Examines the manuscript evidence of the surviving text of the Phaethon of Euripides and offers many decipherments.
As an adult Phaethon claims the promise and asks to drive his father's chariot, with disastrous consequences... Only a quarter of Euripides' original version of Phaethon has survived.
Aristotle: Poetics; Edited and Translated by Stephen Halliwell. Longius
CHARLEs P. SEGAL Solar Imagery and Tragic Heroism in Euripides' Hippolytus Bernard Knox's essay, “The Hippolytus of ... As Kenneth Reckford has recently observed, there are a number of parallels between Hippolytus and Phaethon, ...
This dilemma is fundamental to the myth dramatized by Euripides . Phaethon's mother , Klymene , assures him that Helios rather than Merops is his real father , and that Phaethon is entitled to one request from Helios .
ON THE ALEXANDROS OF EURIPIDES David Kovacs A BOUT Euripides ' Alexandros we are , comparatively speaking , fairly well informed . The book fragments , it is true , are unhelpful , but we have several major papyrus fragments , a number ...
Aeschylus (Heliades), Euripides (Phaethon), and Theodorides (Phaethon) all produced tragedies devoted to a hero named Phaethon. Sadly,. 1 Philostratus the Elder, Imagines 1.11.2 as translated in G. Ferrari, op. cit., p. 65.
This book appears to be one of the first, if not the first contribution that explicitly focuses on what is beneath the surface of money, finance and capital. It invites the reader to explore the financial world in depth.
The surviving text of the fragmentary Phaethon of Euripides depends chiefly on two sources: two pages from a Euripidean manuscript, written about A.D. 500, and a papyrus of the third century B.C., which contains a substantial part of the ...
The immediate focus is Ganymede himself; the young boy, snatched from his guardians, is likely to represent Pallas or perhaps even Turnus. The analogy that offers itself to us is that of victor/victim, hunter/hunted.
Studies in the Theatre of the Fifth and Fourth Centuries BCE Hallie Marshall, C. W. Marshall ... (2020), Greek Theatre and Performance Culture around the Ancient Black Sea (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).