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Ancient Greek literature

Ancient Greek literature is literature written in the Ancient Greek language from the earliest texts until the time of the Byzantine Empire. The earliest surviving works of ancient Greek literature, dating back to the early Archaic period, are the two epic poems the Iliad and the Odyssey, set in an idealized archaic past today identified as having some relation to the Mycenaean era. These two epics, along with the Homeric Hymns and the two poems of Hesiod, Theogony and Works and Days, constituted the major foundations of the Greek literary tradition that would continue into the Classical, Hellenistic, and Roman periods.

A Greek manuscript of the beginning of Hesiod's Works and Days

The lyric poets Sappho, Alcaeus, and Pindar were highly influential during the early development of the Greek poetic tradition. Aeschylus is the earliest Greek tragic playwright for whom any plays have survived complete. Sophocles is famous for his tragedies about Oedipus, particularly Oedipus the King and Antigone. Euripides is known for his plays which often pushed the boundaries of the tragic genre. The comedic playwright Aristophanes wrote in the genre of Old Comedy, while the later playwright Menander was an early pioneer of New Comedy. The historians Herodotus of Halicarnassus and Thucydides, who both lived during the fifth century BC, wrote accounts of events that happened shortly before and during their own lifetimes. The philosopher Plato wrote dialogues, usually centered around his teacher Socrates, dealing with various philosophical subjects, whereas his student Aristotle wrote numerous treatises, which later became highly influential.

Important later writers included Apollonius of Rhodes, who wrote The Argonautica, an epic poem about the voyage of the Argonauts; Archimedes, who wrote groundbreaking mathematical treatises; and Plutarch, who wrote mainly biographies and essays. The second-century AD writer Lucian of Samosata was a Greek, who wrote primarily works of satire.[1] Ancient Greek literature has had a profound impact on later Greek literature and also western literature at large. In particular, many ancient Roman authors drew inspiration from their Greek predecessors. Ever since the Renaissance, European authors in general, including Dante Alighieri, William Shakespeare, John Milton, and James Joyce, have all drawn heavily on classical themes and motifs.

Pre-classical and classical antiquity

 
Linear B tablet from the Archaeological Museum of Mycenae
 
Tablet MY Oe 106 (obverse) exhibited at the Greek National Archaeological Museum

This period of Greek literature stretches from Homer until the fourth century BC and the rise of Alexander the Great. The earliest known Greek writings are Mycenaean, written in the Linear B syllabary on clay tablets. These documents contain prosaic records largely concerned with trade (lists, inventories, receipts, etc.); no real literature has been discovered.[2][3] Michael Ventris and John Chadwick, the original decipherers of Linear B, state that literature almost certainly existed in Mycenaean Greece,[3] but it was either not written down or, if it was, it was on parchment or wooden tablets, which did not survive the destruction of the Mycenaean palaces in the twelfth century BC.[3]

Greek literature was divided in well-defined literary genres, each one having a compulsory formal structure, about both dialect and metrics.[4] The first division was between prose and poetry. Within poetry there were three super-genres: epic, lyric and drama. The common European terminology about literary genres is directly derived from the ancient Greek terminology.[5] Lyric and drama were further divided into more genres: lyric in four (elegiac, iambic, monodic lyric and choral lyric); drama in three (tragedy, comedy and pastoral drama).[6] Prose literature can largely be said to begin with Herodotus.[7] Over time, several genres of prose literature developed,[7] but the distinctions between them were frequently blurred.[7]

Epic poetry

At the beginning of Greek literature stand the two monumental works of Homer, the Iliad and the Odyssey.[8]: 1–3  The figure of Homer is shrouded in mystery. Although the works as they now stand are credited to him, it is certain that their roots reach far back before his time (see Homeric Question).[8]: 15  The Iliad is a narrative of a single episode spanning over the course of a ten-day-period from near the end of the ten years of the Trojan War. It centers on the person of Achilles,[9] who embodied the Greek heroic ideal.[10][8]: 3 

 
A painting by the French Neoclassical painter Thomas Degeorge depicting the climactic final scene from Book Twenty-Two of The Odyssey in which Odysseus, Telemachus, Eumaeus, and Philoetius slaughter the suitors of Penelope

The Odyssey is an account of the adventures of Odysseus, one of the warriors at Troy.[8]: 3  After ten years fighting the war, he spends another ten years sailing back home to his wife and family. Penelope was considered the ideal female; Homer depicted her as the ideal female based on her commitment, modesty, purity, and respect during her marriage with Odysseus. During his ten-year voyage, he loses all of his comrades and ships and makes his way home to Ithaca disguised as a beggar. Both of these works were based on ancient legends.[8]: 15  The Homeric dialect was an archaic language based on Ionic dialect mixed with some element of Aeolic dialect and Attic dialect,[11] the latter due to the Athenian edition of the 6th century BC. The epic verse was the hexameter.[12]

The other great poet of the preclassical period was Hesiod.[8]: 23–24 [13] Unlike Homer, Hesiod refers to himself in his poetry.[14] Nonetheless, nothing is known about him from any external source. He was a native of Boeotia in central Greece, and is thought to have lived and worked around 700 BC.[15] Hesiod's two extant poems are Works and Days and Theogony. Works and Days is a faithful depiction of the poverty-stricken country life he knew so well, and it sets forth principles and rules for farmers. Theogony is a systematic account of creation and of the gods. It vividly describes the ages of mankind, beginning with a long-past Golden Age.[16]

The writings of Homer and Hesiod were held in extremely high regard throughout antiquity[13] and were viewed by many ancient authors as the foundational texts behind ancient Greek religion;[17] Homer told the story of a heroic past, which Hesiod bracketed with a creation narrative and an account of the practical realities of contemporary daily life.[8]: 23–24 

Lyric poetry

 
A nineteenth-century painting by the English painter Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema depicting the poetess Sappho gazing on in admiration as the poet Alcaeus plays the lyre

Lyric poetry received its name from the fact that it was originally sung by individuals or a chorus accompanied by the instrument called the lyre. Despite the name, the lyric poetry in this general meaning was divided in four genres, two of which were not accompanied by cithara, but by flute. These two latter genres were elegiac poetry and iambic poetry. Both were written in the Ionic dialect. Elegiac poems were written in elegiac couplets and iambic poems were written in iambic trimeter. The first of the lyric poets was probably Archilochus of Paros, 7th century BC, the most important iambic poet.[18] Only fragments remain of his work, as is the case with most of the poets. The few remnants suggest that he was an embittered adventurer who led a very turbulent life.[19]

Many lyric poems were written in the Aeolic dialect. Lyric poems often employed highly varied poetic meters. The most famous of all lyric poets were the so-called "Nine Lyric Poets".[20] Of all the lyric poets, Sappho of Lesbos (c. 630 – c. 570 BC) was by far the most widely revered. In antiquity, her poems were regarded with the same degree of respect as the poems of Homer.[21] Only one of her poems, "Ode to Aphrodite", has survived to the present day in its original, completed form.[22] In addition to Sappho, her contemporary Alcaeus of Lesbos was also notable for monodic lyric poetry. The poetry written by Alcman was considered beautiful, even though he wrote exclusively in the Doric dialect, which was normally considered unpleasant to hear.[23] The later poet Pindar of Thebes was renowned for his choral lyric poetry.[24]

Drama

 
Medea kills her son (a scene from Euripides's Medea), Campanian red-figure amphora, c. 330 BC, Louvre (K 300)

All surviving works of Greek drama were composed by playwrights from Athens and are written exclusively in the Attic dialect.[25] Choral performances were a common tradition in all Greek city-states.[25] The Athenians credited a man named Thespis with having invented drama[25] by introducing the first actor, whose primary purpose was to interact with the leader of the chorus.[26] Later playwrights expanded the number of actors to three, allowing for greater freedom in storytelling.[27]

In the age that followed the Greco-Persian Wars, the awakened national spirit of Athens was expressed in hundreds of tragedies based on heroic and legendary themes of the past. The tragic plays grew out of simple choral songs and dialogues performed at festivals of the god Dionysus. In the classical period, performances included three tragedies and one pastoral drama, depicting four different episodes of the same myth. Wealthy citizens were chosen to bear the expense of costuming and training the chorus as a public and religious duty. Attendance at the festival performances was regarded as an act of worship. Performances were held in the great open-air theater of Dionysus in Athens. The poets competed for the prizes offered for the best plays.[28]

All fully surviving Greek tragedies are conventionally attributed to Aeschylus, Sophocles or Euripides. The authorship of Prometheus Bound, which is traditionally attributed to Aeschylus,[29] and Rhesus, which is traditionally attributed to Euripides, are, however, questioned.[30] There are seven surviving tragedies attributed to Aeschylus. Three of these plays, Agamemnon, The Libation-Bearers, and The Eumenides, form a trilogy known as the Oresteia.[31] One of these plays, Prometheus Bound, however, may actually be the work of Aeschylus's son Euphorion.[32]

Seven works of Sophocles have survived, the most acclaimed of which are the three Theban plays, which center around the story of Oedipus and his offspring.[33] The Theban Trilogy consists of Oedipus the King, Oedipus at Colonus, and Antigone. Although the plays are often called a "trilogy," they were actually written many years apart. Antigone, the last of the three plays sequentially, was actually first to be written, having been composed in 441 BC, towards the beginning of Sophocles's career.[34] Oedipus the King, the most famous of the three, was written around 429 BC at the midpoint of Sophocles's career.[Notes 1] Oedipus at Colonus, the second of the three plays chronologically, was actually Sophocles's last play and was performed in 401 BC, after Sophocles's death.[35]

There are nineteen surviving plays attributed to Euripides. The most well-known of these plays are Medea, Hippolytus, and Bacchae.[36] Rhesus is sometimes thought to have been written by Euripides' son, or to have been a posthumous reproduction of a play by Euripides.[37] Euripides pushed the limits of the tragic genre and many of the elements in his plays were more typical of comedy than tragedy.[38] His play Alcestis, for instance, has often been categorized as a "problem play" or perhaps even as a work of tragicomedy rather than a true tragedy due to its comedic elements and the fact that it has a happy ending.[39][40]

 
Illustration for Aristophanes's Lysistrata by Aubrey Beardsley (1896)

Like tragedy, comedy arose from a ritual in honor of Dionysus, but in this case the plays were full of frank obscenity, abuse, and insult. At Athens, the comedies became an official part of the festival celebration in 486 BC, and prizes were offered for the best productions. As with the tragedians, few works still remain of the great comedic writers. The only complete surviving works of classical comedy are eleven plays written by the playwright Aristophanes.[41] These are a treasure trove of comic presentation. He poked fun at everyone and every institution. In The Birds, he ridicules Athenian democracy. In The Clouds, he attacks the philosopher Socrates. In Lysistrata, he denounces war.[42] Aristophanes has been praised highly for his dramatic skill and artistry. John Lemprière's Bibliotheca Classica describes him as, quite simply, "the greatest comic dramatist in world literature: by his side Molière seems dull and Shakespeare clownish."[43] Of all Aristophanes's plays, however, the one that has received the most lasting recognition is The Frogs, which simultaneously satirizes and immortalizes the two giants of Athenian tragedy: Aeschylus and Euripides. When it was performed for the first time at the Lenaia Festival in 405 BC, just one year after the death of Euripides, the Athenians awarded it first prize.[44] It was the only Greek play that was ever given an encore performance, which took place two months later at the City Dionysia.[45] Even today, The Frogs still appeals to modern audiences. A commercially successful modern musical adaptation of it was performed on Broadway in 2004.[46]

The third dramatic genre was the satyr play. Although the genre was popular, only one complete example of a satyr play has survived: Cyclops by Euripides.[47] Large portions of a second satyr play, Ichneutae by Sophocles, have been recovered from the site of Oxyrhynchus in Egypt among the Oxyrhynchus Papyri.[48]

Historiography

 
A second century AD Roman copy of a Greek bust of Herodotus from the first half of the fourth century BC

Two notable historians who lived during the Classical Era were Herodotus of Halicarnassus and Thucydides. Herodotus is commonly called "The Father of History."[49] His book The Histories is among the oldest works of prose literature in existence. Thucydides's book History of the Peloponnesian War greatly influenced later writers and historians, including the author of the book of Acts of the Apostles and the Byzantine Era historian Procopius of Caesarea.[50]

A third historian of ancient Greece, Xenophon of Athens, began his Hellenica where Thucydides ended his work about 411 BC and carried his history to 362 BC.[51] Xenophon's most famous work is his book The Anabasis, a detailed, first-hand account of his participation in a Greek mercenary army that tried to help the Persian Cyrus expel his brother from the throne, another famous work relating to Persian history is his Cyropaedia. Xenophon also wrote three works in praise of the philosopher Socrates: The Apology of Socrates to the Jury, The Symposium, and Memorabilia. Although both Xenophon and Plato knew Socrates, their accounts are very different. Many comparisons have been made between the account of the military historian and the account of the poet-philosopher.[52]

Philosophy

Many important and influential philosophers lived during the fifth and fourth centuries BC. Among the earliest Greek philosophers were the three so-called "Milesian philosophers": Thales of Miletus, Anaximander, and Anaximenes.[53] Of these philosophers' writings, however, only one fragment from Anaximander preserved by Simplicius of Cilicia has survived.[Notes 2][54]

Very little is known for certain about the life of the philosopher Pythagoras of Samos and no writings by him have survived to the present day,[55] but an impressive corpus of poetic writings written by his pupil Empedocles of Acragas has survived, making Empedocles one of the most widely attested Pre-Socratic philosophers.[56] A large number of fragments written by the philosophers Heraclitus of Ephesus[57] and Democritus of Abdera have also survived.[58]

Of all the classical philosophers, however, Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle are generally considered the most important and influential. Socrates did not write any books himself and modern scholars debate whether or not Plato's portrayal of him is accurate. Some scholars contend that many of his ideas, or at least a vague approximation of them, are expressed in Plato's early socratic dialogues.[59] Meanwhile, other scholars have argued that Plato's portrayal of Socrates is merely a fictional representation intended to expound Plato's own opinions who has very little to do with the historical figure of the same name.[60] The debate over the extent to which Plato's portrayal of Socrates represents the actual Socrates's ideas is known as the Socratic problem.[61][62]

Plato expressed his ideas through dialogues, that is, written works purporting to describe conversations between different individuals. Some of the best-known of these include: The Apology of Socrates, a purported record of the speech Socrates gave at his trial;[63] Phaedo, a description of the last conversation between Socrates and his disciples before his execution;[64] The Symposium, a dialogue over the nature of love;[65] and The Republic, widely regarded as Plato's most important work,[66][67] a long dialogue describing the ideal government.[68]

Aristotle of Stagira is widely considered to be one of the most important and influential philosophical thinkers of all time.[69] The first sentence of his Metaphysics reads: "All men by nature desire to know." He has, therefore, been called the "Father of those who know." His medieval disciple Thomas Aquinas referred to him simply as "the Philosopher". Aristotle was a student at Plato's Academy, and like his teacher, he wrote dialogues, or conversations. However, none of these exist today. The body of writings that have come down to the present probably represents lectures that he delivered at his own school in Athens, the Lyceum.[70] Even from these books, the enormous range of his interests is evident: He explored matters other than those that are today considered philosophical; the extant treatises cover logic, the physical and biological sciences, ethics, politics, and constitutional government. Among Aristotle's most notable works are Politics, Nicomachean Ethics, Poetics, On the Soul, and Rhetoric.[71]

Hellenistic period

 
Imaginative nineteenth-century engraving of the ancient Library of Alexandria

By 338 BC all of the Greek city-states except Sparta had been united by Philip II of Macedon.[72] Philip's son Alexander the Great extended his father's conquests greatly. Athens lost its preeminent status as the leader of Greek culture, and it was replaced temporarily by Alexandria, Egypt.[73]

The city of Alexandria in northern Egypt became, from the 3rd century BC, the outstanding center of Greek culture. It also soon attracted a large Jewish population, making it the largest center for Jewish scholarship in the ancient world. The Septuagint, a Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible was reputed to have been initiated in Alexandria. Philo, a Hellenistic Jewish philosopher, operated out of Alexandria at the turn of the Common Era. In addition, it later became a major focal point for the development of Christian thought. The Musaeum, or Shrine to the Muses, which included the library and school, was founded by Ptolemy I. The institution was from the beginning intended as a great international school and library.[74] The library, eventually containing more than a half million volumes, was mostly in Greek. It was intended to serve as a repository for every work of classical Greek literature that could be found.[75]

Poetry

 
A painting by John William Waterhouse depicting a scene from The Argonautica by Apollonius of Rhodes

The genre of bucolic poetry was first developed by the poet Theocritus.[76] The Roman Virgil later wrote his Eclogues in this genre.[77] Callimachus, a scholar at the Library of Alexandria, composed the Aetia ("Causes"),[78] a long poem written in four volumes of elegiac couplets describing the legendary origins of obscure customs, festivals, and names,[78] which he probably wrote in several stages over the course of many years in the third century BC.[78] The Aetia was lost during the Middle Ages,[78] but, over the course of the twentieth century, much of it was recovered due to new discoveries of ancient papyri.[78] Scholars initially denigrated it as "second-rate", showing great learning, but lacking true "art".[78] Over the course of the century, scholarly appraisal of it greatly improved, with many scholars now seeing it in a much more positive light.[78] Callimachus also wrote short poems for special occasions and at least one short epic, the Ibis, which was directed against his former pupil Apollonius.[79] He also compiled a prose treatise entitled the Pinakes, in which he catalogued all the major works held in the Library of Alexandria.[80]

The Alexandrian poet Apollonius of Rhodes is best known for his epic poem the Argonautica, which narrates the adventures of Jason and his shipmates the Argonauts on their quest to retrieve the Golden Fleece from the land of Colchis.[81] The poet Aratus wrote the hexameter poem Phaenomena, a poetic rendition of Eudoxus of Cnidus's treatise on the stars written in the fourth century BC.[82]

Drama

 
Republican or Early Imperial relief depicting a seating Menander holding the masks of New Comedy (1st century BC – early 1st century AD) Princeton University Art Museum

During the Hellenistic period, the Old Comedy of the Classical Era was replaced by New Comedy. The most notable writer of New Comedy was the Athenian playwright Menander. None of Menander's plays have survived to the present day in their complete form, but one play, The Bad-Tempered Man, has survived to the present day in a near-complete form. Most of another play entitled The Girl from Samos and large portions of another five have also survived.[83]

Historiography

The historian Timaeus was born in Sicily but spent most of his life in Athens.[84] His History, though lost, is significant because of its influence on Polybius. In 38 books it covered the history of Sicily and Italy to the year 264 BC, which is where Polybius begins his work. Timaeus also wrote the Olympionikai, a valuable chronological study of the Olympic Games.[85]

Ancient biography

Ancient biography, or bios, as distinct from modern biography, was a genre of Greek (and Roman) literature interested in describing the goals, achievements, failures, and character of ancient historical persons and whether or not they should be imitated. Authors of ancient bios, such as the works of Nepos and Plutarch's Parallel Lives imitated many of the same sources and techniques of the contemporary historiographies of ancient Greece, notably including the works of Herodotus and Thucydides. There were various forms of ancient biographies, including philosophical biographies that brought out the moral character of their subject (such as Diogenes Laertius's Lives of Eminent Philosophers), literary biographies which discussed the lives of orators and poets (such as Philostratus's Lives of the Sophists), school and reference biographies that offered a short sketch of someone including their ancestry, major events and accomplishments, and death, autobiographies, commentaries and memoirs where the subject presents his own life, and historical/political biography focusing on the lives of those active in the military, among other categories.[86]

Science and mathematics

 
In 1906, The Archimedes Palimpsest revealed works by Archimedes previously thought to have been lost.

Eratosthenes of Alexandria (c. 276 BC – c. 195/194 BC), wrote on astronomy and geography, but his work is known mainly from later summaries. He is credited with being the first person to measure the Earth's circumference. Much that was written by the mathematicians Euclid and Archimedes has been preserved. Euclid is known for his Elements, much of which was drawn from his predecessor Eudoxus of Cnidus. The Elements is a treatise on geometry, and it has exerted a continuing influence on mathematics. From Archimedes several treatises have come down to the present. Among them are Measurement of the Circle, in which he worked out the value of pi; The Method of Mechanical Theorems, on his work in mechanics; The Sand Reckoner; and On Floating Bodies. A manuscript of his works is currently being studied.[87]

Prose fiction

Very little has survived of prose fiction from the Hellenistic Era. The Milesiaka by Aristides of Miletos was probably written during the second century BC. The Milesiaka itself has not survived to the present day in its complete form, but various references to it have survived. The book established a whole new genre of so-called "Milesian tales," of which The Golden Ass by the later Roman writer Apuleius is a prime example.[88][89]

The ancient Greek novels Chaereas and Callirhoe[90] by Chariton and Metiochus and Parthenope[91][92] were probably both written during the late first century BC or early first century AD, during the latter part of the Hellenistic Era. The discovery of several fragments of Lollianos's Phoenician Tale reveal the existence of a genre of ancient Greek picaresque novel.[93]

Roman period

While the transition from city-state to empire affected philosophy a great deal, shifting the emphasis from political theory to personal ethics, Greek letters continued to flourish both under the Successors (especially the Ptolemies) and under Roman rule. Romans of literary or rhetorical inclination looked to Greek models, and Greek literature of all types continued to be read and produced both by native speakers of Greek and later by Roman authors as well. A notable characteristic of this period was the expansion of literary criticism as a genre, particularly as exemplified by Demetrius, Pseudo-Longinus and Dionysius of Halicarnassus. The New Testament, written by various authors in varying qualities of Koine Greek also hails from this period,[94][8]: 208–209  the most important works being the Gospels and the Epistles of Saint Paul.[95][8]: 208–213 

Poetry

 
The Mykonos vase, one of the earliest surviving depictions of the myth of the Trojan Horse, a myth which is described in depth in Quintus of Smyrna's Posthomerica

The poet Quintus of Smyrna, who probably lived during the late fourth century AD,[96][97] wrote Posthomerica, an epic poem narrating the story of the fall of Troy, beginning where the Iliad left off.[98] About the same time and in a similar Homeric style, an unknown poet composed the Blemyomachia, a now fragmentary epic about conflict between Romans and Blemmyes.[99]

The poet Nonnus of Panopolis wrote the Dionysiaca, the longest surviving epic poem from antiquity. He also wrote a poetic paraphrase of The Gospel of John.[100][101] Nonnus probably lived sometime during the late fourth century AD or early fifth century AD.[102][103]

Historiography

 
A bust of Plutarch, one of the most famous ancient Greek historians, from his hometown of Chaeronea

The historian Polybius was born about 200 BC. He was brought to Rome as a hostage in 168. In Rome he became a friend of the general Scipio Aemilianus. He probably accompanied the general to Spain and North Africa in the wars against Carthage. He was with Scipio at the destruction of Carthage in 146.[104]

Diodorus Siculus was a Greek historian who lived in the 1st century BC, around the time of Julius Caesar and Augustus. He wrote a universal history, Bibliotheca Historica, in 40 books. Of these, the first five and the 11th through the 20th remain. The first two parts covered history through the early Hellenistic era. The third part takes the story to the beginning of Caesar's wars in Gaul, now France.[105] Dionysius of Halicarnassus lived late in the first century BC. His history of Rome from its origins to the First Punic War (264 to 241 BC) is written from a Roman point of view, but it is carefully researched. He also wrote a number of other treatises, including On Imitation, Commentaries on the Ancient Orators, and On the Arrangement of Words.[106]

The historians Appian of Alexandria and Arrian of Nicomedia both lived in the second century AD.[107][108] Appian wrote on Rome and its conquests, while Arrian is remembered for his work on the campaigns of Alexander the Great. Arrian served in the Roman army. His book therefore concentrates heavily on the military aspects of Alexander's life. Arrian also wrote a philosophical treatise, the Diatribai, based on the teachings of his mentor Epictetus.

Best known of the late Greek historians to modern readers is Plutarch of Chaeronea, who died about AD 119. His Parallel Lives of great Greek and Roman leaders has been read by every generation since the work was first published. His other surviving work is the Moralia, a collection of essays on ethical, religious, political, physical, and literary topics.[109][110]

During later times, so-called "commonplace books," usually describing historical anecdotes, became quite popular. Surviving examples of this popular genre include works such as Aulus Gellius's Attic Nights,[111] Athenaeus of Naucratis's Deipnosophistae,[112] and Claudius Aelianus's De Natura Animalium and Varia Historia.[113]

Science and mathematics

 
Manuscript (1485), of Pausanias's Description of Greece at the Laurentian Library

The physician Galen lived during the 2nd century AD. He was a careful student of anatomy, and his works exerted a powerful influence on medicine for the next 1,400 years. Strabo, who died about AD 23, was a geographer and historian. His Historical Sketches in 47 volumes has nearly all been lost. His Geographical Sketches remain as the only existing ancient book covering the whole range of people and countries known to the Greeks and Romans through the time of Augustus.[114] Pausanias, who lived in the 2nd century AD, was also a geographer.[115] His Description of Greece is a travel guide describing the geography and mythic history of Greece during the second century. The book takes the form of a tour of Greece, starting in Athens and ending in Naupactus.[116]

The scientist of the Roman period who had the greatest influence on later generations was undoubtedly the astronomer Ptolemy. He lived during the 2nd century AD,[117] though little is known of his life. His masterpiece, originally entitled The Mathematical Collection, has come to the present under the title Almagest, as it was translated by Arab astronomers with that title.[118] It was Ptolemy who devised a detailed description of an Earth-centered universe,[119] a notion that dominated astronomical thinking for more than 1,300 years.[120] The Ptolemaic view of the universe endured until Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, and other early modern astronomers replaced it with heliocentrism.[121]

Philosophy

 
Head of Plotinus, a major philosopher from the Roman Era

Epictetus (c. 55 AD – 135 AD) was associated with the moral philosophy of the Stoics. His teachings were collected by his pupil Arrian in the Discourses and the Encheiridion (Manual of Study).[122]

Diogenes Laërtius, who lived in the third century AD, wrote Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers, a voluminous collection of biographies of nearly every Greek philosopher who ever lived. Unfortunately, Diogenes Laërtius often fails to cite his sources and many modern historians consider his testimony unreliable.[123] Nonetheless, in spite of this, he remains the only available source on the lives of many early Greek philosophers.[124] His book is not entirely without merit; it does preserve a tremendous wealth of information that otherwise would not have been preserved. His biography of Epicurus, for instance, is of particularly high quality and contains three lengthy letters attributed to Epicurus himself, at least two of which are generally agreed to be authentic.[125]

Another major philosopher of his period was Plotinus. He transformed Plato's philosophy into a school called Neoplatonism.[126] His Enneads had a wide-ranging influence on European thought until at least the seventeenth century.[127] Plotinus's philosophy mainly revolved around the concepts of nous, psyche, and the "One."[128]

After the rise of Christianity, many of the most important philosophers were Christians. The second-century Christian apologist Justin Martyr, who wrote exclusively in Greek, made extensive use of ideas from Greek philosophy, especially Platonism.[129] Origen of Alexandria, the founder of Christian theology,[130] also made extensive use of ideas from Greek philosophy[131] and was even able to hold his own against the pagan philosopher Celsus in his apologetic treatise Contra Celsum.[132]

Prose fiction

 
A nineteenth-century painting by the Swiss-French painter Marc Gabriel Charles Gleyre depicting a scene from Daphnis and Chloe

The Roman Period was the time when the majority of extant works of Greek prose fiction were composed. The ancient Greek novels Leucippe and Clitophon by Achilles Tatius[133][134] and Daphnis and Chloe by Longus[135] were both probably written during the early second century AD. Daphnis and Chloe, by far the most famous of the five surviving ancient Greek romance novels, is a nostalgic tale of two young lovers growing up in an idealized pastoral environment on the Greek island of Lesbos.[136] The Wonders Beyond Thule by Antonius Diogenes may have also been written during the early second century AD, although scholars are unsure of its exact date. The Wonders Beyond Thule has not survived in its complete form, but a very lengthy summary of it written by Photios I of Constantinople has survived.[137] The Ephesian Tale by Xenophon of Ephesus was probably written during the late second century AD.[135]

 
Illustration from 1894 by William Strang depicting a battle scene from Book One of Lucian of Samosata's A True Story

The satirist Lucian of Samosata lived during the late second century AD. Lucian's works were incredibly popular during antiquity. Over eighty different writings attributed to Lucian have survived to the present day.[138] Almost all of Lucian's works are written in the heavily Atticized dialect of ancient Greek language prevalent among the well-educated at the time. His book The Syrian Goddess, however, was written in a faux-Ionic dialect, deliberately imitating the dialect and style of Herodotus.[139][140] Lucian's most famous work is the novel A True Story, which some authors have described as the earliest surviving work of science fiction.[141][142] His dialogue The Lover of Lies contains several of the earliest known ghost stories[143] as well as the earliest known version of "The Sorcerer's Apprentice."[144] His letter The Passing of Peregrinus, a ruthless satire against Christians, contains one of the earliest pagan appraisals of early Christianity.[145]

The Aethiopica by Heliodorus of Emesa was probably written during the third century AD.[146] It tells the story of a young Ethiopian princess named Chariclea, who is estranged from her family and goes on many misadventures across the known world.[147] Of all the ancient Greek novels, the one that attained the greatest level of popularity was the Alexander Romance, a fictionalized account of the exploits of Alexander the Great written in the third century AD. Eighty versions of it have survived in twenty-four different languages, attesting that, during the Middle Ages, the novel was nearly as popular as the Bible.[148]: 650–654  Versions of the Alexander Romance were so commonplace in the fourteenth century that Geoffrey Chaucer wrote that "...every wight that hath discrecioun / Hath herd somwhat or al of [Alexander's] fortune."[148]: 653–654 

Legacy

 
Hero Mourns the Dead Leander by Gillis Backereel (1640s)

Ancient Greek literature has had an enormous impact on western literature as a whole.[149] Ancient Roman authors adopted various styles and motifs from ancient Greek literature. These ideas were later, in turn, adopted by other western European writers and literary critics.[149] Ancient Greek literature especially influenced later Greek literature. For instance, the Greek novels influenced the later work Hero and Leander, written by Musaeus Grammaticus.[150] Ancient Roman writers were acutely aware of the ancient Greek literary legacy and many deliberately emulated the style and formula of Greek classics in their own works. The Roman poet Vergil, for instance, modeled his epic poem the Aeneid on the Iliad and the Odyssey.[151]

During the Middle Ages, ancient Greek literature was largely forgotten in Western Europe. The medieval writer Roger Bacon wrote that "there are not four men in Latin Christendom who are acquainted with the Greek, Hebrew, and Arabic grammars."[152] It was not until the Renaissance that Greek writings were rediscovered by western European scholars.[153] During the Renaissance, Greek began to be taught in western European colleges and universities for the first time, which resulted in western European scholars rediscovering the literature of ancient Greece.[154] The Textus Receptus, the first New Testament printed in the original Greek, was published in 1516 by the Dutch humanist scholar Desiderius Erasmus.[155] Erasmus also published Latin translations of classical Greek texts, including a Latin translation of Hesiod's Works and Days.[156]

 
Page from an Arabic translation of Aristotle's Poetics by Abū Bishr Mattā

The influence of classical Greek literature on modern literature is also evident. Numerous figures from classical literature and mythology appear throughout The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri.[157] Plutarch's Lives were a major influence on William Shakespeare and served as the main source behind his tragedies Julius Caesar, Antony and Cleopatra, and Coriolanus.[158]: 883–884  Shakespeare's comedies A Comedy of Errors and The Twelfth Night drew heavily on themes from Graeco-Roman New Comedy.[158]: 881–882  Meanwhile, Shakespeare's tragedy Timon of Athens was inspired by a story written by Lucian[159] and his comedy Pericles, Prince of Tyre was based on an adaptation of the ancient Greek novel Apollonius of Tyre found in John Gower's Confessio Amantis.[160]

John Milton's epic poem Paradise Lost is written using a similar style to the two Homeric epics.[161] It also makes frequent allusions to figures from classical literature and mythology, using them as symbols to convey a Christian message.[162] Lucian's A True Story was part of the inspiration for Jonathan Swift's novel Gulliver's Travels.[158]: 545  Bulfinch's Mythology, a book on Greek mythology published in 1867 and aimed at a popular audience, was described by Carl J. Richard as "one of the most popular books ever published in the United States".[163]

George Bernard Shaw's play Pygmalion is a modern, rationalized retelling of the ancient Greek legend of Pygmalion.[158]: 794  James Joyce's novel Ulysses, heralded by critics as one of the greatest works of modern literature,[164][165] is a retelling of Homer's Odyssey set in modern-day Dublin.[166][167] The mid-twentieth-century British author Mary Renault wrote a number of critically acclaimed novels inspired by ancient Greek literature and mythology, including The Last of the Wine and The King Must Die.[168]

Even in works that do not consciously draw on Graeco-Roman literature, authors often employ concepts and themes originating in ancient Greece. The ideas expressed in Aristotle's Poetics, in particular, have influenced generations of Western writers and literary critics.[169] A Latin translation of an Arabic version of the Poetics by Averroes was available during the Middle Ages.[170] Common Greek literary terms still used today include: catharsis,[171] ethos,[172] anagnorisis,[173] hamartia,[174] hubris,[175] mimesis,[176] mythos,[177] nemesis,[178] and peripeteia.[179]

Notes

  1. ^ Although Sophocles won second prize with the group of plays that included Oedipus Rex, its date of production is uncertain. The prominence of the Theban plague at the play's opening suggests to many scholars a reference to the plague that devastated Athens in 430 BC, and hence a production date shortly thereafter. See, for example, Knox, Bernard (1956). "The Date of the Oedipus Tyrannus of Sophocles". American Journal of Philology. 77 (2): 133–147. doi:10.2307/292475. JSTOR 292475.
  2. ^ Simplicius, Comments on Aristotle's Physics (24, 13):
    "Ἀναξίμανδρος [...] λέγει δ' αὐτὴν μήτε ὕδωρ μήτε ἄλλο τι τῶν καλουμένων εἶναι στοιχείων, ἀλλ' ἑτέραν τινὰ φύσιν ἄπειρον, ἐξ ἧς ἅπαντας γίνεσθαι τοὺς οὐρανοὺς καὶ τοὺς ἐν αὐτοῖς κόσμους· ἐξ ὧν δὲ ἡ γένεσίς ἐστι τοῖς οὖσι, καὶ τὴν φθορὰν εἰς ταῦτα γίνεσθαι κατὰ τὸ χρεών· διδόναι γὰρ αὐτὰ δίκην καὶ τίσιν ἀλλήλοις τῆς ἀδικίας κατὰ τὴν τοῦ χρόνου τάξιν, ποιητικωτέροις οὕτως ὀνόμασιν αὐτὰ λέγων. δῆλον δὲ ὅτι τὴν εἰς ἄλληλα μεταβολὴν τῶν τεττάρων στοιχείων οὗτος θεασάμενος οὐκ ἠξίωσεν ἕν τι τούτων ὑποκείμενον ποιῆσαι, ἀλλά τι ἄλλο παρὰ ταῦτα· οὗτος δὲ οὐκ ἀλλοιουμένου τοῦ στοιχείου τὴν γένεσιν ποιεῖ, ἀλλ' ἀποκρινομένων τῶν ἐναντίων διὰ τῆς αἰδίου κινήσεως."
    In ancient Greek, quotes usually blend with the surrounding text. Consequently, deciding where they start and where they end is often difficult. However, it is generally accepted that this quote is not Simplicius' own interpretation, but Anaximander's writing, in "somewhat poetic terms" as it is mentioned by Simplicius.

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Further reading

  • Beye, Charles Rowan (1987). Ancient Greek Literature and Society. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-1874-7.
  • Easterling, P.E.; Knox, B.M.W., eds. (1985). The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 1: Greek literature. Cambridge [Cambridgeshire]; New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-21042-9.
  • Flacelière, Robert (1964). A Literary History of Greece. (Translated by Douglas Garman). Chicago: Aldine Pub.
  • Gutzwiller, Kathryn (2007). A Guide to Hellenistic Literature. Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-23322-0.
  • Hadas, Moses (1950). A History of Greek Literature. New York, NY: Columbia University Press.
  • Lesky, Albin (1966). A History of Greek Literature. Translated by James Willis; Cornelis de Heer. Indianapolis / Cambridge: Hackett Publishing Company. ISBN 0-87220-350-6.
  • Schmidt, Michael (2004). The First Poets: Lives of the Ancient Greek Poets. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-64394-0.
  • C. A. Trypanis (1981). Greek Poetry from Homer to Seferis. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226813165.
  • Whitmarsh, Tim (2004). Ancient Greek Literature. Cambridge: Polity Press. ISBN 0-7456-2792-7.

External links

  •   Works related to Ancient Greek literature at Wikisource

ancient, greek, literature, literature, written, ancient, greek, language, from, earliest, texts, until, time, byzantine, empire, earliest, surviving, works, ancient, greek, literature, dating, back, early, archaic, period, epic, poems, iliad, odyssey, idealiz. Ancient Greek literature is literature written in the Ancient Greek language from the earliest texts until the time of the Byzantine Empire The earliest surviving works of ancient Greek literature dating back to the early Archaic period are the two epic poems the Iliad and the Odyssey set in an idealized archaic past today identified as having some relation to the Mycenaean era These two epics along with the Homeric Hymns and the two poems of Hesiod Theogony and Works and Days constituted the major foundations of the Greek literary tradition that would continue into the Classical Hellenistic and Roman periods A Greek manuscript of the beginning of Hesiod s Works and Days The lyric poets Sappho Alcaeus and Pindar were highly influential during the early development of the Greek poetic tradition Aeschylus is the earliest Greek tragic playwright for whom any plays have survived complete Sophocles is famous for his tragedies about Oedipus particularly Oedipus the King and Antigone Euripides is known for his plays which often pushed the boundaries of the tragic genre The comedic playwright Aristophanes wrote in the genre of Old Comedy while the later playwright Menander was an early pioneer of New Comedy The historians Herodotus of Halicarnassus and Thucydides who both lived during the fifth century BC wrote accounts of events that happened shortly before and during their own lifetimes The philosopher Plato wrote dialogues usually centered around his teacher Socrates dealing with various philosophical subjects whereas his student Aristotle wrote numerous treatises which later became highly influential Important later writers included Apollonius of Rhodes who wrote The Argonautica an epic poem about the voyage of the Argonauts Archimedes who wrote groundbreaking mathematical treatises and Plutarch who wrote mainly biographies and essays The second century AD writer Lucian of Samosata was a Greek who wrote primarily works of satire 1 Ancient Greek literature has had a profound impact on later Greek literature and also western literature at large In particular many ancient Roman authors drew inspiration from their Greek predecessors Ever since the Renaissance European authors in general including Dante Alighieri William Shakespeare John Milton and James Joyce have all drawn heavily on classical themes and motifs Contents 1 Pre classical and classical antiquity 1 1 Epic poetry 1 2 Lyric poetry 1 3 Drama 1 4 Historiography 1 5 Philosophy 2 Hellenistic period 2 1 Poetry 2 2 Drama 2 3 Historiography 2 4 Ancient biography 2 5 Science and mathematics 2 6 Prose fiction 3 Roman period 3 1 Poetry 3 2 Historiography 3 3 Science and mathematics 3 4 Philosophy 3 5 Prose fiction 4 Legacy 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksPre classical and classical antiquity EditFurther information Mycenaean Greece Archaic Greece and Classical Greece Linear B tablet from the Archaeological Museum of Mycenae Tablet MY Oe 106 obverse exhibited at the Greek National Archaeological Museum This period of Greek literature stretches from Homer until the fourth century BC and the rise of Alexander the Great The earliest known Greek writings are Mycenaean written in the Linear B syllabary on clay tablets These documents contain prosaic records largely concerned with trade lists inventories receipts etc no real literature has been discovered 2 3 Michael Ventris and John Chadwick the original decipherers of Linear B state that literature almost certainly existed in Mycenaean Greece 3 but it was either not written down or if it was it was on parchment or wooden tablets which did not survive the destruction of the Mycenaean palaces in the twelfth century BC 3 Greek literature was divided in well defined literary genres each one having a compulsory formal structure about both dialect and metrics 4 The first division was between prose and poetry Within poetry there were three super genres epic lyric and drama The common European terminology about literary genres is directly derived from the ancient Greek terminology 5 Lyric and drama were further divided into more genres lyric in four elegiac iambic monodic lyric and choral lyric drama in three tragedy comedy and pastoral drama 6 Prose literature can largely be said to begin with Herodotus 7 Over time several genres of prose literature developed 7 but the distinctions between them were frequently blurred 7 Epic poetry Edit At the beginning of Greek literature stand the two monumental works of Homer the Iliad and the Odyssey 8 1 3 The figure of Homer is shrouded in mystery Although the works as they now stand are credited to him it is certain that their roots reach far back before his time see Homeric Question 8 15 The Iliad is a narrative of a single episode spanning over the course of a ten day period from near the end of the ten years of the Trojan War It centers on the person of Achilles 9 who embodied the Greek heroic ideal 10 8 3 A painting by the French Neoclassical painter Thomas Degeorge depicting the climactic final scene from Book Twenty Two of The Odyssey in which Odysseus Telemachus Eumaeus and Philoetius slaughter the suitors of Penelope The Odyssey is an account of the adventures of Odysseus one of the warriors at Troy 8 3 After ten years fighting the war he spends another ten years sailing back home to his wife and family Penelope was considered the ideal female Homer depicted her as the ideal female based on her commitment modesty purity and respect during her marriage with Odysseus During his ten year voyage he loses all of his comrades and ships and makes his way home to Ithaca disguised as a beggar Both of these works were based on ancient legends 8 15 The Homeric dialect was an archaic language based on Ionic dialect mixed with some element of Aeolic dialect and Attic dialect 11 the latter due to the Athenian edition of the 6th century BC The epic verse was the hexameter 12 The other great poet of the preclassical period was Hesiod 8 23 24 13 Unlike Homer Hesiod refers to himself in his poetry 14 Nonetheless nothing is known about him from any external source He was a native of Boeotia in central Greece and is thought to have lived and worked around 700 BC 15 Hesiod s two extant poems are Works and Days and Theogony Works and Days is a faithful depiction of the poverty stricken country life he knew so well and it sets forth principles and rules for farmers Theogony is a systematic account of creation and of the gods It vividly describes the ages of mankind beginning with a long past Golden Age 16 The writings of Homer and Hesiod were held in extremely high regard throughout antiquity 13 and were viewed by many ancient authors as the foundational texts behind ancient Greek religion 17 Homer told the story of a heroic past which Hesiod bracketed with a creation narrative and an account of the practical realities of contemporary daily life 8 23 24 Lyric poetry Edit Main article Greek lyric A nineteenth century painting by the English painter Sir Lawrence Alma Tadema depicting the poetess Sappho gazing on in admiration as the poet Alcaeus plays the lyre Lyric poetry received its name from the fact that it was originally sung by individuals or a chorus accompanied by the instrument called the lyre Despite the name the lyric poetry in this general meaning was divided in four genres two of which were not accompanied by cithara but by flute These two latter genres were elegiac poetry and iambic poetry Both were written in the Ionic dialect Elegiac poems were written in elegiac couplets and iambic poems were written in iambic trimeter The first of the lyric poets was probably Archilochus of Paros 7th century BC the most important iambic poet 18 Only fragments remain of his work as is the case with most of the poets The few remnants suggest that he was an embittered adventurer who led a very turbulent life 19 Many lyric poems were written in the Aeolic dialect Lyric poems often employed highly varied poetic meters The most famous of all lyric poets were the so called Nine Lyric Poets 20 Of all the lyric poets Sappho of Lesbos c 630 c 570 BC was by far the most widely revered In antiquity her poems were regarded with the same degree of respect as the poems of Homer 21 Only one of her poems Ode to Aphrodite has survived to the present day in its original completed form 22 In addition to Sappho her contemporary Alcaeus of Lesbos was also notable for monodic lyric poetry The poetry written by Alcman was considered beautiful even though he wrote exclusively in the Doric dialect which was normally considered unpleasant to hear 23 The later poet Pindar of Thebes was renowned for his choral lyric poetry 24 Drama Edit Medea kills her son a scene from Euripides s Medea Campanian red figure amphora c 330 BC Louvre K 300 All surviving works of Greek drama were composed by playwrights from Athens and are written exclusively in the Attic dialect 25 Choral performances were a common tradition in all Greek city states 25 The Athenians credited a man named Thespis with having invented drama 25 by introducing the first actor whose primary purpose was to interact with the leader of the chorus 26 Later playwrights expanded the number of actors to three allowing for greater freedom in storytelling 27 In the age that followed the Greco Persian Wars the awakened national spirit of Athens was expressed in hundreds of tragedies based on heroic and legendary themes of the past The tragic plays grew out of simple choral songs and dialogues performed at festivals of the god Dionysus In the classical period performances included three tragedies and one pastoral drama depicting four different episodes of the same myth Wealthy citizens were chosen to bear the expense of costuming and training the chorus as a public and religious duty Attendance at the festival performances was regarded as an act of worship Performances were held in the great open air theater of Dionysus in Athens The poets competed for the prizes offered for the best plays 28 All fully surviving Greek tragedies are conventionally attributed to Aeschylus Sophocles or Euripides The authorship of Prometheus Bound which is traditionally attributed to Aeschylus 29 and Rhesus which is traditionally attributed to Euripides are however questioned 30 There are seven surviving tragedies attributed to Aeschylus Three of these plays Agamemnon The Libation Bearers and The Eumenides form a trilogy known as the Oresteia 31 One of these plays Prometheus Bound however may actually be the work of Aeschylus s son Euphorion 32 Seven works of Sophocles have survived the most acclaimed of which are the three Theban plays which center around the story of Oedipus and his offspring 33 The Theban Trilogy consists of Oedipus the King Oedipus at Colonus and Antigone Although the plays are often called a trilogy they were actually written many years apart Antigone the last of the three plays sequentially was actually first to be written having been composed in 441 BC towards the beginning of Sophocles s career 34 Oedipus the King the most famous of the three was written around 429 BC at the midpoint of Sophocles s career Notes 1 Oedipus at Colonus the second of the three plays chronologically was actually Sophocles s last play and was performed in 401 BC after Sophocles s death 35 There are nineteen surviving plays attributed to Euripides The most well known of these plays are Medea Hippolytus and Bacchae 36 Rhesus is sometimes thought to have been written by Euripides son or to have been a posthumous reproduction of a play by Euripides 37 Euripides pushed the limits of the tragic genre and many of the elements in his plays were more typical of comedy than tragedy 38 His play Alcestis for instance has often been categorized as a problem play or perhaps even as a work of tragicomedy rather than a true tragedy due to its comedic elements and the fact that it has a happy ending 39 40 Illustration for Aristophanes s Lysistrata by Aubrey Beardsley 1896 Like tragedy comedy arose from a ritual in honor of Dionysus but in this case the plays were full of frank obscenity abuse and insult At Athens the comedies became an official part of the festival celebration in 486 BC and prizes were offered for the best productions As with the tragedians few works still remain of the great comedic writers The only complete surviving works of classical comedy are eleven plays written by the playwright Aristophanes 41 These are a treasure trove of comic presentation He poked fun at everyone and every institution In The Birds he ridicules Athenian democracy In The Clouds he attacks the philosopher Socrates In Lysistrata he denounces war 42 Aristophanes has been praised highly for his dramatic skill and artistry John Lempriere s Bibliotheca Classica describes him as quite simply the greatest comic dramatist in world literature by his side Moliere seems dull and Shakespeare clownish 43 Of all Aristophanes s plays however the one that has received the most lasting recognition is The Frogs which simultaneously satirizes and immortalizes the two giants of Athenian tragedy Aeschylus and Euripides When it was performed for the first time at the Lenaia Festival in 405 BC just one year after the death of Euripides the Athenians awarded it first prize 44 It was the only Greek play that was ever given an encore performance which took place two months later at the City Dionysia 45 Even today The Frogs still appeals to modern audiences A commercially successful modern musical adaptation of it was performed on Broadway in 2004 46 The third dramatic genre was the satyr play Although the genre was popular only one complete example of a satyr play has survived Cyclops by Euripides 47 Large portions of a second satyr play Ichneutae by Sophocles have been recovered from the site of Oxyrhynchus in Egypt among the Oxyrhynchus Papyri 48 Historiography Edit A second century AD Roman copy of a Greek bust of Herodotus from the first half of the fourth century BC Two notable historians who lived during the Classical Era were Herodotus of Halicarnassus and Thucydides Herodotus is commonly called The Father of History 49 His book The Histories is among the oldest works of prose literature in existence Thucydides s book History of the Peloponnesian War greatly influenced later writers and historians including the author of the book of Acts of the Apostles and the Byzantine Era historian Procopius of Caesarea 50 A third historian of ancient Greece Xenophon of Athens began his Hellenica where Thucydides ended his work about 411 BC and carried his history to 362 BC 51 Xenophon s most famous work is his book The Anabasis a detailed first hand account of his participation in a Greek mercenary army that tried to help the Persian Cyrus expel his brother from the throne another famous work relating to Persian history is his Cyropaedia Xenophon also wrote three works in praise of the philosopher Socrates The Apology of Socrates to the Jury The Symposium and Memorabilia Although both Xenophon and Plato knew Socrates their accounts are very different Many comparisons have been made between the account of the military historian and the account of the poet philosopher 52 Philosophy Edit Many important and influential philosophers lived during the fifth and fourth centuries BC Among the earliest Greek philosophers were the three so called Milesian philosophers Thales of Miletus Anaximander and Anaximenes 53 Of these philosophers writings however only one fragment from Anaximander preserved by Simplicius of Cilicia has survived Notes 2 54 Very little is known for certain about the life of the philosopher Pythagoras of Samos and no writings by him have survived to the present day 55 but an impressive corpus of poetic writings written by his pupil Empedocles of Acragas has survived making Empedocles one of the most widely attested Pre Socratic philosophers 56 A large number of fragments written by the philosophers Heraclitus of Ephesus 57 and Democritus of Abdera have also survived 58 Of all the classical philosophers however Socrates Plato and Aristotle are generally considered the most important and influential Socrates did not write any books himself and modern scholars debate whether or not Plato s portrayal of him is accurate Some scholars contend that many of his ideas or at least a vague approximation of them are expressed in Plato s early socratic dialogues 59 Meanwhile other scholars have argued that Plato s portrayal of Socrates is merely a fictional representation intended to expound Plato s own opinions who has very little to do with the historical figure of the same name 60 The debate over the extent to which Plato s portrayal of Socrates represents the actual Socrates s ideas is known as the Socratic problem 61 62 The Death of Socrates by Jacques Louis David 1787 Plato expressed his ideas through dialogues that is written works purporting to describe conversations between different individuals Some of the best known of these include The Apology of Socrates a purported record of the speech Socrates gave at his trial 63 Phaedo a description of the last conversation between Socrates and his disciples before his execution 64 The Symposium a dialogue over the nature of love 65 and The Republic widely regarded as Plato s most important work 66 67 a long dialogue describing the ideal government 68 Aristotle of Stagira is widely considered to be one of the most important and influential philosophical thinkers of all time 69 The first sentence of his Metaphysics reads All men by nature desire to know He has therefore been called the Father of those who know His medieval disciple Thomas Aquinas referred to him simply as the Philosopher Aristotle was a student at Plato s Academy and like his teacher he wrote dialogues or conversations However none of these exist today The body of writings that have come down to the present probably represents lectures that he delivered at his own school in Athens the Lyceum 70 Even from these books the enormous range of his interests is evident He explored matters other than those that are today considered philosophical the extant treatises cover logic the physical and biological sciences ethics politics and constitutional government Among Aristotle s most notable works are Politics Nicomachean Ethics Poetics On the Soul and Rhetoric 71 Hellenistic period EditFurther information Hellenistic period Hellenistic art and Hellenistic Greece Imaginative nineteenth century engraving of the ancient Library of Alexandria By 338 BC all of the Greek city states except Sparta had been united by Philip II of Macedon 72 Philip s son Alexander the Great extended his father s conquests greatly Athens lost its preeminent status as the leader of Greek culture and it was replaced temporarily by Alexandria Egypt 73 The city of Alexandria in northern Egypt became from the 3rd century BC the outstanding center of Greek culture It also soon attracted a large Jewish population making it the largest center for Jewish scholarship in the ancient world The Septuagint a Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible was reputed to have been initiated in Alexandria Philo a Hellenistic Jewish philosopher operated out of Alexandria at the turn of the Common Era In addition it later became a major focal point for the development of Christian thought The Musaeum or Shrine to the Muses which included the library and school was founded by Ptolemy I The institution was from the beginning intended as a great international school and library 74 The library eventually containing more than a half million volumes was mostly in Greek It was intended to serve as a repository for every work of classical Greek literature that could be found 75 Poetry Edit A painting by John William Waterhouse depicting a scene from The Argonautica by Apollonius of Rhodes The genre of bucolic poetry was first developed by the poet Theocritus 76 The Roman Virgil later wrote his Eclogues in this genre 77 Callimachus a scholar at the Library of Alexandria composed the Aetia Causes 78 a long poem written in four volumes of elegiac couplets describing the legendary origins of obscure customs festivals and names 78 which he probably wrote in several stages over the course of many years in the third century BC 78 The Aetia was lost during the Middle Ages 78 but over the course of the twentieth century much of it was recovered due to new discoveries of ancient papyri 78 Scholars initially denigrated it as second rate showing great learning but lacking true art 78 Over the course of the century scholarly appraisal of it greatly improved with many scholars now seeing it in a much more positive light 78 Callimachus also wrote short poems for special occasions and at least one short epic the Ibis which was directed against his former pupil Apollonius 79 He also compiled a prose treatise entitled the Pinakes in which he catalogued all the major works held in the Library of Alexandria 80 The Alexandrian poet Apollonius of Rhodes is best known for his epic poem the Argonautica which narrates the adventures of Jason and his shipmates the Argonauts on their quest to retrieve the Golden Fleece from the land of Colchis 81 The poet Aratus wrote the hexameter poem Phaenomena a poetic rendition of Eudoxus of Cnidus s treatise on the stars written in the fourth century BC 82 Drama Edit Republican or Early Imperial relief depicting a seating Menander holding the masks of New Comedy 1st century BC early 1st century AD Princeton University Art Museum During the Hellenistic period the Old Comedy of the Classical Era was replaced by New Comedy The most notable writer of New Comedy was the Athenian playwright Menander None of Menander s plays have survived to the present day in their complete form but one play The Bad Tempered Man has survived to the present day in a near complete form Most of another play entitled The Girl from Samos and large portions of another five have also survived 83 Historiography Edit The historian Timaeus was born in Sicily but spent most of his life in Athens 84 His History though lost is significant because of its influence on Polybius In 38 books it covered the history of Sicily and Italy to the year 264 BC which is where Polybius begins his work Timaeus also wrote the Olympionikai a valuable chronological study of the Olympic Games 85 Ancient biography Edit Ancient biography or bios as distinct from modern biography was a genre of Greek and Roman literature interested in describing the goals achievements failures and character of ancient historical persons and whether or not they should be imitated Authors of ancient bios such as the works of Nepos and Plutarch s Parallel Lives imitated many of the same sources and techniques of the contemporary historiographies of ancient Greece notably including the works of Herodotus and Thucydides There were various forms of ancient biographies including philosophical biographies that brought out the moral character of their subject such as Diogenes Laertius s Lives of Eminent Philosophers literary biographies which discussed the lives of orators and poets such as Philostratus s Lives of the Sophists school and reference biographies that offered a short sketch of someone including their ancestry major events and accomplishments and death autobiographies commentaries and memoirs where the subject presents his own life and historical political biography focusing on the lives of those active in the military among other categories 86 Science and mathematics Edit In 1906 The Archimedes Palimpsest revealed works by Archimedes previously thought to have been lost Eratosthenes of Alexandria c 276 BC c 195 194 BC wrote on astronomy and geography but his work is known mainly from later summaries He is credited with being the first person to measure the Earth s circumference Much that was written by the mathematicians Euclid and Archimedes has been preserved Euclid is known for his Elements much of which was drawn from his predecessor Eudoxus of Cnidus The Elements is a treatise on geometry and it has exerted a continuing influence on mathematics From Archimedes several treatises have come down to the present Among them are Measurement of the Circle in which he worked out the value of pi The Method of Mechanical Theorems on his work in mechanics The Sand Reckoner and On Floating Bodies A manuscript of his works is currently being studied 87 Prose fiction Edit Very little has survived of prose fiction from the Hellenistic Era The Milesiaka by Aristides of Miletos was probably written during the second century BC The Milesiaka itself has not survived to the present day in its complete form but various references to it have survived The book established a whole new genre of so called Milesian tales of which The Golden Ass by the later Roman writer Apuleius is a prime example 88 89 The ancient Greek novels Chaereas and Callirhoe 90 by Chariton and Metiochus and Parthenope 91 92 were probably both written during the late first century BC or early first century AD during the latter part of the Hellenistic Era The discovery of several fragments of Lollianos s Phoenician Tale reveal the existence of a genre of ancient Greek picaresque novel 93 Roman period EditFurther information Roman Greece While the transition from city state to empire affected philosophy a great deal shifting the emphasis from political theory to personal ethics Greek letters continued to flourish both under the Successors especially the Ptolemies and under Roman rule Romans of literary or rhetorical inclination looked to Greek models and Greek literature of all types continued to be read and produced both by native speakers of Greek and later by Roman authors as well A notable characteristic of this period was the expansion of literary criticism as a genre particularly as exemplified by Demetrius Pseudo Longinus and Dionysius of Halicarnassus The New Testament written by various authors in varying qualities of Koine Greek also hails from this period 94 8 208 209 the most important works being the Gospels and the Epistles of Saint Paul 95 8 208 213 Poetry Edit The Mykonos vase one of the earliest surviving depictions of the myth of the Trojan Horse a myth which is described in depth in Quintus of Smyrna s Posthomerica The poet Quintus of Smyrna who probably lived during the late fourth century AD 96 97 wrote Posthomerica an epic poem narrating the story of the fall of Troy beginning where the Iliad left off 98 About the same time and in a similar Homeric style an unknown poet composed the Blemyomachia a now fragmentary epic about conflict between Romans and Blemmyes 99 The poet Nonnus of Panopolis wrote the Dionysiaca the longest surviving epic poem from antiquity He also wrote a poetic paraphrase of The Gospel of John 100 101 Nonnus probably lived sometime during the late fourth century AD or early fifth century AD 102 103 Historiography Edit A bust of Plutarch one of the most famous ancient Greek historians from his hometown of Chaeronea The historian Polybius was born about 200 BC He was brought to Rome as a hostage in 168 In Rome he became a friend of the general Scipio Aemilianus He probably accompanied the general to Spain and North Africa in the wars against Carthage He was with Scipio at the destruction of Carthage in 146 104 Diodorus Siculus was a Greek historian who lived in the 1st century BC around the time of Julius Caesar and Augustus He wrote a universal history Bibliotheca Historica in 40 books Of these the first five and the 11th through the 20th remain The first two parts covered history through the early Hellenistic era The third part takes the story to the beginning of Caesar s wars in Gaul now France 105 Dionysius of Halicarnassus lived late in the first century BC His history of Rome from its origins to the First Punic War 264 to 241 BC is written from a Roman point of view but it is carefully researched He also wrote a number of other treatises including On Imitation Commentaries on the Ancient Orators and On the Arrangement of Words 106 The historians Appian of Alexandria and Arrian of Nicomedia both lived in the second century AD 107 108 Appian wrote on Rome and its conquests while Arrian is remembered for his work on the campaigns of Alexander the Great Arrian served in the Roman army His book therefore concentrates heavily on the military aspects of Alexander s life Arrian also wrote a philosophical treatise the Diatribai based on the teachings of his mentor Epictetus Best known of the late Greek historians to modern readers is Plutarch of Chaeronea who died about AD 119 His Parallel Lives of great Greek and Roman leaders has been read by every generation since the work was first published His other surviving work is the Moralia a collection of essays on ethical religious political physical and literary topics 109 110 During later times so called commonplace books usually describing historical anecdotes became quite popular Surviving examples of this popular genre include works such as Aulus Gellius s Attic Nights 111 Athenaeus of Naucratis s Deipnosophistae 112 and Claudius Aelianus s De Natura Animalium and Varia Historia 113 Science and mathematics Edit Further information Greek mathematics Greek astronomy and Medicine in ancient Greece Manuscript 1485 of Pausanias s Description of Greece at the Laurentian Library The physician Galen lived during the 2nd century AD He was a careful student of anatomy and his works exerted a powerful influence on medicine for the next 1 400 years Strabo who died about AD 23 was a geographer and historian His Historical Sketches in 47 volumes has nearly all been lost His Geographical Sketches remain as the only existing ancient book covering the whole range of people and countries known to the Greeks and Romans through the time of Augustus 114 Pausanias who lived in the 2nd century AD was also a geographer 115 His Description of Greece is a travel guide describing the geography and mythic history of Greece during the second century The book takes the form of a tour of Greece starting in Athens and ending in Naupactus 116 The scientist of the Roman period who had the greatest influence on later generations was undoubtedly the astronomer Ptolemy He lived during the 2nd century AD 117 though little is known of his life His masterpiece originally entitled The Mathematical Collection has come to the present under the title Almagest as it was translated by Arab astronomers with that title 118 It was Ptolemy who devised a detailed description of an Earth centered universe 119 a notion that dominated astronomical thinking for more than 1 300 years 120 The Ptolemaic view of the universe endured until Copernicus Galileo Kepler and other early modern astronomers replaced it with heliocentrism 121 Philosophy Edit Head of Plotinus a major philosopher from the Roman Era Epictetus c 55 AD 135 AD was associated with the moral philosophy of the Stoics His teachings were collected by his pupil Arrian in the Discourses and the Encheiridion Manual of Study 122 Diogenes Laertius who lived in the third century AD wrote Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers a voluminous collection of biographies of nearly every Greek philosopher who ever lived Unfortunately Diogenes Laertius often fails to cite his sources and many modern historians consider his testimony unreliable 123 Nonetheless in spite of this he remains the only available source on the lives of many early Greek philosophers 124 His book is not entirely without merit it does preserve a tremendous wealth of information that otherwise would not have been preserved His biography of Epicurus for instance is of particularly high quality and contains three lengthy letters attributed to Epicurus himself at least two of which are generally agreed to be authentic 125 Another major philosopher of his period was Plotinus He transformed Plato s philosophy into a school called Neoplatonism 126 His Enneads had a wide ranging influence on European thought until at least the seventeenth century 127 Plotinus s philosophy mainly revolved around the concepts of nous psyche and the One 128 After the rise of Christianity many of the most important philosophers were Christians The second century Christian apologist Justin Martyr who wrote exclusively in Greek made extensive use of ideas from Greek philosophy especially Platonism 129 Origen of Alexandria the founder of Christian theology 130 also made extensive use of ideas from Greek philosophy 131 and was even able to hold his own against the pagan philosopher Celsus in his apologetic treatise Contra Celsum 132 Prose fiction Edit A nineteenth century painting by the Swiss French painter Marc Gabriel Charles Gleyre depicting a scene from Daphnis and Chloe The Roman Period was the time when the majority of extant works of Greek prose fiction were composed The ancient Greek novels Leucippe and Clitophon by Achilles Tatius 133 134 and Daphnis and Chloe by Longus 135 were both probably written during the early second century AD Daphnis and Chloe by far the most famous of the five surviving ancient Greek romance novels is a nostalgic tale of two young lovers growing up in an idealized pastoral environment on the Greek island of Lesbos 136 The Wonders Beyond Thule by Antonius Diogenes may have also been written during the early second century AD although scholars are unsure of its exact date The Wonders Beyond Thule has not survived in its complete form but a very lengthy summary of it written by Photios I of Constantinople has survived 137 The Ephesian Tale by Xenophon of Ephesus was probably written during the late second century AD 135 Illustration from 1894 by William Strang depicting a battle scene from Book One of Lucian of Samosata s A True Story The satirist Lucian of Samosata lived during the late second century AD Lucian s works were incredibly popular during antiquity Over eighty different writings attributed to Lucian have survived to the present day 138 Almost all of Lucian s works are written in the heavily Atticized dialect of ancient Greek language prevalent among the well educated at the time His book The Syrian Goddess however was written in a faux Ionic dialect deliberately imitating the dialect and style of Herodotus 139 140 Lucian s most famous work is the novel A True Story which some authors have described as the earliest surviving work of science fiction 141 142 His dialogue The Lover of Lies contains several of the earliest known ghost stories 143 as well as the earliest known version of The Sorcerer s Apprentice 144 His letter The Passing of Peregrinus a ruthless satire against Christians contains one of the earliest pagan appraisals of early Christianity 145 The Aethiopica by Heliodorus of Emesa was probably written during the third century AD 146 It tells the story of a young Ethiopian princess named Chariclea who is estranged from her family and goes on many misadventures across the known world 147 Of all the ancient Greek novels the one that attained the greatest level of popularity was the Alexander Romance a fictionalized account of the exploits of Alexander the Great written in the third century AD Eighty versions of it have survived in twenty four different languages attesting that during the Middle Ages the novel was nearly as popular as the Bible 148 650 654 Versions of the Alexander Romance were so commonplace in the fourteenth century that Geoffrey Chaucer wrote that every wight that hath discrecioun Hath herd somwhat or al of Alexander s fortune 148 653 654 Legacy Edit Hero Mourns the Dead Leander by Gillis Backereel 1640s Ancient Greek literature has had an enormous impact on western literature as a whole 149 Ancient Roman authors adopted various styles and motifs from ancient Greek literature These ideas were later in turn adopted by other western European writers and literary critics 149 Ancient Greek literature especially influenced later Greek literature For instance the Greek novels influenced the later work Hero and Leander written by Musaeus Grammaticus 150 Ancient Roman writers were acutely aware of the ancient Greek literary legacy and many deliberately emulated the style and formula of Greek classics in their own works The Roman poet Vergil for instance modeled his epic poem the Aeneid on the Iliad and the Odyssey 151 During the Middle Ages ancient Greek literature was largely forgotten in Western Europe The medieval writer Roger Bacon wrote that there are not four men in Latin Christendom who are acquainted with the Greek Hebrew and Arabic grammars 152 It was not until the Renaissance that Greek writings were rediscovered by western European scholars 153 During the Renaissance Greek began to be taught in western European colleges and universities for the first time which resulted in western European scholars rediscovering the literature of ancient Greece 154 The Textus Receptus the first New Testament printed in the original Greek was published in 1516 by the Dutch humanist scholar Desiderius Erasmus 155 Erasmus also published Latin translations of classical Greek texts including a Latin translation of Hesiod s Works and Days 156 Page from an Arabic translation of Aristotle s Poetics by Abu Bishr Matta The influence of classical Greek literature on modern literature is also evident Numerous figures from classical literature and mythology appear throughout The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri 157 Plutarch s Lives were a major influence on William Shakespeare and served as the main source behind his tragedies Julius Caesar Antony and Cleopatra and Coriolanus 158 883 884 Shakespeare s comedies A Comedy of Errors and The Twelfth Night drew heavily on themes from Graeco Roman New Comedy 158 881 882 Meanwhile Shakespeare s tragedy Timon of Athens was inspired by a story written by Lucian 159 and his comedy Pericles Prince of Tyre was based on an adaptation of the ancient Greek novel Apollonius of Tyre found in John Gower s Confessio Amantis 160 John Milton s epic poem Paradise Lost is written using a similar style to the two Homeric epics 161 It also makes frequent allusions to figures from classical literature and mythology using them as symbols to convey a Christian message 162 Lucian s A True Story was part of the inspiration for Jonathan Swift s novel Gulliver s Travels 158 545 Bulfinch s Mythology a book on Greek mythology published in 1867 and aimed at a popular audience was described by Carl J Richard as one of the most popular books ever published in the United States 163 George Bernard Shaw s play Pygmalion is a modern rationalized retelling of the ancient Greek legend of Pygmalion 158 794 James Joyce s novel Ulysses heralded by critics as one of the greatest works of modern literature 164 165 is a retelling of Homer s Odyssey set in modern day Dublin 166 167 The mid twentieth century British author Mary Renault wrote a number of critically acclaimed novels inspired by ancient Greek literature and mythology including The Last of the Wine and The King Must Die 168 Even in works that do not consciously draw on Graeco Roman literature authors often employ concepts and themes originating in ancient Greece The ideas expressed in Aristotle s Poetics in particular have influenced generations of Western writers and literary critics 169 A Latin translation of an Arabic version of the Poetics by Averroes was available during the Middle Ages 170 Common Greek literary terms still used today include catharsis 171 ethos 172 anagnorisis 173 hamartia 174 hubris 175 mimesis 176 mythos 177 nemesis 178 and peripeteia 179 Notes Edit Although Sophocles won second prize with the group of plays that included Oedipus Rex its date of production is uncertain The prominence of the Theban plague at the play s opening suggests to many scholars a reference to the plague that devastated Athens in 430 BC and hence a production date shortly thereafter See for example Knox Bernard 1956 The Date of the Oedipus Tyrannus of Sophocles American Journal of Philology 77 2 133 147 doi 10 2307 292475 JSTOR 292475 Simplicius Comments on Aristotle s Physics 24 13 Ἀna3imandros legei d aὐtὴn mhte ὕdwr mhte ἄllo ti tῶn kaloymenwn eἶnai stoixeiwn ἀll ἑteran tinὰ fysin ἄpeiron ἐ3 ἧs ἅpantas gines8ai toὺs oὐranoὺs kaὶ toὺs ἐn aὐtoῖs kosmoys ἐ3 ὧn dὲ ἡ genesis ἐsti toῖs oὖsi kaὶ tὴn f8orὰn eἰs taῦta gines8ai katὰ tὸ xrewn didonai gὰr aὐtὰ dikhn kaὶ tisin ἀllhlois tῆs ἀdikias katὰ tὴn toῦ xronoy ta3in poihtikwterois oὕtws ὀnomasin aὐtὰ legwn dῆlon dὲ ὅti tὴn eἰs ἄllhla metabolὴn tῶn tettarwn stoixeiwn oὗtos 8easamenos oὐk ἠ3iwsen ἕn ti toytwn ὑpokeimenon poiῆsai ἀlla ti ἄllo parὰ taῦta oὗtos dὲ oὐk ἀlloioymenoy toῦ stoixeioy tὴn genesin poieῖ ἀll ἀpokrinomenwn tῶn ἐnantiwn diὰ tῆs aἰdioy kinhsews In ancient Greek quotes usually blend with the surrounding text Consequently deciding where they start and where they end is often difficult However it is generally accepted that this quote is not Simplicius own interpretation but Anaximander s writing in somewhat poetic terms as it is mentioned by Simplicius References Edit Lucian Greek writer Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2021 08 03 Lucian ancient Greek rhetorician pamphleteer and satirist a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Chadwick John 1967 The Decipherment of Linear B Second ed Cambridge England Cambridge University Press p 101 ISBN 978 1 107 69176 6 The glimpse we have suddenly been given of the account books of a long forgotten people a b c Ventris Michael Chadwick John 1956 Documents in Mycenaean Greek Cambridge England Cambridge University Press p xxix ISBN 978 1 107 50341 0 Heath Malcolm ed 1997 Aristotle sPoetics Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 044636 2 Grendler Paul F 2004 The Universities of the Italian Renaissance Johns Hopkins University Press p 239 ISBN 0 8018 8055 6 Frow John 2007 Genre Reprint ed Routledge pp 57 59 ISBN 978 0 415 28063 1 a b c Engels Johannes 2008 Chapter Ten Universal History and Cultural Geography of the Oikoumene in Herodotus Historiai and Strabo s Geographika In Pigon Jakub ed The Children of Herodotus Greek and Roman Historiography and Related Genres Newcastle upon Tyne England Cambridge Scholar Publishing p 146 ISBN 978 1 4438 0015 0 a b c d e f g h i Jenkyns Richard 2016 Classical Literature An Epic Journey from Homer to Virgil and Beyond New York City New York Basic Books A Member of the Perseus Books Group ISBN 978 0 465 09797 5 Lattimore Richmond 2011 The Iliad of Homer The University of Chicago Press Ltd London The University of Chicago Press Book 1 Line number 155 p 79 ISBN 978 0 226 47049 8 Guy Hedreen The Cult of Achilles in the Euxine Hesperia 60 3 July 1991 pp 313 330 Stanford William Bedell 1959 1947 Introduction Grammatical Introduction Homer Odyssey I XII Vol 1 2nd ed Macmillan Education pp ix lxxxvi ISBN 1 85399 502 9 Harris William The Greek Dactylic Hexameter A Practical Reading Approach Middlebury College Retrieved 12 March 2017 a b M Hadas 2013 08 13 A History of Greek Literature p 16 published by Columbia University Press 13 Aug 2013 327 pages ISBN 978 0 231 51486 6 Retrieved 2015 09 08 J P Barron and P E Easterling Hesiod in The Cambridge History of Classical Literature Greek Literature P Easterling and B Knox eds Cambridge University Press 1985 page 92 West M L Theogony Oxford University Press 1966 page 40 Jasper Griffin Greek Myth and Hesiod J Boardman J Griffin and O Murray eds The Oxford History of the Classical World Oxford University Press 1986 page 88 Cartwright Mark Greek Religion World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 17 January 2017 These traditions were first recounted only orally as there was no sacred text in Greek religion and later attempts were made to put in writing this oral tradition notably by Hesiod in his Theogony and more indirectly in the works of Homer J P Barron and P E Easterling Elegy and Iambus in The Cambridge History of Classical Literature Greek Literature P Easterling and B Knox ed s Cambridge University Press 1985 page 117 David A Campbell Greek Lyric Poetry Bristol Classical Press 1982 page 136 J M Edmonds Lyra Graeca p 3 Wildside Press LLC 2007 ISBN 1 4344 9130 7 Retrieved 2015 05 06 Hallett Judith P 1979 Sappho and her Social Context Sense and Sensuality Signs 4 3 Rayor Diane Lardinois Andre 2014 Sappho A New Edition of the Complete Works Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 02359 8 Pausanias 3 15 2 Ἀlkmᾶni poihsanti ἄismata oὐdὲn ἐs ἡdonὴn aὐtῶn ἐlymhnato tῶn Lakῶnwn ἡ glῶssa ἥkista parexomenh tὸ eὔfwnon M Davies s Monody Choral Lyric and the Tyranny of the Hand Book in Classical Quarterly NS 38 1988 pp 52 64 a b c Garland Robert 2008 Ancient Greece Everyday Life in the Birthplace of Western Civilization New York City New York Sterling p 284 ISBN 978 1 4549 0908 8 Buckham Philip Wentworth Theatre of the Greeks Cambridge J Smith 1827 Garland Robert 2008 Ancient Greece Everyday Life in the Birthplace of Western Civilization New York City New York Sterling p 290 ISBN 978 1 4549 0908 8 Garland Robert 2008 Ancient Greece Everyday Life in the Birthplace of Western Civilization New York City New York Sterling pp 284 296 ISBN 978 1 4549 0908 8 Griffith Mark The Authenticity of the Prometheus Bound Cambridge 1977 Walton J Michael Euripides Our Contemporary University of California Press 2009 ISBN 0 520 26179 8 Burke Kenneth 1952 Form and Persecution in the Oresteia The Sewanee Review 60 3 July September 377 396 JSTOR 27538150 West M L Studies in Aeschylus Stuttgart 1990 Suda ed Finkel et al s v Sofoklῆs Fagles Robert 1986 The Three Theban Plays New York Penguin p 35 Pomeroy Sarah Burstein Stanley Donlan Walter Roberts Jennifer 1999 Ancient Greece A Political Social and Cultural History New York Oxford University Press p 322 ISBN 0 19 509742 4 B Knox Euripides in The Cambridge History of Classical Literature I Greek Literature P Easterling and B Knox ed s Cambridge University Press 1985 page 316 Walton 1997 viii xix B Knox Euripides in The Cambridge History of Classical Literature I Greek Literature P Easterling and B Knox ed s Cambridge University Press 1985 page 339 Banham Martin ed 1998 The Cambridge Guide to Theatre Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 43437 8 Brockett Oscar G and Franklin J Hildy 2003 History of the Theatre Ninth edition International edition Boston Allyn and Bacon ISBN 0 205 41050 2 Aristophanes Clouds K J Dover ed Oxford University Press 1970 Intro page X David Barrett s edition Aristophanes the Frogs and Other Plays Penguin Classics 1964 p 13 Roche Paul 2005 Aristophanes The Complete Plays A New Translation by Paul Roche New York New American Library pp x xi ISBN 978 0 451 21409 6 Roche Paul 2005 Aristophanes The Complete Plays A New Translation by Paul Roche New York New American Library pp 537 540 ISBN 978 0 451 21409 6 Garland Robert 2008 Ancient Greece Everyday Life in the Birthplace of Western Civilization New York City New York Sterling p 288 ISBN 978 1 4549 0908 8 Hall Edith Wrigley Amanda 2007 Aristophanes in Performance 421 BC AD 2007 Peace Birds and Frogs ISBN 9781904350613 Retrieved 5 April 2011 Euripides McHugh Heather trans Cyclops Greek Tragedy in New Translations Oxford Univ Press 2001 ISBN 978 0 19 803265 6 Hunt A S 1912 The Oxyrhynchus Papyri Part IX London T James Luce The Greek Historians 2002 p 26 Procopius John Moorhead Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing M Z Vol II Kelly Boyd Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers 1999 962 Xenophon Hellenica 7 5 27 Xenophon Xenophontis opera omnia vol 1 Oxford Clarendon Press 1900 repr 1968 Danzig Gabriel 2003 Apologizing for Socrates Plato and Xenophon on Socrates Behavior in Court Transactions of the American Philological Association Vol 133 No 2 pp 281 321 G S Kirk and J E Raven and M Schofield The Presocratic Philosophers Cambridge University Press 1983 108 109 Curd Patricia A Presocratics Reader Selected Fragments and Testimonia Hackett Publishing 1996 p 12 One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Smith William ed 1870 Pythagoras Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology pp 616 625 Simon Trepanier 2004 Empedocles An Interpretation Routledge Kahn Charles H 1979 The Art and Thought of Heraclitus An Edition of the Fragments with Translation and Commentary Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 21883 7 Berryman Sylvia Democritus Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Stanford University Retrieved 25 March 2017 Kofman Sarah 1998 Socrates Fictions of a Philosopher p 34 ISBN 0 8014 3551 X Cohen M Philosophical Tales Being an Alternative History Revealing the Characters the Plots and the Hidden Scenes that Make Up the True Story of Philosophy John Wiley amp Sons 2008 p 5 ISBN 1 4051 4037 2 Rubel A Vickers M 11 September 2014 Fear and Loathing in Ancient Athens Religion and Politics During the Peloponnesian War Routledge p 147 ISBN 978 1 317 54480 7 Dorion Louis Andre 2011 The Rise and Fall of the Socratic Problem pp 1 23 The Cambridge Companion to Socrates Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CCOL9780521833424 001 hdl 10795 1977 ISBN 978 0 521 83342 4 Retrieved 2015 05 07 Henri Estienne ed Platonis opera quae extant omnia Vol 1 1578 p 17 Lorenz Hendrik 22 April 2009 Ancient Theories of Soul Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 2013 12 10 Plato The Symposium Translation and introduction by Walter Hamilton Penguin Classics 1951 ISBN 978 0 14 044024 9 National Public Radio August 8 2007 Plato s Republic Still Influential Author Says Talk of the Nation Plato The Republic Plato His Philosophy and his life allphilosophers com Baird Forrest E Walter Kaufmann 2008 From Plato to Derrida Upper Saddle River New Jersey Pearson Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 158591 1 Magee Bryan 2010 The Story of Philosophy Dorling Kindersley p 34 Morison William 2006 The Lyceum Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 30 October 2009 Great Philosophers Aristotle 384 322 BCE Great Philosophers Oregon State University Retrieved 23 June 2017 Bury J B 1937 A History of Greece to the Death of Alexander the Great New York Modern Library pp 668 723 Bury J B 1937 A History of Greece to the Death of Alexander the Great New York Modern Library pp 724 821 Entry Moyseion at Liddell amp Scott Phillips Heather A August 2010 The Great Library of Alexandria Library Philosophy and Practice ISSN 1522 0222 Archived from the original on 2012 04 18 Retrieved 2017 05 17 Introduction p 14 to Virgil The Eclogues trans Guy Lee Penguin Classics Article on Bucolic poetry in The Oxford Companion to Classical Literature 1989 a b c d e f g Harder Annette 2012 Callimachus Aetia Oxford England Oxford University Press pp 1 5 ISBN 978 0 19 958101 6 Nisetich Frank 2001 The Poems of Callimachus Oxford England Oxford University Press pp xviii xx ISBN 0 19814760 0 Retrieved 27 July 2017 Blum 1991 p 236 cited in Phillips Heather A August 2010 The Great Library of Alexandria Library Philosophy and Practice ISSN 1522 0222 Archived from the original on 2012 04 18 Retrieved 2017 05 17 Stephens Susan 2011 Ptolemaic Epic in T Papaghelis A Rengakos eds Brill s Companion to Apollonius Rhodius Second Revised ed Brill A W Mair and G R Mair trans Callimachus and Lycophron Aratus Loeb Classical Library New York G P Putnam s Sons 1921 p 363 Konstan David 2010 Menander of Athens Oxford Oxford University Press pp 3 6 ISBN 0 19 980519 9 Baron Christopher A 2013 Timaeus of Tauromenium and Hellenistic Historiography Cambridge University Press Brown Truesdell S 1958 Timaeus of Tauromenium Berkeley University of California Press Marincola John ed A companion to Greek and Roman historiography John Wiley amp Sons 2010 528 531 Bergmann Uwe X Ray Fluorescence Imaging of the Archimedes Palimpsest A Technical Summary PDF Retrieved 2013 09 29 Walsh P G 1968 Lucius Madaurensis Phoenix 22 2 143 157 doi 10 2307 1086837 JSTOR 1086837 Apuleius Madaurensis Lucius trans Lindsay Jack 1960 The Golden Ass Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press p 31 ISBN 0 253 20036 9 Edmund P Cueva Fall 1996 Plutarch s Ariadne in Chariton s Chaereas and Callirhoe American Journal of Philology 117 3 473 484 doi 10 1353 ajp 1996 0045 Cf Thomas Hagg The Oriental Reception of Greek Novels A Survey with Some Preliminary Considerations Symbolae Osloenses 61 1986 99 131 p 106 doi 10 1080 00397678608590800 Thomas Hagg and Bo Utas The Virgin and Her Lover Fragments of an Ancient Greek Novel and a Persian Epic Poem Brill Studies in Middle Eastern Literatures 30 Leiden Brill 2003 p 1 Reardon Bryan P 1989 Collected Ancient Greek Novels Berkeley University of California Press pp 809 810 ISBN 0 520 04306 5 Retrieved 31 May 2017 Metzger Bruce M 1987 The Canon of the New Testament Its Origin Development and Significance PDF pp 295 296 ISBN 0 19 826180 2 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 06 01 Trobisch David 1994 Paul s Letter Collection Tracing the Origins pp 1 27 ISBN 0 8006 2597 8 Thomas Christian Tychsen Quinti Smyrnaei Posthomericorum libri XIV Nunc primum ad librorum manoscriptorum fidem et virorum doctorum coniecturas recensuit restituit et supplevit Thom Christ Tychsen acceserunt observationes Chr Gottl Heynii Strassburg Typhographia Societatis Bipontinae 1807 Armin H Kochly Quinti Smyrnaei Posthomericorum libri XIV Recensuit prolegomenis et adnotatione critica instruxit Arminius Koechly Leipzig Weidmannos 1850 A S Way Introduction 1913 Nikoletta Kanavou 2015 Notes on the Blemyomachia P Berol 5003 P Gen inv 140 P Phoib fr 1a 6a 11c 12c Tyche 30 55 60 Vian Francis Martus chez Nonnos de Panopolis Etude de semantique et de chronologie REG 110 1997 143 60 Reprinted in L Epopee posthomerique Recueil d etudes Ed Domenico Accorinti Alessandria Edizioni dell Orso 2005 Hellenica 17 565 84 Cameron Alan 2015 Wandering Poets and Other Essays on Late Greek Literature and Philosophy Oxford University Press p 81 Agathias Scholasticus Hist 4 23 530 x 580 Fornaro S s v Nonnus in Brill s New Pauly vol 9 ed Canick amp Schneider Leiden 2006 col 812 815 Titus Livius Livy The History of Rome Book 39 chapter 35 www perseus tufts edu Retrieved 2016 11 02 Sacks Kenneth S 1990 Diodorus Siculus and the First Century Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 03600 4 T Hidber Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece p 229 Routledge 31 Oct 2013 832 pages ISBN 1 136 78799 2 editor N Wilson Retrieved 2015 09 07 White Horace 1912 Introduction Appian s Roman History Cambridge Mass The Loeb Classical Library pp vii xii ISBN 0 674 99002 1 FW Walbank November 1984 F W Walbank ed The Cambridge Ancient History Cambridge University Press 6 Sep 1984 ISBN 0 521 23445 X Retrieved 2015 04 01 Plutarch Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy Stadter Philip A 2015 Plutarch and His Roman Readers Oxford University Press p 69 ISBN 978 0 19 871833 8 Retrieved 2015 02 04 Although Plutarch wrote in Greek and with a Greek point of view he was thinking of a Roman as well as a Greek audience Ramsay William 1867 A Gellius in Smith William Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology 2 Boston p 235 Ἀ8hnaios Athenaeus Deipnosofistai Deipnosophistai Sophists at Dinner c 3rd century Ancient Greek Trans Charles Burton Gulick as Athenaeus Vol I p viii Harvard University Press Cambridge 1927 Accessed 13 Aug 2014 Aelian Historical Miscellany Translated by Nigel G Wilson 1997 Loeb Classical Library ISBN 978 0 674 99535 2 Dueck Daniela 2000 Strabo of Amasia A Greek Man of Letters in Augustan Rome London New York Routledge Taylor amp Francis Group p 145 ISBN 0 415 21672 9 Historical and Ethnological Society of Greece Aristea Papanicolaou Christensen The Panathenaic Stadium Its History Over the Centuries 2003 p 162 Pausanias 18 October 2014 Description of Greece Complete First Rate Publishers ISBN 978 1 5028 8547 0 Ptolemy Accomplishments Biography 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Merlan From Platonism to Neoplatonism The Hague Martinus Nijhoff 1954 1968 p 3 Detlef Thiel Die Philosophie des Xenokrates im Kontext der Alten Akademie Munchen 2006 pp 197ff and note 64 Jens Halfwassen Der Aufstieg zum Einen Who was Plotinus Australian Broadcasting Corporation 11 June 2011 New Schaff Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge 3rd ed 1914 Pg 284 Moore Edward Origen of Alexandria entry in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy IEP ISSN 2161 0002 Retrieved 2014 04 27 Schaff Philip 1910 The new Schaff Herzog encyclopedia of religious knowledge embracing biblical historical doctrinal and practical theology and biblical theological and ecclesiastical biography from the earliest times to the present day Funk and Wagnalls Company p 272 Retrieved 2014 07 30 Herzog Johann Jakob Philip Schaff Albert Hauck December 1908 Celsus In Samual Macauley Jackson ed The New Schaff Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge Vol II New York and London Funk and Wagnalls Company p 466 The early dating of P Oxy 3836 holds Achilles Tatius novel must have been written nearer 120 than 150 Albert Henrichs Culture In Pieces Essays on Ancient Texts in Honour of Peter Parsons eds Dirk Obbink Richard Rutherford Oxford University Press 2011 p 309 n 29 ISBN 0 19 929201 9 9780199292011 the use albeit mid and erratic of the Attic dialect suggest a date a little earlier than mid 2nd century in the same century The Greek Novel Oxford Bibliographies Online Research Guide Oxford University Press 2010 p 7 ISBN 0 19 980303 X 9780199803033 a b Longus Xenophon of Ephesus 2009 Henderson Jeffery ed Anthia and Habrocomes translation Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 69 amp 127 ISBN 978 0 674 99633 5 Richard Hunter 1996 Longus Daphnis and Chloe In Gareth L Schmeling ed The Novel in the Ancient World Brill pp 361 86 ISBN 90 04 09630 2 J R Morgan Lucian s True Histories and the Wonders Beyond Thule of Antonius Diogenes The Classical Quarterly 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Retrieved 31 May 2017 Forster E M Hans Georg Gadamer Aristotle Poetics CriticaLink University of Hawaii Retrieved 25 June 2017 Habib M A R 2005 A History of Literary Criticism and Theory From Plato to the Present Wiley Blackwell p 60 ISBN 0 631 23200 1 Catharsis Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 25 June 2017 Ethos Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 25 June 2017 Anagnorisis Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 25 June 2017 Hamartia Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 25 June 2017 Hubris Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 25 June 2017 Mimesis Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 25 June 2017 Plot Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 25 June 2017 Nemesis Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 25 June 2017 Peripeteia Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 25 June 2017 Further reading EditBeye Charles Rowan 1987 Ancient Greek Literature and Society Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 1874 7 Easterling P E Knox B M W eds 1985 The Cambridge History of Classical Literature Volume 1 Greek literature Cambridge Cambridgeshire New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 21042 9 Flaceliere Robert 1964 A Literary History of Greece Translated by Douglas Garman Chicago Aldine Pub Gutzwiller Kathryn 2007 A Guide to Hellenistic Literature Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 23322 0 Hadas Moses 1950 A History of Greek Literature New York NY Columbia University Press Lesky Albin 1966 A History of Greek Literature Translated by James Willis Cornelis de Heer Indianapolis Cambridge Hackett Publishing Company ISBN 0 87220 350 6 Schmidt Michael 2004 The First Poets Lives of the Ancient Greek Poets London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 0 297 64394 0 C A Trypanis 1981 Greek Poetry from Homer to Seferis University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226813165 Whitmarsh Tim 2004 Ancient Greek Literature Cambridge Polity Press ISBN 0 7456 2792 7 External links Edit Works related to Ancient Greek literature at Wikisource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ancient Greek literature amp oldid 1147107337, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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