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  • {{DISPLAYTITLE:''Origins and Life of Euripides'' Ia = T 1 Kannicht}} Euripides the poet was the son of Mnesarchides, a shopkeeper, and Cleito, a vegetable
    12 KB (870 words) - 19:38, 23 April 2015
  • {{DISPLAYTITLE:Thomas Magister, ''Life of Euripides''}} ...sts for which garlands are the prize. And, in fact, this was the case; for Euripides was victorious in these at Athens.
    10 KB (722 words) - 22:55, 15 March 2015
  • |Then aren’t you planning to bring up Sophocles, who is better than Euripides, if you really have to bring someone up from there? ...Iophon is capable of producing all on his own, without Sophocles. Anyway, Euripides is a knave in other respects, so he’d willingly try to escape with me as
    8 KB (647 words) - 10:03, 15 May 2015
  • Child of the arable goddess: because Euripides was the son of Cleito the vegetable seller. And he has said: Dicaeopolis (to Euripides): May you fare well, as your mother once did…
    4 KB (333 words) - 17:51, 5 June 2015
  • ...δηι· ὅθεν {{#lemma: †Μνησίλοχος† | Μνησίλοχος M (cf. [[Origins and Life of Euripides Ia|''Genos'' Ia.3]]) : Τηλεκλείδης edd. (cf. Telecl., fr. 41 K.- ...an Athenian, from the deme Alopeke. He seems to have composed poetry with Euripides, as a result of which, Mnesilochus says:
    5 KB (407 words) - 21:09, 16 March 2015
  • Theopompus says that the mother of the poet Euripides earned her living selling wild vegetables. ...sula Salamine speluncam esse taetram et horridam, quam nos uidimus, in qua Euripides tragoedias scriptitarit.
    7 KB (890 words) - 22:38, 15 March 2015
  • {{DISPLAYTITLE:''Origins and Life of Euripides'' II = T 1.II Kannicht}} ...g. The young dogs had been released by the huntsmen, and, having come upon Euripides, the poet was torn to pieces and devoured. The young dogs were offspring of
    3 KB (193 words) - 22:21, 15 March 2015
  • ...tests such plays appear most tragic if they are executed successfully, and Euripides, even if in other respects he does not manage things well, is nonetheless m ...e actors and be part of the whole and participate in the action, not as in Euripides, but as in Sophocles.
    4 KB (292 words) - 16:32, 16 March 2015
  • {{DISPLAYTITLE:''Origins and Life of Euripides'' IV = T 1 Kannicht}} Cephisophon best and blackest, for you lived for the most part with Euripides and, so they say, composed his lyrics with him.
    4 KB (342 words) - 22:25, 15 March 2015
  • Euripides, the son of Mnesarchus or Mnesarchides and Cleito, who, being exiled, lived ...the daughter of Mnesilochus, by whom he had Mnesilochus, Mnesarchides, and Euripides. Having divorced her, he had a second wife, whom he found just as licentiou
    7 KB (463 words) - 22:06, 15 March 2015
  • {{DISPLAYTITLE:Scholion to Euripides, ''Orestes'' 982 p. 193, 19 Schwartz = T 38a2 Kannicht}} Euripides, being a student of Anaxagoras, calls the sun an ‘anvil’.
    740 bytes (68 words) - 17:13, 16 March 2015
  • ...it away; then, however, when they had enquired whether they knew songs of Euripides, and the crew answered in the affirmative, they allowed them to bring the s |guides=[[Euripides: A Guide to Selected Sources|Euripides]]
    3 KB (237 words) - 21:38, 16 March 2015
  • {{DISPLAYTITLE:''Origins and Life of Euripides'' Ib = T 1 Kannicht}} Euripides, the son of Mnesarchides, an Athenian. The poets of Old Comedy make fun of
    5 KB (363 words) - 22:20, 15 March 2015
  • {{DISPLAYTITLE:''Origins and Life of Euripides'' III = T 1.III Kannicht}} ‘I find {Euripides} sour to talk to.’
    6 KB (460 words) - 22:23, 15 March 2015
  • Sophocles liked boys, just as Euripides liked women… ...ing use of the story of Helios and Boreas and incorporating a riddle about Euripides’ predilection for adultery:
    4 KB (287 words) - 23:33, 15 March 2015
  • Euripides, the son of Mnesarchus or Mnesarchides and Cleito, who, being exiled, lived ...the daughter of Mnesilochus, by whom he had Mnesilochus, Mnesarchides, and Euripides. Having divorced her, he had a second wife, whom he found just as licentiou
    7 KB (463 words) - 19:35, 23 April 2015
  • (Euripides): Then I reared her (i.e. tragedy), mixing some Cephisophon into my monodie It seems that Cephisophon, a slave of Euripides, composed his dramas with him, and especially the lyrics. The comic poets j
    4 KB (317 words) - 19:23, 8 June 2015
  • Since the poet Aeschylus’ first victory in tragedy and the birth of the poet Euripides and the arrival of the poet Stesichorus in Greece, 222 years, Philocrates b Since the death of Euripides, who lived for 78 years, 145 years, when Antigenes was archon at Athens (40
    2 KB (149 words) - 22:07, 15 March 2015
  • ...an aristocrat, asked him for a gold cup, he ordered a slave to give it to Euripides. The man was astonished but Archelaus said, ‘You are worthy of asking, bu When Euripides was embracing the beautiful Agathon at a symposium and kissing him although
    2 KB (155 words) - 19:59, 16 March 2015
  • {{DISPLAYTITLE:''Origins and Life of Euripides'' Ia = T 1 Kannicht}} |guides=[[Euripides: A Guide to Selected Sources|Euripides]]
    6 KB (175 words) - 02:09, 24 January 2015
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