الاستماع والقراءة

خطوة إلى عالم لا حدود له من القصص

  • اقرأ واستمع إلى ما تريده
  • أكثر من مليون عنوان
  • العناوين الحصرية + أصول القصة
  • 7 يوم تجربة مجانية، ثم 34.99 ريال يورو في الشهر
  • من السهل الإلغاء في أي وقت
جرب مجانا
Cover for The Libation Bearers

The Libation Bearers

1 تقييم

5

اللغات
الإنجليزية
الصيغة
التصنيف

كتب واقعية

Æschylus is often regarded as the father of Greek tragedy; he moved play writing from the simple interaction of a single character and a chorus to one where many characters interact and thereby create more dynamic and dramatic situations. Æschylus, was the son of Euphorion, and a scion of a Eupatrid or noble family. He was born at Eleusis 525 B.C., or, as the Greeks calculated time, in the fourth year of the 63rd Olympiad. He first worked at a vineyard and whilst there claimed to have been visited by Dionysis in a dream and told to turn his attention to the tragic art. It was a dream that would deliver a rich and incredible legacy through his writing talents. His earliest tragedy, composed when he was twenty-six years of age, failed to win the fabled Dionysia, (a revered festival of theatre) and it was not until fifteen years later that he gained this victory in 484BC going on to win it again in 472 BC (for The Persians), 467 BC (for Seven Against Thebes) and 463 BC (for The Suppliants). Æschylus was also known for his military skills and was ready to fight in defence of Athens whenever the call was made. He and his brother, Cynegeirus, fought against Darius's invading Persian army at the Battle of Marathon in 490 BCE and, although the Greeks won against overwhelming odds, Cynegeirus died in the battle, which had a naturally had a profound effect on Æschylus. He made several visits to the important Greek city of Syracuse in Sicily at the invitation of the tyrant Hieron, and it is thought that he also travelled extensively in the region of Thrace. His writing continued to be the envy of others. With the series of plays of which Seven Against Thebes was a part, his supremacy was undisputed. He was the "father of tragedy." Æschylus made many changes to dramatic form. The importance of the chorus was demoted and a second added to give prominence to the dialogue and making that interchange the leading feature of the play. He removed all deeds of bloodshed from the public view, and in their place provided various spectacular elements, improving the costumes, making the masks more expressive and convenient, and probably adopting the cothurnus to increase the stature of the performers. Finally, he established the custom of contending for the prize with trilogies, an inter-connecting set of three independent dramas. The closing years of the life of Æschylus were mainly spent in Sicily, which he had first visited soon after his defeat at the Dionysia by Sophocles. Æschylus returned to Athens to produce his Orestean trilogy, probably the finest of his works, although the Eumenides, the last of the three plays, revealed so openly his aristocratic tendencies that he became extremely unpopular, and returned to Sicily for the last time in 458 BCE and it was there that he died, while visiting the city of Gela in 456 or 455 BCE.

© 2017 Scribe Publishing (كتاب إلكتروني): 9781787371408

تاريخ النشر

الكتاب الإلكتروني: ٤ مارس ٢٠١٧

واستمتع آخرون أيضًا...

  1. The English Novel: Enriched edition. A Scholarly Exploration of English Fiction: Themes, Techniques, and Key Figures in Literary History
    The English Novel: Enriched edition. A Scholarly Exploration of English Fiction: Themes, Techniques, and Key Figures in Literary History Ford Madox Ford
  2. Harvard Classics: All 71 Volumes: Exploring Literary and Philosophical Masterpieces from Harvard Classics Anthology
    Harvard Classics: All 71 Volumes: Exploring Literary and Philosophical Masterpieces from Harvard Classics Anthology Hans Christian Andersen, George Eliot, Ivan Turgenev, Victor Hugo, Honoré Balzac, Jane Austen, Henry James, Edgar Alan Poe, Aesop, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Washington Irving, Mark Twain, Miguel de Cervantes, Leo Tolstoy, Oliver Goldsmith, Tacitus, Robert Louis Stevenson, Voltaire, Charles Darwin, Herodotus, William Shakespeare, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Robert Browning, Homer, Guy de Maupassant, Daniel Defoe, David Hume, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Jonathan Swift, Niccolo Machiavelli, Alphonse Daudet, William Makepeace Thackeray, Aeschylus, Richard Henry Dana, Adam Smith, John Bunyan, Dante Alighieri, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Hobbes, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Walter Scott, George Gordon Byron, Benvenuto Cellini, Thomas More, John Dryden, Plutarch, Virgil, Blaise Pascal, John Milton, Plato, Henry David Thoreau, John Stuart Mill, Thomas Malory, Robert Burns, René Descartes, Henry Fielding, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, John Webster, Euripides, Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson, Edmund Burke, Leigh Hunt, Laurence Sterne, Marcus Aurelius, Michel de Montaigne, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Sophocles, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Wilhelm Grimm, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Immanuel Kant, Izaak Walton, Bret Harte, Charles Lamb, Marcus Tullius Cicero, John Locke, Martin Luther, George Berkeley, Molière, Thomas à Kempis, George Sand, Jean Froissart, Francis Bacon, Hippocrates, Thomas De Quincey, Pedro Calderón de la Barca, Alexander L. Kielland, Samuel Johnson, James Russell Lowell, Epictetus, Friedrich von Schiller, Aristophanes, Christopher Marlowe, Saint Augustine, Thomas Dekker, William Penn, Thomas Carlyle, Michael Faraday, Walter Raleigh, John Ruskin, Simon Newcomb, Ernest Renan, Alfred de Musset, Gottfried Keller, Theodor Storm, Richard Steele, John Fletcher, Pierre Corneille, Jean Racine, Ben Jonson, Abraham Cowley, Philip Massinger, Francis Beaumont, Theodor Fontane, William Hazlitt, Alessandro Manzoni, Juan Valera, Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, Charles W. Eliot, William Roper, Thomas Browne, William Henry Harrison, Edward Everett Hale, Pliny the Younger, John Woolman, Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von Helmholtz, Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve, Giuseppe Mazzini, Francis Pretty, Walter Bigges, Edward Haies, Ambroise Paré, William Harvey, Joseph Lister, Louis Pasteur, Joseph Addison, Philip Sidney, Sydney Smith, Thomas Babington Macaulay, Philip Nichols, David Garrick, Archibald Geikie, Francis Drake, William A. Neilson
  3. The theft of the robot
    The theft of the robot Silvia Strufaldi
  4. The Survival of Margaret Thomas
    The Survival of Margaret Thomas Del Howison
  5. The Pursuit of God
    The Pursuit of God A. W. Tozer
  6. Miss Mapp: Enriched edition. Navigating Gossip, Schemes, and Social Dynamics in a Quaint English Village
    Miss Mapp: Enriched edition. Navigating Gossip, Schemes, and Social Dynamics in a Quaint English Village Edward Frederic Benson

دائمًا برفقة Storytel

  • أكثر من 200000 عنوان

  • وضع الأطفال (بيئة آمنة للأطفال)

  • تنزيل الكتب للوصول إليها دون الاتصال بالإنترنت

  • الإلغاء في أي وقت

الكتب الأكثر استماعًا

شهري

قصص لكل المناسبات.

34.99 ريال /شهر

  • حساب واحد

  • حساب بلا حدود

  • 1 حساب

  • استماع بلا حدود

  • إلغاء في أي وقت

جرب الآن

سنويا

قصص لكل المناسبات.

299 ريال /سنة

وفر 29%
  • حساب واحد

  • حساب بلا حدود

  • 1 حساب

  • استماع بلا حدود

  • إلغاء في أي وقت

جرب الآن

6 أشهر

قصص لكل المناسبات.

192 ريال /6 شهر

وفر 9%
  • حساب واحد

  • حساب بلا حدود

  • 1 حساب

  • استماع بلا حدود

  • إلغاء في أي وقت

جرب الآن