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  1. Aristophanes was a prolific and much acclaimed comic playwright of ancient Greece, sometimes referred to as the Father of Comedy. Eleven of his forty plays have come down to us virtually complete (along with up to with 1,000 brief fragments of other works), and are the only real examples we have of a genre of comic drama known as Old Comedy.

  2. Aristophanes, (born c. 450—died c. 388 bc ), Greek playwright. An Athenian, he began his career as a comic dramatist in 427. He wrote approximately 40 plays, of which 11 survive, including The Clouds (423), The Wasps (422), The Birds (414), Lysistrata (411), and The Frogs (405).

  3. Aristophanes. Routinely described as “the father of comedy” and “the greatest ancient comic writer,” Aristophanes was born in the early 440s, most probably in 447/6. He debuted barely out of his teenage years with The Banqueters in 427 BC (now lost), and won the first prize at both the Dionysia and the Lenaea with his following two ...

  4. Aristophanes Biography. Aristophanes wrote his plays between 427 to 387 B.C.E. Aristophanes lived in the time of Socrates and Thucydides, a generation behind Sophocles and Euripides. Plato lived a generation after Aristophanes. Aristophanes produced at least forty plays, eleven of which have survived to modern times.

  5. May 18, 2018 · Overview. Aristophanes was the greatest writer of Old Comedy in Athens in the fifth century bce and the only playwright from that era with any complete plays surviving. Old Comedy was a form of drama that has no parallel in subsequent European literature.

  6. It may have inaugurated the Middle Comedy. Shortly after producing Wealth, Aristophanes died, leaving two plays (which have not survived), the Aiolosikon and the Kokolos, which his son staged ( c. 387 bce ); both of them are generally assumed to have been mythological burlesques.

  7. www.wikiwand.com › en › AristophanesAristophanes - Wikiwand

    Aristophanes ( / ˌærɪˈstɒfəniːz /; Ancient Greek: Ἀριστοφάνης, pronounced [ aristopʰánɛːs]; c. 446 – c. 386 BC) was an Ancient Greek comic playwright from Athens and a poet of Old Attic Comedy. He wrote in total forty plays, of which eleven survive virtually complete today.

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