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Plautus

Titus Maccius Plautus[2] (/ˈplɔːtəs/, PLAW-təs; c. 254 – 184 BC) was a Roman playwright of the Old Latin period. His comedies are the earliest Latin literary works to have survived in their entirety. He wrote Palliata comoedia, the genre devised by Livius Andronicus, the innovator of Latin literature. The word Plautine /ˈplɔːtn/ (PLAW-tyne) refers to both Plautus's own works and works similar to or influenced by his.

Plautus
18th-century portrait of Plautus[1]
Bornc. 254 BC
Sarsina, Roman Republic
Died184 BC (aged 70)
Rome, Roman Republic
NationalityRoman
PeriodAncient Rome
GenreComedy

Biography edit

Not much is known about Titus Maccius Plautus's early life. It is believed that he was born in Sarsina, a small town in Emilia Romagna in northern Italy, around 254 BC.[3] According to Morris Marples, Plautus worked as a stage-carpenter or scene-shifter in his early years.[4] It is from this work, perhaps, that his love of the theater originated. His acting talent was eventually discovered; and he adopted the nomen "Maccius" (from Maccus, a clownish stock character in Atellan Farce) and agnomen "Plautus" ("trampled flat", usually in reference to "flat-footed" but sometimes intending "flat-eared" like the ears of a hound).[5] Tradition holds that he made enough money to go into the nautical business, but that the venture collapsed. He is then said to have worked as a manual laborer and to have studied Greek drama—particularly the New Comedy of Menander—in his leisure. His studies allowed him to produce his plays, which were released between c. 205 and 184 BC. Plautus attained such popularity that his name alone became a hallmark of theatrical success.

Plautus's comedies are mostly adapted from Greek models for a Roman audience, and are often based directly on the works of the Greek playwrights. He reworked the Greek texts to give them a flavour that would appeal to the local Roman audiences. They are the earliest surviving intact works in Latin literature.

Plautus's epitaph read:

postquam est mortem aptus Plautus, Comoedia luget,
scaena deserta, dein risus, ludus iocusque
et numeri innumeri simul omnes conlacrimarunt.

Since Plautus is dead, Comedy mourns,
The stage is deserted; then Laughter, Jest and Wit,
And all Melody's countless numbers wept together.

Surviving plays edit

  • Amphitruo (missing a large segment towards end)
The play is set in Thebes in Greece. While the general, Amphitruo, is away fighting a war, the god Jupiter visits his house and sleeps with his wife Alcumena, disguising himself as her husband. Jupiter's son Mercury, disguised as Amphitruo's slave Sosia, keeps watch outside, and when the real Sosia turns up bringing news of the victory, Mercury teases him and beats him up. When Amphitruo turns up, Alcumena is surprised to see him back so soon. There is a quarrel and Amphitruo accuses her of adultery. He goes off to fetch a witness. Then Jupiter comes back for a second session with Alcumena, and when Amphitruo returns, Mercury, still disguised as Sosia, climbs on the roof and mischievously pelts him with tiles. (There is a gap in the manuscripts here.) Amphitruo, infuriated, is about to burst into the house and kill everybody, when suddenly there is a thunderclap; a nurse comes out and reports that Alcumena has given birth miraculously to two boys (one of them Hercules). Finally Jupiter appears and explains everything to Amphitruo.
Demaenetus, an Athenian gentleman, tells his slave Libanus that he knows his son Argyrippus is in love with a prostitute, Philaenium, but has no money to pay for her. He asks the cunning Libanus to find the money by cheating his wealthy wife Artemona or her steward Saurea. Libanus is at a loss for a plan until his fellow slave, Leonida, by chance meets a stranger who has come to pay a debt to Saurea for some donkeys which had earlier been sold to a certain merchant. Leonida pretends to be Saurea, and he and Libanus gull the stranger into handing the money over to Leonida. The money is given to Argyrippus but with the stipulation that his father is to be allowed to spend the first night with Philaenium. But a rival lover, Diabolus, who wants Philaenium for himself, and arrives too late with his money, out of jealousy asks his parasite (hanger on) to inform Artemona what is going on. She storms to the brothel in a fury and drags her husband away to his great embarrassment, leaving Argyrippus to enjoy Philaenium by himself.
A miserly old man, Euclio, has found a pot (aula) of gold in his house, and keeps checking that no one has stolen it. His wealthy neighbour Megadorus comes to ask for the hand of Euclio's daughter Phaedrium, unaware that she was earlier raped and is heavily pregnant. Soon Megadorus's slave Strobilus arrives with two hired cooks to prepare a wedding feast; he instructs one of the cooks, Congrio, to go to Euclio's house and start work. When Euclio returns he is alarmed, thinking his gold is being stolen, and he chases Congrio out into the street. Euclio decides to hide the pot first in a neighbouring temple, and later in a grove outside the city, but he is spied on each time by a slave of Megadorus's nephew Lyconides.[6] Euclio is horrified to find that his gold has been stolen despite his precautions. At this point Lyconides confesses to Euclio that he raped Phaedrium and wishes to marry her. Later Lyconides discovers that it was his slave who stole the gold, and he insists that it must be returned. (The manuscript breaks off here, but from the ancient summary it seems that Lyconides returned the gold to Euclio, who consented to the marriage and gave him the gold as a dowry.)
(The first few scenes of the play are missing.) The young man Mnesilochus is in love with a courtesan called Bacchis. While he is abroad, his friend Pistoclerus falls in love with Bacchis's twin sister, also called Bacchis. Mnesilochus returns from his two-year stay in Ephesus, where he had been sent by his father Nicobulus to collect some money. Mnesilochus's cunning slave Chrysalus deceives Nicobulus into thinking that part of the money is still in Ephesus; in this way Mnesilochus will be able to keep some of the money to pay for Bacchis's services. But when Mnesilochus hears that Pistoclerus has a girlfriend called Bacchis, in his anger he gives all the money to his father, keeping none back. Too late, he learns from Pistoclerus that there are two Bacchises. He begs Chrysalus to play another trick on his father to get the money he needs. Chrysalus tells Nicobulus that Mnesilochus has been making love to the wife of a soldier called Cleomachus who is threatening to kill Mnesilochus. To protect his son, Nicobulus willingly promises to pay 200 gold pieces. Later, in yet another deception, Chrysalus persuades Nicobulus to pay another 200 gold pieces to prevent his son committing perjury. But shortly afterwards when Nicobulus meets the soldier he learns that Bacchis is only a courtesan who owed the soldier money. Furious, Nicobulus and Pistoclerus's father Philoxenus go to the Bacchises' house to confront their sons; the two sisters come out and charm them and persuade them to come in and enjoy the party.
The play is set in Aetolia in western Greece. An old man, Hegio, has been buying up prisoners-of-war from Elis in the hope of exchanging one of them for his own son, who has himself been captured in Elis. Among Hegio's captives are a young man, Philocrates, and his loyal slave Tyndarus, who have swapped identities so that Philocrates can go back to his family in Elis. The plan works, and Philocrates goes home. Meanwhile another Elian captive, Aristophontes, recognises Tyndarus and inadvertently informs Hegio what has happened. Tyndarus is sent to hard labour in a stone quarry. Later a parasite/hanger-on Ergasilus excitedly brings news that Hegio's son has arrived at the harbour. Philocrates arrives, together with Hegio's son, Philopolemus, bringing a run-away slave called Stalagmus. When Stalagmus is interrogated he reveals that Tyndarus is none other than Hegio's long-lost son whom Stalagmus had kidnapped and sold years before. Tyndarus is rescued from his punishment and reunited with his father.
A father and son, Lysidamus and Euthynicus, are both in love with the beautiful Casina, a 16-year-old girl who was adopted into their family as a baby. The father sends his son abroad on a trip and plans for Casina to marry his farm-manager Olympio, so that he can use her as a mistress whenever he likes without his wife Cleostrata knowing. When Cleostrata discovers his intention, she plans for Casina to marry Euthynicus's servant Chalinus, to keep her safe until Euthynicus returns. When, after lots are drawn, her plan fails, she dresses up Chalinus as Casina and sends him into the bedroom of the neighbour's house where Lysidamus is planning to spend the night with Casina. The husband is exposed, and Casina is kept safe for Euthynicus's return.
A young courtesan, Selenium, is in love with her first and only lover, a wealthy young man called Alcesimarchus, who has promised to marry her. But she is distressed to hear that Alcesimarchus is now engaged to marry another girl. Selenium believes she is the daughter of the courtesan Melaenis, but in fact her birth mother is Phanostrata, the mother of Alcesimarchus's fiancée. By chance Melaenis overhears Phanostrata's slave, Lampadio, who had been ordered to expose Selenium as a baby, telling his mistress that he had found the old woman who had picked her up, and that he learnt that she had given the baby to be adopted by a courtesan called Melaenis. Melaenis immediately hurries off to fetch the recognition tokens which she has been keeping in a small casket (cistella). The casket is accidentally dropped in the street by the maid; it is found by Lampadio and shown to Phanostrata, who recognises the tokens. Alcesimarchus is now free to marry his beloved Selenium and all ends well.
Phaedromus is a young man in Epidaurus in Greece, who is in love with a girl Planesium owned by a pimp Cappadox. Lacking the money to purchase her, Phaedromus had sent Curculio, a "parasite" (hanger-on), to Caria to borrow money from a certain friend. When he returns, Curculio tells Phaedromus that the friend had no money, but that he, Curculio, had met a soldier called Therapontigonus, who had told him that he intended to buy Planesium for himself. Curculio had stolen the soldier's signet ring and hurried back to Epidaurus. Wearing a disguise and carrying his forged letter, he tricks the banker Lyso into paying the money to Cappadox, and so is able to purchase Planesium for Phaedromus. Planesium, however, recognises the ring as one that had once belonged to her father, and when the soldier arrives in Epidaurus he in turn recognises a ring which he had once given to her. Phaedromus is able to marry Planesium, and, because Planesium proves to be free-born, Cappadox is obliged to return the money that was paid for her.
The slave Epidicus's young master Stratippocles returns from the war in Thebes, bringing a captive girl he has fallen in love with. He orders Epidicus to find 40 minae to pay for her. This alarms Epidicus, since earlier Stratippocles had made him find the money to buy a different girl, and Epidicus had done this by fooling Stratippocles' father Periphanes into believing that the girl was his daughter. Epidicus has an idea. He convinces Periphanes that Stratippocles is still in love with his music girl and has borrowed money to buy her. To prevent this, Epidicus suggests that Periphanes should buy the girl himself, and sell her to a certain army officer for a profit. Periphanes pays, but Epidicus brings him a different music-girl hired for the day and hands the money to Stratippocles. When the officer arrives he tells Periphanes it is not the same girl he wanted to buy. Now Philippa, a woman that Periphanes had raped years before, arrives, looking for her daughter who has been captured in the war. She and Periphanes recognise each other, but when he brings out the girl who Epidicus told him was their daughter, Philippa says it is not her. Epidicus is now in big trouble since he has fooled Periphanes twice. But by a lucky chance, when the captive arrives, Epidicus recognises her: she is Philippa's daughter. Periphanes is so delighted to have found his missing daughter that he forgives Epidicus and gives him his freedom.
The play is set in Epidamnus[7] in western Greece. The play opens when Peniculus, a "parasite", arrives at the house of Menaechmus hoping to be given dinner. Menaechmus comes out, quarrelling with his shrewish wife. He tells Peniculus that he is going to give a cloak (actually his wife's) to his girlfriend the courtesan Erotium, who lives next door. They persuade Erotium to invite them to dinner, and while waiting they go to the forum for drink. Meanwhile Menaechmus's twin brother, also called Menaechmus, arrives from Syracuse with his slave Messenio, looking for his long-lost twin. Erotium greets him warmly, invites him in for dinner and afterwards gives him the cloak requesting it to be altered. A series of misunderstandings follows, during which the first Menaechmus gets tied up by his father-in-law and a doctor who think he has gone mad; he is rescued by Messenio. The two brothers finally meet. The first Menaechmus decides to auction off all his goods (including his wife) and return to Syracuse with his brother. Messenio claims his freedom for rescuing Menaechmus I.
Charinus, son of the Athenian merchant Demipho, met a beautiful girl called Pasicompsa in Rhodes and has brought her back to Athens. He intends to pretend that he has bought her as a maid for his mother. But his father catches sight of Pasicompsa at the port, and wants her for himself. He tells his son that Pasicompsa is too beautiful to be a maid, and insists she must be sold. He arranges for his friend Lysimachus to buy her and take her to his (Lysimachus's) house. But Lysimachus's wife returns unexpectedly from the country and when a cook turns up to prepare a feast there is a row. Lysimachus's son Eutychus, who is a friend of Charinus, learns from a maid that Pasicompsa is inside the house. He fetches Charinus, who was about to go abroad in despair, and brings him to rescue Pasicompsa. Afterwards Eutychus meets Lysimachus and Demipho and chastises Demipho for his disgraceful behaviour.
The play is set in Ephesus. A boastful soldier, Pyrgopolynices, has abducted a courtesan, Philocomasium, from Athens. A resourceful slave, Palaestrio, has separately been captured and is now working in the same house. Palaestrio's former master, the young Athenian Pleusicles, is in love with Philocomasium and has come to Ephesus to rescue her; he is lodging next door with a jovial old bachelor called Periplectomenus. Palaestrio has made a hole in the wall between the houses so that Philocomasium can visit Pleusicles. Unfortunately the lovers are spotted by Sceledrus, one of the soldier's servants. Palaestrio comes up with a plan to pretend that the girl next door is Philocomasium's twin sister, and he and Periplectomenus have fun tricking not very bright Sceledrus while Philocomasium pops out first from one door then the other. Palaestrio now thinks up another plan. He gets a resourceful local courtesan Acroteleutium and her maid Milphidippa to pretend that Acroteleutium is the wealthy owner of the house next door, and that she is madly in love with the soldier. The plan works, and Pyrgopolynices orders Philocomasium to depart to make room for his new bride. But when he goes next door to claim his bride he is thoroughly beaten up by Periplectomenus's servants.
A young man, Philolaches, is in love with a courtesan Philematium, and in his father's absence has borrowed money to buy her. Suddenly, while he and his friend Callidamates are partying, his slave Tranio brings news of the father's return. Tranio ushers everyone inside the house and when the father, Theopropides, arrives, deceives him into thinking that the house is haunted by a ghost and cannot be entered. Next Tranio tricks the neighbour, Simo, into letting Theopropides inspect his house, which Theopropides has been told is for sale. While Tranio is off-stage, Theopropides meets two of Callidamates's slaves and realises that he has been tricked by Tranio. He is determined to punish him. But Callidamates appears and begs Theopropides to forgive both Philolaches and Tranio.
The cunning slave Toxilus, who is looking after his master's house while he is away, is in love with Lemniselenis, a courtesan owned by the pimp Dordalus, who lives next door. He persuades his friend Sagaristio, another cunning slave, to lend him the money needed to buy her, promising to get the money back from Dordalus by a trick. Meanwhile he persuades another friend, the parasite Saturio, to lend his daughter for the trick. Sagaristio dresses up as a Persian, and sells the girl to Dordalus for a large sum pretending she is an Arabian captive. Immediately afterwards Saturio comes to reclaim his daughter from Dordalus on the grounds that she is an Athenian citizen and drags him off to court. Since no guarantee was given at the time of the sale, the money does not have to be returned, and Toxilus and Sagaristio celebrate their victory.
The play is set in Calydon in central Greece. A young man, Agorastocles, is in love with a slave-courtesan Adelphasium owned by a slave-dealer Lycus. He and his slave Milphio spot Adelphasium and her sister in the street and each try to win her over, but she rejects their overtures. Milphio suggests a plan to send Agorastocles' estate-manager Collybiscus to Lycus's house pretending to be a rich customer. Agorastocles brings some witnesses to observe Collybiscus taking a lot of money into the house. They trick Lycus into denying that any slave with money has come to the house, and Agorastocles threatens to take him to court. Lycus flees. Now a Carthaginian traveller comes to the town, speaking in Punic, looking for his two lost daughters, who had been captured in childhood by pirates. Hanno recognises Agorastocles from a monkey-bite scar as the son of his late cousin. He also discovers that Adelphasium and her sister are his daughters. There is a joyful reunion and Agorastocles declares that he will go back to Carthage with Hanno and the girls.
The young man Calidorus is distressed because his beloved, the slave-courtesan Phoenicium, has been sold to a Macedonian army officer. He is unable to find the 20 minae needed to buy her. The cunning slave Pseudolus promises to help. In the next scene, Phoenicium's owner, the slave-dealer Ballio, brings all his slaves and courtesans out into the street and berates them angrily, ordering them to prepare a feast for his birthday. Later, Pseudolus meets Calidorus's father Simo and bets him 20 minae that Phoenicium will be free by the end of the day. At this point Harpax, a servant of the officer, arrives bringing the balance of the money to be paid for Phoenicium. Pseudolus pretends to be Ballio's steward, and Harpax hands him a letter from the officer to Ballio. Now Pseudolus dresses up another cunning slave, Simio, as Harpax and sends him to meet Ballio. The plan works and Phoenicium is released. When the real Harpax returns, Simo and Ballio think that this just is one of Pseudolus's tricks and tease the boy lewdly. Too late, they realise that he is genuine. Ballio has to pay Simo the 20 minae he has bet that Pseudolus will not get the better of them, and Simo has to pay Pseudolus 20 minae, although Pseudolus, who by this time is very drunk, generously offers to return Simo half the money if he will attend a party with him.
Two girls, Palaestra and Ampelisca, escape from the sea after a shipwreck off the coast of north Africa and seek refuge in a nearby temple of Venus. The young slave Trachalio, who is in love with Ampelisca, discovers them there. Now the slave-dealer Labrax, accompanied by his business-partner Charmides, who have also been shipwrecked, arrive. When he learns that the girls are in the temple, Labrax goes in to seize them. The girls are rescued by Trachalio, with the assistance of Daemones, who lives next door to the temple. Trachalio fetches his young master, Plesidippus, who is in love with Palaestra and has already paid Labrax a deposit to buy her. Plesidippus takes Labrax to court to sue him for fraud. In the second half of the play, Daemones' slave Gripus appears, dragging a basket which he has rescued from the sea. Trachalio finds him and, suspecting that the case contains Labrax's money and the tokens which will enable Palaestra to prove her identity, prevents him from stealing it by holding on to the rope by which Gripus is dragging the basket. Daemones is delighted to discover from the tokens that Palaestra is his own long-lost daughter. He forces Labrax to give Gripus the reward he had promised. Daemones uses the money to buy freedom for Gripus and Ampelisca, and invites everyone to dinner.
Two sisters, Philumena and Pamphila, are complaining that their husbands have been away for three years and their father is pressuring them to remarry. The father Antipho arrives and first asks their advice about his getting a new wife, then broaches the subject of their remarrying; but the sisters firmly refuse. When he has gone, Philumena sends for the parasite Gelasimus; she wants to send him to see if there is news of her husband's ship. Gelasimus arrives, but shortly afterwards a slave boy Pinacium also comes bringing news that the ship has arrived. Gelasimus tries to angle for a dinner invitation but is rebuffed. Philumena's husband Epignomus soon arrives with his slave Stichus: Stichus asks for a day's holiday, which is granted together with some wine to celebrate it. For the third time Gelasimus tries his luck for a dinner invitation, but is rebuffed. Now Pamphila's husband Pamphilippus arrives talking to Antipho, who hints that he would like to be given a music girl; the request is granted. Again Gelasimus angles for an invitation and is rebuffed. In the final part of the play Stichus and his friend Sangarinus celebrate Stichus's safe return with some food and drink and dancing, at which they are joined by their shared girlfriend Stephanium.
An Athenian gentleman, Megaronides, reproaches his friend Callicles for having purchased the house of his neighbour Charmides, who is away in Syria, for a cheap price. Callicles explains that he did this honourably since he wanted to protect the house and the treasure buried in it from the spendthrift habits of Charmides' son Lesbonicus. Meanwhile Lesbonicus's friend Lysiteles tells his father Philto that in order to help Lesbonicus he wishes to marry Charmides's daughter without a dowry. Philto goes to Lesbonicus to propose the match, but the plan is thwarted when Lesbonicus refuses to give away his sister without a dowry, as it would dishonour her. Callicles, when he learns this, consults his friend Megaronides, who advises him to use Charmides' buried treasure as a dowry. When Callicles says he does not want to tell Lesbonicus about the treasure in case he misuses it, Megaronides suggests they hire an imposter for three coins (Latin trinummus), dress him up and make him pretend that he has brought the money from Charmides in Syria. Charmides now arrives back and has an amusing conversation with the imposter. At first Charmides reproaches Callicles for buying the house but when Callicles explains everything, Charmides is delighted. Lysiteles is allowed to marry Charmides' daughter, and Lesbonicus is betrothed to Callicles' daughter.
A courtesan, Phronesium, has three lovers: Diniarchus, a young man from the city; Strabax, a young farmer; and Stratophanes, an army officer from the east. Diniarchus, returning from abroad, visits Phronesium but is not allowed to enter. It appears that Phronesium has found a baby and she is going to pretend that the baby is Stratophanes' child. Next the soldier Stratophanes arrives but the gifts he brings are not enough and he is refused admission. Diniarchus's cook Cyamus now arrives bringing gifts sent by his master, and the jealous Stratophanes quarrels with him. The farmer Strabax now arrives with money and is admitted. His slave Truculentus, who is following him to prevent him wasting his father's money, himself falls prey to the allurements of Phronesium's maid Astaphium. Now Diniarchus comes back, but since Phronesium is busy with Strabax, he is again refused admission, despite all the presents he had sent. At this moment an old gentleman called Callicles arrives, looking for the baby which his daughter had given birth to after being raped. Two slave-girls, threatened with punishment, inform him that the baby was given to Phronesium and that the father is Diniarchus. Diniarchus begs Callicles for forgiveness, and he offers to make amends by marrying the daughter. However, when he asks Phronesium for the baby, she asks to keep it for a while longer to continue her deception of Stratophanes. When Stratophanes comes he finds Strabax emerging from the house, and quarrels jealously with him, but, despite the fact that Stratophanes pays Phronesium a further huge sum of money, Strabax wins the day.

Fragmentary plays edit

Only the titles and various fragments of these plays have survived.

  • Acharistio
  • Addictus ("The Devoted One")
  • Ambroicus, or Agroicus ("The Rustic Man")
  • Anus ("The Old Woman")
  • Artamo ("The Mainsail")
  • Astraba
  • Baccharia
  • Bis Compressa ("The Twice-Raped Woman")
  • Boeotia ("Boeotia")
  • Caecus ("The Blind Man"), or Praedones ("Plunderers")
  • Calceolus ("The Little Shoe")
  • Carbonaria ("The Charcoal-Burner")
  • Clitellaria, or Astraba
  • Colax ("The Flatterer")
  • Commorientes ("Those Dying Together")
  • Condalium ("The Slave Ring")
  • Cornicularia
  • Dyscolus ("The Grouch")
  • Foeneratrix ("The Lady Moneylender")
  • Fretum ("The Strait", or "Channel")
  • Frivolaria ("Trifles")
  • Fugitivi ("The Runaways"—possibly by Turpilius [la])
  • Gastrion, or Gastron
  • Hortulus ("Little Garden")
  • Kakistus (possibly by Accius)
  • Lenones Gemini ("The Twin Pimps")
  • Nervolaria
  • Parasitus Medicus ("The Parasite Physician")
  • Parasitus Piger ("The Lazy Parasite"), or Lipargus
  • Phagon ("The Glutton")
  • Plociona
  • Saturio
  • Scytha Liturgus ("The Scythian Public Servant")
  • Sitellitergus ("The Toilet Cleaner")
  • Trigemini ("Triplets")
  • Vidularia ("The Travelling Case")

Manuscript tradition edit

The oldest manuscript of Plautus is a palimpsest, known as the Ambrosian palimpsest (A), since it is kept in the Ambrosian Library in Milan. It is thought to date to the 5th century,[8] but it was not discovered until 1815. This manuscript is only partly legible, since the parchment was cleaned and a copy of the books of Kings and Chronicles was written on top. Parts of the text are completely missing (for example, nothing survives of Amphitruo, Asinaria, Aulularia, or of the first 475 lines of Bacchides), and other parts are barely legible.[9] The most legible parts of A are found in the plays Persa, Poenulus, Pseudolus, and Stichus.[10] Despite its fragmentary state, this palimpsest has proved very valuable in correcting the errors of P.

A second manuscript tradition is represented by manuscripts of the Palatine family, so called because two of its most important manuscripts were once kept in the library of the Elector Palatine in Heidelberg in Germany.[11] The archetype of this family is now lost but it can be reconstructed from various later manuscripts, some of them containing either only the first half or the second half of the plays. The most important manuscript of this group is "B", of the 10th or early 11th century, now kept in the Vatican library. Manuscripts C and D also belong to this family. The lost original P, from which all these manuscripts were copied, is ascribed by Lindsay to the 8th or 9th century.[12] Because of certain errors which both A and the P family have in common, it is thought that they are not completely independent, but are both copies of a single manuscript dating to perhaps the 4th or 5th century AD.[8]

At some stage the plays in the P family were divided into two halves, one containing Amphitruo to Epidicus (omitting Bacchides), and the other containing Bacchides and Menaechmi to Truculentus. The first eight plays are found in B, and the first three and part of Captivi are found in D. The last twelve plays are found in B, C, and D. In addition there was once a fragmentary manuscript called the Codex Turnebi (T), which was used by a French scholar called Turnèbe in the 16th century. Although this manuscript is now lost, some readings from it were preserved by Turnèbe himself, and others were recorded in the margins of a 16th-century edition discovered by Lindsay in the Bodleian Library in Oxford.[13]

There are certain indications (for example, small gaps in the text where there appears to have been in a hole or lacuna in the parchment) that the original P manuscript was copied from an earlier manuscript with 19, 20 or 21 lines to the page, in other words it was a book very similar to A, which has 19 lines to the page, and probably it was about the same age. However, the order of plays in A is slightly different from that in the P family of manuscripts. The headings at the top of the scenes in A, containing character names, which were written in red ink, have been totally washed away, and those in the P family seem to be based on guesswork and so were also probably missing in an ancestor of the lost P codex. For this reason the names of some of the minor characters are not known.[13]

Historical context edit

The historical context within which Plautus wrote can be seen, to some extent, in his comments on contemporary events and persons. Plautus was a popular comedic playwright while Roman theatre was still in its infancy and still largely undeveloped. At the same time, the Roman Republic was expanding in power and influence.[citation needed]

Roman society deities edit

Plautus was sometimes accused of teaching the public indifference and mockery of the gods. Any character in his plays could be compared to a god. Whether to honour a character or to mock him, these references were demeaning to the gods. These references to the gods include a character comparing a mortal woman to a god, or saying he would rather be loved by a woman than by the gods. Pyrgopolynices from Miles Gloriosus (vs. 1265), in bragging about his long life, says he was born one day later than Jupiter. In Curculio, Phaedrome says "I am a God" when he first meets with Planesium. In Pseudolus, Jupiter is compared to Ballio the pimp. It is not uncommon, too, for a character to scorn the gods, as seen in Poenulus and Rudens.

However, when a character scorns a god, it is usually a character of low standing, such as a pimp. Plautus perhaps does this to demoralize the characters.[original research?] Soldiers often bring ridicule among the gods. Young men, meant to represent the upper social class, often belittle the gods in their remarks. Parasites, pimps, and courtesans often praise the gods with scant ceremony.

Tolliver argues that drama both reflects and foreshadows social change. It is likely that there was already much skepticism about the gods in Plautus' era. Plautus did not make up or encourage irreverence to the gods, but reflected ideas of his time. The state controlled stage productions, and Plautus' plays would have been banned, had they been too risqué.[14]

Second Punic War and Macedonian War edit

The Second Punic War occurred from 218 to 201 BC; its central event was Hannibal's invasion of Italy. M. Leigh has devoted an extensive chapter about Plautus and Hannibal in his 2004 book, Comedy and the Rise of Rome. He says that "the plays themselves contain occasional references to the fact that the state is at arms...".[15] One good example is a piece of verse from the Miles Gloriosus, the composition date of which is not clear but which is often placed in the last decade of the 3rd century BC.[16] A. F. West believes that this is inserted commentary on the Second Punic War. In his article "On a Patriotic Passage in the Miles Gloriosus of Plautus", he states that the war "engrossed the Romans more than all other public interests combined".[17] The passage seems intended to rile up the audience, beginning with hostis tibi adesse, or "the foe is near at hand".[18]

At the time, the general Scipio Africanus wanted to confront Hannibal, a plan "strongly favored by the plebs".[19] Plautus apparently pushes for the plan to be approved by the senate, working his audience up with the thought of an enemy in close proximity and a call to outmaneuver him. Therefore, it is reasonable to say that Plautus, according to P. B. Harvey, was "willing to insert [into his plays] highly specific allusions comprehensible to the audience".[20] M. Leigh writes in his chapter on Plautus and Hannibal that "the Plautus who emerges from this investigation is one whose comedies persistently touch the rawest nerves in the audience for whom he writes".[21]

Later, coming off the heels of the conflict with Hannibal, Rome was preparing to embark on another military mission, this time in Greece. While they would eventually move on Philip V in the Second Macedonian War, there was considerable debate beforehand about the course Rome should take in this conflict. But starting this war would not be an easy task considering those recent struggles with Carthage—many Romans were too tired of conflict to think of embarking on another campaign. As W. M. Owens writes in his article "Plautus' Stichus and the Political Crisis of 200 B.C.", "There is evidence that antiwar feeling ran deep and persisted even after the war was approved."[22] Owens contends that Plautus was attempting to match the complex mood of the Roman audience riding the victory of the Second Punic War but facing the beginning of a new conflict.[23] For instance, the characters of the dutiful daughters and their father seem obsessed over the idea of officium, the duty one has to do what is right. Their speech is littered with words such as pietas and aequus, and they struggle to make their father fulfill his proper role.[24] The stock parasite in this play, Gelasimus, has a patron-client relationship with this family and offers to do any job in order to make ends meet; Owens puts forward that Plautus is portraying the economic hardship many Roman citizens were experiencing due to the cost of war.[25]

With the repetition of responsibility to the desperation of the lower class, Plautus establishes himself firmly on the side of the average Roman citizen. While he makes no specific reference to the possible war with Greece or the previous war (that might be too dangerous), he does seem to push the message that the government should take care of its own people before attempting any other military actions.

Influences edit

Greek New Comedy edit

Greek New Comedy greatly differs from those plays of Aristophanes. The most notable difference, according to Dana F. Sutton, is that New Comedy, in comparison to Old Comedy, is "devoid of a serious political, social or intellectual content" and "could be performed in any number of social and political settings without risk of giving offense".[26] The risk-taking for which Aristophanes is known is noticeably lacking in the New Comedy plays of Menander. Instead, there is much more of a focus on the home and the family unit—something that the Romans, including Plautus, could easily understand and adopt for themselves later in history.

Father–son relationships edit

One main theme of Greek New Comedy is the father–son relationship. For example, in Menander's Dis Exapaton there is a focus on the betrayal between age groups and friends. The father-son relationship is very strong and the son remains loyal to the father. The relationship is always a focus, even if it's not the focus of every action taken by the main characters. In Plautus, on the other hand, the focus is still on the relationship between father and son, but we see betrayal between the two men that wasn't seen in Menander. There is a focus on the proper conduct between a father and son that, apparently, was so important to Roman society at the time of Plautus.

This becomes the main difference and, also, similarity between Menander and Plautus. They both address "situations that tend to develop in the bosom of the family".[26] Both authors, through their plays, reflect a patriarchal society in which the father-son relationship is essential to proper function and development of the household.[27] It is no longer a political statement, as in Old Comedy, but a statement about household relations and proper behavior between a father and his son. But the attitudes on these relationships seem much different—a reflection of how the worlds of Menander and Plautus differed.

Farce edit

There are differences not just in how the father–son relationship is presented, but also in the way in which Menander and Plautus write their poetry. William S. Anderson discusses the believability of Menander versus the believability of Plautus and, in essence, says that Plautus' plays are much less believable than those plays of Menander because they seem to be such a farce in comparison. He addresses them as a reflection of Menander with some of Plautus' own contributions. Anderson argues there is unevenness in the poetry of Plautus that results in "incredulity and refusal of sympathy of the audience."[28]

Prologues edit

The poetry of Menander and Plautus is best juxtaposed in their prologues. Robert B. Lloyd makes the point that "albeit the two prologues introduce plays whose plots are of essentially different types, they are almost identical in form..."[29] He goes on to address the specific style of Plautus that differs so greatly from Menander. He says that the "verbosity of the Plautine prologues has often been commented upon and generally excused by the necessity of the Roman playwright to win his audience."[29] However, in both Menander and Plautus, word play is essential to their comedy. Plautus might seem more verbose, but where he lacks in physical comedy he makes up for it with words, alliteration and paronomasia (punning).[30] See also "jokes and wordplay" below.

Plautus is well known for his devotion to puns, especially when it comes to the names of his characters. In Miles Gloriosus, for instance, the female concubine's name, Philocomasium, translates to "lover of a good party"—which is quite apt when we learn about the tricks and wild ways of this prostitute.

Character edit

Plautus' characters—many of which seem to crop up in quite a few of his plays—also came from Greek stock, though they too received some Plautine innovations. Indeed, since Plautus was adapting these plays it would be difficult not to have the same kinds of characters—roles such as slaves, concubines, soldiers, and old men. By working with the characters that were already there but injecting his own creativity, as J. C. B. Lowe wrote in his article "Aspects of Plautus' Originality in the Asinaria", "Plautus could substantially modify the characterization, and thus the whole emphasis of a play."[31]

The Clever Slave edit

One of the best examples of this method is the Plautine slave, a form that plays a major role in quite a few of Plautus' works. The "clever slave" in particular is a very strong character; he not only provides exposition and humor, but also often drives the plot in Plautus' plays. C. Stace argues that Plautus took the stock slave character from New Comedy in Greece and altered it for his own purposes. In New Comedy, he writes, "the slave is often not much more than a comedic turn, with the added purpose, perhaps, of exposition".[32] This shows that there was precedent for this slave archetype, and obviously some of its old role continues in Plautus (the expository monologues, for instance). However, because Plautus found humor in slaves tricking their masters or comparing themselves to great heroes, he took the character a step further and created something distinct.[33]

Understanding of Greek by Plautus' audience edit

Of the approximate 270 proper names in the surviving plays of Plautus, about 250 names are Greek.[34] William M. Seaman proposes that these Greek names would have delivered a comic punch to the audience because of its basic understanding of the Greek language.[35] This previous understanding of Greek language, Seaman suggests, comes from the "experience of Roman soldiers during the first and second Punic wars. Not only did men billeted in Greek areas have opportunity to learn sufficient Greek for the purpose of everyday conversation, but they were also able to see plays in the foreign tongue."[36] Having an audience with knowledge of the Greek language, whether limited or more expanded, allowed Plautus more freedom to use Greek references and words. Also, by using his many Greek references and showing that his plays were originally Greek, "It is possible that Plautus was in a way a teacher of Greek literature, myth, art and philosophy; so too was he teaching something of the nature of Greek words to people, who, like himself, had recently come into closer contact with that foreign tongue and all its riches."[37]

At the time of Plautus, Rome was expanding, and having much success in Greece. W.S. Anderson has commented that Plautus "is using and abusing Greek comedy to imply the superiority of Rome, in all its crude vitality, over the Greek world, which was now the political dependent of Rome, whose effete comic plots helped explain why the Greeks proved inadequate in the real world of the third and second centuries, in which the Romans exercised mastery".[38]

Disputed originality edit

Plautus was known for the use of Greek style in his plays, as part of the tradition of the variation on a theme. This has been a point of contention among modern scholars. One argument states that Plautus writes with originality and creativity—the other, that Plautus is a copycat of Greek New Comedy and that he makes no original contribution to playwriting.[citation needed]

A single reading of the Miles Gloriosus leaves the reader with the notion that the names, place, and play are all Greek, but one must look beyond these superficial interpretations. W.S. Anderson would steer any reader away from the idea that Plautus' plays are somehow not his own or at least only his interpretation. Anderson says that, "Plautus homogenizes all the plays as vehicles for his special exploitation. Against the spirit of the Greek original, he engineers events at the end... or alter[s] the situation to fit his expectations."[39] Anderson's vehement reaction to the co-opting of Greek plays by Plautus seems to suggest that they are in no way like their originals were. It seems more likely that Plautus was just experimenting putting Roman ideas in Greek forms.

Contaminatio edit

One idea that is important to recognize is that of contaminatio, which refers to the mixing of elements of two or more source plays. Plautus, it seems, is quite open to this method of adaptation, and quite a few of his plots seem stitched together from different stories. One excellent example is his Bacchides and its supposed Greek predecessor, Menander's Dis Exapaton. The original Greek title translates as "The Man Deceiving Twice", yet the Plautine version has three tricks.[40] V. Castellani commented that:

Plautus' attack on the genre whose material he pirated was, as already stated, fourfold. He deconstructed many of the Greek plays' finely constructed plots; he reduced some, exaggerated others of the nicely drawn characters of Menander and of Menander's contemporaries and followers into caricatures; he substituted for or superimposed upon the elegant humor of his models his own more vigorous, more simply ridiculous foolery in action, in statement, even in language.[41]

By exploring ideas about Roman loyalty, Greek deceit, and differences in ethnicity, "Plautus in a sense surpassed his model."[42] He was not content to rest solely on a loyal adaptation that, while amusing, was not new or engaging for Rome. Plautus took what he found but again made sure to expand, subtract, and modify. He seems to have followed the same path that Horace did, though Horace is much later, in that he is putting Roman ideas in Greek forms. He not only imitated the Greeks, but in fact distorted, cut up, and transformed the plays into something entirely Roman. In essence it is Greek theater colonized by Rome and its playwrights.

Stagecraft edit

In Ancient Greece during the time of New Comedy, from which Plautus drew so much of his inspiration, there were permanent theaters that catered to the audience as well as the actor. The greatest playwrights of the day had quality facilities in which to present their work and, in a general sense, there was always enough public support to keep the theater running and successful. However, this was not the case in Rome during the time of the Republic, when Plautus wrote his plays. While there was public support for theater and people came to enjoy tragedy and comedy alike, no permanent theater existed in Rome until Pompey dedicated one in 55 BC in the Campus Martius.[43]

The lack of a permanent space was a key factor in Roman theater and Plautine stagecraft. In their introduction to the Miles Gloriosus, Hammond, Mack and Moskalew say that "the Romans were acquainted with the Greek stone theater, but, because they believed drama to be a demoralizing influence, they had a strong aversion to the erection of permanent theaters".[44] This worry rings true when considering the subject matter of Plautus' plays. The unreal becomes reality on stage in his work. T. J. Moore notes that, "all distinction between the play, production, and 'real life' has been obliterated [Plautus' play Curculio]".[45] A place where social norms were upended was inherently suspect. The aristocracy was afraid of the power of the theater. It was merely by their good graces and unlimited resources that a temporary stage would have been built during specific festivals.

The importance of the ludi edit

Roman drama, specifically Plautine comedy, was acted out on stage during the ludi or festival games. In his discussion of the importance of the ludi Megalenses in early Roman theater, John Arthur Hanson says that this particular festival "provided more days for dramatic representations than any of the other regular festivals, and it is in connection with these ludi that the most definite and secure literary evidence for the site of scenic games has come down to us".[46] Because the ludi were religious in nature, it was appropriate for the Romans to set up this temporary stage close to the temple of the deity being celebrated. S.M. Goldberg notes that "ludi were generally held within the precinct of the particular god being honored."[47]

T. J. Moore notes that "seating in the temporary theaters where Plautus' plays were first performed was often insufficient for all those who wished to see the play, that the primary criterion for determining who was to stand and who could sit was social status".[48] This is not to say that the lower classes did not see the plays; but they probably had to stand while watching. Plays were performed in public, for the public, with the most prominent members of the society in the forefront.

The wooden stages on which Plautus' plays appeared were shallow and long with three openings in respect to the scene-house. The stages were significantly smaller than any Greek structure familiar to modern scholars. Because theater was not a priority during Plautus' time, the structures were built and dismantled within a day. Even more practically, they were dismantled quickly due to their potential as fire-hazards.[49]

Geography of the stage edit

Often the geography of the stage and more importantly the play matched the geography of the city so that the audience would be well oriented to the locale of the play. Moore says that, "references to Roman locales must have been stunning for they are not merely references to things Roman, but the most blatant possible reminders that the production occurs in the city of Rome".[50] So, Plautus seems to have choreographed his plays somewhat true-to-life. To do this, he needed his characters to exit and enter to or from whatever area their social standing would befit.

Two scholars, V. J. Rosivach and N. E. Andrews, have made interesting observations about stagecraft in Plautus: V. J. Rosivach writes about identifying the side of the stage with both social status and geography. He says that, for example, "the house of the medicus lies offstage to the right. It would be in the forum or thereabouts that one would expect to find a medicus."[51] Moreover, he says that characters that oppose one another always have to exit in opposite directions. In a slightly different vein, N.E. Andrews discusses the spatial semantics of Plautus; she has observed that even the different spaces of the stage are thematically charged. She states:

Plautus' Casina employs these conventional tragic correlations between male/outside and female/inside, but then inverts them in order to establish an even more complex relationship among genre, gender and dramatic space. In the Casina, the struggle for control between men and women... is articulated by characters' efforts to control stage movement into and out of the house.[52]

Andrews makes note of the fact that power struggle in the Casina is evident in the verbal comings and goings. The words of action and the way that they are said are important to stagecraft. The words denoting direction or action such as abeo ("I go off"), transeo ("I go over"), fores crepuerunt ("the doors creak"), or intus ("inside"), which signal any character's departure or entrance, are standard in the dialogue of Plautus' plays. These verbs of motion or phrases can be taken as Plautine stage directions since no overt stage directions are apparent. Often, though, in these interchanges of characters, there occurs the need to move on to the next act. Plautus then might use what is known as a "cover monologue". About this S.M. Goldberg notes that, "it marks the passage of time less by its length than by its direct and immediate address to the audience and by its switch from senarii in the dialogue to iambic septenarii. The resulting shift of mood distracts and distorts our sense of passing time."[53]

Relationship with the audience edit

The small stages had a significant effect on the stagecraft of ancient Roman theater. Because of this limited space, there was also limited movement. Greek theater allowed for grand gestures and extensive action to reach the audience members who were in the very back of the theater. However the Romans would have had to depend more on their voices than large physicality. There was not an orchestra available as there was for the Greeks and this is reflected in the notable lack of a chorus in Roman drama. The replacement character that acts as the chorus would in Greek drama is often called the "prologue".[54]

Goldberg says that "these changes fostered a different relationship between actors and the space in which they performed and also between them and their audiences".[55] Actors were thrust into much closer audience interaction. Because of this, a certain acting style became required that is more familiar to modern audiences. Because they would have been in such close proximity to the actors, ancient Roman audiences would have wanted attention and direct acknowledgement from the actors.[56]

Because there was no orchestra, there was no space separating the audience from the stage. The audience could stand directly in front of the elevated wooden platform. This gave them the opportunity to look at the actors from a much different perspective. They would have seen every detail of the actor and heard every word he said. The audience member would have wanted that actor to speak directly to them. It was a part of the thrill of the performance, as it is to this day.[57]

Stock characters edit

Plautus' range of characters was created through his use of various techniques, but probably the most important is his use of stock characters and situations in his various plays. He incorporates the same stock characters constantly, especially when the character type is amusing to the audience. As Walter Juniper wrote, "Everything, including artistic characterization and consistency of characterization, were sacrificed to humor, and character portrayal remained only where it was necessary for the success of the plot and humor to have a persona who stayed in character, and where the persona by his portrayal contributed to humor."[58]

For example, in Miles Gloriosus, the titular "braggart soldier" Pyrgopolynices only shows his vain and immodest side in the first act, while the parasite Artotrogus exaggerates Pyrgopolynices' achievements, creating more and more ludicrous claims that Pyrgopolynices agrees to without question. These two are perfect examples of the stock characters of the pompous soldier and the desperate parasite that appeared in Plautine comedies. In disposing of highly complex individuals, Plautus was supplying his audience with what it wanted, since "the audience to whose tastes Plautus catered was not interested in the character play,"[59] but instead wanted the broad and accessible humor offered by stock set-ups. The humor Plautus offered, such as "puns, word plays, distortions of meaning, or other forms of verbal humor he usually puts them in the mouths of characters belonging to the lower social ranks, to whose language and position these varieties of humorous technique are most suitable,"[60] matched well with the stable of characters.

The clever slave edit

In his article "The Intriguing Slave in Greek Comedy," Philip Harsh gives evidence to show that the clever slave is not an invention of Plautus. While previous critics such as A. W. Gomme believed that the slave was "[a] truly comic character, the devisor of ingenious schemes, the controller of events, the commanding officer of his young master and friends, is a creation of Latin comedy," and that Greek dramatists such as Menander did not use slaves in such a way that Plautus later did, Harsh refutes these beliefs by giving concrete examples of instances where a clever slave appeared in Greek comedy.[61] For instance, in the works of Athenaeus, Alciphron, and Lucian there are deceptions that involve the aid of a slave, and in Menander's Dis Exapaton there was an elaborate deception executed by a clever slave that Plautus mirrors in his Bacchides. Evidence of clever slaves also appears in Menander's Thalis, Hypobolimaios, and from the papyrus fragment of his Perinthia. Harsh acknowledges that Gomme's statement was probably made before the discovery of many of the papyri that we now have. While it was not necessarily a Roman invention, Plautus did develop his own style of depicting the clever slave. With larger, more active roles, more verbal exaggeration and exuberance, the slave was moved by Plautus further into the front of the action.[62] Because of the inversion of order created by a devious or witty slave, this stock character was perfect for achieving a humorous response and the traits of the character worked well for driving the plot forward.

The lustful old man edit

Another important Plautine stock character, discussed by K.C. Ryder, is the senex amator. A senex amator is classified as an old man who contracts a passion for a young girl and who, in varying degrees, attempts to satisfy this passion. In Plautus these men are Demaenetus (Asinaria), Philoxenus and Nicobulus (Bacchides), Demipho (Cistellaria), Lysidamus (Casina), Demipho (Mercator), and Antipho (Stichus). Periplectomenos (Miles Gloriosus) and Daemones (Rudens) are regarded as senes lepidi because they usually keep their feelings within a respectable limit. All of these characters have the same goal, to be with a younger woman, but all go about it in different ways, as Plautus could not be too redundant with his characters despite their already obvious similarities. What they have in common is the ridicule with which their attempts are viewed, the imagery that suggests that they are motivated largely by animal passion, the childish behavior, and the reversion to the love-language of their youth.[63]

Female characters edit

In examining the female role designations of Plautus's plays, Z.M. Packman found that they are not as stable as their male counterparts: a senex will usually remain a senex for the duration of the play but designations like matrona, mulier, or uxor at times seem interchangeable. Most free adult women, married or widowed, appear in scene headings as mulier, simply translated as "woman". But in Plautus' Stichus the two young women are referred to as sorores, later mulieres, and then matronae, all of which have different meanings and connotations. Although there are these discrepancies, Packman tries to give a pattern to the female role designations of Plautus. Mulier is typically given to a woman of citizen class and of marriageable age or who has already been married. Unmarried citizen-class girls, regardless of sexual experience, were designated virgo. Ancilla was the term used for female household slaves, with Anus reserved for the elderly household slaves. A young woman who is unwed due to social status is usually referred to as meretrix or "courtesan". A lena, or adoptive mother, may be a woman who owns these girls.[64]

Unnamed characters edit

Like Packman, George Duckworth uses the scene headings in the manuscripts to support his theory about unnamed Plautine characters. There are approximately 220 characters in the 20 plays of Plautus. Thirty are unnamed in both the scene headings and the text and there are about nine characters who are named in the ancient text but not in any modern one. This means that about 18% of the total number of characters in Plautus are nameless. Most of the very important characters have names while most of the unnamed characters are of less importance. However, there are some abnormalities—the main character in Casina is not mentioned by name anywhere in the text. In other instances, Plautus will give a name to a character that only has a few words or lines. One explanation is that some of the names have been lost over the years; and for the most part, major characters do have names.[65]

Language and style edit

Overview edit

Plautus wrote in a colloquial style far from the codified form of Latin that is found in Ovid or Virgil. This colloquial style is the everyday speech that Plautus would have been familiar with, yet that means that most students of Latin are unfamiliar with it. Adding to the unfamiliarity of Plautine language is the inconsistency of the irregularities that occur in the texts. In one of his studies, A.W. Hodgman noted that:

the statements that one meets with, that this or that form is "common," or "regular," in Plautus, are frequently misleading, or even incorrect, and are usually unsatisfying.... I have gained an increasing respect for the manuscript tradition, a growing belief that the irregularities are, after all, in a certain sense regular. The whole system of inflexion—and, I suspect, of syntax also and of versification—was less fixed and stable in Plautus' time than it became later.[66]

Archaic features edit

The diction of Plautus, who used the colloquial speech of his own day, is distinctive and non-standard from the point of view of the later, classical period. M. Hammond, A.H. Mack, and W. Moskalew have noted in the introduction to their edition of the Miles Gloriosus that Plautus was "free from convention... [and] sought to reproduce the easy tone of daily speech rather than the formal regularity of oratory or poetry. Hence, many of the irregularities which have troubled scribes and scholars perhaps merely reflect the everyday usages of the careless and untrained tongues which Plautus heard about him."[67] Looking at the overall use of archaic forms in Plautus, one notes that they commonly occur in promises, agreements, threats, prologues, or speeches. Plautus's archaic forms are metrically convenient, but may also have had a stylistic effect on his original audience.

These forms are frequent and of too great a number for a complete list here,[68] but some of the most noteworthy features which from the classical perspective will be considered irregular or obsolete are:

  • the use of uncontracted forms of some verbs such as mavolo ("prefer") for later malo[69]
  • the use of the final -e of second person singular imperatives in verbs which in classical Latin lack it, e.g. dic(e) "say".
  • the retention of -u- in place of the later -i- in words such as maxumus, proxumus, lacrumare etc. (see Latin spelling and pronunciation §Sonus medius), and of -vo- before r, s or t, where the use after ca. 150 BC[70] would favour -ve- (as vostrum for later vestrum)
  • the use of the -ier ending for the present passive and deponent infinitive (e.g. exsurgier for exsurgī)
  • the forms of sum often joined to the preceding word, which is called prodelision (as bonumst "it's good" for bonum est "it is good")
  • the dropping of the final -s of 2nd-singular verb forms and the final -e of the question-particle -ne when the two are joined (as viden? for videsne? "you see? you get it?")
  • the retention of short -ŏ in noun endings in the second declension for later -ŭ
  • the retention in many words of qu- instead of later c- (as in quom instead of cum)
  • the use of the -āī genitive singular ending, disyllabic, besides -ae
  • the retention of final -d after long vowel in the pronouns mēd, tēd, sēd (accusative and ablative, used before prevocalic words, forms without -d also occur)
  • the occasional addition of a final -pte, -te, or -met to pronouns
  • the use of -īs as an accusative plural and occasionally nominative plural ending.[71]

These are the most common linguistic peculiarities (from the later perspective) in the plays of Plautus, some of them being also found in Terence, and noting them helps in the reading of his works and gives insight into early Roman language and interaction.

Means of expression edit

There are certain ways in which Plautus expressed himself in his plays, and these individual means of expression give a certain flair to his style of writing. The means of expression are not always specific to the writer, i.e., idiosyncratic, yet they are characteristic of the writer. Two examples of these characteristic means of expression are the use of proverbs and the use of Greek language in the plays of Plautus.

Plautus employed the use of proverbs in many of his plays. Proverbs would address a certain genre such as law, religion, medicine, trades, crafts, and seafaring. Plautus' proverbs and proverbial expressions number into the hundreds. They sometimes appear alone or interwoven within a speech. The most common appearance of proverbs in Plautus appears to be at the end of a soliloquy. Plautus does this for dramatic effect to emphasize a point.

Further interwoven into the plays of Plautus and just as common as the use of proverbs is the use of Greek within the texts of the plays. J. N. Hough suggests that Plautus's use of Greek is for artistic purposes and not simply because a Latin phrase will not fit the meter. Greek words are used when describing foods, oils, perfumes, etc. This is similar to the use of French terms in the English language such as garçon or rendezvous. These words give the language a French flair just as Greek did to the Latin-speaking Romans. Slaves or characters of low standing speak much of the Greek. One possible explanation for this is that many Roman slaves were foreigners of Greek origin.

Plautus would sometimes incorporate passages in other languages as well in places where it would suit his characters. A noteworthy example is the use of two prayers in Punic in Poenulus, spoken by the Carthaginian elder Hanno, which are significant to Semitic linguistics because they preserve the Carthaginian pronunciation of the vowels. Unlike Greek, Plautus most probably did not speak Punic himself, nor was the audience likely to understand it. The text of the prayers themselves was probably provided by a Carthaginian informant, and Plautus incorporated it to emphasize the authenticity and foreignness of Hanno's character.[72]

Poetic devices edit

Plautus also used more technical means of expression in his plays. One tool that Plautus used for the expression of his servus callidus stock character was alliteration. Alliteration is the repetition of sounds in a sentence or clause; those sounds usually come at the beginning of words. In the Miles Gloriosus, the servus callidus is Palaestrio. As he speaks with the character, Periplectomenus, he uses a significant amount of alliteration in order to assert his cleverness and, therefore, his authority. Plautus uses phrases such as "falsiloquom, falsicum, falsiiurium" (MG l. 191). These words express the deep and respectable knowledge that Palaestrio has of the Latin language. Alliteration can also happen at the endings of words as well. For example, Palaestrio says, "linguam, perfidiam, malitiam atque audaciam, confidentiam, confirmitatem, fraudulentiam" (MG ll. 188–9). Also used, as seen above, is the technique of assonance, which is the repetition of similar-sounding syllables.

Jokes and wordplay edit

Plautus' comedies abound in puns and word play, which is an important component of his poetry. One well known instance in the Miles Gloriosus is Sceledre, scelus. Some examples stand in the text in order to accentuate and emphasize whatever is being said, and others to elevate the artistry of the language. But a great number are made for jokes, especially riddle jokes, which feature a "knock knock - who's there?" pattern. Plautus is especially fond of making up and changing the meaning of words, as Shakespeare does later.[73]

Meter edit

Further emphasizing and elevating the artistry of the language of the plays of Plautus is the use of meter, which simply put is the rhythm of the play. There seems to be great debate over whether Plautus found favour in strong word accent or verse ictus, stress. Plautus did not follow the meter of the Greek originals that he adapted for the Roman audience. Plautus used a great number of meters, but most frequently he used the iambic senarius and the trochaic septenarius. G. B. Conte has noted that Plautus favours the use of cantica instead of Greek meters.

Vigor and immediacy edit

The servus callidus functions as the exposition in many of Plautus' plays. According to C. Stace, "slaves in Plautus account for almost twice as much monologue as any other character ... [and] this is a significant statistic; most of the monologues being, as they are, for purposes of humor, moralizing, or exposition of some kind, we can now begin to see the true nature of the slave's importance."[74] Because humor, vulgarity,[75] and "incongruity" are so much a part of the Plautine comedies, the slave becomes the essential tool to connect the audience to the joke through his monologue and direct connection to the audience. He is, then, not only a source for exposition and understanding, but connection—specifically, connection to the humor of the play, the playfulness of the play. The servus callidus is a character that, as McCarthy says, "draws the complete attention of the audience, and, according to C. Stace, 'despite his lies and abuse, claims our complete sympathy'".[76] He does this, according to some scholarship, using monologue, the imperative mood and alliteration—all of which are specific and effective linguistic tools in both writing and speaking.

The specific type of monologue (or soliloquy) in which a Plautine slave engages is the prologue. As opposed to simple exposition, according to N. W. Slater, "these ... prologues ... have a far more important function than merely to provide information."[77] Another way in which the servus callidus asserts his power over the play—specifically the other characters in the play—is through his use of the imperative mood. This type of language is used, according to E. Segal, for "the forceful inversion, the reduction of the master to an abject position of supplication ... the master-as-suppliant is thus an extremely important feature of the Plautine comic finale".[78] The imperative mood is therefore used in the complete role-reversal of the normal relationship between slave and master, and "those who enjoy authority and respect in the ordinary Roman world are unseated, ridiculed, while the lowliest members of society mount to their pedestals ... the humble are in fact exalted".[79]

Food edit

Meat is the most commonly mentioned foodstuff in the plays of Plautus, and where a specific meat is mentioned, it is most commonly pork, followed by fish.[80]

Influence edit

Intellectual and academic critics have often judged Plautus's work as crude; yet his influence on later literature is impressive—especially on two literary giants, Shakespeare and Molière.

Playwrights throughout history have looked to Plautus for character, plot, humor, and other elements of comedy. His influence ranges from similarities in idea to full literal translations woven into plays. The playwright's apparent familiarity with the absurdity of humanity and both the comedy and tragedy that stem from this absurdity have inspired succeeding playwrights centuries after his death. The most famous of these successors is Shakespeare—Plautus had a major influence on his early comedies.

The Middle Ages and early Renaissance edit

Plautus was apparently read in the 9th century. His form was too complex to be fully understood, however, and, as indicated by the Terentius et delusor, it was unknown at the time if Plautus was writing in prose or verse.

W. B. Sedgwick has provided a record of the Amphitruo, perennially one of Plautus' most famous works. It was the most popular Plautine play in the Middle Ages, and publicly performed at the Renaissance; it was the first Plautine play to be translated into English.

The influence of Plautus's plays was felt in the early 16th century. Limited records suggest that the first known university production of Plautus in England was of Miles Gloriosus at Oxford in 1522–3. The magnum jornale of Queens College contains a reference to a comoedia Plauti in either 1522 or 1523. This fits directly with comments made in the poems of Leland about the date of the production. The next production of Miles Gloriosus that is known from limited records was given by the Westminster School in 1564.[81] Other records also tell us about performances of the Menaechmi. From our knowledge, performances were given in the house of Cardinal Wolsey by boys of St. Paul's School as early as 1527.[82]

Shakespeare edit

Shakespeare borrowed from Plautus as Plautus borrowed from his Greek models. C. L. Barber says that "Shakespeare feeds Elizabethan life into the mill of Roman farce, life realized with his distinctively generous creativity, very different from Plautus' tough, narrow, resinous genius."[83]

The Plautine and Shakespearean plays that most parallel each other are, respectively, the Menaechmi and The Comedy of Errors. According to Marples, Shakespeare drew directly from Plautus "parallels in plot, in incident, and in character,"[84] and was undeniably influenced by the classical playwright's work. H. A. Watt stresses the importance of recognizing the fact that the "two plays were written under conditions entirely different and served audiences as remote as the poles."[85]

The differences between the Menaechmi and The Comedy of Errors are clear. In the Menaechmi, Plautus uses only one set of twins—twin brothers. Shakespeare, on the other hand, uses two sets of twins, which, according to William Connolly, "dilutes the force of [Shakespeare's] situations".[85] One suggestion is that Shakespeare got this idea from Plautus' Amphitruo, in which both twin masters and twin slaves appear.

It can be noted that the doubling is a stock situation of Elizabethan comedy. On the fusion between Elizabethan and Plautine techniques, T. W. Baldwin writes, "... Errors does not have the miniature unity of Menaechmi, which is characteristic of classic structure for comedy".[86] Baldwin notes that Shakespeare covers a much greater area in the structure of the play than Plautus does. Shakespeare was writing for an audience whose minds weren't restricted to house and home, but looked toward the greater world beyond and the role that they might play in that world.

Another difference between the audiences of Shakespeare and Plautus is that Shakespeare's audience was Christian. At the end of Errors, the world of the play is returned to normal when a Christian abbess interferes with the feuding. Menaechmi, on the other hand, "is almost completely lacking in a supernatural dimension".[87] A character in Plautus' play would never blame an inconvenient situation on witchcraft—something that is quite common in Shakespeare.

The relationship between a master and a clever servant is also a common element in Elizabethan comedy. Shakespeare often includes foils for his characters to have one set off the other. In Elizabethan romantic comedy, it is common for the plays to end with multiple marriages and couplings of pairs. This is something that is not seen in Plautine comedy. In the Comedy of Errors, Aegeon and Aemilia are separated, Antipholus and Adriana are at odds, and Antipholus and Luciana have not yet met. At the end, all the couples are happily together. By writing his comedies in a combination of Elizabethan and Plautine styles, Shakespeare helps to create his own brand of comedy, one that uses both styles.[85]

Also, Shakespeare uses the same kind of opening monologue so common in Plautus's plays. He even uses a "villain" in The Comedy of Errors of the same type as the one in Menaechmi, switching the character from a doctor to a teacher but keeping the character a shrewd, educated man.[85] Watt also notes that some of these elements appear in many of his works, such as Twelfth Night or A Midsummer Night's Dream, and had a deep impact on Shakespeare's writing.[85]

Later playwrights also borrowed Plautus's stock characters. One of the most important echoes of Plautus is the stock character of the parasite. The best example of this is Falstaff, Shakespeare's portly and cowardly knight. As J. W. Draper notes, the gluttonous Falstaff shares many characteristics with a parasite such as Artotrogus from Miles Gloriosus. Both characters seem fixated on food and where their next meal is coming from. But they also rely on flattery in order to gain these gifts, and both characters are willing to bury their patrons in empty praise.[88] Draper notes that Falstaff is also something of a boastful military man, but says, "Falstaff is so complex a character that he may well be, in effect, a combination of interlocking types."[88]

As well as appearing in Shakespearean comedy, the Plautine parasite appears in one of the first English comedies. In Ralph Roister Doister, the character of Matthew Merrygreeke follows in the tradition of both Plautine Parasite and Plautine slave, as he both searches and grovels for food and also attempts to achieve his master's desires.[88] Indeed, the play itself is often seen as borrowing heavily from or even being based on the Plautine comedy Miles Gloriosus.[89]

H. W. Cole discusses the influence of Plautus and Terence on the Stonyhurst Pageants. The Stonyhurst Pageants are manuscripts of Old Testament plays that were probably composed after 1609 in Lancashire. Cole focuses on Plautus' influence on the particular Pageant of Naaman. The playwright of this pageant breaks away from the traditional style of religious medieval drama and relies heavily on the works of Plautus. Overall, the playwright cross-references eighteen of the twenty surviving plays of Plautus and five of the six extant plays by Terence. It is clear that the author of the Stonyhurst Pageant of Naaman had a great knowledge of Plautus and was significantly influenced by this.[90]

There is evidence of Plautine imitation in Edwardes' Damon and Pythias and Heywood's Silver Age as well as in Shakespeare's Errors. Heywood sometimes translated whole passages of Plautus. By being translated as well as imitated, Plautus was a major influence on comedy of the Elizabethan era. In terms of plot, or perhaps more accurately plot device, Plautus served as a source of inspiration and also provided the possibility of adaptation for later playwrights. The many deceits that Plautus layered his plays with, giving the audience the feeling of a genre bordering on farce, appear in much of the comedy written by Shakespeare and Molière. For instance, the clever slave has important roles in both L'Avare and L'Etourdi, two plays by Molière, and in both drives the plot and creates the ruse just like Palaestrio in Miles Gloriosus.[91] These similar characters set up the same kind of deceptions in which many of Plautus' plays find their driving force, which is not a simple coincidence.

Later periods edit

20th century musicals based on Plautus include A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (Larry Gelbart and Burt Shevelove, book, Stephen Sondheim, music and lyrics).

Roman Laughter: The Comedy of Plautus, a 1968 book by Erich Segal, is a scholarly study of Plautus' work.

The British TV sitcom Up Pompeii! uses situations and stock characters from Plautus's plays. In the first series Willie Rushton plays Plautus who pops up on occasion to provide comic comments on what is going on in the episode.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "print | British Museum". The British Museum. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  2. ^ It has been suggested that the correct spelling was Maccus, since that is how it is spelled in Asinaria line 11. Ritschl's proposal to read Maccius in that line has generally not been accepted, since it breaks a metrical law, and it was later withdrawn by Ritschl himself: W. Beare (1937), "Titus Maccus Plautus", Classical Review, Volume 53, 4; W. M. Lindsay (1922), Early Latin Verse, p. 90; C. Questa (2007) La Metrica di Plauto e Terenzio, p. 217.
  3. ^ The Concise Oxford Companion to Classical Literature (1996) Ed. M.C. Howatson and Ian Chilvers, Oxford University Press, Oxford Reference Online
  4. ^ M. Marples. "Plautus," Greece & Rome 8.22 (1938), p. 1.
  5. ^ S. O'Bryhim. Greek and Roman Comedy (University of Texas Press, 2001), p. 149.
  6. ^ This slave is also called "Strobilus" in the text, but many scholars believe that he is not same slave as the Strobilus in the first half.
  7. ^ Modern Durrës, on the coast of what is now Albania.
  8. ^ a b Rolando Ferri (2020), "The Textual Tradition of Plautus" (chapter 27 of G. F. Franko and D. Dutsch (eds) A Companion to Plautus (Wiley). See especially pp. 411–414.
  9. ^ For a complete account of this manuscript see: W. Studemund (1889). T. Macci Plauti Fabularum reliquiae Ambrosianae (also available on Google books).
  10. ^ W. M. Lindsay (1896), An Introduction to Latin Textual Emendation, intro. 3.
  11. ^ Walter de Melo, Plautus: Amphitryon (etc.), (Loeb Classical Library), introduction, p. cvi.
  12. ^ W. M. Lindsay (1896), An Introduction to Latin Textual Emendation, intro. 4.
  13. ^ a b Lindsay, W. M. (1900), Captivi, pp. 1–12.
  14. ^ H.M. Tolliver. "Plautus and the State Gods of Rome", The Classical Journal 48.2(1952), pp. 49-57.
  15. ^ M. Leigh. Comedy and the Rise of Rome. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004. p. 24
  16. ^ A. F. West. "On a Patriotic Passage in the Miles Gloriosus of Plautus," The American Journal of Philology 8.1(1887), p. 18.
  17. ^ West, 24.
  18. ^ West, 26.
  19. ^ West, 28.
  20. ^ P.B. Harvey. "Historical Topicality in Plautus," Classical World 79 (1986), pp. 297-304.
  21. ^ Leigh, 26.
  22. ^ W. M. Owens. "Plautus' 'Stichus' and the Political Crisis of 200 B.C.," The American Journal of Philology 121.3 (2000), p. 388.
  23. ^ Owens, 386.
  24. ^ Owens, 392.
  25. ^ Owens, 395-396.
  26. ^ a b Sutton 1993, p. 57.
  27. ^ Sutton 1993, p. 59.
  28. ^ Lloyd, R. F., "Two Prologues: Menander and Plautus", The American Journal of Philology 84.2 (1963, April), p. 141.
  29. ^ a b Lloyd 1963, p. 149.
  30. ^ Lloyd 1963, p. 150.
  31. ^ Lowe, J. C. B., "Aspects of Plautus' Originality in the Asinaria", The Classical Quarterly 42 (1992), p. 155.
  32. ^ Stace, C., "The Slaves of Plautus", Greece & Rome 15 (1968), p. 75.
  33. ^ Stace 1968, pp. 73–74.
  34. ^ Seaman, W.M., "The Understanding of Greek by Plautus' Audience," Classical Journal 50 (1954), p. 115.
  35. ^ Seaman 1954, p. 116.
  36. ^ Seaman 1954, p. 115.
  37. ^ Seaman 1954, p. 119.
  38. ^ W.S. Anderson, "The Roman Transformation of Greek Domestic Comedy," The Classical World 88.3 (1995), pp. 171-180.
  39. ^ Anderson 1995, p. 178.
  40. ^ Owens, W. M., "The Third Deception in Bacchides: Fides and Plautus' Originality," The American Journal of Philology 115 (1994), pp. 381-382.
  41. ^ V. Castellani. "Plautus versus Komoidia: popular farce at Rome," in Farce, ed. 5 J. Redmond (Cambridge and New York, 1988), pp. 53-82.
  42. ^ Owens 1994, p. 404.
  43. ^ S. M. Goldberg. "Plautus on the Palatine," The Journal of Roman Studies 88 (1998), p. 2.
  44. ^ M. Hammond, A.M. Mack, W. Moskalew. "Introduction: The Stage and Production," in Miles Gloriosus. Ed. M. Hammond, A. Mack, W. Moskalew. London and Cambridge, 1997 repr., pp. 15-29.
  45. ^ T. J. Moore. "Palliata Togata: Plautus, Curculio 462-86," The American Journal of Philology 112.3 (1991), pp. 343-362.
  46. ^ J. A. Hanson, Roman Theater—Temples, (Princeton, NJ, 1959), p. 13.
  47. ^ Goldberg, 1998, pp. 1-20.
  48. ^ T.J. Moore, "Seats and Social Status in the Plautine Theater," The Classical Journal 90.2 (1995), pp. 113-123.
  49. ^ M. Bieber, The History of the Greek and Roman Theater, (Princeton, NJ, 1961.), p. 168.
  50. ^ Moore, 1991, p. 347.
  51. ^ V. J. Rosivach, "Plautine Stage Settings," Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 101 (1970), pp. 445-461.
  52. ^ N. E. Andrews, "Tragic Re-Presentation and the Semantics of Space in Plautus," Mnemosyne 57.4 (2004), pp. 445-464.
  53. ^ S.M. Goldberg, "Act to Action in Plautus' Bacchides," Classical Philology 85.3 (1990), pp. 191-201.
  54. ^ Goldberg, 1998, p.19.
  55. ^ Goldberg, 1998, p.16.
  56. ^ P.G. Brown, "Actors and Actor–Managers at Rome in the Time of Plautus and Terence," in Greek and Roman Actors: Aspects of an Ancient Profession, Ed. P. Easterling and E. Hall. (Cambridge, 2002.), p. 228.
  57. ^ Goldberg, 1998, p. 19.
  58. ^ W.H. Juniper, "Character Portrayals in Plautus." The Classical Journal 31 (1936), p. 279.
  59. ^ Juniper, 1936, p. 278.
  60. ^ J.N. Hough, "The Reverse Comic Foil in Plautus." The American Philological Association 73 (1942), p. 108.
  61. ^ P.W. Harsh, "The Intriguing Slave in Greek Comedy," Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, 86 (1955), pp. 135-142.
  62. ^ Harsh, 1955, p. 135-142.
  63. ^ K.C. Ryder, "The Senex Amator in Plautus," Greece & Rome 31.2. (Oct., 1984), pp.181-189.
  64. ^ Z.M. Packman, "Feminine Role Designations in the Comedies of Plautus," The American Journal of Philology 120.2. (1999), pp. 245-258.
  65. ^ G.E. Duckworth, "The Unnamed Characters in the Plays of Plautus," Classical Philology 33.2. (1938), pp. 167-282.
  66. ^ A.W. Hodgman. "Verb Forms in Plautus," The Classical Quarterly 1.1(1907), pp. 42-52.
  67. ^ Ed. M. Hammond, A.H. Mack, & W. Moskalew, Miles Gloriosus (Cambridge and London, 1997 repr.), pp. 39-57.
  68. ^ The reader is directed to the word studies of A.W. Hodgman (Nouns 1902; Verbs 107) to grasp fully the use of archaic forms in Plautine diction.
  69. ^ From magis volo "want more".
  70. ^ R.H. Martin, Terence: Phormio (London: Methuen, 1969). P. 86 n. 29.
  71. ^ This list compiled from a number of word studies and syntactic texts listed in the reference section.
  72. ^ Sznycer, Maurice (1967). Les passages punique en transcription latine dans le Poenulus de Plaute. Paris: Librairie C. Klincksieck.
  73. ^ M. Fontaine, Funny Words in Plautine Comedy, Oxford, 2010.
  74. ^ C. Stace. "The Slaves of Plautus", Greece and Rome 2.15 (1968), pp. 64–77.
  75. ^ MacCary & Willcock (1976), p.12 "the delight in low humour we associate with Plautus"
  76. ^ Stace 1968, pp. 64–77.
  77. ^ N. W. Slater. Plautus in Performance: The Theatre of the Mind. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1985, p. 152
  78. ^ E. Segal. Roman Laughter: The Comedy of Plautus. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1968, p. 122
  79. ^ Segal 1968, p. 136
  80. ^ Banducci 2011.
  81. ^ L. Bradner. "The First Cambridge Production of Miles Gloriosus." Modern Language Notes, 70.6 (1955), pp. 400–403.
  82. ^ H. W. Cole. "The Influence of Plautus and Terence Upon the Stonyhurst Pageants". Modern Language Notes 38 (1923) 393–399.
  83. ^ C.L. Barber, "Shakespearian Comedy in the Comedy of Errors", College English 25.7 (1964), p. 493.
  84. ^ M. Marples, "Plautus", Greece & Rome 8.22 (1938), p. 2.
  85. ^ a b c d e H. A. Watt. "Plautus and Shakespeare: Further Comments on Menaechmi and The Comedy of Errors", The Classical Journal 20 (1925), pp. 401–407.
  86. ^ T.W. Baldwin. On the Compositional Genetics of The Comedy of Errors. (Urbana 1965), pp. 200–209.
  87. ^ N. Rudd. The Classical Tradition in Operation. (Toronto 1994), pp. 32–60.
  88. ^ a b c J. W. Draper. "Falstaff and the Plautine Parasite", The Classical Journal 33 (1938), pp. 390–401.
  89. ^ H. W. Cole. "The Influence of Plautus and Terence Upon the Stonyhurst Pageants", Modern Language Notes 38 (1923), pp. 393–399.
  90. ^ H. W. Cole. "The Influence of Plautus and Terrence Upon the Stonyhurst Pageants", Modern Language Notes 38.7 (1923), pp. 393–399.
  91. ^ S. V. Cole. "Plautus Up-to-Date", The Classical Journal 16 (1921), pp. 399–409.

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  • Sedgwick, W.B. "The History of a Latin Comedy," The Review of English Studies 3.11 (1927), 346–349.
  • Segal, E. Roman Laughter: The Comedy of Plautus. (Cambridge 1968).
  • Slater, N.W. Plautus In Performance: The Theatre of the Mind. (Princeton 1985).
  • Stace, C. "The Slaves of Plautus," Greece & Rome 15 (1968), pp. 64–77.
  • Sutton, D. F. Ancient Comedy: The War of the Generations (New York 1993).
  • Waite, S. "Word Position in Plautus: Interplay of Verse Ictus and Word Stress," in The Computer in Literary and Linguistic Studies. Ed. A. Jones & R.F. Churchhouse. (Cardiff 1976), pp. 92–105.
  • Watt, H. A. "Plautus and Shakespeare: Further Comments on Menaechmi and The Comedy of Errors." The Classical Journal 20 (1925), pp. 401–407.
  • Wiles, D. "Recent Critical Approaches to Plautus," in Farce. Ed. J. Redmond. (Cambridge 1988), pp. 261–272.
  • Wymer, R. "Shakespeare and the Mystery Cycles," English Literary Renaissance 34.3 (2004), pp. 265–285.

Editions edit

  • T. Macci Plauti Comoediae ex recensione Georgii Goetz et Friderici Schoell, 7 voll., Lipsiae, in aedibus B. G. Teubneri, 1893-6: voll. 1-4 (1909 re-edition), voll. 5-7.
  • Plautus (2007). The Rope and Other Plays. Penguin. ISBN 9780141937915.
  • Plautus (2004). The Pot of Gold and Other Plays. Penguin. ISBN 9780141911229.
  • Richlin, Amy (2005). Rome and the Mysterious Orient: Three Plays by Plautus. University of California Press.

Further reading edit

  • Leigh, Matthew (2015). "Food in Latin literature". In Wilkins, John; Nadeau, Robin (eds.). A Companion to Food in the Ancient World. Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World. Vol. 89. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9781405179409.
  • Banducci, Laura M. (2021). "Food remains from the environmental record". Foodways in Roman Republican Italy. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 9780472132300.
  • Gowers, Emily (1993). "Barbarian spinach and Roman bacon: The Comedies of Plautus". The Loaded Table: Representations of Food in Roman Literature: Representations of Food in Roman Literature. Clarendon Press. ISBN 9780191591655.

External links edit

plautus, roman, noble, rubellius, genus, also, known, pinguinus, great, titus, maccius, ɔː, plaw, təs, roman, playwright, latin, period, comedies, earliest, latin, literary, works, have, survived, their, entirety, wrote, palliata, comoedia, genre, devised, liv. For the Roman noble see Rubellius Plautus For the genus also known as Pinguinus see Great auk Titus Maccius Plautus 2 ˈ p l ɔː t e s PLAW tes c 254 184 BC was a Roman playwright of the Old Latin period His comedies are the earliest Latin literary works to have survived in their entirety He wrote Palliata comoedia the genre devised by Livius Andronicus the innovator of Latin literature The word Plautine ˈ p l ɔː t aɪ n PLAW tyne refers to both Plautus s own works and works similar to or influenced by his Plautus18th century portrait of Plautus 1 Bornc 254 BCSarsina Roman RepublicDied184 BC aged 70 Rome Roman RepublicNationalityRomanPeriodAncient RomeGenreComedy Contents 1 Biography 2 Surviving plays 3 Fragmentary plays 4 Manuscript tradition 5 Historical context 5 1 Roman society deities 5 2 Second Punic War and Macedonian War 6 Influences 6 1 Greek New Comedy 6 2 Father son relationships 6 3 Farce 6 4 Prologues 6 5 Character 6 5 1 The Clever Slave 6 6 Understanding of Greek by Plautus audience 6 7 Disputed originality 6 8 Contaminatio 7 Stagecraft 7 1 The importance of the ludi 7 2 Geography of the stage 7 3 Relationship with the audience 7 4 Stock characters 7 4 1 The clever slave 7 4 2 The lustful old man 7 5 Female characters 7 6 Unnamed characters 8 Language and style 8 1 Overview 8 2 Archaic features 8 3 Means of expression 8 4 Poetic devices 8 5 Jokes and wordplay 8 6 Meter 8 7 Vigor and immediacy 8 8 Food 9 Influence 9 1 The Middle Ages and early Renaissance 9 2 Shakespeare 9 3 Later periods 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Editions 14 Further reading 15 External linksBiography editNot much is known about Titus Maccius Plautus s early life It is believed that he was born in Sarsina a small town in Emilia Romagna in northern Italy around 254 BC 3 According to Morris Marples Plautus worked as a stage carpenter or scene shifter in his early years 4 It is from this work perhaps that his love of the theater originated His acting talent was eventually discovered and he adopted the nomen Maccius from Maccus a clownish stock character in Atellan Farce and agnomen Plautus trampled flat usually in reference to flat footed but sometimes intending flat eared like the ears of a hound 5 Tradition holds that he made enough money to go into the nautical business but that the venture collapsed He is then said to have worked as a manual laborer and to have studied Greek drama particularly the New Comedy of Menander in his leisure His studies allowed him to produce his plays which were released between c 205 and 184 BC Plautus attained such popularity that his name alone became a hallmark of theatrical success Plautus s comedies are mostly adapted from Greek models for a Roman audience and are often based directly on the works of the Greek playwrights He reworked the Greek texts to give them a flavour that would appeal to the local Roman audiences They are the earliest surviving intact works in Latin literature Plautus s epitaph read postquam est mortem aptus Plautus Comoedia luget scaena deserta dein risus ludus iocusque et numeri innumeri simul omnes conlacrimarunt Since Plautus is dead Comedy mourns The stage is deserted then Laughter Jest and Wit And all Melody s countless numbers wept together Surviving plays editAmphitruo missing a large segment towards end The play is set in Thebes in Greece While the general Amphitruo is away fighting a war the god Jupiter visits his house and sleeps with his wife Alcumena disguising himself as her husband Jupiter s son Mercury disguised as Amphitruo s slave Sosia keeps watch outside and when the real Sosia turns up bringing news of the victory Mercury teases him and beats him up When Amphitruo turns up Alcumena is surprised to see him back so soon There is a quarrel and Amphitruo accuses her of adultery He goes off to fetch a witness Then Jupiter comes back for a second session with Alcumena and when Amphitruo returns Mercury still disguised as Sosia climbs on the roof and mischievously pelts him with tiles There is a gap in the manuscripts here Amphitruo infuriated is about to burst into the house and kill everybody when suddenly there is a thunderclap a nurse comes out and reports that Alcumena has given birth miraculously to two boys one of them Hercules Finally Jupiter appears and explains everything to Amphitruo Asinaria The Comedy of Asses Demaenetus an Athenian gentleman tells his slave Libanus that he knows his son Argyrippus is in love with a prostitute Philaenium but has no money to pay for her He asks the cunning Libanus to find the money by cheating his wealthy wife Artemona or her steward Saurea Libanus is at a loss for a plan until his fellow slave Leonida by chance meets a stranger who has come to pay a debt to Saurea for some donkeys which had earlier been sold to a certain merchant Leonida pretends to be Saurea and he and Libanus gull the stranger into handing the money over to Leonida The money is given to Argyrippus but with the stipulation that his father is to be allowed to spend the first night with Philaenium But a rival lover Diabolus who wants Philaenium for himself and arrives too late with his money out of jealousy asks his parasite hanger on to inform Artemona what is going on She storms to the brothel in a fury and drags her husband away to his great embarrassment leaving Argyrippus to enjoy Philaenium by himself Aulularia The Pot of Gold missing ending A miserly old man Euclio has found a pot aula of gold in his house and keeps checking that no one has stolen it His wealthy neighbour Megadorus comes to ask for the hand of Euclio s daughter Phaedrium unaware that she was earlier raped and is heavily pregnant Soon Megadorus s slave Strobilus arrives with two hired cooks to prepare a wedding feast he instructs one of the cooks Congrio to go to Euclio s house and start work When Euclio returns he is alarmed thinking his gold is being stolen and he chases Congrio out into the street Euclio decides to hide the pot first in a neighbouring temple and later in a grove outside the city but he is spied on each time by a slave of Megadorus s nephew Lyconides 6 Euclio is horrified to find that his gold has been stolen despite his precautions At this point Lyconides confesses to Euclio that he raped Phaedrium and wishes to marry her Later Lyconides discovers that it was his slave who stole the gold and he insists that it must be returned The manuscript breaks off here but from the ancient summary it seems that Lyconides returned the gold to Euclio who consented to the marriage and gave him the gold as a dowry Bacchides The Bacchis Sisters The first few scenes of the play are missing The young man Mnesilochus is in love with a courtesan called Bacchis While he is abroad his friend Pistoclerus falls in love with Bacchis s twin sister also called Bacchis Mnesilochus returns from his two year stay in Ephesus where he had been sent by his father Nicobulus to collect some money Mnesilochus s cunning slave Chrysalus deceives Nicobulus into thinking that part of the money is still in Ephesus in this way Mnesilochus will be able to keep some of the money to pay for Bacchis s services But when Mnesilochus hears that Pistoclerus has a girlfriend called Bacchis in his anger he gives all the money to his father keeping none back Too late he learns from Pistoclerus that there are two Bacchises He begs Chrysalus to play another trick on his father to get the money he needs Chrysalus tells Nicobulus that Mnesilochus has been making love to the wife of a soldier called Cleomachus who is threatening to kill Mnesilochus To protect his son Nicobulus willingly promises to pay 200 gold pieces Later in yet another deception Chrysalus persuades Nicobulus to pay another 200 gold pieces to prevent his son committing perjury But shortly afterwards when Nicobulus meets the soldier he learns that Bacchis is only a courtesan who owed the soldier money Furious Nicobulus and Pistoclerus s father Philoxenus go to the Bacchises house to confront their sons the two sisters come out and charm them and persuade them to come in and enjoy the party Captivi The Captives The play is set in Aetolia in western Greece An old man Hegio has been buying up prisoners of war from Elis in the hope of exchanging one of them for his own son who has himself been captured in Elis Among Hegio s captives are a young man Philocrates and his loyal slave Tyndarus who have swapped identities so that Philocrates can go back to his family in Elis The plan works and Philocrates goes home Meanwhile another Elian captive Aristophontes recognises Tyndarus and inadvertently informs Hegio what has happened Tyndarus is sent to hard labour in a stone quarry Later a parasite hanger on Ergasilus excitedly brings news that Hegio s son has arrived at the harbour Philocrates arrives together with Hegio s son Philopolemus bringing a run away slave called Stalagmus When Stalagmus is interrogated he reveals that Tyndarus is none other than Hegio s long lost son whom Stalagmus had kidnapped and sold years before Tyndarus is rescued from his punishment and reunited with his father CasinaA father and son Lysidamus and Euthynicus are both in love with the beautiful Casina a 16 year old girl who was adopted into their family as a baby The father sends his son abroad on a trip and plans for Casina to marry his farm manager Olympio so that he can use her as a mistress whenever he likes without his wife Cleostrata knowing When Cleostrata discovers his intention she plans for Casina to marry Euthynicus s servant Chalinus to keep her safe until Euthynicus returns When after lots are drawn her plan fails she dresses up Chalinus as Casina and sends him into the bedroom of the neighbour s house where Lysidamus is planning to spend the night with Casina The husband is exposed and Casina is kept safe for Euthynicus s return Cistellaria The Little Casket missing large segments A young courtesan Selenium is in love with her first and only lover a wealthy young man called Alcesimarchus who has promised to marry her But she is distressed to hear that Alcesimarchus is now engaged to marry another girl Selenium believes she is the daughter of the courtesan Melaenis but in fact her birth mother is Phanostrata the mother of Alcesimarchus s fiancee By chance Melaenis overhears Phanostrata s slave Lampadio who had been ordered to expose Selenium as a baby telling his mistress that he had found the old woman who had picked her up and that he learnt that she had given the baby to be adopted by a courtesan called Melaenis Melaenis immediately hurries off to fetch the recognition tokens which she has been keeping in a small casket cistella The casket is accidentally dropped in the street by the maid it is found by Lampadio and shown to Phanostrata who recognises the tokens Alcesimarchus is now free to marry his beloved Selenium and all ends well CurculioPhaedromus is a young man in Epidaurus in Greece who is in love with a girl Planesium owned by a pimp Cappadox Lacking the money to purchase her Phaedromus had sent Curculio a parasite hanger on to Caria to borrow money from a certain friend When he returns Curculio tells Phaedromus that the friend had no money but that he Curculio had met a soldier called Therapontigonus who had told him that he intended to buy Planesium for himself Curculio had stolen the soldier s signet ring and hurried back to Epidaurus Wearing a disguise and carrying his forged letter he tricks the banker Lyso into paying the money to Cappadox and so is able to purchase Planesium for Phaedromus Planesium however recognises the ring as one that had once belonged to her father and when the soldier arrives in Epidaurus he in turn recognises a ring which he had once given to her Phaedromus is able to marry Planesium and because Planesium proves to be free born Cappadox is obliged to return the money that was paid for her EpidicusThe slave Epidicus s young master Stratippocles returns from the war in Thebes bringing a captive girl he has fallen in love with He orders Epidicus to find 40 minae to pay for her This alarms Epidicus since earlier Stratippocles had made him find the money to buy a different girl and Epidicus had done this by fooling Stratippocles father Periphanes into believing that the girl was his daughter Epidicus has an idea He convinces Periphanes that Stratippocles is still in love with his music girl and has borrowed money to buy her To prevent this Epidicus suggests that Periphanes should buy the girl himself and sell her to a certain army officer for a profit Periphanes pays but Epidicus brings him a different music girl hired for the day and hands the money to Stratippocles When the officer arrives he tells Periphanes it is not the same girl he wanted to buy Now Philippa a woman that Periphanes had raped years before arrives looking for her daughter who has been captured in the war She and Periphanes recognise each other but when he brings out the girl who Epidicus told him was their daughter Philippa says it is not her Epidicus is now in big trouble since he has fooled Periphanes twice But by a lucky chance when the captive arrives Epidicus recognises her she is Philippa s daughter Periphanes is so delighted to have found his missing daughter that he forgives Epidicus and gives him his freedom MenaechmiThe play is set in Epidamnus 7 in western Greece The play opens when Peniculus a parasite arrives at the house of Menaechmus hoping to be given dinner Menaechmus comes out quarrelling with his shrewish wife He tells Peniculus that he is going to give a cloak actually his wife s to his girlfriend the courtesan Erotium who lives next door They persuade Erotium to invite them to dinner and while waiting they go to the forum for drink Meanwhile Menaechmus s twin brother also called Menaechmus arrives from Syracuse with his slave Messenio looking for his long lost twin Erotium greets him warmly invites him in for dinner and afterwards gives him the cloak requesting it to be altered A series of misunderstandings follows during which the first Menaechmus gets tied up by his father in law and a doctor who think he has gone mad he is rescued by Messenio The two brothers finally meet The first Menaechmus decides to auction off all his goods including his wife and return to Syracuse with his brother Messenio claims his freedom for rescuing Menaechmus I Mercator The Merchant Charinus son of the Athenian merchant Demipho met a beautiful girl called Pasicompsa in Rhodes and has brought her back to Athens He intends to pretend that he has bought her as a maid for his mother But his father catches sight of Pasicompsa at the port and wants her for himself He tells his son that Pasicompsa is too beautiful to be a maid and insists she must be sold He arranges for his friend Lysimachus to buy her and take her to his Lysimachus s house But Lysimachus s wife returns unexpectedly from the country and when a cook turns up to prepare a feast there is a row Lysimachus s son Eutychus who is a friend of Charinus learns from a maid that Pasicompsa is inside the house He fetches Charinus who was about to go abroad in despair and brings him to rescue Pasicompsa Afterwards Eutychus meets Lysimachus and Demipho and chastises Demipho for his disgraceful behaviour Miles Gloriosus The Braggart Soldier The play is set in Ephesus A boastful soldier Pyrgopolynices has abducted a courtesan Philocomasium from Athens A resourceful slave Palaestrio has separately been captured and is now working in the same house Palaestrio s former master the young Athenian Pleusicles is in love with Philocomasium and has come to Ephesus to rescue her he is lodging next door with a jovial old bachelor called Periplectomenus Palaestrio has made a hole in the wall between the houses so that Philocomasium can visit Pleusicles Unfortunately the lovers are spotted by Sceledrus one of the soldier s servants Palaestrio comes up with a plan to pretend that the girl next door is Philocomasium s twin sister and he and Periplectomenus have fun tricking not very bright Sceledrus while Philocomasium pops out first from one door then the other Palaestrio now thinks up another plan He gets a resourceful local courtesan Acroteleutium and her maid Milphidippa to pretend that Acroteleutium is the wealthy owner of the house next door and that she is madly in love with the soldier The plan works and Pyrgopolynices orders Philocomasium to depart to make room for his new bride But when he goes next door to claim his bride he is thoroughly beaten up by Periplectomenus s servants Mostellaria The Ghost A young man Philolaches is in love with a courtesan Philematium and in his father s absence has borrowed money to buy her Suddenly while he and his friend Callidamates are partying his slave Tranio brings news of the father s return Tranio ushers everyone inside the house and when the father Theopropides arrives deceives him into thinking that the house is haunted by a ghost and cannot be entered Next Tranio tricks the neighbour Simo into letting Theopropides inspect his house which Theopropides has been told is for sale While Tranio is off stage Theopropides meets two of Callidamates s slaves and realises that he has been tricked by Tranio He is determined to punish him But Callidamates appears and begs Theopropides to forgive both Philolaches and Tranio Persa The Persian The cunning slave Toxilus who is looking after his master s house while he is away is in love with Lemniselenis a courtesan owned by the pimp Dordalus who lives next door He persuades his friend Sagaristio another cunning slave to lend him the money needed to buy her promising to get the money back from Dordalus by a trick Meanwhile he persuades another friend the parasite Saturio to lend his daughter for the trick Sagaristio dresses up as a Persian and sells the girl to Dordalus for a large sum pretending she is an Arabian captive Immediately afterwards Saturio comes to reclaim his daughter from Dordalus on the grounds that she is an Athenian citizen and drags him off to court Since no guarantee was given at the time of the sale the money does not have to be returned and Toxilus and Sagaristio celebrate their victory Poenulus The Little Carthaginian The play is set in Calydon in central Greece A young man Agorastocles is in love with a slave courtesan Adelphasium owned by a slave dealer Lycus He and his slave Milphio spot Adelphasium and her sister in the street and each try to win her over but she rejects their overtures Milphio suggests a plan to send Agorastocles estate manager Collybiscus to Lycus s house pretending to be a rich customer Agorastocles brings some witnesses to observe Collybiscus taking a lot of money into the house They trick Lycus into denying that any slave with money has come to the house and Agorastocles threatens to take him to court Lycus flees Now a Carthaginian traveller comes to the town speaking in Punic looking for his two lost daughters who had been captured in childhood by pirates Hanno recognises Agorastocles from a monkey bite scar as the son of his late cousin He also discovers that Adelphasium and her sister are his daughters There is a joyful reunion and Agorastocles declares that he will go back to Carthage with Hanno and the girls PseudolusThe young man Calidorus is distressed because his beloved the slave courtesan Phoenicium has been sold to a Macedonian army officer He is unable to find the 20 minae needed to buy her The cunning slave Pseudolus promises to help In the next scene Phoenicium s owner the slave dealer Ballio brings all his slaves and courtesans out into the street and berates them angrily ordering them to prepare a feast for his birthday Later Pseudolus meets Calidorus s father Simo and bets him 20 minae that Phoenicium will be free by the end of the day At this point Harpax a servant of the officer arrives bringing the balance of the money to be paid for Phoenicium Pseudolus pretends to be Ballio s steward and Harpax hands him a letter from the officer to Ballio Now Pseudolus dresses up another cunning slave Simio as Harpax and sends him to meet Ballio The plan works and Phoenicium is released When the real Harpax returns Simo and Ballio think that this just is one of Pseudolus s tricks and tease the boy lewdly Too late they realise that he is genuine Ballio has to pay Simo the 20 minae he has bet that Pseudolus will not get the better of them and Simo has to pay Pseudolus 20 minae although Pseudolus who by this time is very drunk generously offers to return Simo half the money if he will attend a party with him Rudens The Rope Two girls Palaestra and Ampelisca escape from the sea after a shipwreck off the coast of north Africa and seek refuge in a nearby temple of Venus The young slave Trachalio who is in love with Ampelisca discovers them there Now the slave dealer Labrax accompanied by his business partner Charmides who have also been shipwrecked arrive When he learns that the girls are in the temple Labrax goes in to seize them The girls are rescued by Trachalio with the assistance of Daemones who lives next door to the temple Trachalio fetches his young master Plesidippus who is in love with Palaestra and has already paid Labrax a deposit to buy her Plesidippus takes Labrax to court to sue him for fraud In the second half of the play Daemones slave Gripus appears dragging a basket which he has rescued from the sea Trachalio finds him and suspecting that the case contains Labrax s money and the tokens which will enable Palaestra to prove her identity prevents him from stealing it by holding on to the rope by which Gripus is dragging the basket Daemones is delighted to discover from the tokens that Palaestra is his own long lost daughter He forces Labrax to give Gripus the reward he had promised Daemones uses the money to buy freedom for Gripus and Ampelisca and invites everyone to dinner StichusTwo sisters Philumena and Pamphila are complaining that their husbands have been away for three years and their father is pressuring them to remarry The father Antipho arrives and first asks their advice about his getting a new wife then broaches the subject of their remarrying but the sisters firmly refuse When he has gone Philumena sends for the parasite Gelasimus she wants to send him to see if there is news of her husband s ship Gelasimus arrives but shortly afterwards a slave boy Pinacium also comes bringing news that the ship has arrived Gelasimus tries to angle for a dinner invitation but is rebuffed Philumena s husband Epignomus soon arrives with his slave Stichus Stichus asks for a day s holiday which is granted together with some wine to celebrate it For the third time Gelasimus tries his luck for a dinner invitation but is rebuffed Now Pamphila s husband Pamphilippus arrives talking to Antipho who hints that he would like to be given a music girl the request is granted Again Gelasimus angles for an invitation and is rebuffed In the final part of the play Stichus and his friend Sangarinus celebrate Stichus s safe return with some food and drink and dancing at which they are joined by their shared girlfriend Stephanium Trinummus The Three Coins An Athenian gentleman Megaronides reproaches his friend Callicles for having purchased the house of his neighbour Charmides who is away in Syria for a cheap price Callicles explains that he did this honourably since he wanted to protect the house and the treasure buried in it from the spendthrift habits of Charmides son Lesbonicus Meanwhile Lesbonicus s friend Lysiteles tells his father Philto that in order to help Lesbonicus he wishes to marry Charmides s daughter without a dowry Philto goes to Lesbonicus to propose the match but the plan is thwarted when Lesbonicus refuses to give away his sister without a dowry as it would dishonour her Callicles when he learns this consults his friend Megaronides who advises him to use Charmides buried treasure as a dowry When Callicles says he does not want to tell Lesbonicus about the treasure in case he misuses it Megaronides suggests they hire an imposter for three coins Latin trinummus dress him up and make him pretend that he has brought the money from Charmides in Syria Charmides now arrives back and has an amusing conversation with the imposter At first Charmides reproaches Callicles for buying the house but when Callicles explains everything Charmides is delighted Lysiteles is allowed to marry Charmides daughter and Lesbonicus is betrothed to Callicles daughter Truculentus The Churl A courtesan Phronesium has three lovers Diniarchus a young man from the city Strabax a young farmer and Stratophanes an army officer from the east Diniarchus returning from abroad visits Phronesium but is not allowed to enter It appears that Phronesium has found a baby and she is going to pretend that the baby is Stratophanes child Next the soldier Stratophanes arrives but the gifts he brings are not enough and he is refused admission Diniarchus s cook Cyamus now arrives bringing gifts sent by his master and the jealous Stratophanes quarrels with him The farmer Strabax now arrives with money and is admitted His slave Truculentus who is following him to prevent him wasting his father s money himself falls prey to the allurements of Phronesium s maid Astaphium Now Diniarchus comes back but since Phronesium is busy with Strabax he is again refused admission despite all the presents he had sent At this moment an old gentleman called Callicles arrives looking for the baby which his daughter had given birth to after being raped Two slave girls threatened with punishment inform him that the baby was given to Phronesium and that the father is Diniarchus Diniarchus begs Callicles for forgiveness and he offers to make amends by marrying the daughter However when he asks Phronesium for the baby she asks to keep it for a while longer to continue her deception of Stratophanes When Stratophanes comes he finds Strabax emerging from the house and quarrels jealously with him but despite the fact that Stratophanes pays Phronesium a further huge sum of money Strabax wins the day Fragmentary plays editOnly the titles and various fragments of these plays have survived Acharistio Addictus The Devoted One Ambroicus or Agroicus The Rustic Man Anus The Old Woman Artamo The Mainsail Astraba Baccharia Bis Compressa The Twice Raped Woman Boeotia Boeotia Caecus The Blind Man or Praedones Plunderers Calceolus The Little Shoe Carbonaria The Charcoal Burner Clitellaria or Astraba Colax The Flatterer Commorientes Those Dying Together Condalium The Slave Ring Cornicularia Dyscolus The Grouch Foeneratrix The Lady Moneylender Fretum The Strait or Channel Frivolaria Trifles Fugitivi The Runaways possibly by Turpilius la Gastrion or Gastron Hortulus Little Garden Kakistus possibly by Accius Lenones Gemini The Twin Pimps Nervolaria Parasitus Medicus The Parasite Physician Parasitus Piger The Lazy Parasite or Lipargus Phagon The Glutton Plociona Saturio Scytha Liturgus The Scythian Public Servant Sitellitergus The Toilet Cleaner Trigemini Triplets Vidularia The Travelling Case Manuscript tradition editThe oldest manuscript of Plautus is a palimpsest known as the Ambrosian palimpsest A since it is kept in the Ambrosian Library in Milan It is thought to date to the 5th century 8 but it was not discovered until 1815 This manuscript is only partly legible since the parchment was cleaned and a copy of the books of Kings and Chronicles was written on top Parts of the text are completely missing for example nothing survives of Amphitruo Asinaria Aulularia or of the first 475 lines of Bacchides and other parts are barely legible 9 The most legible parts of A are found in the plays Persa Poenulus Pseudolus and Stichus 10 Despite its fragmentary state this palimpsest has proved very valuable in correcting the errors of P A second manuscript tradition is represented by manuscripts of the Palatine family so called because two of its most important manuscripts were once kept in the library of the Elector Palatine in Heidelberg in Germany 11 The archetype of this family is now lost but it can be reconstructed from various later manuscripts some of them containing either only the first half or the second half of the plays The most important manuscript of this group is B of the 10th or early 11th century now kept in the Vatican library Manuscripts C and D also belong to this family The lost original P from which all these manuscripts were copied is ascribed by Lindsay to the 8th or 9th century 12 Because of certain errors which both A and the P family have in common it is thought that they are not completely independent but are both copies of a single manuscript dating to perhaps the 4th or 5th century AD 8 At some stage the plays in the P family were divided into two halves one containing Amphitruo to Epidicus omitting Bacchides and the other containing Bacchides and Menaechmi to Truculentus The first eight plays are found in B and the first three and part of Captivi are found in D The last twelve plays are found in B C and D In addition there was once a fragmentary manuscript called the Codex Turnebi T which was used by a French scholar called Turnebe in the 16th century Although this manuscript is now lost some readings from it were preserved by Turnebe himself and others were recorded in the margins of a 16th century edition discovered by Lindsay in the Bodleian Library in Oxford 13 There are certain indications for example small gaps in the text where there appears to have been in a hole or lacuna in the parchment that the original P manuscript was copied from an earlier manuscript with 19 20 or 21 lines to the page in other words it was a book very similar to A which has 19 lines to the page and probably it was about the same age However the order of plays in A is slightly different from that in the P family of manuscripts The headings at the top of the scenes in A containing character names which were written in red ink have been totally washed away and those in the P family seem to be based on guesswork and so were also probably missing in an ancestor of the lost P codex For this reason the names of some of the minor characters are not known 13 Historical context editThe historical context within which Plautus wrote can be seen to some extent in his comments on contemporary events and persons Plautus was a popular comedic playwright while Roman theatre was still in its infancy and still largely undeveloped At the same time the Roman Republic was expanding in power and influence citation needed Roman society deities edit Plautus was sometimes accused of teaching the public indifference and mockery of the gods Any character in his plays could be compared to a god Whether to honour a character or to mock him these references were demeaning to the gods These references to the gods include a character comparing a mortal woman to a god or saying he would rather be loved by a woman than by the gods Pyrgopolynices from Miles Gloriosus vs 1265 in bragging about his long life says he was born one day later than Jupiter In Curculio Phaedrome says I am a God when he first meets with Planesium In Pseudolus Jupiter is compared to Ballio the pimp It is not uncommon too for a character to scorn the gods as seen in Poenulus and Rudens However when a character scorns a god it is usually a character of low standing such as a pimp Plautus perhaps does this to demoralize the characters original research Soldiers often bring ridicule among the gods Young men meant to represent the upper social class often belittle the gods in their remarks Parasites pimps and courtesans often praise the gods with scant ceremony Tolliver argues that drama both reflects and foreshadows social change It is likely that there was already much skepticism about the gods in Plautus era Plautus did not make up or encourage irreverence to the gods but reflected ideas of his time The state controlled stage productions and Plautus plays would have been banned had they been too risque 14 Second Punic War and Macedonian War edit The Second Punic War occurred from 218 to 201 BC its central event was Hannibal s invasion of Italy M Leigh has devoted an extensive chapter about Plautus and Hannibal in his 2004 book Comedy and the Rise of Rome He says that the plays themselves contain occasional references to the fact that the state is at arms 15 One good example is a piece of verse from the Miles Gloriosus the composition date of which is not clear but which is often placed in the last decade of the 3rd century BC 16 A F West believes that this is inserted commentary on the Second Punic War In his article On a Patriotic Passage in the Miles Gloriosus of Plautus he states that the war engrossed the Romans more than all other public interests combined 17 The passage seems intended to rile up the audience beginning with hostis tibi adesse or the foe is near at hand 18 At the time the general Scipio Africanus wanted to confront Hannibal a plan strongly favored by the plebs 19 Plautus apparently pushes for the plan to be approved by the senate working his audience up with the thought of an enemy in close proximity and a call to outmaneuver him Therefore it is reasonable to say that Plautus according to P B Harvey was willing to insert into his plays highly specific allusions comprehensible to the audience 20 M Leigh writes in his chapter on Plautus and Hannibal that the Plautus who emerges from this investigation is one whose comedies persistently touch the rawest nerves in the audience for whom he writes 21 Later coming off the heels of the conflict with Hannibal Rome was preparing to embark on another military mission this time in Greece While they would eventually move on Philip V in the Second Macedonian War there was considerable debate beforehand about the course Rome should take in this conflict But starting this war would not be an easy task considering those recent struggles with Carthage many Romans were too tired of conflict to think of embarking on another campaign As W M Owens writes in his article Plautus Stichus and the Political Crisis of 200 B C There is evidence that antiwar feeling ran deep and persisted even after the war was approved 22 Owens contends that Plautus was attempting to match the complex mood of the Roman audience riding the victory of the Second Punic War but facing the beginning of a new conflict 23 For instance the characters of the dutiful daughters and their father seem obsessed over the idea of officium the duty one has to do what is right Their speech is littered with words such as pietas and aequus and they struggle to make their father fulfill his proper role 24 The stock parasite in this play Gelasimus has a patron client relationship with this family and offers to do any job in order to make ends meet Owens puts forward that Plautus is portraying the economic hardship many Roman citizens were experiencing due to the cost of war 25 With the repetition of responsibility to the desperation of the lower class Plautus establishes himself firmly on the side of the average Roman citizen While he makes no specific reference to the possible war with Greece or the previous war that might be too dangerous he does seem to push the message that the government should take care of its own people before attempting any other military actions Influences editGreek New Comedy edit Greek New Comedy greatly differs from those plays of Aristophanes The most notable difference according to Dana F Sutton is that New Comedy in comparison to Old Comedy is devoid of a serious political social or intellectual content and could be performed in any number of social and political settings without risk of giving offense 26 The risk taking for which Aristophanes is known is noticeably lacking in the New Comedy plays of Menander Instead there is much more of a focus on the home and the family unit something that the Romans including Plautus could easily understand and adopt for themselves later in history Father son relationships edit One main theme of Greek New Comedy is the father son relationship For example in Menander s Dis Exapaton there is a focus on the betrayal between age groups and friends The father son relationship is very strong and the son remains loyal to the father The relationship is always a focus even if it s not the focus of every action taken by the main characters In Plautus on the other hand the focus is still on the relationship between father and son but we see betrayal between the two men that wasn t seen in Menander There is a focus on the proper conduct between a father and son that apparently was so important to Roman society at the time of Plautus This becomes the main difference and also similarity between Menander and Plautus They both address situations that tend to develop in the bosom of the family 26 Both authors through their plays reflect a patriarchal society in which the father son relationship is essential to proper function and development of the household 27 It is no longer a political statement as in Old Comedy but a statement about household relations and proper behavior between a father and his son But the attitudes on these relationships seem much different a reflection of how the worlds of Menander and Plautus differed Farce edit For the Italian tradition of farce see Atellan farce There are differences not just in how the father son relationship is presented but also in the way in which Menander and Plautus write their poetry William S Anderson discusses the believability of Menander versus the believability of Plautus and in essence says that Plautus plays are much less believable than those plays of Menander because they seem to be such a farce in comparison He addresses them as a reflection of Menander with some of Plautus own contributions Anderson argues there is unevenness in the poetry of Plautus that results in incredulity and refusal of sympathy of the audience 28 Prologues edit The poetry of Menander and Plautus is best juxtaposed in their prologues Robert B Lloyd makes the point that albeit the two prologues introduce plays whose plots are of essentially different types they are almost identical in form 29 He goes on to address the specific style of Plautus that differs so greatly from Menander He says that the verbosity of the Plautine prologues has often been commented upon and generally excused by the necessity of the Roman playwright to win his audience 29 However in both Menander and Plautus word play is essential to their comedy Plautus might seem more verbose but where he lacks in physical comedy he makes up for it with words alliteration and paronomasia punning 30 See also jokes and wordplay below Plautus is well known for his devotion to puns especially when it comes to the names of his characters In Miles Gloriosus for instance the female concubine s name Philocomasium translates to lover of a good party which is quite apt when we learn about the tricks and wild ways of this prostitute Character edit Plautus characters many of which seem to crop up in quite a few of his plays also came from Greek stock though they too received some Plautine innovations Indeed since Plautus was adapting these plays it would be difficult not to have the same kinds of characters roles such as slaves concubines soldiers and old men By working with the characters that were already there but injecting his own creativity as J C B Lowe wrote in his article Aspects of Plautus Originality in the Asinaria Plautus could substantially modify the characterization and thus the whole emphasis of a play 31 The Clever Slave edit One of the best examples of this method is the Plautine slave a form that plays a major role in quite a few of Plautus works The clever slave in particular is a very strong character he not only provides exposition and humor but also often drives the plot in Plautus plays C Stace argues that Plautus took the stock slave character from New Comedy in Greece and altered it for his own purposes In New Comedy he writes the slave is often not much more than a comedic turn with the added purpose perhaps of exposition 32 This shows that there was precedent for this slave archetype and obviously some of its old role continues in Plautus the expository monologues for instance However because Plautus found humor in slaves tricking their masters or comparing themselves to great heroes he took the character a step further and created something distinct 33 Understanding of Greek by Plautus audience edit Of the approximate 270 proper names in the surviving plays of Plautus about 250 names are Greek 34 William M Seaman proposes that these Greek names would have delivered a comic punch to the audience because of its basic understanding of the Greek language 35 This previous understanding of Greek language Seaman suggests comes from the experience of Roman soldiers during the first and second Punic wars Not only did men billeted in Greek areas have opportunity to learn sufficient Greek for the purpose of everyday conversation but they were also able to see plays in the foreign tongue 36 Having an audience with knowledge of the Greek language whether limited or more expanded allowed Plautus more freedom to use Greek references and words Also by using his many Greek references and showing that his plays were originally Greek It is possible that Plautus was in a way a teacher of Greek literature myth art and philosophy so too was he teaching something of the nature of Greek words to people who like himself had recently come into closer contact with that foreign tongue and all its riches 37 At the time of Plautus Rome was expanding and having much success in Greece W S Anderson has commented that Plautus is using and abusing Greek comedy to imply the superiority of Rome in all its crude vitality over the Greek world which was now the political dependent of Rome whose effete comic plots helped explain why the Greeks proved inadequate in the real world of the third and second centuries in which the Romans exercised mastery 38 Disputed originality edit Plautus was known for the use of Greek style in his plays as part of the tradition of the variation on a theme This has been a point of contention among modern scholars One argument states that Plautus writes with originality and creativity the other that Plautus is a copycat of Greek New Comedy and that he makes no original contribution to playwriting citation needed A single reading of the Miles Gloriosus leaves the reader with the notion that the names place and play are all Greek but one must look beyond these superficial interpretations W S Anderson would steer any reader away from the idea that Plautus plays are somehow not his own or at least only his interpretation Anderson says that Plautus homogenizes all the plays as vehicles for his special exploitation Against the spirit of the Greek original he engineers events at the end or alter s the situation to fit his expectations 39 Anderson s vehement reaction to the co opting of Greek plays by Plautus seems to suggest that they are in no way like their originals were It seems more likely that Plautus was just experimenting putting Roman ideas in Greek forms Contaminatio edit One idea that is important to recognize is that of contaminatio which refers to the mixing of elements of two or more source plays Plautus it seems is quite open to this method of adaptation and quite a few of his plots seem stitched together from different stories One excellent example is his Bacchides and its supposed Greek predecessor Menander s Dis Exapaton The original Greek title translates as The Man Deceiving Twice yet the Plautine version has three tricks 40 V Castellani commented that Plautus attack on the genre whose material he pirated was as already stated fourfold He deconstructed many of the Greek plays finely constructed plots he reduced some exaggerated others of the nicely drawn characters of Menander and of Menander s contemporaries and followers into caricatures he substituted for or superimposed upon the elegant humor of his models his own more vigorous more simply ridiculous foolery in action in statement even in language 41 By exploring ideas about Roman loyalty Greek deceit and differences in ethnicity Plautus in a sense surpassed his model 42 He was not content to rest solely on a loyal adaptation that while amusing was not new or engaging for Rome Plautus took what he found but again made sure to expand subtract and modify He seems to have followed the same path that Horace did though Horace is much later in that he is putting Roman ideas in Greek forms He not only imitated the Greeks but in fact distorted cut up and transformed the plays into something entirely Roman In essence it is Greek theater colonized by Rome and its playwrights Stagecraft editIn Ancient Greece during the time of New Comedy from which Plautus drew so much of his inspiration there were permanent theaters that catered to the audience as well as the actor The greatest playwrights of the day had quality facilities in which to present their work and in a general sense there was always enough public support to keep the theater running and successful However this was not the case in Rome during the time of the Republic when Plautus wrote his plays While there was public support for theater and people came to enjoy tragedy and comedy alike no permanent theater existed in Rome until Pompey dedicated one in 55 BC in the Campus Martius 43 The lack of a permanent space was a key factor in Roman theater and Plautine stagecraft In their introduction to the Miles Gloriosus Hammond Mack and Moskalew say that the Romans were acquainted with the Greek stone theater but because they believed drama to be a demoralizing influence they had a strong aversion to the erection of permanent theaters 44 This worry rings true when considering the subject matter of Plautus plays The unreal becomes reality on stage in his work T J Moore notes that all distinction between the play production and real life has been obliterated Plautus play Curculio 45 A place where social norms were upended was inherently suspect The aristocracy was afraid of the power of the theater It was merely by their good graces and unlimited resources that a temporary stage would have been built during specific festivals The importance of the ludi edit Main article Ludi Roman drama specifically Plautine comedy was acted out on stage during the ludi or festival games In his discussion of the importance of the ludi Megalenses in early Roman theater John Arthur Hanson says that this particular festival provided more days for dramatic representations than any of the other regular festivals and it is in connection with these ludi that the most definite and secure literary evidence for the site of scenic games has come down to us 46 Because the ludi were religious in nature it was appropriate for the Romans to set up this temporary stage close to the temple of the deity being celebrated S M Goldberg notes that ludi were generally held within the precinct of the particular god being honored 47 T J Moore notes that seating in the temporary theaters where Plautus plays were first performed was often insufficient for all those who wished to see the play that the primary criterion for determining who was to stand and who could sit was social status 48 This is not to say that the lower classes did not see the plays but they probably had to stand while watching Plays were performed in public for the public with the most prominent members of the society in the forefront The wooden stages on which Plautus plays appeared were shallow and long with three openings in respect to the scene house The stages were significantly smaller than any Greek structure familiar to modern scholars Because theater was not a priority during Plautus time the structures were built and dismantled within a day Even more practically they were dismantled quickly due to their potential as fire hazards 49 Geography of the stage edit Often the geography of the stage and more importantly the play matched the geography of the city so that the audience would be well oriented to the locale of the play Moore says that references to Roman locales must have been stunning for they are not merely references to things Roman but the most blatant possible reminders that the production occurs in the city of Rome 50 So Plautus seems to have choreographed his plays somewhat true to life To do this he needed his characters to exit and enter to or from whatever area their social standing would befit Two scholars V J Rosivach and N E Andrews have made interesting observations about stagecraft in Plautus V J Rosivach writes about identifying the side of the stage with both social status and geography He says that for example the house of the medicus lies offstage to the right It would be in the forum or thereabouts that one would expect to find a medicus 51 Moreover he says that characters that oppose one another always have to exit in opposite directions In a slightly different vein N E Andrews discusses the spatial semantics of Plautus she has observed that even the different spaces of the stage are thematically charged She states Plautus Casina employs these conventional tragic correlations between male outside and female inside but then inverts them in order to establish an even more complex relationship among genre gender and dramatic space In the Casina the struggle for control between men and women is articulated by characters efforts to control stage movement into and out of the house 52 Andrews makes note of the fact that power struggle in the Casina is evident in the verbal comings and goings The words of action and the way that they are said are important to stagecraft The words denoting direction or action such as abeo I go off transeo I go over fores crepuerunt the doors creak or intus inside which signal any character s departure or entrance are standard in the dialogue of Plautus plays These verbs of motion or phrases can be taken as Plautine stage directions since no overt stage directions are apparent Often though in these interchanges of characters there occurs the need to move on to the next act Plautus then might use what is known as a cover monologue About this S M Goldberg notes that it marks the passage of time less by its length than by its direct and immediate address to the audience and by its switch from senarii in the dialogue to iambic septenarii The resulting shift of mood distracts and distorts our sense of passing time 53 Relationship with the audience edit The small stages had a significant effect on the stagecraft of ancient Roman theater Because of this limited space there was also limited movement Greek theater allowed for grand gestures and extensive action to reach the audience members who were in the very back of the theater However the Romans would have had to depend more on their voices than large physicality There was not an orchestra available as there was for the Greeks and this is reflected in the notable lack of a chorus in Roman drama The replacement character that acts as the chorus would in Greek drama is often called the prologue 54 Goldberg says that these changes fostered a different relationship between actors and the space in which they performed and also between them and their audiences 55 Actors were thrust into much closer audience interaction Because of this a certain acting style became required that is more familiar to modern audiences Because they would have been in such close proximity to the actors ancient Roman audiences would have wanted attention and direct acknowledgement from the actors 56 Because there was no orchestra there was no space separating the audience from the stage The audience could stand directly in front of the elevated wooden platform This gave them the opportunity to look at the actors from a much different perspective They would have seen every detail of the actor and heard every word he said The audience member would have wanted that actor to speak directly to them It was a part of the thrill of the performance as it is to this day 57 Stock characters edit Plautus range of characters was created through his use of various techniques but probably the most important is his use of stock characters and situations in his various plays He incorporates the same stock characters constantly especially when the character type is amusing to the audience As Walter Juniper wrote Everything including artistic characterization and consistency of characterization were sacrificed to humor and character portrayal remained only where it was necessary for the success of the plot and humor to have a persona who stayed in character and where the persona by his portrayal contributed to humor 58 For example in Miles Gloriosus the titular braggart soldier Pyrgopolynices only shows his vain and immodest side in the first act while the parasite Artotrogus exaggerates Pyrgopolynices achievements creating more and more ludicrous claims that Pyrgopolynices agrees to without question These two are perfect examples of the stock characters of the pompous soldier and the desperate parasite that appeared in Plautine comedies In disposing of highly complex individuals Plautus was supplying his audience with what it wanted since the audience to whose tastes Plautus catered was not interested in the character play 59 but instead wanted the broad and accessible humor offered by stock set ups The humor Plautus offered such as puns word plays distortions of meaning or other forms of verbal humor he usually puts them in the mouths of characters belonging to the lower social ranks to whose language and position these varieties of humorous technique are most suitable 60 matched well with the stable of characters The clever slave edit In his article The Intriguing Slave in Greek Comedy Philip Harsh gives evidence to show that the clever slave is not an invention of Plautus While previous critics such as A W Gomme believed that the slave was a truly comic character the devisor of ingenious schemes the controller of events the commanding officer of his young master and friends is a creation of Latin comedy and that Greek dramatists such as Menander did not use slaves in such a way that Plautus later did Harsh refutes these beliefs by giving concrete examples of instances where a clever slave appeared in Greek comedy 61 For instance in the works of Athenaeus Alciphron and Lucian there are deceptions that involve the aid of a slave and in Menander s Dis Exapaton there was an elaborate deception executed by a clever slave that Plautus mirrors in his Bacchides Evidence of clever slaves also appears in Menander s Thalis Hypobolimaios and from the papyrus fragment of his Perinthia Harsh acknowledges that Gomme s statement was probably made before the discovery of many of the papyri that we now have While it was not necessarily a Roman invention Plautus did develop his own style of depicting the clever slave With larger more active roles more verbal exaggeration and exuberance the slave was moved by Plautus further into the front of the action 62 Because of the inversion of order created by a devious or witty slave this stock character was perfect for achieving a humorous response and the traits of the character worked well for driving the plot forward The lustful old man edit Another important Plautine stock character discussed by K C Ryder is the senex amator A senex amator is classified as an old man who contracts a passion for a young girl and who in varying degrees attempts to satisfy this passion In Plautus these men are Demaenetus Asinaria Philoxenus and Nicobulus Bacchides Demipho Cistellaria Lysidamus Casina Demipho Mercator and Antipho Stichus Periplectomenos Miles Gloriosus and Daemones Rudens are regarded as senes lepidi because they usually keep their feelings within a respectable limit All of these characters have the same goal to be with a younger woman but all go about it in different ways as Plautus could not be too redundant with his characters despite their already obvious similarities What they have in common is the ridicule with which their attempts are viewed the imagery that suggests that they are motivated largely by animal passion the childish behavior and the reversion to the love language of their youth 63 Female characters edit In examining the female role designations of Plautus s plays Z M Packman found that they are not as stable as their male counterparts a senex will usually remain a senex for the duration of the play but designations like matrona mulier or uxor at times seem interchangeable Most free adult women married or widowed appear in scene headings as mulier simply translated as woman But in Plautus Stichus the two young women are referred to as sorores later mulieres and then matronae all of which have different meanings and connotations Although there are these discrepancies Packman tries to give a pattern to the female role designations of Plautus Mulier is typically given to a woman of citizen class and of marriageable age or who has already been married Unmarried citizen class girls regardless of sexual experience were designated virgo Ancilla was the term used for female household slaves with Anus reserved for the elderly household slaves A young woman who is unwed due to social status is usually referred to as meretrix or courtesan A lena or adoptive mother may be a woman who owns these girls 64 Unnamed characters edit Like Packman George Duckworth uses the scene headings in the manuscripts to support his theory about unnamed Plautine characters There are approximately 220 characters in the 20 plays of Plautus Thirty are unnamed in both the scene headings and the text and there are about nine characters who are named in the ancient text but not in any modern one This means that about 18 of the total number of characters in Plautus are nameless Most of the very important characters have names while most of the unnamed characters are of less importance However there are some abnormalities the main character in Casina is not mentioned by name anywhere in the text In other instances Plautus will give a name to a character that only has a few words or lines One explanation is that some of the names have been lost over the years and for the most part major characters do have names 65 Language and style editOverview edit Plautus wrote in a colloquial style far from the codified form of Latin that is found in Ovid or Virgil This colloquial style is the everyday speech that Plautus would have been familiar with yet that means that most students of Latin are unfamiliar with it Adding to the unfamiliarity of Plautine language is the inconsistency of the irregularities that occur in the texts In one of his studies A W Hodgman noted that the statements that one meets with that this or that form is common or regular in Plautus are frequently misleading or even incorrect and are usually unsatisfying I have gained an increasing respect for the manuscript tradition a growing belief that the irregularities are after all in a certain sense regular The whole system of inflexion and I suspect of syntax also and of versification was less fixed and stable in Plautus time than it became later 66 Archaic features edit The diction of Plautus who used the colloquial speech of his own day is distinctive and non standard from the point of view of the later classical period M Hammond A H Mack and W Moskalew have noted in the introduction to their edition of the Miles Gloriosus that Plautus was free from convention and sought to reproduce the easy tone of daily speech rather than the formal regularity of oratory or poetry Hence many of the irregularities which have troubled scribes and scholars perhaps merely reflect the everyday usages of the careless and untrained tongues which Plautus heard about him 67 Looking at the overall use of archaic forms in Plautus one notes that they commonly occur in promises agreements threats prologues or speeches Plautus s archaic forms are metrically convenient but may also have had a stylistic effect on his original audience These forms are frequent and of too great a number for a complete list here 68 but some of the most noteworthy features which from the classical perspective will be considered irregular or obsolete are the use of uncontracted forms of some verbs such as mavolo prefer for later malo 69 the use of the final e of second person singular imperatives in verbs which in classical Latin lack it e g dic e say the retention of u in place of the later i in words such as maxumus proxumus lacrumare etc see Latin spelling and pronunciation Sonus medius and of vo before r s or t where the use after ca 150 BC 70 would favour ve as vostrum for later vestrum the use of the ier ending for the present passive and deponent infinitive e g exsurgier for exsurgi the forms of sum often joined to the preceding word which is called prodelision as bonumst it s good for bonum est it is good the dropping of the final s of 2nd singular verb forms and the final e of the question particle ne when the two are joined as viden for videsne you see you get it the retention of short ŏ in noun endings in the second declension for later ŭ the retention in many words of qu instead of later c as in quom instead of cum the use of the ai genitive singular ending disyllabic besides ae the retention of final d after long vowel in the pronouns med ted sed accusative and ablative used before prevocalic words forms without d also occur the occasional addition of a final pte te or met to pronouns the use of is as an accusative plural and occasionally nominative plural ending 71 These are the most common linguistic peculiarities from the later perspective in the plays of Plautus some of them being also found in Terence and noting them helps in the reading of his works and gives insight into early Roman language and interaction Means of expression edit There are certain ways in which Plautus expressed himself in his plays and these individual means of expression give a certain flair to his style of writing The means of expression are not always specific to the writer i e idiosyncratic yet they are characteristic of the writer Two examples of these characteristic means of expression are the use of proverbs and the use of Greek language in the plays of Plautus Plautus employed the use of proverbs in many of his plays Proverbs would address a certain genre such as law religion medicine trades crafts and seafaring Plautus proverbs and proverbial expressions number into the hundreds They sometimes appear alone or interwoven within a speech The most common appearance of proverbs in Plautus appears to be at the end of a soliloquy Plautus does this for dramatic effect to emphasize a point Further interwoven into the plays of Plautus and just as common as the use of proverbs is the use of Greek within the texts of the plays J N Hough suggests that Plautus s use of Greek is for artistic purposes and not simply because a Latin phrase will not fit the meter Greek words are used when describing foods oils perfumes etc This is similar to the use of French terms in the English language such as garcon or rendezvous These words give the language a French flair just as Greek did to the Latin speaking Romans Slaves or characters of low standing speak much of the Greek One possible explanation for this is that many Roman slaves were foreigners of Greek origin Plautus would sometimes incorporate passages in other languages as well in places where it would suit his characters A noteworthy example is the use of two prayers in Punic in Poenulus spoken by the Carthaginian elder Hanno which are significant to Semitic linguistics because they preserve the Carthaginian pronunciation of the vowels Unlike Greek Plautus most probably did not speak Punic himself nor was the audience likely to understand it The text of the prayers themselves was probably provided by a Carthaginian informant and Plautus incorporated it to emphasize the authenticity and foreignness of Hanno s character 72 Poetic devices edit Plautus also used more technical means of expression in his plays One tool that Plautus used for the expression of his servus callidus stock character was alliteration Alliteration is the repetition of sounds in a sentence or clause those sounds usually come at the beginning of words In the Miles Gloriosus the servus callidus is Palaestrio As he speaks with the character Periplectomenus he uses a significant amount of alliteration in order to assert his cleverness and therefore his authority Plautus uses phrases such as falsiloquom falsicum falsiiurium MG l 191 These words express the deep and respectable knowledge that Palaestrio has of the Latin language Alliteration can also happen at the endings of words as well For example Palaestrio says linguam perfidiam malitiam atque audaciam confidentiam confirmitatem fraudulentiam MG ll 188 9 Also used as seen above is the technique of assonance which is the repetition of similar sounding syllables Jokes and wordplay edit Plautus comedies abound in puns and word play which is an important component of his poetry One well known instance in the Miles Gloriosus is Sceledre scelus Some examples stand in the text in order to accentuate and emphasize whatever is being said and others to elevate the artistry of the language But a great number are made for jokes especially riddle jokes which feature a knock knock who s there pattern Plautus is especially fond of making up and changing the meaning of words as Shakespeare does later 73 Meter edit Further information Metres of Roman comedy Further emphasizing and elevating the artistry of the language of the plays of Plautus is the use of meter which simply put is the rhythm of the play There seems to be great debate over whether Plautus found favour in strong word accent or verse ictus stress Plautus did not follow the meter of the Greek originals that he adapted for the Roman audience Plautus used a great number of meters but most frequently he used the iambic senarius and the trochaic septenarius G B Conte has noted that Plautus favours the use of cantica instead of Greek meters Vigor and immediacy edit The servus callidus functions as the exposition in many of Plautus plays According to C Stace slaves in Plautus account for almost twice as much monologue as any other character and this is a significant statistic most of the monologues being as they are for purposes of humor moralizing or exposition of some kind we can now begin to see the true nature of the slave s importance 74 Because humor vulgarity 75 and incongruity are so much a part of the Plautine comedies the slave becomes the essential tool to connect the audience to the joke through his monologue and direct connection to the audience He is then not only a source for exposition and understanding but connection specifically connection to the humor of the play the playfulness of the play The servus callidus is a character that as McCarthy says draws the complete attention of the audience and according to C Stace despite his lies and abuse claims our complete sympathy 76 He does this according to some scholarship using monologue the imperative mood and alliteration all of which are specific and effective linguistic tools in both writing and speaking The specific type of monologue or soliloquy in which a Plautine slave engages is the prologue As opposed to simple exposition according to N W Slater these prologues have a far more important function than merely to provide information 77 Another way in which the servus callidus asserts his power over the play specifically the other characters in the play is through his use of the imperative mood This type of language is used according to E Segal for the forceful inversion the reduction of the master to an abject position of supplication the master as suppliant is thus an extremely important feature of the Plautine comic finale 78 The imperative mood is therefore used in the complete role reversal of the normal relationship between slave and master and those who enjoy authority and respect in the ordinary Roman world are unseated ridiculed while the lowliest members of society mount to their pedestals the humble are in fact exalted 79 Food edit Meat is the most commonly mentioned foodstuff in the plays of Plautus and where a specific meat is mentioned it is most commonly pork followed by fish 80 Influence editIntellectual and academic critics have often judged Plautus s work as crude yet his influence on later literature is impressive especially on two literary giants Shakespeare and Moliere Playwrights throughout history have looked to Plautus for character plot humor and other elements of comedy His influence ranges from similarities in idea to full literal translations woven into plays The playwright s apparent familiarity with the absurdity of humanity and both the comedy and tragedy that stem from this absurdity have inspired succeeding playwrights centuries after his death The most famous of these successors is Shakespeare Plautus had a major influence on his early comedies The Middle Ages and early Renaissance edit Plautus was apparently read in the 9th century His form was too complex to be fully understood however and as indicated by the Terentius et delusor it was unknown at the time if Plautus was writing in prose or verse W B Sedgwick has provided a record of the Amphitruo perennially one of Plautus most famous works It was the most popular Plautine play in the Middle Ages and publicly performed at the Renaissance it was the first Plautine play to be translated into English The influence of Plautus s plays was felt in the early 16th century Limited records suggest that the first known university production of Plautus in England was of Miles Gloriosus at Oxford in 1522 3 The magnum jornale of Queens College contains a reference to a comoedia Plauti in either 1522 or 1523 This fits directly with comments made in the poems of Leland about the date of the production The next production of Miles Gloriosus that is known from limited records was given by the Westminster School in 1564 81 Other records also tell us about performances of the Menaechmi From our knowledge performances were given in the house of Cardinal Wolsey by boys of St Paul s School as early as 1527 82 Shakespeare edit Shakespeare borrowed from Plautus as Plautus borrowed from his Greek models C L Barber says that Shakespeare feeds Elizabethan life into the mill of Roman farce life realized with his distinctively generous creativity very different from Plautus tough narrow resinous genius 83 The Plautine and Shakespearean plays that most parallel each other are respectively the Menaechmi and The Comedy of Errors According to Marples Shakespeare drew directly from Plautus parallels in plot in incident and in character 84 and was undeniably influenced by the classical playwright s work H A Watt stresses the importance of recognizing the fact that the two plays were written under conditions entirely different and served audiences as remote as the poles 85 The differences between the Menaechmi and The Comedy of Errors are clear In the Menaechmi Plautus uses only one set of twins twin brothers Shakespeare on the other hand uses two sets of twins which according to William Connolly dilutes the force of Shakespeare s situations 85 One suggestion is that Shakespeare got this idea from Plautus Amphitruo in which both twin masters and twin slaves appear It can be noted that the doubling is a stock situation of Elizabethan comedy On the fusion between Elizabethan and Plautine techniques T W Baldwin writes Errors does not have the miniature unity of Menaechmi which is characteristic of classic structure for comedy 86 Baldwin notes that Shakespeare covers a much greater area in the structure of the play than Plautus does Shakespeare was writing for an audience whose minds weren t restricted to house and home but looked toward the greater world beyond and the role that they might play in that world Another difference between the audiences of Shakespeare and Plautus is that Shakespeare s audience was Christian At the end of Errors the world of the play is returned to normal when a Christian abbess interferes with the feuding Menaechmi on the other hand is almost completely lacking in a supernatural dimension 87 A character in Plautus play would never blame an inconvenient situation on witchcraft something that is quite common in Shakespeare The relationship between a master and a clever servant is also a common element in Elizabethan comedy Shakespeare often includes foils for his characters to have one set off the other In Elizabethan romantic comedy it is common for the plays to end with multiple marriages and couplings of pairs This is something that is not seen in Plautine comedy In the Comedy of Errors Aegeon and Aemilia are separated Antipholus and Adriana are at odds and Antipholus and Luciana have not yet met At the end all the couples are happily together By writing his comedies in a combination of Elizabethan and Plautine styles Shakespeare helps to create his own brand of comedy one that uses both styles 85 Also Shakespeare uses the same kind of opening monologue so common in Plautus s plays He even uses a villain in The Comedy of Errors of the same type as the one in Menaechmi switching the character from a doctor to a teacher but keeping the character a shrewd educated man 85 Watt also notes that some of these elements appear in many of his works such as Twelfth Night or A Midsummer Night s Dream and had a deep impact on Shakespeare s writing 85 Later playwrights also borrowed Plautus s stock characters One of the most important echoes of Plautus is the stock character of the parasite The best example of this is Falstaff Shakespeare s portly and cowardly knight As J W Draper notes the gluttonous Falstaff shares many characteristics with a parasite such as Artotrogus from Miles Gloriosus Both characters seem fixated on food and where their next meal is coming from But they also rely on flattery in order to gain these gifts and both characters are willing to bury their patrons in empty praise 88 Draper notes that Falstaff is also something of a boastful military man but says Falstaff is so complex a character that he may well be in effect a combination of interlocking types 88 As well as appearing in Shakespearean comedy the Plautine parasite appears in one of the first English comedies In Ralph Roister Doister the character of Matthew Merrygreeke follows in the tradition of both Plautine Parasite and Plautine slave as he both searches and grovels for food and also attempts to achieve his master s desires 88 Indeed the play itself is often seen as borrowing heavily from or even being based on the Plautine comedy Miles Gloriosus 89 H W Cole discusses the influence of Plautus and Terence on the Stonyhurst Pageants The Stonyhurst Pageants are manuscripts of Old Testament plays that were probably composed after 1609 in Lancashire Cole focuses on Plautus influence on the particular Pageant of Naaman The playwright of this pageant breaks away from the traditional style of religious medieval drama and relies heavily on the works of Plautus Overall the playwright cross references eighteen of the twenty surviving plays of Plautus and five of the six extant plays by Terence It is clear that the author of the Stonyhurst Pageant of Naaman had a great knowledge of Plautus and was significantly influenced by this 90 There is evidence of Plautine imitation in Edwardes Damon and Pythias and Heywood s Silver Age as well as in Shakespeare s Errors Heywood sometimes translated whole passages of Plautus By being translated as well as imitated Plautus was a major influence on comedy of the Elizabethan era In terms of plot or perhaps more accurately plot device Plautus served as a source of inspiration and also provided the possibility of adaptation for later playwrights The many deceits that Plautus layered his plays with giving the audience the feeling of a genre bordering on farce appear in much of the comedy written by Shakespeare and Moliere For instance the clever slave has important roles in both L Avare and L Etourdi two plays by Moliere and in both drives the plot and creates the ruse just like Palaestrio in Miles Gloriosus 91 These similar characters set up the same kind of deceptions in which many of Plautus plays find their driving force which is not a simple coincidence Later periods edit 20th century musicals based on Plautus include A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum Larry Gelbart and Burt Shevelove book Stephen Sondheim music and lyrics Roman Laughter The Comedy of Plautus a 1968 book by Erich Segal is a scholarly study of Plautus work The British TV sitcom Up Pompeii uses situations and stock characters from Plautus s plays In the first series Willie Rushton plays Plautus who pops up on occasion to provide comic comments on what is going on in the episode See also editA Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum Glossarium Eroticum History of theatre Menander Moliere Prosody Latin Second Punic War Shakespeare Terence Theatre of ancient RomeNotes edit print British Museum The British Museum Retrieved 2023 05 20 It has been suggested that the correct spelling was Maccus since that is how it is spelled in Asinaria line 11 Ritschl s proposal to read Maccius in that line has generally not been accepted since it breaks a metrical law and it was later withdrawn by Ritschl himself W Beare 1937 Titus Maccus Plautus Classical Review Volume 53 4 W M Lindsay 1922 Early Latin Verse p 90 C Questa 2007 La Metrica di Plauto e Terenzio p 217 The Concise Oxford Companion to Classical Literature 1996 Ed M C Howatson and Ian Chilvers Oxford University Press Oxford Reference Online M Marples Plautus Greece amp Rome 8 22 1938 p 1 S O Bryhim Greek and Roman Comedy University of Texas Press 2001 p 149 This slave is also called Strobilus in the text but many scholars believe that he is not same slave as the Strobilus in the first half Modern Durres on the coast of what is now Albania a b Rolando Ferri 2020 The Textual Tradition of Plautus chapter 27 of G F Franko and D Dutsch eds A Companion to Plautus Wiley See especially pp 411 414 For a complete account of this manuscript see W Studemund 1889 T Macci Plauti Fabularum reliquiae Ambrosianae also available on Google books W M Lindsay 1896 An Introduction to Latin Textual Emendation intro 3 Walter de Melo Plautus Amphitryon etc Loeb Classical Library introduction p cvi W M Lindsay 1896 An Introduction to Latin Textual Emendation intro 4 a b Lindsay W M 1900 Captivi pp 1 12 H M Tolliver Plautus and the State Gods of Rome The Classical Journal 48 2 1952 pp 49 57 M Leigh Comedy and the Rise of Rome New York Oxford University Press 2004 p 24 A F West On a Patriotic Passage in the Miles Gloriosus of Plautus The American Journal of Philology 8 1 1887 p 18 West 24 West 26 West 28 P B Harvey Historical Topicality in Plautus Classical World 79 1986 pp 297 304 Leigh 26 W M Owens Plautus Stichus and the Political Crisis of 200 B C The American Journal of Philology 121 3 2000 p 388 Owens 386 Owens 392 Owens 395 396 a b Sutton 1993 p 57 Sutton 1993 p 59 Lloyd R F Two Prologues Menander and Plautus The American Journal of Philology 84 2 1963 April p 141 a b Lloyd 1963 p 149 Lloyd 1963 p 150 Lowe J C B Aspects of Plautus Originality in the Asinaria The Classical Quarterly 42 1992 p 155 Stace C The Slaves of Plautus Greece amp Rome 15 1968 p 75 Stace 1968 pp 73 74 Seaman W M The Understanding of Greek by Plautus Audience Classical Journal 50 1954 p 115 Seaman 1954 p 116 Seaman 1954 p 115 Seaman 1954 p 119 W S Anderson The Roman Transformation of Greek Domestic Comedy The Classical World 88 3 1995 pp 171 180 Anderson 1995 p 178 Owens W M The Third Deception in Bacchides Fides and Plautus Originality The American Journal of Philology 115 1994 pp 381 382 V Castellani Plautus versus Komoidia popular farce at Rome in Farce ed 5 J Redmond Cambridge and New York 1988 pp 53 82 Owens 1994 p 404 S M Goldberg Plautus on the Palatine The Journal of Roman Studies 88 1998 p 2 M Hammond A M Mack W Moskalew Introduction The Stage and Production in Miles Gloriosus Ed M Hammond A Mack W Moskalew London and Cambridge 1997 repr pp 15 29 T J Moore Palliata Togata Plautus Curculio 462 86 The American Journal of Philology 112 3 1991 pp 343 362 J A Hanson Roman Theater Temples Princeton NJ 1959 p 13 Goldberg 1998 pp 1 20 T J Moore Seats and Social Status in the Plautine Theater The Classical Journal 90 2 1995 pp 113 123 M Bieber The History of the Greek and Roman Theater Princeton NJ 1961 p 168 Moore 1991 p 347 V J Rosivach Plautine Stage Settings Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 101 1970 pp 445 461 N E Andrews Tragic Re Presentation and the Semantics of Space in Plautus Mnemosyne 57 4 2004 pp 445 464 S M Goldberg Act to Action in Plautus Bacchides Classical Philology 85 3 1990 pp 191 201 Goldberg 1998 p 19 Goldberg 1998 p 16 P G Brown Actors and Actor Managers at Rome in the Time of Plautus and Terence in Greek and Roman Actors Aspects of an Ancient Profession Ed P Easterling and E Hall Cambridge 2002 p 228 Goldberg 1998 p 19 W H Juniper Character Portrayals in Plautus The Classical Journal 31 1936 p 279 Juniper 1936 p 278 J N Hough The Reverse Comic Foil in Plautus The American Philological Association 73 1942 p 108 P W Harsh The Intriguing Slave in Greek Comedy Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 86 1955 pp 135 142 Harsh 1955 p 135 142 K C Ryder The Senex Amator in Plautus Greece amp Rome 31 2 Oct 1984 pp 181 189 Z M Packman Feminine Role Designations in the Comedies of Plautus The American Journal of Philology 120 2 1999 pp 245 258 G E Duckworth The Unnamed Characters in the Plays of Plautus Classical Philology 33 2 1938 pp 167 282 A W Hodgman Verb Forms in Plautus The Classical Quarterly 1 1 1907 pp 42 52 Ed M Hammond A H Mack amp W Moskalew Miles Gloriosus Cambridge and London 1997 repr pp 39 57 The reader is directed to the word studies of A W Hodgman Nouns 1902 Verbs 107 to grasp fully the use of archaic forms in Plautine diction From magis volo want more R H Martin Terence Phormio London Methuen 1969 P 86 n 29 This list compiled from a number of word studies and syntactic texts listed in the reference section Sznycer Maurice 1967 Les passages punique en transcription latine dans le Poenulus de Plaute Paris Librairie C Klincksieck M Fontaine Funny Words in Plautine Comedy Oxford 2010 C Stace The Slaves of Plautus Greece and Rome 2 15 1968 pp 64 77 MacCary amp Willcock 1976 p 12 the delight in low humour we associate with Plautus Stace 1968 pp 64 77 N W Slater Plautus in Performance The Theatre of the Mind Princeton Princeton University Press 1985 p 152 E Segal Roman Laughter The Comedy of Plautus Cambridge Harvard University Press 1968 p 122 Segal 1968 p 136 Banducci 2011 L Bradner The First Cambridge Production of Miles Gloriosus Modern Language Notes 70 6 1955 pp 400 403 H W Cole The Influence of Plautus and Terence Upon the Stonyhurst Pageants Modern Language Notes 38 1923 393 399 C L Barber Shakespearian Comedy in the Comedy of Errors College English 25 7 1964 p 493 M Marples Plautus Greece amp Rome 8 22 1938 p 2 a b c d e H A Watt Plautus and Shakespeare Further Comments on Menaechmi and The Comedy of Errors The Classical Journal 20 1925 pp 401 407 T W Baldwin On the Compositional Genetics of The Comedy of Errors Urbana 1965 pp 200 209 N Rudd The Classical Tradition in Operation Toronto 1994 pp 32 60 a b c J W Draper Falstaff and the Plautine Parasite The Classical Journal 33 1938 pp 390 401 H W Cole The Influence of Plautus and Terence Upon the Stonyhurst Pageants Modern Language Notes 38 1923 pp 393 399 H W Cole The Influence of Plautus and Terrence Upon the Stonyhurst Pageants Modern Language Notes 38 7 1923 pp 393 399 S V Cole Plautus Up to Date The Classical Journal 16 1921 pp 399 409 References editAnderson W S Barbarian Play Plautus Roman Comedy Toronto 1993 Anderson W S The Roman Transformation of Greek Domestic Comedy The Classical World 88 3 1995 pp 171 180 Andrews N E Tragic Re Presentation and the Semantics of Space in Plautus Mnemosyne 57 4 2004 pp 445 464 Arnott W G A Note on the Parallels between Menander s Dyskolos and Plautus Aulularia Phoenix 18 3 1964 pp 232 237 Baldwin T W The Compositional Genetics of The Comedy of Errors Urbana 1965 pp 200 209 Banducci Laura 2011 The Delayed Feast the Festival Context of Plautus Pseudolus Didaskalia 8 30 Barber C L Shakespearian Comedy in the Comedy of Errors College English 25 7 1964 pp 493 497 Beede G L Proverbial Expressions in Plautus The Classical Journal 44 6 1949 pp 357 362 Bieber M The History of the Greek and Roman Theater Princeton 1961 Bradner L The First Cambridge Production of Miles Gloriosus Modern Language Notes 70 6 1965 pp 400 403 Brown PG Actors and Actor Managers at Rome in the Time of Plautus and Terence in Greek and Roman Actors Aspects of an Ancient Profession Ed P Easterling and E Hall Cambridge 2002 Castellani V Plautus Versus Komoidia Popular Farce at Rome in Farce Ed J Redmond Cambridge and New York 1988 pp 53 82 Christenson D Plautus Amphitruo Cambridge 2000 Christenson D Grotesque Realism in Plautus Amphitruo Classical Journal 96 3 2001 pp 243 60 Cole H W The Influence of Plautus and Terence Upon the Stonyhurst Pageants Modern Language Notes 38 1923 pp 393 399 Cole S V Plautus Up to Date The Classical Journal 16 1921 pp 399 409 Coleman R G G Poetic Diction Poetic Discourse and the Poetic Register in Aspects of the Language of Latin Poetry Ed J N Adams amp R G Mayer Oxford and New York 1999 pp 21 96 Connors C Monkey Business Imitation Authenticity and Identity from Pithekoussai to Plautus Classical Antiquity 23 2 2004 pp 179 207 Conte G B Latin Literature A History Baltimore 1994 Dorey T A and Dudley D R eds Roman Drama New York 1965 Draper J W Falstaff and the Plautine Parasite The Classical Journal 33 1938 pp 390 401 Duckworth G E The Unnamed Characters in the Plays of Plautus Classical Philology 33 2 1938 pp 167 282 Echols E C The Quid Greeting in Plautus and Terence The Classical Journal 45 4 1950 pp 188 190 Fantham E The Curculio of Plautus An Illustration of Plautine Methods in Adaptation The Classical Quarterly 15 1 1965 pp 84 100 Fontaine M Funny Words in Plautine Comedy Oxford Oxford University Press 2010 1 Fortson IV Benjamin W Language and rhythm in Plautus Synchronic and diachronic studies Berlin New York Walter de Gruyter 2008 Sozomena Studies in the Recovery of Ancient Texts 3 Goldberg S M Plautus on the Palatine The Journal of Roman Studies 88 1998 pp 1 20 Goldberg S M Act to Action in Plautus Bacchides Classical Philology 85 3 1990 pp 191 201 Halporn J Roman Comedy and Greek Models in Theater and Society in the Classical World ed Ruth Scodel Ann Arbor 1993 pp 191 213 Hammond M A M Mack W Moskalew Introduction The Stage and Production in Miles Gloriosus Ed M Hammond A Mack W Moskalew London and Cambridge 1997 repr pp 15 29 Hanson J A Roman Theater Temples Princeton 1959 Harsh P W Position of Archaic Forms in the Verse of Plautus Classical Philology 35 2 1940 pp 126 142 Harsh P W The Intriguing Slave in Greek Comedy Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 86 1955 pp 135 142 Hodgman A W Adjectival Forms in Plautus The Classical Review 16 9 1902 pp 446 452 Hodgman A W Adverbial Forms in Plautus The Classical Review 17 6 1903 pp 296 303 Hodgman A W Noun Declension in Plautus The Classical Review 16 6 1902 pp 294 305 Hodgman A W Verb Forms in Plautus continued The Classical Quarterly 1 2 1907 pp 97 134 Hodgman A W Verb Forms in Plautus The Classical Quarterly 1 1 1907 pp 42 52 Hoffmann M E Conversation Openings in the Comedies of Plautus in Latin Linguistics and Linguistic Theory Proceedings of the First International Colloquium on Latin Linguistics Ed H Pinkster Amsterdam 1981 pp 217 226 Hough J N The Development of Plautus Art Classical Philology 30 1 1935 pp 43 57 Hough J N The Reverse Comic Foil in Plautus The American Philological Association 73 1942 pp 108 118 Jocelyn H D Gods Cult and Cultic Language in Plautus Epidicus in Studien zu Plautus Epidicus Ed U Auhagen Tubingen 2001 pp 261 296 Juniper W H Character Portrayals in Plautus The Classical Journal 31 1936 pp 276 288 Krauss Amanda Neill Untaming the Shrew Marriage Morality and Plautine Comedy 2004 2 3 permanent dead link Lindsay W M The Syntax of Plautus London 2002 repr Lloyd R F Two Prologues Menander and Plautus The American Journal of Philology 84 2 1963 pp 146 161 Lowe J C B The Virgo Callida of Plautus Persa The Classical Quarterly 39 2 1989 pp 390 399 Lowe J C B Aspects of Plautus Originality in the Asinaria The Classical Quarterly 42 1992 pp 152 175 MacCary W T Willcock M M 1976 Plautus Casina Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 29022 8 Marples M Plautus Greece amp Rome 8 22 1938 pp 1 7 McCarthy K Slaves Masters and the Art of Authority in Plautine Comedy Princeton 2000 Moore T J Theater of Plautus Playing to the Audience Austin 1998 Moore T J Palliata Togata Plautus Curculio 462 86 The American Journal of Philology 112 3 1991 pp 343 362 Moore T J Seats and Social Status in the Plautine Theater The Classical Journal 90 2 1995 pp 113 123 Nyman M A Where Does Latin Sum Come From Language 53 1 1977 pp 39 60 Owens W M The Third Deception in Bacchides Fides and Plautus Originality The American Journal of Philology 115 1994 pp 381 407 Packman Z M Feminine Role Designations in the Comedies of Plautus The American Journal of Philology 120 2 1999 pp 245 258 Prescott H W Criteria of Originality in Plautus Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 63 1932 pp 103 125 Rosivach V J Plautine Stage Settings Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 101 1970 pp 445 461 Rudd N The Classical Tradition in Operation Toronto 1994 pp 32 60 Ryder K C The Senex Amator in Plautus Greece amp Rome 31 2 1984 pp 181 189 Seaman W M The Understanding of Greek by Plautus Audience Classical Journal 50 1954 pp 115 119 Sedgwick W B The History of a Latin Comedy The Review of English Studies 3 11 1927 346 349 Segal E Roman Laughter The Comedy of Plautus Cambridge 1968 Slater N W Plautus In Performance The Theatre of the Mind Princeton 1985 Stace C The Slaves of Plautus Greece amp Rome 15 1968 pp 64 77 Sutton D F Ancient Comedy The War of the Generations New York 1993 Waite S Word Position in Plautus Interplay of Verse Ictus and Word Stress in The Computer in Literary and Linguistic Studies Ed A Jones amp R F Churchhouse Cardiff 1976 pp 92 105 Watt H A Plautus and Shakespeare Further Comments on Menaechmi and The Comedy of Errors The Classical Journal 20 1925 pp 401 407 Wiles D Recent Critical Approaches to Plautus in Farce Ed J Redmond Cambridge 1988 pp 261 272 Wymer R Shakespeare and the Mystery Cycles English Literary Renaissance 34 3 2004 pp 265 285 Editions editT Macci Plauti Comoediae ex recensione Georgii Goetz et Friderici Schoell 7 voll Lipsiae in aedibus B G Teubneri 1893 6 voll 1 4 1909 re edition voll 5 7 Plautus 2007 The Rope and Other Plays Penguin ISBN 9780141937915 Plautus 2004 The Pot of Gold and Other Plays Penguin ISBN 9780141911229 Richlin Amy 2005 Rome and the Mysterious Orient Three Plays by Plautus University of California Press Further reading editLeigh Matthew 2015 Food in Latin literature In Wilkins John Nadeau Robin eds A Companion to Food in the Ancient World Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World Vol 89 John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781405179409 Banducci Laura M 2021 Food remains from the environmental record Foodways in Roman Republican Italy University of Michigan Press ISBN 9780472132300 Gowers Emily 1993 Barbarian spinach and Roman bacon The Comedies of Plautus The Loaded Table Representations of Food in Roman Literature Representations of Food in Roman Literature Clarendon Press ISBN 9780191591655 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Plautus nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Plautus nbsp Latin Wikisource has original text related to this article Plautus Works by Plautus at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Plautus at Internet Archive Works by Plautus at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Works by Plautus Plautus Perseus Digital Library 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