
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Bonus Episode 36:
Sometimes things conspire against the podcaster, as has happened to me in the last couple of weeks, meaning that I have not been able to get the promised episode up to scratch in time. To make up for this and fill the gap I have created an episode that goes back to Greek theatre. It looks at that most mysterious of the ancient Greek forms, the satyr play and two of the men who were instrumental in vastly increasing our knowledge of these things.
The place of the satyr play in the history of Ancient Greek theatre
The satyr play as part of the Dionysia festival
The satyr play as a counterpoint to tragedy
The later history of the satyr play
‘Cyclops’ by Euripides
The discovery of ‘Trackers’ by Sophocles
The paperologists Hunt and Grenfell
The finds at Oxyrhincus
Arthur Hunt’s speech to the Egyptian Exploration Society
(including the plot of Trackers)
The Hypsipyle tragedy by Euripides, also in the Oxyrhincus finds
The Bacchae as a satyr play
Support the podcast at:
www.thehistoryofeuropeantheatre.com
www.ko-fi.com/thoetp
www.patreon.com/thoetp
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Philip Rowe4.8
3939 ratings
Bonus Episode 36:
Sometimes things conspire against the podcaster, as has happened to me in the last couple of weeks, meaning that I have not been able to get the promised episode up to scratch in time. To make up for this and fill the gap I have created an episode that goes back to Greek theatre. It looks at that most mysterious of the ancient Greek forms, the satyr play and two of the men who were instrumental in vastly increasing our knowledge of these things.
The place of the satyr play in the history of Ancient Greek theatre
The satyr play as part of the Dionysia festival
The satyr play as a counterpoint to tragedy
The later history of the satyr play
‘Cyclops’ by Euripides
The discovery of ‘Trackers’ by Sophocles
The paperologists Hunt and Grenfell
The finds at Oxyrhincus
Arthur Hunt’s speech to the Egyptian Exploration Society
(including the plot of Trackers)
The Hypsipyle tragedy by Euripides, also in the Oxyrhincus finds
The Bacchae as a satyr play
Support the podcast at:
www.thehistoryofeuropeantheatre.com
www.ko-fi.com/thoetp
www.patreon.com/thoetp
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

5,462 Listeners

3,190 Listeners

6,450 Listeners

818 Listeners

1,421 Listeners

1,107 Listeners

493 Listeners

456 Listeners

318 Listeners

370 Listeners

3,232 Listeners

451 Listeners

1,828 Listeners

219 Listeners

2,442 Listeners