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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. Ηλέκτρα By Euripides - Project Gutenberg
Download the free eBook by euripides. Creator, euripides. Translator, Tanagras, Angelos. Title, . Alternate Title, Electra
http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/17995
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Ηλέκτρα by Euripides
Help Read online Bibliographic Record Creator Euripides Translator Tanagras, Angelos Title Alternate Title Electra Language Greek EText-No. Release Date Base Directory /files/17995/
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62. Euripides Quotes
euripides quotes, Searchable and browsable database of quotations with author and subject indexes. Quotes from famous political leaders, authors,
http://www.worldofquotes.com/author/Euripides/1/index.html
i Topics Authors Proverbs ... Quote-A-Day Main Menu Topics Authors Proverbs Today in History ... Contact Sponsor 55 Quotes for 'Euripides' in the Database.
Pages:
Author
Letter "E" We know the good, we apprehend it clearly, but we can't bring it to achievement.
Topic: Accomplishments
Source: None Zeus hates busybodies and those who do too much.
Topic: Action
Source: quoted by Emerson The best prophet is common sense, our native wit.
Topic: Advice / Experience / Wisdom
Source: None Often a noble face hides filthy ways.
Topic: Advice / Experience / Wisdom
Source: None Question everything. Learn something. Answer nothing. Topic: Advice / Experience / Wisdom Source: None Know first who you are; and then adorn yourself accordingly. Topic: Appearance Source: None Among mortals second thoughts are wisest. Topic: Caution Source: None The first requisite to happiness is that a man be born in a famous city. Topic: Cities Source: Encomium on Alcibiades, probably quoted Cleverness is not wisdom. Topic: Cleverness Source: None Do not plan for ventures before finishing what's at hand. Topic: Consistency Source: None A coward turns away, but a brave man's choice is danger.

63. FanFiction.Net - Euripides
Interact with writer, euripides, who has archived 44 stories for Alexander, Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter, Faculty, Yami no Matsuei, Equilibrium,
http://www.fanfiction.net/u/1007306/Euripides
FanFiction.Net - unleash your imagination addthis_url = location.href; addthis_title = document.title; addthis_pub = 'xing'; Home Just In Communities Forums ... TV Author Story Story by Title Story by Summary Ad Blocker Support Privacy TOS Euripides hide bio action Feed Send Message Subscribe Favorite email Email since : 03-13-06, id: 1007306 Author has written 44 stories for Alexander, Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter, Faculty, Yami no Matsuei, Equilibrium, Fast and the Furious, Angel, Gone With The Wind, Alex Rider, Anne McCaffrey, Homer, Artemis fowl, Sherlock Holmes, Misc. Books, Little Women, Dark is Rising Sequence, and Dead Poets Society. http://www.fictionpress.com/s/2311017/1/ Please check out the story. It's called Going Back into the Closet Due to an unfortunate six months ago, my account appears to have been deleted off the face of the earth, and fanfiction.net have not responded to my emails about whether it was intended/ recoverable. Once known as beautifulelf1 I had about 40 stories some of them WIP up. Alas I did not have backup copies of most of these works, and so to lose them- some of which I liked a lot, was a bit of a blow as you can imagine. However I've steeled myself to return, and to start building up a new store, hopefully keeping appropiate backups. I live in England, and write extensively in a number of fandoms, and read a hell of a lot more. Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter, Master and Commander, Alexander, The Faculty, Angel, The Fast and the Furious, Gone with the Wind, Yami no Matsuei etc.

64. Projekt Gutenberg-DE - Kultur - SPIEGEL ONLINE - Nachrichten
Translate this page Kurzbiographie, Werke, im Projekt Gutenberg als Online-Text vorhandene Werke.
http://gutenberg.spiegel.de/?id=19&autor=Euripides, &autor_vorname=&autor_nachna

65. 84.02.06: Euripides’ Alcestis
This unit, euripides’ Alcestis, is an introductory approach to the understanding of Greek tragedy and Euripidean tragedy in particular.
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.

66. Quote Of The Day: Euripides | Bumpshack.com
If you can do that, and live that way, you are really a wise man.” euripides Greek tragic dramatist (484 BC 406 BC)
http://bumpshack.com/2008/01/08/quote-of-the-day-euripides-2/

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67. Euripides Quotes
euripides quotes,euripides, author, authors, writer, writers, people, famous people.
http://thinkexist.com/quotes/euripides/

68. Michel Foucault, Parrhesia In The Tragedies Of Euripides
In Orestes – which was written ten years later, and therefore is one of euripides last plays – the role of parrhesia is not nearly as significant.
http://foucault.info/documents/parrhesia/foucault.DT2.parrhesiaEuripides.en.html
[ foucault.info ]
Discourse and Truth [2]
Parrhesia in the Tragedies of Euripides
Today I would like to begin analyzing the first occurrences of the word "parrhesia" in Greek literature, as the word appears in the following six tragedies of Euripides: (1) Phoenician women; (2) Hippolytus; (3) The Bacchae; (4) Electra; (5) Ion; (6) Orestes. Ion and Orestes Today, then, I shall first try to say something about the occurrences of the word "Parrhesia" in the first four plays mentioned in order to throw some more light on the meaning of the word. And then I shall attempt a global analysis of Ion as the decisive parrhesiastic play where we see human beings taking upon themselves the role of truth-tellers – a role which the gods are no longer able to assume.
The Phoenician Women [c.411-409 B.C.]
Consider, first, The Phoenician Women JOCASTA: This above all I long to know: What is an exile's life? Is it great misery?
POLYNEICES: The greatest; worse in reality than in report.
JOCASTA: Worse in what way? What chiefly galls an exile's heart?

69. Euripides
Visit the euripides Live Chat, and use the forum below to schedule a chat session. . The old euripides Lecture Hall campfire live chat may be found at
http://mobydicks.com/lecture/Euripideshall/wwwboard.html
Euripides and Rhesus
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Ahoy mate! Welcome to the new Euripides lecture hall!
The old Euripides lecture hall may be found at http://mobydicks.com/lecture/Euripideshall/wwwboard23.html
Visit the Euripides Live Chat , and use the forum below to schedule a chat session.
Click on "New Topic" below to start a new topic.
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The New Great Books Forums May Be Found Here: http://westerncanon.com/bookforums
Forum List Go to Top ... Older Messages Topics Author Date A people free to choose will always choose peace. Ronald Reagan new Henry David Thoreau Beauty provoketh thieves sooner than gold. -Shakespeare, As Y new Henry David Thoreau Not everything that counts can be counted, and not everything that can new Henry David Thoreau The eternal mystery of the world is its comprehensibility. Albert Ei new Henry David Thoreau Let us not forget who we are. Drug abuse is a repudiation of everythi new Henry David Thoreau CLIV The little Love-god lying once asleep, Laid by his side his

70. DBLP: Euripides G. M. Petrakis
1 EE, euripides G. M. Petrakis, Stelios C. Orphanoudakis Methodology for the representation, indexing and retrieval of images by content.
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 Coauthor Index - Ask others: ACM DL Guide CiteSeer CSB ... EE Euripides G. M. Petrakis, Epimenidis Voutsakis Evangelos E. Milios : Searching for logo and trademark images on the web. CIVR 2007 EE Angelos Hliaoutakis Giannis Varelas , Euripides G. M. Petrakis, Evangelos E. Milios : MedSearch: A Retrieval System for Medical Information Based on Semantic Similarity. ECDL 2006 EE Angelos Hliaoutakis Kalliopi Zervanou , Euripides G. M. Petrakis, Evangelos E. Milios : Automatic document indexing in large medical collections. HIKM 2006 EE Epimenidis Voutsakis , Euripides G. M. Petrakis, Evangelos E. Milios IntelliSearch : Intelligent Search for Images and Text on the Web. ICIAR (1) 2006 EE Euripides G. M. Petrakis, Klaydios Kontis Epimenidis Voutsakis Evangelos E. Milios : Relevance feedback methods for logo and trademark image retrieval on the web. SAC 2006 EE Angelos Hliaoutakis Giannis Varelas ... Epimenidis Voutsakis , Euripides G. M. Petrakis, Evangelos E. Milios : Information Retrieval by Semantic Similarity. Int. J. Semantic Web Inf. Syst. 2

71. Medea Bibliography
Marianne McDonald, A Semilemmatized Concordance to euripides’ Medea, Irvine, CA, Pietro Pucci, The Violence of Pity in euripides Medea, Ithaca (Cornell
http://www.class.uidaho.edu/luschnig/Medea/bib.htm
Bibliography for MEDEA: A. Euripides, Tragedy, Medea Choose two articles / book chapters to read. William Arrowsmith, "A Greek Theater of Ideas," Arion Shirley Barlow, "Stereotype and Reversal in Euripides’ Medea ," Shirley A. Barlow, "Euripides’ Medea : A Subversive Play?" in Alan Griffiths (ed), Stage Directions: Essays in Ancient Drama in Honour of E. W. Handley , Institute of Classical Studies, University of London School of Advanced Study, BICS Suppl. 66 E. M. Blaiklock, "Nautical Imagery of Euripides’ Medea ," CP Sue Blundell, Women in Ancient Greece , Cambridge, 1995. Deborah Boedeker, "Euripides’ Medea and the Vanity of LOGOI " CP Deborah Boedeker, "Becoming Medea: Assimilation in Euripides," in Clauss and Johnston (1997):127-148. Page duBois, Centaurs and Amazons: Women and the Pre-History of the Great Chain of Being , Ann Arbor, 1982. Page duBois, Torture and Truth , New York and London, 1991. Elizabeth B. Bongie, "Heroic Elements in the Medea of Euripides,"

72. Grief Lessons - NYRB Classics
euripides, the last of the three great tragedians of ancient Athens, reached the height of his renown during the disastrous Peloponnesian War,
http://www.nybooks.com/shop/product?product_id=5424

73. EURIPIDES Homepage
Translate this page The project euripides — conceiving, reusing and prototyping, EURopean Intellectual Property In Designing Electronic Systems — aims at providing specialized
http://euripides.fzi.de/

74. Aristotle's Poetics: Notes On Euripides' Hippolytus
Still, it is worth noting how euripides secures astonishment in the outcome of the curse after the curse is uttered it is forgotten about (Theseus assumes
http://www.leeds.ac.uk/classics/resources/poetics/poet-hi.htm
Aristotle's Poetics : Introduction Aristotle's ... : Seminar Notes
CLAS3152: FURTHER GREEK LITERATURE II: Aristotle's Poetics
Notes on Euripides' Hippolytus
1. What does Aristotle say?
Aristotle himself never refers to this play, or to the Hippolytus or Phaedra in general. (He alludes to line 989 at Rhetoric 1395b28-30, and at Rhetoric 1416a32 mentions someone quoting line 612 - ‘my tongue swore: my heart is not bound by oath’ - against Euripides.)
2. What do Aristotle's theories imply?
Reversal
1. The most obvious candidate for a reversal in this play is the Nurse's approach to Hippolytus: her overriding aim throughout is to save Phaedra's life, but the outcome is to make her death even more imperative and to bring about Hippolytus' death as well. (Note how, as in Oedipus , the pivotal role of the reversal is reflected in a change of agenda. Up to this point Phaedra has wanted to conceal her secret by her own death; now she also needs to bring about Hippolytus' death.) 2. If this identification of the reversal is right, then in Hippolytus the reversal arguably does not coincide with the change of fortune (or with the beginning of the change of fortune); it might be better to say the reversal sets in motion a further chain of events which leads to the change of fortune. So we should not assume that reversal and change of fortune necessarily coincide (as is arguably the case in

75. The Glory That Was Greece
In one play of euripides, a terrible scene of tragedy was followed by a song in which the Chorus prayed for escape from such sorrows on the wings of a bird
http://www.watson.org/~leigh/drama.html
An online resource for students
by Leigh T. Denault
HOME DRAMA HISTORY MYTHOLOGY ... BIBLIOGRAPHY
Drama: The Greek Theatre and Three Athenian Tragedians: Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides
Table of Contents:
Note: For English Translations of the Greek Dramas mentioned in this page, see the Online Books site for Classical Languages and Literature.
The Book of the Ancient Greeks, Chapter XIV: The Greek Theatre
Selections from: Mills, Dorothy. The Book of the Ancient Greeks: An Introduction to the History and Civilization of Greece from the Coming of the Greeks to the Conquest of Corinth by Rome in 146 B.C
The Greek drama began as a religious observance in honour of Dionysus. To the Greeks this god personified both spring and the vintage, the latter a very important time of year in a vine-growing country, and he was a symbol to them of that power there is in man of rising out of himself, of being impelled onwards by a joy within him that he cannot explain, but which makes him go forward, walking, as it were, on the wings of the wind, of the spirit that fills him with a deep sense of worship. We call this power enthusiasm , a Greek word which simply means

76. Eurípides - Wikipedia, La Enciclopedia Libre
Translate this page De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre. Saltar a navegación, búsqueda. Eurípides. Museo del Vaticano. Eurípides. Museo del Vaticano.
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurípides
Eur­pides
De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre
Saltar a navegaci³n bºsqueda Eur­pides. Museo del Vaticano. Eur­pides (en griego Salamina 406 adC ), es uno de los tres grandes poetas tr¡gicos griegos antiguos, junto con Esquilo y S³focles
Tabla de contenidos
  • Biograf­a Obra Bibliograf­a
    editar Biograf­a
    Su madre se llamaba Kleito y su padre Mnesarchos o Mnesarchides. Odiaba la pol­tica y era amante del estudio, para lo que pose­a su propia biblioteca privada. Nada se sabe de su infancia. En 408 adC sali³ de Atenas hacia Macedonia , probablemente por la aversi³n a la regi³n del Peloponeso a causa de la interminable Guerra con Esparta
    editar Obra
    Se cree que escribi³ 92 tragedias, pero se sabe s³lo de 19 de ellas. En estas se muestra que fue un tr¡gico de m©rito incomparable. ‰l ve­a el mundo como un lugar donde la oportunidad, el orden, la paz, la raz³n y la tolerancia eran constantemente frustradas por la irracionalidad y la violencia. Como otros tr¡gicos, las obras de Eur­pides tratan de leyendas y eventos de la mitolog­a de un tiempo lejano, muy anterior al siglo V AdC de Atenas. Pero las obras que hizo eran aplicables al tiempo en que escribi³, sobre todo a las crueldades de la guerra. Durante los ºltimos 20 a±os de su vida, Eur­pides escribi³ varias obras llamadas tragicomedias rom¡nticas dram¡ticas. Era raro que tuvieran finales felices. Entre ©stos estaba

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