1.The Evidence
Euripides composed around 90 plays in his fifty-year production career (455–405 bce). The corpus of texts transmitted from antiquity through the middle ages and into modern times includes seventeen tragedies, one satyr-play (Cyclops), and a further tragedy, Rhesus, which seems to have been confused with Euripides' own play of that name. Some evidence survives for another sixty plays, ranging from mere titles to quite substantial text-fragments and other information. Fifty of these are tragedies and only ten are satyr-plays, so the missing dozen may have included more satyr-plays than tragedies. The sixty plays (together with their production-dates, so far as these are known) are listed at t…
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Citation: Cropp, Martin. "Euripides' fragmentary plays". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 12 January 2010 [https://staging.litencyc.com/php/stopics.php?rec=true&UID=7212, accessed 23 November 2024.]