Euripides was a playwright of the fifth century BC who reinvented Greek tragedy, setting it on a path that leads straight to reality TV. His ...
Continue Reading →Epicurus’ Epistle to Menoeceus is a summary of the ethical teachings of Epicurean philosophy written in the epistolary literary style, and addressed to a student. ...
Continue Reading →Archimedes was the greatest scientist of antiquity and one of the greatest of all time. This book is Volume I of the first authoritative translation ...
Continue Reading →This is the second volume of the first fully-fledged English translation of the works of Archimedes – antiquity’s greatest scientist and one of the most ...
Continue Reading →Transmitted among the plays of Euripides, but disputed to have been written by him ever since Antiquity, Rhesus is probably a mid-fourth century tragedy that ...
Continue Reading →Medea (Ancient Greek: Μήδεια, Mēdeia) is an ancient Greek tragedy written by Euripides, based upon the myth of Jason and Medea and first produced in ...
Continue Reading →Iphigenia in Tauris or Iphigenia among the Taurians is a tragedy, although sometimes described as a romance or melodrama, by the ancient Greek playwright Euripides, ...
Continue Reading →Ion is a tragedy by the ancient Greek playwright Euripides, thought to have been written between about 414 and 412 BCE. It describes the tale ...
Continue Reading →“Heracles” or “The Madness of Heracles” is a tragedy by the ancient Greek playwright Euripides. It describes the frenzy of divinely induced madness of the ...
Continue Reading →Helen is not the most famous of Euripides’ plays, but it is one of the most curious – and it deserves close analysis and study. ...
Continue Reading →