved an inexhaustible resource for Western writers, painters, musicians, choreographers, novelists, and dramatists. It would be comparatively easy and very interesting to develop a course of study of Western Culture based entirely upon artistic depictions of events from this long narrative. So it's an important part of cultural literacy for any students of our culture to have some acquaintance with the details of this story, which even today shows no sign of losing its appeal.

40. - Great Books -
aeschylus (c. 525 BC456 BC), Athenian writer of aeschylus' work has a strongmoral and religious emphasis. aeschylus' greatest contribution
http://www.mala.bc.ca/~mcneil/aesch.htm
Aeschylus (c. 525 BC-456 BC)
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