Festivals are a break in the daily grind; they function as a point of departure for shaping regularity in the life of a community; and at the same time they positively help create collectivity in the consciousness of the individuals who make up a community. So festivals can be a catalyst in shaping identity, especially if their introduction has that purpose.

It had already occurred to the first tyrannos of Athens, Pisistratus, that a festival disposed the citizens favourably towards the person instituting it. And so, if we go by the source we have, Pisistratus introduced the festival "within the town walls" - also known as the Great Dionysia- as part of a broader plan to beautify the city. As well as wanting to make Athens splendid, he also had in mind to weaken the power of his opponents in the eyes of the people of Athens, and concentrate authority in his own hands.

The Great Dionysia was held at the end of March - in the month known to the residents of Attica as Elaphebolion. Originally it lasted five days; later, six. Three (and later, four) of these were devoted to staging plays. Three playwrights would compete before the public, each one offering three tragedies plus a satyr play.


Dramatic poetry had its origins in the rites of Dionysus. At these, a song called the 'dithyramb' was performed: its singers were accompanied by pipe music and by dance or mimic movements. Drama continued to have the religious character of the dithyramb, inasmuch as it was always performed during the festival in honour of Dionysus. In the satyr play, furthermore, the dancers played satyrs, the god's companion's. There was nevertheless a strong political element not only in the content of the plays, but in the carrying out of the dramatic contest. The subjects of Tragedy ceased very early on to rely on the Dionysiac myths from which they had originally been drawn. When Tragedy was at its height, their sources were myths about gods who were not Dionysus and still more often about heroes.


Drama was a product that originated and developed above all in classical Athens. Its subjects were drawn from myth. But the poet could rework the myth so as to voice the problems and anxieties of Athenian society, which were the result of the way civic and social life was organized. Thus the city's inhabitants were enabled, through the distancing effect of the theatre with its various production techniques, to objectivize their problems.

The Classical period saw many playwrights and plays, of which only those of the three greatest authors have been preserved: seven tragedies by Aeschylus, seven by Sophocles, and nineteen by Euripides. Of Comedy there survive entire only the eleven plays of Aristophanes. Of other authors we know just the names of some and a few fragments form their works.


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