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Dionysos --- Geschichte 100-400 --- (Produktform)Electronic book text --- Geschichte --- Altertumswissenschaften --- Tra la vigna --- la croce --- (VLB-WN)9553
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Dionysos carried the blessing of wine to the whole world, and his triumphant return from India became a popular subject for the arts of Greece and Rome in many media. The iconography survived the ancient world into Renaissance and neo-Classical arts, and may even have contributed to the practices of modern circus parades.
Dionysus --- Bacchus --- Bakchos --- Dionís --- Dionisas --- Dioniso --- Dionīss --- Dionisu --- Dioniz --- Dionizi --- Dionizo --- Dionizos --- Dionüszosz --- Dionysos --- Dionýzos --- Diyonizosse --- Διόνυσος --- Дионис --- ديونيسوس --- 디오니소스 --- דיוניסוס --- ディオニューソス --- 狄俄倪索斯 --- Βάκχος --- Діоніс --- Art gréco-romain --- Art, Greco-Roman --- Thèmes, motifs. --- Themes, motives --- Dionysos (divinité grecque) --- Dans l'art
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Christian literature, Early --- Art, Early Christian --- Christianity and other religions --- History and criticism --- Greek --- Dionysia --- Dionysus --- In literature --- Art, Early Christian. --- Art chrétien --- History and criticism. --- Greek. --- Dionysia. --- Iconographie. --- Dionysos --- In literature. --- Dans l'art. --- Littérature chrétienne. --- Dionysus, --- Dionysos, --- Christian literature, Early - History and criticism --- Christianity and other religions - Greek --- Christianity and other religions - Dionysia --- Dionysus - (Greek deity) - In literature --- Dionysus - (Greek deity) - Art --- Dionysus - (Greek deity)
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What is the tragic in Euripides' Bacchae? A nowadays predominant view sees it in the self-reflexion of the genus 'tragedy' and the medium 'theatre': The presence of the theatre god Dionysos on stage turns the tragic of the Bacchae into metatragic. In contrast, by carefully scrutinizing the premises of structuralist methods applied and by interpreting the complete text of the play, Gyburg Radke reads the Bacchae as a 'textbook example' of an Aristotelian tragedy evoking fear and pity, in which the combination of the individual character of the protagonist Pentheus and of his failure constitutes the tragic quality of the plot. Worin liegt die Tragik der Bakchen des Euripides? - Eine heute dominierende Forschungsrichtung meint: in der reflexiven Selbstthematisierung der Gattung Tragödie und des Mediums Theater. Das Auftreten des Theatergottes Dionysos bedeutet, im Sinn dieses strukturalistischen Ansatzes, die Erhebung der Tragik der Bakchen zur Metatragik. Die hier vorgelegte Untersuchung stellt durch eine allgemeine hermeneutische Reflexion auf die Prämissen der Anwendung strukturalistischer Methoden und durch eine vollständige Textinterpretation der Bakchen eine Gewinn- und Verlustbilanz metatheatralischer Deutungen auf. Sie liest die Bakchen als Gegenthese dazu als 'Schulbeispiel' einer Furcht- und Mitleidtragödie, in der der Zusammenhang zwischen dem individuellen Charakter des Protagonisten Pentheus und seinem Scheitern die tragische Qualität der Handlung ausmacht.
Tragedie --- Tragedy --- Tragédie --- Treurspel --- Bacchantes in literature. --- Dionysia in literature. --- Dionysus (Greek deity) in literature. --- Pentheus (Greek mythology) in literature. --- Tragedy. --- Tragic, The, in literature. --- Bacchantes in literature --- Dionysia in literature --- Dionysus (Greek deity) in literature --- Pentheus (Greek mythology) in literature --- Tragic, The, in literature --- Drama --- Euripides. --- Euripides --- Pentheus, --- Dionysus --- In literature. --- Bacchus --- Bakchos --- Dionís --- Dionisas --- Dioniso --- Dionīss --- Dionisu --- Dioniz --- Dionizi --- Dionizo --- Dionizos --- Dionüszosz --- Dionysos --- Dionýzos --- Diyonizosse --- Διόνυσος --- Дионис --- ديونيسوس --- 디오니소스 --- דיוניסוס --- ディオニューソス --- 狄俄倪索斯 --- Βάκχος --- Діоніс --- Penthée, --- Πενθεύς, --- Τενθεύς, --- Tentheus,
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Dionysos, with his following of satyrs and women, was a major theme in a big part of the figure painted pottery in 500-300 B.C. Athens. As an original testimonial of their time, the imagery on these vases convey what this god meant to his worshippers. It becomes clear that - contrary to what is usually assumed - he was not only appropriate for wine, wine indulgence, ecstasy and theatre. Rather, he was present in both the public and private sphere on many, both happy and sad, occasions. In addition, the vase painters have emphasized different aspects of Dionysos for their customers inside and outside of Athens, depending on the political and cultural situation.
Vase-painting, Greek --- Vases, Red-figured --- Dionysus --- Cult. --- Red-figure vases --- Red-figured vases --- Vases, Red-figure --- Bacchus --- Bakchos --- Dionís --- Dionisas --- Dioniso --- Dionīss --- Dionisu --- Dioniz --- Dionizi --- Dionizo --- Dionizos --- Dionüszosz --- Dionysos --- Dionýzos --- Diyonizosse --- Διόνυσος --- Дионис --- ديونيسوس --- 디오니소스 --- דיוניסוס --- ディオニューソス --- 狄俄倪索斯 --- Βάκχος --- Діоніс --- Vases, Ancient --- Cults. --- Vase-painting, Greek. --- Vases, Red-figured. --- Greece --- Greek vase-painting --- Alternative religious movements --- Cult --- Cultus --- Marginal religious movements --- New religions --- New religious movements --- NRMs (Religion) --- Religious movements, Alternative --- Religious movements, Marginal --- Religious movements, New --- Religions --- Sects --- Vase-painting, Greek - Greece - Athens. --- Vases, Red-figured - Greece - Athens. --- Dionysus - (Greek deity) --- Dionysus - (Greek deity) - Cult. --- Dionysus - (Greek deity) - Art. --- Art. --- Peinture de vases grecque --- Vases à figures rouges --- Classics --- Comparative religion --- Iconography --- History of ancient Greece --- Dionysus [Mythological character] --- Athens
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Euripides (c. 485-406 BCE) has been prized in every age for his emotional and intellectual drama. Eighteen of his ninety or so plays survive complete, including Medea, Hippolytus, and Bacchae, one of the great masterpieces of the tragic genre. Fragments of his lost plays also survive.
Rhesus (Legendary character) --- Iphigenia (Greek mythology) --- Pentheus (Greek mythology) --- Dionysus (Greek deity) --- Trojan War --- Bacchantes --- Euripides --- Rhesus, --- Dionysus --- Mythology, Greek --- Maenads --- Cults --- Dionysia --- Greek drama (Satyr play) --- Greek drama (Tragedy) --- Greek drama --- Mythology, Greek, in literature --- Tragedy --- Iphigenia --- Pentheus, --- Greek mythology --- Satyric drama, Greek --- Resas, --- Reso, --- Resos, --- Rhēsos, --- Ῥῆσος, --- Рес, --- Рез, --- Резос, --- Рэс, --- 레소스, --- レーソス, --- Penthée, --- Πενθεύς, --- Τενθεύς, --- Tentheus, --- Ifigeneia --- Ifigenia --- Ifigenija --- Ifigjenia --- Ifixenia --- Iphigeneia --- Iphigenie --- 伊菲革涅亚 --- イーピゲネイア --- איפיגניה --- 이피게네이아 --- Іфігенія --- Ифигенија --- Ифигения --- إيفيجينيا --- Ἰφιγένεια --- Ėvripid --- Yūrībīdīs --- Euripide --- Euripedes --- Eŭripido --- Eurypides --- Euripidesu --- אוריפידס --- エウリーピデース --- Εὐριπίδης --- Bacchus --- Bakchos --- Dionís --- Dionisas --- Dioniso --- Dionīss --- Dionisu --- Dioniz --- Dionizi --- Dionizo --- Dionizos --- Dionüszosz --- Dionysos --- Dionýzos --- Diyonizosse --- Διόνυσος --- Дионис --- ديونيسوس --- 디오니소스 --- דיוניסוס --- ディオニューソス --- 狄俄倪索斯 --- Βάκχος --- Діоніс --- Drama --- Greek literature --- Drama. --- Rhesus (Legendary character) - Drama. --- Iphigenia (Greek mythology) - Drama --- Pentheus (Greek mythology) - Drama. --- Dionysus (Greek deity) - Drama. --- Trojan War - Drama. --- Bacchantes - Drama. --- Bacchantes - Drama --- Euripides - Translations into English --- Rhesus, - King of Thrace (Legendary character) - Drama --- Dionysus - (Greek deity) - Drama --- Rhesus, - King of Thrace (Legendary character) --- Dionysus - (Greek deity)
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