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         Euripides:     more books (100)
  1. Euripides, Vol. VIII: Oedipus-Chrysippus & Other Fragments (Loeb Classical Library, No. 506) by Euripides, 2009-01-31
  2. The plays of Euripides, Aeschylus, and Aristophanes (Monarch Notes) by William Walter, 1963
  3. Nine Greek Dramas by Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides and Aristophanes; Translations by E.d.a. Morshead, E.h. Plumptre, Gilbert Murray and B.b. by Aeschylus, 2010-02-09
  4. Euripides Alcestis
  5. Euripides: Orestes (Duckworth Companions to Greek and Roman Tragedy) (Duckworth Companions to Greek & Roman Tragedy) by Matthew Wright, 2008-12-05
  6. Trojan Women (Greek Tragedy in New Translations) by Euripides, 2009-01-06
  7. The Complete Euripides: Volume II: Iphigenia in Tauris and Other Plays (Greek Tragedy in New Translations)
  8. The Iphigenia in Tauris of Euripides by Euripides, 2009-10-04
  9. Euripides And His Age (1913) by Gilbert Murray, 2010-09-10
  10. Euripides, VII, Fragments: Aegeus-Meleager (Loeb Classical Library No. 504) by Euripides, 2008-06-30
  11. Tragedies of Euripides (2) by Euripides, 2009-12-22
  12. Classic Greek Drama: 10 plays by Euripides in a single file, improved 8/23/2010 by Euripides, 2009-11-24
  13. The Complete Euripides: Volume III: Hippolytos and Other Plays (Greek Tragedy in New Translations) by Euripides, 2009-12-15
  14. Euripides: Alcestis (BCP Classic Commentaries on Greek and Latin Texts) by A.M. Dale, 2009-03-25

61. Euripides (480?-406? BC) Greek Writer.
euripides Guide picks. (480?406? Perseus Encyclopedia euripides A well-writtenhypertext biography containing the essential information on his life.
http://classiclit.about.com/cs/euripides/
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Euripides
Guide picks (480?-406? BC) Greek writer. His work has great influenced Roman drama, and more recently, he influenced English, German, and French drama.
Ancient/Classical History on About.com: Euripides

This About.com feature discusses Euripides' place in the arena of Greek tragedy, covers his life and controversial dramatic innovations, and lists his works. Perseus Encyclopedia: Euripides
A well-written hypertext biography containing the essential information on his life. Also contains a list of reference materials for more information. Portland State's Greek Civ for Kids Portland's Euripides page contains information for middle school kids, but the site is useful for all ages. Works by Euripides Read his famous plays online, including

62. GIGA Quote Author Page For Euripides
GIGA's compilation of quotations, excerpts, proverbs, maxims and aphorisms by euripides. GIGAQUOTES BY AUTHOR euripides Greek tragic poet (485 BC 406 BC
http://www.giga-usa.com/gigaweb1/quotes2/quauteuripidesx001.htm
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GIGA QUOTES BY AUTHOR EURIPIDES
Greek tragic poet (485 BC - 406 BC)
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EURIPIDES
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Authority is never without hate.
Authority

Life is short, yet sweet.
Life
Zeus hates busybodies and those who do too much. - quoted by Emerson [ Action Youth holds no society with grief. Youth But learn that to die is a debt we must all pay. Alcestis Death Sweet is the remembrance of troubles when you are in safety. Andromeda (10, 2), (fragment) [ Trouble The divine power moves with difficulty, but at the same time surely. Bacchoe Retribution The first requisite to happiness is that a man be born in a famous city. Encomium on Alcibiades , probably quoted [ Cities God helps him who strives hard. Eumenidoe Help A bad ending follows a bad beginning. Frag. Melanip. (Stoboeus) Results Vengeance comes not slowly either upon you or any other wicked man, but steals silently and imperceptibly, placing its foot on the bad. Fragment Punishment But the devil when he purports any evil against man, first perverts his mind.

63. Euripides - Quotes And Quotations
Author euripides, 480 BC 406 BC, - Chance fights ever on the - Danger gleamslike sunshine to - Down on your knees, and - Happiness is brief.
http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/e/a127249.html
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Author: Euripides, 480 BC - 406 BC The Lost Blond
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64. RELS 011: Euripides
euripides. Born on the Island of Salamis around 484 BCE, euripideswas a contemporary of Sophocles. Contemplative and private in
http://www-relg-studies.scu.edu/netcours/rs011/Euripids.htm
Euripides
Born on the Island of Salamis around 484 BCE, Euripides was a contemporary of Sophocles. Contemplative and private in character, he was also a controversial man who often found himself at odds with people. Although he had a reputation as a woman-hater, Euripides achieved fame for his sensitive protrayal of femal characters, especially Medea and Phaedra. He wrote ninety-two plays in fifty years of writing, and died in 406 BCE. Eighteen of these plays have survived, among them, Electra, Medea, Hippolytus, The Cyclops, Helena, The Bacchae, The Phoenician Women and Orestes . His plays reject simple answers, express belief in the dignity of the individual, and speak of the oppression of women an dslaves. He faulted sexual passion for causing great human sorrow. He is probably the most tragic of the ancient tragic dramatists who appeals more to human emotions than to religion. Hippolytus is one of Euripides' most successful plays and was first performed in 428 B.C.E.
Resources: The following link gives some biographical information on Euripides. It part of the

65. SINTEF Petroleum Research
Nes, OlavMagnar. Papamichos, euripides. Schei, Grethe. Scheldt, Therese. Back.Details. euripides Papamichos. Senior Research Scientist Formation Physics.
http://www.iku.sintef.no/content/org/staff/staff_department.asp?ID=69

66. 84.02.06: Euripides’ Alcestis
YaleNew Haven Teachers Institute, Home. euripides’ Alcestis. by Kathleen O’Neil. euripides.The author of the Alcestis is no less controversial than his work.
http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1984/2/84.02.06.x.html
Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute Home
Euripides’ Alcestis
by
Kathleen O’Neil
Contents of Curriculum Unit 84.02.06:
To Guide Entry
Overview
Our view of Greek literature is rather like a view of a great mountain range in which few peaks stand out in perfect clarity against a blue sky while the rest of the range is patchily, tantalizingly hidden by banks and drifts of clouds. It is with deepest gratitude and respect that I mention those men and women who have spent their lives in pursuit of discovering and preserving the treasures of Ancient Greece. It has to have been an act of love and dedication seldom thought about by many and thankfully able to be carried on by those who have taken up the quest of continuing discovery and study. Indeed, the treasures of Ancient Greece, plead to each generation of scholar, to be sought after, saved and relished. Classicists, for hundreds of years, wrestled the jewels of Ancient Greece’s artists, writers, poets, philosophers and thinkers from the dry sifting sands of Egypt. It is because of these scholars that this unit can be presented to a classroom of students in Connecticut in the year 1984 A.D. It is also because of this that much of the information about this ancient time is filled with conjecture and legend. However, we have a few peaks that stand out clearly, mainly, because others before us have climbed through the mist and cloud to beckon us to stand with them upon the mountain peak and feel the promise of knowledge, inhale the air of challenge and realize the mystery that is Ancient Greece.

67. Drama: Euripides
Back to list euripides (c. 485406 BC) LINKS The euripides Home Page http//www.dc.peachnet.edu/~shale/humanities/literature/world_literature/euripides.html
http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/litlinks/drama/euripides.htm
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Euripides (c. 485-406 B.C.)
LINKS
The Euripides Home Page

http://www.dc.peachnet.edu/~shale/humanities/literature/world_literature/euripides.html
Maintained by Stephen Hale at DeKalb College, this page provides links to good biographies of the playwright, background on and e-text versions of his works, and literary criticism. The Internet Classics Archive: Works by Euripides
http://classics.mit.edu/Browse/browse-Euripides.html
Maintained by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, this site features full e-text versions of nineteen of Euripides' works. Classic Notes: Euripides
http://www.gradesaver.com/ClassicNotes/Authors/about_euripides.html
This site includes an extensive biography of the author and a complete summary and analysis of The Bacchae and Medea Moonstruck: Euripides
http://www.imagi-nation.com/moonstruck/clsc4.htm

68. Euripides
euripides Bibliography. Complete Plays of euripides web texts Internet ClassicsArchive - euripides' Plays - web texts Primary Texts for browsing in Perseus.
http://pirate.shu.edu/~cottereu/euripides.htm
Eugene Cotter
Seton Hall University Home Greek Plays - links to translations of each] GENERAL Complete Plays of Euripides web texts
Internet Classics Archive - Euripides' Plays
web texts
Primary Texts for browsing in Perseus
Euripides (Perseus Ency)
Euripides
overview
Euripides
biography The Eurpides Home Page - Links Euripides Page
Helen - Phoenissae - Orestes - links to Plays House of Atreus (Baylor) Articles The Age of Euripides
A look at the political and religious atmosphere in which Euripides
composed his plays.
Dialogue of Euripides

An analysis of the dialogue and musical composition of Euripides. Euripides and His Tragedies Biography of the Greek dramatist and analysis of his poetic qualities. Peculiarities of Euripidean Drama An examination of the qualities peculiar to the dramas of Euripides. Popularity of Euripides - A brief analysis of Euripides' rise to fame. PLAYS Electra (text) Electra study guide (Temple) Electra - study guide (Baylor) Electra (Perseus) Bacchai (text) Bacchai study guide (Temple) Bacchai - study guide (Baylor) Bacchae - extensive notes Bacchai (Perseus) Three Outlines of the Bacchai "The Uniqueness of the

69. Euripides Bibliography
BIBLIOGRAPHY. Allen, James T., A Concordance to euripides (U of Calif.Pr 1954) Anthon, Charles, An English Commentary on the Rhesus
http://pirate.shu.edu/~cottereu/euripides_bibliography.htm
Eugene Cotter
Seton Hall University Home BIBLIOGRAPHY Allen, James T., A Concordance to Euripides (U of Calif. Pr 1954)
Anthon, Charles, An English Commentary on the Rhesus, Medea, Hippolytus,
Alcestis, Heracleidae, Supplices, and Troades of Euripides
(Harper 1877)
Appleton, Reginald B., Euripides the Idealist (NY Dutton 1927)
[Searches for the secondary meaning behind the obvious in Euripides.
A reaction to Verrall and the rationalists and realists.]
Bates, William N., Euripides: a Student of Human Nature (Dutton 1927)
[Treats Euripides as primarily an observer of man and his predicament;
a variation of the realist view.]
Blaklock, E. M., The Male Characters of Euripides: a study in realism (Wellington, NZ Univ. Press 1952) A modern realist treatment. Burian, P., ed. Directions in Euripidean Criticism Burnett, S. P., "Virtues of Admetus," Classical Philology, LX, Oct 1965 [A new look at the character of Admetus in the Alcestis from the standpoint of his ethical situation.] Cambridge Ancient History , Vol. V, (Cambridge 1935)

70. Euripides - Wikipedia
euripides. euripides was one of the three great tragedians of classical Athens,along with Aeschylus and Sophocles; he was the youngest of the three.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euripides
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Euripides
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Euripides was one of the three great tragedians of classical Athens , along with Aeschylus and Sophocles ; he was the youngest of the three. He was born c. 480 BC . His mother's name was Cleito, and his father's either Mnesarchus or Mnesarchides. There is a tradition that states Cleito earned an income by selling herbs in the marketplace; Aristophanes found this to be a source of amusement and used it in many comedies. However, there is significant evidence which leads most to believe that Euripides' family was quite comfortable financially, and wouldn't have needed such a source of income. According to ancient sources, he wrote over 90 plays, 19 of which are extant, although it is widely believed by scholars that the play

71. Index
Index Next Page The ancient Greek philosophical antithesis of nomos and physis isa useful framework within which to conceptualise euripides’ The Bacchae.
http://www.arts.unimelb.edu.au/amu/ucr/student/1996/b.marasco/
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72. Index
PRIMARY SOURCES euripides The Bacchae and other plays Translated by Phillip VellacottPenguin Harmondsworth, 1973 SECONDARY SOURCES DECHARME, Paul euripides
http://www.arts.unimelb.edu.au/amu/ucr/student/1996/b.marasco/biblio.htm
You are here: Arts
Internet Applications 103-002 The Internet Applications site has shifted to http://webraft.its.unimelb.edu.au/103002/pub/
Please alter your bookmarks.
Quick Find: Faculty of Arts Home Page Departments, Schools and Centres Undergraduate - Courses Undergraduate - Areas of Study Postgraduate - Courses Postgraduate - Areas of Study Arts International Arts Information Technology Unit (ArtsIT) Scholarships Contacting the Faculty Public Lecture Program
Created: 23 May 2002 - Last modified: 23 May 2002 - Authorised by: General Manager
Maintained by: Michael Warner - Email: m.warner@unimelb.edu.au
M E N U Faculty of Arts - This Page About - News - Careers - Contact Undergraduate - Courses - Areas of Study Postgraduate - Courses - Areas of Study Research Arts International ... Departments,

73. Hippolytus, U. Of Saskatchewan
To Home Page To Course Notes Menu. euripides' Hippolytus by John Porter, Universityof Saskatchewan. The Mythological Background to euripides' Hippolytus.
http://duke.usask.ca/~porterj/CourseNotes/Hipp.html
To Home Page
To Course Notes Menu
Euripides' Hippolytus by John Porter, University of Saskatchewan
Notice:
The Mythological Background to Euripides' Hippolytus
The basic theme of Hippolytus is one that appears in many societies: the innocent young man who attracts the lustful attention of an older married woman (cf. Joseph and Potiphar's wife at Genesis 39, Bellerophon and Proetus' wife at Iliad 6.156ff., Mrs. Robinson in The Graduate). One of the things you will want to consider in reading the play is the curious wrinkle that Euripides adds to the traditional story pattern. The World of Athens, Phaedra it would appear that Phaedra contemplated a liaison with Hippolytus in part because she believed that Theseus was dead.) In the meanwhile, Phaedra, who had seen Hippolytus briefly when the latter visited Athens, has fallen madly in love with her step-son. During Theseus' absence, she has come to Troezen, where she has fallen ill as a result of her passion, which she knows to be wrong and is struggling desperately to keep hidden. The women of Phaedra's family were not happy in love. Her mother was

74. Euripides, Ion (U. Of Saskatchewan)
Mythological Background to euripides' Ion by John Porter, Universityof Saskatchewan. euripides' version of the myth is quite different.
http://duke.usask.ca/~porterj/CourseNotes/IonBckgnd.html
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To Course Notes Menu
Mythological Background to Euripides' Ion by John Porter, University of Saskatchewan
Notice: Medea and Heracles; in Ion, however, Euripides goes to new extremes, presenting a plot that is almost totally free invention on his part. Xuthus . Xuthus married the Athenian princess Creusa , but died in exile in Aegialus, in the northern Peloponnese. One of his sons, Achaeus, returned to his father's homeland, Thessaly, and became the eponymous forefather of the Achaeans; the other, Ion , was recalled to Athens, where he died leading Athens in its war against Eleusis. (Ion's people are later driven from the Peloponnese and come to Athens; many later move eastward to found the Ionian sites in Asia Minor and the islands of the Aegean.) Euripides' version of the myth is quite different. Here the Thessalian Xuthus is a son of Aeolus, summoned to Athens to aid the Athenians in a war against Chalcis (on the island of Euboea) and given the hand of Creusa as his reward. Xuthus and Creusa produce the sons Dorus and Achaeus; Ion, however, is the son of Creusa and Apollo. (Note how Euripides' version inflates the importance of Athens: here the Dorians and Achaeans are a side-branch, as it were, of an essentially Athenian/Ionian genealogy, while the Athenians and Ionians can boast Apollo as their direct "ancestor.") The story of Creusa's rape and the exposure and eventual rediscovery of Ion is invented by Euripides, but not quite out of whole cloth. In developing his plot, the poet follows various models, two of them general and one quite specific. Thus the audience watching the play would have a certain presentiment of how the story would develop and could appreciate the artistry with which the poet contrives his fiction.

75. Euripides - Methuen Publishing
Author Biography. euripides. euripides Plays 1 Medea / The Phoenician Women / Bacchae.euripides Plays 2 Hecuba / The Women of Troy / Iphigenia at Aulis / Cyclops.
http://www.methuen.co.uk/authorpages/euripides.html
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    76. Euripides Plays 6 By Euripides
    Book information on euripides Plays 6 Hippolytos / Suppliants/ Rhesos by euripides a Methuen World Classics title.
    http://www.methuen.co.uk/euripidesplays6.html
    Home Catalogue Coming Soon Ordering ...
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    Euripides Plays 6 by Euripides
    Hippolytos / Suppliants / Rhesos
    J Michael Walton (ed) Kenneth McLeish (trans) Frederic Raphael (intro)
    Published in the new Methuen Classical Dramatists series A dramatist whose trademark was the unexpected, Euripides has constantly challenged and intrigued audiences, from Athens of the fifth century BC to the present. The three plays in this volume demonstrate Euripides' versatility. Hippolytos (which was turned into Phèdre by Racine), deals with sexual passion, incest and abstinence; Suppliants (a version of the Antigone story) sets the play in Eleusis and dramatises the moment when the mothers of the dead sons of Oedipus beg Theseus to go to Thebes and demand their sons' bodies for burial. In Rhesos, all the confusion of sentry duty, the intrigue of spies and intruders, disguises and deceptions are crammed into a single night when the fortunes of war turn against the Trojans by a mixture of devious behaviour and sheer bad luck.
    Order On-Line UK Edition: Amazon.co.uk

    77. DBLP: Euripides G. M. Petrakis
    euripides GM Petrakis. 2002. 6, EE, euripides GM Petrakis, Christos Faloutsos,KingIp Lin ImageMap An Image Indexing Method Based on Spatial Similarity.
    http://www.informatik.uni-trier.de/~ley/db/indices/a-tree/p/Petrakis:Euripides_G
    Euripides G. M. Petrakis
    List of publications from the DBLP Bibliography Server FAQ Ask others: ACM CiteSeer CSB Google ... Home Page (Checked Link from HomePageSearch EE Euripides G. M. Petrakis, Aristeidis Diplaros Evangelos E. Milios : Matching and Retrieval of Distorted and Occluded Shapes Using Dynamic Programming. IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence 24 EE Euripides G. M. Petrakis, Christos Faloutsos King-Ip Lin : ImageMap: An Image Indexing Method Based on Spatial Similarity. TKDE 14 EE Zusheng Rao Evangelos E. Milios , Euripides G. M. Petrakis: Efficient Retrieval of Deformed and Occluded Shapes. ICPR 2000 Euripides G. M. Petrakis, Kostas Tzeras : Similarity searching in the CORDIS text database. Software - Practice and Experience 30 EE Kostas Tzeras , Euripides G. M. Petrakis: Similarity Searching in Text Databases with Multiple Field Types. ICDE 1999 EE Euripides G. M. Petrakis, Evangelos E. Milios : Efficient Retrieval by Shape Content. ICMCS, Vol. 2 1999 EE Euripides G. M. Petrakis, Christos Faloutsos : Similarity Searching in Medical Image Databases. TKDE 9 DBLP: [ Home Author Title Conferences ... Michael Ley (ley@uni-trier.de) Fri Mar 21 15:47:30 2003

    78. Euripides
    euripidesausmachen und hat ihm die Kritik einiger Zeitgenossen zugetragen.
    http://www.uni-essen.de/literaturwissenschaft-aktiv/Vorlesungen/dramatik/euripid
    Euripides
    * 485/480 v. Chr., Salamis
    Aischylos
    und Sophokles , sondern auch im Lustspiel. Aischylos oder Sophokles Chores "kollektiven Aktanten" sophistischen Wichtige Schriften:
    • Medea (431 v. Chr.) Bakchen (postum nach 406 v. Chr.) Iphigenie in Aulis (postum nach 406 v. Chr.)
    Sekundärliteratur:

    79. STEFAN STENUDD - Euripides. Cosmos Of The Ancients -----------
    euripides. COSMOS OF THE ANCIENTS The Greek Philosophers on Myth and Cosmology by Stefan Stenudd, Swedish author and Historian of Ideas. euripides.
    http://www.stenudd.com/myth/greek/euripides.htm
    About the writer
    Stefan Stenudd
    Cosmos of the Ancients
    The Greek Philosophers
    on Myth and Cosmology
    Euripides
    uripides (480-406 BC) cannot be grouped among the philosophers, but in his plays some parts are serving well to illustrate by this one example, how questions on the gods and the myths of them could be treated by the writers of drama. He did, of course, allow discussions on cosmology and such to enter his plays through the mouths of their characters. That certainly does not imply their views being identical with his own, suffice it here to use him as example of in what manner these questions were discussed in his time.
    Bacchae
    Another view, downright atheist in its reasoning along the lines repeated innumerable times in the Christian era – according to Euripides old already at his time, questioning how a benevolent god could allow injustice, is expressed in Bellerophon , a drama remaining only in fragments:
    Does someone say that there are gods in heaven?
    There are not, there are not, if a man will
    not in folly rely on the old argument.

    80. Encyclopædia Britannica
    Search Tips. Your search euripides Did you mean euripides last of classicalAthens' three great tragic dramatists, following Aeschylus and Sophocles.
    http://www.britannica.com/search?query= Euripides

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