Other Definitions
plautus (dict)

Plautus

Titus Maccius Plautus was a comic playwright of the Roman Republic. The years of his life are uncertain, but his plays were first produced between about 205 and 184 BCE. Twenty-one plays survive. Plautus' comedies, which are the earliest surviving intact works in Latin literature, are all adaptations of Greek models for a Roman audience. The characters remain in Greek settings, or perhaps a Greek setting imagined by a Roman. His most typical character is the clever slave who manipulates his master, undermining some of our conceptions of normal social relationships in the Roman world. Plautus' work gave ideas to many playwrights afterwards, such as William Shakespeare, Molire, Lessing and others. His comedies were also the basis for the 1962 musical A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. He wrote the plays Poenulus, Amphitryon, Captivi, Persa, Miles Gloriosus, Aulularia, Trinummus, Rudens, Mercator, Curculio, Stichus, Menaechmi and Asinaria.

External links

Plautus

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
php
priam
principia mathematica
prime minister of canada
process theology
proton decay
paul of tarsus
perestroika
polyphony
pun
pope clement xii
palindrome
pope clement xiii
pope clement xiv
prime minister of the united kingdom
flatworm
pope celestine i
pope celestine ii
pope celestine iii
pope celestine iv
pope celestine v
pueblo, colorado
paul desmond
piper
pride and prejudice
palace of westminster
pythagorean triple
pelobiont
pattern welding
pablo picasso
palm sunday
principia discordia
preterism
per hasselberg
parma, michigan
infant baptism
pseudocode
pre existence
prussian confederation
parimutuel betting
possession
phoenician
pope gregory ii
pope gregory iii