Pratinas

Pratinas (Greek: Πρατίνας) was one of the earliest tragic poets of Athens, he was a native of Phlius in Peloponnesus. About 500 BC he competed with Choerilus and Aeschylus,[1] when the latter made his first appearance as a writer for the stage. The Suda claims that he produced fifty plays.

Pratinas also introduced satyr plays as a species of entertainment distinct from tragedy, in which the rustic merry-makings and the extravagant dances of the satyrs were retained. According to the Suda, thirty two of his plays were in this style.[2] The associations of his home, not far from Corinth, where Arion was said to have established the cyclic choruses of satyrs, may account for his preference for this kind of drama. Pratinas was also a writer of dithyrambs and the choral odes called "hyporchemata" (a considerable fragment of one of these is preserved in Athenaeus, xiv. 617).

A monument was erected by the inhabitants of Phlius in honor of Pratinas's son Aristeas, who, with his father, enjoyed the reputation of excelling all, with the exception of Aeschylus, in the composition of satyric dramas, one of which was called Cyclops.

See Pausanias ii. 13; Suidas q.v.; fragments in T. Bergk, Poetae Lyrici Graeci, vol. iii.

Notes

  1. Suda π 2230
  2. Suda π 2230

References

  • Smith, William, ed. (1880), "PRA´TINAS", A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology: Oarses—Zygia, vol. 3, London: John Murray, pp. 516–517
Attribution
  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Pratinas". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.


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