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Texts in Perseus for Browsing: English
63 texts of Demosthenes and texts other persons. [eng]
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The Quotations Page: Quotations by Author - Euripides
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Great Books and Classics - Euripides
List of Works
[Alcestis] [Andromache] [The Bacchae] [The Cyclops] [Electra] [Hecuba] [Helen] [The Heracleidae] [Heracles] [Hippolytus] [Ion] [Iphigenia at Aulis] [Iphigenia Among the Taurians] [Medea] [Orestes] [The Phoenecian Women] [Rhesus] [The Suppliants] [The Trojan Women]. [eng]
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Euripides
Links to: Complete works (searchable);
Complete works in original Greek (with hyperlinked translation);
Timeline of Greek history and literature;
Dramatis personae: classical encyclopaedia. [eng]
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Íèêîëà - Åâðèïèä
Çàðóáåæíûå ïèñàòåëè. Áèîáèáëèîãðàôè÷åñêèé ñëîâàðü. ×. 1. - Ì., 1997. - Ñ. 310-313. [rus]
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Euripides (ca. 485-406 BC)
A set of links. [eng]
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Euripides Index
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ClassicNotes: Euripides
Biography of Euripides (480? BCE-406? BCE). [eng]
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Diotima
The Anonymous Hypothesis to Euripides' Medea. [eng]
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Euripides (c. 485-406 B.C.)
A biography of the Greek dramatist and analysis of his works.
[eng]
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Euripides: Poems
An index of poems by Euripides. [eng]
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Euripides, The Bacchae, Sophists, Nomos versus Physis
The ancient Greek philosophical antithesis of nomos and physis is a useful framework within which to conceptualise Euripides’ The Bacchae. Through the way in which he depicts the conflict within the play, it is clear that Euripides believed that a successful civilisation must recognise the importance of both forces. [eng]
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Medea Myth Study Guide
Medea boiling the ram with the daughters of Pelias.
Medea rejuvenating Jason or Aeson.
Jason and the Calydonian Boar Hunt.
Medea and the Argonauts. [eng]
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Euripides, Orestes 939-954 (P.Duk.inv. 615)
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Aristotle's Poetics: Notes on Euripides' Hippolytus
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Euripides at The Mad Cybrarian's Library
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Works by Euripides
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Michael Psellus on Euripides and George of Pisidia
A study by Mary Whitby, University of London. [eng]
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EURIPIDES Forum Frigate
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Ancient History Sourcebook: 11th Brittanica: Euripides
The historical interest of such a life as that of Euripides consists in the very fact that its external record is so scanty-that, unlike Aeschylus or Sophocles,
he had no place in the public action of his time, but dwelt apart as a student and a thinker. He has made his Medea speak of those who, through
following quiet paths, have incurred the reproach of apathy. [eng]
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