Aristophanes. Peace

Enlarge text Shrink text
  • Title
| מספר מערכת 987007520677905171
Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
אריסטופנס, 450 לערך-388 לערך. השלום
Name (Latin)
Aristophanes. Peace
Other forms of name
nna Aristophanes. Pax
Aristophanes. Eirēnē
Ἀριστοφάνης. Εἰρήνη
Beginning or single date created
-0420
Place of origin of work or expression
Athens (Greece)
Form of work
Comedies
Plays (Performed works)
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 316392500
Wikidata: Q1193602
Library of congress: n 85306744
Sources of Information
  • His Pax, 1968.
  • Oxf. class. dict., 2nd ed., 1970(under Aristophanes: Peace (Pax))
  • Aristophanes : Peace, 1998.
  • Papyros-Larous.(Eirēnē)
  • Aristophane. Tome II, 1964:title page (La paix) page 87 (first performed in Athens in 421 BC) running title (Εἰρήνη)
1 / 2
Wikipedia description:

Peace (Ancient Greek: Εἰρήνη Eirḗnē) is an Athenian Old Comedy written and produced by the Greek playwright Aristophanes. It won second prize at the City Dionysia where it was staged just a few days before the validation of Peace of Nicias, which promised to end the ten-year-old Peloponnesian War, in 421 BC. The play is notable for its joyous anticipation of peace and for its celebration of a return to an idyllic life in the countryside. However, it also sounds a note of caution, there is bitterness in the acknowledgment of lost opportunities, and the ending is not happy for everyone. As in all of Aristophanes' plays, the jokes are numerous, the action is wildly absurd and the satire is savage. Cleon, the pro-war populist leader of Athens, is once again a target for the author's wit, even though he had died in the Battle of Amphipolis just a few months earlier.

Read more on Wikipedia >