Generated from local file. Cache size:400 (not visible in beta/prod)

Aeschylus



Aeschylus - ĕsˈkĭləs, ēsˈ–, 525–456 b.c., Athenian tragic dramatist, b. Eleusis. The first of the three great Greek writers of tragedy, Aeschylus was the predecessor of Sophocles and Euripides.

Aeschylus fought at Marathon and at Salamis. In 476 b.c. he went to Sicily to live at the court of Hiero I, and he died at Gela. He wrote perhaps 90   Read More...


Read full-text books and articles on:  

Aeschylus

  1. 1.


    The Oresteia
    by Aeschylus, Peter Burian, Alan Shapiro. 285 pgs.


  2. 2.



  3. 3.



  4. 4.



  5. 5.



  6. 6.



  7. 7.



  8. 8.



  9. 9.



  10. 10.



  11. 11.



  12. 12.



  13. 13.



  14. 14.



Search the entire Questia Library for more on: Aeschylus


View all books and articles on Aeschylus

Customize your search: Search within the topic Aeschylus


Search in:
Books Journals Magazines
Newspapers Encyclopedia Research Topics
  • Type your specific word or phrase in the box above after the word and, then click Search.
  • Put exact phrases in double quotation marks. Do not put single words in quotation marks.

Get full-text access to all publications in this Research Pack on Aeschylus
Only
$9.95
30-Day access
(One-time charge)
Search the Library

Customize your search: Search within the topic Aeschylus


Search in:
Books Journals Magazines
Newspapers Encyclopedia Research Topics
  • Type your specific word or phrase in the box above after the word and, then click Search.
  • Put exact phrases in double quotation marks. Do not put single words in quotation marks.
Sponsored Links
Read more than 5,000 classic books FREE!
Back to top