sacred-texts.com Homesacred-texts.com HomeAbout sacred-texts.comFrequently Asked QuestionsHow to contact sacred-textsSearch sacred-textsBuy the Internet Sacred Text Archive on CD-ROM
Wisdom is priceless, the sacred-texts CD-ROM is 49.95. Click here to learn more
Topics
Home
Catalog
African
Age of Reason
Alchemy
Americana
Ancient Near East
Asia
Atlantis
Australia
Basque
Baha'i
Bible
Book of Shadows
Buddhism
Celtic
Christianity
Classics
  Aristotle
  Homer
  Sappho
  Hesiod
  Aeschylus
  Sophocles
  Euripides
  Plato
  Virgil
  Ovid
  Apollonius
  Plutarch
  Procopius
  Lucian
  Gibbon
  Archimedes
Confucianism
DNA
Earth Mysteries
Egyptian
England
Esoteric/Occult
Evil
Fortean
Freemasonry
Gothic
Gnosticism
Grimoires
Hinduism
I Ching
Islam
Icelandic
Jainism
Journals
Judaism
Legends/Sagas
Legendary Creatures
LGBT
Miscellaneous
Mormonism
Native American
Necronomicon
New Thought
Neopaganism/Wicca
Nostradamus
Oahspe
Pacific
Paleolithic
Parapsychology
Philosophy
Piri Re'is Map
Prophecy
Roma
Sacred Books of the East
Sacred Sexuality
Shakespeare
Shamanism
Shinto
Symbolism
Sikhism
Sub Rosa
Swedenborg
Sky Lore
Tantra
Taoism
Tarot
Thelema
Theosophy
Time
Tolkien
UFOs
Utopia
Women
Zoroastrianism
Sacred Text  Classics 

Orestes Pursued by the Furies (1862) [Public Domain Image] The Dramas of Aeschylus

Aeschylus, called "the father of tragedy," was one of the three greatest tragic dramatists of the ancient world, along with Euripides and Sophocles. Born at Eleusis in 525 B.C.E. to a noble family, Aeschylus fought at Marathon and other battles of the Persian war. He introduced the concept of the dramatic trilogy (so he could also be called the "father of the sequel"). The Oresteia is the only trilogy of his that we still have intact; for instance, the Persians is part of a lost trilogy about the Persian war. Aeschylus employed dialog rather than the chorus to move the narrative along, which was a key step towards modern drama. He spent most of his career in Athens but exiled himself to Sicily after writing the Eumenides. He died in 456 B.C.E.

THE ORESTEIA

Agamemnon
translated by Edmund Doidge Anderson Morshead [1881]

The Choephori (Libation Bearers)
translated by Edmund Doidge Anderson Morshead [1881]

Eumenides
translated by Edmund Doidge Anderson Morshead [1881]

Other Plays

Prometheus Bound
translated by Edmund Doidge Anderson Morshead [1881]

The Seven Against Thebes
translated by Edmund Doidge Anderson Morshead [1881]

The Suppliants
translated by Edmund Doidge Anderson Morshead [1881]

The Persians
translated by Robert Potter [1809]

Sign up for
sacred-texts
updates by email
Enter your
Email


Preview
Powered by
FeedBlitz
search powered by
Google

sacred-texts
Web


Sponsored Links

Books are selected by Amazon.com and are not necessarily endorsed by this site

Collage of sacred texts, (c) 1999, J.B. Hare, All Rights Reserved
This is a quiet place in cyberspace
devoted to religious tolerance and scholarship

Non-public domain contents of this site
not otherwise copyrighted are © copyright 2008, John Bruno Hare, All Rights Reserved.
See Site copyrights, Terms of Service for more information.
Index |  FAQ |  Contact |  Search |  Buy Disk
Open Source for the Human Soul