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Euripides - Greek Tragedy and Euripides

By N.S. Gill, About.com

Euripides

Euripides

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Who Was Euripides?:

Euripides (c. 484-407/406) was an ancient writer of Greek tragedy -- the third of the famous trio (with Sophocles and Aeschylus).

Euripides wrote about women and mythological themes like Medea and Helen of Troy. He enhanced the importance of intrigue in tragedy. Some aspects of Euripides' tragedy seem more at home in comedy than in tragedy, and, indeed, Euripides is considered to have been a significant influence on the Greek creation of New Comedy.

Euripides - Life and Career of Euripides:

A contemporary of Sophocles, Euripides was born around 484 B.C. on Salamis and died in 406 in Macedonia. His first competition was in 455 when he came in third. His initial first prize came in 442, but out of about 92 plays, Euripides won only 4 more first prizes -- the last, posthumously. Despite winning only limited acclaim during his lifetime, Euripides was the most popular of the three great tragedians for generations after his death.

Euripides - Death:

Euripides died in 407/406, not in Athens, but in Macedonia, at the court of King Archelaus. Euripides was in Macedonia either in self-imposed exile or at the king's invitation. An improbable variety of explanations for his death shows how controversial Euripides was: "He is said to have been killed by hunting dogs, either accidentally let loose on him or deliberately set on him by enemies or rivals, or torn apart by women."

Contributions of Euripides:

Where Aeschylus and Sophocles emphasized plot, by adding an actor each, Euripides added intrigue. Intrigue is complicated in Greek tragedy by the constant presence of the all-knowing chorus.

Euripides also created the love-drama. New Comedy took over the more effective parts of Euripides' technique. In a modern performance of Eurpides' tragedy, Helen, the director explained it was essential for the audience to see immediately that it's a comedy.

Euripides' Alcestis:

Another Euripidean tragedy that portrays women and Greek mythology, and seems to bridge the genres of tragedy, satyr play, and comedy is Alcestis.

A buffoonish Hercules (Heracles) comes to the house of his friend Admetus. Admetus is mourning the death of his wife Alcestis, who has sacrificed her life for him, but won't tell Hercules who has died. Hercules overindulges, as usual. While his polite host won't say who died, the appalled household staff will. To make amends for partying at a house in mourning, Hercules goes to the Underworld to rescue Alcestis.

See Review - Ted Hughes' Alcestis

Reputation of Euripides:

During his lifetime, Euripides' innovations met with hostility. To Euripides, traditional legends portrayed the moral standards of the gods unsuitably. The gods' morality was shown to be lower than that of virtuous men. Although Euripides portrayed women sensitively, he nonetheless had a reputation as a woman-hater. Rabinowitz indirectly explains this paradox.

Aristophanes on Euripides:

Euripides' contemporary, the comic poet Aristophanes (c. 448-385 B.C.) criticized Euripides for innovating and lessening the hauteur of tragedy, his morals, and his attitudes towards women. Some of these complaints are like those leveled against Socrates [see Charges Against Socrates]. Specifically. Aristophanes criticized Euripides because he:
  1. put beggars in rags on stage
  2. was determined to make tragedy less lofty
  3. was decadent, a poetic innovator
  4. was a misogynist
  5. subverted received morality
  6. held unorthodox religious views.

Surviving Tragedies of Euripides:

  • Alcestis (438 B.C.)
  • Medea (431 B.C.)
  • Heracleidae (c. 430 B.C.)
  • Hippolytus (428 B.C.)
  • Andromache (c. 425 B.C.)
  • Hecuba (c. 424 B.C.)
  • The Suppliants (c. 423 B.C.)
  • Electra (c. 420 B.C.)
  • Heracles (c. 416 B.C.)
  • The Trojan Women (415 B.C.)
  • Iphigeneia in Tauris (c. 414 B.C.)
  • Ion (c. 414 B.C.)
  • Helen (412 B.C.)
  • Phoenician Women (c. 410 B.C.)
  • Orestes (408 B.C.)
  • Bacchae (405 B.C.)
  • Iphigeneia at Aulis (405 B.C.)
See Study Guides for the Individual Plays.

The Plays:

Read Euripides' plays online.

Euripides Quotes

There are three classes of citizens. The first are the rich, who are indolent and yet always crave more. The second are the poor, who have nothing, are full of envy, hate the rich, and are easily led by demagogues. Between the two extremes lie those who make the state secure and uphold the laws.

Euripides - The Suppliants

The following titles come from surviving plays and fragments of the tragedies of Euripides:

Greek Theatre Study Guide

Euripides is on the list of Most Important People to Know in Ancient History.

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